The author applies no categories. It does not ignore anything.
It asks - can we identify in St Augustine (for example) places where he clearly and explicitly talks about procession as eternal / generation vs procession as temporal / economic? There is a matter of wording here, because Greek has different words with distinctions that Latin doesn't perfectly capture. Because this is the point of contention between East and West - are we talking about
causality or not?
And it turns out you can.
Quote:
When the Son spoke of the Spirit, He said, "He proceeds from the Father," because the Father is the author [lit. 'auctor' or "originator"] of His procession. The Father begot a Son and, by begetting Him, gave it to Him that the Holy Spirit proceeds from Him as well.
Quote:
Yet He did not say, Whom the Father will send from me, as He said, Whom I will send unto you from the Father,-- showing, namely, that the Father is the beginning (principium) of the whole divinity, or if it is better so expressed, deity. He, therefore, who proceeds from the Father and from the Son, is referred back to Him from whom the Son was born.
Quote:
...it was said about the Father, 'He Himself does the works,' because from Him [the Father] is also the origin of the works, from whom is the existence of the cooperating persons; because the Son was born from Him, and the Holy Spirit primarily proceeds from Him, from whom the Son was born, and with whom the same Spirit is common to them.
In all of these cases it is explicit that St Augustine teaches the Monarchia of the Father - namely, that the Father is the author of the procession of the Spirit, the father is the beginning of the whole divinity, and that the whole existence of the Son and Spirit come from Him. In other words, the eternal procession
as regard to causality is singular from the Father.
Can you square that with "The Holy Spirit is
eternally from Father and Son; He has his nature and subsistence at once from the Father and the Son. He proceeds
eternally from both
as from one principle and through one spiration. We declare that when holy doctors and fathers say that the holy Spirit proceeds from the Father through the Son, this bears the sense that thereby also
the Son should be signified, according to the Greeks
indeed as cause, and according to the Latins as principle of the subsistence of the holy Spirit,
just like the Father"? I don't see how. The statements from St Augustine do not seem to match.
The Roman church today does not argue against the Monarchia of the Father. In fact on Catholic answers you see this:
Quote:
The key, I think, to understanding between East and West is to understand the Holy Spirit to proceed ek monou tou patrou, because the Father is the true arche of the entire life of the Trinity. The Greeks are right here. It is only when we speak of the procession (proienai) of the Person of the Holy Spirit "after" the initiation of the divine life that alone belongs to the Father that we can speak of the Holy Spirit proceeding from the Father and the Son (filioque). The Latins are correct as well.
The definition of Florence is the problem. The sole cause vs two causes is the issue.