…in addition
Leo the Great: While I fundamentally agree with you, your argument needs some work. You said:
Quote:
Wow, I don’t understand the objection my Orthodox neighbors: The Father and son are only differentiated by what distinguishes them, in all other things they are one.
Now the Son is distinguished from the Father by being generated. All other attributes are shared between them…
This is also true of the Holy Spirit and the Father. Since the thing that distinguishes them is Spiration, the Holy Spirit must share in the Begetting of the Son.
Obviously this is not true, so the flaw in your reasoning must be corrected. I don’t say this to disagree with the filioque, but in order to encourage those who support it to think carefully about their arguments.
Ok, I see what you MEAN but here is the problem: Many latin and greek fathers refer to the Spirit as the Image of the Son. Let’s Keep that in mind.
Now, The Father is Distinguished from the Son by Generation, and in this sense, he is infinitely ontologically prior to the Son; but not in the temporal sense or else the Son would be created: but in an infinite eternal sense so that the Son is Just as infinite and eternal as the Father since the Son is always being begotten from all eternity.
Now, Since the Father is ontologically PRIOR to the Son, the Son cannot share in his own generation, or he would be the Father. Nevertheless, the Father and the Son share all other attributes in common, because the Son is the Fathers image, having received all things except generation from the Father. This includes the property of Spiration of the Holy Spirit. He can share this attribute because it is not prior to himself, the procession of the Spirit being ineffably distinct from and different than the Son’s generation.
NOW, Since the Father is ontologically prior to the Son and both Spirate the Holy Spirit in a single spiration as from a single principle, it then follows that the Father AND THE SON are ontologically prior to the Spirit in terms of origin of hypostases. That being the case, the Holy Spirit cannot share in the generation of the Son because he receives his being and hypostases from the Son through the gift of the Father.
Thus He can have nothing to do with the generation of the Son. If he could share in the Generation of the Son we would be mingled with and confused with the Father, even though he himself proceeds principally from the Father.
SO the question is: Why can the Son share in the Spirit’s origin, but the Spirit doesn’t share in the Son’s origin?
A. The Spirit is indeed God, but he is not the image of the Father in the same way the SOn is, therefore he does not receive from the father the principle of generation. The Son receives the Principle of Spiration because he is the Father’s image and is distinguished only by his relation to the Father. All the other Attributes between the two are the same.
Also, the Spirit is the Son’s image, and being the image of the Son, he cannot receive his being prior to the Son receiving his being.
Between the three, all attributes of divinity are common except what is proper to each one personally.
And once again, this all takes place eternally, so all three are equally infinite, glorious and majestic and there is no subordination, simply different origins.