Ahanu
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To say that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are God is mysterious. Nobody knows what Catholics are saying . . . not even those dashingly good-looking Catholics know. End of story. We can all go home now. Do I really need to continue? However, Catholics want to prove it’s not nonsense. According to Aquinas, the Trinity is not contradictory.
It might help to glance at the Incarnation. Aquinas, when discussing the Incarnation, believes for Jesus to be divine and human does not involve a contradiction, as would for something to be both a square and circle. Don’t look surprised! Physicists should know: wave/particle duality comes with the field. At the moment two languages are used. Perhaps in the future a single language will express this, but, for now, that is the way it is. In this sense Aquinas is in the same boat as physicists. He believes that, in the future, a theoretical development will allow us to see how God can be both one and three. Just because we cannot see how both can be true should not faze us.
Now we can say two things about God: God is one and there are three who are God.
The Father is God, the Son is God, the Holy Spirit is God, and all three are the same God, yet all three are not identical. Aquinas speaks of God’s activity within himself. Consider your own selves: carving, writing, and teaching, for example, are actions upon something else, but growing and understanding, for example, happens within yourself. So what about God’s act of understanding within himself? We'll return to this question shortly. For Aquinas, understanding has something to do with not being material. To understand a nature is to possess the nature immaterially. To possess the nature of a dog materially is to be a dog, but to possess the nature of a dog immaterially is to understand a dog. For Aquinas we can understand because humans are just about able to transcend our materiality. Though understanding is an act involving bodily activity which cannot take place without the body working, it is not itself an act of the body. Therefore, since God cannot be material, he cannot be non-intellectual, so he must possess understanding. We do not know what it means for God to understand, but we know God does not lack the capacity to understand. God can understand himself or form a concept of himself. When we understand a nature—for example, a dog or apple—we form a concept of it in our minds. The concept, the meaning of the word, was called the word of the mind (verbum mentis) by medievals. Back to God’s understanding. When God forms a concept of himself, it must be God. This act of God’s self-understanding involves the bringing forth of a concept (verbum mentis), bringing about a relationship between God and the concept. The language of generation, of Son and Father, now step in.
For Catholics the Father and Son do not differ. The Father generates the Son, and the Son is generated by the Father, so the only distinction is in relationship.
As a side note, in biblical biology women did not contribute to the generative process. So, since during those ancient times Christian theologians did not know of modern biology, it would make more since to talk about God the Parents rather than God the Father.
The post above come from my notes on an essay in Silence and the Word.
It might help to glance at the Incarnation. Aquinas, when discussing the Incarnation, believes for Jesus to be divine and human does not involve a contradiction, as would for something to be both a square and circle. Don’t look surprised! Physicists should know: wave/particle duality comes with the field. At the moment two languages are used. Perhaps in the future a single language will express this, but, for now, that is the way it is. In this sense Aquinas is in the same boat as physicists. He believes that, in the future, a theoretical development will allow us to see how God can be both one and three. Just because we cannot see how both can be true should not faze us.
Now we can say two things about God: God is one and there are three who are God.
The Father is God, the Son is God, the Holy Spirit is God, and all three are the same God, yet all three are not identical. Aquinas speaks of God’s activity within himself. Consider your own selves: carving, writing, and teaching, for example, are actions upon something else, but growing and understanding, for example, happens within yourself. So what about God’s act of understanding within himself? We'll return to this question shortly. For Aquinas, understanding has something to do with not being material. To understand a nature is to possess the nature immaterially. To possess the nature of a dog materially is to be a dog, but to possess the nature of a dog immaterially is to understand a dog. For Aquinas we can understand because humans are just about able to transcend our materiality. Though understanding is an act involving bodily activity which cannot take place without the body working, it is not itself an act of the body. Therefore, since God cannot be material, he cannot be non-intellectual, so he must possess understanding. We do not know what it means for God to understand, but we know God does not lack the capacity to understand. God can understand himself or form a concept of himself. When we understand a nature—for example, a dog or apple—we form a concept of it in our minds. The concept, the meaning of the word, was called the word of the mind (verbum mentis) by medievals. Back to God’s understanding. When God forms a concept of himself, it must be God. This act of God’s self-understanding involves the bringing forth of a concept (verbum mentis), bringing about a relationship between God and the concept. The language of generation, of Son and Father, now step in.
For Catholics the Father and Son do not differ. The Father generates the Son, and the Son is generated by the Father, so the only distinction is in relationship.
As a side note, in biblical biology women did not contribute to the generative process. So, since during those ancient times Christian theologians did not know of modern biology, it would make more since to talk about God the Parents rather than God the Father.
The post above come from my notes on an essay in Silence and the Word.