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Gabriel_of_12
Guest
Hi, jimmy; First of all I don’t disagree with the Church Fathers as they revealed in human words towards the mystery of God which human words can never exhaust or define indefatigable.** No one can define God, so let’s not pretend that the ECF’s have defined God, they haven’t.**jimmy;10976482]Gabriel, you need to read the fathers. The creed and the theology behind it are inseparable.
Thus the Creed; I don’t separate the theology of the Fathers from the Creed. The fiioque addresses only one aspect of the Trinity. You Orthdoox want to make this procession of the Holy Spirit to define the whole Godhead, It does not. Further more the filioque never conflicts nor contradicts the Creed nor does it attempt to define God, only the procession of the Holy Spirit.
God has spoken only ONE Word, and that Word has become flesh. You pretend to take OUR theology of principle without principle and eliminate the Word of God by denying Jesus is not God as the Arians did, because the Holy Spirit only proceeds from the Father.** You Orthodox take the heretical view by denying consubstantiation of the Father and the Son follows the procession of the Holy Spirit. Because the Father and the Son as being of the same substance. From this same substance which the Father and the Son share the Holy Spirit proceeds eternally.**If you want an example of this take a look at creation and all the divine laws which govern it. You see God in all and you see the Word of God from which all things came and you see the HolySpirit eternally proceeding from the Father and the Son because creation still exists and reproduces after it’s own seed (naturally).
Because the filioque compliments Consubstantiation, let us speak of Consubstantiation, we need not discuss any more elements or theology of God except Consubstantiation, which the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son.
In retrospect; The CCC addresses the Orthodox tradition of the Creed in the procession of the Holy Spirit from it’s origin “principle without principle” God the Father. The Catholic profession of the Creed includes the procession of the Holy Spirit eternally proceeding from Consubstantiality = God.
John supports the Roman Catholic position emphatically because he writes; John 1:1 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God.
The Word that was with God, Jesus Later reveals to be the Father and the Son. It is from this divine revelation where the Father and the Son are with one another and the Word was God, is what the filioque is pointing to in revelation from the Creed in Consubstantiation. Jesus later states; “And the Father and the Son are one”, “if you have seen the Son you have seen the Father”. It is this filioque which defeated the Arians in the West.
Pulling the filioque out of the Creed serves no purpose and it is needed to acknowledge that Jesus the only Begotten Son of God is God consubstantially. And if we acknowledge the Holy Spirit’s origin from the Father who is God, we prove to heretics that the Son is God because the Holy Spirit proceeds eternally from the Father and the Son consubstantially of the same substance. The filioque never defines God here, nor the origin of the procession only the eternal procession coming from the Father and the Son.
What eliminates the division between the Orthodox and Catholic position; is that the Catholic filioque from the Creed, never denies the Holy Spirit’s origin of procession from the Father as principle without principle. The filioque in the Creed professess the eternal procession from the Father and the Son from Consubstantiality. Which still maintains it’s mystery. The CCC confirms this mystery when she teaches no one is to apply this fiioque “rigidly and never affects the identity of faith in the reality of the same mystery confessed” CCC 248c
We as Catholics have always believed the origin of the HolySpirit, but that is not what the filioque is addressing from the Creed. We already professed that in the beginning of the Creed. What filioque is doing is stating that the Word became flesh is still God in Consubstantial substance where the Holy Spirit is eternally proceeding from the Father and the Son. In essence this remains a mystery, which cannot be defined in human words, but only in faith revealed by God.
We can find common ground be respecting each one’s tradition. When one is the origin of the procession as principle without principle, and one reveals the eternal procession of the Holy Spirit from the Father and the Son in consubstantiality. Neither one conflicts with the other.
Peace be with you