Of God and His Creatures
The Doctrine of Catholic Faith concerning the Incarnation
ACCORDING to the tradition of Catholic faith we must say that in Christ
there is one perfect divine nature, and a perfect human nature, made up
of a rational soul and human flesh; and that these two natures are
united in Christ, not by mere indwelling of the one in the other, or in
any accidental way, as a man is united with his garment, but in unity
of one person. For since Holy Scripture without any distinction
assigns the things of God to the Man Christ, and the things of the Man
Christ to God, He must be one and the same person, of whom both
varieties of attributes are predicable. But because opposite attributes
are not predicable of one and the same subject in the same respect, and
there is an opposition between the divine and human attributes that are
predicated of Christ, -- as that He is passible and impassible, dead
and immortal, and the like, -- these divine and human attributes must
be predicated of Christ in different respects. If we consider that of
which these opposite attributes are predicated, we shall find no
distinction to draw, but unity appears there. But considering that
according to which these several predications are made, there we shall
see the need of drawing a distinction.* Since
that according to which divine attributes are predicated of Christ is
different from that according to which human attributes are predicated
of Him, we must say that there are in Him two natures, unamalgamated
and unalloyed. And since that of which these human and divine
attributes are predicated is one and indivisible, we must say that
Christ is one person, and one suppositum, supporting a divine
and a human nature. Thus alone will divine attributes duly and properly
be predicated of the Man Christ, and human attributes of the Word of
God.
Thus also it appears how, though the Son is incarnate, it does not
follow that the Father or the Holy Ghost is incarnate: for the
incarnation does not have place in respect of that unity of nature
wherein in the three Persons agree, but in respect of person and
suppositum, wherein the three Persons are distinct. Thus as in
the Trinity there is a plurality of persons subsisting in one nature,
so in the mystery of the Incarnation there is one person subsisting
in a plurality of natures.
4.36 : Of the Error of Macarius of Antioch, who posited one Operation only and one Will only in Christ
4.41 : Some further Elucidation of the Incarnation