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   (2) Whether mission is eternal, or only temporal?
   (3) In what sense a divine person is invisibly sent?
   (4) Whether it is fitting that each person be sent?
   (5) Whether both the Son and the Holy Ghost are invisibly sent?
   (6) To whom the invisible mission is directed?
   (7) Of the visible mission.
   (8) Whether any person sends Himself visibly or invisibly?
   FIRST ARTICLE [I, Q. 43, Art. 1]
   Whether a Divine Person Can Be Properly Sent?
   Objection 1: It would seem that a divine person cannot be properly sent. For one who is sent is less than the sender. But one divine person is not less than another. Therefore one person is not sent by another.
   Obj. 2: Further, what is sent is separated from the sender; hence Jerome says, commenting on Ezech. 16:53: "What is joined and tied in one body cannot be sent." But in the divine persons there is nothing that is separable, as Hilary says (De Trin. vii). Therefore one person is not sent by another.
   Obj. 3: Further, whoever is sent, departs from one place and comes anew into another. But this does not apply to a divine person, Who is everywhere. Therefore it is not suitable for a divine person to be sent.
   _On the contrary,_ It is said (John 8:16): "I am not alone, but I and the Father that sent Me."
   _I answer that,_ the notion of mission includes two things: the habitude of the one sent to the sender; and that of the one sent to the end whereto he is sent. Anyone being sent implies a certain kind of procession of the one sent from the sender: either according to command, as the master sends the servant; or according to counsel, as an adviser may be said to send the king to battle; or according to origin, as a tree sends forth its

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