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| Concerning the theandric energy. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XIX.—Concerning the theandric
energy.
When the blessed Dionysius2197
2197 Dionys.,
Epist. 4, ad Caium. | says that Christ exhibited to us some
sort of novel theandric energy2198
2198 See
Severus, Ep. 3, ad Joann. Hegum.; Anastas.,
Sinait. Hodegus, p. 240. | , he does not do
away with the natural energies by saying that one energy resulted from
the union of the divine with the human energy: for in the same
way we could speak of one new nature resulting from the union of the
divine with the human nature. For, according to the holy Fathers,
things that have one energy have also one essence. But he wished
to indicate the novel and ineffable manner in which the natural
energies of Christ manifest themselves, a manner befitting the
ineffable manner in which the natures of Christ mutually permeate one
another, and further how strange and wonderful and, in the nature of
things, unknown was His life as man2199
2199 Max., Dial.
cum Pyrrh. | , and lastly
the manner of the
mutual interchange arising from the ineffable union. For we hold
that the energies are not divided and that the natures do not energise
separately, but that each conjointly in complete community with the
other energises with its own proper energy2200
2200 Leo, Epist. 1
ad Flav. | . For the human part did not energise
merely in a human manner, for He was not mere man; nor did the divine
part energise only after the manner of God, for He was not simply God,
but He was at once God and man. For just as in the case of
natures we recognise both their union and their natural difference, so
is it also with the natural wills and energies.
Note, therefore, that in the case of our Lord Jesus
Christ, we speak sometimes of His two natures and sometimes of His one
person: and the one or the other is referred to one
conception. For the two natures are one Christ, and the one
Christ is two natures. Wherefore it is all the same whether we
say “Christ energises according to either of His natures,”
or “either nature energises in Christ in communion with the
other.” The divine nature, then, has communion with the
flesh in its energising, because it is by the good pleasure of the
divine will that the flesh is permitted to suffer and do the things
proper to itself, and because the energy of the flesh is altogether
saving, and this is an attribute not of human but of divine
energy. On the other hand the flesh has communion with the
divinity of the Word in its energising, because the divine energies are
performed, so to speak, through the organ of the body, and because He
Who energises at once as God and man is one and the same.
Further observe2201
2201 Perhaps from
Joann. Scythop., bk. viii.; cf. Niceph., C.P. Antirrh.,
III. 59. | that His
holy mind also performs its natural energies, thinking and knowing that
it is God’s mind and that it is worshipped by all creation, and
remembering the times He spent on earth and all He suffered, but it has
communion with the divinity of the Word in its energising and orders
and governs the universe, thinking and knowing and ordering not as the
mere mind of man, but as united in subsistence with God and acting as
the mind of God.
This, then, the theandric energy makes plain that
when God became man, that is when He became incarnate, both His human
energy was divine, that is deified, and not without part in His divine
energy, and His divine energy was not without part in His human energy,
but either was observed in conjunction with the other. Now this
manner of speaking is called a periphrasis, viz., when one embraces two
things in one statement2202
2202 Max., Dogm. ad
Marin., p. 43. | . For just
as in the case of the flaming sword we speak of the cut burn as one,
and the burnt cut as one, but still hold that the cut and the burn have
different energies and different natures, the burn having the nature of
fire and the cut the nature of steel, in the same way also when we
speak of one theandric energy of Christ, we understand two distinct
energies of His two natures, a divine energy belonging to His divinity,
and a human energy belonging to His humanity.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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