Wednesday, March 24, 2021

Is Jesus Christ autotheos?

Is Jesus Christ autotheos (αὐτόθεος)? Unfortunately, there is no simple answer to this question. Like many other theological terms, autotheos can be—and has been—used in more than one sense. Personally speaking, I first became aware of the term via B. B. Warfield’s reflections on John Calvin’s controversial elucidations on the doctrine of the Trinity.

Back in the fall of 2015 I published a three-part series—part 1; part 2, part 3—that delved into John Calvin's novel concepts concerning the doctrine of the Trinity, which included the denial of the communication/generation of the Son of God’s essence/substance from God the Father. To defend this view, Calvin placed a heavy emphasis on the aseity of the Son—i.e. that the Son is autotheos. An excellent introduction concerning this aspect of Calvin’s Trinitarian thought has been provided by Brannon Ellis, who wrote:

the heart of Calvin’s approach [concerning the doctrine of the Trinity] was exactly what his traditionalist opponents also embraced. Calvin and his classical critics were in agreement against all forms of antitrinitarianism, regarding the principal role of the affirmation of both ways of speaking of God through careful distinction. They did not agree, however, on the extent to which this shared conviction should be pressed when it came to one of the central claims of Calvin’s position—one that drew explicit attention to the nexus between Unity and Trinity, between the divine processions and the consubstantiality of the Father, Son, and Spirit. A constant element in all Calvin’s controversies was his assertion of the aseity (or self-existence) of God the Son, and denial of the legitimacy of this language by all his opponents—both orthodox and heterdodox.

Against antitrinitarians who more or less conflated personal and essential language, making the Son other than the one true God the Father or else indistinguishable from the Father in God, Calvin argued along with classical tradition, that, though the Son is not who the Father is, he is all that which the Father is. But, against some Trinitarians uncomfortable with his strong claim that the Son exists in and of himself, Calvin asserted in a similar manner that we must be able to say everything of the only-begotten Son that we say of the Father with respect to essence. The Son is therefore rightly confessed to be essentially self-existent, possessing deity ‘of himself’ (a se) as the one true God together with the Father and the Spirit.

Calvin’s affirmations along these lines, explicitly employing what I call autothean language, arose in 1588 in response to Valentine Gentile’s exclusive attribution of underived deity to the Father. The adjective autothean was first applied to Calvin’s views by a Roman Catholic polemicist shortly after Calvin’s death. It derives from his appropriation of Gentile’s language in order to claim against Gentile that the Son together with the Father possesses αὐτοθεὸτης (divine aseity), and therefore is αὐτοθεὸς (‘God of himself’, self-existent God). Again, however, Calvin had employed synonymous language—drawing similar criticism—from the beginning of his career. (Calvin, Classical Trinitarianism, and the Aseity of the Son, p. 2)

Calvin was not the first individual to apply autothean language to the Son. However, he was the first to use autothean language in a sense that eliminated the communication/generation of the Son’s essence from the Father; a sense that evoked the "denial of the legitimacy of this language by all his opponents—both orthodox and heterdodox." It is a sense that stands in contrast with the original Nicene Creed, which states:

We believe in one God, the Father Almighty, Maker of all things seen and unseen.  And in one Lord, Jesus Christ the Son of God, begotten of the Father, the only-begotten, that is, of the essence of the Father

One of the most proficient defenders of the Nicene Creed was the Anglican priest/theologian George Bull. In volume 2 of his Defensio Fidei Nicænæ - A Defence of the Nicene Creed, he specifically addressed the application of αὐτόθεος to the Son. His introduction to chapter 1 of Book IV is reproduced below:

THE FIRST PROPOSITION TOUCHING THE SUBORDINATION OF THE SON TO THE FATHER AS TO HIS ORIGIN AND PRINCIPLE, STATED. THIS IS ALSO CONFIRMED BY THE UNANIMOUS CONSENT OF THE ANCIENTS. IT IS SHEWN, THAT THAT EXPRESSION OF CERTAIN MODERN WRITERS, BY WHICH THEY DESIGNATE THE SON, αὐτόθεος, THAT IS, OF HIMSELF GOD, IS QUITE REPUGNANT TO THE JUDGMENT OF THE NICENE COUNCIL ITSELF, AND ALSO TO THAT OF ALL THE CATHOLIC DOCTORS, BOTH THOSE WHO WROTE BEFORE, AND THOSE WHO WROTE AFTER, THAT COUNCIL  (1852 Oxford ed., p. 556 – link to PDF)

He then writes:

...the Son has indeed the same divine nature in common with the Father, but communicated by the Father; in such sense, that is, that the Father alone hath the divine nature from Himself, in other words, from no other, but the Son from  the Father; consequently that the Father is the fountain, origin, and principle, of the Divinity which is in the Son. (Ibid. p. 557)

Bull immediately follows the above with numerous quotations from the Church Fathers that clearly support his ‘FIRST PROPOSITION’. In paragraph #7 on page 565 he begins his examination “of certain moderns, who obstinately contend that the Son may properly be called αὐτόθεος, i.e God of Himself.” He then writes:

This view is inconsistent both with the hypotheses of those who maintain it, and with catholic consent. They say,  I mean, that the Son is from God the Father, as He is Son, and not as He is God; that He received His Person, not His essence, or Divine Nature, from the Father. But this is self contradictory; for, as Petavius rightly says, "The Son of God cannot be begotten by the Father, unless He receive from Him His nature and Godhead." For what else is it ' to be begotten,' than to be sprung from another, so as to have a like nature ? he who is begotten must necessarily have [his] nature in such wise communicated by him [who begets,] as in it to be like him who begets [him.] Unless indeed Christ, in that He is the Son of God, is not God; or receives a relation only from the Father without [receiving] Godhead. I add, that in this case Person cannot be conceived of without essence, unless you lay down Person in the Godhead to be nothing else than a mere mode of existence, which is simple Sabellianism. (Ibid. p. 565)

On the next page, he cogently sums up his argument against those who maintain that the Son is ‘God of Himself’:

...if essence is communicated to the Son by generation, He plainly has His essence from the Father, not from Himself; otherwise either He would not be begotten, or He would not be begotten by another. Hence Damascene, on the Orthodox Faith, i. 10, rightly observes, "All things which the Son and the Spirit severally have, They have of the Father, even being itself." And in what way this opinion of theirs is repugnant to catholic consent, I have shewn a little before. The council of Nice itself certainly decreed that the Son is God of God; He, however, who is God of God, cannot, without manifest contradiction, be said to be God of Himself. (Ibid. p. 566- bold emphasis mine.)

In the last paragraph of chapter 1 (#10), Bull acknowledges a sense in which αὐτόθεος can legitimately be applied to the Son; note the following:

...no Catholic would deny that the Son both may and ought to be called αὐτόθεος, that is to say, true and veriest God. Hence, even Eusebius, who (if any one) acknowledged the subordination of the Son to the Father, as to His origin and principle, yet still did not hesitate to declare, that the Saviour is "worshipped, and rightly worshipped, as the genuine Son of the supreme God, and αὐτόθεος (very God)." Where by the word αὐτόθεος, is clearly meant, not one who is God of Himself, but one who is truly God; as may be gathered both from the fact that it is the Son of God, who is here called αὐτόθεος, as well as from the fact that in the same breath the Father is designated the supreme God; (Ibid. p. 569)

It is now time to answer the opening question of this post: Is Jesus Christ autotheos (αὐτόθεος)? If one defines αὐτόθεος as ‘God of Himself’, then NO; but, if one defines αὐτόθεος as ‘very God’ (i.e. God of God/God from God), then YES.


Grace and peace,

David


P.S. This post was prompted by this comment posted on March 13, 2021.

11 comments:

Rory said...

Whatever someone means.

What did Calvin mean?

If he meant "true God", then okay. What is the point of autotheos if that is the limit of what is meant? One can have "true God" without using language that seems to indicate that with or without the Father, the Son is God.

Did Calvin employ the word, autotheos?

Rory said...

Perhaps I been misunderstanding Calvin's use or non-use of the expression, autotheos, as meaning that the Son is God independent of the Father? I am happy if Calvin didn't think that.

David Waltz said...

Hi Rory,

Thanks for taking to comment. You wrote:

== What did Calvin mean?

If he meant "true God", then okay. What is the point of autotheos if that is the limit of what is meant? One can have "true God" without using language that seems to indicate that with or without the Father, the Son is God.==

Calvinists disagree amongst themselves as to what Calvin meant. Given the amount of controversy his musings on the Trinity created during his own life, I am quite surprised that he did not definitively clarify what he meant.

==Did Calvin employ the word, autotheos?==

Calvin wrote in French and Latin, and I have only read his writings in the English translations. I suspect he used the Latin and French equivalents of autotheos and autotheotēs, but I am not sure on this.

== Perhaps I been misunderstanding Calvin's use or non-use of the expression, autotheos, as meaning that the Son is God independent of the Father? I am happy if Calvin didn't think that.==

If Calvin had only meant that the Son was ‘God of God’ and ‘true God of true God’ I doubt it would have precipitated the incredible amount of controversy that has lasted for over four centuries now.

Interestingly enough, Robert Bellarmine thought Calvin was just sloppy in his Trinitarian assessments; but the highly respected Catholic theologian, Petavius (Denis Petau), adamantly disagreed, and maintained that certain aspects of Calvin’s Trinitarian thought were heretical.


Grace and peace,

David

Rory said...

Dave, hi.

It seems like perhaps Calvin was unnecessarily making sure that the Son was equal to the Father as to their relationship. The relationship of a Father and Son can, and must be unequal, if it is to make any sense why They are revealed to us as such. It doesn't affect ontology. They are equal in that respect.

And what of the Holy Ghost? Derived eternally, or autotheos?

If the Persons have to be fully equal in every sense, would it not make Three Gods? Could we speak of a Patriarch, the Father, or a Monarch, the Father? It would be an oligarchy of equals.

That's fine with me if that is what Calvin's short Bible tells him. Not bring sarcastic here. But it seems like he cut himself loose from Tradition which keeps equal ontology, with unequal relationships.

leeseykay said...

Hi David. From the link to the thread where this subject was raised.

David Waltz wrote:
"Now, it is extremely important to point out that the term autotheos can be understood in two different senses—as one who is true God, or as one who is God of himself."

I have been in a discussion elsewhere in which a few parties were implying that because Catholic theology says God is incomprehensible that Catholics are happy to be completely ignorant about God.

I think I made a little headway among some in explaining that to comprehend in the sense theology speaks about it, is to have exhaustive knowledge. Catholics do not believe that they are totally ignorant about God. There was one who was unwilling to accept, that even though I provided a dictionary definition that distinguishes between understanding and comprehensive knowledge. He would not allow such a use of the word.

This was why I said in my first post, "Whatever Calvin meant." If we want to understand what someone means, we have to accept as best we can their language as they used it. I would be interested in how those who have looked into this subject would answer this question: With Calvin's autotheos,is it difficult to know how he was using the word?

Rory

David Waltz said...

Hello again Rory,

Last night you wrote:

==If we want to understand what someone means, we have to accept as best we can their language as they used it. ==

Agreed. Yesterday, I found a good Latin edition of Calvin’s Institute’s. In Book 1, chapter 13, paragraph 23, Calvin provides his most in depth explanation of his understanding of the aseity of the Son. Below I provide the germane Latin texts, with three English translations:

>>…sequitur deitatis respectu ex se ipso esse. (Tholuck, 1.106)

…it follows that with respect to his deity his being is from himself. (Battles, 1.150)

…it follows that in respect of his Deity he is self-existent. (Allen, 1.159)

…it follows that, in regard to Deity, he is of himself. (Beveridge, 1.176)

Nam quisquis essentiatum a patre filium esse dicit, a se ipso negat esse. (Tholuck, 1.106)

For whoever says that the Son has been given his essence from the Father denies that he has being from himself. (Battles, 1.150)

For whoever asserts that the Son owes his essence to the Father, denies him to be self-existent. (Allen, 1.159)

Whosoever says that the Son was essentiated by the Father, denies his self-existence. (Beveridge, 1.177)>>

The above sure seems contrary to what the original Nicene Creed said (see quote in my opening post). What do you think?

You also wrote:

==I would be interested in how those who have looked into this subject would answer this question: With Calvin's autotheos,is it difficult to know how he was using the word?==

The three parts series I linked to in my opening post provides extensive quotes from “those who have looked into this subject”. When you have the time, I hope you can read them.


Grace and peace,

David

leeseykay said...

Hi again David,

I have no recollection of this well done series from 2105, that I have just finished. What I have seen thus far, makes it seem probable that Calvin used the term autotheos, not as Eusebius before him to mean, "truly God".

With respect St. Bellarmine, I tend to agree with Warfield and you that this marks a new epoch in the history of theology on the Trinity.

Calvin's apparent autotheos would destroy the way Catholic understand relations in the Trinity, which is subordinationst and hierarchical, while the Son and the Spirit enjoy the fullness of the Father's divinity.

What factor decided among the three self-existent Gods, perfectly equal, which "role" would be played by each?

Whatever Calvin meant may still not be certain, but those in the Reformed camp, who interpret and accept that autotheos means self-existent have taken a heretical position.

Tomorrow is Palm Sunday, and the readings from the Traditional Catholic missal begin on today to give an account of events leading up to our Lord's Passion and Death according to how many days until the Crucifixion. Today is the sixth day before.
In that account from today we see how, as His "hour" approaches, the human soul of Jesus experiences anxiety at the thought:

"If any man minister to me, him will my Father honour. Now is my soul troubled. And what shall I say? Father, save me from this hour. But for this cause I came unto this hour. Father, glorify thy name. A voice therefore came from heaven: I have both glorified it, and will glorify it again."

---Jn. 12:26b-28

What is striking about this passage is the always present concern that the Son has that His Father be recognized and glorified, and not only adored and glorified by the Son, but that all men would also follow Jesus to the Father.

After Jesus met the woman at the well, His final words to her are instructive on the mission of the Son:

"Woman, believe me, that the hour cometh, when you shall neither on this mountain, nor in Jerusalem, adore the Father. You adore that which you know not: we adore that which we know; for salvation is of the Jews. But the hour cometh, and now is, when the true adorers shall adore the Father in spirit and in truth. For the Father also seeketh such to adore him. God is a spirit; and they that adore him, must adore him in spirit and in truth."

---Jn. 4:21-24

---to be continued

leeseykay said...

---continued from above

Then the disciples catch up to Him. They knew he was experiencing bodily weariness and begged him to take some food that they had procured while Jesus rested at the well:

"In the mean time the disciples prayed him, saying: Rabbi, eat. But he said to them: I have meat to eat, which you know not. The disciples therefore said one to another: Hath any man brought him to eat? Jesus saith to them: My meat is to do the will of him that sent me, that I may perfect his work."

---Jn 4:31-34

How does such a mission make sense among three self-existent Gods. Why this concern that one of them, who is not the principle without a principle, who is not the source and fountain of all divinity, be so elevated that Jesus Christ subsisted on doing "the will of him that sent me"?

There is much to ponder. There is mystery here. But it is consistent with the knowledge that Christ is not self-existent, whereas the Father is self-existent. On earth Jesus gives us the privilege of beginning to see the inner dynamics which guide the Blessed Trinity for all eternity.

In my opinion, the use of autotheos which Reformed theology has accepted as meaning self-existence for the Son, is not simply mysterious. It is bizarre. For what reason would it be necessary to the Gods or man, that One of the Three, should be glorified, obeyed, and adored before the other Two? Nicene Orthodoxy answers this question.

A rigorous autotheos seems as arbitrary as Calvin's rigorous predestinationism without freedom of the will.

Rory

Errol Amey said...

Indeed. As chance should have it, I just came across this instance in my readings:

“the soul is nourished, and without nourishment it dies. The soul is nourished with its own proper nourishment. It is nourished with Christ himself, and without nourishment it dies. But my Savior and Lord is nourished and drinks: ‘You are the portion of my inheritance and my cup,’ [Psalm 15:5] he says to the Father. But I often neglect my nourishment, and as often as I have neglected it, in proportion to the neglect, I am either sickened or I have died. But my Savior never neglects his own nourishment, but always keeps watch and is nourished by the Father. If, hypothetically, he were not to be nourished, I do not know what would follow. But the Savior actually is nourished and always nourished by the Father.”
(Origen, ca. 251, Homilies on Psalm 15 1:9, in Fathers of the Church 141:55)

David Waltz said...

Hi Rory,

Hope you are having a blessed Palm Sunday.

It is great to hear that you were able to find the time to read the three-part series I recommended. I am not surprised that have sided with Warfield’s belief that Calvin’s view of the aseity of the Son was a theological novelty. I am convinced that this take on Calvin is the most consistent one—if one objectively examines the evidence. However, as you well know, I adamantly disagree with Warfield’s conclusion that this novel development of Calvin was a legitimate/positive theological advancement; but rather, that it was heretical/negative one. As such, concur with the following you wrote:

==Whatever Calvin meant may still not be certain, but those in the Reformed camp, who interpret and accept that autotheos means self-existent have taken a heretical position.==

I also like the comparison you made at the end of your post:

==A rigorous autotheos seems as arbitrary as Calvin's rigorous predestinationism without freedom of the will.==


Grace and peace,

David

David Waltz said...

Hi Errol,

Thanks much for the quote. It certainly speaks to the Son’s continuing reliance on the Father.

I was not aware of the publication of the book you quoted from. A good portion can be read online via Google Book Preview—LINK.

I also want to thank you for your last post in the previous thread. It is an excellent summation of Justin’s so-called angelomorphic pneumatology. I plan on sharing a few of my own musings on this issue over in that thread later today, but it may be tomorrow before I can do so.


Grace and peace,

David