"The Monotheletes wished to reconcile the supporters of the Council of Chalcedon (451), who ascribed two natures to the incarnate Christ, with the Monophysites, who believed that He has only one nature; and so they proposed as a compromise the theory that Christ has two natures, the one divine and the other human, but only one single will. Against this St. Maximos maintained that human nature without a human will is an unreal abstraction: if Christ does not have a human will as well as a divine will, He is not truly man; and if He is not truly man, the Christian message of salvation is rendered void. What we see in Christ our Savior is precisely a human will, genuinely free yet held in unwavering obedience to His divine will; and it is by virtue of this voluntary co-operation of manhood with divinity in Christ, which restored by the integrity of human nature, that we are enabled to make our own wills freely obedient to the will of God and so attain salvation. St. Maximos' teaching was confirmed after his death by the Sixth Eucumenical Council, meeting at Constantinople in 680-1."
The Philokalia Vol 2 pg 49-50
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