Partake vs Enhypostasia - What's the difference?
partake | enhypostasia |
(formal) To take part in an activity; to participate.
* John Locke
To take a share or portion (of).
(obsolete) To have something of the properties, character, or office (of).
* Francis Bacon
Something which subsists in another personality or partakes of another hypostasis.
* 1997 , Schaff, Philip, History of the Christian Church'', (Oak Harbor, WA: Logos Research Systems, Inc.), based on the 1910 edition from Charles Scribner's Sons, Volume IV, chapter 14,
As a verb partake
is to take part in an activity; to participate.As a noun enhypostasia is
something which subsists in another personality or partakes of another hypostasis.partake
English
Verb
- Brutes partake in this faculty.
- Will you partake of some food?
- The attorney of the Duchy of Lancaster partakes partly of a judge, and partly of an attorney-general.
enhypostasia
English
Noun
(-)ยง144. ''John of Damascus
- "The Logos was bound to the flesh through the Spirit, which stands between the purely divine and the materiality of the flesh. The human nature of Jesus was incorporated in the one divine personality of the Logos (Enhypostasia )."
