Gregory palamas' two apodeictic treatises concerning the procession of the holy spirit
Mind, and that the spirit proceeds from another because of your ignorance concerning 'alone'?
It is said and not from him, but with him, begotten from the father, and the spirit proceeds.
Holy spirit. but those who connect or make pretexts first refute each,
Sixth inscription. since there are some who say that 'proceeds' and 'is poured forth' and
Epistle 1 to akindynos (p. 398)
of the divine sign from the heavens and the earth was shaken perceptibly. Do you see in such a sign that which proceeds not only being of the Spirit, but common to the Father, Son, and Spirit? But this procession is later-born and under time; for it says, "in the people". If "in the people", then also after the people.
We have said well, then, that "what proceeds" with respect to the Holy Spirit does not always signify the pre-eternal existence from the Father, but sometimes also the later manifestation, in which the Son will also have communion with the Father, which the divine Cyril also shows clearly, saying, "The Spirit makes the Son well up for us from His own nature." For by adding "for us," he allows us to understand the temporal nature of the bestowal. And that what springs forth for us from the Father and the Son is an energy and a gift of the divine Spirit, Joel proclaims beforehand, or rather God through him, saying not, "I will pour out my Spirit," but "I will pour out from my Spirit." For as the father Chrysostom also says, "he speaks of the part of the energy; for the Paraclete is not divided." And the chief of the apostles in many places, or rather everywhere, calls the [grace] poured out upon them at that time a gift. And again the golden theologian: "not God," he says, "but grace is poured out."
Therefore, it is not for these reasons that the Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son; for we would have (p. 332) dishonored this rather than glorified it, by ranking it with those things that have their being through the Son. Therefore, we glorify it as proceeding from the Father alone, in a unique and pre-eternal manner, just as the Son is begotten; and glorifying it thus, we glorify it together and worship it together with the Son and the Father.
And indicating this, the God-wise fathers, in the symbol of orthodoxy, brought together into one the [statement that] the Spirit proceeds from the Father and is glorified together with the Father and the Son, proclaiming and handing it down conjointly, as those who do not glorify the Holy Spirit as proceeding from the Father alone, just as indeed the Son is begotten, are not able to worship the Spirit together with them, being contemplated in His own hypostasis.
For if the procession of the Spirit were always common to them as being from them, the Spirit would be only an energy and not in a hypostasis; for only an energy is what is common to them. Therefore, He is common to them as consubstantial, but not always common to them as from both, even if now at the end of the ages He has been poured out from both, and I will add that also from Himself; for He is poured out towards us of His own authority. For it was also said prophetically to the Son, "You are my Son, today I have begotten you." But we know this begetting exists under time. What then, did not the Spirit also work together in this begetting, by which the assumed human nature of the Son was anointed at the baptism and, having been anointed, was revealed, because even before the baptism it had become co-divine, since also in the beginning the Son of God, "was incarnate of the Holy Spirit and Mary the virgin," according to what is written?
Will you say, then, that the Son was begotten before the ages from the Father and from the Spirit because of this begetting under time? But you perhaps, who by logical methods procure knowledge concerning (p. 334) God and from later events, as you yourself say, conjecture about pre-eternal realities; but you might also bring forward for us a most worthy witness, the Son Himself, saying through the prophet, "The Lord has sent me, and his Spirit"; for this is also your [view], that sending and the mode of existence are the same. And in addition to this you will also use and misinterpret the great Paul, and this willingly and with evil intent, or out of ignorance and not confessing. "For to one," he says, "through the