C
Cecilianus
Guest
I am wondering if anyone knows if St. Symeon the New Theologian said anything explicitly regarding the Filioque. I am curious because of the following passage - in the Catechetical Discourses (p. 344 in the Paulist Press edition) where he seems to hint at an acceptance of the Catholic doctrine on the issue:
“If a name is attributed to One, it is by nature applied to the others, with the exception of the terms Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, or the terms beget, begotten, and proceeding, for these alone indisputably apply to the Holy Trinity by nature and in distinctive fashion. As for an interchange of names, or their reversal, or their change, that we are forbidden to speak about. These terms characterize the three Persons, so that in this way we cannot place the Son before the Father nor the Holy Ghost before the Son. We must speak of them together as “Father, Son, and Holy Ghost,” without the slightest difference of duration or time between them. The Son is begotten and the Spirit proceeds simultaneousy with the Father’s existence.”
This is the first passage of Symeon’s I’ve seen this summer - when I read the Catechetical Discourses, the Ethical Discourses, and the Hymns of Divine Love - which I remember even coming close to talking about the Filioque (and here the allusion is, in fact, quite indirect), so I thought I’d take the risk and post this before reading the last thirty pages of the Catechetical Discourse.
Anybody here know more about Symeon’s explanation of the doctrine, or anything else that he contributed to the doctrine of the Holy Spirit?
“If a name is attributed to One, it is by nature applied to the others, with the exception of the terms Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, or the terms beget, begotten, and proceeding, for these alone indisputably apply to the Holy Trinity by nature and in distinctive fashion. As for an interchange of names, or their reversal, or their change, that we are forbidden to speak about. These terms characterize the three Persons, so that in this way we cannot place the Son before the Father nor the Holy Ghost before the Son. We must speak of them together as “Father, Son, and Holy Ghost,” without the slightest difference of duration or time between them. The Son is begotten and the Spirit proceeds simultaneousy with the Father’s existence.”
This is the first passage of Symeon’s I’ve seen this summer - when I read the Catechetical Discourses, the Ethical Discourses, and the Hymns of Divine Love - which I remember even coming close to talking about the Filioque (and here the allusion is, in fact, quite indirect), so I thought I’d take the risk and post this before reading the last thirty pages of the Catechetical Discourse.
Anybody here know more about Symeon’s explanation of the doctrine, or anything else that he contributed to the doctrine of the Holy Spirit?