"Our earthly liturgies must be celebrations full of beauty and power: Feasts of the Father who created us—that is why the gifts of the earth play such a great part: the bread, the wine, oil and light, incense, sacred music, and splendid colors. Feasts of the Son who redeemed us—that is why we rejoice in our liberation, breathe deeply in listening to the Word, and are strengthened in eating the Eucharistic Gifts. Feasts of the Holy Spirit who lives in us—that is why there is a wealth of consolation, knowledge, courage, strength, and blessing that flows from these sacred assemblies." unknown source possibly YOUCAT Mal.1.11 For from the rising of the sun even unto the going down of the same my name shall be great among the Gentiles; and in every place incense shall be offered unto my name, and a pure offering: for my name shall be great among the heathen, saith theLord of hosts.

Friday, November 16, 2012

Incarnation--things relating to this

from comment 24 here http://www.calledtocommunion.com/2009/09/horton-on-being-made-one-flesh-with-christ/


 The incarnation is not Jesus possessing a human being or possessing a human body or possessing a human soul. The incarnation is the Logos becoming human, not through a change in the Logos, but by taking taking up a body and rational soul into His very act of existence, as I explained above. Union is not necessarily Leibnizian identity. A human being (with body and rational soul) is ipso facto a human person. The only way (if it could be) for God to make a zombie is either not to make a body, or not to make a rational soul. As soon as God joins a rational soul to a body, there is a human person; that existing being is ipso facto a human person.
from comment 30:

 Chrysostom teaches at one point (before Ephesus, of course) the following:“For by union and by conjunction God the Word and the flesh are one, not in any confused way, nor by an obliteration of the senses, but by a certain union that is indescribable and beyond understanding. . . . There was no possibility of raising [our fallen nature] again, unless He that fashioned it in the beginning should stretch His hand to it and remold it anew, by rebirth through water and the Spirit.”

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