Hypostatic Union
A
theological term used with reference to the
Incarnation to express the
revealed truth that in
Christ one
person subsists in two
natures, the Divine and the
human.
Hypostasis means, literally, that which lies beneath as basis or foundation. Hence it came to be used by the Greek
philosophers to denote reality as distinguished from appearances (Aristotle, "Mund.", IV, 21). It occurs also in
St. Paul's Epistles (
2 Corinthians 9:4;
11:17;
Hebrews 1:3-
3:14), but not in the sense of
person. Previous to the
Council of Nicæa(325)
hypostasis was synonymous with
ousia, and even St. Augustine (
On the Holy Trinity V.8) avers that he sees no difference between them. The distinction in fact was brought about gradually in the course of the controversies to which the
Christological heresies gave rise, and was definitively established by the
Council of Chalcedon (451), which declared that in Christ the two
natures, each retaining its own properties, are united in one subsistence and one
person (
eis en prosopon kai mian hpostasin) (
Denzinger, ed. Bannwart, 148). They are not joined in a moral or
accidental union (Nestorius), nor commingled (
Eutyches), and nevertheless they are substantially united. For further explanation and bibliography see:
INCARNATION;
JESUS CHRIST;
MONOPHYSITISM;
NATURE;
PERSON.
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