L
Linusthe2nd
Guest
Wrong again, and you weren’t even close. What the Nicene Creed is saying is that Jesus Christ was born in time as to his human nature. But that his Divine nature is eternally begotten. Christ’s human nature was indeed made, but his Divine nature was begotten. The assumption of a human nature, in time, by the Second Person of the Trinity did not constitute a change in his Divine Nature. The Council of Chalcedon and other documents ( the Catechisms ) make this crystal clear. Do you understand what I am saying? You used some of the documents yourself.Huh?That’s what I did say. Well, okay, it is close but no cigar either.
Christ did not, in the Incarnation, “assume a human nature”. His nature, his essence, his Being does not ever change. Here is what the original text of the 325 A.D. Nicene Creed has to say about that:
“But those who say: ‘There was a time when he [Christ] was not;’ and ‘He was not before he was made’; and ‘He was made out of nothing,’ or 'He is of another ‘substance’ or ‘essence,’ or 'The Son of God is ‘created’ or ‘changeable’ or ‘alterable’–they are condemned by the Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church.”
Clear enough, I’d say.![]()
So the Son of God, the Second Person of the Trinity, is unchangeable, uncreated, eternally begotten by the Father. But the human nature of the Second Person was created and is changeable like all composite or material substances. Jesus Christ, you see, was one Divine Person with two natures or substances, one corporeal and human and created and changeable and one Divine, simple, uncreated, unchangeable, eternally begotten.
Now it is the Divine Substance of the Son of God that enters in to the act of governing the universe, as I stated in my last post. Likewise, all the other points I made are valid. I am perfectly satisfied that I am correct on all counts. You need not accept my conclusion, but I suggest you think over what I have argued and consider it.
Thank you for the discussion, it helped clarify my own thoughts.
Linus2nd