Fran D. Villegas FRANK J. SHEED, THEOLOGY AND SANITY, page 183: “The very heart of the doctrine of the Redemption is that the human acts of Christ were the acts of a Person who was divine… Everything that Christ did and suffered and experienced was done and suffered and experienced by one who was God. […]
Communicatio idiomatum
Communicatio idiomatum (Latin: communication of properties) is a Christological[a] concept about the interaction of deity and humanity in the person of Jesus Christ. It maintains that in view of the unity of Christ's person, his human and divine attributes and experiences might properly be referred to his other nature so that the theologian may speak of "the suffering of God".[2]
The germ of the idea is first found in Ignatius of Antioch (c. AD 100) but the development of an adequate, agreed technical vocabulary only took place in the fifth century with the First Council of Ephesus in 431 and the Council of Chalcedon twenty years later and the approval of the doctrine of the hypostatic union of the two distinct natures of Christ.[3] In the sixteenth century, the Reformed and Lutheran churches disagreed on this question.[4]
The philosopher J. G. Hamann argued that the communicatio idiomatum applies not just to Christ, but should be generalised to cover all human action: "This communicatio of divine and human idiomatum is a fundamental law and the master-key of all our knowledge and of the whole visible economy."[5]
Developments in the Patristic period
When the question as to how deity and humanity could be combined in the Saviour was investigated in depth, two schools of thought emerged: one associated with Alexandria and the other with Antioch. Alexandrian thought drew heavily on Platonism and was markedly dualist, while its biblical exegesis was mystical and allegorical.[11] Its Christology has been labelled the Word-flesh model. It took no real account of a human soul in Christ, but viewed the incarnation as the union of the Word with human flesh, thus drawing on the platonic concept of the human being as a soul which inhabited an essentially alien body. Antiochene thought was based far more on Aristotelian principles and its biblical exegesis tended to be literal and historical thus taking the genuine humanity of the Saviour very seriously. The traditional label for this second type of Christology is Word-man: the Word united himself with a complete humanity, i.e. soul plus body, which did justice to the genuinely human being described in the Gospels. The Antiochene-style Christology stresses the distinction of natures and therefore a more tightly regulated communication of properties; while the Alexandrian-type Christology underscores the unity of Jesus Christ and therefore a more complete communication of properties.[12]Ignatius of Antioch emphasised both the oneness of Christ and the reality of his two-fold mode of existence: "There is one physician, composed of flesh and spirit, generate and ingenerate, God in man, authentic life from death, from Mary and from God, first passible then impassible, Jesus Christ our Lord",[6][7] but he uses phrases like 'the blood of God', 'the suffering of my God' and 'God ... was conceived by Mary';[2] Tertullian (c. AD 200) stated that the saviour was composed of two 'substances' and the human substance was in every respect genuine. He was the first theologian to tackle the question of the relationship between them; each preserved its particular qualities but Christians observe "a twofold condition, not confused but conjoined, Jesus, in one Person at once God and man".[8][9] On the whole he referred what the one person experienced to the appropriate substance, but at times uses phrases such as "God was truly crucified, truly died".[10] thus anticipating the communicatio idiomatum.[9]
Lutheran–Reformed debate
Notes[edit]Reformed and Lutheran Christians are divided on the communicatio idiomatum. In Reformed doctrine, the divine nature and the human nature are united strictly in the person of Christ. According to his humanity, Jesus Christ remains in heaven as the bodily high priest, even while in his divine nature he is omnipresent. This coincides with the Calvinistic view of the Lord's Supper, the belief that Christ is truly present at the meal, though not substantially and particularly joined to the elements (pneumatic presence). Lutherans, on the other hand, describe a union in which the divine and the human natures share their predicates more fully. Lutheran scholastics of the 17th century called the Reformed doctrine that Christ's divine nature is outside or beyond his human nature the extra calvinisticum. They spoke of the genus maiestaticum, the view that Jesus Christ's human nature becomes "majestic", suffused with the qualities of the divine nature. Therefore, in the eucharist the human, bodily presence of Jesus Christ is "in, within, under" the elements (sacramental union).
References
- ^ McGrath, Alister E. Christian Theology. Blackwell. p. 345.
- ^ ab Kelly, J. N. D. Early Christian Doctrines. A & C Black (1965) p.143
- ^ Christie, Francis (April 1912), "Luther and Others" (PDF), The Harvard Theological Review, Cambridge University Press, 5 (2): 240–250, doi:10.1017/S001781600001347X, ISSN 0017-8160, JSTOR 1507428
- ^ Carson, Ronald (September 1975), "The Motifs of Kenosisand Imitatio in the Work of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, with an Excursus on the Communicatio Idiomatum", Journal of the American Academy of Religion, Oxford University Press, 43(3): 542–553, doi:10.1093/jaarel/xliii.3.542, ISSN 0002-7189, JSTOR 1461851
- ^ Hamann, Johann (2007), Haynes, Kenneth (ed.), Writings on Philosophy and Language, Leiden: Cambridge University Press, p. 99, ISBN 978-0-511-34139-7, retrieved 2012-12-06
- ^ Letter to the Ephesians, 7
- ^ Kelly, J. N. D. Early Christian Doctrines A & C Black (1965) p.143, quoting Eph 7,2
- ^ Contra Praxeas, 27
- ^ ab Kelly, J. N. D. Early Christian Doctrines. A & C Black (1965) pp.151,2, quoting Adv. Prax. 27 & c. Marc. 2.27
- ^ De Carne Christi, 5.2
- ^ Cross, F. L.; Livingstone, E. A., eds. (1974). "Alexandrian Theology" and "Antichene Theology". The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church (2 ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- ^ Need, Stephen (April 1995), "Language, Metaphor, and Chalcedon: A Case of Theological Double Vision", The Harvard Theological Review, Cambridge University Press, 88(2): 237–255, doi:10.1017/S0017816000030327, ISSN 0017-8160, JSTOR 1509887
- Offers a radical reinterpretation of the debates between Lutheran
- and Reformed theologians on the question of the Incarnation
- Provides close attention to the semantics and metaphysics
- adopted and/or presupposed by the various theologians
- Situates the Reformation debates in their Medieval context
Richard Cross is John A. O'Brien Professor of Philosophy. He came to Notre Dame in 2007, having been a Fellow of Oriel College in the University of Oxford from 1993 to 2007. He specializes in medieval philosophy and theology, with a particular focus on Duns Scotus. He also works on philosophy and theology in the Patristic and Reformation periods, about on the history and philosophy of disability.
Prof. Richard Cross, John A. O'Brien Professor of Philosophy, Philosophy Department, University of Notre Dame, discusses Thomas Aquinas' theory of perception in application to the question of the apprehension of God. For more information, see Paul Gavrilyuk & Sarah Coakley, eds, The Spiritual Senses: Perceiving God in Western Christianity (Cambridge University Press, 2012)
This is a clip from a question and answer podcast I recorded in which a brief explanation of differences between the Christology of the Lutheran and Reformed traditions is explained. The full podcast can be found here below on the next video:
Am listening to the Cosmic Skeptic re "Thoughts about Christianity and Jesus from the atheist position." These are the kinds of good questions which Christians must answer. Though I don't deny the observations being made I and others have used other platforms other than the (Reformed) Calvinistic Evangelical approach to God, Jesus, and the bible. I have found (process) Open and Relational Theology quite helpful here when based upon Process Theology. - re slater
https://www.christamongthedisciplines.com/
by R.E. SlaterNovember 23, 2020Please note: I write these notes to myself. They are not intended to be exact transcriptions from the speakers themselves. What I have written are not their words but my own thoughts. - resPlease note: All panelists provided textual statements for comments to attendees. These are not allowed to be publically published as they are intended to form to the moment-in-time not replicable beyond the panel discussions themselves as very specific conversations to one another in the AAR setting
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