Books Four and Five
Books I - III
Book IV
Book V
BOOK IV
CHAPTER I
The marvel is, not that men have failed to
know Christ, but that they have not listened to the words of the Scriptures. Christ,
indeed, was not known, even of angels, save by revelation, nor again, by His forerunner.
Follows a description of Christ's triumphal ascent into heaven, and the excellence of its
glory over the assumption of certain prophets. Lastly, from exposition of the conversation
with angels upon this occasion, the omnipotence of the Son is proved, as against the
Arians.
1. On consideration, your Majesty, of the
reason wherefore men have so far gone astray, or that many--alas!--should follow diverse
ways of belief concerning the Son of God, the marvel seems to be, not at all that human
knowledge has been baffled in dealing with superhuman things, but that it has not
submitted to the authority of the Scriptures.
2. What reason, indeed, is there to wonder,
if by their worldly wisdom men failed to comprehend the mystery of God the Father and the
Lord Jesus Christ, in Whom all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge are hidden,(2) that
mystery of which not even angels have been able to take knowledge, save by revelation?
3. For who could by force of imagination,
and not by faith, follow the Lord Jesus, now descending from the highest heaven to the
shades below, now rising again from Hades to the heavenly places; in a moment
self-emptied, that He might dwell amongst us, and yet never made less than He was, the Son
being ever in the Father and the Father in the Son?
4. Even Christ's forerunner, though only in
so far as representing the synagogue,(1) doubted concerning Him, even he who was appointed
to go before the face of the Lord, and at last sending messengers, enquired: "Art
Thou He that should come, or do we look for another?"(2)
5. Angels, too, stood spellbound in wonder
at the heavenly mystery. And so, when the Lord rose again, and the heights of heaven could
not bear the glory of His rising from the dead, Who of late, so far as regarded His flesh,
had been confined in the narrow bounds of a sepulchre, even the heavenly hosts doubted and
were amazed.
6. For a Conqueror came, adorned with
wondrous spoils, the Lord was in His holy Temple, before Him went angels and archangels,
marvelling at the prey wrested from death, and though they knew that nothing can be added
to God from the flesh, because all things are lower than God, nevertheless, beholding the
trophy of the Cross, whereof "the government was upon His shoulder," and the
spoils borne by the everlasting Conqueror, they, as if the gates could not afford passage
for Him Who had gone forth from them, though indeed they can never o'erspan His
greatness--they sought some broader and more lofty passage for Him on His return--so
entirely had He remained undiminished by His self-emptying.
7. However, it was meet that a new way
should be prepared before the face of the new Conqueror--for a Conqueror is always, as it
were, taller and greater in person than others; but, forasmuch as the Gates of
Righteousness, which are the Gates of the Old and the New Testament, wherewith heaven is
opened, are eternal, they are not indeed changed, but raised, for it was not merely one
man but the whole world that entered, in the person of the All-Redeemer.
8. Enoch had been translated, Elias caught
up, but the servant is not above his Master. For "No man hath ascended into heaven,
but He Who came down from heaven;"(1) and even of Moses, though his corpse was never
seen on earth, we do nowhere read as of one abiding in celestial glory, unless it was
after that the Lord, by the earnest of His own Resurrection, burst the bonds of hell and
exalted the souls of the godly. Enoch, then, was translated, and Elias caught up; both as
servants, both in the body, but not after resurrection from the dead, nor with the spoils
of death and the triumphal train of the Cross, had they been seen of angels.
9. And therefore [the angels] descrying the
approach of the Lord of all, first and only Vanquisher of Death, bade their princes that
the gates should be lifted up, saying in adoration, "Lift up the gates, such as are
princes amongst you, and be ye lifted Up, O everlasting doors, and the King of glory shall
come in."(2)
10. Yet there were still, even amongst the
hosts of heaven, some that were amazed, overcome with astonishment at such pomp and glory
as they had never yet beheld, and therefore they asked: "Who is the King of
glory?"(3) Howbeit, seeing that the angels (as well as ourselves) acquire their
knowledge step by step, and are capable of advancement, they certainly must display
differences of power and understanding, for God alone is above and beyond the limits
imposed by gradual advance, possessing, as He does, every perfection from everlasting.
11. Others, again,--those, to wit, who had
been present at His rising again, those who had seen or who already recognized Him, made
reply: "It is the Lord, strong and mighty, the Lord mighty in battle."
12. Then, again, sang the multitude of
angels, in triumphal chorus: "Lift up the gates, O ye that are their princes, and be
ye lift up, ye everlasting doors, and the King of glory shall come in."
13. And back again came the challenge of
them that stood astonished: "Who is that King of glory? For we saw Him having neither
form nor comeliness;(4) if then it be not He, who is that King of glory?"
14. Whereto answer they which know:
"The Lord of Hosts, He is the King of glory." Therefore, the Lord of Hosts, He
is the Son. How then do the Arians call Him fallible, Whom we believe to be Lord of Hosts,
even as we believe of the Father? How can they draw distinctions between the sovereign
powers of Each, when we have found the Son, even as also the Father, entitled "Lord
of Saboath"? For, in this very passage, the reading in many copies is: "The Lord
of Sabaoth, He is the King of glory." Now the translators have, for the "Lord of
Sabaoth," rendered in some places "the Lord of Hosts," in others "the
Lord the King," and in others "the Lord Omnipotent." Therefore, since He
Who ascended is the Son, and, again, He Who ascended is the Lord of Sabaoth, it surely
follows that the Son of God is omnipotent!
CHAPTER
II.
None can ascend to heaven without faith; in
any case, he who hath so ascended thither will be cast out wherefore, faith must be
zealously preserved. We ourselves each have a heaven within, the gates whereof must be
opened and be raised by confession of the Godhead of Christ, which gates are not raised by
Arians, nor by those who seek the Son amongst earthly things, and who must therefore, like
the Magdalene, be sent back to the apostles, against whom the gates of hell shall not
prevail. Scriptures are cited to show that the servant of the Lord must not diminish aught
of his Master's honour.
15. What shall we do, then? How shall we
ascend unto heaven? There, powers are stationed, principalities drawn up in order, who
keep the doors of heaven, and challenge him who ascends. Who shall give me passage, unless
I proclaim that Christ is Almighty? The gates are shut,--they are not opened to any and
every one; not every one who will shall enter, unless he also believes according to the
true Faith. The Sovereign's court is kept under guard.
16. Suppose, however, that one who is
unworthy hath crept up, hath stolen past the principalities who keep the gates of heaven,
hath sat down at the supper of the Lord; when the Lord of the banquet enters, and sees one
not clad in the wedding garment of the Faith, He will cast him into outer darkness, where
is weeping and gnashing of teeth,(1) if he keep not the Faith and peace.
17. Let us, therefore, keep the wedding
garment which we have received, and not deny Christ that which is His own, Whose
omnipotence angels announce, prophets foretel, apostles witness to, even as we have
already shown above.(2)
18. Perchance, indeed, the prophet hath
spoken of His entering in not only with regard to the gates of the universal heaven; for
there be other heavens also where-into the Word of God passeth, whereof it is said:
"We have a great Priest, a High Priest, Who hath passed through the heavens, Jesus,
the Son of God."(1) What are those heavens, but even the heavens whereof the prophet
sayeth that "the heavens declare the glory of God"?(2)
19. For Christ standeth at the door of thy
soul. Hear Him speaking. "Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any man open to
Me, I will come in to him, and I will sup with him, and he with Me."(3) And the
Church saith, speaking of Him: "The voice of my brother soundeth at the
door."(4)
20. He stands, then--but not alone, for
before Him go angels, saying: "Lift up the gates, O ye the princes." What gates?
Even those of the which the Psalmist sings in another place also: "Open to me the
gates of righteousness."(5) Open, then, thy gates to Christ, that He may come into
thee--open the gates of righteousness, the gates of chastity, the gates of courage and
wisdom.
21. Believe the message of the angels:
"Be ye lift up, ye everlasting doors, and the King of glory shall come in, the Lord
of Sabaoth." Thy gate is the loud confession made with faithful voice; it is the door
of the Lord, which the Apostle desires to have opened for him, as he says: "That a
door of the word may be opened for me, to proclaim the mystery of Christ."(6)
22. Let thy gate, then, be opened to Christ,
and let it be not only opened, but lifted up, if, indeed, it be eternal and not condemned
to ruin; for it is written: "And be ye lift up, ye everlasting doors." The
lintel was lift up for Isaiah, when the seraph touched his lips and he saw the Lord of
Sabaoth.
23. Thy gates shall be lifted up, then, if
thou believest the Son of God to be eternal, omnipotent, above and beyond all praise and
understanding, knowing all things, both past an d to come, whilst if thou judgest Him to
be of limited power and knowledge, and subordinate, thou liftest not up the everlasting
doors.
24. Be thy gates lifted up, then, that
Christ may come in unto thee, not such a Christ as the Arians take Him to be--petty, and
weak, and menial--but Christ in the form of God, Christ with the Father; that He may enter
such as He is, exalted above the heaven and all things; and that He may send forth upon
thee His holy Spirit. It is expedient for thee that thou shouldst believe that He hath
ascended and is sitting at the right hand of the Father, for if in impious thought thou
detain Him amongst things created and earthly, if He depart not for thee, ascend not for
thee, then to thee the Comforter shall not come, even as Christ Himself hath told us:
"For if I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you, but if I depart, I will
send Him unto you."(1)
25. But if thou shouldst seek Him amongst
earthly beings, even as Mary of Magdala sought Him, take heed lest He say to thee, as unto
her: "Touch Me not, for I am not yet ascended unto My Father."(2) For thy gates
are narrow--they give me no passage--they cannot be lifted up, and therefore I cannot come
in.
26. Go thy way, therefore, to my
brethren--that is, to those everlasting doors, which, as soon as they see Jesus, are
lifted up. Peter is an "everlasting door," against whom the gates of hell shall
not prevail.(3) John and James, the sons of thunder, to wit,(4) are "everlasting
doom." Everlasting are the doors of the Church, where the prophet, desirous to
proclaim the praises of Christ, says: "That I may tell all thy praises in the gates
of the daughter of Sion."(5)
27. Great, therefore, is the mystery of
Christ, before which even angels stood amazed and bewildered. For this cause, then, it is
thy duty to worship Him, and, being a servant, thou oughtest not to detract from thy Lord.
Ignorance thou mayest not plead, for to this end He came down, that thou mayest believe;
if thou believest not, He has not come down for thee, has not suffered for thee. "If
I had not come," saith the Scripture, "and spoken with them, they would have no
sin: but now have they no excuse for their sin. He that hateth Me, hateth My Father
also."(6) Who, then, hates Christ, if not he who speaks to His dishonour?--for as it
is love's part to render, so it is hate's to withdraw honour.(7) He who hates, calls in
question; he who loves, pays reverence.
CHAPTER
III.
The words, "The head of every man is
Christ ... and the head of Christ is God" misused by the Arians, are now turned back
against them, to their confutation. Next, another passage of Scripture, commonly taken by
the same heretics as a ground of objection, is called in to show that God is the Head of
Christ, in so far as Christ is human, in regard of His Manhood, and the unwisdom of their
opposition upon the text, "He who planteth He who watereth are one," is
displayed. After which explanations, the meaning of the doctrine that the Father is in the
Son, and the Son in the Father, and that the faithful are in Both, is expounded.
28. Now let us examine some other objections
raised by the Arians. It is written, say they, that "the head of every man is Christ,
and the head of woman is man, and the head of Christ is God."(1) Let them, if they
please, tell me what they mean by this objection--whether to join together, or to
dissociate, these four terms. Suppose they mean to join them, and say that God is the Head
of Christ in the same sense and manner as man is the head of woman. Mark what a conclusion
they fall into. For if this comparison proceeds on the supposed equality of the terms of
it, and these four--woman, man, Christ, and God--are viewed together as in virtue of a
likeness resulting from their being of one and the same nature, then woman and God will
begin to come under one definition.
29. But if this conclusion be not
satisfactory, by reason of its impiety, let them divide, on what principle they will.
Thus, if they will have it that Christ stands to God the Father in the same relation as
woman to man, then surely they pronounce Christ and God to be of one substance, inasmuch
as woman and man are of one nature in respect of the flesh, for their difference is in
respect of sex. But, seeing that there is no difference of sex between Christ and His
Father, they will acknowledge then that which is one, and common to the Son and the
Father, in respect of nature, whereas they will deny the difference lying in sex.
30. Does this conclusion content them? Or
will they have woman, man, and Christ to be of one substance, and distinguish the Father
from them? Will this, then, serve their turn? Suppose that it will, then observe what they
are brought to. They must either confess themselves not merely Arians, but very
Photinians, because they acknowledge only the Manhood of Christ, Whom they judge fit only
to be placed on the same scale with human beings. Or else they must, however contrary to
their leanings, subscribe to our belief, by which we dutifully and in godly fashion
maintain that which they have come at by an irapious course of thought, that Christ is
indeed, after His divine generation,(1) the power of God, whilst after His putting on of
the flesh, He is of one substance with all men in regard of His flesh, excepting indeed
the proper glory of His Incarnation,(2) because He took upon Himself the reality, not a
phantom likeness, of flesh.
31. Let God, then, be the Head of Christ,
with regard to the conditions of Manhood. Observe that the Scripture says not that the
Father is the Head of Christ; but that God is the Head of Christ, because the Godhead, as
the creating power, is the Head of the being created. And well said [the Apostle]
"the Head of Christ is God;" to bring before our thoughts both the Godhead of
Christ and His flesh, implying, that is to say, the Incarnation in the mention of the name
of Christ, and, in that of the name of God, oneness of Godhead and grandeur of
sovereignty.
32. But the saying, that in respect of the
Incarnation God is the Head of Christ, leads on to the principle that Christ, as
Incarnate, is the Head of man, as the Apostle has clearly expressed in another passage,
where he says: "Since man is the head of woman, even as Christ is the Head of the
Church;"(3) whilst in the words following he has added: "Who gave Himself for
her."(4) After His Incarnation, then, is Christ the head of man, for His
self-surrender issued from His Incarnation.
33. The Head of Christ, then, is God, in so
far as His form of a servant, that is, of man, not of God, is considered, But it is
nothing against the Son of God, if, in accordance with the reality of His flesh, He is
like unto men, whilst in regard of His Godhead He is one with the Father, for by this
account of Him we do not take aught from His sovereignty, but attribute compassion to Him.
34. But who can with a good conscience deny
the one Godhead of the Father and the Son, when our Lord, to complete His teaching for His
disciples, said: "That they may be one, even as we also are one."(4) The record
stands for witness to the Faith, though Arians turn it aside to suit their heresy; for,
inasmuch as they cannot deny the Unity so often spoken of, they endeavour to diminish it,
in order that the Unity of Godhead subsisting between the Father and the Son may seem to
De such as is unity of devotion and faith amongst men, though even amongst men themselves
community of nature makes unity thereof.
35. Thus with abundant clearness we disprove
the objection commonly raised by Arians, in order to loosen the Divine Unity, on the
ground that it is written: "But he who planteth and he who watereth are one."
This passage the Arians, if they were wise, would not quote against us; for how can they
deny that the Father and the Son are One, if Paul and Apollos are one, both in nature and
in faith? At the same time, we do grant that these cannot be one throughout, in all
relations, because things human cannot bear comparison with things divine.(1)
36. No separation, then, is to be made of
the Word from God the Father, no separation in power, no separation in wisdom, by reason
of the Unity of the Divine Substance. Again, God the Father is in the Son, as we ofttimes
find it written, yet [He dwells in the Son] not as sanctifying one who lacks
sanctification, nor as filling a void, for the power of God knows no void. Nor, again, is
the power of the one increased by the power of the other, for there are not two powers,
but one Power; nor does Godhead entertain Godhead, for there are not two Godheads, but one
Godhead. We, contrariwise, shall be One in Christ through Power received [from another]
and dwelling in us.
37. The letter [of the unity] is common, but
the Substance of God and the substance of man are different. We shall be, the Father and
the Son. [already] are, one; we shall be one by grace, the Son is so by substance. Again,
unity by conjunction is one thing, unity by nature another. Finally, observe what it is
that Scripture hath already recorded: "That they may all be one, as Thou, Father, art
in Me, and I in Thee."(2)
38. Mark now that He said not "Thou in
us, and we in Thee," but "Thou in Me, and I in Thee," to place Himself
apart from His creatures. Further He added: "that they also may be in Us," in
order to separate here His dignity and His Father's from us, that our union in the Father
and the Son may appear the issue, not of nature, but of grace, whilst with regard to the
unity of the Father and the Son it may be believed that the Son has not received this by
grace, but possesses by natural right of His Sonship.
CHAPTER
IV.
The passage quoted adversely by heretics,
namely, "The Son can do nothing of Himself," is first explained from the words
which follow; then, the text being examined, word by word, their acceptation in the Arian
sense is shown to be impossible without incurring the charge of impiety or absurdity, the
proof resting chiefly on the creation of the world and certain miracles of Christ.
39. Again, another objection that the Arians
bring up, denying that the Power of the Father and the Son can be one and the same, is
rested on His saying: "Verily, verily, I say unto you; the Son can do nothing of
Himself, but what He hath seen the Father doing."(1) And therefore they affirm that
the Son has done nothing of Himself, and can do nothing, save what He hath seen the Father
doing.
40. O wise foreknowledge of the arguments of
unbelievers, which made further provision of means whereby to answer questions, by adding
the words that follow: "For whatsoever the Father doeth, the same doeth the Son also,
in like fashion,"(2) for this indeed is the sequel. Why, then, is it written:
"The Son doeth the same things," and not "such like things," but that
thou mightest judge that in the Son there is unity in the Father's works, not imitation of
them?
41. But to put their proofs in turn upon
trial: I would have them answer the question, whether the Son sees the works of the
Father. Does He see, I ask, or not? If He sees them, then He also does them; if He does
them, let heretics cease to deny the omnipotence of Him Whom they confess able to do all
things that He has seen the Father doing.
42. But what are we to understand by
"hath seen"? Has the Son any need of bodily eyes? Nay, if they will affirm this
of the Son, they will make out in the Father also a need of bodily activity,(3) in order
that the Son may see that which He Himself is to do.
43. Furthermore, what mean the words:
"The Son can do nothing of Himself"? Let us put this question, and debate it.
Now is there anything impossible to God's Power and Wisdom? These, observe, are names of
the Son of God, Whose Might is certainly not a gift received from another, but just as He
is the Life,(1) not depending upon another's quickening action, but Himself quickening
others, because He is the Life; so also He is Wisdom,(2) not as one that is ignorant
acquiring wisdom, but making others wise from His own store; so, too, He is Power,(3) not
as having through weakness obtained increase of strength, but being Himself Power, and
bestowing power upon the strong.
44. How, then, does Power assert, as it
were, under oath: "Verily, verily I say unto you," which means: "Of a
truth, of a truth, I tell you"?(4) Truly, then, Thou speakest, Lord Jesus, and dost
affirm, repeating indeed thy solemn declaration, that Thou canst do nothing, save what
Thou hast seen the Father doing. Thou didst make the universe. Did Thy Father then make
another universe, for Thee to take as a model? So must Thy blasphemers confess that there
are two, or a multitude of universes, as philosophers affirm, and thus also entangle
themselves in this heathen error,(5) or, if they will follow the truth, let them say that
what Thou hast made, Thou didst make, without any pattern.
45. Tell me, Lord, when Thou sawest Thy
Father incarnate, and walking upon the sea, for I know not, I hold it impious to believe
this thing of the Father, knowing that Thou only hast taken our flesh upon Thee. When
sawest Thou the Father at a marriage-feast, turning water into wine?(6) Nay, but I have
read that Thou alone art the only Son, begotten of the Father. I have been taught that
Thou alone, in the mystery of the Incarnation, wast born of the Holy Ghost and the Virgin.
The things, then, which we have cited as Thy doings, the Father did not, but Thou alone,
without guidance of any work done by Thy Father, for the purchase of the world's salvation
with Thy Blood, didst come forth spotless from the Virgin's womb.
46. When they say, "The Son can do
nothing of Himself," they indeed except nothing, so that one blasphemer has even
said: "He cannot make even a gnat,"(7) mocking with so headstrong profanity and
with insolence so overweening the majesty of Supreme Power; yet perhaps they may think the
mystery of Thine Incarnate Life a needful exception. But say, Lord Jesu, what earth the
Father made without Thee. For without Thee He made no heaven, seeing that it is written:
"By the Word of the Lord were the heavens established."
47. But neither did the Father make the
earth without Thee, for it is written: "All things were made by Him, and without Him
was not anything made."(1) For if the Father made aught without Thee, God the Word,
then not all things were made by the Word, and the Evangelist lies. Whereas if all things
were made by the Word, and if by Thee all things begin to be, which before were not, then
surely Thou Thyself, of Thyself, hast made what Thou didst not see made by the Father;
though perchance our adversaries may have recourse to that theory of Plato, and place
before Thee the ideas supposed by philosophers, which, indeed, we know have been exploded
by philosophers themselves. On the other hand, if Thou Thyself hast of Thyself made all
things, vain are the assertions of the unbelieving, which ascribe progress in learning to
the Maker of all, Who of Himself supplies the teaching of His craft.
48. But if heretics deny that either the
heavens or the earth were made by Thee, let them take heed into what a gulf they are by
their own madness hurling themselves, seeing that it is written: "Perish the gods,
which have not made heaven and earth." (2) Shall He then perish, O Arian, Who has
found and saved that which had perished? But to purpose.
CHAPTER V.
Continuing the exposition of the disputed
passage, which he had begun, Ambrose brings forward four reasons why we affirm that
something cannot be, and shows that the first three fail to apply to Christ, and infers
that the only reason why the Son can do nothing of Himself is His Unity in Power with the
Father.
49. In what sense can the Son do nothing of
Himself? Let us ask what it is that He cannot do. There are many different sorts of
impossibilities. One thing is naturally impossible, another is naturally possible, but
impossible by reason of some weakness. Again, there are things which are rendered possible
by strength, impossible by unskilfulness or weakness, of body and mind. Further, there are
things which it is impossible to change, by reason of the law of an unchangeable purpose,
the endurance of a firm will, and, again, faithfulness in friendship.
50. To make this clearer, let us consider
the matter in the light of examples. It is impossible for a bird to pursue a course of
learning in any science or become trained to any art: it is impossible for a stone to move
in any direction, inasmuch as it can only be moved by the motion of another body. Of
itself, then, a stone is incapable of moving, and passing from its place. Again, an eagle
cannot be taught in the ways of human learning.
51. It is, to take another example,
impossible for a sick man to do a strong man's work; but in this case the reason of the
impossibility is of a different kind, for the man is rendered unable, by sickness, to do
what he is naturally capable of doing. In this case, then, the cause of the impossibility
is sickness, and this kind of impossibility is different from the first, since the man is
hindered by bodily weakness from the possibility of doing.(1)
52. Again, there is a third cause of
impossibility. A man may be naturally capable, and his bodily health may allow of his
doing some work, which he is yet unable to do by reason of want of skill, or because his
rank in life disqualifies him; because, that is, he lacks the required learning or is a
slave.(2)
53. Which of these three different causes of
impossibility, think you, which we have enumerated (setting aside the fourth) can we
meetly assign to the case of the Son of God? Is He naturally insensible and immovable,
like a stone? He is indeed a stone of stumbling to the wicked, a cornerstone for the
faithful;(3) but He is not insensible, upon Whom the faithful affection of sentient
peoples are stayed. He is not an immovable rock, "for they drank of a Rock that
followed them, and that Rock was Christ."(4) The work of the Father, then, is not
rendered impossible to Christ by diversity of nature.
54. Perchance we may suppose some things
were made impossible for Him by reason of weakness. But He was not weakly Who could heal
the weaknesses of others by His word of authority. Seemed He weak when bidding the
paralytic take up his bed and walk?(1) He charged the man to perform an action of which
health was the necessary condition, even whilst the patient Was yet praying a remedy for
his disease. Not weak was the Lord of hosts when He gave sight to the blind,(2) made the
crooked to stand upright, raised the dead to life,(3) anticipated the effects of medicine
at our prayers, and cured them that besought Him, and when to touch the fringe of His robe
was to be purified.(4)
55. Unless, peradventure, you thought it was
weakness, you wretches, when you saw His wounds. Truly, they were wounds piercing His
Body, but there was no weakness betokened by that wound, whence flowed the Life of all,
and therefore was it that the prophet said: "By His stripes we are healed."(5)
Was He, then, Who was not weak in the hour when He was wounded, weak in regard of His
Sovereignty? How, then, I ask? When He commanded the devils, and forgave the offences of
sinners?(6) Or when He made entreaty to the Father?
56. Here, indeed, our adversaries may
perchance enquire: "How can the Father and the Son be One, if the Son at one time
commands, at another entreats?" True, They are One; true also, He both commands and
prays: yet whilst in the hour when He commands He is not alone, so also in the hour of
prayer He is not weak. He is not alone, for whatsoever things the Father doeth, the same
things doeth the Son also, in like manner. He is not weak, for though in the flesh He
suffered weakness for our sins yet that was the chastisement of our peace upon Him,(7) not
lack of sovereign Power in Himself.
57. Moreover, that thou mayest know that it
is after His Manhood that He entreats, and in virtue of His Godhead that He commands, it
is written for thee in the Gospel that He said to Peter: "I have prayed for thee,
that thy faith fail not."(8) To the same Apostle, again, when on a former occasion he
said, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God," He made answer:
"Thou art Peter, and upon this Rock will I build My Church, and I will give thee the
keys of the kingdom of heaven."(9) Could He not, then, strengthen the faith of the
man to whom, acting on His own authority, He gave the kingdom, whom He called the Rock,
thereby declaring him to be the foundation of the Church? Consider, then, the manner of
His entreaty, the occasions of His commanding. He entreats, when He is shown to us as on
the eve of suffering: He commands, when He is believed to he the Son of God.
58. We see, then, that two sorts of
impossibility furnish no explanation,(1) inasmuch as the Power of God can be neither
insensible nor weakly. Will you then proffer the third kind [as an account of the matter],
namely, that He can do nothing, just as an unskilled apprentice can do nothing without his
master's instructions, or a slave can do nothing without his lord. Then didst Thou speak
falsely, Lord Jesu, in calling Thyself Master and Lord, and Thou didst deceive Thy
disciples by Thy words: "Ye call Me Master and Lord, and ye say well, for so I
am."(2) Nay, but Thou, O Truth, wouldst never have deceived men, least of all them
whom Thou didst call friends.(3)
59. Yet if our enemies sunder Thee from the
Creator, as being unskilled, let them see how they affirm that skill was lacking to Thee,
that is to say, to the Divine Wisdom; for all that, however, they cannot divide the unity
of substance that Thou hast with the Father. It is not, indeed, by nature, but by reason
of ignorance, that the difference exists between the craftsman and the unskilled; but
neither is handicraft attributable to the Father, nor ignorance to Thee, for there is no
such thing as ignorant wisdom.
60. Therefore, if insensibility is no
attribute of the Son, and if neither weakness, nor ignorance, nor servility, let
unbelievers put it to their minds for meditation that both by nature and sovereignty the
Son is One with the Father, and by its working His power is not at cross-purpose with the
Father, inasmuch as "all things that the Father hath done, the Son doeth
likewise," for no one can do in like fashion the same work that another has done,
unless he shares in the unity of the same nature, whilst he is also not inferior in method
of working.
61. Yet I would still enquire what it is
that the Son cannot do, unless He see the Father doing it. I will take the fool's line,
and propound some examples drawn from things of a lower world. "I am become a fool;
ye have compelled me."(4) What indeed is more foolish than to debate over the majesty
of God, which rather occasions questionings, than godly instruction which is in faith.(5)
But to arguments let arguments reply; let words make answer to them, but love to us, the
love which is in God, issuing of a pure heart and good conscience and faith unfeigned. And
so I stickle not to introduce even the ludicrous for the confutation of so vain a thesis.
62. How, then, does the Son see the Father?
A horse sees a painting, which naturally it is unable to imitate. Not thus does the Son
behold the Father. A child sees the work of a grown man, but he cannot reproduce it;
certainly not thus, again, does the Son see the Father.
63. If, then, the Son can, by virtue of a
common hidden power of the same nature which He has with the Father, both see and act in
an invisible manner, and by the fulness of His Godhead execute every decree of His Will,
what remains for us but to believe that the Son, by reason of indivisible unity of power,
does nothing, save what He has seen the Father doing, forasmuch as because of His
incomparable love the Son does nothing of Himself, since He wills nothing that is against
His Father's Will? Which truly is the proof not of weakness but of unity.(1)
CHAPTER
VI.
The fourth kind of impossibility (49) is now
taken into consideration, and it is shown that the Son does nothing that the Father
approves not, there being between Them perfect unity of will and power.
64. The Son, moreover,--to consider now our
fourth premiss,--is not self-assertive, for He, the Divine Assessor,(2) hath done nought
that is not in agreement with His Father's Will. Further, the Father hath seen the things
that the Son made, and pronounced them very good; for so it is written in Genesis:
"And God said, Let there be light; and there was light. And God saw the light that it
was good."(3)
65. Now, did the Father say on that
occasion, "Let there be such light as I Myself have made," or "Let there be
light"--light having as yet not existed; or did the Son ask what sort of light the
Father made?(4) Nay, the Son made light, according to His own Will, and so far in
accordance with the Father's good pleasure, that He approved. It is of new, original work
by the Son that the place speaks.
66. Again, if, as Arian, expositions of the
Scriptures make out, it is a discredit to the Son to have made what He saw, whereas the
Scriptures present Him as having made what He [before] saw not, and to have given being to
things which as yet were not, what should they say of the Father, Who praised that He had
seen, as though He could not have foreseen the things that were to be made?
67. The Son, therefore, sees the Father's
work in like manner as the Father sees the Son's, and the Father praises not the work as
one would praise work of another's doing, but recognizes it as His own, for
"whatsoever things the Father hath done, the same doeth the Son, in like
manner." [So was it written, that] you might understand one and the same work to be
the work both of the Father and of the Son. And thus the Son does nothing save what is
approved of by the Father, praised by the Father, willed by the Father, because His whole
Being is of the Father; and He is not as the created being, which commits many faults,
ofttimes offending the Will of its Creator, in lusting after and falling into sin. Nought,
then, is of the Son's doing, save what is pleasing to the Father, forasmuch as one Will,
one Purpose, is Theirs, one true Love, one effect of action.
68. Furthermore, to prove to you that it
comes of Love, that the Son can do nothing of Himself save what He hath seen the Father
doing, the Apostle has added to the words, "Whatsoever the Father hath done, the same
things doeth the Son also, in like manner," this reason: "For the Father loveth
the Son," and thus Scripture refers the Son's inability to do, whereof it testifies,
to unity in Love that suffers no separation or disagreement.
69. But if the inseparableness of the
Persons in Love rest, as it truly does, upon [identity of] nature, thou surely they are
also inseparable, for the same reason, in action, and it is impossible that the work of
the Son should not be in agreement with the Father's Will, when what the Son works, the
Father works also, and what the Father works, the Son works also, and what the Son speaks,
the Father speaks also, as it is written: "My Father, Who dwelleth in Me, He it is
that speaketh, and the works that I do He Himself doeth."(1) For the Father appointed
nought save by the exercise of His Power and Wisdom, forasmuch as He made all things
wisely, as it is written: "In wisdom hast Thou made them all"(1) and likewise,
God the Word made nought without the Father's participation.
70. Not without the Father does He work; not
without His Father's Will did He offer Himself for that most holy Passion, the Victim
slain for the salvation of the whole world;(2) not without His Father's Will concurring
did He raise the dead to life. For example, when He was at the point to raise Lazarus to
life, He lifted up His eyes and said, "Father, I thank Thee, for that Thou hast heard
Me. And I knew that Thou dost always hear Me, but for the sake of the multitude that
standeth round I spake, that they may believe that Thou hast sent Me,"(3) in order
that, though speaking agreeably to His assumed character of man, in the flesh,(4) He might
still express His oneness with the Father in will and operation, in that the Father hears
all and sees all that the Son wills, and therefore also the Father sees the Son s doings,
hears the utterances of His Will, for the Son made no request, and yet said that He had
been heard.
71. Again, we cannot suppose that the Father
hears not all, whatsoever the Son's will resolves; and to show that He is always heard by
the Father, not as a servant, not as a prophet, but as Son, He said: "And I knew that
Thou dost always hear Me, but for the sake of the multitude which standeth round I spake,
that they may believe that Thou hast sent Me."
72. It is for our sakes, therefore, that He
renders thanks, lest we should suppose that the Father and the Son are one and the same
Person, when we hear of one and the same work being wrought by the Father and the Son.
Further, to show us that His rendering of thanks had not been the tribute due from one
wanting in power, that, on the contrary, He, as Son of God, ever claimed for Himself the
possession of divine authority, He cried, "Lazarus, come forth." Here, surely,
is the voice of command, not of prayer.
CHAPTER
VII.
The doctrine had in view for enforcement is
corroborated by the truth that the Son is the Word of the
Father--the Word, not in the sense in which
we understand the term, but a living and active Word. This being so, we cannot deny Him to
beof the same Will, Power, and Substance with the Father.
73. To return, however, to what we had in
hand before, and finish the task set before us. The Son, as the Word. carries out His
Father's Will. Now, a word, as we understand and use it, is an utterance. There are
syllables and sounds, which, however, are not at variance with the thought of our mind,
and what we apprehend and are affected by inwardly we give token of by the testimony of
the spoken word, which, as it were, works [for us]. But the words we speak have no direct
efficacy in themselves, it is the Word of God alone, which is neither an utterance, nor an
"inward concept," as they call it, but works efficaciously, is living, and has
healing power.
74. Wouldst thou know what is the nature of
the Word--hear the Scriptures. "For the Word of God is living and mighty, yea,
working effectually, sharp and keener than any the sharpest sword, piercing even to the
sundering of soul and spirit, of limbs and marrow."(1)
75. Hearest thou, then, the Word of God, and
wilt separate Him from the Father's Will and Power? Thou hearest Him called the living
Word, the healing Word--seek not then to compare Him with the word of our mouth; for if
the word we utter, through it have not eyes to see, nor ears to hear, yet speaks, and
still the knowledge of what it speaks is wrought by virtue of hidden mysteries of man's
nature, how can he escape the charge of blasphemy, who requires that some sort of bodily
vision and hearing shall go along with the Godhead in the Word of God, and thinks that the
Son can do nothing of Himself, save what He shall have seen the Father doing, though (as
we have said) there is in the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit the same Will, both to do and
not to do, and the same Power, by reason of unity in the same substance.
76. But if, though men are, as a rule,
different in respect of their thoughts and feelings, they yet agree as to the meaning of a
single proposition, what ought we to think as concerning the Father and the Son of God,
seeing that in the Substance of the Godhead there is that is imitated by human love?
77. Let us, however, suppose--as our
adversaries would have it--that the Son does, as it were, copy the pattern of that which
He has seen His Father doing. But even this, we must confess, means that He is of the same
substance, for none can completely imitate the working of another, unless he be one with
him in the same nature.
CHAPTER
VIII.
The heretical objection, that the Son cannot
be equal to the Father, because He cannot beget a Son, is turned back upon the authors of
it. From the case of human nature it is shown that whether a person begets offspring or
not, has nothing to do with his power. Most of all must this be true since, otherwise, the
Father Himself would have to be pronounced wanting in power. Whence it follows that we
have no right to judge of divine things by human, and must take our stand upon the
authority of Holy Writ, otherwise we must deny all power either to the Father or to the
Son.
78. There is a fool's demurrer, your
Majesty, which certain persons are given to raising, in order to show the Father and the
Son to be not equal together, saying that the Father is Almighty, because He hath begotten
the Son, but that the Son is not Almighty, because He hath not been able to beget.
79. But see how wild is their blasphemy, how
their philosophers' logic confutes itself. For the raising of this question must lead
either to their confessing with their own mouths that the Son is co-eternal with the
Father, or, if they impose a beginning upon the Son's existence, to their assigning of
necessity a beginning to the Father's power. When, therefore, they deny that the Son is
Almighty, they are on the road to assert--which is impious--that the Father began to be
Almighty by help of the Son.
80. For if the Father is Almighty by reason
of begetting the Son, then, certainly, either the Son is co-eternal with the Father,
because if the Father is eternally Almighty, then the Son also is eternal, or, if there
was a time when there was not an eternal Son, there was by consequence a time when there
was not an Almighty Father. For when they would make out that there was a time when the
Son began to be, they are sliding back into [the error of] saying that the Father's Power
also has not been from everlasting, but began to be in consequence of the generation of
the Son. So, in their desire to do dishonour to the Son of God, they do so increase His
honour as to seem to make Him, contrary to all right belief, the source of His Father's
Power, though the Son saith, "All things that the Father hath are Mine"(1)--that
is to say, not the things which He has bestowed upon the Father, but which He has received
from the Father, by right as the Son Whom the Father has begotten.
81. And therefore we do declare the Son to
be Eternal Power;(1) if, then, His Power and Godhead be eternal, surely His Sovereignty is
eternal also. He, then, who dishonours the Son dishonours the Father, and is an enemy and
offender against duty and love. Let us honour the Son, in Whom the Father is well pleased,
for it is the Father's pleasure that praise be given to the Son, in Whom He Himself is
well pleased.
82. Let us, however, make answer to the
conclusion they strive to establish; but we seem to have sought, in pursuit of a personal
appeal, to escape from the difficulty of treating the question before us. The Father, they
say, has begotten a Son; the Son has not. What proof is this that they are not equal? To
beget is the Father's natural function, as a Father, and no necessary outcome of His
Sovereign Power.(2) Furthermore, dutiful regard places persons on an equality with each
other, and does not sunder them. Again, our own experience of what holds good amongst us
frail mortals teaches us that it may frequently happen that weak men have sons, whilst
stronger men have not; that slaves have children, whilst their masters are childless; and
that the poor beget offspring, whilst rich men are unblessed with any.
83. But if our adversaries say that this too
may be the result of infirmity, inasmuch as men may desire to beget children, but be
unable to do so; then, though things divine are not to be judged of and determined by
things human, yet let them understand that with men also, as with God, whether one has
children or no, is not dependent upon or derived of his authoritative power, but upon the
personal attributes of a father, and that begetting lies not in the power of our will, but
is contingent upon our qualities of body; for if it were a matter of sovereign authority,
then the mightier king would have the greater number of sons. To have sons, then, or to be
childless, therefore, is not in necessary connection or relation to sovereign authority.
Is it, then, so with nature?
84. If you [my Arian adversaries] regard
what you object as natural weakness, and rely upon examples taken from the nature of
mankind, remember that the Father's nature is the same as the Son's, and therefore you do
either confess the Son to be a true Son, and dishonour the Father in the Person of the
Son, by reason of Their unity in one and the same Nature (for as the Father is by Nature
God, so also is the Son; whereas the Apostle says that the "gods many" are not
so by nature, but are only so called); or, if you deny Him to be a true Son, that is to
say, possessing the same Nature, then He is not begotten, and if the Son is not begotten,
the Father did not beget Him.
85. The conclusion we come at, therefore, on
the line of your persuasion, is that God the Father is not Almighty, because He could not
beget, if He did not beget the Son, but created Him. But forasmuch as the Father is
Almighty, He being, as you hold, the Almighty in so far as He is the only Author of Being,
then surely He has begotten His Son, and not created Him. Howbeit, we ought to believe His
word before yours. He says: "I have begotten,"(1) and that more than once,
witnessing to Himself as begetting.
86. It is no sign, then, of infirmity,
whether of nature or authority, in Christ, that He has not begotten, for to beget, as we
have already said ofttimes, bears no relation to supremacy of authority, but to a personal
property in a nature.(2) For if the Omnipotence of the Father is thereby constituted, that
He hath a Son, then He might have been more Almighty had He begotten more Sons.
87. Then is His power exhausted in the
begetting of One? Nay, but I will show that Christ also hath sons, whom He begets every
day, but with that generation, or rather regeneration, which is related to personal
authority rather than nature, for adoption is the exercise and bestowal of authority, and
generation the manifestation of a property, as Scripture itself hath taught us: for John
saith that "He was in this world, and the world was made by Him, and the world knew
Him not. He came to His own, and His own received Him not. But as many as received Him, to
them gave He power(3) to become sons of God, to them which believe in His Name."(4)
88. We say, therefore, that it is the
function and exercise of His Authority that He has made us sons of God, whereas the
oracles of God discover that His generation is in relation to personal attribute, for the
Wisdom of God saith: "I came forth out of the mouth of the Most High,"(5) that
is to say not of compulsion, but free, not under bond of authority, but born in a hidden
birth, according to personal powers of Supreme Sovereignty and rightfulness of authority.
Again, concerning the same Wisdom, Which is the Lord Jesus, the Father saith in another
place: "Out of the womb I begat Thee, before the morning star."(1)
89. Now this He said, not to make us think
of a bodily womb,(2) but to show that true generation is His proper activity,(3) for if we
understand the words as speaking of generation from a body, then [we imply] the Father
Almighty conceived and brought forth in travail. But far be it from us that we should make
this weak bodily frame the measure of God's greatness. The word "womb"
represents the hidden mystery, the inner sanctuary of the Father's being, into which
neither angels nor archangels nor powers nor dominations, nor any created nature, hath
been able to enter. For the Son is always with the Father, and in the Father--with the
Father, by virtue of the distinction, without division, proper to the Eternal Trinity;(4)
in the Father, by reason of the essential unity of the Divine Nature.
90. What room here, then, for one to sit in
judgment upon the Godhead, to call in question the Father and the Son,--the One for
begetting, the Other for not begetting. No man condemns his servant or handmaid for
begetting (or bearing) offspring; but those Arians condemn Christ for not begetting--they
do condemn Him, for they privately pass sentence of condemnation upon Him, when they take
from His glory and dignity. The question, why they have not begotten offspring, does not
lead those who are joined in marriage into loss of their love, or denial of each other's
merits, but the Arians, because Christ hath not begotten a Son, make light of His
sovereignty.
91. Why, ask they, is the Son not a Father?
Because, on the other side, the Father is not a Son. Why has not Christ begotten? Even
because the Father is not begotten. Yet the Son stands none the lower, because He is not a
Father; nor the Father, because He is not a Son, for the Son said: "All things that
the Father hath are Mine"(5)--so truly is generation involved in the Father's
personal attributes, and comes not by mere right of sovereignty.
92. The Substance of the Trinity is, so to
say, a common Essence in that which is distinct,(1) an incomprehensible, ineffable
Substance. We hold the distinction, not the confusion of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit; a
distinction without separation; a distinction without plurality;(2) and thus we believe in
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit as each existing from and to eternity in this divine and
wonderful Mystery: not in two Fathers, nor in two Sons, nor in two Spirits. For
"there is one God, the Father, of Whom are all things, and we in Him; and one Lord,
Jesus Christ, by Whom are all things, and we by Him."(3) There is One born of the
Father, the Lord Jesus, and therefore He is the Only-begotten. "There is also One
Holy Spirit,"(4) as the same Apostle hath said. So we believe, so we read, so we
hold. We know the fact of distinction, we know nothing of the hidden mysteries; we pry not
into the causes, but keep the outward signs vouchsafed unto us.
93. O monstrous wickedness, that they who
have no power over their own procreation should claim and usurp power to enquire into the
Divine Generation! Let them deny, them, that the Son is equal to the Father, forasmuch as
He hath not begotten; let them deny that the Son is equal to the Father, because He hath a
Father! But if they talked after this fashion about men, who sometimes desire to beget
sons, yet cannot, we should call it an insult, just as we should so call it, if of two
men, one having sons and the other childless, the latter were said to be inferior to the
former on that ground. So monstrous also, I say, does it seem, in regard simply to men,
that one should therefore be esteemed the more lightly because he hath a father.
Peradventure, indeed, the Arians suppose that Christ is in the position of one in a
family, and frets because He is not set free and independent of His Father's authority,
and is not empowered to administer the estate. But Christ is not under tutelage; nay,
rather has He abolished all tutelage.(5)
94. How then, let them tell us, would they
have these things to be?--a true generation, the true Son begotten of God the Father, that
is, of the Substance of the Father, or of another substance? If they say "begotten of
the Father, that is, of the Substance of God," well and good, for then they
acknowledge the Son as begotten of the Substance of the Father. If, then, they are of one
Substance, surely they are also of one sovereign Power. Whereas, if the Son is begotten of
another substance, how can the Father be Almighty, and the Son not Almighty? For what
advantage hath God, if He have made His Son of another substance, when confessedly the
Son, on His part, hath of another substance made us sons of God? The Son, therefore, is
either of one Substance with the Father, or of one sovereign Power.
95. Our adversaries' question, then, falls
flat, because they cannot judge Christ--or rather, because He is clear, when He is
judged.(1) They are worthy, however, to be condemned upon their own sentence, who raise
this question against us, for if the Son be therefore not equal to the Father, because He
hath not begotten a Son, then by all means let them who sow discussions of this kind(2)
confess, if they have not children, that their very servants are to be preferred before
themselves, inasmuch as they cannot be the equals of those who have children--whereas, if
they have children, let them regard the merit thereof as due not to themselves, but of
right to their sons.
96. The objection, then, holds not together,
that the Son cannot be equal to the Father, by reason of the Father having begotten the
Son, whilst the Son has begotten no Son of Himself, for the spring: begets the stream,
though the stream begets no spring out of itself, and light begets radiance, and not
radiance light, yet the nature of radiance and light is one.(3)
CHAPTER
IX.
Various quibbling arguments, advanced by the
Arians to show that the Son had a beginning of existence, are considered and refuted, on
the ground that whilst the Arians plainly prove nothing, or if they prove anything, prove
it against themselves, (inasmuch as He Who is the beginning of all cannot Himself have a
beginning), their reasonings do not even hold true with regard to facts of human
existence. Time could not be before He was, Who is the Author of time--if indeed at some
time He was not in existence, then the Father was without His Power and Wisdom. Again, our
own human experience shows that a person is said to exist before he is born.
97. Now that our opponents have failed to
maintain their objection against the truth of His Son's equality with the Father, on the
ground of His Generation, let them see that their well known device of controversy, their
stock misrepresentation, is frustrated. Their common use is to propound this riddle:
"How can the Son be equal with the Father? If He is a Son, then before He was
begotten He was not in existence. If He was in existence, why was He begotten?" And
men who advance difficulties raised by Arius yet sturdily deny that they are Arians.
98. Accordingly, they demand our answer,
intending, if we say, "The Son existed before He was begotten," to meet us with
a subtle retort, that "If so, then, before He was begotten, He was created, and there
is no difference between Him and the rest of created beings, for He began to be a creature
before He began to be the Son." To which they add: "Why was He begotten, when He
was already in existence? Because He was imperfect, and in order that He might afterwards
be made more perfect?" Whilst if we reply that the Son did not exist before He was
begotten, they will immediately reply: "Then by being begotten He was brought into
existence, not having existed before He was begotten," so as to lead on from this to
the conclusion that "the Son existed, when He did not exist.":
99. But let those who propound this
difficulty and endeavour to enwrap the truth in a cloud tell us themselves whether the
Father exerts His power of begetting within or without limits of time. If they say
"within limits of time," then they will attribute to the Father what they object
against the Son, so as to make the Father seem to have begun to be what He was not before.
If their answer is "without such limits," then what is left them but to resolve
for themselves the problem they have propounded, and acknowledge that the Son is not
begotten under limits and conditions of time, since they deny that the Father so begets?
100. If the Son, then, is not begotten
within limits of time, we are free to judge that nothing can have existed before the Son,
Whose being is not confined by time. If, indeed, there was anything in being before the
Son, then it instantly follows that in Him were not created all things in heaven or in
earth, and the Apostle is shown to have erred in so setting it down in his Epistle,(2)
whereas, if before He was begotten there was nothing, I see not wherefore He, before Whom
none was, should be said to have been after any.
101. With the consideration whereof we must
join another most blasphemous objection of theirs, which covers a subtle purpose to
confuse the sense and understanding of simple folk. They ask whether everything that comes
to an end had also at any time a beginning. If they are told that what has an end also had
a beginning, then they return to the charge with the question whether the Father has
ceased to beget His Son. This by our consent being granted them, they conclude that the
generation of the Son had a beginning. The which if you allow, it seems to follow that if
the Generation had a beginning, it appears to have begun in Him Who was begotten; so that
one, who had not existed before, may be called "begotten"--their intent being to
close the inquiry by laying down as conclusive that there was a time when the Son existed
not.
102. Besides this, there are other vain
objections, such as persons of their glibness of tongue would readily urge. If, say they,
the Son is the Word of the Father, then He is called "begotten," inasmuch as He
is the Word. But then since He is the Word, He is not a work. Now the Father has spoken
"in divers manners,"(1) whence it follows that He has begotten many Sons, if He
has spoken His Word, not created it as a work of His hands. O fools, talking as though
they knew not the difference between the word uttered and the Divine Word, abiding
eternally, born of the Father--born, I say, not uttered only--in Whom is no combination of
syllables, but the fulness of the eternal Godhead and life without end!(2)
103. Follows another blasphemy, whereby they
enquire whether it was of His own free will, or on compulsion, that the Father begat [His
Son], intending, if we say, "Of His own free will," that we should appear as
though we acknowledged that the Father's Will preceded the [Divine] Generation, and to
answer that there being something that preceded the existence of the Son, the Son is not
co-eternal with the Father, or that He, like the rest of the world, is a being created,
forasmuch as it is written, "He hath made all things, as many as He would,"(3)
though this is spoken, not of the Father and the Son, but of those creatures which the Son
made. Whereas if we answered that the Father begat [His Son] on compulsion, we should seem
to have attributed infirmity to the Father.
104. But in the eternal Generation there is
no foregoing condition, neither of will, nor of unwillingness, and therefore I can neither
say that the Father begat of His free Will, nor yet that He begat on compulsion, for to
beget depends not upon possibility as determined by will, but rather appears to stand in a
certain right and property of the hidden being of the Father. For just as the Father is
not good because He wills to be so, or is compelled to be so, but is above these
conditions--is good, that is, by nature,--even so the putting forth of His generative
power is neither of will nor of necessity.
105. Yet let us grant their proposal,
Granted that the Generation depends on the Will of Him Who generates; when do they say
that this act of will took place? If it was in the beginning, then, plainly; the Son was
in the beginning. If the Will is eternal, then the Son also is eternal. If the Will began
to exist, then God the Father, as He was, was so displeased with Himself, that He made a
change in His condition, that is to say, without His Son He was displeasing to Himself; in
His Son He began to be well pleased.
106. To follow out the consequences thereof.
If the Father conceived, after the manner of human nature, a desire to beget, then did He
also pass through all the experiences which befal men before the birth takes place-- but
we find that generation is not determined merely by will, but is an object of wish.
107. Thus do they betray their own
ungodliness, who would have it that Christ's generation had a beginning, in order that it
may seem, not that true begetting of the Word abiding, but the utterance of words that
pass and are forgotten, and that by intrusion of [the premiss of] a multitude of sons,
they may [be warranted to] deny Christ's personal possession of the divine attributes, to
the end that He may be regarded as neither the only- begotten nor the first-begotten Son;
and lastly, that given the belief that His existence had a beginning, it may also be
deemed as appointed to have an end.
108. But neither had the Son of God any
beginning, seeing that He already was at the beginning, nor shall He come to an end, Who
is the Beginning and the End of the Universe;(1) for being the Beginning, how could He
take and receive that which He already had,(2) or how shall He come to an end, being
Himself the End of all things, so that in that End we have an abiding-place without end?
The Divine Generation is not an event occurring in the course of time, and within its
limits, and therefore before it time is not, and in it time has no place.
109. Again, their aimless and futile
question finds no loophole for entry, even when directed upon the creation itself;(3) nay,
indeed, temporal existences appear, in certain cases, to admit of no division of time. For
instance, light generates radiance, but we can neither conceive that the radiance begins
to exist after the light, nor that the light is in existence before the radiance, for
where there is a light,(4) there is radiance, and where there is radiance there is also a
light; and thus we can neither have a light without radiance, nor radiance without light,
because both the light is in the radiance, and the radiance in the light. Thus the Apostle
was taught to call the Son "the Radiance of the Father's Glory,"(5) for the Son
is the Radiance of His Father's light, co-eternal, because of eternity of Power;
inseparable, by unity of brightness.
110. If then we can neither understand the
mystery of, nor dissociate, these created objects in the sky above us, which we see, can
we comprehend Him Whom we see not, Who is above every created existence, God, as He is in
the very Holy of Holies of His own Generation? Can we make time a barrier between Him and
the Son, when all time is the creation of the Son?
111. Let them cease therefore, and say no
more that before He was begotten the Son was not. For the word "before" is a
mark of time, whereas the Generation is before all times,(1) and therefore that which
comes after aught comes not before it, and the work cannot be before the maker, seeing
that necessarily objects made take their commencement from the craftsman who makes them.
How can the customary action of any created object be regarded as existing prior to the
maker of it, whilst all time is a creation, and every creation has taken its being from
its creator?
112. I would, therefore, further examine our
opponents, who esteem themselves so cunning, and have them make good the application of
their theory to human existence, seeing that they use it to disparage the glory of God's
Existence, and keep far away from any confession of an inscrutable mystery in the Divine
Generation. I would have them find ground for their objection in the facts of human
generation. Of God's Son they assert that before He was begotten He was not,--that is to
say, they say this of the Wisdom, the Power, the Word of God, Whose Generation knows
nothing prior to itself. But if, as they would have us believe, there was a time when the
Son existed not (the which it is blasphemy to affirm), then there was a time when God
lacked the fulness of Divine Perfection, if afterwards He passed through a process of
begetting a Son.
113. To show them, however, the weakness and
transparency of their objection, though it has no real relation to any truth, divine or
human, I will prove to them that men have existed before they were born. Else, let them
show that Jacob, who whilst yet hidden in the secret chamber of his mother's womb
supplanted his brother, had not been appointed and ordained, ere ever he was born;(2) let
them show that Jeremiah had not likewise been so, before his birth, -Jeremiah, to whom the
message comes: "Before I formed thee in thy mother's womb, I knew thee; and before
thou camest forth from the belly, I sanctified thee, and appointed thee for a prophet
amongst the nations."(3) What testimony can we have stronger than the case of this
great prophet, who was sanctified before he was born, and known before he was shaped?
114. What, again, shall I say of John, of
whom his holy mother testifies that, whilst he yet lay in her womb, he perceived in
spirit(4) the presence of his Lord, and leaped for joy, as we remember it to be written,
his mother saying: "For lo, as soon as the voice of the salutation entered mine ears,
the babe leaped in my womb for joy."(1) Was he, then, who prophesied, in existence or
not? Nay, surely he was--surely he was in being who worshipped his Maker; he was in being
who spake in his mother's womb. And so Elisabeth was filled with the spirit of her son,
and Mary sanctified by the Spirit of hers, for thus you may find it recorded, that
"the babe leaped in her womb, and Elisabeth was filled with the Holy Ghost."(2)
115. Consider the proper force of each word.
Elisabeth was indeed the first to hear the voice of Mary, but John was first to feel His
Lord's gracious Presence. Sweet is the harmony of prophecy with prophecy, of woman with
woman, of babe with babe. The women speak words of grace, the babes move hiddenly, and as
their mothers approach one another, so do they engage in mysterious converse of love; and
in a twofold miracle, though in diverse degrees of honour, the mothers prophesy in the
spirit of their little ones. Who, I ask, was it that performed this miracle? Was it not
the Son of God, Who made the unborn to be?
116. Thus your objection fails of
reconcilement with the truths of human existence--can it attain thereto with divine
mysteries? What mean you by your principle that "before He was begotten He was
not"? Was the Father engaged for some time in conception, so that certain epochs
passed away before the Son was begotten? Was He, like women, in travail of birth, so that
just this travail? What would you? Why seek we to pry into divine mysteries? The
Scriptures tell me the necessary effects of the Divine Generation,(3) not how it is done.
CHAPTER X.
The objection that Christ, on the showing of
St. John, lives because of the Father, and therefore is not to be regarded as equal with
the Father, is met by the reply that for the Life of the Son, in respect of His Godhead,
there has never been a time when it began; and that it is dependent upon none, whilst the
passage in question must be understood as referring to the His human life, as is shown by
His speaking there of His body and blood. Two expositions of the passage are given, the
one of which is shown to refer to Christ's Manhood, whilst the second teaches His equality
with the Father, as also His likeness with men. Rebuke is administered to the Arians for
the insult which they are seeking to inflict upon the Son, and the sense in which the Son
can be said to live "because of" the Father is explained, as also the union of
life with our the divine Life. A further objection, based upon the Son's prayer that He
may be glorified by the Father, is briefly refuted.
118. There are not a few who raise this
further objection, that it is written: "As the living Father hath sent Me, and I live
by the Father; so he that eateth Me, liveth also by Me."(1) "How," ask
they, "is the Son equal with the Father, when He has said that He lives by the
Father?"
119. Let those who oppose us on this ground
tell us first what the Life of the Son is. Is it a life bestowed by the Father upon one
lacking life? But how could the Son ever fail to possess life, He Himself being the Life,
as He says, "I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life."' Truly, His life is
eternal, even as His power is eternal. Was there a time, then, when (so to speak) Life
possessed not itself?
120. Bethink you what is read this day
concerning the Lord Jesus, that "He died for our sakes, to the end that whether we
wake or whether we sleep, we may live with Him."(3) He Whose Death is Life, is not
His Godhead Life, seeing that the Godhead is Life eternal?
121. But is His Life truly in the Father's
power? Why, He showed that even His bodily life was not in the power of any other, as we
have it on record: "I lay down My life, that I may take it again. No man taketh it
from Me, but I lay it down of Myself. I have power to lay it down, and again I have power
to take it. This commandment have I received of My Father."(4)
122. Is His divine Life then to be regarded
as depending upon the power of another, when His bodily life was subject to no other power
but His own? For it would have been the power of another, but for the Unity of power. But
just as He gives us to understand that His laying down His life was done of His own power,
and of His free Will, so also He teaches us, in laying it down in obedience to His
Father's command, the unity of His own with the Father's Will.
123. If, then, there has neither been slime
when the Life of the Son took a commencement, nor any power to which it has been
subjected, let us consider what His meaning was when He said: "Even as the living
Father hath sent Me, and I live by the Father"? Let us expound His meaning as best we
can; nay, rather let Him expound it Himself.
124. Take notice, then, what He said in an
earlier part of His discourse. "Verily, verily, I say unto you." He first
teaches thee how thou oughtest to listen. "Verily, verily, I say unto you, unless ye
eat the flesh of the Son of Man, and drink His blood, ye shall have no life in
you."(1) He first premised that He was speaking as Son of Man; dost thou then think
that what He hath said, as Son of Man, concerning His Flesh and His Blood, is to be
applied to His Godhead?
125. Then He added: "For My Flesh is
meat indeed, and My Blood is drink [indeed]."(2) Thou hearest Him speak of His Flesh
and of His Blood, thou perceivest the sacred pledges, [conveying to us the merits and
power] of the Lord's death,(3) and thou dishonourest His Godhead. Hear His own words:
"A spirit hath not flesh and bones."(4) Now we, as often as we receive the
Sacramental Elements, which by the mysterous efficacy of holy prayer are transformed into
the Flesh and the Blood, "do show the Lord's Death."(5)
126. Then, alter calling on us to take
notice that He speaks as Son of Man, and frequent repeated mention of His Flesh and His
Blood, He adds: "Even as the living Father hath sent Me, and I live by the Father, so
he that eateth Me, he also liveth by Me." How then do they suppose that we are to
understand these words?--for the comparison can be shown as a double one. The first
comparison being after the following manner: "Even as the living Father hath sent Me,
I live by the Father;" the second: "Even as the living Father hath sent Me, and
I live by the Father, so also he that eateth Me, he too liveth by Me."
127. If our adversaries choose the former,
the meaning is this, that, "as I am sent by the Father and am come down from the
Father, so (in accordance therewith) I live by the Father." But in what character was
He sent, and came down, save as Son of Man, even as He Himself said before: "No man
hath ascended into heaven, save He that hath come down from heaven as Son of Man."(6)
Then, just as He was sent and came down as Son of Man, so as Son of Man He lives by the
Father. Furthermore, he that eateth Him, as eating the Son of Man, doth himself also live
by the Son of Man. Thus, He has compared the effect of His Incarnation to His coming.
128. But if they choose the second method,
do we not infer both the equality of the Son with the Father, and His likeness to men,
together, though in clear mutual distinction? For what is the meaning of the words,
"Even as He Himself liveth by the Father, so we also live by Him," but that the
Son so quickeneth a man, as the Father hath in the Son quickened human nature?(1)
"For as the Father raiseth the dead and quickeneth them, so also the Son quickeneth
whom He will,"(2) as the Lord Himself hath already said.
129. Thus the equality of the Son to the
Father is established simply upon unity in the action of quickening, since the Son so
quickeneth as the Father doth. Acknowledge therefore the eternity of His Life and
Sovereignty. Again, our likeness with the Son is discovered, and a certain unity with Him
in the flesh,(3) because that, like as the Son of God was quickened in the flesh(4) by the
Father, so also is man quickened; for thus it is written, that as God raised Jesus Christ
from the dead, so we also, as men, are quickened by the Son of God.(5)
130. According to this interpretation, then,
immortality is not only applied to our condition by grace of bounty, but is also
proclaimed as the property of Godhead--the latter, because it is the Godhead which
quickeneth; the former, because manhood is quickened in Christ.
131. But if any would apply the force of
either comparison to Christ's Godhead, then the Son of God is put on one footing with men,
so that the Son of God lives by the Father just as we live by the Son of God. But the Son
of God bestows eternal life by free gift, we cannot so do. If then He be placed on a level
with us, He too does not bestow this gift. Let Arius' disciples then have the due reward
of their faith--which is, not to obtain eternal life of the Son.
132. I would now go further. If our
opponents are pleased to apply the teaching of this passage to the principle of the
eternity of the Divine Substance, let them hear a third exposition: Does not our Lord
plainly appear to say that as the Father is a living Father, so too the Son also
lives?-and who can but observe that here we must understand a reference to unity of Life,
forasmuch as the same Life is the Life of the Father and the Life of the Son? "For as
the Father hath Life in Himself, so hath He given to the Son also to have Life in
Himself."(1) He hath given--by reason of unity with Him. He hath given, not to take
away, but that He may be glorified in the Son. He hath given, not that He, the Father,
might keep guard over it, but that the Son might have it in possession.
133. But the Arians think that they must
oppose hereto the fact that He had said, "I live by the Father." Of a certainty
(suppose that they conceive the words as referring to His Godhead) the Son lives by the
Father, because He is the Son begotten of the Father,--by the Father, because He is of one
Substance with the Father,--by the Father, because He is the Word given forth from the
heart of the Father,(2) because He came forth from the Father, because He is begotten of
the "bowels of the Father,"(3) because the Father is the Fountain and Root of
the Son's being.
134. But peradventure they may urge:
"If you hold that the Son, in saying, 'And I live by the Father,' spoke of the unity
of life subsisting between the Father and the Son, does it not follow that He discovered
the unity of life between the Son and mankind in saying that 'he that eateth Me, the same
liveth by Me'?"
135. Even so. Just as I confess the unity of
celestial Life subsisting in Father and Son by reason of the unity of the substance of the
Godhead, so too, save as concerns the prerogatives of the Divine Nature or those which are
the effect of the Incarnation of our Lord, I affirm of the Son a participation of
spiritual life with us by virtue of the unity of His Manhood with ours, for "as is
the heavenly, such are they also that are heavenly."(4) Further, even as in Him we
sit at the right hand of the Father, not in the sense that we share His throne, but that
we rest in the Body of Christ--even as, I say, we have part in Christ's session by reason
of corporal unity, so too we live in Christ by reason of unity of our bodies with His
Body.
136. Not only, then, have I no fears of the
text, "I live by the Father," but I should have none, even though Christ had
said, "I live by help of the Father.
137. Now another objection commonly urged by
them starts from the text: "This sickness is not unto death, but for the glory of
God, to the end that His Son may be glorified by Him."(2) But not only is the Son
glorified through the Father and by the Father, as it is written: "Glorify Me,
Father;"(3) and again: "Now hath the Son of Man been glorified, and God hath
been glorified in Him, and God glorifieth Him,"(4) but the Father also is glorified
through the Son and by the Son, for Truth hath said: "I have glorified Thee upon
earth."
138. Even as the Son, therefore, is
glorified through the Father, so too He lives by the Father. There are some who have been
led by consideration of these words to the supposition that [the Greek] "do'xa"
means "opinion, belief," rather than "glory," and therefore have
interpreted as follows: "I have given thee a Do'xa upon earth, I have finished the
work which Thou gavest Me to do, and now, O Father, give me a do'xa" that is to say:
"I have taught men so to believe concerning Thee, as to know that Thou art the true
God; do Thou also establish in them, concerning Me, the belief that I am Thy Son, and very
God."
CHAPTER
XI.
The particular distinction which the Arians
endeavoured to prove upon the Apostle's teaching that all things are "of" the
Father and "through" the Son, is overthrown, it being shown that in me passage
cited the same Omnipotence is ascribed both to Father and to Son, as is proved from
various texts, especially from the words of St. Paul himself, in which heretics foolishly
find a reference to the Father only, though indeed there is no diminution or inferiority
of the Son's sovereignty proved, even by such a reference. Finally, the three phrases,
"of Whom," "through Whom," "in Whom," are shown to suppose
or imply no difference (of power), and each and all to hold true of the Three Persons.
139. Now we come to that laughable method,
attempted by some, of showing a difference of Power to subsist between
Father and Son, on the strength of apostolic
testimony, it being written "But for us there is One God, the Father, of Whom are all
things, and we in Him, and One Lord, Jesus Christ, through Whom are all things, and we
through Him."(1) It is urged that no small difference in degree of Divine Majesty is
signified in the affirmation that all things are "of" the Father, and
"through" the Son. Whereas nothing is clearer than that here a plain reason is
given of the Omnipotence of the Son, inasmuch as whilst all things are "of" the
Father, none the less are they all "through" the Son.(2)
140. The Father is not "amongst"
all things, for to Him it is confessed that "all things serve Thee."(3) Nor is
the Son reckoned "amongst" all things, for "all things were made by
Him,"(4) and "all things exist together(5) in Him, and He is above all the
heavens."(6) The Son, therefore, exists not "amongst" but above all things,
being, indeed, after the flesh, of the people,(7) of the Jews, but yet at the same time
God over all, blessed for ever, (8) having a Name which is above every name,(9) it being
said of Him, "Thou hast put all things in subjection under His feet."(10) But in
making all things subject to Him, He left nothing that is not subject, even as the Apostle
hath said.(11) But suppose that the Apostle's words were intended with reference to the
Incarnate Lord; how then can we doubt the incomparable majesty of His Divine Generation?
141. Certain it is, then, that between
Father and Son there can be no difference of Power. Nay, so far is such difference from
being present, that the same Apostle has said that all things are "of" Him, by
Whom are all things, as followeth: "For of Him and through Him and in Him are all
things."(12)
142. Now if, as they suppose, it is the
Father alone Who is spoken of, it cannot be that He is at once Omnipotent because all
things are of Him, and not Omnipotent because all things are through Him.(13) On their own
showing, then, they will declare the Father lacking in Power, and not Omnipotent, or at
the least they will be confessing with their own mouth, all against their will though it
be, the Omnipotence of the Son as well as of the Father.
143. Howbeit, let them decide whether they
will understand this affirmation as made concerning the Father. If they do so decide then
all things are "through" Him also. If they decide that it is the Son Who is
spoken of, then all things are "of" Him as well as "of" the Father.
But if all things are "through" the Father also, then surely there is no
argument for diminishing from the honour due to the Son; and if all things are
"of" the Son, the Son must be honoured in like manner as the Father is.
144. In case our opponents should suspect
that we are taking advantage of some intrusion of a single spurious verse into the text,
let us review the whole passage. "O depth of the riches of God's wisdom and
knowledge!" exclaims the Apostle, "how unsearchable are His judgments, and His
ways past finding out! For Who hath known the mind of the Lord, or who hath been His
counsellor? Or who hath been first to give unto Him, and shall be recompensed? For of Him
and through Him and in Him are all things. To Him be glory for ever!"(1)
145. Who, then, think they, is here spoken
of--the Father or the Son? If it be the Father--then we answer that the Father is not the
Wisdom of God, for the Son is. But what is there that is impossible to Wisdom, of Whom it
is written: "Seeing that she is almighty and abiding, she maketh all things new m
herself"?(2) We read of Wisdom, then, not as approaching, but as abiding.(3) Thus
have you the authority of Solomon to teach you of the Omnipotence and Eternity of Wisdom,
and of her Goodness as well, for it is written: "But malice overcometh not
Wisdom."(4)
146. But to purpose. "How
unsearchable," saith the Apostle, "are His judgments!" Now if "the
Father hath given all judgment to the Son,"(1) it seems that the Father points to the
Son as Judge.
147. But now, to show us that He is speaking
of the Son, not of the Father, St. Paul proceeds: "Who was first in giving to
Him?" For "the Father hath given to the Son," but it was as acknowledging
the rights of Him Whom He has begotten, not by way of largess. Therefore, it being
undeniable that the Son has received at the hands of the Father, as it is written,
"All things have been given unto Me of My Father,"(3) yet, in saying, "Who
was first in giving to Him?" the Apostle has not denied that the Son has received
gifts of the Father, by virtue of His Nature, but he has indeed shown that, of Father and
Son, Neither can be said to be before the Other, forasmuch as, albeit the Father has given
gifts unto the Son, yet He has not so bestowed them as upon one that began to be after
Him; because the uncreate and incomprehensible Trinity, Which is of One Eternity and
Glory, admits neither difference of time nor degree of precedence.
148. If, however, we hold ourselves more
bound to observe those Greek manuscripts which show "ti's prose'dwken autw(i)"
it is clear that He to Whom nothing can be added is not unequal to Him Who is perfect and
complete. Therefore, if this passage from the Apostle, in its entirety, is better
understood with reference to the Son, we see that we must also believe concerning the Son,
that all things are of Him, even as it is written: "For of Him and through Him and in
Him are all things."
149. Be it so, nevertheless, that they
suppose the passage to be intended of the Father, then let us call to mind that even as we
read of all things being of Him, so too we read of all things being through Him, that is
to say, the authority of the Father and of the Son is extended over the whole created
universe. And, though we have already proved the Omnipotence of the Son by the Omnipotence
of the Father,(4) still-- forasmuch as they are ever bent upon disparagement--let them
consider that they disparage the Father as well as the Son. For if the Son be limited in
might, because all things are through Him, do we say further, that the Father likewise is
limited, because all things are through Him also?
150. But to bring them to understand that
these phrases involve no difference, I will once again show that it is the same person,
"of" whom anything is, and "through" whom anything is, and that we
read of things being related in both these ways to the Father. For we find: "Faithful
is God, through Whom ye were called into the fellowship of His Son."(1) Let our
adversaries weigh the meaning of the Apostle's words. We are called "through"
the Father--they raise no controversy: we are created "through" the Son--and
this they have set down as a mark of inferiority.(2) The Father has called us into
fellowship with His Son, and this truth we, as in duty bound, devoutly receive. The Son
has created all things, and Arius' followers imagine that here they have not the decree of
a free Will, but a forced service, slavishly performed!
151. Again, to obtain fuller understanding
that, forasmuch as we are called through the Father into fellowship with His Son, there is
no difference of Power in the Father and the Son, [note that] the fellowship itself has
its beginning of the Son, as it is written: "For from His fulness have we all
received," though, if we follow the Greek text of the Gospel, we ought to render
"of His fulness."(3)
152. See, then, how there is fellowship both
through the Father and of the Son, and yet not a different fellowship, but one and the
same. "And that our fellowship be with the Father and with His Son Jesus
Christ."(4)
153. Observe, further, that Scripture speaks
of our having one fellowship not only "of" the Father and the Son, but also
"of" the Holy Spirit. "The grace of Our Lord Jesus Christ," saith the
Apostle, "and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you
all."(5)
154. Now, I ask, wherein does He, through
Whom are all things, appear less than He, of Whom are all things? Is it because He is
declared to be the Worker? But the Father also works, for He is true who said, "My
Father worketh hitherto, and I work."(6) Therefore, even as the Father worketh, so
worketh the Son also; and so He Who worketh is not limitary in power nor abject, for the
Father also worketh; which being so, that which is common to the Son with the Father, or
even which the Son has by the Father, ought not to be the less esteemed, lest heretics
further dishonour the Father in the Person of the Son.
155. Not to be passed over for silencing the
disputings of Arian misbelief are those words of the same Saint John, which he set down in
another Scripture: "If ye know that He is just, know that he which doeth
righteousness is born of Him."(1) But who is righteous, save the Lord, Who loveth
righteousness?(2) Or whom--as the foregoing texts warn us--have we to assure us of
everlasting life, if we have not the Son? If, therefore, the Son of God hath promised us
everlasting life, and He is righteous, surely we are born "of" Him. Else, if our
adversaries deny that we are born of the Son by grace, they likewise deny His
righteousness.
156. Thou must therefore believe that all
things are of the Son of God [even as of God the Father, for even as God is the Father of
all, so likewise is the Son the Author and Creator of all. We see, then, the vanity of
this their questioning, forasmuch as it holds good of the Son [as of the Father], that
"of Him and through Him and in Him are all things."
157. We have shown how all things are
"of" Him, and likewise how all things are also "through" Him. Who then
doubts that all things are "in" Him, when another Scripture saith: "For in
Him are all things founded, that are in the heavens, and in Him they were created, and He
is before all things, and all things consist in Him"? (Col. i. 16). Of Him, then,
thou hast grace; Himself thou hast for thy Creator; in Him thou findest the foundation of
all things.
CHAPTER
XII.
The comparison, found in the Gospel of St.
John, of the Son to a Vine and the Father to a husbandman, must be understood with
reference to the Incarnation. To understand it with reference to the Divine Generation is
to doubly insult the Son, making Him inferior to St. Paul, and bringing Him down to the
level of the rest of mankind, as well as in like manner the Father also, by making Him not
merely to be on one footing with the same Apostle, but even of no account at all. The Son,
indeed, in so far as being God, is also the husbandman, and, as regards His Manhood, a
grape-cluster. True statement of the Father's pre-eminence.
158. There is yet another Scripture, which
our opponents commonly object against us, in order to prove their division of the Godhead
of the Father from the Godhead of the Son, namely, our Lord's words in the Gospel: "I
am the true Vine and My Father is the Husbandman." The vine and the husbandman, say
they, are of different natures, and the vine is in the power of the husbandman.
159. Thus, then, ye would have us believe
that the Son, as touching His Godhead, is like to a vine, so that without a vine-dresser
He is nothing, and may be neglected or even rooted up. Thus ye juggle up a lie from the
letter of the Scripture which sayeth that our Lord called Himself the Vine, intending
thereby the mystery of His Incarnation.(1) Howbeit, if ye are bent on it that we dispute
upon the letter, I too confess, yea, I proclaim, that the Son called Himself the Vine. For
woe be to me, if I deny the pledge(2) of the salvation of His people!
160. How then do you purpose to understand
the truth that the Son of God called Himself the Vine? If you interpret the saying with
respect to the Substance of His Godhead, and if you suppose such a diversity of Godhead
between the Father and the Son as there is of nature between a husbandman and a vine, you
do double insult both to Father and to Son--to the Son, because if, as you affirm, He is,
as touching His Godhead, beneath a husbandman, then must He on the same showing be
esteemed lower than the Apostle Paul, forasmuch as Paul indeed called himself a
husbandman, as we find it written: "I have planted, Apollos hath watered: but God
hath given the increase."(3) Will you have Paul, then, to be better than the Son of
God?
161. Thus far the one insult. As for the
other, it lies herein, that if the Son is the Vine in respect of His eternally-begotten
Person, then, He having said: "I am the Vine, ye are the branches,"(4) that
divinely- begotten One appears to be of one substance with us. But" who is like unto
Thee among the gods, O Lord?"(5) as it is written; and again, in the Psalms:
"For who is there among the clouds that shall be equal to the Lord? Or who among the
sons of God shall be like unto God."(6)
162. Moreover, ye disparage not only the
Son, but the Father also. For if the term "husbandman" is to comprehend in its
designation all the prerogative of the Father's Sovereignty, then, seeing that Paul too is
a husbandman, you set the Apostle, to whom you deny that the Son is equal, on an even
footing with the Father.
163. Again, it being written, "But
neither he which planteth is anything, nor he that watereth; but God, Who giveth the
increase,"(1) you will rest the fulness of the Father's Majesty in a name which, as
you see, stands for weakness. For if he that planteth is nothing, and he that watereth is
nothing, but it is God, Who giveth the increase [Who is all], observe what your blasphemy
intends--even to expose the Father to contempt under the title of a husbandman, and to
demand another God to provide the increase of the Father's labour. Wickedly, therefore, do
they think to extol the Dignity of God the Father by this use of the term
"husbandman," in which God the Father is brought down to the level of man, as
being designated by a common title.
164. Yet what wonder if, as ye heretics
would have it, the Father is to be exalted above a Son Whose Godhead differs not a whir
from the common condition of mankind? If ye suppose the Son to have been entitled the Vine
with respect to His Godhead, then do ye esteem Him not only as liable to corruption and
subject to changes of wind and weather, but even as partaking of manhood only, forasmuch
as the Vine and its branches are of one nature, so that the Son of God appears, not to
have taken upon Him our flesh, through the mystery of Incarnation, but to have altogether
sprung into being from the flesh.
165. But I will indeed openly confess that
His flesh, though born in a new and mysterious birth, was yet of the same nature with
ours, and that this is the pledge of our salvation, not the source of the Divine
Generation. He indeed is the Vine, for He bears my sufferings, whensoever manhood,
hitherto frail, leans on Him and so matures with plenteous fruit of renewed devotion.
166. Yet if the husbandman's power allure
thee, tell me, prithee, who it was that spake in the prophet, saying: "0 Lord, make
it known to me, that I may know; then saw I their thoughts. I was led as a harmless lamb
to the slaughter and knew it not: they took counsel together against me, saying, Come, let
us throw wood into his bread."(2) For if the Son here speaks of the mystery of His
coming Incarnation--for it were blasphemy to suppose that the words are spoken concerning
the Father--then surely it is the Son Who speaks in an earlier passage: "I have
planted thee as a fruitful vine--how art Thou become bitter, and a wild vine?"(3)
167. And thus thou seest that the Son also
is the husbandman,--the Son, of one Name with the Father, one work, one dignity and
Substance. If, then, the Son is both Vine and Husbandman, plainly we infer the meaning of
the Vine with regard to the mystery of the Incarnation.
168. But not only has our Lord called
Himself a Vine--He has also given Himself, by the voice of the prophet, the title of a
Grape-cluster--even when Moses, at the command of the Lord, sent spies to the Valley of
the Cluster.(1) What is that valley but the humility of the Incarnation and the
fruitfulness of the Passion? I indeed think that He is called the Cluster, because that
from the Vine brought out of Egypt, that is, the people of the Jews, there grew a fruit
for the world's good. No man, truly, can understand the Cluster as a token of the Divine
Generation--or if there be any who so understand it, they leave no conclusion open but
that we should believe that Cluster to have sprung from the Vine: And thus in their folly
they attribute to the Father that which they refuse to believe of the Son.
169. But if there be now left no room for
doubt that the Son of God is called the Vine with respect and intention to His
Incarnation,(1) you see what hidden truth it was to which our Lord had regard in saying,
"The Father is greater than I."(2) For after this premised, He proceeded
immediately: "I am the true Vine, and My Father is the Husbandman," that you
might know that the Father is greater in so far as He dresses and tends our Lord's flesh,
as the husbandman dresses and tends his vines. Further, our Lord's flesh is that which
could increase in stature with age,(3) and be wounded through suffering, to the end that
the whole human race might rest guarded from the pestilent heat of the pleasures of this
world, under the shadow of the Cross whereon Its limbs are spread.
BOOK V
PROLOGUE
Who is a faithful and wise servant? His
reward is pointed out in the case of Peter, as also in the case of Paul. Ambrose, being
anxious to follow Paul's guidance, wished this book to be added to the others, for it
could not be included in the preceding one. The subject for discussion is then stated, and
the reason for such a discussion given. He must needs be pardoned, for usury is to be
demanded from every servant for the money which has been entrusted to him. Their
faithfulness is the usury desired in his own case. He will be happy if he may hope for a
reward; but he does not look so much for the recompense of the saints, as for exemption
from punishment. He urges all to seek to merit this.
1. "Who, then, is a faithful and wise
servant, whom his lord hath made ruler over his household, to give them meat in due
season? Blessed is that servant, whom his lord when he cometh shall find so doing."
(2) Not worthless is this servant: some great one ought he to be. Let us think who he may
be.
2. It is Peter, chosen by the Lord Himself
to feed His flock, who merits thrice to hear the words: "Feed My little lambs; feed
My lambs; feed My sheep."(3) And so, by feeding well the flock of Christ with the
food of faith, he effaced the sin of his former fall. For this reason is he thrice
admonished to feed the flock; thrice is he asked whether he loves the Lord, in order that
he may thrice confess Him, Whom he had thrice denied before His Crucifixion.(4)
3. Blessed also is that servant who can say:
"I have fed you with milk and not with meat; for hitherto ye were not able to bear
it."(5) For he knew how to feed them. Who of us can do this? Who of us can truly say:
"To the weak became Ins weak, that I might gain the weak"?(6)
4. Yet he, being so great a man, and chosen
by Christ for the care of His flock, so as to strengthen the weak and to heal the
sick,--he, I say, rejects forthwith after one admonition(7) a heretic from the fold
entrusted to him, for fear that the taint of one erring sheep might infect the whole flock
with a spreading sore. He further bids that foolish questions and contentions be
avoided.(8)
5. How, then, shall we act, being but
ignorant dwellers set amongst these fresh tares in the old-standing harvest field?(9) If
we are silent, we shall seem to be giving way; and if we contend against them, there is
the fear that we too shall be held to be carnal. For it is written of matters of this
sort, which beget strife: "The servant of the Lord must not strive, but be gentle
unto all, apt to teach, patient, with moderation instructing those that oppose
themselves."(1) And in another place: "If any man is contentious, we have no
such custom, neither the Church of God."(2) For this reason it was our intention to
write somewhat, in order that our writings might without any din answer the impiety of
heretics on our behalf.
6. And so we prepare to commence this our
Fifth Book, O Emperor Augustus. For it was but right that the Fourth Book should end with
our discussion on the Vine, lest otherwise we should seem to have overloaded that book
with a tumultuous mass of subjects, rather than to have filled it with the fruit of the
spiritual vineyard. On the other hand, it was not seemly that the gathering of the vintage
of the faith should be left unfinished, whilst there was still all abundance of such great
matters for discussion.
7. In the Fifth Book, therefore, we speak of
the indivisible Godhead of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost (omitting, however, a
full discussion on the Holy Ghost), being urged by the teaching of the Gospel to let out
on interest to human minds the five talents(3) of the faith entrusted to these five books
being as it were the principal; lest perhaps when the Lord comes, and finds His money
hidden in the earth, He may say to me: "Thou wicked and slothful servant, thou
knewest that I reap where I do not sow; and gather where I have not strawed; thou oughtest
therefore to have put My money to the exchangers, that at My coming I might have received
Mine Own,"(4) or as it stands in another book: "And I," it says, "at
My coming might have received it with usury."(5)
8. I pray those to pardon me, whom the
boldness of such a lengthy address displeases. The thought of my office compels me to
entrust to others what I have received. "We are stewards of the heavenly
mysteries."(6) We are ministers, but not all alike. "But," it says,
"even as the Lord gave to every man, I have planted; Apollos watered; but God gave
the increase."(7) Let each one then strive that be may be able to receive a reward
according to his labour. "For we are labourers together with God," as the
Apostle said; "we are God's husbandry, God's building."(1) Blessed therefore is
he who sees such usury on his principal; blessed too is he who beholds the fruit of his
work; blessed again is he "who builds upon the foundation of faith, gold, silver,
precious stones."(2)
9. Ye who hear or read these words are all
things to us. Ye are the usury of the money-lender,--the usury on speech, not on money; ye
are the return given to the husbandman; ye are the gold, the silver, the precious stones
of the builder. In your merits lie the chief results of the labours of the priest; in your
souls shines forth the fruit of a bishop's work; in your progress glitters the gold of the
Lord; the silver is increased if ye hold fast the divine words. "The words of the
Lord are pure words, as silver tried in the fire; proved on the earth, purified seven
times."(3) Ye therefore will make the lender rich, the husbandman to abound in
produce; ye will prove the master-builder to be skilful. I do not speak boastfully; for I
do not desire so much my own advantage as yours.
10. Oh that I might safely say of you at
that time: "Lord, Thou gavest me five talents, behold I have gained five other
talents;"(4) and that I might show the precious talents of your virtues! "For we
have a treasure in earthen vessels."(5) These are the talents which the Lord bids us
spiritually to trade with, or the two coins of the New and the Old Testament, which that
Samaritan in the Gospel left for the man robbed by the thieves, for the purpose of getting
his wounds healed.(6)
11. Neither do I, my brethren, with greedy
desires, long for this, so that I may be set over many things; the recompense I get from
the fact of your advance is enough for me. Oh that I may not be found unworthy of that
which I have received! Let those things which are too great for me be assigned to better
men. I demand them not! Yet mayest Thou say, O Lord: "I will give unto this last,
even as unto thee."(7) Let the man that deserves it receive authority over ten
cities.(8)
12. Let him be such an one as was Moses, who
wrote the Ten Words of the Law. Let him be as Joshua, the son of Nun, who subdued five
kings, and brought the Gibeonites into subjection, that he might be the figure of a Man of
his own name Who was to come, by Whose power all fleshly lust should be overcome, and the
Gentiles should be converted, so that they might follow the faith of Jesus Christ rather
than their former pursuits and desires. Let him be as David, whom the young maidens came
to meet with songs, saying: "Saul hath triumphed over thousands, David over ten
thousands."(1)
13. It is enough for me, if I am not thrust
out into the outer darkness, as he was, who hid the talent entrusted to him in the earth
so to speak, of his own flesh. This the ruler of the synagogue did, and the other rulers
of the Jews; for they employed(2),(3) the words of the Lord, which had been entrusted to
them, on the ground as it were of their bodies; and, delighting in the pleasures of the
flesh, sunk the heavenly trust as though into the pit of an overweening heart.
14. Let us then not keep the Lord's money
buried and hidden in the flesh; nor let us hide our one talent in a napkin;(4) but like
good money- changers let us ever weigh it out with labour of mind and body, with an even
and ready will, that the word may be near, even in thy mouth and in thy heart.(5)
15. This is the word of the Lord, this is
the precious talent, whereby thou art redeemed. This money must often be seen on the
tables of souls, in order that by constant trading the sound of the good coins may be able
to go forth into every land, by the means of which eternal life is purchased. "This
is eternal life," which Thou, Almighty Father, givest freely, that we may know
"Thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ Whom Thou hast sent."(6)
CHAPTER
I.
How impious the Arians are, in attacking
that on which human happiness depends. John ever unites the Son with the Father,
especially where he says: "That they may know Thee, the only true God, etc." In
that place, then, we must understand the words "true God" also of the Son; for
it cannot be denied that He is God, and it cannot be said He is a false god, and least of
all that He is God by appellation only. This last point being proved from the Apostle's
words, we rightly confess that Christ is true God.
16. Wherefore let the Arians observe, how
impious they are in calling in question our hope and the object of our desires. And since
they are wont to cry out on this point above all others, saying that Christ is distinct
from the only and true God, let us confute their impious ideas so far as lies in our
power.
17. For on this point they ought rather to
understand, that this is the benefit, this the reward of perfect virtue, namely, this
divine and incomparable gift, that we may know Christ together with the Father, and not
separate the Son from the Father; as also the Scriptures do not separate them. For the
following tells rather for the unity than for the diversity of the Divine Majesty, namely,
that the knowledge of the Father and of the Son gives us the same recompense, and one and
the same honour; which reward no man will have but he that has known both the Father and
the Son. For as the knowledge of the Father procures eternal life, so also does the
knowledge of the Son.
18. Therefore as the Evangelist forthwith at
the outset joined the Word with God the Father in his devout confession of faith, saying:
"And the Word was with God;"(1) and here too, in writing the words of the Lord:
"That they may know Thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ Whom Thou hast
sent,"(2) he has undoubtedly, by thus connecting Them, bound together the Father and
the Son, so that no one may separate Christ as true God from the majesty of the Father,
for union does not dissever.
19. Therefore in saying, "That they may
know Thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ Whom Thou hast sent," he put an end to
the Sabellians, and has also put the Jews out of court,--those at any rate who heard him
speak; so that the former might not suppose the Same to be the Father as the Son, which
they might have done if he had not added also Christ, and that the latter might not sever
the Son from the Father.
20. But, I ask, why do they not think we
ought to gather and understand this from what has been already said; that as he has
declared the Father to be only, true God, so we may understand Jesus Christ also to be
only, true God? For it could not be expressed in any other way, for fear he might seem to
be speaking of two Gods. For neither do we speak of two Gods; and yet we confess the Son
to be of the same Godhead with the Father.
21. May we ask, therefore, on what grounds
they think a distinction is made in the Godhead, and whether they deny Christ to be God?
But they cannot deny it. Do they deny Him to be true God? But if they deny Him to be true
God, let them say whether they declare Him to be a false God, or God by appellation only.
For according to the Scriptures the word "God" is used either of the true God,
or by appellation only, or of a false god. True God as the Father; God by appellation as
the saints; a false god like the demons and idols. Let them say then how they will
acknowledge and describe the Son of God. Do they suppose the name of God to have been
falsely assumed; or was there in truth merely an indwelling of God within Him, as it were
by appellation only?
22. I do not think they can say the name was
falsely assumed, and so involve themselves in the open wickedness of blasphemy; lest they
should betray themselves on the one hand to the demons and idols, and on the other to
Christ, by insinuating that the name of God was falsely given to Him. But if they think He
is called God because He had an indwelling of the Godhead within Him,--as many holy men
were (for the Scripture calls them Gods to whom the word of God came),(1)--they do not
place Him before other men, but think He is to be compared with them; so that they
consider Him to be the same as He has granted other men to be, even as He says to Moses:
"I have made thee a god unto Pharaoh."(2) Wherefore it is also said in the
Psalms: "I have said, ye are gods."(3)
23. This idea of these blasphemers Paul puts
aside; for he said: "For though there be that are called gods, whether in heaven or
in earth."(4) He said not: "There be gods," but "There be that are
called gods." But "Christ, as it is written, "is the same yesterday and
to-day."(5) "He is," it says; that is, not only in name but also in truth.
24. And well is it written: "He is the
same yesterday and to-day," so that the impiety of Arius might find no room to pile
up its profanity. For he, in reading in the second psalm of the Father saying to the Son,
"Thou art My Son, this day have I begotten Thee,"(6) noted the word
"to-day," not "yesterday," referring this which was spoken of the
assumption of our flesh to the eternity of the divine generation; of which Paul also says
in the Acts of the Apostles: "And we declare unto you the promise which was made to
our fathers: for God has fulfilled the same to our children, in that He hath raised up the
Lord Jesus Christ again, as it is written in the second psalm: Thou art My Son, this day
have I begotten Thee."(1) Thus the Apostle, filled with the Holy Ghost, in order that
he might destroy that fierce madness of his, said: "The same, yesterday, to-day, and
for ever." "Yesterday" on account of His eternity; "to-day" on
account of His taking to Himself a human body.
35. Christ therefore is, and always is; for
He, Who is, always is. And Christ always is, of Whom Moses says: "He that is hath
sent me."(2) Gabriel indeed was, Raphael was, the angels were; but they who sometime
have not been are by no means with equal reason said always to be. But Christ, as we read,
"was not it is, and, it is not, but, it is was in Him."(3) Wherefore it is the
property of God alone to be, Who ever is.
26. Therefore if they dare not say He is God
by appellation, and it is a mark of deep impiety to say He is a false god, it remains that
He is true God, not unlike to the true Father, but equal to Him. And as He sanctifies and
justifies whom He will,(4) not by assuming that power from without Himself, but having
within Himself the power of sanctification, how is He not true God? For the Apostle called
Him indeed true God, Who according to His nature was God, as it is written: "Howbeit
then, when ye knew not God, ye did service unto them, who by nature were not
gods;"(5) that is, who could not be true gods, for this title by no means belonged to
them by nature.
CHAPTER
II.
Since it has been proved that the Son is
true God, and in that is not interior to the Father, it is shown that by the word solus
(alone) when used of the Father in the Scriptures, the Son is not excluded; nay, that this
expression befits Him above all, and Him alone. The Trinity is alone, not amongst all, but
above all. The Son alone does what the Father does, and alone has immortality. But we must
not for this reason separate Him from the Father in our controversies. We may, however,
understand that passage of the Incarnation. Lastly the Father is shut out from a share in
the redemption of men by those who would have the Son to be separated from Him.
27. We have fully demonstrated by passages
of Scripture, in the earlier books, that Christ is true, yea, very true God. Therefore if
Christ, as it has been taught, is true God, let us enquire why they desire to separate the
Son from the Father, when they read that the Father is the only true God.
28. If they say that the Father alone is
true God, they cannot deny that God the Son alone is the Truth; for Christ is the Truth.
Is the Truth then something inferior to Him that is true, seeing that according to the use
of terms a man is called true from the word "truth," as also wise from wisdom,
just from justice? We donor deem it so between the Father and the Son. For there is
nothing wanting to the Father, because the Father is full of truth; and the Son, because
He is the Truth, is equal to Him that is true.
29. But that they may know, when they see
the word "alone," that the Son is in no wise to be separated from the Father,
let them remember it was said by God in the Prophets: "I stretched forth the heavens
alone."(1) The Father certainly did not stretch them forth without the Son. For the
Son Himself, Who is the Wisdom of God, says: "When He prepared the heavens I was
present with Him."(2) And Paul declares that it was said of the Son: "Thou,
Lord, in the beginning hast laid the foundation of the earth, and the heavens are the work
of Thy hands."(3) Whether therefore the Son made the heavens, as also the Apostle
would have it understood, whilst He Himself certainly did not alone spread out the heavens
without the Father; or as it stands in the Book of Proverbs: "The Lord in wisdom hath
rounded the earth, in understanding hath He prepared the heavens;"(4) it is proved
that neither the Father made the heavens alone without the Son, nor yet the Son without
the Father. And yet He who spread out the heavens is said to be alone.
30. To show indeed how plainly we must
understand the expression "alone" of the Son (although we may never believe that
He did anything without the knowledge of the Father), we have here also another passage,
where it is written: "Which alone spreadeth out the heavens, and walketh as it were
on a pavement over the sea."(5) For the Gospel of the Lord has taught us that it was
not the Father but the Son that walked upon the sea, when Peter asked Him, saying,
"Lord, bid me come unto Thee."(6) But even prophecy itself gives proof of this.
For holy Job prophesied of the coming of the Lord; of Whom he said in truth that He would
vanquish the great Leviathan,(7) and it was done. For that dread Leviathan that is, the
devil, He smote, and struck down, and laid low in the last times by the adorable Passion
of His own Body.(1)
31. The Son therefore is only and true God
for this also is assigned to the Son as His sole right. For of no created being can it be
accurately said that he is alone. How can he to whom fellowship in creation belongs be
separated from the rest, as though he were alone? Thus man is seen to be a rational being
amongst all earthly creatures, yet he is not the only rational being; for we know that the
heavenly works of God also are rational, we confess that angels and archangels are
rational beings. If then the angels are rational, man cannot be said to be the only
rational being.
32. But they say that the sun can be said to
be alone, because there is no second sun. But the sun himself has many things in common
with the stars, for he travels across the heavens, he is of that ethereal and heavenly
substance, he is a creature, and is reckoned amongst all the works of God. He serves God
in union with all, blesses Him with all, praises Him with all.(2) Therefore he cannot
accurately be said to be alone, for he is not set apart from the rest.
33. Wherefore since no created being can be
compared with the Godhead of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, Which is alone, not
amongst all, but over all (our declaration concerning the Spirit being meanwhile held
back); as the Father is said to be the only true God, because He has nothing in common
with others; so also is the Son alone the Image of the true God, He alone is the Hand of
the Father, He alone is the Virtue and Wisdom of God.
34. Thus the Son alone does what the Father
does; for it is written: "Whatsoever things I do, He doth."(3) And since the
work of the Father and of the Son is one, it is well said of the Father and the Son, that
God worked alone; wherefore also when we speak of the Creator, we own both the Father and
the Son. For assuredly when Paul said, "Who served the creature more than the
Creator,"(4) he neither denied the Father to be the Creator, from Whom are all these
things, nor yet the Son, through Whom are all things.(5)
35. And it does not seem out of agreement
with this that it is written: "Who alone hath immortality."(6) For how could He
not have immortality Who has life in Himself? He has it in His nature; He has it in His
essential Being; and He has it not as a temporal grace, but owing to His eternal Godhead.
He has it not by way of a gift as a servant, but by peculiar fight of His Generation, as
the co-eternal Son. He has it, too, as has the Father. "For as the Father hath life
in Himself, so also hath He given to the Son to have life in Himself."(1) As He has
it, it says, so He has given it. Thou hast learnt already how He gave it,(2) that thou
mayest not think it to be a free gift of grace, when it is a secret of His generation.
Since, then, there is no divergence of life between the Father and the Son, how can it be
supposed that the Father alone has immortality, whilst the Son has it not?
36. Wherefore let them understand that in
this passage the Son is not to be separated from the Father, Who is the only true God. For
they cannot prove that the Son is not the only and true God, especially as here also it
may be gathered, as I have said, that Christ too is true and only God; or the passage may
at least be understood partly in reference to the Godhead of the Father and the Son, and
partly to the Incarnation of Christ: for knowledge is not perfect unless it confesses
Jesus Christ from eternity to be only-begotten God, true Son of God, and, according to the
flesh, begotten of a Virgin. Which also this very Evangelist has taught us elsewhere,
saying: "Every spirit that confesseth that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh, is of
God."(3)
37. Lastly, the whole of our passage teaches
us that it is not improper in this verse to understand a reference to the sacrament of the
Incarnation. For thus it is written: "Father, the hour is come, glorify Thy
Son."(4) When, therefore, He states that the hour is come, and prays to be glorified,
how can one suppose Him to have spoken but only in accordance with the assumption of our
flesh? For the Godhead has no fixed moments of time, nor does eternal light stand in need
of glorification. Therefore in the only true God, Who is the Father, we also understand
the only true Son of God to be in accordance with the unity of the Godhead. And in the
name of Jesus Christ, which He received when born of the Virgin, we acknowledge the
sacrament of the Incarnation.
38. But if they wish to separate the Son,
when they read that the Father is the only true God, I suppose that when they read of the
Incarnation of the Son: "This is the stone which was set at naught of you builders,
which is become the head of the corner;" and further: "There is none other name
under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved;"(1) then they imagine the
Father is to be cut off from the benefit of imparting salvation to us. But there is
neither salvation without the Father, nor eternal life without the Son.
CHAPTER
III.
To the objection of the Arians, that two
Gods are introduced by a unity of substance, the answer is that a plurality of Gods is
more likely to be inferred from diversity of substance. Further, their charge recoils upon
themselves. Manifold diversity is the reason why two men cannot be said to be one man,
though all men are called individually man, where a unity of nature is referred to. There
is one nature alone in them, but there is wholly a unity in the Divine Persons. Therefore
the Son is not to be severed from the Father, especially as they dare not deny that
worship is due to Him.
39. But the Arians maintain the following:
If you say that, as the Father is the only true God, so also is the Son, and confess that
the Father and the Son are both of one substance, you introduce not one God, but two. For
they who are of one substance seem not to be one God but two Gods. Just as two men or two
sheep or more are spoken of, but a man and a sheep are not spoken of as two men or two
sheep, but as one man and one sheep.
40. This is what the Arians say; and by this
cunning argument they attempt to catch the more simple-minded. However if we read the
divine Scriptures we shall find that plurality occurs rather amongst those things which
are of a diverse and different substance, that is, heterou'sia. We have this set forth in
the books of Solomon, in that passage in which he said: "There are three things
impossible to understand, yea, a fourth which I know not, the track of an eagle in the
air, the way of a serpent upon a rock, the path of a ship in the sea, and the way of a man
in his youth."(2) An eagle and a ship and a serpent are not of one family and nature,
but of a distinguishable and different substance, and yet they are three. On the testimony
of Scripture, therefore, they learn that their arguments are against themselves.
41. Therefore, in saying that the substance
of the Father and of the Son is diverse and their Godhead distinguishable, they themselves
assert there are two Gods. But we, when we confess the Father and' the Son, in declaring
them still to be of one Godhead, say that there are not two Gods, but one God. And this we
establish by the word of the Lord. For where there are several, there is a difference
either of nature or of will and work. Lastly, that they may be refuted on their own
witness, two men are mentioned: But though they are of one nature by right of birth, yet
in time and thought and work and place, they are apart; and so one man cannot be spoken of
under the signification and number of two; for there is no unity where there is diversity.
But God is said to be one, and the glory and completeness of the Father, the Son, and the
Holy Spirit is thus expressed.
42. Such, indeed, is the truth of unity
that, when the nature alone of human birth or of human flesh is indicated, one man is the
term used for the many, as it is written "The Lord is my helper, I will not fear what
man can do unto me;"(1) that is, not the one person of a man, but the one flesh, the
one frailty of human birth. It added also: "It is better to trust in the Lord than to
trust in man."(2) Here, too, it did not denote one particular man, but a universal
condition. Then, immediately after it added, speaking of many: "It is better to put
confidence in the Lord than to put confidence in princes."(3) Where man is spoken of,
as we have already said, there the common unity of the nature, which exists between all is
indicated; but where the princes are mentioned, there is a certain distinction between
their different powers.
43. Amongst men, or in men, there exists a
unity in some one thing, either in love, or desire, or flesh, or devotion, or faith. But a
universal unity, that embraces within itself all things agreeably to the divine glory, is
the property of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit alone.
44. Wherefore the Lord also, in pointing out
the diversity that exists among men, who have nothing in common that can tend towards the
unity of an indivisible substance, says: "In your law it is written that the
testimony of two men is true."(4) But though He had said, "The testimony of two
men is true," when He came to the testimony of Himself and His Father, He said not:
"Our testimony is true, for it is the testimony of two Gods;" but: "I am
One that bear witness of Myself, and the Father that sent Me beareth witness of Me.",
Earlier He also says: "If I judge, My judgment is true; for I am not alone, but I and
the Father that sent Me."(2) Thus, both in one place and the other, He indicated both
the Father and the Son, but neither implied the plurality, nor severed the unity of their
divine Substance.
45. It is plain, then, that whatsoever is of
one substance cannot be severed, even though it be not single, but one. By singleness I
mean that which the Greeks call monoth's. Singleness has to do with a person; unity with a
nature. That those things which are of a different substance are wont to be called, not
one alone, but many, though already proved on the testimony of the prophet, the Apostle
himself has stated in so many words, saying: "For though there be that are called
gods, whether in heaven or in earth."(3) Dost thou see, then, that those who are of
different substances, and not of the verity of one nature, are called "gods"?
But the Father and the Son, being of one substance, are not two Gods, but "One God,
the Father, of Whom are all things, and one Lord Jesus Christ, through Whom are all
things."(4) "One God," he says, "and one Lord Jesus;" and above:
"One God, not two Gods;" and then: "One Lord, not two Lords."(5)
46. Plurality, therefore, is excluded, but
the unity is not destroyed. But as, on the one hand, when we read of the Lord Jesus, we do
not dissociate the Father, as I have already said, from the prerogative of ruling, because
He has that in common with the Son; so, on the other hand, when we read of the only true
God, the Father, we cannot sever the Son from the prerogative of the only true God, for He
has that in common with the Father.
47. Let them say what they feel or what they
think, when we read: "Thou shall worship the Lord thy God, and Him only shall thou
serve."(6) Do they think Christ should not be worshipped, and that He Ought not to be
served? But if that woman of Canaan who worshipped Him,(7) merited to gain what she asked
for, and the Apostle Paul, who confessed himself to be the servant of Christ in the very
outset of his letters, merited to be an Apostle "not of men, neither by man, but by
Jesus Christ;"(8) let them say what they think should follow. Would they prefer to
join with Arius in a league of treachery, and so show, by denying Christ to be the only
true God, that they consider He should neither be worshipped nor served? Or would they
sooner go in company with Paul, who in serving and worshipping Christ did not disown in
word and heart the only true God, Whom he acknowledged with dutiful service?
CHAPTER
IV.
It is objected by heretics that Christ
offered worship to His Father. But instead it is shown that this must be referred to His
humanity, as is clear from an examination of the passage. However, it also offers fresh
witness to His Godhead, as we often see it happening in other actions that Christ did.
48. But if any one were to say that the Son
worships God the Father, because it is written, "Ye worship ye know not what, we know
what we worship,"(1) let him consider when it was said, and to whom, and to whose
wishes it was in answer.
49. In the earlier verses of this chapter it
was stated, not without reason, that Jesus, being weary with the journey, was sitting
down, and that He asked a woman of Samaria to give Him drink;(2) for He spoke as man; for
as God He could neither be weary nor thirst.
50. So when this woman addressed Him as a
Jew, and thought Him a prophet, He answers her, as a Jew who spiritually taught the
mysteries of the Law: "Ye worship ye know not what, we know what we worship."
"We," He says; for He joined Himself with men. But how is He joined with men,
but according to the flesh? And to show that He answered as being incarnate, He added:
"for salvation is of the Jews."(3)
51. But immediately after this He put aside
His human feelings, saying: "But the hour cometh, and now is, when the true
worshippers shall worship the Father."(4) H e said not: "We shall worship."
This He would certainly have said, if He had a share in our obedience.
52. And when we read that Mary worshipped
Him,(5) we ought to learn that it is not possible for Him under the same nature both to
worship as a servant, and to be worshipped as Lord; but rather that as man He is said to
worship among men, and that as Lord He is worshipped by His servants.
53. Many things therefore we read and
believe, in the light of the sacrament of the Incarnation. But even in the very feelings
of our human nature we may behold the Divine Majesty. Jesus is wearied with His journey,
that He may refresh the weary; He desires to drink, when about to give spiritual drink to
the thirsty; He was hungry, when about to supply the food of salvation to the hungry; He
dies, to live again; He is buried, to rise again; He hangs upon the dreadful tree, to
strengthen those in dread; He veils the heaven with thick darkness, that He may give
light; He makes the earth to shake, that He may make it strong; He rouses the sea, that He
may calm it; He opens the tombs of the dead, that He may show they are the homes of the
living; He is made of a Virgin, that men may believe He is born of God; He feigns not to
know, that He may make the ignorant to know; as a Jew He is said to worship, that the Son
may be worshipped as true God.
CHAPTER
V.
Ambrose answers those who press the words of
the Lord to the mother of Zebedee's children, by saying that they were spoken out of
kindness, because Christ was unwilling to cause her grief. Ample reason for such
tenderness is brought forward. The Lord would rather leave the granting of that request to
the Father, than declare it to be impossible. This answer of Christ's, however, is not to
His detriment, as is shown both by His very words, and also by comparing them with other
passages.
54. "How," they say, "can the
Son of God be the only true God, like to the Father, when He Himself said to the sons of
Zebedee: 'Ye shall drink indeed of My cup; but to sit on My right hand or on My left, is
not Mine to give to you, but to those for whom it has been prepared of My
Father'?"(1) This, then, is, as you desire, your proof of divine inequality; though
in it you ought rather to reverence the Lord's kindness and to adore His grace; if, that
is, you could but perceive the deep secrets of the virtue and wisdom of God.
55. For think of her who, with and for her
sons, makes this request. It is a mother, who in her anxiety for the honour of her sons,
though somewhat unrestrained in the measure of her desires, may for all that yet find
pardon. It is a mother, old in years, devout in her zeal, deprived of consolation; who at
that time, when she might have been helped and supported by the aid of her able bodied
offspring, suffered her children to leave her, and preferred the reward her sons should
receive in following Christ to her own pleasure. For they when called by the Lord, at the
first word, as we read, left their nets and their father and followed Him.(1)
56. She then, somewhat yielding to the
devotion of a mother's zeal, besought the Saviour, saying: "Grant that these my two
sons may sit the one on Thy right hand, the other on Thy left in Thy kingdom."(2)
Although it was an error, it was an error of a mother's affections; for a mother's heart
knows no patience. Though eager for the object of her desires, yet her longing was
pardonable, for she was not greedy for money, but for grace. Not shameless was her
request, for she thought not of herself, but of her children. Contemplate the mother,
reflect upon her.
57. But it is nothing wonderful if the
feelings of parents for their children seem nothing to you, who think the love of the
Almighty Father for His only-begotten Son a trifling matter. The Lord of heaven and earth
was ashamed (to speak as accords with the assumption of our flesh and the virtues of the
soul)--He was ashamed, I say, and, to use His own word, disturbed, to refuse a share even
in His own seat to a mother making request for her sons. You maintain sometimes that the
proper Son of the eternal God stands to give service, at other times you would have His
co- session to be as that of an attendant, that is, not because there is a oneness of
majesty, but because it is the order of the Father; and you deny to the Son of God, Who is
true God, that which He plainly was unwilling to refuse to men.
58. For He thought of the mother's love, who
solaced her old age with the thought of her sons' reward, and, though harassed with a
mother's longings, endured the absence of those dearest pledges of her love.
59. Think also of the woman, that is, the
weaker sex, whom the Lord had not yet strengthened by His own Passion. Think, I say, of a
descendant of Eve, the first woman, sinking under the inheritance of unrestrained passion,
which had been passed on to all; one, too, whom the Lord had not yet redeemed with His own
Blood, and from whom He had not yet washed out in His Blood the desire implanted in the
hearts of all for unbounded honour even beyond what is right. Thus the woman offended
owing to an inherited tendency to wrong.
60. And what wonder if a mother should
strive to win preference for her children (which is far better than if she had done it for
herself), when even the Apostles themselves, as we read, strove amongst themselves, as to
who should have the preference?(1)
61. The physician, therefore, ought not to
wound a mother who has been deprived of all, nor a suffering mind, with shameful
reproaches, lest when the request had been made and had been proudly denied, she should
grieve over the condemnation of her petition as being unreasonable.
62. Lastly, the Lord, Who knew that a
mother's affection is to be honoured, answered not the woman, but her sons, saying:
"Are ye able to drink of the cup that I shall drink of?" When they say: "We
are able," Jesus says to them: "Ye shall drink indeed of My cup; but to sit on
My right hand and on My left is not Mine to give to you, but to those for whom it is
prepared of My Father."(2)
63. How patient and kind the Lord is; how
deep is His wisdom and good His love! For wishing to show that the disciples asked for no
slight thing, but one they could not obtain, He reserved His own peculiar rights for His
Father's honour, not fearing to detract aught from His own rights: "Who thought it
not robbery to be equal with God;"(3) and loving, too, His disciples (for "He
loved them," as it is written, "unto the end"),(4) He was unwilling to seem
to refuse to those whom He loved what they desired; He, I say, the good and holy Lord, Who
would rather keep some of His own prerogative secret, than lay aside aught of His love.
"For charity suffereth long, and is kind; charity envieth not, and seeketh not her
own."(5)
64. Lastly, that you may learn it was no
sign of weakness, but rather of tenderness, that He said: "It is not Mine to give to
you;" note that when the sons of Zebedee make the request without their mother, He
said nothing about the Father; for thus it is written: "It is not Mine to give to
you, but those for whom it has been prepared."(6) So the Evangelist Mark has stated
it. But when the mother makes this request on her sons' behalf, as we find it in Matthew,
He says: "It is not Mine to give to you, but to those for whom it has been prepared
of My Father."(7) Here He added: "of My Father," for a mother's feelings
demanded greater tenderness.
65. But if they think that by saying,
"For whom it hath been prepared of My Father," He assigned greater power to His
Father, or detracted aught from His own; let them say whether they think there is any
detraction from the Father's power, because the Son in the Gospel says of the Father:
"The Father judgeth no man."(1)
66. But if we think it impious to believe
that the Father has handed over all judgment to the Son in such wise that He has it not
Himself,--for He has it, and cannot lose what the Divine Majesty has by its very nature,-
-we ought to consider it equally impious to suppose that the Son cannot give what either
men can merit, or any creature can receive; especially as He Himself has said: "I go
unto My Father, and whatsoever ye shall ask of Him in My name, that will I do."(2)
For if the Son cannot give what the Father can give, the Truth has lied, and cannot do
what the Father has been asked for in His name. He therefore did not say: "For whom
it has been prepared of My Father," in order that requests should be made only of the
Father. For all things which are asked of the Father, He has declared that He will give.
Lastly, He did not say: "Whatsoever ye shall ask of Me, that will I do;" but:
"Whatsoever ye shall ask of Him in My name, that will I do."
CHAPTER
VI.
Wishing to answer the above-stated objection
somewhat more fully, he maintains that this request, had it not been impossible in itself,
would have been possible for Christ to grant; especially as the Father has given all
judgment to Him; which gift we must understand to have been given without any feature of
imperfection. However, he proves that the request must be reckoned amongst the
impossibilities. To make it really possible, he teaches that Christ's answer must be taken
in accordance with His human nature, and shows this next by an exposition of the passage.
Lastly, he once more confirms the reply he as given on the impossibility of Christ's
session.
67. I Ask now whether they think the request
made by the wife and sons of Zebedee was possible or impossible to human circumstances, or
to any created being? If it was possible, how is it that He Who made all things which were
not had not the power of granting a seat to His apostles on His right hand and on His
left? or how was it that He, to Whom the Father gave all judgment, could not judge of
men's merits?
68. We know well in what way He gave it; for
how did the Son, who created all things out of nothing, receive it as though in want? Had
He not the judgment of those whose natures He had made? The Father gave all judgment to
the Son, "that all men should honour the Son, even as they honour the
Father."(1) It is not therefore the power of the Son, but our knowledge of it, that
increases; nor does what is learnt by us add aught to His being, but only to our
advantage; so that by knowing the Son of God, we may have eternal life.
69. As, then, in our knowledge of the Son of
God His honour, but our profit, not His, is concerned; if any one thinks that the power of
God is augmented by that honour, He must also believe that God the Father can receive
augmentation; for He is glorified by our knowledge of Him, as is the Son: as it is written
on the word of the Son: "I have glorified Thee upon the earth."(2) Therefore if
that which was asked for was at all possible, it certainly was in the power of the Son to
grant it.
70. Let them show, if they consider it
possible, who of men or of other created beings sits either on the right hand or the left
of God. For the Father says to the Son: "Sit Thou on My right hand."(3)
Therefore if any one sits on the right hand of the Son, the Son is found to be sitting (to
speak in human wise) between Himself and the Father.
71. A thing impossible for man, then, was
asked of Him. But He was unwilling to say that men could not sit with Him; seeing that He
desired His divine glory should be veiled, and not revealed before He rose again.(4) For
before this, when He had appeared in glory between His attendants Moses and Elias, He had
warned His disciples that they should tell no man what they had seen.
72. Therefore if it was not possible for men
or other created beings to merit this, the Son ought not to seem to have less power
because He gave not to His apostles, what the Father has not given to men or other created
beings. Or else let them say to which of them He has given it. Certainly not to the
angels; of whom Scripture says that all the angels stood round about the throne.(5) Thus
Gabriel said that he stands, as it says: "I am Gabriel that stand before
God."(6)
73. Not to the angels, then, has He given
it, nor to the elders who worship Him that sitteth; for they do not sit upon the seat of
majesty, but as the Scripture has said, round about the throne; for there are four and
twenty other seats, as we have it in the Revelation of John: "And upon the seats four
and twenty elders sitting."(1) In the Gospel also the Lord Himself says: "When
the Son of Man shall sit in the throne of His glory, ye also shall sit upon twelve
thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel."(2) He did not say that a share in His
own throne could be given to the apostles, but that there were those other twelve thrones;
which, however, we ought not to think of as referring to actual sitting down, but as
showing the happy issue of spiritual grace.
74. Lastly, in the Book of the Kings,
Micaiah the prophet said: "I saw the Lord God of Israel sitting on His throne, and
all the host of heaven standing around Him, on His right hand and on His left."(3)
How then, when the angels stand on the right hand and on the left of the Lord God, when
all the host of heaven stands, shall men sit on the right hand of God or on His left, to
whom is promised as a reward for virtue likeness to the angels, as the Lord says: "Ye
shall be as the angels in heaven?"(4) "As the angels," He says, not
"more than the angels."
75. If, then, the Father has given nothing
more than the Son, the Son certainly has given nothing less than the Father. Therefore the
Son can in no wise be less than the Father.
76. Suppose, however, that it had been
possible for men to obtain what was desired; what does it mean when He says: "But to
sit on My right hand and on My left is not Mine to give to you"?(5) What is
"Mine"? Above He said: "Ye shall drink indeed of My cup;" and again He
added: "It is not Mine to give to you." Above He said "Mine," and
again lower down He said "Mine." He made no change. And so the earlier passages
tell us why He said "Mine."
77. For being asked by a woman as man to
allow her sons to sit on His right hand and His left, because she asked Him as man, the
Lord also as though only man answered concerning His Passion: "Are ye able to drink
of the cup that I shall drink of?"(6)
78. Therefore because He spoke according to
the flesh of the Passion of His Body, He wished to show that according to the flesh He
left behind Him an example and pattern to us of the endurance of suffering; but that
according to His position as man He could not grant them fellowship in the throne above.
This is the reason why He said: "It is not Mine;" as also in another place He
says: "My doctrine is not Mine."(1) It is not, He says, spoken after my flesh;
for the words which are divine belong not to the flesh.
79. But how plainly He showed His tenderness
for His disciples, whom He loved, saying first: "Will ye drink of My cup?" For
as He could not grant what they sought, He offered them something else, so that He might
mention what He would assign to them, before He denied them anything; in order that they
might understand that the failure lay more in the equity of their request to Him, than in
the wish of their Lord to show kindness.
80. "Ye shall indeed drink of My
cup," He says; that is, "I will not refuse you the suffering, which My flesh
will undergo. For all that I have taken on Myself as man, ye can imitate. I have granted
you the victory of suffering, the inheritance of the cross. 'But to sit on My right hand
and on My left is not Mine to give to you."' He did not say, "It is not Mine to
give," but: "It is not Mine to give to you;" meaning by this, not that He
lacked the power, but that His creatures were wanting in merit.
81. Or take in another way the words:
"It is not Mine to give to you," that is. "It is not Mine, for I came to
teach humility; it is not Mine, for I came, not to be ministered unto, but to minister; it
is not Mine, for I show justice, not favour."
82. Then, speaking of the Father, He added:
"For whom it has been prepared," to show that the Father also is not wont to
give heed merely to requests, but to merits; for God is not a respecter of persons.(2)
Wherefore also the Apostle says: "Whom He did foreknow, He also did
predestinate."(3) He did not predestinate them before He knew them, but He did
predestinate the reward of those whose merits He foreknew.
83. Rightly then is the woman checked, who
demanded what was impossible, as a special kind of privilege from Him the Lord, Who of His
own free gift granted not only to two apostles, but to all the disciples, those things
which He had adjudged to be given to the saints; and that too without a prayer from any
one, as it is written: "Ye shall sit upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes
of Israel."(4)
84. Therefore, although we may think the
demand to have been possible, there is no room for false attacks. However, when I read
that the seraphim stand,(1) how can I suppose that men may sit on the right hand or the
left of the Son of God? The Lord sits upon the cherubim, as it says: "Thou that
sittest upon the cherubim, show myself."(2) And how shall the apostles sit upon the
cherubim?
85. And I do not come to this conclusion of
my own mind, but because of the utterances of our Lord's own mouth. For the Lord Himself
later on, in commending the apostles to the Father, says: "Father, I will that they
also whom Thou hast given Me be with Me where I am."(3) But if He had thought that
the Father would give the divine throne to men, He would have said: "I will that
where I sit, they also may sit with Me." But He says: "I will that they be with
Me," not "that they may sit with Me;" and "where I am," not
"as I am."
86. Then follow the words: "That they
may see My glory." Here too He did not say: "that they may have My glory,"
but "that they may see" it. For the servant sees, the Lord possesses; as David
also has taught us, saying: "That I may see the delight of the Lord."(4) And the
Lord Himself in the Gospel has revealed it, stating: "Blessed are the pure in heart,
for they shall see God."(5) "They shall see," He says; not "They shall
sit with God upon the cherubim."
87. Let them therefore cease to think little
of the Son of God according to His Godhead, lest they should think little also of the
Father. For he who believes wrongly of the Son cannot think rightly of the Father; he who
thinks wrongly of the Spirit cannot think rightly of the Son. For where there is one
dignity, one glory, one love, one majesty, whatsoever thou thinkest is to be withdrawn in
the case of any one of the Three Persons, is withdrawn from all alike, For that can never
have completeness which thou canst separate and divide into various portions.
CHAPTER
VII.
Objection is taken to the following passage:
"Thou hast loved them, as Thou hast loved Me." To remove it, he shows first the
impiety of the Arian explanation; then compares these words with others; and lastly, takes
the whole passage into consideration. Hence he gathers that the mission of Christ,
although it is to be received according to the flesh, is not to His detriment. When this
is proved he shows how the divine mission takes place.
88. There are some, O Emperor Augustus, who
in their desire to deny the unity of the divine Substance, strive to make little of the
love of the Father and the Son, because it is written: "Thou hast loved them, as Thou
hast loved Me."(1) But when they say this, what else do they do but adopt a likeness
of comparison between the Son of God and men?
89. Can men indeed be I loved by God as the
Son is, in Whom the Father is well-pleased?(2) He is well-pleasing in Himself; we through
Him. For those in whom God sees His own Son after His own likeness, He admits through His
Son into the favour of sons. So that as we go through likeness unto likeness, so through
the Generation of the Son are we called unto adoption. The eternal love of God's Nature is
one thing, that of grace is another.
90. And if they start a debate on the words
that are written: "And Thou hast loved them, as Thou hast loved Me," and think a
comparison is intended; they must think that the following also was said by way of
comparison: "Be ye merciful, as your Father Which is in heaven is merciful;"(3)
and elsewhere: "Be ye perfect, as My Father Which is in heaven is perfect."(4)
But if He is perfect in the fulness of His glory, we are but perfect according to the
growth of virtue within us. The Son also is loved by the Father according to the fulness
of a love that ever abideth, but in us growth in grace merits the love of God.
91. Thou seest, then, how God has given
grace to men, and dost thou wish to dissever the natural and indivisible love of the
Father and the Son? And dost thou still strive to make nothing of words, where thou dost
note the mention of a unity of majesty?
92. Consider the whole of this passage, and
see from what standpoint He speaks; for thou hearest Him saying: "Father, glorify
Thou Me with the glory which I had with Thee before the world was."(5) See how He
speaks from the standpoint of the first man. For He begs for us in that request those
things which, as Man, He remembered were granted in paradise before the Fall, as also He
spoke of it to the thief at His Passion: "Verily, verily, I say unto thee, today
shall thou be with Me in paradise."(6) This is the glory before the world was. But He
used the word "world" instead "men," as also thou hast it: "Lo!
the whole world goeth after Him;"(1) and again "That the world may know that
Thou hast sent Me."(2)
93. But that thou mightest know the great
God, even the life-giving and Almighty Son of God, He has added a proof of His majesty by
saying: "And all Mine are Thine, and Thine are Mine."(3) He has all things, and
dost thou turn aside the fact that He was sent, to wrong Him?
94. But if thou dost not accept the truth of
His mission according to the flesh, as the Apostle spoke of it,(4) and dost raise out of a
mere word a decision against it, to enable thee to say that inferiors are wont to be sent
by superiors; what answer wilt thou give to the fact that the Son was sent to men? For if
thou dost think that he who is sent is inferior to him by whom he is sent, thou must learn
also that an inferior has sent a superior, and that superiors have been sent to inferiors.
For Tobias sent Raphael the archangel,(5) and an angel was sent to Balsam,(6) and the Son
of God to the Jews.
95. Or was the Son of God inferior to the
Jews to whom He was sent? For of Him it is written: "Last of all He sent unto them
His only Son, saying, They will reverence My Son."(7) And mark that He mentioned
first the servants, then the Son, that thou mayest know that God, the only-begotten Son
according to the power of His Godhead, has neither name nor lot in common with servants.
He is sent forth to be reverenced, not to be compared with the household.
96. And rightly did He add the word
"My," that we might believe He came, not as one of many, nor as one of a lower
nature or of some inferior power, but as true from Him that is true, as the Image of the
Father's Substance.
97. Suppose, however, that he who is sent is
inferior to him by whom he is sent. Christ then was inferior to Pilate; for Pilate sent
Him to Herod. But a word does not prejudice His power. Scripture, which says that He was
sent from the Father, says that He was sent from a ruler.
98. Wherefore, if we sensibly hold to those
things which be worthy of the Son of God, we ought to understand Him to have been sent in
such a way that the Word of God, out of the incomprehensible and ineffable mystery of the
depths of His majesty, gave Himself for comprehension to our minds, so far as we could lay
hold of Him, not only when He "emptied" Himself, but also when He dwelt in us,
as it is written: "I will dwell in them."(1) Elsewhere also it stands that God
said: "Go to, let us go down and confound their language."(2) God, indeed, never
descends from any place; for He says: "I fill heaven and earth."(3) But He seems
to descend when the Word of God enters our hearts, as the prophet has said: "Prepare
ye the way of the Lord, make His paths straight."(4) We are to do this, so that, as
He Himself promised, He may come together with the Father and make His abode with us.(5)
It is clear, then, how He comes.
CHAPTER
VIII.
Christ, so far as He is true Son of God, has
no Lord, but only so far as He is Man; as is shown by His words in which He addressed at
one time the Father, at another the Lord. How many heresies are silenced by one verse of
Scripture! We must distinguish between the things that belong to Christ as Son of God or
as Son of David. For under the latter title only must we ascribe it to Him that He was a
servant. Lastly, he points out that many passages cannot be taken except as referring to
the Incarnation.
99. Wherefore also it is plain how He calls
Him Lord, Whom He knew as Father. For He says: "I confess to Thee, Father, Lord of
heaven and earth."(6) First Wisdom spoke of His own Father, and then proclaimed Him
Lord of creation. For this reason the Lord shows in His Gospel that no lordship is
exercised where there is a true offspring, saying: "What think ye of Christ? Whose
Son is He? They say unto Him, The son of David. Jesus saith to them, How then doth David
in spirit call Him Lord, saying: The Lord said unto my Lord: Sit Thou on My right
hand"? Then he added: "If David in spirit then call Him Lord. how is He his son?
And no man was able to answer Him a word."(7)
100. With what care did the Lord provide for
the faith in this witness because of the Arians! For He did not say: "The spirit
calls Him Lord," but that "David spake in spirit;" in order that men might
believe that as He is his, that is, David's son according to the flesh, so also He is his
Lord and God according to His Godhead. Thou seeest, then, that there is a distinction
between the titles that are used of relationship and of lordship.
101. And rightly did the Lord speak of His
own Father, but of the Lord of heaven and earth; so that thou, when thou readest of the
Father and the Lord, mayest understand it is the Father of the Son, and the Lord of
Creation. In the one title rests the claim of nature, in the other the authority to rule.
For taking on Himself the form of a servant, He calls Him Lord, because He has submitted
to service; being equal to Him in the form of God, but being a servant in the form of His
body: for service is the due of the flesh, but lordship is the due of the Godhead.
Wherefore also the Apostle says: "The God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of
glory,"(1) that is, terming Him God of the adoption of humanity but the Father of
glory. Did God have two Sons, Christ and Glory? Certainly not. Therefore if there is one
Son of God, even Christ, Christ is Glory. Why dost thou strive to belittle Him who is the
glory of the Father?
102. If then the Son is glory, and the
Father is glory (for the Father of glory cannot be anything else than glory), there is no
separation of glories, but glory is one. Thus glory is referred to its own proper nature,
but lordship to the service of the body that was assumed. For if the flesh is subject to
the soul of a just man as it is written: "I chastise my body and bring it into
subjection;"(2) how much more is it subject to the Godhead, of Which it is said:
"For all things serve Thee"?(3)
103. By one question the Lord has shut out
both Sabellians and Photinians and Arians. For when He said that the Lord spoke to the
Lord, Sabellius is set aside, who will have it that the same Person is both Father and
Son. Photinus is set aside, who thinks of Him merely as man; for none could be Lord of
David the King, but He Who is God, for it is written: "Thou shalt worship the Lord
'thy God, and Him only shalt thou serve."(4) Would the prophet who ruled under the
Law act contrary to the Law? Arius is set aside, who hears that the Son sits on the right
hand of the Father; so that if he argues from human ways, he refutes himself, and makes
the poison of his blasphemous arguments to flow back upon himself. For in interpreting the
inequality of the Father and the Son by the analogy of human habits (wandering from the
truth in either case), he puts Him first Whom he makes little of, confessing Him to be the
First, Whom he hears to be at the right hand. The Manichaean also is set aside, for he
does not deny that He is the Son of David according to the flesh, Who, at the cry of the
blind men, "Jesus, Thou Son of David, have mercy on us,"' was pleased at their
faith and stood and healed them. But He does deny that this refers to His eternity, if He
is called Son of David alone by those who are false.
104. For "Son of God" is against
Ebion,(2) "Son of David," is against the Manichees; 3 "Son of God" is
against Photinus,(4) "Son of David" is against Marcion;(5) "Son of
God" is against Paul of Samosata,(6) "Son of David" is against
Valentinus;(7) "Son of God" is against Arius and Sabellius, the inheritors of
heathen errors. "Lord of David "is against the Jews, who beholding the Son of
God in the flesh, in impious madness believed Him to be only man.
105. But in the faith of the Church one and
the same is both Son of God the Father and Son of David. For the mystery of the
Incarnation of God is the salvation of the whole of creation, according to that which is
written: "That without God He should taste death for every man;"(8) that is,
that every creature might be redeemed without any suffering at the price of the blood of
the Lord's Divinity, as it stands elsewhere: "Every creature shall be delivered from
the bondage of corruption."(9)
106. It is one thing to be named Son
according to the divine Substance, it is another thing to be so called according to the
adoption of human flesh. For, according to the divine Generation, the Son is equal to God
the Father; and, according to the adoption of a body, He is a servant to God the Father.
"For," it says, "He took upon Him the form of a servant."(10) The Son
is, however, one and the same. On the other hand, according to His glory, He is Lord to
the holy patriarch David, but his Son in the line of actual descent, not abandoning aught
of His own, but acquiring for Himself the rights that go with the adoption into our race.
107. Not only does He undergo service in the
character of man by reason of His descent from David, but also by reason of His name, as
it is written: "I have found David My Servant;"(11) and elsewhere: "Behold
I will send unto you My Servant, the Orient is His name.(1) And the Son Himself says:
"Thus saith the Lord, that formed Me from the womb to be His servant, and said unto
Me: It is a great thing for Thee to be called My Servant. Behold I have set Thee up for a
witness to My people, and a light to the Gentiles, that Thou mayest be for salvation unto
the ends of the earth."(2) To whom is this said, if not to Christ? Who being in the
form of God, emptied Himself and took upon Him the form of a servant.(3) But what can be
in the form of God, except that which exists in the fulness of the Godhead?
108. Learn, then, what this means: "He
took upon Him the form of a servant." It means that He took upon Him all the
perfections of humanity in their completeness, and obedience in its completeness. And so
it says in the thirtieth Psalm: "Thou hast set my feet in a large room. I am made a
reproach above all mine enemies. Make Thy face to shine upon Thy servant."(4)
"Servant" means the Man in whom He was sanctified; it means the Man in whom He
was anointed; it means the Man in whom He was made under the law, made of the Virgin; and,
to put it briefly, it means the Man in whose person He has a mother, as it is written:
"O Lord, I am Thy Servant, I am Thy Servant, and the Son of Thy hand-maid;"(5)
and again: "I am cast down and sore humbled."(6)
109. Who is sore humbled, but Christ, Who
came to free all through His obedience? "For as by one man's disobedience many were
made sinners, so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous."(7) Who
received the cup of salvation? Christ the High Priest, or David who never held the
priesthood, nor endured suffering? Who offered the sacrifice of Thanksgiving?(8)
110. But that is insufficient; take again:
"Preserve My soul, for I am holy."(9) Did David say this of himself? Nay, He
says it, Who also says: "Thou wilt not leave My soul in hell, neither wilt Thou
suffer Thine Holy One to see corruption."(10) The Same then says both of these.
111. He has added further: "Save Thy
Servant;"(11) and, further on: "Give Thy strength to Thy servant, and to the Son
of Thy handmaid;"(12) and, elsewhere, that is, m Ezekiel: "And I will set up one
Shepherd over them, and He shall rule them, even My Servant David. He shall feed them, and
He shall be their Shepherd. And I the Lord will be their God, and My Servant David a
prince among them."(1) Now David the Son of Jesse was already dead. Therefore he
speaks of Christ, Who for our sakes was made the Son of a handmaiden in the form of man;
for according to His divine Generation He has no Mother, but a Father only: nor is He the
fruit of earthly desire, but the eternal Power of God.
112. And so, also, when we read that the
Lord said: "My time is not yet full come;"(2) and: "Yet a little while I am
with you;" and: "I go unto Him that sent Me;"(3) and: "Now is the Son
of Man glorified;"(4) we ought to refer all this to the sacrament of the Incarnation.
But when we read: "And God is glorified in Him, and God hath glorified Him;" s
what doubt is there here, where the Son is glorified by the Father, and the Father is
glorified by the Son?
113. Next, to make clear the faith of the
Unity, and the Union of the Trinity, He also said that He would be glorified by the
Spirit, as it stands: "He shall receive of Mine, and shall glorify Me."(6)
Therefore the Holy Spirit also glorifies the Son of God. How, then, did He say: "If I
glorify Myself, My glory is nothing."(7) Is then the glory of the Son nothing? It is
blasphemy to say so, unless we apply these words to His flesh; for the Son spoke in the
character of man, for by comparison with the Godhead, there is no glory of the flesh.
114. Let them cease from their wicked
objections which are but thrown back upon their own falseness. For they say, it is
written: "Now is the Son of Man glorified." I do not deny that it is written:
"The Son of Man is glorified." But let them see what follows:
"And God is glorified in Him." I
can plead some excuse for the Son of Man, but He has none for His Father; for the Father
took not flesh upon Himself. I can plead an excuse, but do not use it. He has none, and is
falsely attacked. I can either understand it in its plain sense, or I can apply to the
flesh what concerns the flesh. A devout mind distinguishes between the things which are
spoken after the flesh or after the Godhead. An impious mind turns aside to the dishonour
of the Godhead, all that is said with regard to the littleness of the flesh.
CHAPTER
IX.
The saint meets those who in Jewish wise
object to the order of the words: "In the name of the Father and of the Son and of
the oly Ghost," with the retort that the Son also is often placed before the Father;
though he first points out that an answer to this objection has been already given by him.
115. Why is it that the Arians, after the
Jewish fashion, are such false and shameless interpreters of the divine words, going
indeed so far as to say that there is one power of the Father, another of the Son, and
another of the Holy Ghost, since it is written: "Go ye, teach all nations, baptizing
them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost"? And why do they
make a distinction of divine power owing to the mere order of words?
116. Though I have already given this very
witness for a unity of majesty and name in my former books, yet if they make this the
ground of debate, I can maintain on the testimony of the Scriptures that the Son is
mentioned first in many places, and that the Father is spoken of after Him. Is it
therefore a fact that, because the name of the Son is placed first, by the mere accident
of a word, as the Arians would have it, the Father comes second to the Son? God forbid, I
say, God forbid. Faith knows nothing of such order as this;it knows nothing of a divided
honour of the Father and the Son. I have not read of, nor heard of, nor found any varying
degree in God. Never have I read of a second, never of a third God. I have read of a first
God,(1) I have heard of a first and only God.
117. If we pay such excessive regard to
order, then the Son ought not to sit at the right hand of the Father, nor ought He to call
Himself the First and the Beginning. The Evangelist was wrong in beginning with the Word
and not with God, where he says: "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was
with God."(2) For, according to the order of human usage, he ought to name the Father
first. The Apostle also was ignorant of their order, who says: "Paul the servant of
Jesus Christ, called to be an Apostle, separated unto the Gospel of Go;"(3) and
elsewhere: "The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the
communion of the Holy Ghost."(4) If we follow the order of the words, he has placed
the Son first, and the Father second. But the order of the words is often changed; and
therefore thou oughtest not to question about order or degree, in the case of God the
Father and His Son, for there is no severance of unity in the Godhead.
CHAPTER
X.
The Arians openly take sides with the
heathen in attacking the words: "He that believeth on Me, believeth not on Me,"
etc. The true meaning of the passage is unfolded; and to prevent us from believing that
the Lord forbade us to have faith in Him, it is shown how He spoke at one time as God, at
another as Man. After bringing forward examples of various results of that faith, he shows
that certain other passages also must be taken in the same way.
118. LAST of all, to show that they are not
Christians, they deny that we are to believe on Christ, saying that it is written: Me that
believeth on Me, believeth not on Me, but on Him that sent Me."(1) I was awaiting
this confession; why did you delude me with your quibbles? I knew I had to contend with
heathens. Nay, they indeed are converted, but ye are not. If they believe, that the
sacrament [of Baptism] is safe; ye have received it, and destroyed it, or perchance it has
never been received, but was unreal(1) from the first.
119. It is written, they say: "He that
believeth on Me, believeth not on Me, but on Him that sent Me." But see what follows,
and see how the Son of God wishes to be seen; for it continues: "And he that seeth
Me, seeth Him that sent Me,"(3) for the Father is seen in the Son. Thus, He has
explained what He had spoken earlier, that he who confesses the Father believes on the
Son. For he who knows not the Son, neither knows the Father. For every one that denies the
Son has not the Father, but he that confesses the Son has both the Father and the Son.(4)
120. What, then, is the meaning of
"Believeth not on Me"? That is, not on that which you can perceive in bodily
form, nor merely on the man whom you see. For He has stated that we are to believe not
merely on a man, but that thou mayest believe that Jesus Christ Himself is both God and
Man. Wherefore, for both reasons He says: "I came not from Myself;"(3) and
again: "I am the beginning, of which also I speak to you."(6) As Man He came not
from Himself; as Son of God He takes not His beginning from men; but "I am," He
says, "Myself 'the beginning of which also I speak to you.' Neither are the words
which I speak human,' but divine."
121. Nor is it right to believe that He
denied we were to believe on Him, since He Himself said: "That whosoever believeth on
Me should not abide in darkness;"(1) and in another place again: "For this is
the will of My Father that sent Me, that every one that seeth the Son, and believeth on
Him, may have eternal life;"(2) and again: "Ye believe in God, believe also in
Me."(3)
122. Let no one, therefore, receive the Son
without the Father, because we read of the Son. The Son hath the Father, but not in a
temporal sense, nor by reason of His passion, nor owing to His conception, nor by grace. I
have read of His Generation, I have not read of His Conception. And the Father says:
"I have begotten;"(4) He does not say: "I have created." And the Son
calls not God His Creator in the eternity of His divine Generation, but Father.
123. He represents Himself also now in the
character of man, now in the majesty of God; now claiming for Himself oneness of Godhead
with the Father, now taking upon Him all the frailty of human flesh; now saying that He
has not His own doctrine, and now that He seeks not His own will; now pointing out that
His testimony is not true, and now that it is true. For He Himself has said: "If I
bear witness of Myself, My witness is not true."(5) Later on He says: "If I bear
witness of Myself, My witness is true."(6)
124. And how is Thy testimony, Lord Jesus,
not true? Did not he who believed it, though he hung upon the cross, and paid the penalty
for the crime he owned to, cast aside the deserts of the robber and gain the reward of the
innocent?(7)
125. Was Paul deceived, who received his
sight, because he believed;(8) which sight he had lost, before he believed?
126. And did Joshua, the son of Nun, err in
recognizing the leader of the heavenly host?(9) But after he believed, be forthwith
conquered, being found worthy to triumph in the battle of faith. Again, he did not lead
forth his armed ranks into the fight, nor did he overthrow the ramparts of the enemy's
walls, with battering rams or other engines of war, but with the sound of the seven
trumpets of the priests. Thus the blare of the trumpet and the badge of the priest brought
a cruel war to an end.
127. A harlot saw this; and she who in the
destruction of the city lost all hope of any means of safety, because her faith had
conquered, bound a scarlet thread in her window, and thus uplifted a sign of her faith and
the banner of the Lord's Passion;(1) so that the semblance of the mystic blood, which
should redeem the world, might be in memory. So, without, the name of Joshua was a sign of
victory to those who fought; within, the semblance of the Lord's Passion was a sign of
salvation to those in danger. Wherefore, because Rahab understood the heavenly mystery,
the Lord says in the Psalm: "I will be mindful of Rahab and Babylon that know
Me."(2)
128. How, then, is Thy testimony not true, O
Lord, except it be given in accordance with the frailty of man? For "every man is a
liar."(3)
129. Lastly, to prove that He spoke as man,
He says: "The Father that sent Me, He beareth witness of Me."(4) But His
testimony as God is true, as He Himself says: "My record is true: for I know whence I
come, and whither I go, but ye know not whence I come, and whither I go. Ye judge after
the flesh."(5) They judge then not after the Godhead but after the manhood, who think
that Christ had not the power of bearing witness.
130. Therefore, when thou hearest: "He
that believeth, believeth not on Me;" or: "The Father that sent Me, He gave Me a
commandment;"(6) thou hast now learnt whither thou oughtest to refer those words.
Lastly, He shows what the commandment is, saying: "I lay down My life, that I may
take it again. No man taketh it from Me, but I lay it down of Myself."(7) Thou seest,
then, what is said so as to show He had full power to lay down or to take up His life; as
He also said: "I have power to lay it down, and I have power again to take it up.
This commandment have I received of My Father."(8)
131. Whether, then, a command, or, as some
Latin manuscripts have it, a direction was given, it was certainly not given to Him as
God, but as incarnate man, with reference to the victory He should gain in undergoing His
Passion.
CHAPTER
XI.
We must refer the fact that Christ is said
to speak nothing of Himself, to His human nature. After explaining how it is fight to say
that He hears and sees the Father as being God, He shows conclusively, by a large number
of proofs, that the Son of God is not a creature.
132. Are we indeed to bring the Son of God
to such a low estate that He may not know how to act or speak, except as He hears, and are
we to suppose that a fixed measure of action or of speech is assigned to Him, because it
is written: "I speak not of Myself," and, further on: "As the Father hath
said unto Me, even so I speak"?(1) But those words have reference to the obedience of
the flesh, or else to the faith in the Unity. For many learned men allow that the Son
hears, and that the Father speaks to the Son through the unity of their Nature; for that
which the Son, through the unity of their will, knows that the Father wills, He seems to
have heard.
133. Whereby is meant no personal duty, but
an indivisible sentence of co-operation. For this does not signify any actual hearing of
words, but the unity of will and of power, which exists both in the Father and in the Son.
He has stated that this exists also in the Holy Spirit, in another place, saying,
"For He shall not speak of Himself, but whatsoever He shall hear, that shall He
speak,"(2) so that we may learn that whatsoever the Spirit says, the Son also says;
and whatsoever the Son says, the Father says also; for there is one mind and one mode of
working in the Trinity. For, as the Father is seen in the Son, not indeed in bodily
appearance, but in the unity of the Godhead, so also the Father speaks in the Son, not
with a voice of earth, not with a human sound, but in the unity of Their work. So when He
had said: "The Father that dwelleth in Me, He speaketh; and the works that I do, He
doeth;"(3) He added: "Believe Me, that I am in the Father, and the Father in Me;
or else believe Me for the very work's sake."(4)
134. This is what we understand according to
the whole course of the holy Scriptures; but the Arians, who will not think of God the
things that be right, may be put to silence by an example just suited to their deserts;
that they may not believe everything in carnal fashion, since they themselves do not see
the works of their father the devil with bodily eyes. So the Lord has declared of their
fellows the Jews, saying: "Ye do what ye have seen your father doing;"(1) though
they are reproved not because they saw the work of the devil, but because they did his
will, since the devil unseen works out sin in them in accordance with their own
wickedness, We have written this, as the Apostle did, because of the folly of these
traitors.(2)
135. But we have sufficiently proved by
examples from Scripture that it is a property of the unity of the divine majesty that the
Father should abide in the Son, and that the Son should seem to have heard from the Father
those things which He speaks. How else can we understand the unity of majesty than by the
knowledge that the same deference is paid to the Father and the Son? For what can be
better put than the Apostle's saying that the Lord of glory was crucified?(3)
136. The Son then is the God of glory and
the Lord of glory, but glory is not subject to creatures; the Son therefore is not a
creature.
137. The Son is the Image of the Father's
Substance;(4) but every creature is unlike that divine Substance, but the Son of the
Father is not unlike God; therefore the Son is not a creature.
138. The Son thought it not robbery to be
equal with God;(5) but no creature is equal with God, the Son, however, is equal;
therefore the Son is not a creature.
139. Every creature is changeable; but the
Son of God is not changeable; therefore the Son of God is not a creature.
140. Every creature meets with chance
occurrences of good and evil after the powers of its nature, and also feels their passing
away; but nothing can pass away from or bring addition to the Son of God in His Godhead;
therefore the Son of God is not a creature.
141. Every work of His God will bring into
judgment;(6) but the Son of God is not brought into judgment; for He Himself judges;
therefore the Son of God is not a creature.
142. Lastly, that thou mayest understand the
unity, the Saviour in speaking of His sheep says: "No man is able to pluck them out
of My hand. My Father Which gave them to Me is greater than all, and no man is able to
pluck them out of My Father's hand. I and My Father are one."(7)
143. So the Son gives life as does the
Father. "For as the Father raiseth up the dead and quickeneth them, even so the Son
quickeneth whom He will."(1) So the Son raises up as does the Father: so too the Son
preserves as does the Father. He Who is not unequal in grace, how is He unequal in power?
So also the Son does not destroy, as neither does the Father. Therefore lest any one
should believe there were two Gods, or should imagine a diversity of power, He said that
He was one with His Father. How can a creature say that? Therefore the Son of God is not a
creature.
144. It is not the same thing to rule as to
serve; but Christ is both a King and the Son of a King. The Son of God therefore is not a
servant. Every creature, however, gives service. But the Son of God, Who makes servants
become the sons of God, does not give service. Therefore the Son of God is not a servant.
CHAPTER
XII.
He confirms what has been already said, by
the parable of the rich man who went into a far country to receive for himself a kingdom;
and shows that when the Son delivers up the kingdom to the Father, we must not regard the
fact that the Father is said to put all things in subjection under Him, in a disparaging
way. Here we are the kingdom of Christ, and in Christ's kingdom. Hereafter we shall be in
the kingdom of God, where the Trinity will reign together.
145. Is divine fashion has He represented
that parable of the rich man, who went to a far-off country to receive a kingdom, and to
return,(2) thus describing Himself in the substance of the Godhead, and of His Manhood.
For He being rich in the fulness of His Godhead, Who was made poor for us though He was
rich and an eternal King," and the Son of an eternal King; He, I say, went to a
foreign country in taking on Him a body, for He entered upon the ways of men as though
upon a strange journey, and came into this world to preparefor Himself a kingdom from
amongst us.
146. Jesus therefore came to this earth to
receive for Himself a kingdom from us, to whom He says: "The kingdom of God is within
you."(3) This is the kingdom which Christ has received, this the kingdom which He has
delivered to the Father. For how did He receive for Himself a kingdom, Who was a King
eternal? "The Son of Man therefore came to receive a kingdom and to return." The
Jews were unwilling to acknowledge Him, of whom He says: "They which would not that I
should reign over them, bring hither and slay them."(1)
147. Let us follow the course of the
Scriptures. He Who came will deliver up the kingdom to God the Father; and when He has
delivered up the kingdom, then also shall He be subject to Him, Who has put all things in
subjection under Him, that God may be all in all.(2) If the Son of God has received the
kingdom as Son of Man, surely as Son of Man also He will deliver up what He has received.
If He delivers it up as Son of Man, as Son of Man He confesses His subjection indeed under
the conditions of the flesh, and not in the majesty of His Godhead.
148. And dost thou make objections and
contemn Him, because God has put all things in subjection under Him, when thou hearest
that the Son of Man delivers up the kingdom to God, and hast read, as we said in our
earlier books: "No man can come to Me, except the Father draw him; and I will raise
him up at the last day"?(3) If we follow it literally, see rather and notice the
unity of honour each gives to other: The Father has put all things in subjection under the
Son, and the Son delivers the kingdom to the Father. Say now which is the greater, to
deliver up, or to raise up to life? Do we not after human fashion speak of the service of
delivering up, and the power of raising to life? But both the Son delivers up to the
Father, and also the Father to the Son. The Son raises to life, and the Father also raises
to life, Let them create the fiction of a blasphemous division where there is a unity of
power.
149. Let the Son then deliver up His kingdom
to the Father. The kingdom which He delivers up is not lost to Christ, hut grows. We are
the kingdom, for it was said to us: "The kingdom of God is within you."(4) And
we are the kingdom, first of Christ, then of the Father; as it is written: "No man
cometh to the Father, but by Me."(5) When I am on the way, I am Christ's; when I have
passed through, I am the Father's; but everywhere through Christ, and everywhere under
Him.
150. It is a good thing to be in the kingdom
of Christ, so that Christ may be with us; as He Himself says: "Lo I am with you
always, even unto the end of the world."(6) But it is better to be with Christ:
"For to depart and be with Christ is far better."(1) Though we are under sin in
this world, Christ is with us, that "by the obedience of one man many may be made
just."(2) And if I escape the sin of this world, I shall begin to be with Christ. And
so He says: "I will come again, and receive you unto Myself;"(3) and further on:
"I will that where I am, there ye may be also with Me."(4)
151. Therefore we are now under Christ's
rule, whilst we are in the body, and are not yet stripped of the form of a servant, which
He put upon Him, when He "emptied Himself." But when we shall see His glory,
which He had before the world was, we shall be in the kingdom of God, in which are the
patriarchs and prophets, of whom it is written: "When ye shall see Abraham, Isaac,
and Jacob, and all the prophets in the kingdom of God;"(5) and shall thus acquire a
deeper knowledge of God.
152. But in the kingdom of the Son the
Father also reigns; and in the kingdom of the Father the Son also reigns: for the Father
is in the Son, and the Son in the Father; and in whomsoever the Son dwells, in him also
the Father dwells; and in whomsoever the Father dwells, in him also the Son dwells, as it
is written: "Both I and My Father will come to Him, and make Our abode with
Him."(6) Thus as there is one dwelling, so also there is one kingdom. Yea, and so far
is the kingdom of the Father and of the Son but one, that the Father receives what the Son
delivers, and the Son does not lose what the Father receives. Thus in the one kingdom
there is a unity of power. Let no one therefore sever the Godhead between the Father and
the Son.
CHAPTER
XIII.
With the desire to learn what subjection to
Christ means after putting forward and rejecting various ideas of subjection, he runs
through the Apostle s words; and so puts an end to the blasphemous opinions of the
heretics on this matter. The subjection, which is shown to be future, cannot concern the
Godhead, since there has always been the greatest harmony of wills between the Father and
the Son. Also to that same Son in His Godhead all things have indeed been made subject;
but they are said to be not yet subject to Him in this sense, because all men do not obey
His commands. But after that they have been made subject, then shall Christ also be made
subject in them, and the Father's work be perfected.
153. But if the one name and right of God
belong to both the Father and the Son, since the Son of God is also true God, and a King
eternal, the Son of God is not made subject in His Godhead. Let us then, Emperor Augustus,
think how we ought to regard His subjection.
154. How is the Son of God made subject? As
the creature to vanity? But it is blasphemous to have any such idea of the Substance of
the Godhead.
155. Or as every creature is to the Son of
God, for it is rightly written: "Thou hast put all things in subjection under His
feet"?(1) But Christ is not made subject to Himself.
156. Or as a woman to a man, as we read:
"Let the wives be subject to their husbands;"(2) and again: "Let the woman
learn in silence in all subjection"?(3) But it is impious to compare a man to the
Father, or a woman to the Son of God.
157. Or as Peter said: "Submit
yourselves to every human creature"?(4) But Christ was certainly not so subject.
158. Or as Paul wrote: "Submitting
yourselves mutually to God and the Father in the fear of Christ"?(5) But Christ was
not subject either in His own fear, nor in the fear of another Christ. For Christ is but
one. But note the force of these words, that we are subject to the Father, whilst we also
fear Christ.
159. How, then, do we understand His
subjection? Shall we review the whole chapter which the Apostle wrote, so as to give no
appearance of having falsely withheld anything, or of having weakened its force with
intention to deceive? "If in this life only," he says, "we have hope in
Christ, we are of all men most miserable. But if Christ is risen from the dead, He is the
first-fruits of them that sleep."(6) Ye see how he discusses the question of Christ's
Resurrection.
160. "' For since by one man,'" he
says, "came death, by man came also the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all
die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive. But each one in his own order: Christ the
firstfruits; afterward they that are Christ's, who have believed in His coming. Then
cometh the end, when He shall have delivered up the kingdom to God,even the Father, when
He shall have put down all rule and authority and power. For He must reign until He hath
put all enemies under His feet. The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death; for He
hath put all things under His feet. But when He saith, all things are put under Him, it is
manifest that He is excepted Which did put all things under Him. But when all things shall
be subdued unto Him, then shall the Son also Himself be subject unto Him, that put all
things under Him, that God may be all in all."(1) Thus also the same Apostle said to
the Hebrews: "But now we see not yet all things put under Him."(2) We have heard
the whole of the Apostle's discourse.
161. How, then, do we speak of His
subjection? The Sabellians and Marcionites say that this subjection of Christ to God the
Father will be in such wise that the Son will be re-absorbed into the Father. If, then,
the subjection of the Word means that God the Word is to be absorbed into the Father; then
whatsoever is made subject to the Father and the Son will be absorbed into the Father and
the Son, that God may be all and in all His creatures. But it is foolish to say so. There
is therefore no subjection through re-absorption. For there are other things which are
made subject, those, that is to say, which are created, and there is Another, to Whom that
subjection is made. Let the expounders of a cruel re-absorption keep silence.
162. Would that they too were silent, who,
as they cannot prove that the Word of God and Wisdom of God can be re-absorbed, attribute
the weakness of subjection to His Godhead, saying that it is written: "But when all
things shall be subdued unto Him, then shall the Son also Himself be subject unto
Him."(3)
163. We see, then, that the Scripture states
that He is not yet made subject, but that this is to come: Therefore now the Son is not
made subject to God the Father. In what, then, do ye say that the Son will be made
subject? If in His Godhead, He is not disobedient, for He is not at variance with the
Father; nor is He made subject, for He is not a servant, but the only Son of His own
proper Father. Lastly, when He created heaven, and formed the earth, He exercised both
power and love. There is therefore no subjection as that of a servant in the Godhead of
Christ. But if there is no subjection then the will is free.
164. But if they think of this as the
subjection of the Son, namely, that the Father makes all things in union with His will,
let them learn that this is really a proof of inseparable power. For the unity of Their
will is one that began not in time, but ever existed. But where there is a constant unity
of will, there can be no weakness of temporal subjection. For if He were made subject
through His nature, He would always remain m subjection; but since He is said to be made
subject in time, that subjection must be part of an assumed office and not of an
everlasting weakness: especially as the eternal Power of God cannot change His state for a
time, neither can the right of ruling fall to the Father in time. For if the Son ever will
be changed in such wise as to be made subject in His Godhead, then also must God the
Father, if ever He shall gain more power, and have the Son in subjection to Himself in His
Godhead, be considered now in the meantime inferior according to your explanation.
165. But what fault has the Son been guilty
of, that we should believe that He could hereafter be made subject in His Godhead? Has he
as man seized for Himself the right to sit at His Father's side, or has He claimed for
Himself the prerogative of His Father's throne, against His Father's will? But He Himself
says: "For I do always those things that please Him."(1) Therefore if the Son
pleases the Father in all things, why should He be made subject, Who was not made subject
before?
166. Let us see then that there be not a
subjection of the Godhead, but rather of us in the fear of Christ, a truth so full of
grace, and so full of mystery. Wherefore, again, let us weigh the Apostle's words:
"But when all things shall be subdued unto Him, then shall the Son also Himself be
subject unto Him that put all things under Him: that God may be all in all." What
then dost thou say? Are not all things now subject unto Him? Are not the choirs of the
saints made subject? Are not the angels, who ministered to Him when on the earth."(2)
Are not the archangels who were sent to Mary to foretell the coming of the Lord? Are not
all the heavenly hosts? Are not the cherubim and seraphim, are not thrones and dominions
and powers which worship and praise Him?
167. How, then, will they be brought into
subjection? In the way that the Lord Himself has said. "Take My yoke upon
you."(3) It is not the fierce that bear the yoke, but the humble and the gentle. This
clearly is no base subjection for men, but a glorious one: "that in the Name of Jesus
every knee should bow, of things in heaven and things beneath; and that every tongue
should confess that Jesus is Lord in the glory of God the Father."(1) But for this
reason all things were not made subject before, for they had not yet received the wisdom
of God, not yet did they wear the easy yoke of the Word on the neck as it were of their
mind. "But as many as received Him," as it is written, "to them gave He
power to become the sons of God."(2)
168. Will any one say that Christ is now
made subject, because many have believed? Certainly not. For Christ's subjection lies not
in a few but in all. For just as I do not seem to be brought into subjection, if the flesh
in me as yet lusts against the spirit, and the spirit against the flesh,(3) although I am
in part subdued; so because the whole Church is the one body of Christ, we divide Christ
as long as the human race disagrees. Therefore Christ is not yet made subject, for His
members are not yet brought into subjection. But when we have become, not many members,
but one spirit, then He also will become subject, in order that through His subjection
"God may be all and in all."
169. But as Christ is not yet made subject,
so is the work of God not yet perfected; for the Son of God said: "My meat is to do
the will of My Father that sent Me, and to finish His work."(4) What manner of doubt
is there that the subjection of the Son in me iS still in the future, in whom the work of
the Father is unfinished, because I myself am not yet perfect? I, who make the work of God
to be unfinished, do I make the Son of God to be in subjection? But that is not a matter
of wrong, it is a matter of grace. For in so far as we are made subject, it is to our
profit, not to that of the Godhead, that we are made subject to the law, that we are made
subject to grace. For formerly, as the Apostle himself has said, the wisdom of the flesh
was at enmity with God, for "it was not made subject to the law,"(5) but now it
is made subject through the Passion of Christ.
CHAPTER
XIV.
He continues the discussion of the
difficulty he has entered upon, and teaches that Christ is not subject but only according
to the flesh. Christ, however, whilst in subjection in the Flesh, still gave proofs of His
Godhead. He combats the idea that Christ is made subject in This. The humanity indeed,
which He adopted, has been so far made subject in us, as ours has been raised in that very
humanity of His. Lastly, we are taught, when that same subjection of Christ will take
place.
170. However, lest anyone should cavil, see
what care Scripture takes under divine inspiration. For it shows to us in what Christ is
made subject to God, whilst it also teaches us in what He made the universe subject to
Himself. And so it says: "Now we see not yet all things put under Him."(1) For
we see Jesus made a little lower than the angels for the suffering of death.(2) It shows
therefore that He was made lower in taking on Him our flesh. What then hinders Him from
openly showing His subjection in taking on Him our flesh, through which He subjects all
things to Himself, whilst He Himself is made subject in it to God the Father?
171. Let us then think of His subjection.
"Father," He says, "if Thou be willing, remove this cup from Me;
nevertheless not My will but Thine be done."(3) Therefore that subjection will be
according to the assumption of human nature; as we read: "Being found in fashion as a
man, He humbled Himself, being made obedient unto death."(4) The subjection therefore
is that of obedience; the obedience is that of death; the death is that of the assumed
humanity; that subjection therefore will be the subjection of the assumed humanity. Thus
in no wise is there a weakness in the Godhead, but there is such a discharge of pious duty
as this.
172. See how I do not fear their intentions.
They allege that He must be subject to God the Father, I say He was subject to Mary His
Mother. For it is written of Joseph and Mary: "He was subject unto them."(5) But
if they think so, let them say how the Deity was made subject to men.
173. Let not the fact that He is said to
have been made subject work against Him, Who receives no hurt from the fact that He is
called a servant, or is stated to have been crucified, or is spoken of as dead. For when
He died He lived; when He was made subject He was reigning; when He was buried He revived
again. He offered Himself in subjection to human power, yet at another time He declared He
was the Lord of eternal glory. He was before the judge, yet claimed for Himself a throne
at the right hand of God, as Judge forever. For thus it is written: "Hereafter ye
shall see the Son of Man sitting on the right hand of the power of God, and coming in the
clouds of heaven."(1) He was scourged by the Jews, and commanded the angels; He was
born of Mary under the law;(2) He was before Abraham above the law. On the cross He was
revered by nature; the sun fled; the earth trembled; the angels became silent. Could the
elements see the Generation of Him Whose Passion they feared to see? And will they uphold
the subjection of an adorable Nature in Him, in Whom they could not endure the subjection
of the body?
174. But since the Father, the Son, and the
Holy Spirit are of one Nature, the Father certainly will not be in subjection to Himself.
And therefore the Son will not be in subjection in that in which He is one with the
Father; test it should seem that through the unity of the Godhead the Father also is in
subjection to the Son. Therefore, as upon that cross it was not the fulness of the
Godhead, but our weakness that was brought into subjection, so also will the Son hereafter
become subject to the Father in the participation of our nature, in order that when the
lusts of the flesh are brought into subjection the heart may have no care for riches, or
ambition, or pleasures; but that God may be all to us, if we live after His image and
likeness, as far as we can attain to it, through all.
175. The benefit has passed, then, from the
individual to the community; for in His flesh He has tamed the nature of all human flesh.
Thus, according to the Apostle: "As we have borne the image of the earthly, so also
shall we bear the image of the heavenly."(3) This thing certainly cannot come to pass
except in the inner man. Therefore, "laying aside all these," that is those
things which we read of: "anger, malice, blasphemy, filthy communication;"(4) as
he also says below: "Let us, having put off the old man with his deeds, put on the
new man, which is renewed in knowledge after the image of Him that created Him."(5)
176. And that thou mightest know that when
he says: "That God may be all in all," he does not separate Christ from God the
Father, he also says to the Colossians: "Where there is neither male nor female, Jew
nor Greek, Barbarian nor Scythian, bond nor free, but Christ is all and in all."(6)
So also saying to the Corinthians: "That God may be all and in all," he
comprehended in that the unity and equality of Christ with God the Father, for the Son is
not separated from the Father. And in like manner as the Father worketh all and in all, so
also Christ worketh all in all. If, then, Christ also worketh all in all, He is not made
subject in the glory of the Godhead, but in us. But how is He made subject in us, except
in the way in which He was made lower than the angels, I mean in the sacrament of His
body? For all things which served their Creator from their first beginning seemed not as
yet to be made subject to Him in that.
177. But if thou shouldst ask how He was
made subject in us, He Himself shows us, saying: "I was in prison, and ye came unto
Me; I was sick, and ye visited Me: Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of
these ye have done it unto Me."(1) Thou hearest of Him as sick and weak, and art not
moved. Thou hearest of Him in subjection, and art moved, though He is sick and weak in Him
in whom He is in subjection, in whom He was made sin and a curse for us.
178. As, then, He was made sin and a curse
not on His own account but on ours, so He became subject in us not for His own sake but
for ours, being not in subjection in His eternal Nature, nor accursed in His eternal
Nature. "For cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree."(2) Cursed He was, for
He bore our curses; in subjection, also, for He took upon Him our subjection, but in the
assumption of the form of a servant, not in the glory of God; so that whilst he makes
Himself a partaker of our weakness in the flesh, He makes us partakers of the divine
Nature in His power. But neither in one nor the other have we any natural fellowship with
the heavenly Generation of Christ, nor is there any subjection of the Godhead in Christ.
But as the Apostle has said that on Him through that flesh which is the pledge of our
salvation, we sit in heavenly places,(3) though certainly not sitting ourselves, so also
He is said to be subject in us through the assumption of our nature.
179. For who is so mad as to think, as we
have said already,(4) that a seat of honour is due to Him at the right hand of God the
Father, when that is granted to Christ according to the flesh by the Father of His
Generation, even a seat of a heavenly and equal power? The angels worship, and dost thou
attempt to overthrow the throne of God with impious presumption?
180. It is written, thou sayest, that
"when we were dead in sins, He hath quickened us in Christ, by Whose grace ye are
saved, and hath raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in
Christ Jesus. I acknowledge that it is so written; but it is not written that God suffers
men to sit on His right hand, but only to sit there in the Person of Christ. For He is the
foundation of all, and is the head of the Church,(2) in Whom our common nature according
to the flesh has merited the right to the heavenly throne. For the flesh is honoured as
having a share in Christ Who is God, and the nature of the whole human race is honoured as
having a share in the flesh.
181. As we then sit in Him by fellowship in
our fleshly nature, so also He, Who through the assumption of our flesh was made a curse
for us (seeing that a curse could not fall upon the blessed Son of God), so, I say, He
through the obedience of all will become subject in us; when the Gentile has believed, and
the Jew has acknowledged Him Whom he crucified; when the Manichaean has worshipped Him,
Whom he has not believed to have come in the flesh; when the Arian has confessed Him to be
Almighty, Whom he has denied; when, lastly, the wisdom of God, His justice, peace, love,
resurrection, is in all. Through His own works and through the manifold forms of virtues
Christ will be in us in subjection to the Father. And when, with vice renounced and crime
at an end, one spirit in the heart of all peoples has begun to cleave to God in all
things, then will God be all and in all.(3)
CHAPTER
XV.
He briefly takes up again the same points of
dispute, and shrewdly concludes from the unity of the divine power in the Father and the
Son, that whatever is said of the subjection of the Son is to be referred to His humanity
alone. He further confirms this on proof of the love, which exists alike in either.
182. Let us then shortly sum up our
conclusion on the whole matter. A unity of power puts aside all idea of a degrading
subjection. His giving up of power, and His victory as conqueror won over death, have not
lessened His power. Obedience works out subjection. Christ has taken obedience upon
Himself, obedience even to taking on Him our flesh, the cross even to gaining our
salvation. Thus where the work lies, there too is the Author of the work. When therefore,
all things have become subject to Christ, through Christ's obedience, so that all bend
their knees in His name, then He Himself will be all in all. For now, since all do not
believe, all do not seem to be in subjection. But when all have believed and done the will
of God, then Christ will be all and in all. And when Christ is all and in all, then will
God be all and in all; for the Father abides ever in the Son. How, then, is He shown to be
weak, Who redeemed the weak?
183. And lest thou shouldst by chance
attribute to the weakness of the Son, that it is written, that God hath put all things in
subjection under Him; learn that He has Himself brought all things into subjection to
Himself, for it is written: "Our conversation is in heaven, from whence also we look
for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus, Who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned
like unto His glorious body according to the working, whereby He is able to subdue all
things unto Himself."(1) Thou has learnt, therefore, that He can subdue all things
unto Himself according to the working of His Godhead.
184. Learn now how He receives all things in
subjection according to the flesh, as it is written: "Who wrought in Christ, raising
Him from the dead, and setting Him at His own right hand in the heavenly places, above
principality and power and might and dominion and every name that is named not only in
this world, but also in that which is to come; and hath put all things under His
feet."(2) According to the flesh then all things are given to Him in subjection;
according to which also He was raised from the dead, both in His human soul and His
rational subjection.
185. Many nobly interpret that which is
written: "Truly my soul will be in subjection to God;"(3) He said soul not
Godhead, soul not glory. And that we might know that the Lord has spoken through the
prophet of the adoption of our human nature, He added: "How long will ye cast
yourselves upon a man?"(4) As also He says in the Gospel: "Why do ye seek to
kill Me, a man?"(5) And He added again: "Nevertheless they desired to refuse My
price, they ran in thirst, they blessed with their mouth, and cursed with their
heart."(6) For the Jews, when Judas brought back the price,(7) would not receive it,
running on in the thirst of madness, for they refused the grace of a spiritual draught.
186. This is the reverent interpretation of
subjection, for since this is the office of the Lord's Passion, He will be subject in us
in that in which He suffered. Do we ask wherefore? That "neither angels, nor powers,
nor height, nor depth, nor things present, nor things to come, nor any other creature may
separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus."(1) we see then, from
what has been said, that no creature is excepted; but that every one, of whatever kind it
may be, is enumerated among those he mentioned above.
187. At the same time, we must also think of
the words which, after first saying "Who shall separate us from the love of
Christ?"(2) he wrote next: "Neither death, nor life, nor any other creature can
separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus." we see, then, that the
love of God is the same as the love of Christ. Thus it was not without reason that he
wrote of the love of God, "which is in Christ Jesus," lest otherwise thou
mightest imagine that the love of God and of Christ was divided. But there is nothing that
love divides, nothing that the eternal Godhead cannot do, nothing that is unknown to the
Truth, or deceives Justice, or escapes the notice of Wisdom.
CHAPTER
IV.
The Arians are condemned by the Holy Spirit
through the mouth of David: for they dare to limit Christ s knowledge. The passage cited
by them in proof of this is by no means free from suspicion of having been corrupted. But
to set this right, we must mark the word "Son." For knowledge cannot fail Christ
as Son of God, since He is Wisdom; nor the recognition of any part, for He created all
things. It is not possible that He, who made the ages, cannot know the future, much less
the day of judgment. Such knowledge, whether it concerns anything great or small, may not
be denied to the Son, nor yet to the Holy Spirit. Lastly, various proofs are given from
which we can gather that this knowledge exists in Christ.
188. Wherefore we ought to know that they
who make such statements are accursed and condemned by the Holy Spirit. For whom else but
the Arians in chief does the prophet condemn, seeing that they say that the Son of God
knows neither times nor years. For there is nothing which God is ignorant of; and Christ,
yea the most high Christ, is God, for He is "God over all."(3)
189. See how horrified holy David is at such
men, in limiting the knowledge of the Son of God. For thus it is written: "They are
not in the troubles of other men, neither will they be scourged with men; therefore their
pride has laid hold on them; they are covered with their wickedness and blasphemy; their
iniquity hath stood forth as it were with fatness; they have passed on to the thoughts of
their heart. "(1) Truly he condemns those who think that divine things are to be
regarded in the light of the thoughts of the heart. For God is not subject to arrangement
or order; seeing that we do not perceive even those very things, which are common among
men and often occur in the history of the human race, to turn out always after the
arrangement of some stated rule, but often to happen suddenly in some secret and
mysterious manner.
190. "They have thought," he says,
"and have spoken wickedness. They have spoken wickedness against the Most High. They
have set their mouth against heaven."(2) We see then that he condemns, as guilty of
wicked blasphemy, those who claim for themselves the fight to arrange the heavenly secrets
after the semblance of our human nature.
191. And they have said: "How hath God
known? And is there knowledge in the Most High?"(3) Do not the Arians echo this
daily, saying that all knowledge cannot exist in Christ? For He, they say, stated that He
knew not the day nor hour. Do they not say, how did He know, while they maintain that He
could not know anything but what He heard and saw, and apply by a blasphemous
interpretation that which concerns the unity of the divine Nature to weaken His power?
192. It is written, they say: "But of
that day and that hour knoweth no man, no, not the angels which are in heaven, neither the
Son, but the Father only."(4) First of all the ancient Greek manuscripts do not
contain the words, "neither the Son." But it is not to be wondered at if they
who have corrupted the sacred Scriptures, have also falsified this passage. The reason for
which it seems to have been inserted is perfectly plain, so long as it is applied to
unfold such blasphemy.
193. Suppose however that the Evangelist
wrote thus. The name of "Son" embraces both natures. For He is also called Son
of Man, so that in the ignorance attached to the assumption of our nature, He seems not to
have known the day of the judgment to come. For how could the Son of God be ignorant of
the day, seeing that the treasures of the wisdom and knowledge of God are hidden in
Him?(1)
194. I ask then, whether He had this
knowledge by reason of His Being, or by chance? For all knowledge comes to us either
through nature, or by learning. It is supplied by nature, as for instance to a horse to
enable it to run, or to a fish to enable it to swim. For they do this without learning. On
the other hand, it is by learning that a man is enabled to swim. For he could not do so
unless he had learnt. Since therefore nature enables dumb animals to do and to know what
they have not learnt, why shouldst thou give an opinion on the Son of God, and say whether
He has knowledge by instruction or by nature? If by instruction, then He was not begotten
as Wisdom, and gradually began to be perfect, but was not always so. But if He has
knowledge by nature, then He was perfect in the beginning, He came forth perfect from the
Father; and so needed no foreknowledge of the future.
195. He therefore was not ignorant of the
days; for it does not fall to the lot of the Wisdom of God to know in part and in part to
be ignorant. For how can He who made all things be ignorant of a part, since it is a less
thing to know than to make. For we know many things which we cannot make, neither do we
all know things in the same way but we know them in part. For a countryman knows the force
of the wind and the courses of the stars in one way--the inhabitant of a city knows them
in another way--and a pilot in yet a third way. But although all do not know all things,
they are said to know them; but He alone knows all things in full, Who made all things.
The pilot knows for how many watches Arcturus continues, what sort of a rising of Orion he
will discover, but he knows nothing of the connection of the Vergiliae and of the other
stars, or of their number or names, as does He "Who numbers the multitude of stars,
and calleth them all by their names;"(2) Whom indeed the power of His work cannot
escape.
196. How then do you wish the Son of God to
have made these things? Like a signet ring which does not feel the impression it makes?
But the Father made all things in wisdom,(3) that is, He made all things through the Son,
who is the Virtue and Wisdom of God.(4) But it befits such Wisdom as that to know both the
powers and the causes of His own works. Thus the Creator of all things could not be
ignorant of what He did--or be without knowledge of what He had Himself given. Therefore
He knew the day which He made.
197. But thou sayest that He knows the
present and does not know the future. Though this is a foolish suggestion, yet that I may
satisfy thee on Scriptural grounds, learn that He made not only what is past, but also
what is future, as it is written: "Who made things to come."(1) Elsewhere too
Scripture says: "By whom also He made the ages, who is the brightness of His glory
and the express Image of His Person."(2) Now the ages are past and present and future
How then were those made which are future, unless it is that His active power and
knowledge contains within itself the number of all the ages? For just as He calls the
things that are not as though they were, s so has He made things future as though they
were. It cannot come to pass that they should not be. Those things which He has directed
to be, necessarily will be. Therefore He who has made the things that are to be, knows
them in the way in which they will be.
198. If we are to believe this about the
ages, much more must we believe it about the day of judgment, on the ground that the Son
of God has knowledge of it, as being already made by Him. For it is written:
"According to Thine ordinance the day will continue."(4) He did not merely say
"the day continues," but even "will continue," so that the things
which are to come might be governed by His ordinance Does He not know what He ordered?
"He who planted the ear, shall He not hear? He that formed the eye shall He not
see?"(5)
199. Let us however see if by chance there
may be some great thing, which could be beyond the knowledge of its Creator; or at least
let them choose whether they will think of something great and superior to other things,
or something very little and mean. If it is very little and mean, it is no loss, to speak
after our fashion, to know nothing of worthless and petty things. For as it is a sign of
power to know the greatest things, it seems rather to be a sign of inferior work to look
upon what is worth less. Thus He is freed from fastidiousness, yet is not deprived of His
power.
200. But if they think it a great and
important thing to know the day of judgment: Let them say what is greater or better than
God the Father. He knows God the Father, as He Himself says: "No man knoweth the
Father but the Son and he to whomsoever the Son will reveal Him."(1) I say, does He
know the Father and yet not know the day? So then ye believe that He reveals the Father,
and yet cannot reveal the day?
201. Next because you make certain grades,
so as to put the Father before the on, and the Son before the Holy Spirit, tell me whether
the Holy Spirit knew the day of judgment For no thing is written of Him in this place. You
deny it entirely. But what if I show you He knew it? For it is written: "But God hath
revealed them to us by His Spirit, for the Spirit searcheth all things, yea the deep
things of God."(2) Wherefore, because He searches the deep things of God, since God
knows the day of judgment, the Spirit also knows it. For He knows all that God knows, as
also the Apostle states, saying: "For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the
spirit of man which is in him, even so the things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of
God."(3) Take heed therefore lest either by denying that the Holy Spirit knows, you
should deny that the Father knows; (For the things of God, the Spirit of God also knows,
but the things which the Spirit of God does not know, are not the things of God). Or by
confessing that the Spirit of God knows, what you deny that the Son of God knows, you
should put the Spirit before the Son in opposition to your own declaration. But to
hesitate on this point is not only blasphemous but also foolish.
202. Now consider how knowledge is acquired,
and let us show that the Son Himself proved that He knew the day. For what we know we make
clear either by mention of time or place or signs or persons, or by giving their order.
How then did He not know the day of judgment Who described both the hour and the place of
judgment, and the signs and the cases?
203. And so thou hast it: "In that hour
he which shall be on the housetop let him not come down to take his goods out of his
house, and he that is in the field, let him likewise not return back."(4) To such a
point in the future did He know the issues of dangers, that He even showed the means of
safety to those in danger.
204. Could the Lord be ignorant of a day Who
Himself said of Himself that the Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath?(1)
205. He has also elsewhere marked out a
place, when He said to His disciples who were showing Him the building of the temple,
"Do ye see all these things? Verily I say unto you, there shall not be left one stone
upon another which shall not be thrown down."(2)
206. When questioned also about a sign by
His disciples, He answered: "Take heed that ye be not deceived. For many shall come
in My name, saying I am Christ;"(3) and further on He says: "and great
earthquakes shall be in divers places, and famines, and pestilences, and terrors from
heaven, and there shall be great signs."(4) Thus He has described both persons and
signs.
207. In what manner He tells that the armies
will surround Jerusalem, or that the times of the Gentiles are to be fulfilled, and in
what order,-- all this is disclosed to us by the witness of the Gospel words. Therefore He
knew all things.
CHAPTER
XVII.
Christ acted for our advantage in being
unwilling to reveal the day of judgment. This is made plain by other words of our Lord and
by a not dissimilar passage from Paul's writings. Other passages in which the same
ignorance seems to be attributed to the Father are brought forward to meet those who are
anxious to know why Christ answered His disciples, as though He did not know. From these
Ambrose argues against them that if they admit ignorance and inability in the Father, they
must admit that the same Substance exists in the Son as in the Father; unless they prefer
to accuse the Son of falsehood; since it belongs neither to Him nor to the Father to
deceive, but the unity of both is pointed out in the passage named.
208. But we ask for what reason He was
unwilling to state the time. If we ask it, we shall not find it is owing to ignorance, but
to wisdom. For it was not to our advantage to know; in order that we being ignorant of the
actual moments of judgment to come, might ever be as it were on guard, and set on the
watch-tower of virtue, and so avoid the habits of sin; lest the day of the Lord should
come upon us in the midst of our wickedness. For it is not to our advantage to know but
rather to fear the future; for it is written: "Be not high-minded but fear."(5)
209. For if He had distinctly stated the
day, he would seem to have laid down a rule of life for that one age which was nearest to
the judgment, and the just man in the earlier times would be more negligent, and the
sinner more free from care. For the adulterer cannot cease from the desire of committing
adultery unless he fears punishment day by day, nor can the robber forsake the hiding
places in the woods where he dwells, unless he knows punishment is hanging over him day by
day. For impurity generally spurs them on, but fear is irksome to the end.
210. Therefore I have said that it was not
to our advantage to know; nay, it is to our advantage to be ignorant, that through
ignorance we might fear, through watchfulness be corrected, as He Himself said: "Be
ye ready, for ye know not at what hour the Son of Man cometh."(1) For the soldier
does not know how to watch in the camp unless he knows that war is at hand.
211. Wherefore at another time also the Lord
Himself when asked by his Apostles (Yes, for they did not understand it as Arius did, but
believed that the Son of God knew the future. For unless they had believed this, they
would never have asked the question.)--the Lord, I say, when asked when He would restore
the kingdom to Israel, did not say that He did not know, but says: "It is not for you
to know the times or years, which the Father hath put in His own power."(2) Mark what
He said: It is not for you to know! Read again, "It is not for you.' "For you,'
He said, not "for Me," for now He spoke not according to His own perfection but
as was profitable to the human body and our soul. "For you therefore He said, not
"for Me."
212. Which example the Apostle also
followed: "But of the times and seasons, brethren," he says, "ye have no
need that I write unto you."(3) Thus not even the Apostle himself, the servant of
Christ, said that he knew not the seasons, but that there was no need for the people to be
taught; for they ought ever to be armed with spiritual armour, that the virtue of Christ
may stand forth in each one. But when the Lord says: "Of the times which the Father
hath put in His own power, "(4) He certainly cannot be without a share in His
Father's knowledge, in whose power He is by no means without a share. For power grows out
of wisdom and virtue; and Christ is both of these.
213. But you ask, why did He not refuse His
disciples as one who knew, but would not say; and, why did He state instead that neither
the angels nor the Son knew?' I too will ask you why God says in Genesis: "I will go
down now, and see whether they have done altogether according to the cry that is come unto
Me. And if not, that I may know."(2) Why does Scripture also say of God: "And
the Lord came down to see the city and the tower, which the sons of men builded."(3)
Why also does the prophet say in the Book of the Psalms: "The Lord looked down upon
the children of men, to see if there were any that did understand, and that did seek
God"?(4) Just as though in one place, if God had not descended, and in the other, if
He had not looked down, He would have been ignorant either of men's work or of their
merits.
214. But in the Gospel of Luke also thou
hast the same, for the Father says: "What shall I do? I will send My beloved Son; it
may be that they will reverence Him."(5) In Matthew and in Mark thou hast: "But
He sent His only Son, saying: they will reverence My Son;"(6) In one book He says:
"It may be that they will reverence My Son; "(7) and is in doubt as though He
does not know; for this is the language of one in doubt. But in the two other books He
says: "They will reverence My Son;" that is, He declares that reverence will be
shown.
215. But God can neither be in doubt, nor
can He be deceived. For he only is in doubt, who is ignorant of the future; and he is
deceived, who has predicted one thing, whilst another has happened. Yet what is plainer
than the fact that Scripture states the Father to have said one thing of the Son, and that
the same Scripture proves another think to have taken place? The Son was beaten, He was
mocked, was crucified, and died.(8) He suffered much worse things in the flesh than those
servants who had been appointed before. Was the Father deceived, or was He ignorant of it,
or was He unable to give help? But He that is true cannot make a mistake; for it is
written: "God is faithful Who doth not lie."(9). How was He ignorant, Who knows
all? What could He not do, Who could do all?
216. Yet if either He was ignorant, or had
not power (for you would sooner agree to say that the Father did not know than own that
the Son knows), you see from this very fact that the Son is of one Substance with the
Father; seeing that the Son like the Father (to speak in accordance with your foolish
ideas) does not know all things, and cannot do all things. For I am not so eager or rash
in giving praise to the Son as to dare to say that the Son can do more than the Father;
for I make no distinction of power between the Father and the Son.
217. But perhaps you say that the Father did
not say so, but that the Son erred about the Father. So now you convict the Son not only
of weakness, but also of blasphemy and lying. However if you do not believe the Son with
regard to the Father, neither may you believe Him with regard to that. For if He wished to
deceive us in saying that the Father was in doubt as though He knew not what would take
place, He wished also to deceive us about Himself in saying that He did not know the
future. It would be far more endurable for Him to stretch the veil of ignorance in front
of that which He does of His own accord, than that He should seem to be deluded by a
result contrary to what He had foretold in the things He had declared of His Father.
218. But neither is the Father deceived not
does the Son deceive. It is the custom of the holy Scriptures to speak thus, as the
examples I have already given, and many others testify, so that God feigns not to know
what He does know. In this then a unity of Godhead, and a unity of character is proved to
exist in the Father and in the Son; seeing that, as God the Father hides what is known to
Him, so also the Son, Who is the image of God in this respect, hides what is known to Him.
CHAPTER
XVIII.
Wishing to give a reason for the Lord's
answer to the apostles, he assigns the one received to Christ's tenderness. Then when
another reason is supplied by others he confesses that it is true; for the Lord spoke it
by reason of His human feelings. Hence he gathers that the knowledge of the Father and the
Son is equal, and that the Son is not inferior to the Father. After having set beside the
text, in which He is said to be inferior, another whereby He is declared to be equal, he
censures the rashness of the Arians in judging about the Son, and shows that whilst they
wickedly make Him to be inferior, He is rightly called a Stone by Himself.
219. We have been taught therefore that the
Son of God is not ignorant of the future. If they confess this, I too--that I may now
answer why He declared that neither angels, nor the Son, but only the Father knows--call
to mind His wonted love for His disciples also in this passage, and His grace, which by
its very frequency ought to have been known to all. For the Lord, filled with deep love
for His disciples, when they asked from Him what He thought unprofitable for them to know,
prefers to seem ignorant of what He knows, rather than to refuse an answer. He loves
rather to provide what is useful for us, than to show His own power.
220. There are, however, some not so
faint-hearted as I. For I would rather fear the deep things of God, than be wise. There
are some, however, relying on the words: "And Jesus increased in age and in wisdom
and in favour with God and man,"(1) who boldly say, that according to His Godhead
indeed He could not be ignorant of the future, but that in His assumption of our human
state He said that He as Son of Man was in ignorance before His crucifixion. For when He
speaks of the Son, He does not speak as it were of another; for He Himself is our Lord the
Son of God and the Son of a Virgin. But by a word which embraces both, He guides our mind,
so that He as Son of Man according to His adoption of our ignorance and growth of
knowledge, might be believed as yet not fully to have known all things. For it is not for
us to know the future. Thus He seems to be ignorant in that state in which He makes
progress. For how does He progress according to His Godhead, in Whom the fulness of the
Godhead dwells?(2) Or what is there which the Son of God does not know, Who said:
"Why think ye evil in your hearts?"(3) How does He not know, of Whom Scripture
says: "But Jesus knew their thoughts"?(4)
221. This is what others say, but I--to
return to my former point, where I stated it was written of the Father: "It may be
they will reverence My Sen,"--I think indeed this was written in order that the
Father, as He was speaking of men, might also seem to have spoken with human feelings. But
still more am I inclined to think that the Son Who went about with men, and lived the life
of man, and took upon Him our flesh, assumed also our feelings; so that after our
ignorance He might say He knew not, though there was not anything He did not know. For
though He seemed to be a man in the reality of His body, yet was He Life, and Light, and
virtue came out of Him,(5) to heal the wounds of the injured by the power of His Majesty.
222. Ye see then that this matter has been
solved for you, since the saying of the Son is referred to the assumption of our state in
its fulness, and it was thus written concerning the Father, in order that you might cease
to cavil at the Son.
223. There was nothing then of which the Son
of God was ignorant, for there was nothing of which the Father was ignorant. But if the
Son was ignorant of nothing, as we now conclude, let them say in what respect they wish
Him to seem to be inferior. If God has begotten a Son inferior to Himself, He has granted
Him less. If He has granted Him less, He either wished to give less, or could only give
less. But the Father is neither weak nor envious, seeing that there was neither will nor
power before the Son. For wherein is He inferior, Who has all things even as the Father
has them? He has received all things from the Father by right of His Generation,(1) and
has shown forth the Father wholly by the glory of His Majesty.
224. It is written, they say: "For the
Father is greater than I."(2) It is also written: "He thought it not robbery to
be equal with God"(3) It is written again that the Jews wished to kill Him, because
He said He was the Son of God, making Himself equal with God.(4) It is written: "I
and My Father are one."(5) They read "one" they do not read
"many." Can He then be both inferior and equal in the same Nature? Nay, the one
refers to His Godhead, the other to His flesh.
225. They say He is inferior: I ask who has
measured it, who is of so overweening a heart, as to place the Father and the Son before
his judgment seat to decide upon which is the greater? "My heart is not haughty nor
are mine eyes raised unto vanity,"(6) says David. King David feared to raise his
heart in pride in human affairs, but we raise ours even in opposition to the divine
secrets. Who shall decide about the Son of God? Thrones, dominions, angels, powers? But
archangels give attendance and serve Him, cherubim and seraphim minister to Him and praise
Him. Who then decides about the Son of God, on reading that the Father Himself knows the
Son, but will not judge Him. "For no man knoweth the Son, but the Father."(7)
"Knoweth" it says, not "judgeth." It is one thing to know, another to
judge. The Father has knowledge in Himself. The Son has no power superior to Himself. And
again: "No man knoweth the Father, but the Son;" and He Himself knows the
Father, as the Father knows Him.
226. But thou sayest that He said He was
inferior, He said also He was a Stone. Thou sayest more and yet dost impiously attack Him.
I say less and with reverence add to His honour. Thou sayest He is inferior and confessest
Him to be above the angels. I say He is less than the angels, yet do not take from His
honour; for I do not refute His Godhead, but I do proclaim His pity.
CHAPTER
XIX.
The Saint having turned to God the Father,
explains why he does not deride that the Son is inferior to the Father, then he declares
it is not for him to measure the Son of God, since it was given to an angel--nay, perhaps
even to Christ as man--to measure merely Jerusalem. Arius, he says, has shown himself to
be an imitator of Satan. It is a rash thing to hold discussions on the divine Generation.
Since so great a sign of human generation has been given by Isaiah, we ought not to make
comparisons in divine things. Lastly he shows how carefully we ought to avoid the pride of
Arius, by putting before us various examples of Scriptures.
227. To Thee now, Almighty Father, do I
direct my words with tears. I indeed have readily called Thee inapproachable,
incomprehensible, inestimable; but I dared not say Thy Son was inferior to Thyself. For
when I read that He is the Brightness of Thy glory, and the Image of Thy Person,(1) I fear
lest, in saying that the Image of Thy Person is inferior, I should seem to say that Thy
Person is inferior, of which the Son is the Image; for the fulness of Thy Godhead is
wholly in the Son. I have often read, I freely believe, that Thou and Thy Son and the Holy
Spirit are boundless, unmeasurable, inestimable, ineffable. And therefore I cannot
appraise Thee so as to weigh Thee.
228. But be it so, that I desired with a
daring and rash spirit to measure Thee? From whence, I ask, shall I measure Thee, The
prophet saw a line of flax with which the angel measured Jerusalem. An angel was
measuring, not Arius. And he was measuring Jerusalem, not God. And perchance even an angel
could not measure Jerusalem, for it was a man. Thus it is written: "I raised mine
eyes and saw and beheld a man, and in his hand there was a line of flax."(1) He was a
man, for a type of the body that was to be assumed was thus shown. He was a man, of whom
it was said: "There cometh a man after me, Whose shoe's latchet I am not worthy to
unloose."(2) Therefore Christ in a type measures Jerusalem. Arius measures God.
229. Even Satan transforms himself into an
angel of light;(3) what wonder then if Arius imitates his Author in taking upon himself
what is forbidden? Though his father the devil did it not in his own case, that man with
intolerable blasphemy assumes to himself the knowledge of divine secrets and the mysteries
of the heavenly Generation. For the devil confessed the true Son of God, Arius denies Him.
230. If, then, I cannot measure Thee,
Almighty Father, can I without blasphemy discuss the secrets of Thy Generation? Can I say
there is anything more or less between Thee and Thy Son when He Himself Who was begotten
of Thee, says: "All things which the Father hath are Mine."(4) Who has made Me a
judge and a divider of human affairs? This the Son says,(5) and do we claim to make a
division and to give judgment between the Father and the Son? A right feeling of duty
avoids arbiters even in the division of an inheritance. And shall we become arbiters, to
divide between Thee and Thy Son the glory of the uncreated Substance?
231. "This generation," it says,
"is an evil generation. It seeketh a sign, and there shall no sign be given it, but
the sign of Jonas the prophet."(6) A sign of the Godhead then is not given, but only
of the Incarnation. Thus when about to speak of the Incarnation the prophet says:
"Ask thee a sign." And when the king had said: "I will not ask, neither
will I tempt the Lord," the answer was: "Behold a Virgin shall
conceive."(7) Therefore we cannot see a sign of the Godhead, and do we seek a measure
of it? Alas! woe is me! we impiously dare to discuss Him, to Whom we cannot worthily pray!
232. Let the Arians see to what they do. I
have unlawfully compared Thee, O Father, with Thy works in saying that Thou art greater
than all. If greater than Thy Son, as Arius maintains, I have judged wickedly. Concerning
Thee first will that judgment be. For no choice can be made except by comparison, nor can
anyone be put before another without a decision being first given on Himself.
233. It is not lawful for us to swear by
heaven, but it is lawful to judge about God. Yet Thou hast given to Thy Son alone judgment
over all.
234. John feared to baptize the flesh of the
Lord, John forbade Him, saying: "I have need to be baptized of Thee, and comest Thou
to me?"(1) And shall I bring Christ under my judgment.?
235. Moses excuses himself from the
Priesthood, Peter is for avoiding the obedience demanded in the Ministry; and does Arius
examine even the deep things of God? But Arius is not the Holy Spirit. Nay, it was said
even to Arius and to all men: "Seek not that which is too deep for thee."
236. Moses is prevented from seeing the face
of God;(3) Arius merited to see it in secret. Moses and Aaron among His Priests. Moses who
appeared with the Lord in glory, that Moses then saw only the back parts of God in
appearance; Arius beholds God wholly face to face! But" no one," it says,
"can see My face and live."(4)
237. Paul also speaks of inferior beings:
"We know in part and we prophesy in part."(5) Arius says: "I know God
altogether and not in part." Thus Paul is inferior to Arius, and the vessel of
election knows in part, but the vessel of perdition knows wholly. "I know," he
says, "a man, whether in the body or out of the body, I cannot tell, God knoweth, how
he was caught up into Paradise and heard unspeakable words."(6) Paul carried up to
the third heaven, knew not himself; Arius rolling in filth, knows God. Paul says of
himself: "God knows;" Arius says of God: "I know."
238. But Arius was not caught up to heaven,
although he followed him who with accursed boastfulness presumed on what was divine,
saying: "I will set my throne upon the clouds; I will be like the Most High."(7)
For as he said: "I will be like the Most High," so too Arius wishes the Most
High Son of God to seem like himself, Whom he does not worship in the eternal glory of His
Godhead, but measures by the weakness of the flesh.