Hello, all. NanaR wrote me and asked me to clarify these statements from my paper “The Watchtower and the Ante-Nicene Church Fathers.”
As a little bit of background, I’m an Orthodox catechumen, and I’ve been reading the works of the early Church Fathers at
www.ccel.org for a few years now. When I wrote my paper on the Watchtower’s mishandling of the early Church Fathers, I had only just begun my studies. Had I known then what I know now, I don’t think I would necessarily have used this “positional superiority vs. ontological superiority” argument in my paper.
My point was simply to show that an equal can willingly submit himself to another equal without losing any claim to equality of being. Unfortunately, one unforeseen implication generated by this argument is that the divine Lordship is depicted as something possessed by the Father alone because the Son and Spirit have in a sense “abdicated” their Lordship, albeit willingly. It’s clear from the writings of such Fathers as Sts. Augustine and Ambrose that this is not the case. They maintained that Father, Son, and Spirit are equal in Lordship, for the divine Lordship belongs to the Godhead, not to any peculiar person of the Trinity. So the Son is Lord (and the Holy Spirit is Lord) just as the Father is Lord.
Had I to do it over again, I probably would have argued that any claims made by the early Church Fathers concerning the subordination of the Son to the Father were applicable only to the humanity appropriated by the Son in the Incarnation, not to the divinity which He shares equally with the Father (and the Holy Spirit) according to His eternal generation. This interpretation would be much more in line with the later teachings of Sts. Augustine and Ambrose.
If I need to clarify my thoughts further, or if there’s anything else in the paper that needs clarification (or correction), please let me know. I hope you enjoy the paper, and thanks to NanaR for her gracious invitation to the forum.
–Mike