Rationalist critics lay great stress upon the text: "The Father is greater than I" (
14:28). They argue that this suffices to establish that the author of the Gospel held subordinationist views, and they expound in this sense certain texts in which the
Son declares His dependence on the Father (
5:19;
8:28). In point of fact the
doctrine of the
Incarnation involves that, in regard of His Human
Nature, the
Son should be less than the Father. No argument against
Catholic doctrine can, therefore, be drawn from this text. So too, the passages referring to the dependence of the
Son upon the Father do but express what is essential to Trinitarian
dogma, namely, that the Father is the supreme source from Whom the
Divine Nature and perfections flow to the
Son. (On the essential difference between
St. John's doctrine as to the
Person of
Christ and the
Logos doctrine of the Alexandrine Philo, to which many
Rationalists have attempted to trace it, see
LOGOS.)
In regard to the
Third Person of the Blessed Trinity, the passages which can be cited from the
Synoptists as attesting His distinct
personality are few. The words of
Gabriel (
Luke 1:35), having regard to the use of the term, "the Spirit," in the
Old Testament, to signify
God as operative in His creatures, can hardly be said to contain a definite
revelation of the
doctrine. For the same reason it is dubious whether
Christ's warning to the
Pharisees as regards
blasphemy against the
Holy Spirit (
Matthew 12:31) can be brought forward as
proof. But in
Luke 12:12, "The
Holy Ghost shall teach you in the same hour what you must say" (
Matthew 10:20, and
Luke 24:49), His
personality is clearly implied. These passages, taken in connection with
Matthew 28:19, postulate the
existence of such teaching as we find in the discourses in the Cenacle reported by St. John (
14,
15,
16). We have in these chapters the
necessary preparation for the
baptismal commission. In them the
Apostles are instructed not only as the
personality of the
Spirit, but as to His office towards the
Church. His work is to teach whatsoever He shall hear (
16:13) to bring back their
minds the teaching of
Christ (
14:26), to convince the world of
sin (
16:8). It is evident that, were the
Spirit not a
Person,
Christ could not have spoken of His presence with the
Apostles as comparable to His own presence with them (
14:16). Again, were He not a Divine
Person it could not have been expedient for the
Apostles that
Christ should leave them, and the
Paraclete take His place (
16:7). Moreover, notwithstanding the neuter form of the word (
pneuma), the pronoun used in His regard is the masculine
ekeinos. The distinction of the
Holy Spirit from the Father and from the
Son is involved in the express statements that He proceeds from the Father and is sent by the
Son (
15:26; cf.
14:16,
14:26). Nevertheless, He is one with Them: His presence with the Disciples is at the same time the presence of the
Son (
14:17-18), while the presence of the
Son is the presence of the Father (
14:23).