Knowledge and Vision of God in Cappadocian Fathers
Anita Strezova Macquarie University, Sydney
The recurrent charges of atheism carried by the
Cappadocian fathers against the neo-Arian Eunomius, show to what extent the
Byzantine theologians of the fourth and fifth centuries were faced with the
possibility of intellectualism in the knowledge of God. The main argument
is Eunomius’s claim on the absolute intelligibility of the divine essence.
He insists on the perfect simplicity of the divine being, arguing that God’s
nature can be revealed in language and known through the concept of ungeneracy.
The idea that human discourse can describe the divine essence is the point
to which Cappadocians object. However, the inability of mind to grasp the
divine essence points to the problem of skepticism. If we are unable to understand
the mystery of God, how we will be able to understand the paradox of Christian
revelation and unravel the purpose of creation? This article explores theological
and philosophical answers for the question of knowledge and vision of God,
as proposed by Gregory of Nyssa, Basil the Great and Gregory the Theologian.
Knowledge of God
The Cappadocians are regarded as exponents of
the negative theology, and of the mystical tradition in Christianity. The
supreme antinomy of the Triune God, unknowable and knowable, incommunicable
and communicable, transcendent and immanent is the primary locus of
their apophaticism. Moreover, the negative theology of the Cappadocians is
balanced by their acute sense of the revelation of God ad extra (equally
predicated of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit). [1]
Thus, they are compelled to recognise an ineffable distinction
between the essence (ousia) and energies (energeiai)
within the uncreated God. The divine nature is eternally transcendent and
beyond man”s experience and comprehension. The energies of God, on the other
hand, are forces proper to, and inseparable from God’s essence, in which He
manifests, communicates and gives Himself to us. [2] Thus, the knowledge
and existence of God is understood by Gregory of Nyssa, Basil the Great and
Gregory the Theologian in two different modes: inside and outside the essence.
Further, the Cappadocians acknowledge two methods of understanding and experiencing
God. The first is a method of knowledge by epinoia, an intellectual
and rational approximation (a category of kataphatic knowledge). [3] It is
used to describe God in a rational realm of the created world and formulates
in language manifestations of God in His names and energies. The second is
the method of knowledge by means of direct experience. It goes beyond sense
perceptions (a category of apophaticism) towards union with
God. This constitutes a paradox where God is seen as knowable (kataphasis)
and unknowable (apophasis) at the same time.
Gregory of Nyssa agrees that
a real knowledge of God is not to be found in the created world, but was careful
not to make the cognitive knowledge, even if necessarily limited, seem unimportant.
[4] He insists on the absolute transcendence and unknowability
of the Trinity, while emphasising the reasonable accuracy of words as verbal
signifiers. [5] Thus, he does not aspire
to develop a method of apophatic theology only in the sense of private or
negative statements. [6] Instead, he recognises the need for plurality of
discourses, since neither the apophasis nor the kataphasis can
properly describe the nature of God. [7] . The main characteristic of
Gregory’s via negativa is concrete experience of theology against the
limits of language. Human comprehension becomes a method of negation, rather
than affirmation, and truth rises above (simply because it lies beyond) cognitive
knowledge. Here, one who truly loves, experiences, and knows God (to the extent
that such is humanly possible) is compelled to speak as follow: God is not
Good, Truth, Justice, and so on (these
positive affirmations limit God to categories appropriate
to human speach).
[8] God is not the opposite of these things: evil, falsehood,
and injustice, and so on. Rather, these characteristics must be refuted since
they are the products of human experience of the created universe. [9]
The notion of unknowability does not imply the impossibility
of a theoretical response to God in words and concepts. In fact, Gods attributes
can be positively designated in images and doctrines, and God is encountered
through images and stories in the realm of history. [10] The
kataphatic qualities which are affirmatively
predicated of God, such as “being”, “substance”, “life”, “power” and the like,
cannot describe ultimate realities. Instead they speak of relations and analogies
and point to the reality of God’s nature rather than describing its nature. [11] These
however, must not be absolutised as conveying an understanding of the divine
reality, but at the same time they do provide some useful clues. [12] “For we say, it may be, that the Deity is incorruptible,
or powerful, or whatever else we are accustomed to say of Him. But in each
of these terms we find a peculiar sense, fit to be understood or asserted
of the Divine nature, yet not expressing that which that nature is in its
essence”. [13] “Now the divine nature
as it is in itself, according to its essence, transcends every act of comprehensive
knowledge and cannot be approached or attained by our speculation”. [14] God is above every
name, thought or concept, not only of humans, but also of angels, and above
any linguistic expression, transcendent and incomprehensible. [15] Because the divine essence is perfectly
ungraspable and cannot be compared to anything”, [16] every idea made up
about God is essentially an idol, a false likeness, declared Gregory of Nyssa
. [17]
Gregory
identifies that one of the most important differences between the creator
and the creatures is the presence or absence of diastēma (ordinarily
translated as “interval”). The term diastema indicates the distance
in time and space, the spatial and temporal limitation separating the Creator
from all creation. The human mind with its diastemic nature is “not able to
comprehend a nature that has no dimension”. [18]
In turn, the diastemic gulf between infinite God and finite creatures, is
not just a stopping point for human knowledge of God, but is an open field
for action. [19]
Gregory
of Nyssa distinguishes between two types of names; those relating to the exterior
manifestation of God, and those relating to the interior relationship of the
Trinity (disregarding the acts of creation and redemption). [20]
These in turn can have a negative or positive signification. Of the divine
names some have the negative meaning such are “invisible”, “timeless”, ineffable”.
These terms do not indicate that God is inferior to anything or lacking in
anything, but that He is pre-eminently separated from everything that exists.
Other terms such are Essence, Intellect, and Life, have the affirmative signification
and indicate that He is the cause of all. [21]
Both the
affirmative and negative names are common to the whole Godhead. However, if
we call Him the One, Good, Spirit, Being itself, Father, God, Creator, Lord
we do so improperly. Instead of pronouncing His name, we are only using the
most exceptional names we can find. [22]
Basil often discusses the human limits involved
in studying God. He readily identified that “language is powerless to express
[even] what the mind conceives.” For him, not only divine essence is undefinable,
unnameable and unknowable but humans do not even know the essence of the ground
on which they are standing. [23] In general knowledge
of God may be beyond both the apophatic and kataphatic realms and human language
is incapable of grasping the divine nature. However, the negative theology
(apophasis) which relies on denial or negation as higher form of argumentation
and understanding” is more suitable linguistic method to designate the transcendence
of the divine essence. [24] Therefore,
Basil employed alpha privatives to say what God is not, i.e., arretos,
aidios aggenetos, athanatos, atheatos, ameres, apathes, and so on. According
to Basil, not only the divine essence alone but also created essences could
not be expressed in concepts. In regards to names, applicable to God, the
negative names tell us what God is not, forbidding the use of concepts alien
to God. The kataphatic attributes point out what must be conceived when we
think of God. They show us God as He reveals Himself to created beings.
[25] But there is not one among all the divine names expressing
what God is in essence, since all types of names are posterior to the divinity. [26] The divine names reveal
his energies which descend towards the created world, yet they do not draw
humanity closer to his inaccessible essence. God’s nature remains beyond the
human capacity for comprehension and knowledge. “The peace of God surpasses
all understanding,” asserted Basil alluding to Philippians 4, 7. [27] Yet, what can be said
about God in his being? Can human language express the antinomy of transcendental
Christian God revealing Himself in this world as creator and redeemer? [28]
The distinction between divine essence and energies
forms part of theological resource by which Basil the Great defends the transcendence
of God and the reality of God’s communication of himself to his creation. [29] The essence
of God and its properties cannot be comprehended by humans in any other ways,
except apophatically.
[30] However, it is possible to know God
in a certain fashion through the entire creation, and more through creation
of humanity.
[31] “We know the greatness of God, his power, his wisdom, his
goodness, his providence over us and the justness of His judgments, but we
do not undertake to approach near to his essence. His operations come down
to us, but His essence remains beyond our reach.”
[32]
The divine attributes are not effects foreign
to the divine essence. They are not acts exterior to God depending on His
will, like the creation of the world or acts of providence. [33] . The divine energies are natural
processions of God Himself, a mode of existence, which is proper to Him.
[34] The divine energies belong at the same time, to both
domains of theologia and oikonomia. They are eternal and an
inseparable force of the Trinity existing independently of the created act.
Yet, they display the infinite variety of loving acts of God towards the creation. [35] The divine
energies are present everywhere: in beings with or without reason, with or
without life, to a greater or lesser extent depending on the capacity of the
nature which receives them.
[36] They represent a major link among the individual substances
of the Trinity, originating in the Father, being communicated by the Son in
the Holy Spirit.
The Trinitarian divine energies themselves, which
proceed from all three divine hypostases at once, are supernatural, eternal
and uncreated. However, what energies affect and produce is a dynamic continuous
activity of the divine economy on the creation. [37] Through them, we know
the wonders of God, their beauty, the order, and the splendour of created beings. Also, we behold the magnificent
names of God: Wisdom, Life, Power, Justice, Love, Being, God and the infinity
of other names which are unknown to us.
[38]
Gregory the Theologian is a rhetorician and a
philosopher who defends Christian scholarship. However, he knows that human
comprehension has its boundaries and human reason cannot grasp the nature
of the divine. Although the purity of heart and leisure of contemplation are
preconditions for the knowledge of God, they do not lead one to
recognise His ousia. Only God’s works and acts (energeiai)
can be known, that which constitutes the hinder parts of God exposed to Moses
between the gaps in the cliff in Exodus 33:23.
[39]
Gregory
points that a critical awareness of nature, or an astute application of the
reasoning faculty, can tell us that God is, but not what he is. The nature
of God’s essence remains “unknown even to the Seraphim”. Thus, all we can
assume with any certainty is what God is not. [40]
. Everything
referred to God kataphatically, shows not the divine nature but “the things
about His nature”. [41]
Referring to Plato without naming him, Gregory
changes the famous statement from the Timaeus to emphasise
the difficulty in forming an adequate concept of God.
[42] To grasp “the whole of so great a Subject”, he claims,
is impossible and impracticable not merely to the utterly careless and ignorant,
but even to those who are exalted and who love God. The darkness of this world
and the thick covering of the flesh is an obstacle to full understanding of
God’s nature. [43] Yet, what is apprehended
of God through His salvational acts in the world,
may perhaps be expressed by language, albeit imperfectly, only by those who
are not quite deprived of their hearing, or indolent of understanding. [44]
The human beings are unable to comprehend the
whole world and to perceive the divinity. However, it is possible for them
to acquire indistinct (amudros) and weak (asthēns) vision
of God according to his attributes (ta kath autou)
[45] This does not mean that we can label Him as a separate
being who is the “cause” of goodness, being, stone, and so on. Rather, for
God to cause or create beings is to multiply Himself into the world so he
becomes “all things in all things” and therefore truly subject to all names.
However, it does not mean that God gives us information, true statements about
himself, which we could not know otherwise, but rather He reveals Himself
to us. The positive attributes “proper to God” (logoi theoprepeis)
can set someone’s mind with an answer about God at least formally and schematically, [46] while an unbroken chain
of negations leads one away from Him. [47] Nevertheless,
the reason prefers to remain speechless and silent before the Triune God,
whose essence remains “deep and unfathomable mystery.” [48] To reach
to this mystery is to become “godlike”, possessing by grace what the Holy
Trinity possesses by nature.
[49] One cannot achieve salvation on ones own initiative;
one’s salvation is rather dependent on God’s grace. [50]
Ascent to God
The noetic and onomastic quest for
God, in Cappadocian fathers, does not lead to the spirituality of escape,
or return to God through the intellect. In their theological doctrine union
with God or theosis, is the ultimate aim of the quest for knowledge of God
through apophaticism”. [51] The negations, as well
as serving to qualify positive statements about God, act as a springboard
whereby the mystic moves up with all his or her being into the living mystery
of God. [52] This is the state of
deification, of the “mingling” of human soul with Christ and the Holy Spirit, [53] of the conscious meeting
with the living God.
[54] However, the doctrine of vision and knowledge of God
no longer involves a substratum of the intellectualistic thought as it was
the case with Neoplatonism. The philosophical intellectualism is superseded
and transformed in the doctrinal synthesis crowned in the dogma of Trinity.
[55]
Gregory of Nyssa devotes special attention to
the spiritual ascent towards God. According to him, knowledge of and communion
with God, are bound and explicitly considered as identical. [56] It is union with God
that conditions knowledge of God, and not the vice versa. The infinite
and never completed character of this union with God is signified by darkness. [57] The theme
of Moses drawing closer to God in the ascent of Sinai is the favorite metaphor
for conveying the divine transcendence. [58]
For Gregory, the human person represents an image
of uncreated beauty, and as such, it must have something in it akin to the
divine goodness, which it was made to enjoy. By a “certain affinity with the
divine” mingled with human nature, God draws humanity to His own self. [59] Because God can never
be seen in himself, his image is seen in the mirror of the purified soul.
But to acquire knowledge of God, each person must undertake a spiritual journey.
The
journey of the soul is a mountain steep difficult to climb, only few people
approach its peak. [60]
The movement starts from the light, goes through the cloud into the darkness
at the peak of the mountaintop, whereby the transcendent is known through
“not knowing”. [61]
The three
ways of soul’s ascent are all interconnected, building one upon the next in
the faithful seeker’s quest for union with God.
The
first way proceeds by inference from the activities of God revealed to the
senses. It is a struggle for apatheia and love, marked by cleansing of the soul from all extraneous aspects and by restoring
the likeness of God. [62]
In fact, the mind cannot see the “place of God” in itself unless it is
raised higher than all the representations of objects. It has to be stripped
off all the passions that bind his mind to sensory matters via representation. [63]
Removing the inner chatter of sensual or earthly thoughts, the soul places
the mind in a receptive state, awaiting God. In this stage the person starts
to acquire the virtue of detachment.
The
second way is through introspection. This leads to the statement that we have
God within us by our reflection of his goodness in our own virtuous lives,
rather than through any “face-to-face vision” (anti prosōpou). [64]
This assumption is based on a fundamental Christian doctrine:
the soteriological perspective of man as created in the image and likeness
of God. As the Godhead remains within the soul, so He grants to soul the rational
facilities necessary for contemplation of God [65]
However, to gain knowledge of God and himself, the human soul needs to practice
aphairesis. In other words, it must cast off its reliance on knowledge,
and embrace the groundlessness of an “ineffable knowledge”. [66]
From now
on, the celestial journey of the soul is interiorised; the soul finds its
native land, within itself, by recovering its primitive state.
The
way of “not seeing and not knowing”, is the final stage of souls journey.
It is usually referred to as “uncovered (aperikaluptōs) vision”,
which no longer runs through the “veil of existing things”. It is a path that
goes beyond vision, beyond Theōria and beyond intelligence, to
an area where knowledge is suppressed and love alone remains or rather where
gnōsis becomes agapē. Desiring God more and more and
leading to good blessings of divine love and divine counsel under the influence
of “blessed erōs”, the soul continuously reaches out for God.
In fully shedding the senses and cognitive reason as sources of truth, the
soul finally realises its inability to grasp the ineffable and transcendent
God and simply penetrates deeper, into darkness”. [67]
The image
of the darkness is the highlight of Gregory’s spiritual theology. [68]
The soul realises the union with God is endless, the ascent to God has no
limit, the beatitude is an infinite progression. [69]
Knowledge,
according to Basil, is a “journey from man’s conscience to God”. This journey
has the image of God in man as its point of departure, and knowledge of God
as its goal. [70]
The image of God in man is the “mind”, which is not static and external. [71]
The human nous concerns the ultimate and dynamic presence of God in
man, and its primary role is to know God by means of entering a personal relationship
with Him. If the human mind is scattered outwards and muted through the senses
into the world, then it must return from its fallen position to the natural
state, claims Basil. [72]
It must not be manipulated by the influences of the world and extraneous things
through the senses. The prodigal, sinful and darkened mind has to withdraw
within itself, and of its own accord ascends to contemplating God. Guidant
by the Holy Spirit and illuminated by the uncreated Light (the state of theosis),
the nous returns within the heart. “Being God by nature, the Holy Spirit deifies
by grace those who still belong to a nature subjected to change”. [73]
Through
Him man knows God, “the like by the like”. [74]
The process of restoration and union with God,
according to Gregory the Theologian, starts with the deliverance from the
world. “To break from the world and be united with God, gaining the things
above by means of the things below, and acquiring, through goods which are
unstable and pass away, those that are stable and abide”. [75] This step involves various
forms of self denial or voluntary renunciation of the world, in order to unite
with God. In other words, a relationship with the incarnate Logos is
impossible without mortification of the flesh. For only through life in Christ
does the restoration of human nature gain meaning. One will not only cease
to be sinner or a slave; one becomes Godlike. [76] In this world, Gregory
claims, we converse with God “in a cloud” like Moses, for God has set darkness
between Himself and us. The darkness must be overcome as an obstruction to
vision of the ineffable divine Light (God). [77] “In the Fourth Theological
Oration, Gregory refers explicitly to apocatastasis and by it he
means the divinizing union of all rational creatures with God.” [78] Influenced by Origen
and Gregory of Nyssa, he believed that "human creatures would at last
attain to the perfect image of God according to which they were created." [79] This process entails
not only perfection of the individual but unifying and transforming of the
entire human race in the body of Christ. [80]
As follows, deification "is the highest stage
of the knowledge of God, when the incomprehensible God becomes comprehensible,
so far as this is possible for the human nature.” [81] Yet, union with God is
to be understood in the Christological context of salvation. It could be only
experienced through personal encounter with the Spirit of God, the deifying
energy of God.
[82] The process of transforming humanity can be misunderstood
outside the sacramental and liturgical life of the Church. Acquisition of
divine grace begins with Baptism, continues in the Eucharist
[83] and reaches fulfillment after the Resurrection of
the dead. At the end the human person will be mysteriously reconstructed and
transformed by the divine energies (dunameis) to incorruption,
glory and a spiritualised body (I Cor. 15, 44). “Whoever has been permitted
to escape from matter by reason and contemplation, and holds communion with
God, the purest Light, is blessed”, declared Gregory. His ascent from matter
is conferred by true philosophy “leading to the unity which is perceived in
the Trinity”.
[84] Gregory is predecessor of the teaching of God as light.
He also speaks about entire hierarchy of lights beginning from God the Trinity. [85]
The Trinitarian Divine light is absolutely transcendent
and is beyond everything sensible, yet it penetrates through all created world.
[86] The uncreated light manifests to the apostles at the
Transfiguration on Mount Tabor, [87] is seen during prayer
by saints, and is symbolically represented by the halo in icons. It is also
“the Light of the Age to come”.
[88] Although it was contemplated with corporeal eyes,
the “light of the Lord’s Transfiguration had no beginning and no end. Because
it belongs to the mystical theology according to apophasis, it remained uncircumscribed
(in space) and unperceived by the senses.
[89]
The event of the Transfiguration on Mount Tabor
has twofold significance, but the two aspects are in truth one. First, it
is the revelation of God, for what the disciples see is the divinity of Christ
and the light of his Godhead. Second, it is deification of man, for the human
nature assumed by Christ appeared in divine glory. [90] Gregory believed that
all existing things participate in this Divine light to a certain degree,
and to a proportionate degree they acquire spiritual knowledge of created
things.
There are other types of light, related to God’s
actions in the history of humanity.
[91] The angels, the human person, the entire Bible, the
whole life of the Church are regarded as an unceasing revelation of the Divine
light. Gregory creates special “terminology of light” which appears to be
the foundation of his entire theological teaching. [92]
God the Trinity
The doctrine of the Trinity
stands at the centre of Cappadocians’ mystical experience. As Vladimir Lossky
notes: “the Incomprehensible reveals Himself in the fact of His being incomprehensible,
for His transcendence is firmly established in the fact that God is at the
same time “both monad and triad”. [93]
The doctrine of the Trinity
locates with surgical precision the central metaphysical antinomy of the Absolute
who is at the same time, ‘One ousia or essence and Three persons or
hypostases’. [94]
The theological dogma of God as one essence or
substance (ousia) and three persons or hypostasis is formulated
by the Cappadocian Fathers. Given the circumstances in the fourth century,
they never pretend their formula is more than the best possible description
of the divine mystery. At this point, however, a ground for distinguishing
the three hypostases was found, one which leaves the ontological simplicity
of the divine essence uncompromised. God is “undivided in Three who are distinct”
(ameristos en memerismenois).
[95] What this means depends on the doctrine that each
hypostasis “inheres” in the other two, [96] the doctrine called by
the Greeks perihōrēsis and by the Latins communicatio
idiomatum. Further clarification of this Trinitarian problem will come
after the Christological issue receives initial resolution at Chalcedon in
451.
The Cappadocians never consider the “Father”,
“Son”, and “Holy Spirit” simply as names associated with various workings
of one God, but as distinct, non-interchangeable Persons within the divine
essence. As the three divine Persons share a single will and energy, they
are not three gods, that is, three divine beings, but rather one God, that
is, a single divine being. The Byzantine church has
expressed by the term homoousios the consubstantiality of the Three,
the mysterious identity of the Monad and of the Triad, and the identity of
one essence in three persons or hypostases. [Lossky, Mystical Theology, 48-49]
The term homoousios
(consubstantial) does not identify the Son with the Father hypostatically,
but only on the level of ousia. Yet the Father is not the Son or the
Spirit. The Son is not the Father or the Spirit and the Spirit is not the
Father or the Son. [97]
The Father
is distinguished as Father to the Son and Source of the Spirit. The Son is
the living, substantial image of the Father, bearing in Himself the whole
Father, in all things equal to Him, differing only by being begotten by the
Father who is the Begetter. [98]
The Holy
Spirit is the perfect and unchangeable image of the Son proceeding from the
Father and through the Son. [99]
The divinity is One, but the
Three hypostases are personal identities, irreducible to each other in their
personal being. They “possess divinity” and divinity is “in them”. [100]
Although
the divinity is one in essence, yet the hypostases are distinguished by their
personal properties from what they share with one another. [101]
These characteristics or properties are explained by distinct relations that
hypostases bear towards one another on the basis of the origins of Son and
Spirit from the unoriginate Father. On this basis the Father, the Son and
the Holy Spirit are one in all respects, except in that of not being begotten,
that of being begotten, and that of procession.
[102]
“The Father begets, being unbegotten, the Son is begotten, and is not the
Father, the Holy Spirit is not the Father or the Son but He proceeds from
the Father and it is the image of the Son”. [103]
"The terms used to describe the Son are reflective of His
qualities in relation to the Father. To be begotten of the Father is the property
of the Son alone, distinct from the property of procession proper to the Spirit.
The difference in such qualities involves no distinction of dignity, but only
of the manner of coming into being." [104]
The relation of origin between
the hypostases of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit in the Trinity is
understood in an apophatic sense. Although it is above all a negation showing
us the Father is neither the Son nor the Holy Spirit, the relation of origin
does not include the manner of the divine processions. “When we confess the
individuality of the hypostasis we dwell in the monarchy without dividing
the theology into fragments”. [105]
The recovery of eternal origin leads to discovery
of a new category. It is a category of the mutual relations (skheseis) [106] which remain unconfused, immovable,
and distinct for each hypostasis, [107]
in particularly to the hypostasis of the Father. As a cause (aitia)
and principal (arkhē) of the two other persons, the Father
is also the source of relations from whom the hypostases receive their distinct
characteristics. The Father shares with the Son and the Holy Spirit the unity
and perfection of his incomprehensible divinity in an essential identity of
nature. [108] “He derives from himself
His being, and does not derive a single quality from another. Rather, He is
Himself the beginning and cause of existence of all things both to their nature
and their mode of being”. [109] As the existence of a divine Father
implies the existence of a divine Son, so the existence of a divine Head implies
the existence of divine Reason (Logos) and divine Spirit (Pneuma).
“All then the Son and the Spirit have is from the Father, even their beings:
and unless the Father is, neither the Son nor the Spirit is.” [110]
The personal attributes of Christ are often referred
to in relation to the first person of the Holy Trinity. He is “the identical
image of the Father”, “begotten of the Father before all ages”, “the light
from light”. God the Holy Spirit is glorified together with the Father and
the Son, who eternally proceeds from the Father “through the Son” (temporal
procession). These attributes safeguard the distinction of the three hypostases
in one nature. For the Son, who is begotten of the Father before all ages,
is not the Father, but He is what the Father is. The Holy Spirit, who proceeds
from the Father, is not the Son, because there is only one Begotten Son, but
He is what the Son is. One consubstantial God in Three divine Persons: the
Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. Three are One in Godhead, and the One
is Three in properties; so that neither is the unity Sabellian, nor does the
Trinity countenance the present evil divisions (Arianism). [111]
Because of the unity in essence (homoousios)
the “indivisible, incomprehensible, unbuilt-up, non-circumscribed Trinity
is to be worshipped and revered with adoration. There is only one Godhead,
one Lordship, one dominion, one realm and dynasty, which without division
is apportioned to the Persons, and is fitted to the essence severally”. [112]
The Cappadocian fathers safeguard
the doctrine of God’s transcendence (theologia) by recognising the
Person of the Father as the source of governing authority and Head (kephalē)
of both the Son and the Holy Spirit. At the same time, they acknowledged the
notion of the “absolute hypostatic difference and of the equally absolute
essential identity of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit”. [113]
Further, they rejected the monarchianism of Arianism, which distinguished
the divine essence into “greater and smaller”, and Sabellianism, which blurred
the real distinctions between the three persons. [114]
Conclusion
Avoiding a nihilistic approach to God’s knowledge,
while responding to the extreme claims of Eunomius, the Cappadocian fathers
answer the common question for knowledge and accessibility of God. Reluctant
to accept the theological understanding as a path to God, they argue for the
infinity of God. However, to preserve God’s transcendence and avoid
creating a mental “idol”, the three Cappadocians use
simultaneously and interchangeably both apophatic and
kataphatic terminology. The word, examples, analogy, theological tradition
in both kataphatic and apophatic forms are used to reach the same goal, union
with God the Trinity.
Moreover, to defend the paradox of the transcendent
Christian God, who reveals Himself in this world as the creator and redeemer,
the Cappadocians distinguish between the essence and energies. The divine
essence signifies God’s absolute transcendence and humans will never participate
in it either in this life or in the age to come. The divine energies, in which
God comes out of Himself and reveals Himself to us, on the other hand, permeate
all creation and we humans participate in them through grace. Ultimately,
God manifests his whole being in attributes (or names) while preserving the
transcendence of his essence. This constitutes a paradox where God is seen
as knowable and unknowable.
Contrary to the mystical
intellectualism of Alexandria in which the vision and knowledge of God in His essence involves
a substratum of the intellectualistic thought according to the Neoplatonic
schema, knowledge and union with God (theosis),
is the ultimate aim of the apophatic quest according to the Cappadocian fathers.
Lead by a burning love and longing for God,
the soul goes above and beyond the perceptible and the intelligible
in absolute ignorance or unknowing (agnōsia). This promotes a
tendency towards the ever-greater plenitude, in which the theology of concepts
is transformed into contemplation and dogmas are turned into mystery. It is
a philosophy of ecstasy par excellence and standing in silence in an
attitude of wonder, love, and praise before the majesty of the transcendent
God who is incomprehensible to the human mind. God’s darkness is concealed
by the light of knowledge of existing things, while complete unknowing is
the knowledge of Him, who transcends all things.
So far as the theological interpretation of
the dogma of the Trinity is concerned, the Cappadocians succeed in overthrowing
Arianism, by distinguishing between the notions of ousia and hypostasis.
In formulating a conception of God, as three persons in one essence, they
take as their starting point not the unity of the ousia but the trinitarity
of the hypostases. This formula allows faithful to understand difficult
concepts, and approach closer to the supreme object of theologia. We
cannot know what God is, only that He is, because he reveals himself in salvational
history as Father, Son and Spirit.
Notes:
[1] Marcus Plested, The Macarian Legacy: the place of Macarius-Symeon in
the eastern Christian [Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004] 57.
[2] Vladimir Lossky, The Mystical Theology of the Eastern
Church [Cambridge: James Clarke & Co. 1973] 70.
[4] Jonah Winters, “Saying Nothing about No-Thing: Apophatic
Theology in the Classical World”, [Baha”i Library Online 1994], http://bahai-library.com/personal/jw/my.papers/apophatic.html.
[5] Emmanuel Clapsis, Orthodoxy in Conversation: Orthodox
Ecumenical Engagements [Brookline, Mass.: Holy Cross Orthodox Press, 2000]
42.
[6] L ena Karfíková, Řehoř z Nyssy:
Boží a lidská nekonečnost [Praha: Oikúmené, 1999] 186
[8] Bishop Auxentios, “The Iconic and Symbolic in Orthodox
theology”, Orthodox Christian Information Centre, at http://www.orthodoxinfo.com/general/orth_icon.aspx.
[9] Dragaz Bulzan, “Apophaticism, Postmodernism and Language:
Two Similar Cases of Theological Imbalance”, SJT, vol. 50, 3 [1997]
261-287 (268)
[10] John P. Price, “Transcendence and Images: the Apophatic
and Kataphatic Reconsidered”, SFS, no.11-12 [1990-91] 194-201
[11] Robert Brightman, "Apophatic
Theology and Divine Infinity in St. Gregory of Nyssa," Greek Orthodox
Theological Review 18 [1973] 97-114 at 101.
[12] Gregory of Nyssa, Contra Eunomium, II, 61
[13] Gregory of Nyssa, To Ablabius; ed. Philip Schaff
and Henry Wace, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Series 2:
Gregory of Nyssa [Grand Rapids, MI, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing
Company, 1980] Vol. V
[14] Gregory of Nyssa, Homily on Beatitudes,
Sermon 6, PG 44, 1269.
[15] Gregory of Nyssa; Contra
Eunomium I, PG 44, 686; also Werner
Jaeger and Hermann Langerbeck, Gregorii
Nysseni Opera: Sermones, part I, ed. Gunther Heil, Adrian van Heck, Ernest
Gebhardt, and Andreas Spira [Leiden: E. J. Brill 1967] 223.
[16] Gregory of Nyssa, De Vita
Moysis, PG 44, 377.
[17] Gregory of Nyssa, Homily on Beatitudes, PG 44,
1269A; see also Brooks Otis, Gregory of Nyssa and the Cappadocian Conception
of Time, ", Studia Patristica, 117 [1976]
327-57 at 341.
[18] Brightman, “Apophatic
theology and divine infinity” 105.
[19] P.M. Blowers, “Maximus the Confessor, Gregory of Nyssa,
and the Concept of Perpetual Progress”, VC, vol. 46 [1993] 151-171
[20] Gregory of Nyssa, Homily on Beatitudes, Sermon
6; PG 44, 1269; see also Jaeger and Langerbeck, Gregorii Nysseni Opera,
93-111
[21] John of Damascus, DFO I, 12; PG 94, 844CD
[22] Clement of Alexandria, Stromateis,
V, 12; PG 9, 116; see also Jaeger, Gregorii Nysseni Opera, 686; compare
with Raul Mortley, From Word to Silence II: The Way of Negation, Christian
and Greek [Bonn: Hanstein 1986] 187,
183
[23] Basil the Great, Adversus Eunomium
I, 12, PG 29, 540CD; compare with John F. Callahan. “Greek
philosophy and the Cappadocian cosmology”, Dumbarton Oaks Papers,
no.12 [1958] 31-55 at 49-50; and Bernard Sesboüé, Basile de Césarée: Suivi
de Eunome Apologie,
critiques G. M. de Durand and L. Doutreleau, Studie Chretiennes [Paris: Les
Éditions du Cerf 1982] 212-216
[24] M.P. Begzos, “Apophaticism in the Theology of the Eastern
Church: The Modern Critical Function of a Traditional Theory”, GTOR,
vol. 41, 4 [1996] 327-357
[25] Basil the Great, Adversus Eunomium, I, 6; PG 29, 521-4; II, 32, PG 29, 648; also Sesboüé, Basile de Césarée 182-188
[26] Vladimir Lossky, The Mystical Theology of the Eastern
Church, 33.
[27] Basil the Great, Adversus Eunomium;
I, 8; PG 29, 544A; also Sesboüé, Basile
de Césarée192-198
[28] Andrew Louth, Denys the
Areopagite, [London: Geoffrey Chapman Press 1989] 90
[29] John Baggley, Festival Icons for the Christian Year
[Crestwood:St Vladimir”s Seminary Press 2000] 63.
[30] Maximos
Aghiorgoussis, “Image as Sign (Shmei&on)
of God: Knowledge of God through the Image according to St. Basil”, GOTR,
vol. 21, 1 [Spring 1976] 19-54
[31] Basil the Great; Epistulae 234, 1; PG 32, 869;
also Thomas Hopko, “The Trinity in Cappadocians”, in Christian Spirituality: Origins to the Twelfth Century,
ed. Bernard McGinn, John Meyendorff, and Jean Leclercq [New York: Crossroad,
1989) 263-70 at 262; compare
Phillip Scaff and Henry Wace, ed. St. Basil: Letters and Selected Works, NPNF,
2nd series, vol. VIII [Michigan: , W.M.B. Eerdmans Publishing Company
1968] 274-275
[32] Basil
the Great, Epistulae 234, 1; PG 32, 869A; also C. Scouteris, “Never
as Gods: Icons and their Veneration”, SO 6 [1984] p. 6-18
[33] Maximos Aghiorgoussis, “Christian Existentialism of
the Greek Fathers: Persons, Essence, and Energies in God”, GOTR, vol.
23, 1 [Spring 1978] 15-42 (21)
[34] Aghiorgoussis, “Christian Existentialism”
21
[35] In a Letter to Amphilochios of Ikonium Basil the Great
makes a synthesis of the two aspects, when he speaks of the many facets of
knowledge of God. This knowledge is at the same time “understanding of our
creator, comprehension of His marvellous things, observance of His commandments,
and familiarity with Him”; Basil the Great, Epistulae 235, 3; PG 32,
873C
[36] Theodore, Refutation I, 12; PG 100, 344C
[37] Basil the Great, Adversus Eunomium II, 17; PG
36, 605B
[38] Clarence E. Rolt, Divine Names
and Mystical Theology, [London: S.P.C.K 1957] 20-191
[39] Constantine Scouteris, “Platonic Elements in Pseudo-Dionysius
Anti-Manichaean Ontology”, University of Athens, Department of Theology, Online
publications in English, www.cc.uoa.gr/theology/html/english/pubs/doctrsec/scouteris/04/04.htm;
[40] Gregory the Theologian, Oratio
28; PG 36, 32C, 37A
[41] Oratio 28, 17; PG 36, 48C; also Paul Gallay, ed. Grégoire
de Nazianze: Discours 27-31, [Paris: Les Éditions du Cerf 1978]
134-136
[42] Gregory the Theologian, Oratio
28, 4; PG 36, 32; also Gallay, Grégoire de Nazianze: Discours
27-31, 106-108. The Timaeus passage is 28c: ton men oun poiêtên
kai patera toude tou pantos eurein te ergon kai euronta eis panta adunaton
legein; “Now, to find the maker and father of this universe is hard enough,
and even if I succeeded, to declare him to everyone is impossible” (tr. Donald
J. Zehl).
[43] Gregory the Theologian, Oratio 28, 4; PG 36,
31; also Gallay, Grégoire de Nazianze: Discours 27-31, 106-108
[44] Constantine
Scouteris, “Platonic Elements in Pseudo-Dionysius Anti-Manichaean Ontology”,
University of Athens, Department of Theology, Online publications in English,
www.cc.uoa.gr/theology/html/english/pubs/doctrsec/scouteris/04/04.htm;
[45] Gregory the Theologian, Oratio 30, 17; PG 36,
127
[46] Gregory the Theologian; Panegyric on St. Basil
68; Oratio 31 (On the Holy Athanasius), 35; Basil the Great,
On the Holy Spirit 18; Gregory of Nyssa, Contra Eunomium,
II; De Vita Moysis, 2, 176-78
[47] Bishop A. Hilarion, “Theology and Mysticism in St Gregory
Nazianzen”, at http://en.hilarion.orthodoxia.org/6_5_1
[48] Nikephoros of Constantinople, Logos, 19; PG 100,
584
[49] Nikephoros of Constantinople, Logos
53; PG 100, 724
[50] Thomas Sadler, “Apophaticism and Early Christian Theology”,
Phronema, no. 7 [1992] 13-23.
[51] Vladimir Lossky,
The Mystical theology of the Eastern Church, (Cambridge: James
Clarke & Co. Ltd. 1973) 9.
[52] Kalistos Ware, The Orthodox
Church, ed. Timothy Were, [Penguin 1963] 63-64
[53] Macarius of Egypt, Homily 49; PG 34, 816B; see also
Russell, “Partakers of the Divine nature”, 83.
[54] Aghiorgoussis, “Christian Existentialism of the Greek
Fathers” 15-42
[55] Henry A. Wolfson, The Philosophy of The Church Fathers:
Faith, Trinity, Incarnation, x [Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1976]
347-406
[56] Constantine Scouteris, “Never as Gods: Icons and their
Veneration”, SO 6 [1984] 6-18
[57] V. Lossky, In the Image and Likeness
of God, A.R. Mowbray & Co. Ltd, The Alden Press [Oxford 1975] 38
[58] Gregory of Nyssa,, De Vita Moses, PG 44, 297-430
[59] John R. Sachs, Apocatastasis
in Patristic Theology”, Theological Studies, no. 54 [1993] 617-640;
633
[60] Gregory of Nyssa, The Life
of Moses, 157, ed. Abraham J. Malherbe and Everett Ferguson, The Life
of Moses, trans. [Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 1978] 93.
[61] Deirdre Carabine,
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The Unknown God: Negative Theology in the Platonic tradition, Plato
to Eriugena [Louvain : Peeters Press, 1955] 53.
[62] Jean Daniélou, Platonisme et Théologie Mystique:
Essai Sur la Doctrine Spirituelle de Saint Grégoire de Nysse [Paris: Editions
Montaigne, 1953] 23
[63] William Harmless and Raymond
Fitzgerald, “The Sapphire Light of the Mind: The Skemmata of Evagrius
Ponticus”, Theological Studies, vol. 62 [Sept.2001] 498-529 at 507.
[64] Gregory of Nyssa, Homily on Beatitudes, PG 44,
1269C; see also Anthony Meredith, “The Concept of Mind in Gregory of Nyssa”,
Studia Patristica XII [1975] 35-47 at 47.
[65] Gregory of Nyssa, Life of Moses, 155-158, Malherbe and Ferguson, The Life of Moses, 93-94.
[66] Carabine, The Negative
Theology in the Platonic Tradition, 245
[67] Stuart Burns, “Divine Ecstasy in Gregory of Nyssa and
Pseudo-Macarius: Flight and Intoxication”, Greek Orthodox Theological Review,
vol. 44, 1-4 [Spring 1999] 309-327
[68] Gregory of Nyssa, Life of Moses, 163
[69] Lossky, The Vision of God 74.
[70] Aghiorgoussis, “Image
as Sign (Sēmeion) of God” 21.
[71] George Bebis, “In the
Image of God: Studies in Scripture, Theology, and Community”, Greek Orthodox
Theological Review, vol. 44, 1-4 [1999] 695-7.
[73] Basil the Great, Adversus
Eunomium, III, 5; PG 29, 665BC; also
Sesboüé, Basile de Césarée, Contre Eunome 162-166.
[74] Aghiorgoussis, “Image
as Sign (Sēmeion) of God” 25.
[75] Gregory the Theologian, Logos 43, 13; PG 36,
368.
[76] Idem: Logos, 40, 8; PG 36,368.
[77] John Chryssavgis,
“The Origins of the Essence-Energies Distinction”; Phronema,
no. 5 [1990] 15-31at 25.
[78] Sachs, “Apokatastasis in Patristic Theology”
631. Gregory the Theologian; Oratio 30, 6; PG 36, 112B, 7-9.
[79] Sachs, “Apokatastasis
in Patristic Theology” 631.
[80] Paul Galley, Grégoire de Nazianze: Discours
32-37, Sources Chrétiennes 318 [Paris, 1985]
174-176; also Gregory the Theologian, Oratio
33, 9; PG 36; 225B, 12-17;
[81] Bishop A. Hilarion, “The Way Towards Deification,”
at http://en.hilarion.orthodoxia.org/6_5_10
[82] Aghiorgoussis, “Christian
Existentialism of the Greek Fathers”, 36
[83] Kenneth Parry, Depicting
the Word: Byzantine Iconophile Thought of the Eight and Ninth Centuries
[Laiden: E.J. Brill 1996]119
[84] Gregory the Theologian,
Oratio 43, 2; PG 36, 495B
[85] Paul Galley,
trans. Gregoire de Nazianze: Discours 38-40, Sources Chrétiennes
358, [Paris January 1990], idem: Discourse 40, 5, 1-21;
SC 358,204-206.
[86] Paul Galley,
trans. Gregoire de Nazianze:
Discours 27-31, 250 [Paris 1978], idem: Discourse
31, 3, 11-22; SC 250,280.
[87] Basil the Great, On Psalm 44,
5; PG 39, 400C
[88] Gregory Palamas, Triads, I,
3, 43; quoted by Kalistos Ware, “God Hidden and Revealed: The Apophatic Way
and the Essence-Energies Distinction”, ECR, vol. 7, 2 [1975] 132-145
[89] Maximus the Confessor, Ambiguorum Liber, 10;
PG 91, 1168A.
[90] John of Shanghai, Homily on the
Transfiguration, publish. Library of St. John Chrysostom [Bitola, 1926]
52-54
[91] Gregory the Theologian,
Discourse 40, 5, 1-21; SC 358,204-206.
[92] Bishop Hilarion Alfeyev, Theology and Mysticism
in St Gregory Nazianzen, http://en.hilarion.orthodoxia.org/6_5
[93] Lossky, Mystical Theology 69
[94] Maximus the Confessor, Capita Theologica et Oeconomica
200; Century II, 1; PG 90, 1125A.
[95] Gregory the Theologian, Oratio 31, 14; PG 36,
149.
[96] Basil the Great, Epistulae, 38, 8; PG 32, 340.
[97] Very soon after its establishment the Church faced the
danger of heresies and misinterpretations of her faith and experience. One
truth it had to defend and clarify was that the three persons of the Holy
Trinity are of the same substance. It expressed this truth using the Greek
term homoousios meaning “consubstantial” (St. Athanasius the Great,
in particular stood steadfastly by the term homoousios, “of one essence,”
used by the Nicene Creed). St. Basil the Great, together with St.
Gregory the Theologian and his brother, St. Gregory of Nyssa, refined the
meaning of the homousios to account more adequately for the distinct
persons of the Father and the Son. In short, they defined the homoousios
in light of the homoiousian tradition, safeguarding both the unity
of the divine nature as well as the distinct persons of the Father and the
Son.
[98] John of Damascus, Oration I, 9; PG 94, 1239
[99] Gregory the Theologian, Oratio 36,8; PG 36,141A;
see also John of Damascus, Oration III, 18-19; PG 94, 1340AC.
[100] Gregory the Theologian, Oratio 31, 41; PG 36,
149A.
[101] Theodore the Studite, Refutation III, 7CD; PG
99, 432.
[102] John of Damascus, Oration III, 18; PG 94, 1338AC.
[103] Gregory the Theologian, Oratio 39, 9; PG 36,
144A; see also John of Damascus, DFO I, 2; PG 94, 792-3
[104] John of Damascus DFO I, 8; PG 94, 811B-815B.
[105] Basil the Great, De Spiritu Sancto, cap. 45,
PG 32,149.
[106] Gregory the Theologian, Oratio 29, 16; PG 36,
96.
[107] Nikephoros of Constantinople, Logos 18, 19; PG
100, 580-81, Letter, PG 100, 181-4.
[108] Gregory the Theologian, Oratio 62; PG 36, 476B.
[109] Ps. Dionysius the Areopagite, De Divinis Nominibus
II, 7, PG 3, 645B.
[110] John of Damascus, DFO I, 8-9; PG 94, 821C, 824B, 829B.
[111] Gregory the Theologian, Oratio 31, 9; PG 36,
146A.
[112] Council of Nicaea II, Session IV, quoted by Henry R. Percival, The Seven Ecumenical Councils of the
Undivided , in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, 2nd Series, ed.
Phillip Schaff and Henry Wace, [Grand Rapids: MI, 1955] XIV, 541.
[113] Gregory the Theologian, Oratio 30, 9; PG 36,
141D-144A.
[114] Nikephoros, Logos, 18; PG 100, 581.
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