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First Part [<< | >>]
Question: 33 [<< | >>]
We now consider the persons singly;
and first, the Person of the Father, concerning Whom there are four points of inquiry:
(1) Whether the Father is the Principle?
(2)
Whether the person of the Father is properly signified by this name "Father"?
(3)
Whether "Father" in God is said personally before it is said essentially?
(4) Whether it belongs to the Father alone to be unbegotten?
Index [<< | >>]
First Part [<< | >>]
Question: 33 [<< | >>]
Article: 1 [<< | >>]
Objection 1: It would seem that the
Father cannot be called the principle of the Son, or of the Holy Ghost. For principle and
cause are the same, according to the Philosopher (Metaph. iv). But we do not say that the
Father is the cause of the Son. Therefore we must not say that He is the principle of the
Son.
Objection 2: Further, a principle is
so called in relation to the thing principled. So if the Father is the principle of the
Son, it follows that the Son is a person principled, and is therefore created; which
appears false.
Objection 3: Further, the word
principle is taken from priority. But in God there is no "before" and
"after," as Athanasius says. Therefore in speaking of God we ought not to used
the term principle.
On the contrary, Augustine says (De
Trin. iv, 20), "The Father is the Principle of the whole Deity."
I answer that, The word
"principle" signifies only that whence another proceeds: since anything whence
something proceeds in any way we call a principle; and conversely. As the Father then is
the one whence another proceeds, it follows that the Father is a principle.
Reply to Objection 1: The Greeks use
the words "cause" and "principle" indifferently, when speaking of God;
whereas the Latin Doctors do not use the word "cause," but only
"principle." The reason is because "principle" is a wider term than
"cause"; as "cause" is more common than "element." For the
first term of a thing, as also the first part, is called the principle, but not the cause.
Now the wider a term is, the more suitable it is to use as regards God (Question [13],
Article [11]),
because the more special terms are, the more they determine the mode adapted to the
creature. Hence this term "cause" seems to mean diversity of substance, and
dependence of one from another; which is not implied in the word "principle."
For in all kinds of causes there is always to be found between the cause and the effect a
distance of perfection or of power: whereas we use the term "principle" even in
things which have no such difference, but have only a certain order to each other; as when
we say that a point is the principle of a line; or also when we say that the first part of
a line is the principle of a line.
Reply to Objection 2: It is the
custom with the Greeks to say that the Son and the Holy Ghost are principled. This is not,
however, the custom with our Doctors; because, although we attribute to the Father
something of authority by reason of His being the principle, still we do not attribute any
kind of subjection or inferiority to the Son, or to the Holy Ghost, to avoid any occasion
of error. In this way, Hilary says (De Trin. ix): "By authority of the Giver, the
Father is the greater; nevertheless the Son is not less to Whom oneness of nature is
give."
Reply to Objection 3: Although this
word principle, as regards its derivation, seems to be taken from priority, still it does
not signify priority, but origin. For what a term signifies, and the reason why it was
imposed, are not the same thing, as stated above (Question [13],
Article [8]).
Index [<< | >>]
First Part [<< | >>]
Question: 33 [<< | >>]
Article: 2 [<< | >>]
Objection 1: It would seem that this
name "Father" is not properly the name of a divine person. For the name
"Father" signifies relation. Moreover "person" is an individual
substance. Therefore this name "Father" is not properly a name signifying a
Person.
Objection 2: Further, a begetter is
more common than father; for every father begets; but it is not so conversely. But a more
common term is more properly applied to God, as stated above (Question [13],
Article [11]).
Therefore the more proper name of the divine person is begetter and genitor than Father.
Objection 3: Further, a metaphorical
term cannot be the proper name of anyone. But the word is by us metaphorically called
begotten, or offspring; and consequently, he of whom is the word, is metaphorically called
father. Therefore the principle of the Word in God is not properly called Father.
Objection 4: Further, everything
which is said properly of God, is said of God first before creatures. But generation
appears to apply to creatures before God; because generation seems to be truer when the
one who proceeds is distinct from the one whence it proceeds, not only by relation but
also by essence. Therefore the name "Father" taken from generation does not seem
to be the proper name of any divine person.
On the contrary, It is said (Ps. 88:27): "He shall cry out
to me: Thou art my Father."
I answer that, The proper name of any
person signifies that whereby the person is distinguished from all other persons. For as
body and soul belong to the nature of man, so to the concept of this particular man belong
this particular soul and this particular body; and by these is this particular man
distinguished from all other men. Now it is paternity which distinguishes the person of
the Father from all other persons. Hence this name "Father," whereby paternity
is signified, is the proper name of the person of the Father.
Reply to Objection 1: Among us
relation is not a subsisting person. So this name "father" among us does not
signify a person, but the relation of a person. In God, however, it is not so, as some
wrongly thought; for in God the relation signified by the name "Father" is a
subsisting person. Hence, as above explained (Question [29],
Article [4]),
this name "person" in God signifies a relation subsisting in the divine nature.
Reply to Objection 2: According to
the Philosopher (De Anima ii, text 49), a thing is denominated chiefly by its perfection,
and by its end. Now generation signifies something in process of being made, whereas
paternity signifies the complement of generation; and therefore the name
"Father" is more expressive as regards the divine person than genitor or
begettor.
Reply to Objection 3: In human nature
the word is not a subsistence, and hence is not properly called begotten or son. But the
divine Word is something subsistent in the divine nature; and hence He is properly and not
metaphorically called Son, and His principle is called Father.
Reply to Objection 4: The terms
"generation" and "paternity" like the other terms properly applied to
God, are said of God before creatures as regards the thing signified, but not as regards
the mode of signification. Hence also the Apostle says, "I bend my knee to the Father
of my Lord Jesus Christ, from whom all paternity in heaven and on earth is named" (Eph. 3:14). This is explained
thus. It is manifest that generation receives its species from the term which is the form
of the thing generated; and the nearer it is to the form of the generator, the truer and
more perfect is the generation; as univocal generation is more perfect than non-univocal,
for it belongs to the essence of a generator to generate what is like itself in form.
Hence the very fact that in the divine generation the form of the Begetter and Begotten is
numerically the same, whereas in creatures it is not numerically, but only specifically,
the same, shows that generation, and consequently paternity, is applied to God before
creatures. Hence the very fact that in God a distinction exists of the Begotten from the
Begetter as regards relation only, belongs to the truth of the divine generation and
paternity.
Index [<< | >>]
First Part [<< | >>]
Question: 33 [<< | >>]
Article: 3 [<< | >>]
Objection 1: It would seem that this
name "Father" is not applied to God, firstly as a personal name. For in the
intellect the common precedes the particular. But this name "Father" as a
personal name, belongs to the person of the Father; and taken in an essential sense it is
common to the whole Trinity; for we say "Our Father" to the whole Trinity.
Therefore "Father" comes first as an essential name before its personal sense.
Objection 2: Further, in things of
which the concept is the same there is no priority of predication. But paternity and
filiation seem to be of the same nature, according as a divine person is Father of the
Son, and the whole Trinity is our Father, or the creature's; since, according to Basil
(Hom. xv, De Fide), to receive is common to the creature and to the Son. Therefore
"Father" in God is not taken as an essential name before it is taken personally.
Objection 3: Further, it is not
possible to compare things which have not a common concept. But the Son is compared to the
creature by reason of filiation or generation, according to Col. 1:15: "Who is the
image of the invisible God, the first-born of every creature." Therefore paternity
taken in a personal sense is not prior to, but has the same concept as, paternity taken
essentially.
On the contrary, The eternal comes
before the temporal. But God is the Father of the Son from eternity; while He is the
Father of the creature in time. Therefore paternity in God is taken in a personal sense as
regards the Son, before it is so taken as regards the creature.
I answer that, A name is applied to
that wherein is perfectly contained its whole signification, before it is applied to that
which only partially contains it; for the latter bears the name by reason of a kind of
similitude to that which answers perfectly to the signification of the name; since all
imperfect things are taken from perfect things. Hence this name "lion" is
applied first to the animal containing the whole nature of a lion, and which is properly
so called, before it is applied to a man who shows something of a lion's nature, as
courage, or strength, or the like; and of whom it is said by way of similitude.
Now it is manifest from the
foregoing (Question [27],
Article [2];
Question [28],
Article [4]),
that the perfect idea of paternity and filiation is to be found in God the Father, and in
God the Son, because one is the nature and glory of the Father and the Son. But in the
creature, filiation is found in relation to God, not in a perfect manner, since the
Creator and the creature have not the same nature; but by way of a certain likeness, which
is the more perfect the nearer we approach to the true idea of filiation. For God is
called the Father of some creatures, by reason only of a trace, for instance of irrational
creatures, according to Job 38:28: "Who is the father of the rain? or who begot the
drops of dew?" Of some, namely, the rational creature (He is the Father), by reason
of the likeness of His image, according to Dt. 32:6: "Is He not thy Father, who
possessed, and made, and created thee?" And of others He is the Father by similitude
of grace, and these are also called adoptive sons, as ordained to the heritage of eternal
glory by the gift of grace which they have received, according to Rm. 8:16,17: "The
Spirit Himself gives testimony to our spirit that we are the sons of God; and if sons,
heirs also." Lastly, He is the Father of others by similitude of glory, forasmuch as
they have obtained possession of the heritage of glory, according to Rm. 5:2: "We
glory in the hope of the glory of the sons of God." Therefore it is plain that
"paternity" is applied to God first, as importing regard of one Person to
another Person, before it imports the regard of God to creatures.
Reply to Objection 1: Common terms
taken absolutely, in the order of our intelligence, come before proper terms; because they
are included in the understanding of proper terms; but not conversely. For in the concept
of the person of the Father, God is understood; but not conversely. But common terms which
import relation to the creature come after proper terms which import personal relations;
because the person proceeding in God proceeds as the principle of the production of
creatures. For as the word conceived in the mind of the artist is first understood to
proceed from the artist before the thing designed, which is produced in likeness to the
word conceived in the artist's mind; so the Son proceeds from the Father before the
creature, to which the name of filiation is applied as it participates in the likeness of
the Son, as is clear from the words of Rm. 8:29: "Whom He foreknew and predestined to
be made conformable to the image of His Son."
Reply to Objection 2: To
"receive" is said to be common to the creature and to the Son not in a univocal
sense, but according to a certain remote similitude whereby He is called the First Born of
creatures. Hence the authority quoted subjoins: "That He may be the First Born among
many brethren," after saying that some were conformed to the image of the Son of God.
But the Son of God possesses a position of singularity above others, in having by nature
what He receives, as Basil also declares (Hom. xv De Fide); hence He is called the only
begotten (Jn. 1:18): "The only begotten
Who is in the bosom of the Father, He hath declared unto us."
From this appears the Reply to the Third Objection.
Index [<< | >>]
First Part [<< | >>]
Question: 33 [<< | >>]
Article: 4 [<< | >>]
Objection 1: It would seem that it is
not proper to the Father to be unbegotten. For every property supposes something in that
of which it is the property. But "unbegotten" supposes nothing in the Father; it
only removes something. Therefore it does not signify a property of the Father.
Objection 2: Further, Unbegotten is
taken either in a privative, or in a negative sense. If in a negative sense, then whatever
is not begotten can be called unbegotten. But the Holy Ghost is not begotten; neither is
the divine essence. Therefore to be unbegotten belongs also to the essence; thus it is not
proper to the Father. But if it be taken in a privative sense, as every privation
signifies imperfection in the thing which is the subject of privation, it follows that the
Person of the Father is imperfect; which cannot be.
Objection 3: Further, in God,
"unbegotten" does not signify relation, for it is not used relatively. Therefore
it signifies substance; therefore unbegotten and begotten differ in substance. But the
Son, Who is begotten, does not differ from the Father in substance. Therefore the Father
ought not to be called unbegotten.
Objection 4: Further, property means
what belongs to one alone. Since, then, there are more than one in God proceeding from
another, there is nothing to prevent several not receiving their being from another.
Therefore the Father is not alone unbegotten.
Objection 5: Further, as the Father
is the principle of the person begotten, so is He of the person proceeding. So if by
reason of his opposition to the person begotten, it is proper to the Father to be
unbegotten it follows that it is proper to Him also to be unproceeding.
On the contrary, Hilary says (De
Trin. iv): "One is from one ---that is, the Begotten is from the Unbegotten---namely,
by the property in each one respectively of innascibility and origin."
I answer that, As in creatures there
exist a first and a secondary principle, so also in the divine Persons, in Whom there is
no before or after, is formed the principle not from a principle, Who is the Father; and
the principle from a principle, Who is the Son.
Now in things created a first
principle is known in two ways; in one way as the first "principle," by reason
of its having a relation to what proceeds from itself; in another way, inasmuch as it is a
"first" principle by reason of its not being from another. Thus therefore the
Father is known both by paternity and by common spiration, as regards the persons
proceeding from Himself. But as the principle, not from a principle He is known by the
fact that He is not from another; and this belongs to the property of innascibility,
signified by this word "begotten."
Reply to Objection 1: Some there are
who say that innascibility, signified by the word "unbegotten," as a property of
the Father, is not a negative term only, but either that it means both these things
together---namely, that the Father is from no one, and that He is the principle of others;
or that it imports universal authority, or also His plenitude as the source of all. This,
however, does not seem true, because thus innascibility would not be a property distinct
from paternity and spiration; but would include them as the proper is included in the
common. For source and authority signify in God nothing but the principle of origin. We
must therefore say with Augustine (De Trin. v, 7) that "unbegotten" imports the
negation of passive generation. For he says that "unbegotten" has the same
meaning as "not a son." Nor does it follow that "unbegotten" is not
the proper notion of the Father; for primary and simple things are notified by negations;
as, for instance, a point is defined as what has no part.
Reply to Objection 2:
"Unbegotten" is taken sometimes in a negative sense only, and in that sense
Jerome says that "the Holy Ghost is unbegotten," that is, He is not begotten.
Otherwise "unbegotten" may be taken in a kind of privation sense, but not as
implying any imperfection. For privation can be taken in many ways; in one way when a
thing has not what is naturally belongs to another, even though it is not of its own
nature to have it; as, for instance, if a stone be called a dead thing, as wanting life,
which naturally belongs to some other things. In another sense, privation is so called
when something has not what naturally belongs to some members of its genus; as for
instance when a mole is called blind. In a third sense privation means the absence of what
something ought to have; in which sense, privation imports an imperfection. In this sense,
"unbegotten" is not attributed to the Father as a privation, but it may be so
attributed in the second sense, meaning that a certain person of the divine nature is not
begotten, while some person of the same nature is begotten. In this sense the term
"unbegotten" can be applied also to the Holy Ghost. Hence to consider it as a
term proper to the Father alone, it must be further understood that the name
"unbegotten" belongs to a divine person as the principle of another person; so
that it be understood to imply negation in the genus of principle taken personally in God.
Or that there be understood in the term "unbegotten" that He is not in any way
derived from another; and not only that He is not from another by way only of generation.
In this sense the term "unbegotten" does not belong at all to the Holy Ghost,
Who is from another by procession, as a subsisting person; nor does it belong to the
divine essence, of which it may be said that it is in the Son or in the Holy Ghost from
another---namely, from the Father.
Reply to Objection 3: According to
Damascene (De Fide Orth. ii, 9), "unbegotten" in one sense signifies the same as
"uncreated"; and thus it applies to the substance, for thereby does the created
substance differ from the uncreated. In another sense it signifies what is not begotten,
and in this sense it is a relative term; just as negation is reduced to the genus of
affirmation, as "not man" is reduced to the genus of substance, and "not
white" to the genus of quality. Hence, since "begotten" implies relation in
God, "unbegotten" belongs also to relation. Thus it does not follow that the
Father unbegotten is substantially distinguished from the Son begotten; but only by
relation; that is, as the relation of Son is denied of the Father.
Reply to Objection 4: In every genus
there must be something first; so in the divine nature there must be some one principle
which is not from another, and which we call "unbegotten." To admit two
innascibles is to suppose the existence of two Gods, and two divine natures. Hence Hilary
says (De Synod.): "As there is one God, so there cannot be two innascibles." And
this especially because, did two innascibles exist, one would not be from the other, and
they would not be distinguished by relative opposition: therefore they would be
distinguished from each other by diversity of nature.
Reply to Objection 5: The property of
the Father, whereby He is not from another, is more clearly signified by the removal of
the nativity of the Son, than by the removal of the procession of the Holy Ghost; both
because the procession of the Holy Ghost has no special name, as stated above (Question [27],
Article [4],
ad 3), and because also in the order of nature it presupposes the generation of the Son.
Hence, it being denied of the Father that He is begotten, although He is the principle of
generation, it follows, as a consequence, that He does not proceed by the procession of
the Holy Ghost, because the Holy Ghost is not the principle of generation, but proceeds
from the person begotten.
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