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Pseudo-Athanasius,
The first part of A. N. Williams' book (i.e., the part on Aquinas) is interesting, because she tries to reinterpret the Scholastic teaching on grace in order to make it less problematic in connection with the doctrine of theosis and the erroneous concept of "created" grace. But the second part of her book involves a gross misunderstanding of the nature of the distinction between essence and energy, since she tries to reduce this real distinction to an epistemic quality within man, rather than see it as an ontological quality inherent to the divine being itself.
Now, let me be clear about this, because as a Byzantine Christian I do not hold that the West has to use the exact same terminology as the East, but it does have to affirm the same theological content, and "created" grace is an oxymoron, because nothing created can deify a man. It should be noted that even A. N. Williams' attempt to reinterpret "created" grace as created only in the sense that it takes on the characteristics (i.e., the limitations) of its created recipient is problematic, because the Eastern doctrine affirms the exact opposite. In other words, the Byzantine tradition holds that by the power of grace (i.e., the divine energy) man takes on the characteristics of God.
Thus, the Eastern doctrine of theosis allows one to say that man, by participating in the uncreated divine energies, becomes unoriginate, uncreated, and without beginning and end, while the Western doctrine of "created" grace makes this reality impossible.
God bless, Todd
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[. . .]
The quick and casual reader will read this and say "Aha! Western Heretics think the essence of God may be seen!" if they are not careful enough to determine how it is that Aquinas uses the term "essence." They will think "essentia" in its uses equals "ousia" in its uses and then issue denunciations. But it doesn't. If they were more eager to find common ground than to denounce, they would find that the doctrine of the beatific vision does _not_ compromise the transcendence of God, since this vision is something created within us by the grace (energies?) of God, and that God may never be circumscribed with such a vision.
[. . .] Pseudo-Athanasius, I understand what you want to do, but we cannot cover over all the differences between East and West as merely semantical in nature. That said, I do not believe that the vision of God is, as you put it, "something created within us by the grace of God." The vision of God is an uncreated and enhypostatic encounter with God, it is eternal, and it makes us eternal, uncreated, and unoriginate. There is no such thing as "created" grace, nor a "created vision" of God. To see God one must become God, not in essence, but by participating in the uncreated Light and energy that flows out from the three divine persons to man as a gift, as a real participation in God's own uncreated life and glory. God bless, Todd
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Dear Todd,
This, I find difficult to make sense of. Perhaps you can help me. I can see how the object of the vision can be uncreated, but I don't see how the subject of the vision, the one who sees, can be uncreated. My participation in God, as you say, is something that begins temporally, which is the mark of what it means to be created, isn't it?
I am created. My personal participation in divine grace is created. The divine grace isn't created. Does that make sense? Or are we talking past each other?
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To see God a man must be given what St. Gregory Palamas calls the "eyes of the Spirit," that is, he must become God, because only God can see God, only the uncreated can see the uncreated. This is a principle that goes back to the Cappadocians, who insisted against the Pneumatomachian heretics that nothing created could divinize man.
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[. . .]
I am created. My personal participation in divine grace is created. The divine grace isn't created. Does that make sense? No. In the Byzantine tradition your personal participation in divine grace is uncreated (cf. St. Gregory Palamas, The Triads, III, 1, 27-29). To be blunt, the Western teaching on "created" grace sounds Arian to an Eastern Christian. Or are we talking past each other? No, I do not think that we are "talking past each other"; instead, I think that we (or better, that East and West) disagree with each other on this issue. God bless, Todd
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Wait just a minute. Are you saying that Palamas is saying (my copy of the Triads is loaned out, so I can't check) that I participate in God from all eternity? I, personally, I, Pseudo-Athanasius, created being that I am, participate in God eternally? I'd like a quote, if you aren't too tired from typing.
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Another book that talks about man becoming unoriginate by grace was published by SVS Press back in the 1980s:
Author: Georgios I. Mantzaridis Title: The Deification of Man
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Wait just a minute. Are you saying that Palamas is saying (my copy of the Triads is loaned out, so I can't check) that I participate in God from all eternity? I, personally, I, Pseudo-Athanasius, created being that I am, participate in God eternally? I'd like a quote, if you aren't too tired from typing. He is saying that each man's gift of theosis is an unoriginate and eternal reality, because it is an uncreated and enhypostatic divine energy, and once a man participates in it, he becomes unoriginate and eternal. That is the whole point of theosis. Do you believe that man becomes uncreated by grace? God bless, Todd P.S. - Reread the text I posted from Palamas' writings where he speaks of St. Paul and Melchisedek becoming uncreated.
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Again, I ask you: is my participation in God's grace eternal? Because that would mean that I am eternal.
It looks to me that there is a confusion here between the gift and the reception of the gift. The _gift_ is eternal, but my reception of it occurs at some point in time, certainly after my birth in 1971.
The phrase "to become uncreated" seems like nonsense to me, like square circle--to "become" means not to be uncreated. Thus, I must conclude either that "uncreated" is not applied properly to the person's participation, which certainly begins in time, or it refers in some way to participation in the uncreated. I become "uncreated" in the same way my sins are forgiven, through the action/energies/grace of God.
You must not, therefore, mean "unoriginate" literally--I still am a man with an origin in 1971, even after I participate in God's divine nature. Either you do not mean it literally, or I must conclude that you think that Christians not only live forever, but _have already lived forever_, since their gift of divine grace must be uncreated and therefore eternal.
Pre-existence of the soul?
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By participation in the divine energies you have entered into eternity, you have become unoriginate (without begining and end) and uncreated. The phrase "to become uncreated" seems like nonsense to me, like square circle--to "become" means not to be uncreated. As I said, East and West disagree on the nature of grace and theosis. God bless, Todd P.S. - As far as becoming "unoriginate" is concerned, I mean it literally, because the participation in the uncreated energies is real, and not merely volitional or nominal.
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So, answer my question simply: have I always existed? You have not yet answered this question.
Did I pre-exist my birth?
Please give a yes or no answer.
By the way, I notice that the texts say "unoriginate by grace" which is not the same thing as "unoriginate absolutely."
Last edited by Pseudo-Athanasius; 03/25/07 05:21 PM.
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So, answer my question simply: have I always existed? You have not yet answered this question.
Did I pre-exist my birth? Yes and no. Yes, in that you are participating in God's uncreated energies and have become timeless in the process; and, no, as far as your created nature is concerned, because in essence you remain a creature. As I have said a number of times in this thread already, but which you apparently did not read; the deified man is both human and divine, created and uncreated, finite and infinite, and these paradoxical statements signify the mystery of what it is to participate in divinity through the uncreated divine energies. Clearly, on this issue, East and West do not agree. God bless, Todd P.S. - The change that occurs in man through the process of theosis is existential, and not essential.
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Pseudo-Athanasius,
When you die and enter into the divine eternity, do you remain bound by time?
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Yes and no. Yes, in that you are participating in God's uncreated energies and have become timeless in the process; and, no, as far as your created nature is concerned, because in essence you remain a creature. Well of course then we can just as well say that grace, which is God's participation in the life of a created soul, is created--because it exists in a a created being. And we can say that theosis is a participation in God's self knowledge, in which a creature cannot, by definition particpate fully, and therefore, cannot fully comprehend God. The beauty of this position of course is that it eliminates an unnecessary distinction between God and His Energies. What can be explained with more simplicity is more beautiful. It is interesting to note that the Ukranian Catechism for children does not find it necessary teach of a distinction between God's essence and energies. With children one tends to limit one's teaching to what is necessary and absolutely known. Finally, this comment from A.N. Williams is noteworthy: The modern figues whom the East calls theologians are no more mystics than their Western counterparts . I find Aquinas account of theosis far more in accord with the claim of what theosis is--becoming like unto God. For Aquinas, the vision is of God Himself, not his uncreated energies which are not Him. Aquinas of course, knowing that God cannot be comprehended by any creatures states: In proof of this we must consider that what is comprehended is perfectly known; and that is perfectly known which is known so far as it can be known. Thus, if anything which is capable of scientific demonstration is held only by an opinion resting on a probably proof, it is not comprehended; as, for instance, if anyone knows by scientific demonstration that a triangle has three angles equal to two right angles, he comprehends that truth; whereas if anyone accepts it as a probable opinion because wise men or most men teach it, he cannot be said to comprehend the thing itself, because he does not attain to that perfect mode of knowledge of which it is intrinsically capable. But no created intellect can attain to that perfect mode of the knowledge of the Divine intellect whereof it is intrinsically capable. Which thus appears - Everything is knowable according to its actuality. But God, whose being is infinite, as was shown above is infinitely knowable. Now no created intellect can know God infinitely. For the created intellect knows the Divine essence more or less perfectly in proportion as it receives a greater or lesser light of glory. Since therefore the created light of glory received into any created intellect cannot be infinite, it is clearly impossible for any created intellect to know God in an infinite degree. Hence it is impossible that it should comprehend God. Finally, Aquinas' view seems a little more consistent with Scripture: Beloved, we are God's children now; it does not yet appear what we shall be, but we know that when he appears we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is. 1 John 3 In Aquinas' understanding we do actually become like Him, not like His Energies. While I understand Palamas' views are consistent and logical, they seem to me to tend to take the notion of God's incomprehensibility too far--so far that he must posit, ucreated Energies which are not God. I don't find this distinction in Scripute explicity or implicitly
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I can see how the object of the vision can be uncreated, but I don't see how the subject of the vision, the one who sees, can be uncreated Psuedo-A: Consider this possibility: Now in natural things a self-subsistent thing cannot be the form of any matter, if that thing has matter as one of its parts, since it is impossible for matter to be the form of a thing. But if this self-subsistent thing be a mere form, nothing hinders it from being the form of some matter and becoming that whereby the composite itself is (literally - and becoming the whereby-it-is of the composite itself) as instanced in the soul. Now in the intellect we must take the intellect itself in potentiality as matter, and the intelligible species as form; so that the intellect actually understanding will be the composite as it were resulting from both. Hence if there be a self-subsistent thing, that has nothing in itself besides that which is intelligible, such a thing can by itself be the form whereby the intellect understands. Now a thing is intelligible in respect of its actuality and not of its potentiality (De Metaphysica ix): in proof of which an intelligible form needs to be abstracted from matter and from all the properties of matter. Therefore, since the Divine essence is pure act, it will be possible for it to be the form whereby the intellect understands: and this will be the beatific vision. Hence the Master says (Sententiarum ii,1) that the union of the body with the soul is an illustration of the blissful union of the spirit with God. Part III Q 92 art 1. Now that needs some unpacking, and i certainly don't intend to do that, but that sounds like theosis! And the subject of the vision becomes, well, in a sense, uncreated! God is the very form whereby he is known (though not comprehended)!
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