I.
There are many who
claim as theirs the dignity of the Christian religion; but that form of faith is
valid and only valid which, both on account of the universal character of the
rules and doctrines affirming its authority, and because the worship in which
they are expressed has spread throughout the world, is called catholic or
universal. The belief of this religion concerning the Unity of the Trinity is as
follows: the Father is God, the Son is God, the Holy Spirit is God. Therefore
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are one God, not three Gods. The cause of this
union is absence of difference:88The terms differentia, numerus, species, are used
expertly, as would be expected of the author of the In Isag. Porph.
Commenta. See S. Brandt's edition of that work (in the Vienna Corpus,
1906), s.v. differencia, etc. difference cannot be avoided by
those who add to or take from the Unity, as for instance the Arians, who, by
graduating the Trinity according to merit, break it up and convert it to
Plurality. For the essence of plurality is otherness; apart from otherness
plurality is unintelligible. In fact, the difference between three or more
things lies in genus or species or number. Difference is the necessary
correlative of sameness. Sameness is predicated in three ways: By genus;
e.g. a man and a horse, because of their common genus, animal. By
species; e.g. Cato and Cicero, because of their common species, man. By
number; e.g. Tully and Cicero, because they are one and the same man.
Similarly, difference is expressed by genus, species, and number. Now numerical
difference is caused by variety of accidents; three men differ neither by genus
nor species but by their accidents, for if we mentally remove from them all
other accidents,99This method of mental abstraction is employed more elaborately
in Tr. iii. (vide infra, p. 44) and in Cons. v. pr. 4,
where the notion of divine foreknowledge is abstracted in imagination. still each one occupies a different place which
cannot possibly be regarded as the same for each, since two bodies cannot occupy
the same place, and place is an accident. Wherefore it is because men are plural
by their accidents that they are plural in number.
This book has been accessed more than 22447 times since June 1, 2005.