Quote:
Originally Posted by Originalist
What do you call a doctrine that teaches that God ADDED the man Christ Jesus to his own being, adding humanity to his deity?
|
Hypostatic union, which most Oneness and Trinitarian believers adhere to.
Definition of chalcedon, essentially - God added to himself a complete human nature, fully human, a complete human being - yet in such a way as not to create two persons, rather one person subsisting in two natures.
If by 'added the man' he means God (one person) added another person - albeit human - then he seems to be 'Nestorian' - the idea that God added a complete human nature
person and all to himself, thus two persons in one Christ.
Personally, I think most of these disputes are the result of excess philosophical baggage from the Nicene era. We box ourselves into a paradigm and then have to explain things and we wind up sounding like a bunch of ignorant bishops glorying in our 'theological exactness' while missing the whole point.
Seems to me the bible is pretty clear - God is one, and God was manifested in the flesh, became flesh - ie human. And 'without controversy' this is a 'great mystery'. The man Jesus Christ is our 'great God and savior.'