RamistThomist
Puritanboard Clerk
This is from Damascene's On the Orthodox Faith. Is this an accurate way to speak of the soul's relation to the body, especially Christ's body?
The Word of God was united to flesh through the medium of mind, which stands midway between purity of God and grossness of flesh (III.6).
I am tentatively using mind as similar to soul (I Understand the nuances but other manuals speak of soul as mind+will). If this holds of Christ's hypostasis, then reasoning analogously can we posit the following for human hypostases?
I am not saying this is my position, but I am trying to flesh out (sorry) Damascene's position and see what implications it has for theological anthropology.
The Word of God was united to flesh through the medium of mind, which stands midway between purity of God and grossness of flesh (III.6).
I am tentatively using mind as similar to soul (I Understand the nuances but other manuals speak of soul as mind+will). If this holds of Christ's hypostasis, then reasoning analogously can we posit the following for human hypostases?
P1: The flesh of the body is united with spirit via the medium of the soul?
I am not saying this is my position, but I am trying to flesh out (sorry) Damascene's position and see what implications it has for theological anthropology.