On the Nativity - Sermon 21 of Leo the Great
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 12 ก.ย. 2024
- A reading of sermon 21 by Leo the Great, on the nativity of our Lord. I found it particularly succinct yet powerful, and so thought it would be a great contribution to this year's celebration of Christ's birth. I hope this blesses you, and that you have a merry Christmas.
Read the text of the sermon here: ccel.org/ccel/...
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Music Used:
O Come, O Come, Emmanuel - instrumental cover by ClaRK's Music: • O Come, O Come, Emmanu...
I've listened over and over even after Christmas. What a beautiful sermon. Please do more like this.
Many thanks man, that's very encouraging. I 100% intend to do another for Easter :)
Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. Merry Christmas.
Absolutely magnificent! Merry Christmas!
Thank you heaps, and merry Christmas :)
Wow! great job on this one!
Beautiful!
Merry Christmas! Christ is born, he is born indeed!
Merry Christmas!
Well done sir! ❤ Thank you
Beautiful!
Thanks for sharing this sermon, Paul!
God bless you
This is awesome bro! Fantastic words, great delivery, and the music is so fitting. Merry Christmas!
Thank you heaps for the kind words Rev!
The music and lyrics are in impeccable taste here. Merry Christmas.
Thanks heaps John! Merry Christmas
Beautiful
Make the Roman Pontiff great again!
@3:45 OO seeth. Merry Xmas!
Leo, Sermon 54 (CCT - Grillmeier translation):
"God therefore assumed the whole man and joined himself to him, and him to himself, out of mercy and power, so that each of the two natures inheres in the other and neither changes into the other with the surrender of its properties."
Original Latin - PL 54:319:
"Suscepit ergo totum hominem Deus, et ita se illi, atque illum sibi misericordiae et potestatis ratione conseruit, ut utraque alteri natura inesset, et neutra in alteram a sua proprietate transiret."
@@dioscoros and out of context quote mining award goes to!...
@@OrthodoxChristianTheology apparently Grillmeier according to you, who said in his commentary regarding this passage:
"Strictly speaking, there would have to be thus two personae in Christ. But both natures enter into each other in such a way that, each without loss of its varitas and its proprietates, they form an inseparable, unmingled unity."
So then, enlighten me, how it can be Orthodox to say that the God who assumed and the whole man assumed are "himself to him, and him to himself?" What possible interpretation can be used to speak of the 2 parts which form Christ as two "hims?"
@@dioscoros you're literally responding to a citation of a Christ being a single person ...
@@OrthodoxChristianTheology right, and as you probably know by now, the classical Theodorean school teaches that Christ is a single "prosopon of unity" which is formed out of two persons, which Grillmeier also notes that Leo taught in another sermon of his. Theodore refers to the human and divine persons as distinct persons, but then to one external person which is the juxtaposition of the 2. Leo refers to the human and divine persons as distinct persons but refers to the "kingly person" as the juxtaposition of the 2.
So again, under what context do you believe it is permissible to speak of the two natures as "two hims" that Leo does twice in Sermon 54?
that was very well done - is this same Leo who wrote Leo’s Tome? that has i guess an early virgin mary perpetual virgin type of phrasing on the birth of Jesus? i wonder why the difference if its same Leo?
Thank you man. Yes this is the same Leo.
Where is Hatun Tash?
Too bad about his ecclesiology.
His Christology was way worse:
Leo, Sermon 54 (CCT - Grillmeier translation):
"God therefore assumed the whole man and joined himself to him, and him to himself, out of mercy and power, so that each of the two natures inheres in the other and neither changes into the other with the surrender of its properties."
Original Latin - PL 54:319:
"Suscepit ergo totum hominem Deus, et ita se illi, atque illum sibi misericordiae et potestatis ratione conseruit, ut utraque alteri natura inesset, et neutra in alteram a sua proprietate transiret."
Merry Christmas!