M
mardukm
Guest
Dear brother East and West,
"East and West:
Likewise, for you to properly understand the Eastern position that “Essence IS God/Energy IS God,” you need to go beyond the little snippet of that phrase, but give heed to the TOTALITY of the teaching on the matter. I will attempt to that for you below.
First, you have to understand the purpose of the Essence/Energies distinction. It is the Eastern/Oriental attempt to understand the idea that God is wholly seperate from Creation, yet somehow we are able (or have been permitted by Grace) to participate in divinity. As the Fathers who use the distinction have attested, the distinction is merely a mental aid for the weak human mind to grasp the utter Mystery of salvation (i.e., divinization). The Fathers do not say that there is an ACTUAL distinction WITHIN the Godhead, but only that the human mind makes the distinction as an aid to understanding the mystery.
The common understanding between Easterns and Orientals on the Essence/Energies distinction diverged ever so slightly in the high middle-ages. The present position of Eastern Christendom (Catholic and Orthodox) developed out of Palamas’ debate with Barlaam of Calabria in the 14th century. Barlaam (in opposition to both Catholic and Orthodox teaching) proposed that God cannot be experienced at all by the believer. To combat that heresy, Palamas taught that believers REALLY DO experience God, but only in His Energies. From here, the language of “Essence IS God/Energy IS God” started coming into vogue in Eastern Christendom, as a way to insist that the believer DOES actually experience God Himself. As far as I can see, at this point, there is still no attempt to actually impose the distinction as a REAL distinction WITHIN the Godhead. The distinction is still explained very much in terms of what HUMANS experience, in perfect accord with the teaching of the Fathers.
However, in modern Eastern Orthodoxy (not Eastern Catholicism), I have noticed an even further development regarding the Essence/Energies distinction. I have seen the Essence/Energies distinction actually utilized in the debates against filioque. As far as I know, even (St.) Gregory Palamas himself did not go this far (though I have read somewhere - don’t know if it’s true - that the Eastern synod that dogmatized his teachings attempted to do so). The argument goes that what proceeded through the Son was merely the Energies of God, and not his Essence. When I had read this from some EO apologists in this forum, I thought to myself, “WHOAAA!!! That is going too far. You’re actually proposing that the distinction ACTUALLY exists WITHIN the Godhead.”
Anyway, from my fallible understanding, you cannot accuse (St.) Palamas, nor Palamite theology, of imposing an ACTUAL distinction WITHIN the Godhead. You simply cannot do that if you consider ALL the points of Palamite theology. However, I would be all over anyone who uses the Essence/Energies distinction in the debate on filioque, and would charge those particular people with the same accusation you have wrongly and indiscriminately proposed against Eastern Christianity in general.
My Eastern Catholic brethren. if I have misrepresented the Eastern teaching in any way, please correct my (mis)understanding.
Blessings,
Marduk
"East and West:
You have actually proven the point of my criticism. You can only rebut the charge of polytheism by appealing to the TOTALITY of the teaching on the Trinity, not the little snippet of the teaching that non-Christians utilize.mardukm:![]()
No because they are all “one in essence”. But the essence energies distinctions actualy creates a being separate from God that is not one with his essence.This rhetoric of “the logical conclusion is…” is not very smart. What is the “logical conclusion” of the teaching that “the Father is God, the Son is God, and the Holy Spirit is God”? Is it that Christians are polytheists?
Likewise, for you to properly understand the Eastern position that “Essence IS God/Energy IS God,” you need to go beyond the little snippet of that phrase, but give heed to the TOTALITY of the teaching on the matter. I will attempt to that for you below.
I am not an Eastern, but an Oriental, so I don’t particularly accept the Eastern language of “Essence IS God/Energy IS God.” However, I have tried to understand it, and I believe it is a legitimate and orthodox development within Eastern Christianity and perfectly in the spirit of patristic Catholic Christianity.No. The members of the Trinity are one in “essence” and not separated from it like the supposed “energies” are.
First, you have to understand the purpose of the Essence/Energies distinction. It is the Eastern/Oriental attempt to understand the idea that God is wholly seperate from Creation, yet somehow we are able (or have been permitted by Grace) to participate in divinity. As the Fathers who use the distinction have attested, the distinction is merely a mental aid for the weak human mind to grasp the utter Mystery of salvation (i.e., divinization). The Fathers do not say that there is an ACTUAL distinction WITHIN the Godhead, but only that the human mind makes the distinction as an aid to understanding the mystery.
The common understanding between Easterns and Orientals on the Essence/Energies distinction diverged ever so slightly in the high middle-ages. The present position of Eastern Christendom (Catholic and Orthodox) developed out of Palamas’ debate with Barlaam of Calabria in the 14th century. Barlaam (in opposition to both Catholic and Orthodox teaching) proposed that God cannot be experienced at all by the believer. To combat that heresy, Palamas taught that believers REALLY DO experience God, but only in His Energies. From here, the language of “Essence IS God/Energy IS God” started coming into vogue in Eastern Christendom, as a way to insist that the believer DOES actually experience God Himself. As far as I can see, at this point, there is still no attempt to actually impose the distinction as a REAL distinction WITHIN the Godhead. The distinction is still explained very much in terms of what HUMANS experience, in perfect accord with the teaching of the Fathers.
However, in modern Eastern Orthodoxy (not Eastern Catholicism), I have noticed an even further development regarding the Essence/Energies distinction. I have seen the Essence/Energies distinction actually utilized in the debates against filioque. As far as I know, even (St.) Gregory Palamas himself did not go this far (though I have read somewhere - don’t know if it’s true - that the Eastern synod that dogmatized his teachings attempted to do so). The argument goes that what proceeded through the Son was merely the Energies of God, and not his Essence. When I had read this from some EO apologists in this forum, I thought to myself, “WHOAAA!!! That is going too far. You’re actually proposing that the distinction ACTUALLY exists WITHIN the Godhead.”
Anyway, from my fallible understanding, you cannot accuse (St.) Palamas, nor Palamite theology, of imposing an ACTUAL distinction WITHIN the Godhead. You simply cannot do that if you consider ALL the points of Palamite theology. However, I would be all over anyone who uses the Essence/Energies distinction in the debate on filioque, and would charge those particular people with the same accusation you have wrongly and indiscriminately proposed against Eastern Christianity in general.
My Eastern Catholic brethren. if I have misrepresented the Eastern teaching in any way, please correct my (mis)understanding.
Blessings,
Marduk