| PART THREE: The Apostles' Creed II - V
Second Article: "Jesus Christ His Only Son, Our Lord"
1. The Incarnation
This article teaches that Jesus is the Redeemer promised
to Adam and Eve in Genesis 3:15, the only Son of God, and by
that very fact, Lord of all Creation. He is the second
Person of the Holy Trinity, sent to the world by the Father
to become man and save us from our sins. So St. Peter said
in Matthew 15:16: "You are the Christ, the son of the Living
God". The name Jesus means Savior, as we see from Matthew
1:2. The name Christ means the Anointed one (cf. Acts
10:38).
We can easily see He was not the same as other great
religious teachers. He not only worked miracles that could
be authenticated, but worked them in contexts such that
there was a tie established between the miracle and the
claim, as we see in the healing of the paralytic in Mark 2.
He foretold His own resurrection; He lived a life of such
holiness that He could challenge people: "Which of you can
convict me of sin?" (John 8:46). Hardly anyone else would
dare to give such a challenge! His teaching rested not on
human reasoning but on the divine authority which He
claimed, e.g., when He said several times over: "You have
heard it was said to them of old... but I say to you"
(Matthew 5:27-44). He inspired His followers to follow Him
even to dreadful deaths. If someone objects: other religions
have had martyrs too — correct. But not one of them can
provide the solid support of data that we can, as shown in
our sketch of apologetics in part one. He founded a Church
whose doctrine can and does develop in the same line, that
is, without reversing any previous teaching, over all
centuries. He made clear this was the divinely given means
of getting peace in this life and eternal salvation in the
world to come.
"And the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us" wrote
St. John (1:14). So the Second Person of the Holy Trinity
assumed human nature, He who "In the beginning was the Word;
the Word was with God, and the Word was God" (John 1:1)
He became man to redeem us from sin, that is, to pay the
debt of our sins, as Leo the Great said (Letter to
Flavian, June 13, 449). We read in the Epistle to the
Ephesians (2:4-5): "God, being rich in mercy, because of the
great love with which He loved us, even when we were dead in
our transgressions, made us alive again together with
Christ."
The Council of Chalcedon in 451 brought to the climax the
long debates about the make-up of Jesus: He is one Person, a
Divine Person, having two natures, divine and human, in such
a way that these two natures remain distinct after the union
in the one Person. We call this union "hypostatic union"
from the Greek "hypostasis" which means person — two natures
joined in one Person. His human nature is the same as ours
except that He was without sin, even though He was tempted
as we are (Hebrews 4:15). However, this does not mean that
He had within Him disorderly passions. The Second Council of
Constantinople in 553 defined this truth against "impious
Theodore of Mopsuestia".
His divine nature is the same as that of the Father. The
Council of Nicea in 325 defined that He is "one in substance
[homoousios] with the Father".
The Church has repeatedly taught, e. g, in the
Encyclicals of Pius XII on the Mystical body and on the
Sacred Heart, that from the first instant of His conception,
Jesus' human mind had the vision of God, in which all
knowledge is available. This was reaffirmed at least
implicitly in the Encyclical Sempiternus Rex of Pius
XII, and in the Letter of the Holy Office under Paul
VI, of July 24, 1966 which complained: "There creeps forth a
certain Christological humanism in which Christ is reduced
to the condition of a mere man, who gradually acquired
consciousness of His divine sonship." Pius XII in his
Encyclical, Humani generis, in 1950, pointed out that
"if the Popes in their Acta pass judgment on a matter thus
far debated, it is clear to all that according to the mind
and will of the same Pontiffs, the question cannot be
considered any more open to free discussion among
theologians." He added that these statements come under the
promise of Christ, "He who hears you, hears me" (Luke
10:16). Of course, that promise cannot fail.
Really, theological reasoning even without the help of
the Church can reach the same conclusion thus: Any soul has
the vision of God if, besides grace, the divinity joins
itself directly to the human mind, without even an image in
between (no image could represent God). Now since Jesus has
a true humanity but it is joined to the divinity in such a
way that there is only one Person (the hypostatic union), it
is obvious that His human soul and mind was joined to the
divinity directly, even more closely than an ordinary soul
is joined in the vision, in which the soul remains one
person, while God is a different Person. But in Jesus there
was only one Person. So He not only happened to have the
vision: it could not have been otherwise.
What of the words of Luke 2:51 that He advanced in
wisdom? St. Athanasius in the 4th century found the answer.
In his Third Oration Against the Arians he said:
"Gradually as the body grew and the Word manifested itself
in it, He is acknowledged first by Peter, then by all." In
other words: There was no real growth in wisdom, only a
growth in manifestation. If at age 3 for example He had
shown His full wisdom, it would have been overwhelming.
Rather, He chose a gradual self-revelation. Only late in His
public life did he say such things as, "I and the Father are
one" (John 10:30) and, "Before Abraham was, I AM" (John
8:57). As to His saying that even the Son did not know the
day of the end (Mark 13:32), Pope Gregory the Great gave us
the answer in his Epistle to Eulogius: "... in the
nature of His humanity He knew the day... but not from the
nature of humanity did He know it." That is, it registered
on His human mind, but His humanity was not the source of
that knowledge.
Finally , Plato, the great Greek philosopher, in his
Symposium 203, wrote: "No god associates with men".
Aristotle in his Nichomachean Ethics 8.7 wrote that
friendship of a god with a man is impossible, the distance
is too great. What would they have thought had they learned
that God actually became man, and even, that He willed for
our sake to submit to a horrible and shameful death? In the
Old Testament, Deuteronomy 21:23 says: "Cursed be everyone
who hangs on the wood". No wonder St. Paul told the
Corinthians (I. 1:23) that the doctrine of the cross is
folly to the Greeks, and a scandal to the Jews!
Third Article: "Conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of
the Virgin Mary"
1. The Blessed Virgin Mary: Her Privileges and
Relation to Christ and His Church
According to a late tradition, the parents of Our Lady
were St. Joachim and St. Anne, natives of Bethlehem who
lived in Nazareth.
Her most fundamental privilege is that of being the
Mother of God. We do not mean she produced the divine
nature, of course. But her Son is God, so she is the Mother
of God. Similarly, Mrs. Jones shares only in the production
of the body of her son John, not at all in the making of his
soul. Yet we do not say she is mother of the body of John
Jones, but of John Jones, the person. Pius XI quoted St.
Thomas Aquinas with approval in saying that "From the fact
that she is the Mother of God, she has a sort of infinite
dignity from the infinite good that God is. (Lux
veritatis, Dec. 25, 1931, citing Summa I. 25. 6. ad 4).
She conceived her son by the power of the Holy Spirit
(Luke 1:35). The Archangel first told her that her Son was
to be the Son of the Most High. However, any devout Jew
could be called a son of God. But there was more: the angel
told her He would reign over the house of Jacob forever:
right then she would know He was to be the Messiah, for Jews
then commonly believed the Messiah would reign forever.
Finally, the angel said He would be conceived when the Holy
Spirit would "overshadow" her. That word, she would know,
was the one use to describe the Divine Presence filling the
ancient Tabernacle in the desert (Exodus 40:35). Her Son was
to be called Son of God "for this reason". So that He was
the Son of God in a unique sense. From this alone she likely
knew of His divinity, especially when she would add the
words of Isaiah 9. 5-6 that the Messiah would be "God the
Mighty". Even though the Jews found that text hard, she,
full of grace, would readily grasp it.
So this was a virginal conception, that is, without the
intervention of a man. Both Matthew and Luke make this
clear. If we believe the Gospels, we will understand that
readily. The teaching of the Church, already in the oldest
creeds which call her "ever-virgin" tells us she remained a
virgin during and after His birth. Some have tried to say
the teaching on her virginity was not physical, but just a
way of expressing her holiness. But it is more than that:
Vatican II (LG # 57) wrote that His birth "did not
diminish, but consecrated her virginal integrity." That word
"integrity" refers to physical condition.
Therefore when the Gospels speak of the "brothers and
sisters" of Jesus, they do not mean other children of Mary.
The Hebrew words were very broad, could cover any sort of
relationship. For that matter, modern English uses these
words even more broadly for members of fraternities and
sororities.
As a result of this Divine Motherhood, because it was
fitting for Her Son, she obtained the great grace of the
Immaculate Conception, defined by Pius IX in 1854. This
means that from the first instant of conception her soul had
sanctifying grace, in anticipation of the future merits of
her Son.
Vatican II, Pope John Paul II and others understand the
Greek of Luke 1:28, kecharitomene, to mean "full of grace".
The Greek perfect participle is very strong, the root verb
means to put someone in the state of grace/favor. And
especially, the word is used instead of her name. This is
like saying someone is Mr. Tennis — the ultimate in tennis.
So she is Miss Grace, the ultimate in grace. Pius IX, in
defining the Immaculate Conception, said that even at the
start, her holiness was so great that "none greater under
God can be thought of, and no one but God can comprehend
it"! One of the oldest teachings of the Church is that she
is the New Eve: just as the first Eve really contributed to
the disaster of original sin, so Mary the New Eve really
contributed to removing it, that is, to redeeming us. Every
Pope since Leo XIII, and Vatican II, in seventeen documents
have said that her role in redeeming us extends even to a
part in the great sacrifice of Calvary itself! It is a
general principle, that if something is taught repeatedly by
the Church, even on a level less than a definition, the
teaching is infallible.
Vatican II, echoing earlier papal teaching, tells us that
at the cross she was asked even to "consent" to the death of
her Son (LG # 58). Pope John Paul II, in his
Encyclical, The Mother of the Redeemer, set out to
further deepen that teaching (as he tells us in his
Guardian of the Redeemer [on St. Joseph]). He showed
that this was the "deepest self-emptying in history" for her
and her Son. That she in it practiced "the obedience of
faith". Now since all perfection lies in positively willing
what God wills whenever we know His positive will, she was
called on to positively will that He die, die so horribly.
All this in spite of a love so great that "only God can
comprehend it" — for Pius IX had said, as we saw above that
her holiness was that great even at the start. But holiness
and love of God are interchangeable words. So her suffering
was such that "no one but God could comprehend it." As we
would expect, having shared at immense cost in earning all
graces, she shares similarly in distributing all of them as
Mediatrix of all graces. This truth too has been taught
numerous times by a long series of Popes, everyone from Leo
XIII through John XXIII.
Pius XII, in defining the Assumption, explained that
"Just as the glorious resurrection of Christ was an
essential part and final sign of this victory [over sin and
death by Calvary] so that struggle [Calvary] which was
common to the Blessed Virgin and her Son, had to be closed
by the glorification of her virginal body". That is, the
struggle, a work common to the two was a common cause. It
brought Him glorification; it had to bring the same to her.
(In all this it is understood she is subordinate to Him, and
really depends on Him for all her ability to do anything at
all).
As a result, just as He is now King of the Universe, she
is Queen of the Universe. "And her kingdom is as vast as
that of her Son and God, since nothing is excluded from her
dominion" (Pius XII, Bendito seia, May 13, 1946).
Chapter 8 of the Vatican II Constitution on the Church
is entirely on her. In it the Council goes through in detail
her association with Him. She is eternally joined with Him
in the eternal decree for the Incarnation. She will remain
eternally joined to Him as Queen in His Kingdom. And the
council went through in detail every one of the mysteries of
His life and death, showing in each case her close
association with Him. The place the Father gave her is
really all-pervading, in His approach to us. In writing
this, Vatican II wrote more extensively about her, went
farther theologically than all previous Councils combined!
In spite of talk that it downgraded her, it was the
opposite. Vatican II could really be called the Marian
Council.
On the floor of the Council, Paul VI declared her Mother
of the Church. This was not entirely new. Pius XII, in a
message to the Marian Congress of Ottawa, Canada, on July
19, 1947 said: "When the little maid of Nazareth uttered her
fiat to the message of the angel... she became not only the
Mother of God in the physical order of nature, but also in
the supernatural order of grace, she became the Mother of
all, who... would be made one under the Headship of her Son.
The Mother of the Head would be the Mother of the members."
Fourth Article: "Suffered under Pontius Pilate, was
crucified, died, and was buried"
When Jesus died, His body and soul were separated, for
that is what death means. They remained separated until the
Resurrection, but His divinity remained united to both His
body and His soul.
How did His death produce the effect of Redemption?
Sinners had, as it were, taken from one pan of a two-pan
scale — an image to represent the moral order — what they
had no right to take. The Holiness of the Father, loving all
that is morally right, wanted the scales of the moral order
righted, wanted the debt to be paid. Further, the imbalance
was infinite, so that only a divine Person incarnate could
rectify it, by giving up satisfactions He could have
lawfully had, and by suffering things He did not owe. Pope
Paul VI wrote (Constitution on Indulgences, Jan 9,
1967):
It is necessary... for the full remission and...
reparation of sins, not only that friendship with God be
reestablished... and amends be made for the offense
against His wisdom and goodness, but also that all the
personal as well as social values, and those of the
universal order, diminished or destroyed by sin, be
fully restored, ... through voluntary reparation... .
Indeed Christ, 'who committed no sin, ' suffered for us,
'was wounded for our iniquities, bruised for our sins...
. by His bruises we are healed. ' Thus there was
established as it were a treasury of 'the infinite and
inexhaustible value the expiation and the merits of
Christ our Lord have before God.
We willed to suffer so much also "to draw all things to
Himself" (John 12:32) by proving (cf. Romans 5:8) the
immense love of His Heart, which went to such lengths to
make eternal happiness open to all.
Further, since as St. Paul tells us (cf. Romans 8:17), we
are saved and sanctified to the extent that we are not only
members of Christ, but are like Him, therefore we too must
share in this work of reparation. Jesus wanted to draw us to
imitate Him in His work of satisfaction.
So we might join with Him, He commanded "Do this in
memory of me." So it is precisely in the Mass that we bring
our offering of whatever obedience to the Father we have
carried out since the last Mass, and we present too our
penance of reparation, to be joined with the obedience and
reparation of Jesus and His Mother at the double
consecration, when He Himself, using a human priest to carry
out the same dramatic sign He used in the Upper Room,
presents again His willingness to obey the Father, to make
reparation for sin. We might note: Even though in the U. S.
we have a dispensation from Friday abstinence, the Church
cannot dispense us from this obligation of penance, in union
with the sufferings of Jesus and His most holy Mother.
Fifth Article: "He descended into hell, the third day
He rose again from the dead"
1. Christ's Descent into Limbo and His Resurrection
After His death, the soul of Jesus, still united to the
divinity, descended into the realm of the dead, which the
Creed calls "hell", in the old English usage. It does not
mean at all the hell of the damned. He visited what is
called the Limbo of the Fathers. For the just, who had died
in the state of grace, and had paid all the debt of their
sins, were still not admitted to the vision of God until
Jesus had died.
When a soul reaches the vision of God, by that vision, it
knows all that pertains to it on earth. But without that
vision, it would not know any of these things, unless God
might decide to give a special revelation. Of course, then,
the afterlife was very different then from what it is now.
So we can understand some otherwise strange texts in the Old
Testament. Job 7. 9-10 says that the dead one "does not
return to his house." Of course not, the resurrection will
be not a return to the present mode of life. Psalm 6:6 asks
"who in Sheol can praise you?" Sheol is the realm of the
dead. The Psalmist is thinking of the grand liturgical
praise of God, which the Hebrews really loved. That
liturgical praise of course is not found in Sheol. In Isaiah
38:19 we read that "those who go down to the pit cannot hope
for God's fidelity." The "fidelity" means God's faithful
keeping of His covenant promises. Those in Sheol cannot
appeal to the covenant. Qoheleth 9:10 says there is no work
in Sheol — of course not. It says there is no knowledge —
that is, of what goes on on earth. Jesus came to take them
out of that drab and dull place. Then there was fulfilled
what St. Paul wrote in Philippians 2:9-10: "God exalted Him
and gave to Him the name that is above every name, so that
at the name of Jesus, every knee should bend, of those in
heaven, and on the earth, and under the earth." This can
also refer to the power of Jesus over satan. The passage is
poetic, and so need not mean that Sheol is under the earth.
Jesus rose from the dead, as He had foretold in John
2:19-22, and elsewhere. Sometimes Scripture says He rose,
that is, by His own power. In as much as He is God, this is
true. It also says the Father raised Him: this is true,
thinking of His human nature.
So many witnesses saw Him after this resurrection, for
example we have an enumeration of them in First Corinthians
15:5-8.
How can we arrange in plausible order the events after
His resurrection? In more than one way, e.g., :
1) Magdalen and other women come to the tomb at dawn,
and see it is
empty,
2) In excitement she or they run to the Apostles
(Matthew here, between
20:8 &9, omits the visit of Peter and John, our item
3),
3) Peter and John do not believe but do run to the tomb,
and see it empty.
They do not see Jesus,
4) Peter and John leave, Magdalen then sees Him, takes
Him for the
gardener; He makes himself known,
5) Jesus appears to Peter,
6) He appears to two men on road to Emmaus,
7) They go back to the Apostles, hear Peter had seen
Him,
8) He appears to the Eleven, gives them the power to
forgive sins.
9) Thomas was absent, Jesus comes again,
10) Further appearances at Lake of Galilee.
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