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The hypostatic union is the union of two natures, one divine, one
human, in the person of the Word made flesh. What is meant by
person, personality?
The classic definition is that of Boethius: [736] Person
means an individual substance having a rational nature. Of this
definition St. Thomas [737] gives the following explanation.
Person signifies an individual subject, which is first intellectual,
secondly free, i. e.: master of his own acts, [738] one
whose acts are self-initiated. Person, he continues, being the
primary subject [739] which bears all predicates attributable in
any way to its being, is itself incommunicable to any other subject.
To each human person, for example, belong and are attributed, his
soul, his body, his existence, his faculties, his operations, the
parts of his body. [740] .
This explanation simply makes precise that notion of person already
held by the common sense of mankind. In everyday speech, when we
speak of person, we mean that deep inward self-ownership, that
ontological personality, which is the root, first of the
self-conscious ego, and this we may call psychological personality,
and secondly of that self-controlled use of liberty, which we may call
moral personality.
Person, personality, thus defined, is found in men, in angels,
and, analogically, in God. In God, moreover, according to
revelation, there are three persons, three subjects intellectual and
free, which have each the same intellect and the same liberty, the
same act of understanding and the same free act, by which all three are
one principle of external operation. This same notion of personality
allows us to say that Jesus too is a person, one sole intellectual and
free subject, one sole ego, although he has two natures, one divine,
one human, and hence first two intellects, and secondly two
liberties, His human liberty, however, completely conformed to His
divine liberty. When Jesus says [741] that He is the way,
He is speaking according to His human nature. But when, in the same
text, He adds that He is the truth and the life, He is speaking
primarily according to His divine nature, which makes Him truth
itself and life itself. "All things whatsoever the Father hath are
Mine." [742] .
What is the formal and radical element of ontological personality?
Here the Scholastics divide into opposed camps. Scotus, who denies
real distinction of essence and existence, who denies further real
distinction between suppositum (quod est) and existence (esse):
answers thus: Personality is something negative. In any particular
individual humanity (in Peter or Paul) personality is the denial,
the absence in that person of hypostatic union with a divine person.
[743] Suarez [744] says that personality is a substantial
mode which follows the existence of a particular individual nature, and
makes that nature incommunicable. He cannot admit, as Thomists do,
that personality is presupposed to existence, since, like Scotus, he
denies real distinction of essence and existence.
But even those who admit this real distinction are not all of one mind
in defining personality. One view, that of Cajetan, [745]
who is followed by most Dominican and Carmelite Thomists,
[746] defines personality as follows: [747] Personality
is that by which an individual nature becomes immediately capable of
existence. A second view, less explicit, but almost identical, is
that of Capreolus, who says that personality is the individual nature
as that nature underlies its existence. [748] A third view,
that of Cardinal Billot [749] and his disciples, says that
personality is existence itself, as actualizing the individual nature.
By what criterion are we to arrive at the true definition of
personality? [750] We must start with the nominal definition,
furnished by common usage, a definition which all theologians intend to
preserve. Now, by that common usage, when we use the word "person"
or its equivalent pronouns "I," "you," and "he," we mean to
signify, not a mere negation, not something accidental, but a
distinct, individual and substantial thing, even though its existence
be contingent. Why, then, should the philosopher or theologian, in
his search for a real and distinct definition, abandon this nominal
definition of common sense? Let him rather follow the method indicated
by Aristotle [751] and St. Thomas, which requires that we
proceed, first, negatively, then positively.
1. Ontological personality, then, that by which a subject is
person, cannot be a negative something. [752] If personality
is to constitute the person, it must itself be something positive.
Further, the personality of Socrates or of Peter must be something
in the natural order, and hence it cannot be defined, as Scotus
wills, by the negation of hypostatic union, which belongs essentially
to the supernatural order; a consequence would be that personality,
the personality, say, of Socrates, would be something naturally
unknowable.
2. Ontological personality is not only something positive, but also
something substantial, not accidental, because "person" means a
substance, a real subject of accident. Hence personality, speaking
properly, ontological personality, is not formally constituted by
self-consciousness, which is rather an act of the person already
constituted, an act which manifests the person which it presupposes.
Similarly, personality is not constituted by freedom of will, which
is a consequence that shows the dignity of the person who is already
constituted. Moreover, in Jesus, we find two self-conscious
intellects and two free wills, though He is one sole person, one sole
ego. Hence personality is something positive and substantial. Let us
now compare it with those elements in the line of substance which it
most resembles.
3. Is personality identified with nature [753] as found
concrete in the individual? No, because person is a whole which has
nature indeed as a part, the essential, formal, and perfective part,
but still only a part. [754] Were nature not a mere part, but
the whole of person, we could say "Peter is his nature." But since
person contains more than nature, we say "Peter has human nature."
4. Is then personality identified with individualized nature which
underlies existence? [755] Again no, because the concrete
singular nature of Peter is not that which exists but is that by which
Peter is man. That which exists is Peter himself, his person.
Hence personality is not the concrete singular nature as preceding
existence. Further, were this view granted, since as in Christ
there are two natures, so there would likewise be two personalities,
two persons.
5. Nor is personality to be identified with existence. Existence is
attributed to created persons as contingent predicate, not as a formal
constitutive predicate. No creature is its own existence. Creatures
have existence, but the distance between "to be" and "to have" is
measureless. Only God is His own existence.
In every creature, St. Thomas [756] repeats, that which
exists (the suppositum, the person) differs from its existence.
Existence, he says elsewhere, [757] follows both nature and
person. But it follows nature as that by which the thing is what it
is, whereas it follows person as that which has existence. The word
"follows" in this passage expresses a sequel that is real and
objective, not a mere logical consequence. And thus, if existence
follows person, it presupposes person, and hence cannot constitute
personality.
Further, if existence formally constituted person, then the created
person would be identical with his existence. Peter would be his own
existence, he would not simply have existence. St. Thomas
[758] would be wrong in repeating: In every creature person
differs from existence.
In other words, the fundamental argument of the Thomistic thesis runs
thus: That which is not its own existence is really distinct from that
existence, really, that is, anteriorly to any mental act of ours.
Now the person of Peter, and much more his personality, is really
distinct from his existence, and existence is in him as a contingent
predicate. God alone is His own existence, a truth of supremest
evidence to those who have received the beatific vision.
6. To recapitulate. Ontological personality is a positive
something, a substantial something, which so determines the concrete
singular nature of a rational substance that it is capable, without
medium, of existing in itself as a separate and independent entity.
[759] More briefly, it is that by which a rational subject is
that which exists (quod est): whereas its nature is that by which it
belongs to its species, and existence is that by which it exists.
Existence is a contingent predicate of the created person, it is his
ultimate actuality, not in the line of essence but in another line.
Hence, since existence presupposes personality, personality itself
cannot be [760] a substantial mode posterior to existence.
Hence we may say that personality is the point where two distinct lines
intersect: the line of essence and the line of existence.
Personality, speaking properly, is that by which an intellectual
subject is that which is. This ontological personality, which
constitutes the ego, is thus the root, both of the psychologic
personality, that is, of the ego as self-conscious, and of the moral
personality, that is, of self-mastery, of self-initiated activity.
Thus Christ's person, as theologians in general say, is the
personal principle (principium quod) of His theandric actions, and
thus gives to His acts their infinite value.
This objective definition of personality does but make explicit the
content of the nominal definition which common sense accepts.
Personality is that by which the intellectual subject is a person, as
existence is that by which it exists, hence personality differs both
from the essence and the existence which it unites into one complete
whole.
Hence created essence and its contingent existence do not make one sole
nature, [761] but they do belong to one and the same subject
(suppositum): [762] nature as its essential part, and
existence as its contingent predicate. This terminology rests on
Aristotle's doctrine of the four modes of predicating per se, i.
e.: of saying that this predicate belongs to this subject. We have
the first mode in a definition, the second mode when we predicate a
characteristic of the essence, the third when we predicate something of
an independent suppositum, and the fourth when we predicate of an
effect its proper and necessary cause. [763] Following this
accepted terminology, we see that created essence and its contingent
existence make one complete whole as belonging each to one suppositum,
in the third mode of predicating per se.
Ontological personality thus conceived, far from preventing union
between essence and existence, is rather that which unites the two and
makes them one complete whole.
Such is the conception of personality defended by Cajetan and the
majority of Thomists. This conception, they maintain, is the
metaphysical foundation of grammatical usage in regard to personal
pronouns, and of the verb "to be": he is a man, for example, or he
exists, or, he is active, he is patient, and so on.
The texts of Capreolus are less explicit. "Nature as individualized
under existence" is his definition of personality. We have said,
with the majority, that personality is that by which individualized
nature becomes immediately capable of existing. Now that which exists
is, precisely speaking, not the nature of Peter, but Peter
himself, Peter's person. Thus Cajetan, though he speaks more
explicitly, does not contradict Capreolus.
In clarification of this doctrine, held by most Thomists, let us
quote a few more texts from St. Thomas. The form signified by this
name person, he says, [764] is not essence or nature, but
personality. The contrast with nature shows that personality is
something substantial. Again he says: [765] The name person
rests on personality, which expresses subsistence in rational nature.
This means, in other terms, that personality is that by which a
rational subject is capable, first of separate existence, second, of
self-initiated activity.
Again, speaking now of Christ directly, he writes thus:
[766] Had not His human nature been assumed by a divine
person, that nature would have its own proper personality. Hence we
may say, speaking inexactly, that the divine person consumed the human
personality, because the divine person, by being united to the human
nature prevented that nature from having its own personality. In other
words, personality, though it is not a part of the essence, is still
something positive and substantial, not identified however with
existence which, in a created person, is something contingent.
Existence, he said above, [767] follows person which is the
subject of existence.
Lastly, speaking now of the Trinity, he says: [768] The
three divine persons have each one and the same existence. This text
shows clearly that personality differs from existence, since in God
there are three personalities but only one existence. Similarly he
says: [769] Existence is not included in the definition of
person (suppositum). Only God is His own existence, whereas in a
created person existence is a predicate, not essential, but
contingent.
Now for some consequences of this position. Person is to be found in
man, in angel, and, analogically, in God. By personality the
intellectual subject becomes the first subject of attribution, the
subject of which all else in him is predicated, the center from which
all else radiates, the ego which possesses his nature, his existence,
his self-conscious act, his freedom. By deviation, this principle
of ownership and possession [770] can become the principle of
egoism and individualism, which prefers itself to family, society,
and God. But while egoism and pride are thus an abuse of created
personality, an enormous abuse, rising even to the denial of the
Creator's supreme right, still the right use of personality,
psychological and moral, grows into truth, self-devotedness, and
sanctity.
In what, then, consists the full development of created personality?
It consists in making ourselves fully independent of inferior things,
but also, and still more closely, dependent on truth, on goodness,
on God.
Propriam personalitatem haberet; et pro tanto dicitur persona
(divina) consumpsisse personam, licet improprie, quia persona divina
sua unione impedivit ne humana natura propriam personalitatem haberet.
Himself. The saints are complete personalities, since they recognize
that human personality grows great only by dying to self so that God
may live in us, may rule us ever more completely. As God inclines to
give Himself ever more and more, so the saint renounces ever more
completely his own judgment and his own will, to live solely by the
thoughts and will of God. He desires that God be his other self,
[771] more intimate than his proper self. Thus, from afar
off, he begins to understand the personality of Jesus.
But the saint, however high, is still a creature, immeasurably below
the Creator, eternally distinct from God. In Jesus Christ, the
Word of God gave Himself, in the highest conceivable manner, to
humanity, by uniting Himself personally to humanity, in such wise
that the human nature thus united becomes one sole ego with that Word,
which assumed forever that human nature. Thus, there is in Christ
one sole person, one sole intellectual and free subject, even while
there are two natures, two intellects, two freedoms. Hence Christ
alone among men can say: [772] "Before Abraham was, I
am." "The Father and I are one." "All that belongs to the
Father belongs to Me."
To clarify this hypostatic union, St. Thomas [773] proceeds
as follows: According to Catholic faith, human nature is really and
truly united to the person of the Word, while the two natures remain
distinct. Now that which is united to a person, without a union in
nature, is formally united to it in person, because person is the
complete whole of which nature is the essential part. Further, since
human nature is not an accident, like whiteness, for example, and is
not a transitory act of knowledge or love, the human nature is united
to the Word not accidentally, but substantially. [774] .
Christ, then, is man, though He has no human personality. But
His humanity, far from being lowered by this union with the Word, is
rather thereby elevated and glorified. From that union His humanity
has an innate sanctity substantial and uncreated. To illustrate.
Imagination, the highest of sense faculties, has a higher nobility in
man than in animal, a nobility arising from its very subordination to
the higher faculty of the intellect. A thing is more noble, says
Thomas, when it exists in a higher being than when it exists in
itself. [775] .
Whereas individuation proceeds from matter, personality, on the
contrary, is the most perfect thing in nature. [776] Thus in
Jesus, as in us, all individualizing circumstances, of time and
place of birth, of people and country, arise from created matter,
whereas His person is uncreated.
This union of two natures therefore is not an essential union, since
the two are distinct and infinitely distant. Nor is it an accidental
union, like that of the saints with God. It is a union in the
substantial order, in the very person of the Word, since one real
subject, one sole ego, possesses both natures. [777] Hence
this union is called the hypostatic union.
This teaching of St. Thomas, and of the majority of Thomists,
rests, first on the words of Jesus concerning His own person,
secondly on the idea of person accessible to our natural intelligence.
Hence this doctrine can be expounded in a less abstract form, in
formulas that elevate the soul to sure and fruitful understanding of
this mystery. [778] .
But a more subtle question arises: Is this hypostatic union of two
natures something created? In answer, it is clear, first, that the
action which unites the two natures is uncreated, because it is an act
of the divine intellect and will, an act which is formally immanent in
God, and only virtually transitive, an act which is common to the
three divine persons. It is clear, secondly, that the humanity of
Jesus has a real and created relation to the Word which possesses that
humanity, and on which that humanity depends, whereas the Word has
only a relation, not real but only of reason, to the humanity which it
possesses, but on which it does not depend. On these two points there
is no discussion.
But there is discussion when the question is posed thus: Is there a
substantial intermediate mode which unites the human nature to the
Word? Scotus, Suarez, and Vasquez answer affirmatively, as do
likewise some Thomists, the Salmanticenses, for example, and
Godoy. Thomists in general answer negatively, appealing with justice
to repeated statements of St. Thomas. Thus he says: [779]
"In the union of the human nature to the divine, nothing mediates as
cause of this union, nothing to which human nature would be united
before being united to the divine person: just as between matter and
form there is no medium. So likewise nothing can be conceived as
medium between nature and person (suppositum)." Thus the Word
terminates and sustains the human nature of Christ, which human nature
thus constituted depends directly, without medium, on the Word. And
creation itself, passive creation, is nothing but a real direct
relation by which the creature depends on the Creator.
Further, St. Thomas holds [780] that the hypostatic union is
the most deep and intimate of all created unions. The human nature,
it is true, is infinitely distant from the divine, but the principle
which unites them, namely, the person of the Word, cannot be more
one and more unitive. The union of our soul to our body, for
example, however immediate it is and intimate, is yet broken by
death, whereas the Word is never separated either from the body or
from the soul which He has assumed. Thus the hypostatic union is
immovable, indissoluble, for all eternity.
This deep inward intimacy of the hypostatic union has as consequence
the truth that there is in Christ one existence for the two natures.
[781] This consequence, since it supposes real distinction
between created essence and existence, is denied by Scotus and
Suarez, who thereby attenuate that union which constitutes the
God-man. St. Thomas thus establishes his conclusion: [782]
There can be, in one and the same person, many accidental
existences, that of whiteness, for example, that of an acquired
science or art: but the substantial existence of the person itself must
be one and one only. Since existence is the ultimate actuality, the
uncreated existence of the Word would not be the ultimate actuality if
it were ulteriorly determinable by a created existence. Hence we say,
on the contrary, that the eternal Word communicates His own existence
to His humanity, somewhat as the separated soul communicates its own
existence to the body at the moment of resurrection. "It is more
noble to exist in a higher thing than to exist in one's self."
[783] "The eternal existence of God's Son, an existence
identified with divine nature, becomes the existence of a man, when
human nature is assumed by God's Son into unity with His person."
[784] .
Scotus and Suarez, as has been said, since they reject real
distinction between essence and existence, reject likewise the doctrine
of one existence in Christ. They not only attenuate the hypostatic
union but even compromise it, because existence, as ultimate
actuality, presupposes subsistence or personality. Hence, as
Thomists say, if there were two existences in Christ, there must be
likewise two persons. One thing St. Thomas [785] insists
on: one person can have but one sole existence.
This doctrine shows the sublimity of the hypostatic union. Under this
union, just as the soul of Christ has the transcendent gift of the
beatific vision, so the very being of Christ's humanity, since it
exists by the Word's uncreated existence, is on a transcendent level
of being. Here we see in all its fullness the principle with which
St. Thomas begins his treatise on the Incarnation: Good is
self-communicative, and the higher is that good the more abundantly
and intimately does it communicate itself.
Christ's personality, then, the unity of His ego, is primarily an
ontological unity. He is one sole subject, intellectual and free,
and has one sole substantial existence. But this most profound of all
ontological unities expresses itself by a perfect union of this human
mind and will with His divinity. His human mind, as we have just
said, had even here on earth the beatific vision of God's essence,
and hence of God's knowledge. Hence, even here below, there was in
Jesus a wonderful compenetration of vision uncreated and vision
created, both having the same object, though only the uncreated vision
is infinitely comprehensive. Similarly there was perfect and
indissoluble union of divine freedom and human freedom, the latter also
being absolutely impeccable.
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