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derived from the disdain of servitude,   inflamed, after the time of Constantine, by the pride of equality   or dominion; and finally exasperated by the preference which   their rebellious subjects had given to the alliance of the   Franks. In every age the Greeks were proud of their superiority   in profane and religious knowledge: they had first received the   light of Christianity; they had pronounced the decrees of the   seven general councils; they alone possessed the language of Scripture and philosophy; nor should the Barbarians,   immersed in the darkness of the West, ^2 presume to argue on   the high and mysterious questions of theological science.   Those Barbarians despised in then turn the restless and   subtile levity of the Orientals, the authors of every heresy; and   blessed their own simplicity, which was content to hold the tradition of the apostolic church. Yet in the seventh century,   the synods of Spain, and afterwards of France, improved or   corrupted the Nicene creed, on the mysterious subject of the   third person of the Trinity. ^3 In the long controversies of the   East, the nature and generation of the Christ had been   scrupulously defined; and the well-known relation of father   and son seemed to convey a faint image to the human mind.   The idea of birth was less analogous to the Holy Spirit, who,   instead of a divine gift or attribute, was considered by the   Catholics as a substance, a person, a god; he was not   begotten, but in the orthodox style he proceeded. Did he   proceed from the Father alone, perhaps by the Son? or from   the Father and the Son? The first of these opinions was   asserted by the Greeks, the second by the Latins; and the   addition to the Nicene

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