He didn't want to do it, but his wife guilted him into it.
In journalese and politicianese every warning is grave, every destruction wanton, every feeling sensibly felt[…]
Some bastard stole my car while I was helping an injured person.
[H]e [Henry Liddon] observes, The anhypostasia (impersonality) of our Lord's humanity is a result of the hypostatic union: to deny it is to assert that there are two persons in Christ, or else deny that he is more than man. At his Incarnation, the Eternal Word took on him human nature, not a human personality. In Liddon's work, the word anhypostasia is rendered in Greek as ἀνῠποστασία: see Henry Parry Liddon (1867), “Lecture I. The Question before Us.”, in The Divinity of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ; Eight Lectures Preached before the University of Oxford, in the Year 1866, on the Foundation of the Late Rev. John Bampton, M.A. Canon of Salisbury, London; Oxford; Cambridge: Rivingtons, OCLC 2196086, section III.1 (The Catholic Answer […] Jealously Guards the Truth of Christ’s Manhood), footnote g, page 34.
The anhypostasia (impersonality) of our Lord's humanity is a result of the hypostatic union: to deny it is to assert that there are two persons in Christ, or else deny that he is more than man. At his Incarnation, the Eternal Word took on him human nature, not a human personality.
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