Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library |
Martin Luther Disputation On the Divinity and Humanity of Christ IntraText CT - Text |
IV.
Argument: A word is not a person. Christ is the Word. Therefore Christ is
not a person.
I prove the major premise, that a word and a person are different.
Response: This is a new expression, which was formerly unheard of in the
world. Christ is not a mathematical or physical word, but a divine and
uncreated word, which signifies a substance and a person, because the divine
Word is the divinity. Christ is the divine Word. Therefore he is the
divinity, that is, a substantial person [ipsa substantia et persona].
Philosophically, "word" means a sound or an utterance, but speaking
theologically, "Word" signifies the Son of God. This, Aristotle would not
admit, that "Word" signifies true God [plenum Deum].