- Joined
- May 21, 2023
- Messages
- 5,402
- Reaction score
- 5,778
- Points
- 138
- Faith
- Monergist
- Country
- USA
- Marital status
- Widower
- Politics
- Conservative
John Bauer said:
However, that framing raises a serious theological concern for me. The Holy Spirit as necessary for the Son’s deity? Christ’s divine nature is not caused by the Spirit the way human nature is caused by parents. In fact, that is an inversion of classical trinitarian order. The Father is unbegotten, the Son is eternally begotten of the Father, and the Spirit proceeds from the Father (and the Son, if you accept the filioque).
The difficulty I see is that, if we press that model, it seems to entail one of three things: (a) that the Son’s divinity is contingent, (b) that the Spirit is ontologically prior to the Son, or (c) that the Spirit mediates the Son’s being. None of these would sit comfortably for a Christian—especially you, I am sure, as perspicacious as you are. The pre-incarnate Son was already fully divine, a divinity that didn’t change one iota with the incarnation.
What the Holy Spirit did, I would argue, is conceive the human nature of Christ in the womb of Mary, which the Son assumed into union with himself, his person. The Spirit is the agent of the Son’s incarnation, not the source of his deity.
John Bauer said:
The right way to say it, then, is not that Christ gets one nature from the Holy Spirit and another from Mary, but that the divine Son assumes a human nature by the Spirit from Mary, two natures that remain distinct and unmixed.
However, that framing raises a serious theological concern for me. The Holy Spirit as necessary for the Son’s deity? Christ’s divine nature is not caused by the Spirit the way human nature is caused by parents. In fact, that is an inversion of classical trinitarian order. The Father is unbegotten, the Son is eternally begotten of the Father, and the Spirit proceeds from the Father (and the Son, if you accept the filioque).
John Bauer said:The framing certainly could at least cause theological confusion. Christ's divine nature is not caused by the Spirit in the same way as our nature is caused by our parents. It is not caused at all.
The difficulty I see is that, if we press that model, it seems to entail one of three things: (a) that the Son’s divinity is contingent, (b) that the Spirit is ontologically prior to the Son, or (c) that the Spirit mediates the Son’s being. None of these would sit comfortably for a Christian—especially you, I am sure, as perspicacious as you are. The pre-incarnate Son was already fully divine, a divinity that didn’t change one iota with the incarnation.
John Bauer said:Unbalanced and poor theological understanding of God and pressing the model beyond sound theology might. I can see that and I can see a lot of people doing that, unfortunately, though those who would, probably wouldn't give it enough thought to get that far. I agree that the Holy Spirit did not make Jesus divine, but the fact that the Spirit is in the place of a natural father announces his divine nature. Having had the above pointed out, I would agree that to simply word it as Jesus gets his divine nature from the Father and his human nature from his mother, probably shouldn't be left there without expounding. It leaves it too much in horizontal terms.
So, is Mary as is mother for the sake of a human nature? Or only for the sake of the throne of David? Does his human nature come from Mary? Or is it about covenant promises being made and fulfilled?
What the Holy Spirit did, I would argue, is conceive the human nature of Christ in the womb of Mary, which the Son assumed into union with himself, his person. The Spirit is the agent of the Son’s incarnation, not the source of his deity.
John Bauer said:
The right way to say it, then, is not that Christ gets one nature from the Holy Spirit and another from Mary, but that the divine Son assumes a human nature by the Spirit from Mary, two natures that remain distinct and unmixed.
I agree. Well said for someone who started out by saying he didn't have a ready answer because he had never thought about that particular question.
I can identify with that. Hence, (and among other reasons), my considerable admiration for those old timers, who even without a word processor could write page-long sentences of cogent thought.He wasn't discarding my notion---he was thinking through it, is the way I see it. He wasn't implying that I believe or was saying that the Spirit is the source of his deity either, or I never took it that way. In fact, he said the ideas he presented that could be formed from by wording (framing) would be untenable to me. I absorb it as a reminder to self to be more precise about how I say things. One day hopefully, I will. I love thinking but consider the typing a bit of drudgery (like paperwork, details, details, details) and skip over finding all the necessary clarifying words. A bit selfish in a way since I know what I mean, how come "you" don't know what I mean?" I know exactly what I mean, I can see it like a picture, and my mind goes---"How do I say all that?" and "Why do I have to." like a spoiled child.
