Dear brother Zekariya,
Brother mardukm said, “not a merely economic manifestation.” I do not see how your saying, “Manifestation, however, is not Procession,” is a refutation of what he says. He might be wrong about calling “manifestation” “economic,” however, you both seem to agree that “manifestation” is not a “procession.”
Since you have shown that you disagree with the use of the word “economic,” would you agree with the following (with the removal of “economic”)?
‘What we know from the letter, regardless of the verb used, was that St. Cyril was describing an ontological relationship (using words such as “inherent” and “according to nature”) between the Son and the Holy Spirit, not merely a manifestation.’
I doubt the revision could enjoin agreement. The problem is that even though Cavaradossi might himself admit that the manifestation is not merely economic, but eternal, there is still a disagreement on the issue “manifestation.”
Cavaradossi and I have discussed this at length in the past. We both agree on the following:
- The Father is Source of the Son and Holy Spirit (per Council of Florence).
- The Father alone is the Origin of the Hypostasis of the Holy Spirit.
- The terms “through” and “from” cannot be equated (per Synod of Blacharnae; in distinction, Florence equated the terms “through” and “and”).
What we disagree on is the use of the term “cause of existence” as a reference to the Son in His relationship to the Holy Spirit (as used by Florence).
My pov as a Catholic of the Oriental Tradition, in line with the teaching of Pope St. Cyril of Alexandria (and, really, all the Western and Eastern/ Oriental Fathers), is that the Spirit has His Divine Essence from the Son. There is actually another quote from St. Cyril that asserts explicitly that the Essence of the Holy Spirit proceeds (
proienai) from the Son (you can’t explain that away by stating it refers only to the “manifestation,” because to EO, “manifestation” refers only to the Energy, not the Essence). This is perfectly equivalent to the Latin doctrine on
filioque - that the Holy Spirit proceeds (
procedit) from the Son - because the Latin doctrine has to do with the Essential consubstantiality of the Son and Holy Spirit, not the hypostatic origin of the Holy Spirit from the Son. Now, because the Essence of the Holy Spirit is derived from the Son (or, more concisely, from the Father through the Son), I believe it is perfectly orthodox to assert (according to Florence) that the Son is “cause of the existence of the Holy Spirit.” Unless Orthodox are willing to claim that the divine Essence is not part and parcel of the Holy Spirit, I do not see how they can doubt the Truth of the Florentine statement.
The issue is that while the Latins (per Florence) explicitly make a distinction between “Source” and “Cause,” the late medieval Greek Fathers seem to have regarded the two terms equivalently. To Latins, the Son being a Cause of the existence (
hyparxeos) of the Holy Spirit because the Essence of the Holy Spirit is derived from the Father through the Son is differentiated from the Father being the Source of the Person (
hypostasis) of the Holy Spirit. But because “Source” and “Cause” is not distinguished in the Greek mind, they think that when the Latins say that the Son is a Cause of the existence of the Holy Spirit, then the Latins mean that the Son is the Source of the Person of the Holy Spirit. But that assumption by the EO of the Latin doctrine is simply wrong.
There is no objective heterodoxy in what the Latins are teaching. Can any Eastern Orthodox deny that the Spirit has His Essence from the Father
through the Son? It only seems to be a matter of the Greeks misunderstanding what the Latins mean.
That’s my take on the whole issue so far. I wonder if Cavaradossi understands it differently.
Blessings,
Marduk