Divinity suffered in the flesh vs God suffered in the flesh

Divinity suffered in the flesh vs God suffered in the flesh

1. The Core Doctrine: One Person, Two Natures

The Orthodox Church teaches that Jesus Christ is one Person (Hypostasis) with two natures:

  • Divine nature – eternal, impassible, uncreated
  • Human nature – created, capable of suffering and death

This doctrine was defined at the Council of Chalcedon, which proclaimed that Christ exists:

“in two natures, without confusion, without change, without division, without separation.”

Because of this hypostatic union, what belongs to either nature can be attributed to the one Person of Christ.

So we say:

  • “God suffered in the flesh.”
  • But not “the divine nature suffered.”

2. Why the Divine Nature Cannot Suffer

In Orthodox theology, God is impassible.

The Greek word used by the Fathers is:

ἀπαθής (apathēs)
meaning without passions, incapable of suffering or being altered.

John of Damascus explains:

“The divinity is impassible; yet we say that God suffered in the flesh.”
Exact Exposition of the Orthodox Faith, Book III, Chapter 20

The divine nature cannot:

  • suffer
  • change
  • decay
  • die

If it could, it would not be divine.

3. What Actually Happened on the Cross

Christ truly suffered because His human nature suffered.

The human nature He assumed from the Virgin Mary could:

  • feel pain
  • bleed
  • hunger
  • die

But the suffering belonged to the human nature, while the Person experiencing it was the divine Son.

This is why Scripture can say:

“They crucified the Lord of Glory.”
— 1 Corinthians 2:8

The Lord of Glory (God) was crucified —
but in His humanity.

4. The Examples of St. John of Damascus

To help us approach this mystery, St. John offers two images.

The Sun and the Tree

Imagine:

  • A tree being cut
  • Sunlight shining on it

The tree is damaged, but the sunlight remains unaffected.

Likewise:

  • Christ’s body suffers
  • The divinity remains impassible

Yet they remain united.


Heated Iron

Another patristic analogy is iron placed in fire.

The iron becomes:

  • glowing
  • burning

Yet iron and fire remain distinct.

When water is poured:

  • the fire is extinguished
  • the iron remains

Similarly in Christ:

  • the human nature suffers
  • the divinity remains untouched
  • yet they are inseparably united

5. The Mystery of Kenosis

This also reveals Christ’s self-emptying.

The Greek word used by St. Paul is:

κένωσις (kenōsis)self-emptying

“He emptied Himself, taking the form of a servant.”
— Philippians 2:7

Christ did not stop being God.
Rather, He humbled Himself by willingly experiencing human suffering.

Athanasius of Alexandria writes:

“The Word was not Himself subject to corruption, yet He assumed a body capable of death.”
On the Incarnation, §20

6. How the Church Sings This Mystery

The Church expresses this theology beautifully in the hymns of Holy Saturday.

During the services of Holy Saturday, we hear:

“Though Thy body suffered, Thy divinity remained impassible.”

Orthodox theology is not merely academic —
it is sung in the Church’s worship.

7. A Spiritual Lesson

The Cross also teaches us something about our own suffering.

The saints often say:

When iron enters fire, it becomes fire-like.

So when a human person unites with Christ, suffering itself becomes transformed.

Maximus the Confessor writes:

“God became man so that man might become god by grace.”
Ambigua, 7

Through union with Christ:

  • suffering can become purification
  • weakness can become strength
  • death becomes resurrection

8. A Simple Analogy from the Saints

An elder once told a monk who feared suffering:

“When a surgeon cuts the body, it hurts—but the cut heals the disease.”

The Cross is God’s healing incision into human death.

Christ allowed His human body to be wounded
so that human nature itself might be healed.

 


 In summary

  • Christ has two natures (divine and human)
  • He is one Person (the Word/Logos)
  • The human nature suffered
  • The divine nature remained impassible
  • Yet the Person of Christ truly suffered in the flesh

Therefore the Church rightly proclaims:

“God suffered in the flesh.”

On Key

Related Posts

Reading Scripture in an Orthodox way

Reading Scripture in an Orthodox way: 1. Doctrinal Explanation The patristic method of reading Scripture is not merely intellectual or academic—it is a participation in