||Fil`i*o"que (?), n. (Eccl.
Hist.) The Latin for, "and from the Son," equivalent to et
filio, inserted by the third council of Toledo (a. d. 589)
in the clause qui ex Patre procedit (who proceedeth from the
Father) of the Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed (a. d. 381),
which makes a creed state that the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Son as
well as from the Father. Hence, the doctrine itself (not admitted by
the Eastern Church).
||Fil`i*o"que (?), n. (Eccl.
Hist.) The Latin for, "and from the Son," equivalent to et
filio, inserted by the third council of Toledo (a. d. 589)
in the clause qui ex Patre procedit (who proceedeth from the
Father) of the Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed (a. d. 381),
which makes a creed state that the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Son as
well as from the Father. Hence, the doctrine itself (not admitted by
the Eastern Church).