|
Of course, if the case were so, we should not be Trinitarian
Christians. But it is not so. There are two considerations which refute this
objection.
(1) A genus, thus understood, has no absolute, objective, and substantial
existence at all. It is a generalization, an abstraction made by the mind from
many individuals who or which are observed to have important common features.
But God is not a generalization, an abstraction! He is the highest reality, a
living entity. Therefore, whatever the mysterious Persons of the Holy Trinity
may be, they are not individuals, ranged under an abstraction or
generalization called God, and the charge of Tritheism quite falls to the
ground.
Philosophical controversies have doubtless raged round the question of what
these universals really are. Are they the merest abstractions, expressions to
denote common features roughly observed in particulars, mere names to labels
given for convenience in classification? Such is the doctrine of the
Nominalists. Others agreed with that doctrine as far as the objective
existence of the universals is concerned, but tried to preserve to it more
reality than was conceded by the Nominalists, by saying that a universal was a
real conception of the mind, more than a mere name and rough label. These
thinkers were called Conceptualists. But Aristotle emphasized the importance
of believing in the objective reality of the universal underlying thesethe
differences of the particularsthat is to say, that each universal though
inseparable from the |
|
CREATOR, INCARNATE, ATONER |
21 |
|
individuals it embraces, does really indicate an intrinsic similarity in the
things embraced. To finite thought that similarity may be abstract; but to
absolute thought it is real. To absolute thought, the forms, which inhere in all
members of a species, are absolutely the reallest things of all, being the
subject of the contemplation of the thought of God. Hence the Aristotelians were
called Realists. But still they totally denied that their doctrine involved
attributing to these universal genera (man, animal, etc.) any
substantial, or hypostatic, existence, that is, declaring that they are
distinct entities. Only Plato found his way to this extreme position, and
appeared sometimes to teach that universals, horse, man, etc., are distinct
entities; that they inhabit an ideal, heavenly world, that they are as
substantial and real as any individual things here on earthnay, far more so,
for they are the sole reality; and in comparison with them horses, men, etc.,
are mere shadows, owing whatever reality they possess to their partaking in the
likeness of their heavenly, ideal counterparts, which he named ideas. Hence his
followers were called Idealists. These are philosophical matters which are
rather remote from our thinking to-day, and we may feel the distinctions alluded
to are more subtle than is necessary, and not worth much trouble. Nevertheless
blood has been shed in the course of working out the controversy, but it would
take too long to show why this was. For our present purpose, however, it is
enough to say that God, the supreme, |
|