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| The Holy Spirit Twice Given by Christ. The Procession of the Holy Spirit from the Father and from the Son is Apart from Time, Nor Can He Be Called the Son of Both. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 26.—The Holy Spirit Twice Given by Christ. The
Procession of the Holy Spirit from the Father and from the Son is
Apart from Time, Nor Can He Be Called the Son of Both.
Further, in that Highest Trinity
which is God, there are no intervals of time, by which it could
be shown, or at least inquired, whether the Son was born of the
Father first and then afterwards the Holy Spirit proceeded from
both; since Holy Scripture calls Him the Spirit of both. For it is
He of whom the apostle says, “But because ye are sons, God hath
sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your hearts:”1047 and it is
He of whom the same Son says, “For it is not ye who speak, but
the Spirit of your Father who speaketh in you.”1048 And it is
proved by many other testimonies of the Divine Word, that the
Spirit, who is specially called in the Trinity the Holy Spirit, is
of the Father and of the Son: of whom likewise the Son Himself
says, “Whom I will send unto you from the Father;”1049 and in
another place, “Whom the Father will send in my name.”1050 And we are
so taught that He proceeds from both, because the Son Himself says,
He proceeds from the Father. And when He had risen from the dead,
and had appeared to His disciples, “He breathed upon them, and
said, Receive the Holy Ghost,”1051 so as to show that He proceeded
also from Himself. And Itself is that very “power that went out
from Him,” as we read in the Gospel, “and healed them all.”1052
46. But the reason why, after His
resurrection, He both gave the Holy Spirit, first on earth,1053 and
afterwards sent Him from heaven,1054 is in my judgment this: that
“love is shed abroad in our hearts,”1055 by that Gift itself, whereby we
love God and our neighbors, according to those two commandments,
“on which hang all the law and the prophets.”1056 And Jesus
Christ, in order to signify this, gave to them the Holy Spirit,
once upon earth, on account of the love of our neighbor, and a
second time from heaven, on account of the love of God. And if some
other reason may perhaps be given for this double gift of the Holy
Spirit, at any rate we ought not to doubt that the same Holy Spirit
was given when Jesus breathed upon them, of whom He by and by says,
“Go, baptize all nations in the name of the Father, and of the
Son, and of the Holy Spirit,” where this Trinity is especially
commended to us. It is therefore He who was also given from heaven
on the day of Pentecost, i.e. ten days after the Lord
ascended into heaven. How, therefore, is He not God, who gives the
Holy Spirit? Nay, how great a God is He who gives God! For no one
of His disciples gave the Holy Spirit, since they prayed that He
might come upon those upon whom they laid their hands: they did not
give Him themselves. And the Church preserves this custom even now
in the case of her rulers. Lastly, Simon Magus also, when he
offered the apostles money, does not say, “Give me also this
power, that I may give” the Holy Spirit; but, “that on
whomsoever I may lay my hands, he may receive the Holy Spirit.”
Because neither had the Scriptures said before, And Simon, seeing
that the apostles gave the Holy Spirit; but it had said, “And
Simon, seeing that the Holy Spirit was given by the laying on of
the apostles’ hands.”1057 Therefore also the Lord Jesus
Christ Himself not only gave the Holy Spirit as God, but also
received it as man, and therefore He is said to be full of grace,1058 and of the
Holy Spirit.1059 And in the
Acts of the Apostles it is more plainly written of Him, “Because
God anointed Him with the Holy Spirit.”1060 Certainly not with visible oil but
with the gift of grace which is signified by the visible ointment
wherewith the Church anoints the baptized. And Christ was certainly
not then anointed with the Holy Spirit, when He, as a dove,
descended upon Him at His baptism.1061 For at that time He deigned to
prefigure His body, i.e. His Church, in which especially the
baptized receive the Holy Spirit. But He is to be understood to
have been then anointed with that mystical and invisible unction,
when the Word of God was made flesh,1062 i.e. when human nature,
without any precedent merits of good works, was joined to God the
Word in the womb of the Virgin, so that with it it became one
person. Therefore it is that we confess Him to have been born of
the Holy Spirit and of the Virgin Mary. For it is most absurd to
believe Him to have received the Holy Spirit when He was near
thirty years old: for at that age He was baptized by John;1063 but that
He came to baptism as without any sin at all, so not without the
Holy Spirit. For if it was written of His servant and forerunner
John himself, “He shall be filled with the Holy Spirit, even from
his mother’s womb,”1064 because, although generated by his
father, yet he received the Holy Spirit when formed in the womb;
what must be understood and believed of the man Christ, of whose
flesh the very conception was not carnal, but spiritual? Both
natures, too, as well the human as the divine, are shown in that
also that is written of Him, that He received of the Father the
promise of the Holy Spirit, and shed forth the Holy Spirit:1065
seeing that He received as man, and shed forth as God. And we
indeed can receive that gift according to our small measure, but
assuredly we cannot shed it forth upon others; but, that this may
be done, we invoke over them God, by whom this is
accomplished.
47. Are we therefore able to ask
whether the Holy Spirit had already proceeded from the Father when
the Son was born, or had not yet proceeded; and when He was born,
proceeded from both, wherein there is no such thing as distinct
times: just as we have been able to ask, in a case where we do find
times, that the will proceeds from the human mind first, in order
that that may be sought which, when found, may be called offspring;
which offspring being already brought forth or born, that will is
made perfect, resting in this end, so that what had been its desire
when seeking, is its love when enjoying; which love now proceeds
from both, i.e. from the mind that begets, and from the
notion that is begotten, as if from parent and offspring? These
things it is absolutely impossible to ask in this case, where
nothing is begun in time, so as to be perfected in a time
following. Wherefore let him who can understand the generation of
the Son from the Father without time, understand also the
procession of the Holy Spirit from both without time. And let him
who can understand, in that which the Son says, “As the Father
hath life in Himself, so hath He given to the Son to have life in
Himself,”1066 not that
the Father gave life to the Son already existing without life, but
that He so begat Him apart from time, that the life which the
Father gave to the Son by begetting Him is co-eternal with the life
of the Father who gave it:1067
1067 [Says Turrettin, III. xxix. 21.
“The Father does not generate the Son either as previously
existing, for in this case there would be no need of generation;
nor yet as not yet existing, for in this case the Son would not be
eternal; but as co-existing, because he is from eternity in
the God-head.”—W.G.T.S.] | let him, I say, understand, that
as the Father has in Himself that the Holy Spirit should proceed
from Him, so has He given to the Son that the same Holy Spirit
should proceed from Him, and be both apart from time: and that the
Holy Spirit is so said to proceed from the Father as that it be
understood that His proceeding also from the Son, is a property
derived by the Son from the Father. For if the Son has of the
Father whatever He has, then certainly He has of the Father, that
the Holy Spirit proceeds also from Him. But let no one think of any
times therein which imply a sooner and a later; because these
things are not there at all. How, then, would it not be most absurd
to call Him the Son of both: when, just as generation from the
Father, without any changeableness of nature, gives to the Son
essence, without beginning of time; so procession from both,
without any changeableness of nature, gives to the Holy Spirit
essence without beginning of time? For while we do not say that the
Holy Spirit is begotten, yet we do not therefore dare to say that
He is unbegotten, lest any one suspect in this word either two
Fathers in that Trinity, or two who are not from another. For the
Father alone is not from another, and therefore He alone is called
unbegotten, not indeed in the Scriptures,1068
1068 [The term “unbegotten” is not
found in Scripture, but it is implied in the terms “begotten”
and “only-begotten,” which are found. The term “unity” is
not applied to God in Scripture, but it is implied in the term
“one” which is so applied.—W.G.T.S.] | but in the usage of disputants,
who employ such language as they can on so great a subject. And the
Son is born of the Father; and the Holy Spirit proceeds from the
Father principally, the Father giving the procession without any
interval of time, yet in common from both [Father and Son].1069
1069 [The spiration and procession of
the Holy Spirit is not by two separate acts, one of the Father, and
one of the Son—as perhaps might be inferred from Augustin’s
remark that “the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father
principally.” As Turrettin says: “The Father and Son spirate
the Spirit, not as two different essences in each of which resides
a spirative energy, but as two personal subsistences of one
essence, who concur in one act of spiration.” Institutio
III. xxxi. 6.—W.G.T.S.] | But He
would be called the Son of the Father and of the Son, if—a thing
abhorrent to the feeling of all sound minds—both had
begotten Him. Therefore the Spirit of both is not begotten of
both, but proceeds from both.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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