Book contents
- The Humility of the Eternal Son
- Current Issues in Theology
- The Humility of the Eternal Son
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Prologue to a Trilogy of Works
- Introduction
- Part I A Critical History of Kenotic Christologies and Their Antecedents:
- 1 Chalcedon and Its Legacy
- 2 Divine Kenosis as Either Depotentiation or Divestment
- 3 Divine Kenosis as Proper to the Eternal Son
- 4 The Post-Barthian Temptation
- Part II Returning to Scripture
- Part III Repairing Chalcedon
- Select Bibliography
- Names Index
- Concepts Index
1 - Chalcedon and Its Legacy
from Part I - A Critical History of Kenotic Christologies and Their Antecedents:
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 November 2021
- The Humility of the Eternal Son
- Current Issues in Theology
- The Humility of the Eternal Son
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Prologue to a Trilogy of Works
- Introduction
- Part I A Critical History of Kenotic Christologies and Their Antecedents:
- 1 Chalcedon and Its Legacy
- 2 Divine Kenosis as Either Depotentiation or Divestment
- 3 Divine Kenosis as Proper to the Eternal Son
- 4 The Post-Barthian Temptation
- Part II Returning to Scripture
- Part III Repairing Chalcedon
- Select Bibliography
- Names Index
- Concepts Index
Summary
This chapter argues that there is a logical aporia at the very heart of the Chalcedonian Definition: namely, that Jesus of Nazareth contributes nothing to the constitution of the “person,” or, said differently, that he stands in no real relation to the Logos. This aporia has its origins in a twofold historical pressure: the desire to affirm a unified subject and in Gregory of Nazianzus’ declaration that “the unassumed is the unhealed.” Throughout this chapter the historical conditions for this aporia are explored in the theologies of Origen, Apollinaris, Gregory of Nazianzus, and Cyril of Alexandria. The chapter argues that the majority of the bishops at Chalcedon followed Cyril in making the preexistent Logos as such to be the “person of the union,” leading to this aporia in the Chalcedonian Definition. The chapter ends with John of Damascus’ Christology and his solution to working with the given Chalcedonian definition.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Humility of the Eternal SonReformed Kenoticism and the Repair of Chalcedon, pp. 27 - 65Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021