There
is an essential aspect Of the theological presuppositions of all Ecumenical
Councils concerning the Person of Christ which is either missing or has been
rejected by those following Augustine. This raises the question of whether
those who do so really accept these Councils.
With
the sole exception of Augustine, the Fathers maintain that Jesus Christ, before
His birth from the Virgin Theotokos, in His uncreated Person of the Angel of
God, Angel of the Great Council, the Lord of Glory, the Lord Sabaoth, is He who
revealed God in Himself to the patriarchs and prophets of the Old Testament.
Both the Arians and Eunomians agreed that it was Christ who did this in His
person or hypostasis which existed before the creation of the ages, but they
insisted that He was created from non-being and is therefore not of the same
nature (consubstantial or co-essential) with God, who is alone truly God by
nature.
In
order to prove their points the Arians and Eunomians argued, as did the Jew
Trypho with Justin Martyr, that it was not the Angel of the Lord in the burning
bush who said "I am He Who Is" (Ex. 3, 14), but God Himself by means
of the created Logos Angel. The Fathers insisted that the Angel-Logos revealed
this about Himself also, and not only about God. The Angel of the Lord spoke in
His own right also when to Moses He said, "I am the God of your father,
the God of Abraham and the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob" (Ex. 3, 6).
Against
the Arians St. Athanasius argues that the name 'angel' is sometimes applied to
the uncreated Logos and sometimes to a created angel. He insists that there can
be no confusion on whether one sees a created angel or the uncreated Son of God
sometimes called 'angel' in the Old Testament. He insists that "when the
Son is seen, so is the Father, for He is the Father's radiance; and thus the
Father and the Son are one... What God speaks, it is very plain He speaks
through the Logos and not through another... And he who hath seen the Son,
knows that, in seeing Him, he has seen, not an angel, nor one merely greater
than angels, nor in short any creature, but the Father Himself. And he who
hears the Logos, knows that he hears the Father; as he who is irradiated by the
radiance, knows that he is enlightened by the sun (Against Arians III, 12-14).
As a key to the Old and New Testaments, St. Athanasius states that "there
is nothing that the Father operates except through the Son..." (Ibid. III,
12).
This
means that the Old Testament is Christo-centric since Christ is the
pre-incarnate Angel of the Lord and of the Great Council, the Lord of Glory,
and the Lord Sabaoth in Whom the patriarchs and prophets see and hear God and
through Whom they receive grace, succor, and forgiveness.
That
the Orthodox and Arians agreed that it was the Angel-Logos Who appeared to and
revealed God to the prophets and the very same person who became man and the
Christ should be taken very seriously as the key to understanding the decisions
of the First and subsequent Ecumenical Councils. It is important to realize
that the Orthodox and Arians were not arguing speculatively over an abstract
Second Person of the Holy Trinity whose identity and nature one allegedly
deciphered by mulling over biblical passages with the help of Hellenistic
philosophy and the Holy Spirit. What they were discussing was the spiritual
experience of the prophets and apostles; specifically whether it is a created
or uncreated Logos who appears in glory to them and reveals in Himself as Image
God the Father as Archetype.
Because
the Eunomians held the same positions as the Arians on the appearances of the
allegedly created Logos-Angel to the prophets, this same discussion was carried
to the Second Ecumenical Council, St, Basil the Great with a bit of loss of
patience accosts Eunomius as follows: You atheist, are you not going to cease
calling Him who is really He Who Is - the source of life, the one who gives to
all that exist their being - non-being? Him who found, when giving an audience
to His own servant Moses, His proper and meet appellation for His eternity,
naming Himself 'He Who Is.' For He said 'I am He Who Is. And that these things
were said by the Person of the Lord no one will gainsay; that is, no one who
does not have the Jewish covering lying over against his heart in the reading
of Moses (2 Cor. 3. 15). For it is written, that an angel of the Lord appeared
to Moses in fire of flame from the bush (Ex. 3, 2). Whereas the Scripture
presents in the narrative an angel, the voice of God follows: 'He said to
Moses, I am the God of your father Abraham' (Ex. 3, 6). And a bit later again,
'I am He Who Is.' Who then is He Himself both angel and God? Therefore, is it
not He about whom we learned, that He is called 'the Angel of the Great Council'?
(Is. 9, 6)." After summarizing the same observations about the encounter
between the Angel-Logos and Jacob, which one finds in St. Athanasius the Great
and the earlier Fathers, St. Basil gives expression to the same interpretative
principle as we saw in the bishop of Alexandria. It is clear to all, that
wherever the same person is called both angel and God, it is the Only-Begotten
who is declared, who manifests Himself to human beings from generation to
generation and announces the will of the Father to His saints. Thus He who to
Moses gave Himself the name 'He Who Is,' is to be thought of as none other than
God the Logos, who in the beginning is with God (John l. I - 2)' (Refutation Of
Eunomius Apology II, 18). Eunomius answered these arguments of Basil by
claiming that the Son is the angel of "Him Who Is" but not "He
Who Is Himself. This angel is called god to show his superiority over all the
things created by him, but this does not mean that he is He Who Is. Thus
Eunomius claims that, He who sent Moses was Himself He Who Is, but he by whom
He sent and spake was the angel of Him Who Is, and the god of all else (Gregory
of Nyssa, Against Eunomius XI. 3).
The
sophistic subtlety of the argument may seem strange but it is nevertheless
important as a witness to the fact that the identity of the Angel, called God
in the Old Testament, with Christ, the OnlyBegotten Son of God and Creator, was
so entrenched in the tradition that the Eunomians could never think of getting
rid of it as Augustine, a younger contemporary, was about to do in North Africa
in spite of the fact his alleged teacher Ambrose and all the rest of the
Western Fathers agreed with the tradition herein described.
St.
Basil could not reply to Eunomius answers to his arguments since he had passed
away, so his brother Gregory did so in his twelve books Against Eunomius which
he communicated to St. Jerome during the Second Ecumenical Council in 381.
St.
Gregory among other things argues that "if Moses begs that the people may
not be led by an angel (Ex. 33, 15; 34, 9), (which God had announced He would
send to lead His people to freedom; Ex. 32, 34; 33, 2) and if He who was
discoursing with him consents to become his fellow-traveler and the guide of
the army (Ex. 33, 17), it is hereby manifestly shown that He who made Himself
known by the title 'He Who Is' is the Only-Begotten God. If anyone gainsays
this, he will show himself to be a supporter of the Jewish persuasion in not
associating the Son with the deliverance of the people. For if, on the one
hand, it was not an angel that went forth with the people, and if, on the
other, as Eunomius would have it, He Who was manifested by the name of 'He Who
Is' is not the Only-Begotten, this amounts to nothing less than transferring
the doctrines of the synagogue to the Church of God. Accordingly, of the two
alternatives they must needs admit one, namely either that the OnlyBegotten God
on no occasion appeared to Moses, or that the Son is Himself 'He Who Is,' from
whom the word came to His servant. But he contradicts what has been said above,
alleging the Scripture itself (Ex. 3, 2) which informs us that the voice of an
angel was interposed and that it was thus that the discourse of 'He Who Is' was
conveyed. This, however, is no contradiction but a confirmation of our view.
For we too say plainly, that the prophet, wishing to make manifest to men the
mystery concerning Christ, called 'Him Who Is, an 'Angel,' that the meaning of
the words might not be referred to the Father, as it would have been if the
title 'He Who Is' alone had been found throughout the discourse (Against
Eunomius, XI, 3).
These
passages from mainstay Fathers of the First and Second Ecumenical Councils
should be sufficient indications that for the Council Fathers the doctrine of
the Holy Trinity was identical to the appearances of Christ the Logos without
flesh to the prophets and in His human nature to the apostles. No one within
the tradition, except for Augustine, ever doubted this identity of the Logos
with this concrete Individual who revealed in Himself the invisible God of the
Old Testament to the prophets and who became man and continued this same
revelation of God's glory in and through His own human nature taken from the
Virgin.
The
controversy between the Orthodox and Arians/Eunomians was not about who the
Logos is in the Old and New Testaments, but about what the Logos is and what
His relationship is to God the Father. The Orthodox maintained that the Logos
is uncreated and unchangeable having always existed from the essence or
hypostasis of the Father who eternally and by nature causes His Son's existence
before the Ages. The Arians and Eunomians insisted that this same Angel-Logos
is a changeable creation of God who derives His existence before the Ages from
non-being not by God's nature but by His will.
Thus
the basic question was, did the prophets and apostles see in God's uncreated
glory (Orthodox and Arians) or created energy (Eunomians) an uncreated or a
created Logos, a Logos who is God by nature and has therefore all the energies
and powers of God by nature or a God by grace, who has some but not all the
energies of God the Father and then only by grace and not by nature. Both
Orthodox and Arians/Eunomians agreed in principle that if the Logos has every
power and energy of the Father by nature then He is uncreated, if not He is
then a creature.
The
question at issue was the experiences of revelation or glorification or theosis
which God gives in His Spirit through His Logos Angel-Christ to the prophets.
apostles, and saints. These experiences or these lives of saints are recorded
primarily in the Bible but also in the post-biblical continuation of Pentecost
in the Body of Christ, the Church. Therefore, both sides appealed to the
Fathers of all ages, beginning with their lives recorded in Genesis and
extending to their own day. They could not agree on the authority of the
witnesses of their own time, but they did have a common ground of debate in the
Old Testament and the New Testament, as well as in the earlier patristic tradition.
Thus
Orthodox and heretics use both the Old and New Testaments indiscriminately in
order to prove whether the prophets and apostles saw a created or uncreated
divine hypostasis or person of Christ. The argumentation is simple. Both sides
make a list of all the powers and energies of God recorded in the Bible. They
do the same for the Angel-Logos- Only-Begotten Son. Then they compare them to
see if they are identical or not. They must not be simply similar but
identical.
Both
Orthodox and Arians fully agreed with the inherited tradition of the Old
Testament witnessed to by the apostles and saints to whom God reveals His glory
in His incarnate Son that creatures cannot know the uncreated essence of God,
and that between the uncreated and the created ex nihilo there is no similarity
whatsoever. Thus, in order to prove that the Logos is a creature, the Arians
argued that He knows neither the essence of God nor His own essence and is not
in all respects similar to God. The Orthodox argued that the Logos does know
the essence of the Father and is in every respect similar to the Father, having
all that the Father has by nature except Fatherhood or the being the cause of
the existence of the Son and the Holy Spirit.
The
Orthodox and Arians were in agreement that what God is in Himself by nature and
what He is or does by will are not identical, but they differed sharply in the
application of this distinction between the divine essence and will or energy.
Thus the Orthodox argued that God causes the existence of the Logos by nature
and the existence of creatures by will, whereas the Arians argued that both the
Logos and all other creatures are products of the divine will.
Against
these positions the Eunomians argued that the essence and uncreated energy of
God are identical, that the Logos is a product of a created energy of God, that
the Holy Spirit is the product of a created energy of the Logos and that each
created species is a product of separate or distinct created energies of the
Holy Spirit. If each species did not have its individual energy of the Holy
Spirit, there would be only one created species and not many, according to Eunomius.
Eunomius
is here actually mimicking in his own way the biblical and patristic witness to
glorification Wherein each creature partakes and each saint communes with the
Logos who is present to each by indivisibly multiplying His uncreated glory
which is in toto, and not as part to each. present to and in each, as taught by
Christ (John 14, 2-23) and experienced in Pentecost (Acts 2, 3-4) and which
bears in the Logos both the Father and the Holy Spirit. This means that there
are no unversals in God and that God sustains not only species but every single
part of existence in all its multiple forms. Thus the individual is never
sacrificed by Christ for a supposedly common good. but at the same time the
common good is the good of each individual. As a result of the mystery of the
Ascension of Christ in His own proper glory and His return to His disciples in
the Spirit of glory in Pentecost, He is now all of Him present to and in each
in the states of' illumination and glorification (theosis). For this reason
each communicant of the body and blood of Christ in the Holy Eucharist receives
not a part of Christ, but the whole human nature of Christ which since
Pentecost multiplies itself indivisibly in each member of His Body. Thus by
partaking of the eucharistic bread, which is one, and the cup, which is one,
each member of the Body of Christ receives not part but the Whole Christ and
becomes what he already is, a temple (naos) or a mansion (moni) of the Father
and the Holy Spirit in the Logos Incarnate in common with the other members of
Christ's Body.
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου