Jacob of Serugh

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    The Undivided Light: The Holy Trinity (Part 4 of 7)

    Week 4 of The Undivided Light is now up on Seeking Theosis, and this one is on the Holy Spirit.
    The post draws on Ephrem the Syrian, Jacob of Serugh, and Cyril of Alexandria to look at who the Spirit is and what the Spirit does, both in the broad sweep of salvation history and in the specific life of prayer, baptism, and the Qurbana. There is also a brief and honest note on the filioque question, which is something that comes up whenever the Spirit’s procession is discussed, and where the Oriental Orthodox position is clear and worth knowing.
    It is perhaps the post in the series so far that has felt most personally relevant to write. The Spirit is the person of the Trinity closest to us and yet the hardest to speak about directly, and the Syriac fathers have things to say about that which I have found genuinely helpful.

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    The Undivided Light: The Holy Trinity (Part 3 of 7)

    The Undivided Light | Week 3 is now up on Seeking Theosis
    The Eternal Son, Begotten Not Made
    There is a phrase in the Nicene Creed that most of us have said so many times that we have stopped hearing it.
    “Begotten. Not made.”
    Two words. One of the most consequential theological statements ever written. And if they are true, the entire Gospel stands. If they are not, the entire Gospel falls.
    This third post in the summer Trinity series looks at the eternal Son, the second person of the Trinity, through the eyes of three fathers whose voices shaped the Oriental Orthodox confession of the Nicene faith.
    Three fathers guide the reading: Athanasius of Alexandria, who spent most of his life defending this confession against enormous pressure and explained why it is the foundation of the entire Gospel. Cyril of Alexandria, whose theology of participation shows why the Eucharist depends on the Son being truly and fully God. And Jacob of Serugh, who expressed the mystery of the begotten Son in Syriac verse of remarkable beauty and depth.
    There is also a reflection toward the end on what this theology means for how we receive the Qurbana, which may be the most practically useful part of the post.
    Do share it with anyone who might benefit, and prayers for the completion of the series remain very much asked for and appreciated.

  • Dwelling in the Spirit: The Spirit Has Come to Stay

    Five days ago the Church kept Pentecost.

    Monday came, and the ordinary week returned. The question Pentecost always quietly leaves behind waited in the ash: what has changed?

    The Fathers answer: everything – because the Spirit has not merely visited. He has come to stay.

    New Friday series begins today on Seeking Theosis.