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One of the greatest hurdles that confronted the Fathers of the Church was how to reconcile the idea of a suffering God with the Greco-Roman philosophical tradition of divinity, where change and suffering are foreign and impossible to the Supreme Being. With the possible exception of the early Syriac Fathers, whose roots were more Semitic and biblical than Hellenistic, this problem involved a great reworking of the classical heritage.1 Platonic tradition, Aristotelians, Stoicism, and Epicureanism were all in agreement that God could not have anger, love, hatred, compassion, envy, or mercy, he did not change, and he did not suffer. The context for the Eastern Fathers is on the one hand the defense of their faith and on the other hand the expanding of the classical tradition through their own theological reflections. St. Ignatius of Antioch for example in his letter to the Ephesians reminds them that Jesus is God and Man, eternal God and born of Mary, and therefore is without suffering and has suffered.
In: Divine Impassibility and the Mystery of Human Suffering, ed. James F. Keating and Thomas J. White (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2009), pp. 27-76.
Both contemporary theology and the preaching associated with it seem to accord an ever-increasing place to the theme of the “suffering” of the tri- une God. Without revisiting in detail the criticisms of this trend which can be posed from a metaphysical perspective, and without entering into a profound theological consideration of human suffering, I propose to sketch out here some of the principal stages of the teaching of the Church (I), then examine certain aspects of the uneasiness that the traditional teaching elicits today (II). After this I will describe various forms of reflection developed by contemporary theologians (III), in order to discuss them in light of the teaching of St. Thomas Aquinas (IV).
2012
In Eastern Christianity, suffering is not treated as a special topic. A special theology of suffering is not well-defined, although the theme is present in important aspects of Orthodox doctrine: anthropology, providence, soteriology, sanctification and eschatology. As a consequence of Adam"s sin, suffering overwhelms the entire human being: body and soul. The ontological restoration of all of humanity is achieved in the divine-human person of Our Saviour Jesus Christ, in His quality as Son of God Incarnate. Once Christ entered the world, human suffering acquired a soteriological meaning: from individual despair it became a saving cross, a sacrifice expiating sin, an opportunity for man to obtain the power of grace in his battle with sin and its aftermath. Suffering, as estrangement from God"s grace, does not elude the irrational created nature either. Called to protect and sanctify nature, man becomes its serving priest, an intercessor of God"s grace, capable of restoring it from corruption.
New Blackfriars, 2005
The contemporary theological discussion concerning divine (im)passibility
Divine Impassibility and the Mystery of Human Suffering (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 2009), 2009
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