My ...brain.....is...working...slowly. [img]http://www.the-highway.com/w3timages/icons/hairout.gif" alt="hairout" title="hairout[/img]<br><br>He is wholly human and wholly divine. But how can he be wholly human without being a human person? I.e. is a nature wholly human?<br><br>The 2nd person of the trinity took on human flesh. But if he took on human flesh, is he a human person or does he just have a human nature? <br><br>And the Chalcedon Creed says he is in all things like us. I'm not just a human nature, am I? Am I not a person as well? Can a human nature really be said to be in all things like unto us?<br><br>Or (as has been the case with me more than once before) am I pouring too much or the wrong meaning into the terms "nature" and "person"? I haven't found most systematics/dogmatics to be inadequate in their treatment of this, or at least they are inadequate in making me understand this issue!<br><br>Sorry to be thick-skulled on this one,<br>Steve


Grace is not common.