![]() |
|
|
The Statement of Faith of the Third Council of Constantinople (681 AD) This is a clarification of the issue of whether or not Jesus had two wills: one for each of His two natures. We also proclaim two natural willings or wills in him and two natural operations, without separation, without change, without partition, without confusion, according to the
teaching of the holy Fathers -- and two natural wills not contrary to each other, God forbid, as the impious heretics have said they would be, but his human will following, and
not resisting or opposing, but rather subject to his divine and all-powerful will. For it was proper for the will of the flesh to be moved naturally, yet to be subject to the divine
will, according to the all-wise Athanasius. For as his flesh
is called and is the flesh of God the Word, so also the
natural will of his flesh is called and is God the Word's own
will, as he himself says: "I came down from heaven, not to do
my own will, but the will of the Father who sent me," calling
the will of the flesh his own, as also the flesh had become
his own. For in the same manner that his all-holy and
spotless ensouled flesh, though divinised, was not destroyed,
but remained in its own law and principle also his human
will, divinised, was not destroyed, but rather preserved, as
Gregory the divine says: "His will, as conceived of in his
character as the Savior, is not contrary to God, being
wholly divinised." We also glorify two natural operations in
the same our Lord Jesus Christ, our true God, without separation, without change, without partition, without confusion,
that is, a divine operation and a human operation, as the
divine preacher Leo most clearly says: "For each form does
what is proper to it, in communion with the other; the Word,
that is, performing what belongs to the Word, and the flesh
carrying out what belongs to the flesh." We will not
therefore grant the existence of one natural operation of God
and the creature, lest we should either raise up into the
divine nature what is created, or bring down the preeminence
of the divine nature into the place suitable for things that
are made. For we recognize the wonders and the sufferings as
of one and the same person], according to the difference of
the natures of which he is and in which he has his being, as
the eloquent Cyril said.
Preserving therefore in every way the unconfused and
undivided, we set forth the whole confession in brief;
believing our Lord Jesus Christ, our true God, to be one of
the holy Trinity even after the taking of flesh, we declare
that his two natures shine forth in his one hypostasis, in
which he displayed both the wonders and the sufferings
through the whole course of his dispensation, not in phantasm
but truly, the difference of nature being recognized in the
same one hypostasis by the fact that each nature wills and
works what is proper to it, in communion with the other. On
this principle we glorify two natural wills and operations
combining with each other for the salvation of the human
race. |