OK, tell me what you think of this filioque formulation

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An interesting time line perspective related to the possibly providential addition of the honor given to The Son , in the Creed - it is reported to have been first said in the Council of Toledo, in 589 , at the conversion of the king at his renunciation of arianism , under the directive of the local Bishop , thus an example of the earthly authority submitting to Godly wisdom,and the return of a repentant sinner , may be an occasion of penance for his previous arian heresy , by honoring The Son .

One year earlier, in Constantinople there was the council** set against the authority of the Pope **, with the latter suppoesedly warning about anti Christian powers being around -
Mohammed 18 y.o at the time .
I think that is definetely a stretch to describe it in those words. Proclaiming the Patriarch of Constantinople the Oecumenical Patriarch was not setting anything against the Pope’s authority. Perhaps its more interesting in when Gregory the Great denounced this title, he claimed there was no such thing as a Bishop of Bishops or a universal Bishop :rolleyes:
 
I think that is definetely a stretch to describe it in those words. Proclaiming the Patriarch of Constantinople the Oecumenical Patriarch was not setting anything against the Pope’s authority. Perhaps its more interesting in when Gregory the Great denounced this title, he claimed there was no such thing as a Bishop of Bishops or a universal Bishop :rolleyes:
Very true. As Patriarch of Constantinople, St. Chrysostom made appeals to the bishop of Rome to heal the disturbances going on all over the world. Constantinople received the same appellate authority in the Eastern portion of Christendom that Rome possessed in the whole Church.

The wierd thing is, I have read EO argue that St. Chrysostom was not in communion with Rome just because he was ordained by St. Meletius as priest who was not in communion with Paulinus, who was in communion with Rome.:rolleyes::whacky:

But I’ve said too much already on a topic not germaine to his thread. Sorry.:o

Blessings
 
HERE is the reference to the quote of Pope St. Leo I

In his 447 letter 15:2 to Bishop St. Turibius of Astorga,

“primo itaque capitulo demonstratur quam impie sentiant de Trinitate divina, qui et Patris et Filii et Spiritus Sancti unam atque eandem asserunt esse personam, tamquam idem Deus nunc Pater nunc Filius nunc Spiritus Sanctus nominetur; nec alius sit qui genuit, alius qui genitus est, alius qui de utroque procedit.”

There ya go.
The reference means a published book. I don’t have teh access to Vatican archives to look for the letter.

In spite to the fact that Formosus butchered the chapter of Synod of Blachernae to prove what has exactly been denied in the same chapter (which provided the opprotunity to others to build further on sand…) I will give you the benefit of doubt that you, presonally, aren’t involved in such activities, and assume you provided an accurate quote.

The quote is obviously aimed at refuting the heresy of Modalism (which is quite the opposite from Arianism, making present reasoning of the cause of the addition spurious), and is not aimed at theological debate about the source of the Holy Ghost. Hence, it is quite less inaccurate (althouh inaccurate indeed) than, say, apokatastasis exposed by St. Gregory of Nyssa. Since St. Leo haven’t comprehended the distinction between physis and hypostasis, which led to at least some misunderstanding in Chalcedon, the above quote is quite a shallow reasoning of filioque.
 
The only time I’d ever thought about the Holy Spirit being sent is when Jesus says the Father will send another paraclete in My name. Nothing confusing there.
Exactly.

Nothing else confusing in anything else about the Trinity that has been revealed and writen down in the Bible.

Procession of the Holy Ghost from the Son has nowhere been revealed. It’s a pure invention of human “wisdom”.
 
The reference means a published book. I don’t have teh access to Vatican archives to look for the letter.

In spite to the fact that Formosus butchered the chapter of Synod of Blachernae to prove what has exactly been denied in the same chapter (which provided the opprotunity to others to build further on sand…) I will give you the benefit of doubt that you, presonally, aren’t involved in such activities, and assume you provided an accurate quote.

The quote is obviously aimed at refuting the heresy of Modalism (which is quite the opposite from Arianism, making present reasoning of the cause of the addition spurious), and is not aimed at theological debate about the source of the Holy Ghost. Hence, it is quite less inaccurate (althouh inaccurate indeed) than, say, apokatastasis exposed by St. Gregory of Nyssa. Since St. Leo haven’t comprehended the distinction between physis and hypostasis, which led to at least some misunderstanding in Chalcedon, the above quote is quite a shallow reasoning of filioque.
I don’t see how I butchered anything. I quoted directly from the council , from an Orthodox website. I don’t see why you are so against an Eternal manifestation. Its very clearly stated in St. Palamas’ writings and he is one of the “three pillars of Orthodoxy”.
 
. The only time I’d ever thought about the Holy Spirit being sent is when Jesus says the Father will send another paraclete in My name. Nothing confusing there.
Better understanding of what is meant by the phrase ’ in MY Name ’ is possibly what is needed ; seems most persons would take it to mean as He, our Lord Jesus does …

Thank God we in The Church do have the Magisterium and encyclicals , to give adequate guidance .
 
I think that is definetely a stretch to describe it in those words. Proclaiming the Patriarch of Constantinople the Oecumenical Patriarch was not setting anything against the Pope’s authority. Perhaps its more interesting in when Gregory the Great denounced this title, he claimed there was no such thing as a Bishop of Bishops or a universal Bishop :rolleyes:
oce.catholic.com/index.php?title=John_the_Faster .
Code:
Scripture gives us enough occasions of  what to us seem  unexpected consquences  for behaviors from certain  persons who have been entrusted with more ; in O.T , incidents of rebellion against Moses ; even what Moses himself had to  face ; there are the incidents with Ananias and Sapphira and St.Peter ; there is no intent to malign the  history of any one particular group ; just hoping that reversal /remediation of  certain actions can also bring forth much fruit  as per His promises !
Peace !
 
The Holy Spirit receives of the Son and shares that with humanity; that is how we come to know Christ and how we can testify to the Word. It is why the Holy Spirit is called the “Image of the Son”.
The Son was conceived by the Holy Spirit, and it was the descent of the Spirit on Him that confirmed His identity as the Son (at the Baptism), so by the logic you use above we must add a “Spiritoque” to the creed, to signify that the Son is eternally begotten of the Father and the Spirit. (Which, of course, is gravely in error).
Your (and the Roman Church’s) fundamental error here is confounding the eternal relations of the Persons of the Trinity with their missions for the Divine Economy. That the Spirit “recieves of mine [Christ’s]” no more shows an eternal procession of the Spirit from the Son than Christ’s “for the Father is greater than I” shows that the Son is not equally God with the Father.
 
Double Procession, as understood by my Latin friends, does not include double origin.

The double origin is heretical.

The latin of the creed only implies flowing forth, not origination in; adding the filioque (and the comparable “ex patris et filios” of the mozarabic creedal construction) speaks only of the spirit, as in scripture, answering to the person of Christ, not originating in Christ.
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But Filioque itself doesn’t mandate a double origin, and therefore isn’t heretical in and itself, properly understood.
But the gloss on the Filioque by the Councils of Lyons and Florence mandate a double origin when they say that the Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son “eternally” and equally" and “as from one prinicple”. “Eternally” means, uh, eternally, and “equally” means, uh, equally. “As from one principle” means just what it says, that the Father and the Son act together, as one entity or unit, in eternally spirating the Spirit. Words have meanings.
It divides the Trinity into “Father and Son” on the one hand, and “Spirit” on the other, something inconceivable and repugnant to the Fathers. It creates a “God” out of Father and Son, considered without the Spirit; Anselm explicitly says this in his treatise on the Ptocession. Aquinas (from whom the language of Lyons and Florence mostly derive) states that the “one principle” from which the Spirit proceeds is both the Father and the Son “confusedly”.
That is exactly what was meant at the time, and it is exactly what it was taken to mean at the time, and for centuries thereafter.
It is a great thing that Rome has backed off from this teaching in the last century or so, but it must simply be honest and discard these teachings. In fact, Rome has taken the first step by implying, informally, in the persons of both Paul VI and JPII, that the post-schism western councils do not have the status of ecumenical councils and are not binding on the whole Church. Joe
 
The Son was conceived by the Holy Spirit, and it was the descent of the Spirit on Him that confirmed His identity as the Son (at the Baptism), so by the logic you use above we must add a “Spiritoque” to the creed, to signify that the Son is eternally begotten of the Father and the Spirit. (Which, of course, is gravely in error).
Your (and the Roman Church’s) fundamental error here is confounding the eternal relations of the Persons of the Trinity with their missions for the Divine Economy. That the Spirit “recieves of mine [Christ’s]” no more shows an eternal procession of the Spirit from the Son than Christ’s “for the Father is greater than I” shows that the Son is not equally God with the Father.
The “receives of mine” does not refer to Divine Economy, and in no possible way COULD refer to Divine Economy. It can only refer to eternal relation, because the Holy Spirit only “receives” in the sense of the Divine Nature. You are mixing apples and oranges when you compare “the Father is greater” (which can be said of the human nature of Christ) with the “the Holy Spirit receives of mine” (which can only be said of the Divine Nature). You are likewise drawing erroneous comparisons when you talk about Christ being conceived of the Holy Spirit (which, again, refers to human nature only, since the Divine Nature is not conceived).

So unless you are arguing that the Holy Spirit has a created nature, like Christ’s human nature, your comparisons don’t work at all. Otherwise you’re left explaining how the immutable Divine Nature of the Holy Spirit can “receive” anything in terms of temporal relations. :rolleyes:

And, again, the EFathers ALL speak of the Holy Spirit receiving from the Son in eternity, not merely temporally; I ask you to show one, just one, that says that this refers to temporal relations. Several citations have been shown already in which it is shown to be eternal, yet we’ve not seen a single one where it is said to be temporal. We’re waiting patiently.
But the gloss on the Filioque by the Councils of Lyons and Florence mandate a double origin when they say that the Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son “eternally” and equally" and “as from one prinicple”. “Eternally” means, uh, eternally, and “equally” means, uh, equally. “As from one principle” means just what it says, that the Father and the Son act together, as one entity or unit, in eternally spirating the Spirit. Words have meanings.
You have been proven wrong on this point so many times in the past that it amazes me that you still bring it up. Equally, at Florence, does not mean “identically”. Here’s the proof, yet again, for anyone with eyes to see and a mind to understand:
The Latins asserted that they say the holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son not with the intention of excluding the Father from being the source and principle of all deity, that is of the Son and of the holy Spirit, nor to imply that the Son does not receive from the Father, because the holy Spirit proceeds from the Son
If it was so basic and simple as you say, there never would have been this explanation put to the relation of the Father to the Divine Nature, and to the Holy Spirit. The Father is Source, and the Son receives even the relation to the Holy Spirit from the Father.

By all means continue to contradict not only Eastern Orthodox tradition, but the plain language of the Council of Florence. It’s only detrimental to yourself. 😦

Peace and God bless!
 
For those on this thread questioning the importance of this controversy, I respond that the question of rejecting the double eternal procession of the Spirit is the same question as to whether the Church remains true to scripture, and the very words of Christ, or not. In John 15:26 Christ Himself distinguishes between the eternal procession of the Spirit (the Greek word meaning “as from the origin”) which He states is “from the Father”, and the “sending” (different Greek word, as everyone here knows) which is from the Father and the Son. When the author of the gospel of John (reflecting, we must presume, the meaning of the original words of Christ) uses different words in the space of one verse to describe what is of the Father alone (eternal procession) and what is from the Father and the Son (the temporal “sending” of the Spirit) then he is clearly making a meaningful distinction, and it is frightfully wrong for us to ignore what God Himself teaches us about His own nature. Joe
 
For those on this thread questioning the importance of this controversy, I respond that the question of rejecting the double eternal procession of the Spirit is the same question as to whether the Church remains true to scripture, and the very words of Christ, or not. In John 15:26 Christ Himself distinguishes between the eternal procession of the Spirit (the Greek word meaning “as from the origin”) which He states is “from the Father”, and the “sending” (different Greek word, as everyone here knows) which is from the Father and the Son. When the author of the gospel of John (reflecting, we must presume, the meaning of the original words of Christ) uses different words in the space of one verse to describe what is of the Father alone (eternal procession) and what is from the Father and the Son (the temporal “sending” of the Spirit) then he is clearly making a meaningful distinction, and it is frightfully wrong for us to ignore what God Himself teaches us about His own nature. Joe
Ekporousis does NOT mean “eternal”, and proinai does NOT mean “temporal”. As has been pointed out, even St. Gregory Palamas refers to the “proinai” of the Holy Spirit from the Son as eternal. You’re breaking with Orthodox tradition as well as Catholic tradition, so your stated religious affiliation is doubly ironic. 😛

Peace and God bless!
 
Dear brother Alethiaphile,
For those on this thread questioning the importance of this controversy, I respond that the question of rejecting the double eternal procession of the Spirit is the same question as to whether the Church remains true to scripture, and the very words of Christ, or not. In John 15:26 Christ Himself distinguishes between the eternal procession of the Spirit (the Greek word meaning “as from the origin”) which He states is “from the Father”, and the “sending” (different Greek word, as everyone here knows) which is from the Father and the Son. When the author of the gospel of John (reflecting, we must presume, the meaning of the original words of Christ) uses different words in the space of one verse to describe what is of the Father alone (eternal procession) and what is from the Father and the Son (the temporal “sending” of the Spirit) then he is clearly making a meaningful distinction, and it is frightfully wrong for us to ignore what God Himself teaches us about His own nature. Joe
I would point out that the Greek word for “send” is not proienai, but pempo. The “sending” indeed affects us in the temporal plane, and who knows if the “sending” is eternal or not. Whatever the case is with the “sending,” that is not what the Greek proienai is referrring to, and that is not what we are speaking about when we speak of the Latin procedit, which is equivalent to the Greek proienai.

I have to agree with brother Ghosty that you are comparing apples and oranges.

Blessings
 
Eternal relations are eternal even if they exist in time. even Jesus statement about the Father’s greatness isn’t relative to His humanity but also to the Second Person co-equally God. Eternally greater because He is A Father to the Son.:confused:
 
The “receives of mine” does not refer to Divine Economy, and in no possible way COULD refer to Divine Economy. It can only refer to eternal relation, because the Holy Spirit only “receives” in the sense of the Divine Nature.
This is classic begging of the question to be considered. The Son eternally proceeds the Spirit because Christ says the Spirit “receives of mine”, which can only refer to eternal procession. Classic circular logic!

You are mixing apples and oranges when you compare “the Father is greater” (which can be said of the human nature of Christ) with the “the Holy Spirit receives of mine” (which can only be said of the Divine Nature).

“Recieves of mine” can quite easily refer to the Spirit receiving Christ’s teaching, which the Spirit then passes on to men, in the same way that Christ speaks of not giving His own teaching, but that which He recieved from the Father.
You are likewise drawing erroneous comparisons when you talk about Christ being conceived of the Holy Spirit (which, again, refers to human nature only, since the Divine Nature is not conceived).
I was showing that the same logic by which you deduce an eternal procession from the Son by the words of Christ “He shall receive of mine” can be used to deduce a begetting of the Son by the Spirit. It is a reductio ad absurdum. I wasn’t saying that the Son was conceived. You seem to be incapable of understanding that.

Quote:
But the gloss on the Filioque by the Councils of Lyons and Florence mandate a double origin when they say that the Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son “eternally” and equally" and “as from one prinicple”. “Eternally” means, uh, eternally, and “equally” means, uh, equally. “As from one principle” means just what it says, that the Father and the Son act together, as one entity or unit, in eternally spirating the Spirit. Words have meanings.
You have been proven wrong on this point so many times in the past that it amazes me that you still bring it up.
I haven’t been “proven wrong” of anything. The words of Aquinas themselves show up your error here: he explicitly says that the “one principle” that spirates the Spirit is both the Father and the Son “confusedly”. And when Florence adopts his “one principle” teaching, that is exactly what they mean, the Father and the Son together, as one, eternally proceed the Spirit. All your verbal gymnastics cannot obscure that fact.
Equally, at Florence, does not mean “identically”.
I never said it did, I said, and still say, it means “equally”. “Equally” means “equally”. You cannot admit the straightforward, intuitive, commonplace sense of “equally” in this context, but you cannot give a convincing alternative account of “equally” in this context that does not amount to double eternal procession. You have likened it to someone who came from the bedroom through a hallway saying “I came equally from the bedroom and the hallway”. First of all, an alernative explanation is not a “proof”, and especially not one as unconvincing as that. That is clearly a tortured rendering of “equally”; it cannot be taken seriously.
Here’s the proof, yet again, for anyone with eyes to see and a mind to understand:
Linking to the proceedings of Florence is not a “proof” of anything.

There is no mystery to what is happening here; Rome has realized the importance of the monarchy of the Father (praise God), but you feel you must try to “save” the decrees of Lyons and Florence by twisting the words they use out of all recognition. Joe
 
Ekporousis does NOT mean “eternal”, and proinai does NOT mean “temporal”. As has been pointed out, even St. Gregory Palamas refers to the “proinai” of the Holy Spirit from the Son as eternal. You’re breaking with Orthodox tradition as well as Catholic tradition, so your stated religious affiliation is doubly ironic. 😛
Peace and God bless!
So you (and mardukm, apparently) believe Christ was making an empty point when He explicitly contrasted ekporousis with pronai. I personally don’t believe Christ used empty language, especially when speaking solemnly about the other Persons of the Trinity. I personally believe to maintain such is exceedingly spiritually dangerous.
 
This is classic begging of the question to be considered. The Son eternally proceeds the Spirit because Christ says the Spirit “receives of mine”, which can only refer to eternal procession. Classic circular logic!
You must have failed Logic 101. I said that “receives of mine” can only refer to eternal reality because the Holy Spirit only “receives” in eternity. I never said, or even suggested, that it could only be eternal because that’s what Christ meant; that would be circular logic. :rolleyes:
“Recieves of mine” can quite easily refer to the Spirit receiving Christ’s teaching, which the Spirit then passes on to men, in the same way that Christ speaks of not giving His own teaching, but that which He recieved from the Father.
This would still be an eternal reality, and not a temporal one. The Holy Spirit didn’t receive the teaching of the Father in time, unless you want to argue that the Holy Spirit had imperfect knowledge until the Incarnation. I’d like to see you defend such a position.
I was showing that the same logic by which you deduce an eternal procession from the Son by the words of Christ “He shall receive of mine” can be used to deduce a begetting of the Son by the Spirit. It is a reductio ad absurdum. I wasn’t saying that the Son was conceived. You seem to be incapable of understanding that.
Again you’re failing at basic logic. Christ’s human nature was conceived, not the Divine. Unless you are arguing that the Holy Spirit ALSO has a human nature, or any other nature than Divine, this comparison doesn’t stand. Christ could be conceived temporally because the human nature is finite and temporal; the Holy Spirit is eternal and infinite, and in no way can He change temporally, not by receiving, not by conception, not in any sense at all.

So, even if when we do say that Christ was “conceived of the Holy Spirit”, it would only refer to the human nature and not the Divine Nature. This is why it’s a case of apples and oranges.
I haven’t been “proven wrong” of anything. The words of Aquinas themselves show up your error here: he explicitly says that the “one principle” that spirates the Spirit is both the Father and the Son “confusedly”. And when Florence adopts his “one principle” teaching, that is exactly what they mean, the Father and the Son together, as one, eternally proceed the Spirit. All your verbal gymnastics cannot obscure that fact.
You don’t seem to understand what you’re citing. Yes, Aquinas says that it refers to the Father and the Son “confusedly”, because the procession doesn’t itself refer to a specific trait of either. It is a “broad term” that covers both Persons and their role. Aquinas also explicitely highlights the distinction between the role of the Father and the Son when he says:
and therefore the Holy Ghost proceeds equally from both, although sometimes He is said to proceed principally or properly from the Father, because the Son has this power from the Father.
So even when the term “equally” is used, a distinction is very clearly being made. Had Latin possessed a term which referred to a specific kind of procession from a source, like ekporousis, there would not be one term holding the place for two meanings. Since Latin only has one term, however, it must stand “confusedly” for both meanings at once, but in every major work on the subject (including the Council of Florence) this distinction is made clear, and is not merely left to a simplistic interpretation of the word “equally”.
I never said it did, I said, and still say, it means “equally”. “Equally” means “equally”. You cannot admit the straightforward, intuitive, commonplace sense of “equally” in this context, but you cannot give a convincing alternative account of “equally” in this context that does not amount to double eternal procession. You have likened it to someone who came from the bedroom through a hallway saying “I came equally from the bedroom and the hallway”. First of all, an alernative explanation is not a “proof”, and especially not one as unconvincing as that. That is clearly a tortured rendering of “equally”; it cannot be taken seriously.
See the above passage of Aquinas. In one breath he says “equally”, and yet also says that the Father is the Source. You can’t twist “equally” to mean that both the Father and the Son are the Source, which is what it would take to prove that ekporousis from the Father is contradicted by the filioque.

As always you insist on reading your own meaning into the text, rather than accepting the obvious facts of what is being said. If “equally” meant what you’re insisting, the Father in no way could be called the Source apart from the Son, and in no way could the Son be said to receive the Spiration from the Father. You are proven wrong by the very texts you cite.
There is no mystery to what is happening here; Rome has realized the importance of the monarchy of the Father (praise God), but you feel you must try to “save” the decrees of Lyons and Florence by twisting the words they use out of all recognition.
I’m just pointing out that Florence calls the Father the Source, which is the explicit recognition of the monarchy of the Father. Rome has never broken with the teaching of Florence, nor should it; to do so would be to break with the teaching of the all the Early Fathers, East and West.

Peace and God bless!
 
So you (and mardukm, apparently) believe Christ was making an empty point when He explicitly contrasted ekporousis with pronai. I personally don’t believe Christ used empty language, especially when speaking solemnly about the other Persons of the Trinity. I personally believe to maintain such is exceedingly spiritually dangerous.
The Catholic Church believes that the Spirit ekporeusai from the Father alone. We also believe that the Spirit proienai (or procedit, in Latin) from the Father and Son, as so many early Eastern and Western Fathers testify.

Your conclusion that Catholics don’t distinguish between ekporeusai and proienai is a lot of nonsense - at least not if you know what the Catholic Church actually teaches.

Blessings
 
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