madeleine wrote:His is basic Trinitarian theology,
Completely untrue. He makes use of a couple phrases and broad concepts that were later incorporated into trinitarianism, but "basic Trinitarian theology" simply did not exist in Martyr's day. His discussion of Jesus as another god absolutely obliterates any chance of reconciling the two. Additionally, the analogy of the fire or a spoken word are incompatible with Trinitarian notions of "not dividing the substance," which really means they operate within the same ontological being. Kindling one fire from another divides the substance, as one fire is no longer ontologically one with the other. It is a separate fire, a separate being. The fact that they came from the same single entity and substance is irrelevant, as the analogy could just as accurately be applied to the siring of a child. It does not diminish my being one iota to father a child, and that child develops from my own being and substance. The fire analogy Martyr uses has nothing to do with basic Trinitarian theology, it was only used to illustrate that Jesus wasn't divided off from the substance of God, reducing the amount of God's total substance. This was a reference to the doctrine of emanation.
madeleine wrote:beginning with Jesus, the Word of God, which is not an analogy but who the Person of Jesus is. He speaks to the Word of the Father, not being divided from the Father. Basic stuff, taught in any catcechesis, which I do teach in my parish RCIA. God's Word is not divided from the Father any more than your word is divided from yourself.
My word is not divided from myself? In what universe? The instant the sound waves from a word I speak fall still it ceases to exist except in memory, which is not real existence. Just like you can't unring a bell, the instant you speak, your words are no longer your own.
madeleine wrote:When you give your word, it is not something separate from you.
"Give your word" is an entirely separate concept from "saying a word," and in both uses, the word itself is immediately and irreconcilably separated from you.
madeleine wrote:The difference for God is, the Word of God is a Person, not divided from the Father but His begotten Word.
I think you're relying too much on the vernacular your faith tradition has agreed upon. It does not function outside of that tradition except as symbols of that faith tradition.
madeleine wrote:I'm ok with your idea of extrapolating God's Will, vs God's Word, as Jesus is the Will of God, fully revealed, as well as the Word.
The councils at Nicaea only clarified, based on a need for clarification because of the Arian heresy.
Funny that they clarified a concept that did not exist anywhere on earth prior to the moment of clarification. In reality, what they did was create and ratify a doctrine in an authoritative context.
madeleine wrote:Theology and philosophy are but tools, to describe what God has revealed, and particular to the councils, revealed via Apostolic teaching. The faith handed on, once.
the beginning point is Jesus, who reveals the Father, who is Himself, revealed by the Father. I first read Justin Martyr, as an inquirer into the Catholic faith, seeking to understand how Christians view God. There isn't anything of St. Justin that conflicts with what I was learning simultaneously, from a Catholic deacon who was trained in both philosophy and theology (Masters of divinity). I also read several works at the time by Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, who taught for many years at a university. So my reading has not been light, or my catechesis. I happened to also take a college philosophy course at the same time, which was useful to understanding what I was reading.
In the end Trinitarian understanding of God is to me very beautiful and profound, Justin Martyr displays both. :) His dialogue with Trypho remains one of my favorite, to this day.
So perhaps you can engage the part where he tells Trypho that Jesus is another god, united with the Father in will, not in number. That flatly contradicts the notion that Jesus is united with God in substance, and thus being and number (rather than just will).