Alan,2024AprHowCan_I_ProveToSomeone
One way we can understand the conundrum of God understood by Catholic philosophers being the same as God understood by Old Testament writers, is that God can be in both realms of reality at once: the eternal and the temporal. In other words, the unchanging God who transcends time and space can interact with His creation, played out in time. In God's perspective, one can surmise that all is one in the 'eternal now' of His perfection. The two realms (temporal and eternal) work together in harmony, as an author who writes himself into his own novel. With the people of the Old Testament, this means God communicating with an ancient people mired in the effects of original sin. The first order of business was to wean them off the false idols of their time.
As for the Trinity, I don't know why you see it as logically necessary for there being an infinite regress of spirations of divine Persons. Consider the analogy that the Holy Spirit is the love-life between the Father and the Son as a child is the life-love between his Father and mother. As Eve proceeds from Adam's side (Genesis 2:22), a wife proceeds from her husband's heart; and the love-life between them is the child. Just like it's unreasonable to believe the child should unite with either parent to create another person, so too is it unreasonable to think the Holy Spirit would do the same with the Father or the Son. In human nature this would be called incest. Similarly, it also contradicts God's nature. The Father is the eternal Source of God. The Son is eternally begotten of Him as His Mind/Logos, and the Spirit proceeds from their union as Love-life. The nature of the family reflects God's eternal essence as Trinity.
One of the more popular definitions of 'person' in history is an individual substance of a rational nature (Boetheus). A similar definition could be a subject with intellect and will. Persons are rational and relational by nature. Humans are persons, angels are persons, and God is three Persons. Each divine Person has intellect and will and is distinct in their processions, relations, and revealed roles in the creation and salvation of the world. The universe is created by the Father, through the Son, and with the Holy Spirit. It returns to the Father, through the Son, with the Spirit.
The dogma of the Trinity is the greatest and most central mystery of Christianity. To apprehend a grasp of it, one must understand the difference between the concepts of being, nature, and person. God is one Being, has one Nature, and is three Persons. Christ as the second Person of God assuming a human nature, is one being, has two natures, and is one Person.
The Catholic encyclopedia has a good exposition of the topic. And for a simpler more condensed version, try the Catechism of the Catholic Church.
Peace and God bless,
Paul
Beneath the Surface at www.Paulmurano.com – where faith and reason meet.
|