The Lamb of God Quotes

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The Lamb of God The Lamb of God by Sergius Bulgakov
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“But it is pre-eternally resolved in the bliss of the offered and mutually accepted sacrifice, of suffering overcome. This mutual sacrifice never exists unresolved, although it cannot be separated or excluded from this bliss, for it is its hidden foundation.”
Sergius Bulgakov, The Lamb of God
“one cannot negate the importance of the idea itself that human will and energy preserve their autonomous being even when united with Divinity”
Sergius Bulgakov, The Lamb of God
“the perfect holiness of the God-Man, “the only one without sin.” Rather than “sinless,” Adam’s condition before the Fall can more accurately be called “pre-sinful.” It was sinless only in the negative sense of the absence of sin, not in the sense of the overcoming of sin. This condition of Adam is raised here to the positive holiness of the Man deified in the Incarnation,”
Sergius Bulgakov, The Lamb of God
“The Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and is received by the Son; He is the “third” person of the Holy Trinity, for He establishes the mutuality of the Father and the Son. God ideally defines His own nature in this begetting of His Pre-eternal Word by the Speaking Father. But the reality of this nature is experienced through the Holy Spirit. In God there is no self-definition that is not hypostatic. Therefore, the recognition of His own nature as reality is the hypostatic act of the procession of the Holy Spirit.”
Sergius Bulgakov, The Lamb of God
“Spiritual sonhood consists precisely in the Son’s depleting Himself in the name of the Father. Sonhood is already eternal kenosis.”
Sergius Bulgakov, The Lamb of God
“the Divine hypostases are equally eternal. The Father is the cause (aitia) of the Son not in the sense of His origination but only of eternal interrelation: that of begetter and begotten, the revealing one and the revealed one, the subject and the predicate.”
Sergius Bulgakov, The Lamb of God
“In the Divine Spirit the relation between person and nature is defined in another manner. In the Divine Spirit, there is nothing in a given or unrealized state. This Spirit is totally and thoroughly transparent to itself.”
Sergius Bulgakov, The Lamb of God
“In Macarius’s opinion, all the statements of Christ contained in the Gospels should be attributed to one person, to the one incarnate hypostasis of the Word, for “both the human and the divine [statements] were spoken by one person.”
Sergius Bulgakov, The Lamb of God
“creaturely freedom, which, being limited, is expressed in the opposition of freedom — as volition — to necessity, which is freedom’s limit, condition, and object.”
Sergius Bulgakov, The Lamb of God