C
Cecilianus
Guest
I kind of agree with Gurney Halleck - it shouldn’t be either/or. Neither Byzantines nor Latins (or Orthodox) ever really make it either/or. My spirituality manifests an emphasis on the Resurrection; theirs on the Passion. But we each have both. Both were necessary for the Redemption (with or without the Anselmian deal - being Byzantine I’m certainly not an Anselmian). Both were part of the Incarnation - you can’t “chop up” Christ’s life and ask which part redeemed us from our sins, any more than you can parse the syllables of the Anaphora and ask which sound performs transubstantiation (the proper Eastern view is not that it happens at the epiklesis AS OPPOSED TO the Words of Institution, but rather simply that the whole Anaphora confects the Eucharist - see Cardinal Ratzinger on this in The Nature and Mission of Theology). The whole life of Christ saved us from our sins and deified us; His life story climaxed in His death and Resurrection.