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Augustine's treatment of the Trinity is unique in thinking about it together with his doctrine of love. He argues that the Holy Spirit is the basis of unity between the Father and Son, and that this unity is one of love. Love is seen as the essence of God and the means by which we can know and be united with the Trinity, even if direct knowledge of the Trinity is impossible. He uses the twofold commandment to love God and others as a way to understand the internal unity of the Trinity and our ability to be united with them through love.
Augustine's treatment of the Trinity is unique in thinking about it together with his doctrine of love. He argues that the Holy Spirit is the basis of unity between the Father and Son, and that this unity is one of love. Love is seen as the essence of God and the means by which we can know and be united with the Trinity, even if direct knowledge of the Trinity is impossible. He uses the twofold commandment to love God and others as a way to understand the internal unity of the Trinity and our ability to be united with them through love.
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Augustine's treatment of the Trinity is unique in thinking about it together with his doctrine of love. He argues that the Holy Spirit is the basis of unity between the Father and Son, and that this unity is one of love. Love is seen as the essence of God and the means by which we can know and be united with the Trinity, even if direct knowledge of the Trinity is impossible. He uses the twofold commandment to love God and others as a way to understand the internal unity of the Trinity and our ability to be united with them through love.
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Scarica in formato PDF, TXT o leggi online su Scribd
2001 St. Augustine Lecture Love and the Trinity: Saint Augustine and the Greek Fathers Andrew Louth University of Durham, United Kingdom It is generally recognized that one of the most distinctive, even unique, elements in St. Augustines treatment of the Trinity is his thinking together the doctrine of the Trinity and his doctrine of love. Indeed this claim can be enhanced by a further claim: that it is to Augustine that we owe the emphasis on the twofold commandment to love as summing up the essence of the Chris- tian life. 1 What I want to do in this lecture is to look at the way in which Augustine uses his doctrine of love in thinking about the Trinity, and use this as a way of comparing Augustines approach to the Trinity with that found in the Greek East. Comparison between Greek and Latin doctrines of the Trinity inevitably always gives Augustines doctrine a central part, and this seems to me justified, for his doctrine of the Trinity (as of much else) has become, at least until comparatively recently, determinative for Western theology, at least since the eleventh and twelfth centuries. Such comparison, however, usually 1. Oliver ODonovan, The Problem of Self-Love in St. Augustine (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1980), 4. 2 LOUTH: LOVE AND THE TRINITY tries to articulate the difference between Eastern and Western approaches by concentrating on other aspects of trinitarian doctrine, usually the question of the Filioque; I want to go behind that to what it seems to me are more funda- mental differences. I need, however, to limit my field of discussion, for whereas in Latin theology it seems justifiable to concentrate on Augustine, given his unquestioned influence, no such limitation in the realm of Greek theology can be justified so simply. It might seem obvious to concentrate on the theology of the great Cappadocian Fathers, especially given the likelihood that Augustine was influenced by, at least, St. Gregory Nazianzen, but I do not propose to do that for two, closely related, reasons. First, almost all that the Cappadocians have to say about the Trinity is directly related to their polemic against Eunomius and his followers; so their discussion tends to be technical, and to take its cue from Eunomius own philosophical arguments; but secondly, such technical argumentation has little opportunity to develop links between Christian life and Christian thoughtbetween spirituality and theology, as we would say nowa- daysin the way that is characteristic of Augustines own treatment of love and the Trinity, which though not so remote from polemics as has sometimes been claimed, 2 certainly has a spaciousness that is usually impossible in direct polemic. I am therefore going to use, as a foil to Augustine and an introduction to Greek Trinitarian theology, two theologians: Clement of Alexandria and St. Maximos the Confessor. The choice of the latter needs no justification: the greatest of all Byzantine theologians, St. Maximos is unquestionably a bench- mark for Greek theology, as much by virtue of the brilliance and subtlety of his theology, as by his influence. Clement is perhaps a more puzzling choice, but I think I am ultimately moved by a series of articles, later published as a book, that constitute a seminal work of twentieth-century Orthodox theology, by Myrrha Lot-Borodine, entitled Le dification de lhomme selon la doctrine des Pres grecs, in which that great interpreter of Byzantine theology made clear the fundamental place of Clement in the formation of that tradition. 3 What I propose to do, then, is, first, to look at Augustines own thinking, which joins together the doctrine of love and his Trinitarian theology, and then try and see how these themes are treated in Clement and Maximos; finally, I shall draw some conclusions. 2. I am not unmoved by the recent arguments by Lewis Ayres and others that Augustines argumen- tation is much more directly affected by contemporary Arianism than has often been allowed. 3. M. Lot-Borodine, La deification de lhomme selon la doctrine des Pres grecs, (Bibliothque cumnique 9, Paris: ditions du Cerf, 1970), esp. 268. 3 LOUTH: LOVE AND THE TRINITY Augustine on Love and the Trinity In De Trinitate, to which I shall mostly confine my discussion, Augustines use of his understanding of love to elucidate his doctrine of the Trinity occurs mainly in two pivotal books: books VI and VIII. There is also a brief fore- shadowing in book V, and a kind of reprise in book XV. First, let us look at the brief foreshadowing in book V. In that book, Augustine asserts that the Spirit is peculiarly to be regarded as the gift of God, donum Dei. Unlike the names Father and Son, which reveal the intratrinitarian rela- tionships in which Father and Son stand, the name Holy Spirit reveals no such thing, since both Father and Son are both holy and spirit. The designation donum Dei reveals the Spirits relationship to the Father and the Son. The identification of the title donum Dei with the Spirit Augustine derives from Acts 8:20, where Peter calls the Holy Spirit, which Simon Magus wishes to obtain, the gift of God; the fact that it is given by the Father and the Son is justified by reference to John 15:26, which speaks of the Spirit proceeding from the Father, and to Rom. 8:9, which affirms that anyone who does not have Christs Spirit does not belong to him. Augustine does not take the step from thinking of the Spirit as gift to thinking of him as love, though he comes very close when he goes on to say, to speak of the gift of the giver and the giver of the gift is to use terms that are relative one to another. Therefore the Holy Spirit is a certain ineffable communion of the Father and the Son; and thus perhaps is he called, because the same designation can be appropriate to both Father and Son: ineffabilis communio suggests something of the nature of love, but Augustine does not make the connexion. 4 On the basis of this point, it seems, Augustine brings in the notion of love in book VI. He notes that, though on the one hand one can speak of God as spirit, and on the other speak of the human spirit as spirit, when someone cleaves to the Lord, there is one spirit (1 Cor. 6:17). If that is the case between human beings and God, how much more is that true, where there is inseparabilis atque aeterna connexio, an inseparable and eternal union (trin. VI. iv. 6). Which leads Augustine to begin the next section by asserting that the Holy Spirit is the basis (consistit) of the same unity and equality of substance, and goes on to affirm that whether it is a matter of the unity of the two [Father and Son], or holiness, or love, or unity because of love, or love because of holiness, it is manifest 4 For all this see trin. V. xi. 12. 4 LOUTH: LOVE AND THE TRINITY that it is not some one of the pair by which one is joined to the other, or by which the one begotten is loved by the begetter, and loves his own beget- ter, and they are so not by participation, but by its essence, nor by the gift of a superior, but genuinely (suo proprio) preserving the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace, that last phrase being, of course, a citation of Eph. 4:3. Augustine continues: which [viz., that unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace] we are commanded to imitate, both in relation to God and in relation to ourselves. On which two precepts hang all the Law and the Prophets. Thus these three are one, sole, great, wise, holy and blessed God. We, however, are blessed from him, and through him, and in him (cf. Rom. 11:36); because by his gift [munus, rather than donum] we are one among ourselves, and one spirit with him, because our soul is firmly attached to him. . . . The Holy Spirit, therefore, is something common to the Father and the Son, whatever that is. And this communion is consubstantial and co-eternal; which, if it may appropriately be called friendship, let it be so called; but still more aptly is it called love [caritas]. And this [love] is also substance, because God is substance, and God is love, as it is written. There is a great deal going on here, but one thing is obvious: the centrality for Augustine of the twofold commandment to love in elucidating what is meant by the unity that is Trinity. The unity that we may know among ourselves, the unity we may know with God, and the unity there is in God himself: there is some deep analogy between these, and that is signalled by the twofold commandment to love. The way in which the first two of theseunity amongst ourselves, and unity with Godare spoken of in terms of spiritus gives the key to the unity of God him- self, that inseparabilis atque aeterna connexio, which is the Holy Spirit. It is on this basis that Augustine conducts his investigation modo interiore, in a more inward way, 5 from book VIII onwards. What is important for our purposes in book VIII is the way Augustine negotiates the problem of loving an unknowable Trinity. For Augustine, love and knowledge go together: we cannot love what we do not know. And yet our faith seems to involve much that we do not know, and yet love: the people and places of the Gospel, the central events of the creed, including the Resurrection of Christ himself, of none of this do we have direct knowledge, and yet they are dear to us. But we have seen human beings and other creatures mentioned in the Gospel, we know about life and death, and from this we can make clear to ourselves what we mean when we talk about the events of the Gospel. None of this helps much in 5. Trin. VIII. i. 1. 5 LOUTH: LOVE AND THE TRINITY relation to God, for God is not a kind of being, examples of which we know, and even understanding what is meant by a trinity or triad does not help, for God is not loved because we recognize him from other examples of trinities. 6 We do not even love the Apostle Paul simply because we recognize that he is a kind of hu- man being. Augustine dwells on this example, arguing that we love Paul from what we read about him, for we love the justice we read in him, because we our- selves want to be just: indeed, loving a just man for his justice means wanting to be just ourselves; in fact, we love human beings either because they are just, or because we want to make them just. 7 This clarification of what is meant by brotherly love gives Augustine a basis for the rest of book VIII, for it has become clear, he asserts, that the heart of this question about the Trinity and our knowledge of God is the nature of true love (vera dilectio), or bluntly the nature of love itself, for true love is the only kind worth talking about, the rest is cupiditas (trin. VIII. vii. 10). True love Augustine goes on to define (or perhaps better, describe) by saying that this is true love, that cleaving to the truth we may live justly. This leads, as we would expect, to the twofold commandment to love and, by way of the ideas about that which we have already seen to be implicit in Augustines mind, to the assertion that in deal- ing with love, we are dealing directly with God himself, for which the key biblical evidence is 1 John 4:8: God is love, Deus dilectio est. Therefore Augustine can say: Let no one say: I do not know what I love. Let him love his brother, and he will love that same love. For he rather knows the love by which he loves, than the brother whom he loves. Behold now he can have God more known [to him] than his brother; clearly more known, because more present; more known, because more inward; more known, because more certain. Embrace love, and by love embrace God. (trin. VIII. viii. 12) Augustine goes on to envisage an objection: But I see love, and as much as I can I look at it with my mind, and I believe what Scripture says: God is love, and he who abides in love, abides in God. But when I see [love], I do not see the Trinity in it. On the contrary, [Augus- tine replies] you do see the Trinity, if you see love. But I will help you, if I can, to see what you see; let [the Trinity] alone be present [to help us], that we may be moved by love towards some good [end]. (Ibid.) 6. See especially trin. VIII. v. 8. 7. Trin. VIII. vi. 9. 6 LOUTH: LOVE AND THE TRINITY 8. Trin. VII. iii. 5; VIII. vii. 10; XIII. x. 14; XV. xvii. 31; XV. xxvi. 46. Imo vero vides Trinitatem, si vides caritatem: if you see love, you see the Trinity. It is one of Augustines boldest claims. He has already warned us, that this is only true in the case of true love, but nonetheless one is struck by its boldness. There is a long way to go, from seeing love to discerning the Trinity. Augustine will offer, at the end of book VIII, an initial image or trace of the Trinity in the lover, the beloved and the love that binds them together, but he makes few claims for it. It is a starting point: from here it remains to ascend, and to seek out these things above, in as much as it is given to humans. We have not, asserts Augustine, found what we are look- ing for, but we have found where to look (trin. VIII. x. 14). That is still quite a claim. The theme of love and the Trinity is not absent from the following books, but I do not think Augustine introduces any new considerations that directly affect this theme. In his summary in book XV these ideas are stated concisely when he affirms: He who is the Holy Spirit in accordance with the Holy Scriptures is not the Fathers alone, nor the Sons alone, but belongs to them both: and thus he instils in us that common love by which the Father and the Son love each other (trin. XV. xvii. 27). What are the key steps in Augustines considerations? Immediately, I want to draw attention to two of them, which are, indeed, closely bound up with each other. First, there is the way in which the twofold commandment links the divine and the human realms. It is a twofold command, but there are not really two loves: there is one love which functions as a bridge between the divine and the human. Even though the one definition (or description) prof- fered is in purely human terms (that cleaving to the truth we may live justly), Augustine moves between human and divine love without much sense of dif- ference. The second point I want to make is close to this: for it is the Holy Spirit who is the root of either love, whether human or divine. In the case of divine love, there is a strict identity: the Holy Spirit is the love by which the Father loves the Son and is in term loved by the Son. In the case of human love, such love is only genuine when it is a matter of the Holy Spirit moving within us. The key text here is Rom. 5:5, which speaks of the love of God poured out in our hearts by the Holy Spirit that is given to us, quoted five times in de Trinitate. 8 7 LOUTH: LOVE AND THE TRINITY Clement and Maximos With Clement and Maximos, we shall have to approach the question of love and the Trinity less directly, for neither of them wrote a work specifically on the Trinity. There is a further complication with Clement, and that is, that since he lived more than a century before the Synod of Nica, we cannot expect to find in him the clarity of Trinitarian theology that there is in Augustine and Maximos. Nonetheless, there are compensations, as we shall see. The first point I want to make about Clement is to challenge Oliver ODonovans assertion that Augustine is the first to see the centrality of the twofold command- ment to love. On the contrary, it seems to me that Clement makes a great deal of it: he frequently returns to it in his discussions of the perfect Christian life in his Stromateis, and yet more frequently the notion of the twofold nature of love guides his reflections, even when the Dominical commandment is not explicitly cited. But it is more than a matter of mention. For the twofold commandment has for Clement, it seems to me, something of the same pivotal significance that it has for Augustine. Let me take a couple of examples. First, from the second book of Stromateis. One of Clements ways of proceeding in this work is to discuss gnomic sayings from both the Classical and the Biblical traditions. Here is an example: A little more mysterious is the sentence, Know yourself. It comes from the text, You have seen your brother, you have seen your God. In this way I suppose we must take You shall love the Lord your God with your whole heart and your neighbour as yourself. He says that the whole of the Law and the Prophets depends on these commandments. This matches the oth- ers: I have spoken thus to you so that my joy may be made full. This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you. For the Lord is full of mercy and pity, and The Lord is good to all. Moses, trans- mitting Know yourself with greater clarity, often says, Take heed [prov sece seautw/ ` , common in Deuteronomy]. By acts of mercy and faith are sins cleansed; by the fear of the Lord everyone is turned away from sin. The fear of the Lord is education and wisdom. [These last two citations from Proverbs] (Strom. II. 70. 571. 4) 9 Here the apocryphal Dominical sayingYou have seen your brother, you have seen your Godis used to link the Delphic saying, Know yourself, with the commandment to love (which suggests an attention to the qualification as yourself in the second part of the twofold commandment, that ODonovan also denies before Augustine). 9. Translation, slightly modified, by John Ferguson, in Clement of Alexandria, Stromateis, Books One to Three (Fathers of the Church 85, Washington DC: Catholic University of America Press, 1991), 2056. 8 LOUTH: LOVE AND THE TRINITY The other passage of Clement I want to look at briefly in this connexion is the passage that ODonovan cites in support of his claim: from Quis dives salvetur. 10 This is the passage where it is claimed that by loving ones neighbour, Clement means loving Christ (the implication being that this robs the command of its func- tion as a basis for human morality). He, of course, does say this, but this is because in the passage (Qds 27ff.) Clement is not just discussing the twofold command- ment on its own, but in its context in St. Lukes Gospel, where Jesus answer to the lawyers query as to the identity of the neighbour we are to love is the parable of the Good Samaritan. Clement reads this parable with more care than some exegetes. It seems to me that he sees it functioning on two levels: the Lords final words, Go and do likewise subvert the lawyers question to limit the commandment to the neighbour, for, as Clement comments, Jesus words show that love bursts out in good works. The neighbour then is the one whom we are to love, and it is these good works (eujpwiiva) that are important rather than the identity of the neighbour. This is the usual way in which the parable is taken. But Clement is conscious that the parable is meant to answer the lawyers question. Taken like that, it is the good Samaritan who is the neighbour: he is the one who is to be loved. That is a more profound suggestion: that we are to love the one who shows us pity, for only in that way will we open ourselves to the One whose pity we desperately need, namely Christ himself. But even that interpretation does not frustrate the commandment in the way ODonovan feared, for Clement goes on to say that he who loves Christ will obey his commandments, and as an example quotes Matt. 25:3440, the Lords words to the sheep in the parable of the sheep and the goats, a demanding account of neighbourly love. But before Clement gets there he argues that such love on our part will not be possible unless we are freed from the wounds visited upon us by the world-rulers of darkness: fears, lusts, wraths, griefs, deceits and pleasures. Of these wounds, he says, Jesus is the only healer, by cutting out the passions absolutely and from the very root. He does not deal with the bare results, the fruits of bad plants, as the law did, but brings his axe to the roots of evil. This is he who poured over our wounded souls the wine, the blood of Davids vine; this is he who has brought and is lavishing on us the oil, the oil of pity from the Fathers heart; this is he who has shown us the unbreakable bands of health and salvation, love, faith and hope; this is he who has ordered angels and principalities and powers to 10. I have used the text of the Loeb Classical Library edition, with introduction and translation by G. W. Butterworth (Cambridge Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1968 imprint of 1919 edi- tion), though I have often modified, sometimes quite drastically, Butterworths translation (Quis dives salvetur is on pp. 270376; abbreviated in citations as Qds). 9 LOUTH: LOVE AND THE TRINITY serve us for great reward, because they too shall be freed from the vanity of the world at the revelation of the glory of the sons of God. (Qds 29. 36) A little later on in this treatise, or homily, there is another striking passage that leads up to an affirmation of the twofold commandment to love: Behold the mysteries of love, and then you will have a vision of the bosom of the Father, whom the only-begotten God alone declared. God himself is love, and for loves sake he manifested himself to us. And while the ineffable part of him is Father, the part that has sympathy with us became Mother. By his loving, the Father became female, a great sign of which is he whom he begat from himself; and the fruit that is born of love is love. For this reason he himself descended, for this reason he clothed himself in humanity, for this reason he willingly suffered the human lot, so that, having been mea- sured to the weakness of us whom he loved, he might measure to us his own power. And when he was about to be offered and give himself as a ransom, he leaves us a new covenant: I give you my love. What love is this, and how great? For each of us he lays down his life, equal to that of the whole world. In return he asks this from us for each other. (Qds 37. 14) This passage is perhaps best known for its reference, unusual in the Fa- thers, to Gods motherhood. But it is not that I wish to pursue now. What we have in this passage is a remarkable account of the manifestation of Gods love for us, through the Son, in Incarnation and Redemption: a love that mani- fests God to us and through that manifestation calls from us love on our part, a love for God, but primarily manifest in our love for one another, for the twofold command is to characterize the life of those who have responded to Gods gift of himself to us in love. The passage we have just quoted continues: But if we owe our lives to our brothers, and acknowledge such a reciprocal compact with the Saviour, shall we still gather up and treasure the things of the world which are beggarly and alien and unstable? Shall we shut out from one another that which in a short while the fire shall have? It was with divine inspiration indeed that John said, He who does not love his brother is a murderer, a seed of Cain, a nursling of the devil. He has nothing of Gods tenderness, and no hope of better things, he is infertile, he is barren, he is no branch of the ever-living vine from the realm beyond the heavens; he is cut off, he is even now ready for the fire. (Qds 37. 56) But the movement of love, the movement from God the Father to the Son (or from Gods fatherliness to his motherliness) is a movement of manifestation to us of that which, in itself, is ineffable. God, who is beyond knowledge and under- standing, beyond being, like Platos form of the Good, 11 makes himself known as love in the Son, in his Incarnation and self-offering. But love belongs to the 11. Plato, Republic VI. 509b, frequently alluded to by Clement. 10 LOUTH: LOVE AND THE TRINITY manifestation; God in himself is ineffable. Clement expresses his movement from what would later be called the apophatic to the cataphatic (from the realm where our knowledge is expressed by negation to the realm where we may affirm what has been revealed), from ineffable mystery to divine manifestation as love, in terms of the unknowable, invisible Father whom the Son makes visible or known, terms characteristic of much pre-Nicene theology. 12 In post-Nicene Greek the- ology, this distinction is preserved as the contrast between -.c`c,. c and c. -c|c. c: the unknowable mystery of God in Himself, God as Trinity, and Gods self-manifestation in his bringing into being the house (c.-c,) of creation and his work of redeeming and bringing to perfection all that belongs to that house. The c. -c|c. c is the realm of Gods love; God in Himself, God the Trinity, is a mystery beyond our comprehension. One consequence, or so it seems to me, of Clements correlating love with the realm of manifestation is that it is something that can be known and un- derstood; and we indeed find in Clement much reflection on the nature of love as the crowning human virtue, both requiring and making fully effective the other human virtues. His picture of the Christian gnostic (or contemplative, though I wish we could reclaim the word gnostic for Orthodoxy: it was far more commonly used, and continued to be used, in Orthodox ascetic theol- ogy than it ever was among those we have come to know since the nineteenth century as gnostics): this picture is of one moved by such love, what Clem- ent calls the divinity of love (-.. c| t , c ,c ,), which is not desire on the part of the one who loves, but a loving affinity (ct.-t.- c. -.. .c.,) restoring the gnostic to unity of faith, having no need of time or space; 13 it is a state of serene attention, made possible by the acquisition of c c -..c, free- dom from passion or desire in virtue, as Clement sees it, of the serene possession of the good on the part of the gnostic. It is this love that we see in Christ, for he could never abandon his care for human kind (-o.c|. c|) through the distractions of any pleasure, seeing that, after he had taken upon himself our flesh, which is by nature subject to passion, he trained it to a habit of freedom from passion (. .| c c-.. c,). 14 12. On Clements apophatic theology, see most recently Henny Fisk Hgg, Apophaticism and Knowledge in Clement of Alexandria, in Eadem (ed.), Language and Negativity. Apophaticism in Theology and Literature (Oslo: Novus Press, 2000), 5162. 13. Clement of Alexandria, Stromateis VI. ix. 73. 3. 14 Ibid. VII. ii. 7. 5. 11 LOUTH: LOVE AND THE TRINITY This notion of love and aj pav qeia is one that seems very strange to modern Western ears: and that is partly because it was attacked early on in the West by Jerome 15 and perhaps also by Augustine, 16 and therefore dropped out of Western ascetic vocabulary, to be replaced by Cassian with the less alarming- sounding puritas cordis. But Clements understanding of love and aj pav qeia, developed and deepened by their own experience, became the heritage of the Eastern ascetic masters, and was inherited by Maximos. 17 What we find in Maximos is very much what we have found in Clement, transposed into the idiom of post-Nicene, indeed post-Chalcedonian, theology. The distinction between the unknowable, apophatic realm of qeologiv a and the cataphatic realm of oij konomiv a, about which we are granted understand- ing, is fundamental. 18 In his beautiful letter on love (ep. 2), which is really a lengthy encomium of love, Maximos says: For nothing is more truly godlike than divine love, nothing more mysterious, nothing more apt to raise up human beings to deification. For it has gathered together in itself all things that are recounted by the understanding of truth in the form of virtue, and it has absolutely no relation to anything that has the form of wickedness, since it is the fulfilment of the law and the prophets. For they were succeeded by the mystery of love, which out of human beings makes us gods, and reduces the individual commandments to a universal meaning. Everything is circumscribed by love according to Gods good plea- sure in a single form, and love is dispensed in many forms in accordance with Gods economy. 19 Even though Maximos speaks (like Clement) of divine love, he means Gods love towards us and the love he inspires in us, a love manifest both in our longing for God, and also in our love for our fellows. Like Clement, and Augustine, the twofold commandment constantly guides Maximos reflections on love; Maximos even concurs with Augustine in finding in the two pence the Good Samaritan leaves with the innkeeper an allusion to the twofold com- mandment. 20 Maximos also follows Clement (and the by now highly developed 15. Jerome, ep. 133. 3. 16. Cf. Augustine, de Civitate Dei XIV. 9. 4. 17. On Clements understanding of love and ajpavqeia , see my article, Apathetic Love in Clement of Alexandria, Studia Patristica 18.3 (1989), 41319. 18. Though, as Maximos disciple, St. John Damascene, points out the two distinctionsapophatic- kataphatic, theologia-oikonomiado not exactly correspond (expos. fidei 2). 19. Maximos the Confessor, ep. 2 (PG 91. 393BC). 20. Idem, Centuries on Love IV. 75 (cf. Augustine, Qu. Evang. II. 19; En. Psa. 125. 15). 12 LOUTH: LOVE AND THE TRINITY Byzantine ascetical tradition) in having a clearly worked out notion of love as the fruit of aj pav qeia, itself the product of the acquisition of the virtues. Love brings us to the threshold of the divine mystery, but Maximos does not use the language of love to describe Gods inner nature, or trinitarian life: love belongs to, indeed characterizes, the divine economy. Of love, Maximos can say: This is the way of truth, as the Word of God calls himself, that leads those who walk in it, pure of passions, to God the Father. This is the door, through which the one who enters finds himself in the Holy of Holies, and is made worthy to behold the unapproachable beauty of the holy and royal Trinity. This is the true vine, in which he who is firmly rooted is made worthy of becoming a partaker of the divine quality. Through this love, all the teaching of the law and the prophets and the Gospel both is and is proclaimed, so that we who have a desire for ineffable goods may confirm our longing in these ways. 21 It is not that Maximos has nothing to say about the Trinity, into whose myster- ies the Christian soul is initiated. There is a remarkable passage, that occurs is slightly different forms in his commentary on the Lords Prayer and in his com- mentary on the Divine Liturgy, called his Mystagogia. Let me quote part of it: The Word then leads [the soul] to the knowledge of theology made mani- fest after its journey through all things, granting it an understanding equal to the angels as far as this is possible for it. He will teach it with such wisdom that it will comprehend the one God, one nature and three per- sons, a tri-personal unity of essence, and a consubstantial trinity of persons, trinity in unity and unity in trinity, not one and another, nor one beside another, nor one through another, nor one in another, nor one from an- other, but the same in itself, according to itself, with itself, by itself. . . . For the holy trinity of persons is an unconfused unity, by essence and in its own simple meaning; and the holy unity is a trinity, by persons and in its mode of existence, the samewhatever it isas a whole, and differently according to each meaning, as has been said, understood as one and sole, undivided and unconfused, single and undiminished and undeviating godhead, wholly a unity existing in its being and the same wholly a trinity in its persons, a single ray of triply radiant light, shining in a single form. In which light the soul, equal in dignity to the holy angels, having received the manifest principles concerning the godhead that are accessible to cre- ation, and having learned in harmony with them without silence to praise in threefold form the one godhead, has been drawn up to the adoption by grace through the likeness it has acquired, through which, in its prayers having God by grace as the hidden and only Father, it is gathered up to the One in its hiddenness by an ecstasy from all things, and the more it is persuaded of 21. Idem, ep. 2 (PG 91. 404A). 13 LOUTH: LOVE AND THE TRINITY divine things, or rather comes to know them, the more it wants not to be its own, nor to be able to be known from itself, by itself or anything else, but only as wholly Gods, who takes it up wholly in a way befitting of the good, wholly and impassibly in a divinely-befitting way entering it wholly, wholly deifying it, and transforming it unchangeably into himself. 22 There is an intensity, a passion even, about this passage, a strangely sober, ethereal intensity, that is not uncommon in Byzantine attempts to delineate something of what knowledge (gnw` si~) of the Trinity means. But Maximos does not use the notion of love to characterize the Trinity that he has discov- ered. Even though the fulfilment of human love is deification, becoming divine, love is not used to characterize the nature or inner life of the Trinity. The reason is, I think, very simple: that for Maximos, and for the Greek patristic tradition both before and after him, the mystery of God overwhelms any hu- man categories; all one can do is stutter the precise distinctions that belong to the doctrine of the Trinity, which do not so much reveal the divine mystery, as prevent one reducing it in ones conception to a bare philosophical unity or a pagan pantheon or any other misconception. As Vladimir Lossky put it, with characteristic perceptiveness: This is why the revelation of the Holy Trinity, which is the summit of cataphatic theology, belongs also to apophatic theology, for [quoting the Areopagite] if we learn from the Scriptures that the Father is the source of divinity, and Jesus and the Holy Spirit are the divine progeny, the divine seeds, so to say, and flowers and lights that transcend being, we can neither say nor understand what that is. 23 Conclusion I think my conclusion is reasonably clear, and perhaps not very surprising. All the Fathers we have discussed are in complete agreement that the twofold com- mandment to love is at the centre of any understanding of the Christian life; furthermore, in this love something of the divine is revealed to us, for the Incar- nation is a revelation of Gods love, and in our loving response to his love we come to share in the divine love. But despite all this there is a striking difference between Augustine and our two Greeks, and this difference is, broadly speaking, a difference between Augustine and Greek patristic theology. This difference lies in 22. Idem, Mystagogia 23, ed. Ch. Sotiropoulos (Athens 1993), 216. 1422, 218. 3220. 2; cf. idem, exp. orationis dominicae, ed. P. van Deun, CCSG 23, ll. 440467. 23. Vladimir Lossky, La notion des analogies chez le Pseudo-Denys lAropagite, in Archives dhistoire doctrinale et littraire du moyen ge 5 (1930): 283 (quoting Dionysios, Divine Names II. 7). 14 LOUTH: LOVE AND THE TRINITY the fact that for Augustine love characterized the divine life itself, and not just Gods love for us and our love for one another. Love gives us some kind of key to the inner reality of God. Augustines idea is intoxicating; it is difficult, once having read Augustine, not to let this idea, which seems to be very much Augustines own, condition our reading of other theologians, especially the Greeks, who do not seem to share it. 24 But if we look at how Augustine gets to this idea, it is clear that there are reasons for reserving our judgment. The unity of the spirit in the bond of peace (Eph. 4:3) is clearly for St. Paul the unity of love in the Spirit that is the principle of the unity of the Church; it is not, as it is for Augustine, the unity of the Spirit that constitutes the unity of the Trinity (cf. trin. VI. v. 7). The advancement of Augustines argument in the books of de Trinitate that we have looked at depends on this blurring of the distinction between the divine and the human. But we have seen in the Greek Fathers, in an inchoate form in Clement, but fully worked out in Maximos, as in all the post-Nicene Greek Fathers (with rare exceptions such as, perhaps, Synesius of Cyrene), the crucial significance of the distinction between qeologiv a and oij konomiv a, a distinction that holds together, on the one hand, the genuine revelation of God that takes place in the created order, both in the providential ordering of the cosmos and in the history of salvation, culminating in the Incarnation, and, on the other, the ultimate mystery of the ineffable Godhead. For the Fathers this distinction, first evoked, to my knowledge, in connexion with the Arian controversy, 25 is crucial, because if it is breached we run the risk of reducing the mystery of the Godhead to human categories. This, it seems to me, is the danger with Augustines doctrine of the Trinity, even if the human category is love, and even though he does his best to make sure that we derive our notion of love from Gods love, rather than the other way about. This conclusion is not at all original, for much the strongest argument of Orthodox theologians against the Western doctrine of the Filioque, the doc- trine that the Spirit proceeds from the Son as well as from the Father, is that this doctrine only gains what credence it has by confusing qeologiv a and oij konomiv a, by applying ideas about the Spirits mission in the oij konomiv a to his eternal procession within the Trinity. 24. For someone who keeps her head, see Catherine Osborne, Eros Unveiled. Plato and the God of Love (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994). 25. See the letter of Alexander of Alexandria to Alexander of Byzantium (?Thessalonica), in H.-G. Opitz (ed.), Athanasius Werke, vol. III, part 1: Urkunde zur Geschichte des arianischen Streites, Urkunde 14. 4. 15 LOUTH: LOVE AND THE TRINITY But it may be that my conclusion is not really a conclusion at all. Maybe Augus- tine was right in seeing the notion of love as one that retains its meaning, if not univocally, at least with a strong analogy, whether applied to God or to human kind. One might think that some recent developments in personalist metaphysics in mod- ern theology, whether Orthodox or Western, make Augustines premise plausible (though Western advocates of such personalist metaphysics seem even less inclined than the Orthodox to seek support for their ideas in Augustine). 26 One might also point to the fact (for such I think it is) that no less an Orthodox theologian than St. Gregory Palamas, once he encountered Augustines association of the Spirit and love, incorporated it into his own theology. 27 Perhaps then I have not reached a conclusion, but rather raised a question about the continued relevance of the thought of the great African doctor of the Church on the topic of love and the Trinity. But if we are to follow Augus- tine, we should, I think, heed the fact that this is one aspect of Augustines theology that departs from the tradition of the Church, both as it was under- stood in his day and for centuries later, at least in the East. Not only that, but it is not difficult to see why the Greek Fathers do not follow Augustine in tracing the reality of love right to the heart of the Trinity. For myself, I would want to be sure that they were wrong before abandoning their teaching. I do not, however, think that the Greek Fathers are wrong, and it perhaps worth concluding by drawing out why I think we should hold to the Greek distinction between qeologiva and oijkonomiva, and resist the attraction of Augustine. What Augustine does in allowing his doctrine of love to constitute a bridge between qeologiv a and oij konomiv a is, it seems to me, to begin to imagine the Trinity as a community of loving individuals. The Trinity then becomes an object of human specu- lation in itself: we are well on the way to a kind of mythological notion of the Trinity, which will cause the problems Augustine is already somewhat at a loss to answer, such as whether any other members of the Trinity could have become incarnate. 28 The apophatic doctrine of the Trinity we find in the Greek Fathers 26. I have in mind Orthodox theologians such as Metropolitan John (Zizioulas) of Pergamon and Christos Yannaras, and Western theologians such as Colin Gunton and Alan Torrance. 27. See Gregory Palamas, Capita CL 367. For evidence that Palamas derived this from his reading of Maximos Planoudis Greek translation of Augustines de Trinitate, see R. Flogaus, Palamas and Barlaam Revisited: A Reassessment of East and West in the Hesychast Controversy of 14 th - Century Byzantium, in St. Vladimirs Theological Quarterly 42 (1998): 132. Palamas use of Augustine extends far beyond this idea. 28. A question Augustine faces without giving any convincing response in both ep. 11 to Nebridius and sermo 52. I am grateful to Lewis Ayres for bringing these two passages to my attention in a 16 LOUTH: LOVE AND THE TRINITY keeps a rein on such speculations, and this seems to me an advantage. 29 Such reasons to resist the modern tendency to go even further than Augustine with a social model of the Trinity have been aired recently by several theologians, and I would endorse their approach here. 30 It must be granted that Augustine himself does not advance very far down this route, his doctrine of the Trinity has its own apophaticism; 31 but his use of the doctrine of love in the way outlined above ad- vances along a road ruled out altogether by the Greek Fathers. Another related point of contrast between Augustine and the Greek Fathers might be worth mentioning briefly. I noted above that, because the Greek doc- trine of love is about the realm of the oij konomiv a, it belongs to the realm of the known, and in fact the Greek Fathers have a good deal to say about the nature of love, and how to nurture it; there is, in short, a proper asceticism of love to be developed. I find myself wondering whether there is not a link between Augustines sliding between divine and human love in the way I have argued above and what seems to me his shyness of any asceticism of love. Such shyness occurs in, for instance, the second half of book ten of his Confessions, and also in his response to the monks of Hadrumetum: in the former case, particularly, his searching self- examination does not lead to any consideration of what his part might be in remedying the defects he analyses but to the need to cast himself on divine grace. If love is essentially divine, the presence of the Spirit within us, then it is perhaps not surprising that Augustine finds it impossible to develop any asceticism of love, such as can be found throughout the Byzantine ascetical tradition. But I am raising questions, not providing answers, and I hope that such may be accepted as a proper use of the Villanova Augustine Lecture. seminar paper eventually published as: Remember That You are Catholic (serm. 52.2): Augus- tine on the Unity of the Triune God, Journal of Early Christian Studies 8 (2000): 3982. But I think Augustine has greater difficulty with this problem than Ayres would like to think. 29. The question as to why it is the person of the Son who becomes incarnate it raised, glancingly, by John Damascene in his treatise against the Monothelites (de Duabus in Christo Voluntatibus 37). But his response in terms of the invariability of the mode of existence of the Son in qeologiva and oijkonomiva provides an answer without raising any speculative questions about the nature of the Trinity. 30. See Karen Kilby, Perichoresis and Projection: Problems with Social Doctrine of the Trinity, New Blackfriars 81 (2000): 43245, and from a rather different perspective, John Behr, The Paschal Foundation of Christian Theology, St. Vladimirs Theological Quarterly 45 (2001): 11536. 31. See Vladimir Lossky, Les lments de thologie negativedans la pense de saint Augustin, Augustinus Magister I (Paris, tudes Augustiniennes, 1954), 57581.