Christs blood is divine, but by union with divinity, not by its own nature.
Christ's blood has one united NATURE: Divine-Human. Mia Physis. It's like the example of ignited iron: it is simultaneously iron and fire. The same can be said of the example of the sunbeam: heat-light.
Yes, the Essence of the body is Human, and yes, the Divine Essence is united to it, but we do
not have here an addition; we have
UNION. So you canNOT separate the two Essences. Yes, you distinguish them, you don't mix them, you don't confuse them, but you canNOT talk about them as working or acting each alone. They are UNITED. They act as ONE Nature. What is the one Nature of this blood? It is 100% Divine-Human,
not 100% Divine
AND 100% Human, and only Divine by a wrongly defined union. It's
not an addition, but
UNION.
Read again in the Confession of the Orthodox Faith:
"Հաւատամք զմինն յերից
Անձանց [Armenian equivalent of the Greek
Hypostasis] զԲանն Աստուած` ծնեալ ի Հօրէ նախ քան զյաւիտեանս. ի ժամանակի իջեալ յԱստուածածին կոյսն Մարիամ,
առեալ յարենէ նորա` միաւորեաց ընդ իւրում Աստուածութեանն [The Second
Hypostasis took from the flesh of the Virgin and
united it to His Divinity; He didn't unite
Himself to the flesh, but He united
the flesh taken from the Virgin to
His Divinity!], իննամսեայ ժուժկալեալ յարգանդի անարատ կուսին. և
եղև Աստուածն կատարեալ` մարդ կատարեալ հոգւով և մտօք և մարմնով [the Perfect God
became perfect Man in spirit and mind and body].
մի անձն [equivalent of the Greek
Hypostasis],
մի դէմ [equivalent of the Greek
Prosopon] և
միաւորեալ մի Բնութիւն [
one united Physis]: Աստուածն մարդացեալ առանց փոփոխման և առանց այլայլութեան. անսերմն յղութիւն և անապական ծնունդ. որպէս ոչ է սկիզբն Աստուածութեան նորա` և ոչ վախճան մարդկութեան նորա, (զի Յիսուս Քրիստոս երէկ և այսօր` նոյն և յաւիտեան):"
VERY IMPORTANT NOTE:
In this Confession, when we use the Armenian
Անձ for the Greek
Hypostasis, it is the equivalent of the term Hypostasis
as used in a technical way by the Cappadocian Fathers for the Persons of the Trinity,
not as the equivalent of the Greek term Hypostasis in its original simple Greek meaning which is
Essence and which is almost equivalent to the Greek Ousia. In Hebrews 1:3 we read:
"And He is the radiance of His glory and the exact representation of His nature [Hypostasis], and upholds all things by the word of His power." (Hebrews 1:3 NASB1995)
As you see, the NASB translators translated the Greek Hypostasis as Nature (though the exact equivalent of the Greek term would be Essence and not Nature), unlike the KJV and NKJV that wrongly translates it as Person. The Armenian Version translated Hebrews 1:3 very well with the exact equivalent of the Greek Hypostasis:
«որ է լոյս փառաց եւ նկարագիր էութեան [Eyoutioun or Eyoutyoun, the exact equivalent of the Greek Hypostasis]
նորա, որ կրէ զամենայն բանիւ զօրութեան իւրոյ, սրբութիւն մեղաց մերոց արարեալ՝ նստաւ ընդ աջմէ Մեծութեանն ի բարձունս»։
In the Van Dyck-Boustany version also, which is the most widely used Arabic version, Hypostasis is translated as جوهر (Jawhar = Essence).
The Armenian theologians continued to use the Greek Hypostasis as it was used in our Version of the Bible, i.e. as meaning Essence, as we see in the quotations that you made. You wrongly made them say what they are NOT saying. You made them say what their
opponents were saying, making the Hypostasis become a distinct reality that was not
Himself incarnated, but was
added to another reality (human hypostasis). Of course, the difference between you and the Nestorians is that you are not simply saying "
added", but "
united", though the result is the same: you are
adding the hypostases as we have seen in your mathematical equation x + y = z where z is Christ; Christ in your theory is NOT 100% y anymore, as He was before the Incarnation. This understanding is being propagated by some Nestorian apologists (as you also shared a video from a Nestorian apologist trying to convince us that Cyril and other theologians used Hypostasis in the way you are describing) in order to use the Miaphysite writings
against Miaphysitism.
Thus, most of the confusion during the Nestorian and Chalcedonian controversies was caused by the different understandings of some key terms in the controversy, like Hypostasis and Physis and Qnoma and Kayana. We have seen - and you have quoted some sayings of Cyril of Alexandria and of Severus of Antioch and of Armenian Fathers - that Fathers like Cyril of Alexandria used the term Hypostasis in its simple Greek meaning, not in the technical meaning as it was used by the Cappadocian Fathers to distinguish the Three Persons in the Trinity. In the description of the Trinity, the Cappadocian Fathers distinguished between Ousia and Hypostasis: Ousia is the universal (the Divine Essence), Hypostasis is the particular (the Individual Reality that represents the One Ousia). Each of the Hypostases of the Trinity is the WHOLE Ousia (the WHOLE Godhead), yet they are Three distinct Hypostases. Each of the Three Persons of the Godhead has certain distinguishing characteristics, but all those characteristics belong to the WHOLE Divine Essence. There is no division in the Godhead. Thus the
Perichoresis (a term first used by the Cappadocian Fathers) is expressed clearly for the Trinity: the eternal mutual indwelling and fellowship of the Persons of the Trinity. Thus the Term Hypostasis is not the equivalent of Prosopon. Prosopon is a different person that doesn't necessarily share the same characteristics with another person and certainly he is not
in another person as Hypostasis is in the Divine Perichoresis; Prosopon is the English term person as we use it everyday. The term Hypostasis is used by the Cappadocian Fathers in a different way to distinguish the Persons of the Trinity. This is why in Arabic they distinguish between Hypostasis and Prosopon by using two terms: أقنوم (Ouqnoum, from the Syriac Qnoma), and شخص (Shakhs, the simple everyday usage of person in Arabic). For the Trinity, the Arab Christians do not use Shakhs, but Ouqnoum. In Armenian theology, as we have seen in some of your quotes, they did not follow the usage of the Cappadocian Fathers for the Trinity or for Hypostasis: In Armenian, we do not say the Trinity is Three Ենթադրութիւններ (Hypostases), but we say the Trinity is Three Անձեր (Persons), following the Latin Persona. The same is done in English, by the way. In Armenian, Hypostasis continued to be used in its simple Greek meaning, i.e. as meaning something very close to Ousia: Actually, it was used interchangeably with Ousia, as also we have seen in Cyril of Alexandria. But the Armenian way to distinguish between Person as used for the Persons of the Trinity, and Person as meaning Prosopon was the usage of the two terms
Անձ and
Դէմ, as we see it in the Confession of the Orthodox Faith above. Thus in the Confession of the Orthodox Faith and in Armenian theology as a whole,
Անձ is the equivalent of Hypostasis
as used by the Cappadocian Fathers for the Trinity, and
Դէմ is the equivalent of the Greek Prosopon. Hypostasis in its simple Greek sense is NOT used in the Confession of the Orthodox Faith.
We are not partakers of Divine Physis the same way as Christ has divine physis. We won’t take a new nature and become gods by nature, but by grace only.
Who said otherwise? But Adam did not have this.
Human essence existed before incarnation. Human essence of Christ and us was created with Adam, when all essences were created.
But the Human Essence
of Christ did not exist before the Incarnation, so you cannot talk about a change in it after the Incarnation. Christ did NOT have a Human Essence before the Incarnation. As for the human essence as a whole, Christ did NOT change it, but He UNITED it to His Divine Essence in ONE Physis (Nature). The Human Essence did NOT change.
When I said “changes in human nature”, that doesn’t mean that human nature changes. That means that Christ is always changing as man by human properties, not as God by divine properties.
Exactly!
Christ was growing up and changed
as Man! Not
the Human Essence changing all alone! Christ is ONE Person, ONE Physis: One Nature with distinct but
united Divine and Human Essences. Christ grew up, for example; it's
NOT the Human Essence alone that grew up. Christ was hungry; it's
not the Human Essence alone that got hungry. And the most important part for the Gospel:
Christ died on the cross; it's
not the Human Essence alone that died on the cross.
No, substance of the Person has changed without changing divinity, not the Person itself.
A person with another substance is another person. A book with another content is another book.
If I have water in a glass and I add oil to it, the glass does not change. Therefore, Person does not change. Oil and water do not lose their properties, but together form a single whole.
First, note that you said
addition again, thus showing your wrong theory that the Logos
ADDED Human Essence to His Divine Essence, whereas the truth is that the Logos
UNITED Human Essence to His Divine Essence in ONE Nature.
The glass was previously full to the top with water. It was a glass of what? It was a glass of water. You can't
add oil to it, because it is already full. If you empty the half of the glass and you
add oil to the water, you have now a glass of water
and oil, not a glass of water anymore. In the Incarnation, you have a glass that is
simultaneously FULLY a glass of water and
FULLY a glass of oil; fully! The original content of the glass did
not change. This is the Mystery of the Incarnation that is above our human understanding.
Of course, the example of the glass does not give the exact meaning of the Incarnation, because the Person (Hypostasis) of Christ is never separate from His Essence or Nature, whereas the glass is not of the same essence or nature as its content.
Once again.
Christ - is a name of Person, that has divine-human nature, not only divine. So, Person of Son received this name only when this Person took human nature, not before.
Are we now discussing which name we should give to the Person? No! We are discussing if the SAME Person, with all who He is, existed as the SAME Person before the Incarnation.
By the way, the Logos was called Christ BEFORE the Incarnation. Actually, He is the Christ from all eternity, by eternal Generation from the Father. Jesus Christ is the SAME yesterday, today, and forever.
God of Word without body and spirit is not Christ, as Gregory of Tatev say:
And regarding division of the whole into parts, as with the diminution of one part the whole becomes imperfect, likewise in God the Word, spirit, and body totally united are Christ, and by the diminution of one of them Christ does not remain.
Yes,
after the Incarnation, you cannot separate the Essences and still have the One Christ. This is what Gregory of Tatev is explaining. But Jesus Christ is the SAME yesterday, today and forever.
Two essences are one the same way as two essences of soul and body are one.
No, that was an example used by the Fathers NOT to explain the nature of the unity, but to explain the possibility of a unity from two essences. In other examples, like the example of the ignited iron, we do NOT have the same image, but the image of 100% of both iron and fire.