Chapter 5. Whether Christ's subsistence is created or uncreated | ||||
The subsistence of God the Word before the Incarnation was simple and uncompound, and incorporeal and uncreated: but after it became flesh, it became also the subsistence of the flesh, and became compounded of divinity which it always possessed, and of flesh which it had assumed: and it bears the properties of the two natures, being made known in two natures: so that the one same subsistence is both uncreated in divinity and create in humanity, visible and invisible. For otherwise we are compelled either to divide the one Christ and speak of two subsistences, or to deny the distinction between the natures and so introduce change and confusion. | ||||
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