4.
The
Cappadocian Fathers gave full meaning to what?
The textbook states that the
Cappadocian Fathers preserved a delicate balance between the threeness and oneness
of God and that they gave a full meaning to the classic summary of Trinitarian
doctrine, three Persons in one essence. Concerning this analysis, Hieromonk
Patapios of Etna states that the textbook presents a typically Western
assessment of St. Athanasius the Great and the Cappadocians, according to which
the former emphasized the “unity of God” and the latter “God's threeness.” Fr.
Patapios explains that:
Such a contrast is not inherently mistaken, as long as it is not pressed
so far as to imply that St. Athanasius did not appreciate the “threeness” of
God or that the Cappadocians did not make due allowance for His “oneness.” This
difference of emphasis has more to do with the different heresies that both
were combating, than it does with any lopsidedness in their respective
theologies. One should be extremely cautious about posing contrasts of this
kind, which all too easily contribute to the misconception that the Fathers
were somehow at odds with each other,
rather than members of a harmonious chorus [The
Orthodox Church and The Orthodox Way Reviewed, pp.
5-6].
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