Gregory palamas's two demonstrative treatises concerning the procession of the holy spirit
But o god of all, the sole giver and guardian of true theology and of the dogmas and words according to it, the only most monarchical trinity, not onl
For because of this, having been both taught and enlightened, they were sent, so that they might teach as they were taught, so that they might enlight
Being refuted by those who have written down the particulars of all the holy synods, and by the very agreement, from those times until now and rather
Hearing [him] begotten of the father before all ages and having the [word] alone understood and implied along with [the phrase] from the father, j
Shall we fall away from this? may you not suffer this, or rather, may you not remain incurable having suffered it for the right has already become kn
Of the father, not as being necessarily co-understood? therefore, when it is said so many times concerning the son that he is from the father and now
Of the father. but the one by adoption is not from him alone but through the son from the father, and yet is not son only, but also spirit by grace: “
But nowhere did any of the theologians say either two or three. for just as we say that each of those three adorable hypostases is god and that each o
They say, therefore, that the one is from the other. what then of seth? was he begotten from one principle, because eve was from adam, (p. 106) and ar
Differs in nothing from the hypostatic [properties] therefore also the nature from the hypostasis, so that god, according to them, is not three-hypos
And the son. therefore without the cause and beginning of the divinity conceived in the trinity therefore the son has all things of (p. 114) the fath
Understanding, and that the spirit proceeds from another, on account of your ignorance concerning the word “alone”?
If, indeed, it were possible to name these things, such as father of light or projector of the holy spirit, how would gregory, the great in theology,
Is a union of the father and the spirit. how then does the same gregory, great in theology, say, the unoriginate and the origin and that which is wit
And what of the one who exhorts both theologically and patristically in metrical verses, that if you should hear about the son and the spirit, ‘as the
An apostle: but if this, it is not a creature, but rather god, as from god and in god.” and again, “the spirit therefore is god, existing naturally in
For we have heard a little above from the one named the theologian, who said that the father is the source and origin of eternal light, but the son is
For if you say that the spirit is spoken of after the son, being enumerated, which seems to you the safer of arguments—though i would say it is no les
He brought forth the word. but what he says in the first of his books *against eunomius*, that there is a form of order not according to our arrangem
Has it been handed down to be initiated? god and father, the beginning of all things, is father of the only-begotten son, who even before being added
Of the consubstantiality of the spirit, even if the latins force the sayings, dragging their meaning into their own evil-mindedness.
Of the god-befitting and most provident dispensations we render through all things the most concise doxology and thanksgiving and remembrance not tha
Was called by none of the apostles or the evangelists, but instead of this the voice of the father was sufficient for them. and by beginning i do not
Unassailable by those who do evil and who corrupt by counterfeiting the word of truth, known to all, wise and simple alike, and always on their lips.
Immediately, but not also from the son. we have additionally shown that, since the spirit is called the mind of christ, just as also our own
It is said and not from him, but with him, who was begotten from the father, the spirit also proceeds.
Furthermore after this we speak concerning the principle, and how the latin-minded answer sophistically to those who ask them, if they say there are t
They are willing, but at those who give a hand for correction—the power of the word of truth that leads to truth—they, like some who are truly incorri
Testimonies, if not rightly understood, would be able to assist those who excuse themselves unseasonably or to deliver them from their impiety and the
With god assisting us, having refuted them, (p. 192) and as it were undermining certain foundations, we will prove the whole edifice of their impiety
“john the son of zacharias,” according to the divine evangelist luke, (p. 196) and “as the lord spoke through his holy prophets to show mercy,” zachar
But do you see how this insufflation hints at the spirit being present and effecting the renewal for the better of the human soul, which we believe is
Varieties of services, but the same lord and there are varieties of activities, but it is the same god.” the divine powers and the
Shining in part? but concerning that which is now the subject, let us see the promise: and where is the not many days hence?
Whatever the father has is mine, he receives from what is mine and will announce it for both the wealth and the gifts are common to us.
It is fitting to glorify the eternal spirit but it is necessary that those to whom the manifestation is directed also be co-eternal, and in addition,
His. after him the holy spirit was manifested, the same glories of the same nature and
He sent, having returned whence he came down. but the son is both god and has become man therefore he was sent also as man the spirit was not incarn
Being signified, but not being the in-breathing itself, as having its existence by necessity from that from which the in-breathing is and if being se
Of the relation and of the surpassing connaturality and of the incomprehensible and ineffable perichoresis, we again find and proclaim him the father,
The holy spirit? i think not, unless he clearly wishes to fight against god. but, he says, it is called the spirit of the son himself and his own. fo
And they set aside the essence and the hypostasis of the all-holy spirit. therefore, the conclusion from division of the latin hypothetical syllogism
And there by the theologians, as indicative of the hypostasis of the father, but not as the son also being a co-cause with respect to the godhead.
The holy spirit. but those who connect or make pretexts first refute each,
Opposing them or both theologians according to them? by no means. therefore we shall strike this one or those ones from the choir of the orthodox, acc
Of creatures, it is so much more magnificent for the first cause to be the origin of divinity than of creatures and to come to the creatures through a
Of the all-working god the father towards the generation and procession of the son, creator of all things and the one perfecting all things, neither t
Proceeds from the father and from me? for he was not then speaking more humbly of himself, for which reason he would have omitted this alone, conceal
Proceeds, having this as a distinctive sign of its existence in its hypostasis: to be known after the son and with him and to subsist from the father.
The discourse is concerning the economy?» and after a little: for he says here the grace that came upon the flesh for all grace was poured out into t
According to the principle of its proper cause, that is, that the son is contemplated before [the spirit] from the father, stands in the way, preventi
To ablabius, on why, when we speak of one divinity in the father and the son and the holy spirit, we are forbidden to speak of three gods, having esta
To exist, just as the holy spirit, yet causally by generation, and the holy spirit also exists causally, but not by generation.
To theologians, for the sake of greater clarity. cain was the son of adam and his only-begotten before he begat the others, but eve was a part and sh
We shall understand and take the preposition through as with, along with gregory, who is named for theology, saying, one god for us, the beginnin
God of all? but i do not speak of him as co-creating, he says, but as co-proceeding. therefore, co-proceeding, the spirit will perfect (p. 298) himsel
But, was not the mission of the word to us, which proceeded from both the father and the spirit, also essential? but the mission was not a generation
As the nature of the father and the son is one and the same. for to speak according to the divine cyril himself, as he himself writes to hermias, “the
Of the spirit as more manifest and foretold and fore-believed and the son has naturally in himself the father's own and exceptional properties, the
But that one whole. but if his energy is immeasurable, much more his essence». thus the power of the truth spoken by us conquers all things, making yo
He proclaims christ the son. and the divine cyril in his *treasures* concludes that the spirit exists naturally in the son from the father, and says t
For the spirit to proceed from those made like unto the son by grace for most particularly from the father, as from him alone having its pre-eternal
Proceeding from the father himself that is, each of them immediately and from the father alone, that is, from the very hypostasis of the father. but
Of the divine sign from the heavens and the earth was shaken sensibly. do you see in such a sign that which proceeds not only being of the spirit, but
The word of wisdom is given by the spirit, and to another the word of knowledge.” but christ also dwells in the hearts of those who are not reprobate,
Counter-inscriptions
Second inscription (p. 348) since there are some who contradict the scriptural testimonies, which declare through the son
The son alongside the spirit. do you see how the sayings of the saints are both pious and good, but when taken up by you, are evil and impious?
Sixth inscription. since there are some who say that 'proceeds' and 'is poured forth' and the
They represent the father and the son as consubstantial with the holy spirit as far as is possible for it is not possible to find a perfectly suitabl
Proper to the son and from the essence of the son, the son would also be proper to the spirit and from the essence of the spirit because of the conver
Having its hypostasis from the substance is not from the remaining hypostases, but from some one of them, namely the paternal for it is not possible
You perhaps think we should give an account for not writing more often but we think we must apologize even for writing after so long a time. and what
Testify to a creative principle? if, therefore, because it is written “the principle from the principle,” nothing prevents us from speaking of two pri
Let us clarify the power of the most monarchical principle and refute those who dogmatize two principles for the one spirit, both that they dogmatize
To the cause of the son, for he too is equally a cause of divinity, or in saying it is from the father alone, let them piously grant one principle in
To think and to call, but never demonstrative, i am far from positing. for the inscriptions of the patristic sayings do not allow us to accept this, a
Is added to it. for no one, he says, is good, except one, god, the only wise, the blessed and only potentate, who alone has immortality, dwelling
And they conclude in a most archetypal principle? what then when we make demonstrations from things that are posterior, but prior to us, of the that
(p. 428) receiving, and that it is divided, even if not in itself, for which reason also in division it remains undivided, and that even in what is di
Having also written to him to do him this favor as a messenger, that if any discourse were left to us, it should come from us not to another, but to h
For it behaves indecently and ruins with interest and, know well, forces harsher arguments from us against those who are of a firm mind), but now afte
First to barlaam (p. 444)
Shall we cast away both? and how could you declare this, sitting as an arbiter over your own affairs, and not rather force the votes, desiring at leas
As i am able, i shall make it brief, being least willing to prolong it. besides, since the one who caused the scandal has been removed from our midst,
To one who clearly lies about things so clearly written? and how could one who does not hold truth in high regard attain to the truth when discoursing
And what apology he proposes, although it is a cold one and puts forward those things of the latins which have been refuted in many places and by us o
To the subject at hand: therefore, the example is one thing and that for which it became an example is another, but it is not because it is other that
Arranging them by your own authority, of whom you intemperately accuse? and not only the living, but also those who long ago departed to heaven and ar
These things would be predicated, not universally». for the super-essential and super-good and super-wise and super-luminous, of what else could it be
So that i may refute you on your own terms and the saying of solomon may come to pass: he who digs a pit for his neighbor will fall into it. what th
To speak of demonstrations, to this i would have ascribed the demonstration, not to those things from which i syllogistically deduced it.
To have become.” what is this you are saying, o man? did those men come to be in communion with an intellectual and divine light?
Do they bear witness to this? what is this, diogenes? i trample, says diogenes, on the pride of plato. with a different pride, diogenes, plato dec
The indwelling of grace, of a wonderful kind, almost ineffable and unheard of. for what word could explain how it both pervades everything and in itse
Nor did the attendant daimonion of socrates, which he obeyed throughout his life, reveal to you, the philosopher of our time, what their illumination
But let us leave this aside but i would add, telling you, 'cast away not only the ideas, but also the theories and the falsely named lights of this m
To be knowledge, and sensation would teach. have you seen how far this demonstration is from that which is beyond demonstration? almost as much as
You bring astronomical science, that is, the geometrical necessities will become weaker than spiderwebs and will fall apart, dissolved by your most de
Being neither dialectical nor demonstrative but that they are not dialectical was very easy for me to show, by merely indicating that the premises th
He makes them out to be a wonder, as having understood the divine excellence, and having brought them forward to tell about intelligible light (p. 5
Of a discourse that has been refuted and unwillingly supports our own arguments. but if the example has been found from that very source, one ought to
Is, but that also is true, that no one has ever seen god, this is what we said, that some divine things can be contemplated, but others cannot.
May grant that knowledge is gathered through contact with intelligible things, but divine things are also beyond mind how then could there be a diale
Gathering himself as much as possible, he uses the power of arguments against us, declaring that nothing of divine matters is knowable or demonstrable
Is known by knowledge and by unknowing” for that he is and that he is one is both known and demonstrated, but what he is and what sort of one is comp
I think i should pass over. for on the one hand, no one was ignorant that nothing exists in god by participation, and on the other hand, no one has so
What is said of other essences in themselves, this also exists for god as what is said concerning him for it is not possible to be and not to be if
Knowledge of god? for that which belongs to something in itself, it is not possible (p. 554) in any way for this not to be that. what do i mean? to be
But without proof there will be none. let us then set against plato his own teachings, as he is willingly set in opposition,
May be weaker in power, and that a demonstration from fewer postulates is not simply held to be superior, but that one from more is better than it, wh
Among them who have a rational, intelligent soul, do those who have surpassed all their kin in contemplation not even have a 'shadow of a shadow' of g
Elijah, having rested his head on his knees and thus having gathered his mind more laboriously into himself and into god, loosed that manifold drought
He transferred the doubling of the shadow from that to this, or rather, he does not even grant this to the observers of invisible things. and having s
For you yourself declare in your letters to us that a demonstrative principle and premise must be known by nature.
The universal has been synthesized for me from perceptions. what then, o philosopher? did you perceive the days and periods and eclipses that occurre
Of our piety and of his false doctrine, since even the great basil was called a tritheist by those who blasphemed against the son and the holy spirit.
Of him, even if with his lips he allegedly claims he is god. but god has, he says, energies, but they are created for every energy of god, apart f
Power and energy, from the patristic sayings put forth by us on these matters, he has gathered and composed against us, or rather against the holy fat
For all such things, passing into one another through one another, proceed towards non-being. but he who affirms that only the essence is uncreated, b
Of transcendent and most simple holiness and lordship and kingship and divinity is every good providence, beholding and sustaining the objects of its
Now barlaam proclaims ditheism, supposedly against us for it is clear that he makes this notorious for the sake of slandering the unassailable theolo
Created, because of which he began to be and ceased, but because of the divine and uncreated grace, and ever-existing beyond all nature and time from
To breathe a little, lest he become a suicide. for i heard him say in person here, that he often was in danger of bursting from helplessness, i suppo
Having purposed to obscure that choir and the wonderful harmony, having instilled no small courage in him.
his. After him the Holy Spirit was manifested, the same glories of the same nature and
itself providing to the apostles by grace the properties of the divinity, its natural and essential energies. For the kingdom of God, of which the saints receive the earnest here, as the divine Maximus says in his scholia to Thalassius, “is a participation by grace in those things that belong to God by nature; which also man, having been fashioned by God from the very beginning, received by grace”; as also the divine Cyril says in his letter to Soïmos, writing that, “God, having fashioned man, brought him forth animated, having the spiritual gifts, wisdom, justice, and all things that are essentially in God; for at the same time the Spirit placed life in the creature and divinely impressed His own characteristics”. When, therefore, you hear him say that the Holy Spirit is poured forth from both, as essentially from the Father through the Son, piously understand that he is teaching the communication of these natural powers and energies of God, but not that the divine hypostasis of the Spirit is being poured forth.
After the Son, then, the Holy Spirit was manifested through providing the same powers and energies to the worthy; so that it might at once show both itself as subsisting in itself, and, having made the disciples wise and clothed them with spiritual power, it might both make them understand and preach to all through them the proclamations of the Savior, through which it too is proclaimed—not after the (p. 222) Son in existence, but with the Son, nor as the Son, but as subsisting in a unique manner from the Father alone, being naturally united to him and to the Son indivisibly and eternally. And why the Spirit was not immediately after the Father, although it too is immediately from the Father, but the Son was manifested first to the world, and why the theologians represent the things of the Spirit as from the Son, we have given the reasons in the preceding discourse.
But since the works of the tri-hypostatic divinity are common, and one of the works is the manifestation, for this reason it both comes to us from itself and is sent from the Father and the Son, by whom that which is manifested also from itself is manifested, just as the Son was before it. Therefore, the Holy Spirit is manifested as being sent also from the Son, but it does not proceed. If this is not so, and the mission and the sending forth according to it are not a manifestation, but a procession; since the Son too was sent previously by it, I mean the Holy Spirit, and the Father: "For the Lord," he says, "has sent me, and his Spirit." So then, is the Son either begotten or does he proceed from the Father and the Spirit? Away with the impiety. But if someone says that the Son was sent as man, the response is near at hand: for he was sent as man; “but if also as God, what of this? Consider the good pleasure of the Father to be the mission,” Gregory, surnamed the Theologian, commands you, and I [consider] that of the Son and of the Spirit, being persuaded by him and by the truth.
Since, therefore, the Son is sent also as God and from both, the Father and the Spirit, he therefore, according to the Latins, has his generation also from both of these, if, because the Spirit is also sent from both, the Father and the Son, it proceeds from both of these. And even if they were to say that they do not consider the mission to be the procession, but infer the latter from the former (p. 224), this would surely be evidence for the generation of the Son as well.
And what is the difference between considering the mission to be generation or procession, and saying that the Spirit has the power to eternally send the Son, and the Son the Spirit? The one even now sent him later into the world; but the other [sent] the Spirit to his own disciples
αὐτοῦ. Μετ᾿ αὐτόν τό ἅγιον πεφανέρωται Πνεῦμα, τό αὐτά τῆς αὐτῆς φύσεως αὐχήματα καί
αὐτό τοῖς ἀποστόλοις κατά χάριν παρέχον, τά τῆς θεότητος ἰδιώματα, τάς φυσικάς καί οὐσιώδεις αὐτοῦ ἐνεργείας. Ἡ γάρ τοῦ Θεοῦ
βασιλεία, ἧς τούς ἀρραβῶνας οἱ ἅγιοι ἐνταῦθα κομίζονται, καθάπερ ὁ θεῖος Μάξιμος ἐν τοῖς Πρός Θαλάσσιον σχολίοις φησί, «τῶν
προσόντων τῷ Θεῷ φυσικῶς κατά χάριν ἐστί μετάδοσις˙ ἅ καί τήν ἀρχήν εὐθύς παρά Θεοῦ πλασθείς ὁ ἄνθρωπος κατά χάριν εἴληφεν»˙
ὡς καί ὁ θεῖος Κύριλλος ἐν τῇ Πρός Σόϊμον ἐπιστολῇ φησι γράφων ὅτι, «πλάσας ὁ Θεός τόν ἄνθρωπον, ψυχωθέντα παρήγαγεν, ἔχοντα
τάς πνευματικάς δωρεάς, σοφίαν, δικαιοσύνην καί ὅσα ἔνεστιν οὐσιωδῶς ἐν τῷ Θεῷ˙ ὁμοῦ γάρ καί ζωήν ἐνετίθει τό Πνεῦμα τῷ πλάσματι
καί τούς ἑαυτοῦ χαρακτῆρας θεοπρεπῶς ἐνεσήμαινεν». Ὅταν οὖν ἀκούσῃς αὐτόν ἐξ ἀμφοῖν, ὡς ἐκ Πατρός οὐσιωδῶς δι᾿ Υἱοῦ προχεόμενον,
τό Πνεῦμα τό ἅγιον λέγοντα, τήν τῶν φυσικῶν τούτων δυνάμεών τε καί ἐνεργειῶν τοῦ Θεοῦ μετάδοσιν, ἀλλά μή τήν θείαν τοῦ Πνεύματος
ὑπόστασιν προχεῖσθαι διδάσκειν, εὐσεβῶς νόμισον.
Μετά τόν Υἱόν τοίνυν διά τοῦ τάς αὐτάς δυνάμεις καί ἐνεργείας τοῖς ἀξίοις παρέχειν τό ἅγιον πεφανέρωται Πνεῦμα˙ ὡς ἄν ἅμα
τε δείξῃ καί αὐτό καθ᾿ ἑαυτό ὑφεστώς, καί τούς μαθητάς σοφίσαν καί πνευματικήν δύναμιν ἐνδύσαν, αὐτούς τε συνιέναι ποιήσῃ
καί τοῖς πᾶσι δι᾿ αὐτῶν κηρύξῃ τά τοῦ Σωτῆρος κηρύγματα, δι᾿ ὧν καί αὐτό, οὐ μετά τόν (σελ. 222) Υἱόν κατά τήν ὕπαρξιν, ἀλλά
μετά τοῦ Υἱοῦ, οὐδέ ὡς ὁ Υἱός, ἀλλ᾿ ἰδιοτρόπως ἐκ τοῦ μόνου Πατρός ὑφεστηκός κηρύττεται, συνημμένον ὄν φυσικῶς αὐτῷ καί τῷ
Υἱῷ ἀδιαστάτως τε καί ἀϊδίως. ∆ι᾿ ὅ δέ οὐκ εὐθύς τό Πνεῦμα μετά τόν Πατέρα, καίτοι καί αὐτό ἀμέσως ὄν ἐκ τοῦ Πατρός, ἀλλ᾿
ὁ Υἱός πρότερος τῷ κόσμῳ πεφανέρωται, καί δι᾿ ὅ ἐκ τοῦ Υἱοῦ τά τοῦ Πνεύματος οἱ θεολόγοι παριστῶσιν, ἐν τῷ προτέρῳ λόγῳ τάς
αἰτίας ἀποδεδώκαμεν.
Ἐπεί δέ τῆς τρισυποστάτου θεότητος τά ἔργα κοινά, ἕν δέ τῶν ἔργων καί ἡ φανέρωσις, διά τοῦτο παρ᾿ ἑαυτοῦ τε πρός ἡμᾶς ἥκει
καί παρά τοῦ Πατρός καί τοῦ Υἱοῦ πέμπεται, δι᾿ ὧν καί φανεροῦται τό καί παρ᾿ ἑαυτοῦ φανερούμενον, καθάπερ καί ὁ Υἱός πρό αὐτοῦ.
Φανεροῦται τοιγαροῦν καί ἐκ τοῦ Υἱοῦ πεμπόμενον τό Πνεῦμα τό ἅγιον, ἀλλ᾿ οὐκ ἐκπορεύεται. Εἰ δέ μή τοῦτο, μηδέ φανέρωσις ἡ
ἀποστολή καί ἡ κατ᾿ αὐτήν ἔκπεμψις, ἀλλ᾿ ἐκπόρευσις˙ ἐπεί καί ὁ Υἱός ἐπέμφθη πρότερον παρ᾿ αὐτοῦ, τοῦ ἁγίου λέγω Πνεύματος
καί τοῦ Πατρός˙ «Κύριος γάρ», φησίν, «ἐπέσταλκέ με καί τό Πνεῦμα αὐτοῦ». Ἄρ᾿ ἐκ τοῦ Πατρός καί τοῦ Πνεύματος ὁ Υἱός ἤ γεννᾶται
ἤ ἐκπορεύεται; Ἄπαγε τῆς ἀσεβείας. Εἰ δέ λέγει τις ὡς ἄνθρωπον ἀπεστάλθαι τόν Υἱόν, ἐγγύς ἡ ἀπάντησις˙ ἀπεστάλη μέν γάρ ὡς
ἄνθρωπος˙ «εἰ δέ καί ὡς Θεός, τί τοῦτο; Τήν εὐδοκίαν τοῦ Πατρός ἀποστολήν εἶναι νόμισον», Γρηγόριός σοι διακελεύεται ὁ τῆς
θεολογίας ἐπώνυμος, κἀγώ τήν τοῦ Υἱοῦ καί τοῦ Πνεύματος, ἐκείνῳ καί τῇ ἀληθείᾳ πειθόμενος.
Ἐπεί οὖν καί ὡς Θεός ὁ Υἱός ἀποστέλλεται καί παρ᾿ ἀμφοτέρων, Πατρός καί Πνεύματος, παρ᾿ ἀμφοτέρων τούτων λοιπόν κατά Λατίνους
ἔχει καί οὗτος τήν γέννησιν, εἴπερ, ὅτι καί τό Πνεῦμα παρ᾿ ἀμφοτέρων ἀποστέλλεται. Πατρός τε καί Υἱοῦ, παρ᾿ ἀμφοτέρων ἐκπορεύεται
τούτων. Κἄν εἰ λέγοιεν μή τήν ἀποστολήν νομίζειν ἐκπόρευσιν, ἀλλ᾿ ἐκ (σελ. 224) ταύτης ἐκείνην τεκμαίρεσθαι, καί τῆς τοῦ Υἱοῦ
γεννήσεως αὕτη δήπουθε ὑπάρξει τεκμήριον.
Τί δέ καί διενήνοχε τοῦ τήν ἀποστολήν νομίζειν γέννησιν ἤ ἐκπόρευσιν τό λέγειν ὡς ἀϊδίως ἔχον πέμπειν τό τε Πνεῦμα τόν Υἱόν
καί ὁ Υἱός τό Πνεῦμα; Τό μέν καί νῦν αὐτόν ὕστερον εἰς τόν κόσμον ἀπέστειλεν˙ ὁ δέ τό Πνεῦμα τοῖς οἰκείοις μαθηταῖς