Revised
2002
Note:
The full electronic versions of most of the texts can be found at
Early Church Fathers (CCEL).
|
Week
7 - Rome & Africa
- Tertullian, Hippolytus, Novatian -
[
And Secondary Source Readings: Studer. Trinity & Incarnation;
and,
Chp. 6; Kelly. Early Xian Doctrines. Chp 5.1-4; 6.4. ]
Study
questions:
1. How do the author's explain the reality of the humanity of Christ?
2. How do the author's explain the reality of Christ's divinity?
Are there any attempts to explain binitarian or trinitarian unity
of the godhead? What is the relationship of the Son to the Father?
[In Both # Q.1 & 2, important are the words, analogies or concepts
used to explain these realities]
3. How (and with what words) do they explain Christ's "origin"
or pre -- existence?
4. What are some of the doctrines that they are rejecting?
5. Do you sense a different theological style or approach from the
author's read to date?
Tertullian
Apolegeticus
Chapter
21
a.
Then, too, the common people have now some knowledge of Christ,
and think of Him as but a man, one indeed such as the Jews condemned,
so that some may naturally enough have taken up the idea that we
are worshippers of a mere human being. But we are neither ashamed
of Christ -- for we rejoice to be counted His disciples, and in
His name to suffer -- nor do we differ from the Jews concerning
God. We must make, therefore, a remark or two as to Christ's divinity.
b.
The sacred writers withal, in giving previous warning of these things,
all with equal clearness ever declared that, in the last days of
the world, God would, out of every nation, and people, and country,
choose for Himself more faithful worshippers, upon whom He would
bestow His grace, and that indeed in ampler measure, in keeping
with the enlarged capacities of a nobler dispensation. Accordingly,
He appeared among us, whose coming to renovate and illuminate man's
nature was pre-announced by God -- I mean Christ, that Son of God.
And so the supreme Head and Master of this grace and discipline,
the Enlightener and Trainer of the human race, God's own Son, was
announced among us, born -- but not so born as to make Him ashamed
of the name of Son or of His paternal origin. It was not His lot
to have as His father, by incest with a sister, or by violation
of a daughter or another's wife, a god in the shape of serpent,
or ox, or bird, or lover, for his vile ends transmuting himself
into the gold of Danaus. They are your divinities upon whom these
base deeds of Jupiter were done. But the Son of God has no mother
in any sense which involves impurity; she, whom men suppose to be
His mother in the ordinary way, had never entered into the marriage
bond [i.e.consummated marriage with Mary].
c.
But, first, I shall discuss His essential nature, and so the nature
of His birth will be understood. We have already asserted that God
made the world, and all which it contains, by His Word, and Reason,
and Power. It is abundantly plain that your philosophers, too, regard
the Logos -- that is, the Word and Reason -- as the Creator of the
universe. For Zeno lays it down that he is the creator, having made
all things according to a determinate plan; that his name is Fate,
and God, and the soul of Jupiter, and the necessity of all things.
Cleanthes ascribes all this to spirit, which he maintains pervades
the universe. And we, in like manner, hold that the Word, and Reason,
and Power, by which we have said God made all, have spirit as their
proper and essential substratum, in which the Word has in being
to give forth utterances, and reason abides to dispose and arrange,
and power is over all to execute. We have been taught that He proceeds
forth from God, and in that procession He is generated; so that
He is the Son of God, and is called God from unity of substance
with God. For God, too, is a Spirit. Even when the ray is shot from
the sun, it is still part of the parent mass; the sun will still
be in the ray, because it is a ray of the sun -- there is no division
of substance, but merely an extension. Thus Christ is Spirit of
Spirit, and God of God, as light of light is kindled. The material
matrix remains entire and unimpaired, though you derive from it
any number of shoots possessed of its qualities; so, too, that which
has come forth out of God is at once God and the Son of God, and
the two are one. In this way also, as He is Spirit of Spirit and
God of God, He is made a second in manner of existence -- in position,
not in nature; and He did not withdraw from the original source,
but went forth. This ray of God, then, as it was always foretold
in ancient times, descending into a certain virgin, and made flesh
in her womb, is in His birth God and man united. The flesh formed
by the Spirit is nourished, grows up to manhood, speaks, teaches,
works, and is the Christ.
d.
As, then, under the force of their pre-judgment, they had convinced
themselves from His lowly guise that Christ was no more than man,
it followed from that, as a necessary consequence, that they should
hold Him a magician from the powers which He displayed, -- expelling
devils from men by a word, restoring vision to the blind, cleansing
the leprous, reinvigorating the paralytic, summoning the dead to
life again, making the very elements of nature obey Him, stilling
the storms and walking on the sea; proving that He was the Logos
of God, that primordial first -- begotten Word, accompanied by power
and reason, and based on Spirit, -- that He who was now doing all
things by His word, and He who had done that of old, were one and
the same.
e.
We say, and before all men we say, and torn and bleeding under your
tortures, we cry out, "We worship God through Christ."
Count Christ a man, if you please; by Him and in Him God would be
known and be adored.
Against
Praxaes
Chapter
27 The Distinction of the Father and the Son, Thus Established,
He Now Proves the Distinction of the Two Natures, Which Were, Without
Confusion, United in the Person of the Son. The Subterfuges of Praxeas
Thus Exposed.
a.
But why should I linger over matters which are so evident, when
I ought to be attacking points on which they seek to obscure the
plainest proof? For, confuted on all sides on the distinction between
the Father and the Son, which we maintain without destroying their
inseparable unionas (by the examples) of the sun and the ray,
and the fountain and the riveryet, by help of (their conceit)
an indivisible number, (with issues) of two and three, they endeavour
to interpret this distinction in a way which shall nevertheless
tally with their own opinions: so that, all in one Person, they
distinguish two, Father and Son, understanding the Son to be flesh,
that is man, that is Jesus; and the Father to be spirit, that is
God, that is Christ. Thus they, while contending that the Father
and the Son are one and the same, do in fact begin by dividing them
rather than uniting them. For if Jesus is one, and Christ is another,
then the Son will be different from the Father, because the Son
is Jesus, and the Father is Christ. Such a monarchy as this they
learnt, I suppose, in the school of Valentinus, making twoJesus
and Christ.
b.
But this conception of theirs has been, in fact, already confuted
in what we have previously advanced, because the Word of God or
the Spirit of God is also called the power of the Highest, whom
they make the Father; whereas these relations are not themselves
the same as He whose relations they are said to be, but they proceed
from Him and appertain to Him. However, another refutation awaits
them on this point of their heresy. See, say they, it was announced
by the angel: "Therefore that Holy Thing which shall be born
of thee shall be called the Son of God." [Lk 1.35] Therefore,
(they argue, ) as it was the flesh that was born, it must be the
flesh that is the Son of God. Nay, (I answer, ) this is spoken concerning
the Spirit of God. For it was certainly of the Holy Spirit that
the virgin conceived; and that which He conceived, she brought forth.
That, therefore, had to be born which was conceived and was to be
brought forth; that is to say, the Spirit, whose "name should
be called Emmanuel which, being interpreted, is, God with us."
[Mt 1.23] Besides, the flesh is not God, so that it could not have
been said concerning it, "That Holy Thing shall be called the
Son of God," but only that Divine Being who was born in the
flesh, of whom the psalm also says, "Since God became man in
the midst of it, and established it by the will of the Father."
[Ps 87.5]
c.
Now what Divine Person was born in it? The Word, and the Spirit
which became incarnate with the Word by the will of the Father.
The Word, therefore, is incarnate; and this must be the point of
our inquiry: How the Word became flesh,whether it was by having
been transfigured, as it were, in the flesh, or by having really
clothed Himself in flesh. Certainly it was by a real clothing of
Himself in flesh. For the rest, we must needs believe God to be
unchangeable, and incapable of form, as being eternal. But transfiguration
is the destruction of that which previously existed. For whatsoever
is transfigured into some other thing ceases to be that which it
had been, and begins to be that which it previously was not. God,
however, neither ceases to be what He was, nor can He be any other
thing than what He is. The Word is God, and "the Word of the
Lord remains for ever,"even by holding on unchangeably
in His own proper form. Now, if He admits not of being transfigured,
it must follow that He be understood in this sense to have become
flesh, when He comes to be in the flesh, and is manifested, and
is seen, and is handled by means of the flesh; since all the other
points likewise require to be thus understood.
d.
For if the Word became flesh by a transfiguration and change of
substance, it follows at once that Jesus must be a substance compounded
of two substancesof flesh and spirit,a kind of mixture,
like electrum, composed of gold and silver; and it begins to be
neither gold (that is to say, spirit) nor silver (that is to say,
flesh),the one being changed by the other, and a third substance
produced. Jesus, therefore, cannot at this rate be God for He has
ceased to be the Word, which was made flesh; nor can He be Man incarnate
for He is not properly flesh, and it was flesh which the Word became.
Being compounded, therefore, of both, He actually is neither; He
is rather some third substance, very different from either.
e.
But the truth is, we find that He is expressly set forth as both
God and Man; the very psalm which we have quoted intimating (of
the flesh), that "God became Man in the midst of it, He therefore
established it by the will of the Father,"certainly in
all respects as the Son of God and the Son of Man, being God and
Man, differing no doubt according to each substance in its own especial
property, inasmuch as the Word is nothing else but God, and the
flesh nothing else but Man. Thus does the apostle also teach respecting
His two substances, saying, "who was made of the seed of David;
" in which words He will be Man and Son of Man. "Who was
declared to be the Son of God, according to the Spirit; " [Rom
1.34] in which words He will be God, and the Wordthe Son of
God. We see plainly the twofold state, which is not confounded,
but conjoined in One PersonJesus, God and Man. Concerning
Christ, indeed, I defer what I have to say. (I remark here), that
the characteristic property of each nature [communion of properties]
is so wholly preserved, that the Spirit on the one hand did all
things in Jesus suitable to Itself, such as miracles, and mighty
deeds, and wonders; and the Flesh, on the other hand, exhibited
the affections which belong to it. It was hungry under the devil's
temptation, thirsty with the Samaritan woman, wept over Lazarus,
was troubled even unto death, and at last actually died. If, however,
it was only a tertium quid, some composite essence formed out of
the Two substances, like the electrum (which we have mentioned),
there would be no distinct proofs apparent of either nature. But
by a transfer of functions, the Spirit would have done things to
be done by the Flesh, and the Flesh such as are effected by the
Spirit; or else such things as are suited neither to the Flesh nor
to the Spirit, but confusedly of some third character. Nay more,
on this supposition, either the Word underwent death, or the flesh
did not die, if so be the Word was converted into flesh; because
either the flesh was immortal, or the Word was modal. Forasmuch,
however, as the two substances acted distinctly, each in its own
character, there necessarily accrued to them severally their own
operations, and their own issues.
f.
Learn then, together with Nicodemus, that "that which is born
in the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is Spirit."
Neither the flesh becomes Spirit, nor the Spirit flesh. In one Person
they no doubt are well able to be co-existent. Of them Jesus consistsMan
of the flesh; of the Spirit, Godand the angel designated Him
as "the Son of God," in respect of that nature, in which
He was Spirit, reserving for the flesh the appellation "Son
of Man." In like manner, again, the apostle calls Him "the
Mediator between God and Men," [1 Tim 2.5] and so affirmed
His participation of both substances. Now, to end the matter, will
you, who interpret the Son of God to be flesh, be so good as to
show us what the Son of Man is? Will He then, I want to know, be
the Spirit? But you insist upon it that the Father Himself is the
Spirit, on the ground that "God is a Spirit," just as
if we did not read also that there is "the Spirit of God; "in
the same manner as we find that as "the Word was God,"
so also there is "the Word of God."
On
the Flesh of Christ
Chapter
I.The General Purport of This Work. The Heretics, Marcion,
Apelles, and Valentinus, Wishing to Impugn the Doctrine of the Resurrection,
Deprive Christ of All Capacity for Such a Change by Denying His
Flesh.
a.
They who are so anxious to shake that belief in the resurrection
which was firmly settled before the appearance of our modern Sadducees,
as even to deny that the expectation thereof has any relation whatever
to the flesh, have great cause for besetting the flesh of Christ
also with doubtful questions, as if it either had no existence at
all, or possessed a nature altogether different from human flesh.
For they cannot but be apprehensive that, if it be once determined
that Christ's flesh was human, a presumption would immediately arise
in opposition to them, that flesh must by all means rise again,
which has already risen in Christ. Therefore we shall have to guard
our belief in the resurrection from the same armoury, whence they
get their weapons of destruction.
b.
Let us examine our Lord's bodily substance, for about His spiritual
nature all are agreed. It is His flesh that is in question. Its
verity and quality are the points in dispute. Did it ever exist?
whence was it derived? and of what kind was it? If we succeed in
demonstrating it, we shall lay down a law for our own resurrection.
Marcion, in order that he might deny the flesh of Christ, denied
also His nativity, or else he denied His flesh in order that he
might deny His nativity; because, of course, he was afraid that
His nativity and His flesh bore mutual testimony to each other's
reality, since there is no nativity without flesh, and no flesh
without nativity. As if indeed, under the prompting of that licence
which is ever the same in all heresy, he too might not very well
have either denied the nativity, although admitting the flesh,like
Apelles, who was first a disciple of his, and afterwards an apostate,or,
while admitting both the flesh and the nativity, have interpreted
them in a different sense, as did Valentinus, who resembled Apelles
both in his discipleship and desertion of Marcion. At all events,
he who represented the flesh of Christ to be imaginary was equally
able to pass off His nativity as a phantom; so that the virgin's
conception, and pregnancy, and child-bearing, and then the whole
course of her infant too, would have to be regarded as putative.
These facts pertaining to the nativity of Christ would escape the
notice of the same eyes and the same senses as failed to grasp the
full idea of His flesh.
Chapter
3Christ's Nativity Both Possible and Becoming. The Heretical
Opinion of Christ's Apparent Flesh Deceptive and Dishonourable to
God, Even on Marcion's Principles.
a.
Since you think that this lay within the competency of your own
arbitrary choice, you must needs have supposed that being born was
either impossible for God, or unbecoming to Him. With God, however,
nothing is impossible but what He does not will.
b.
Let us consider, then, whether He willed to be born (for if He had
the will, He also had the power, and was born). I put the argument
very briefly. If God had willed not to be born, it matters not why,
He would not have presented Himself in the likeness of man. Now
who, when he sees a man, would deny that he had been born? What
God therefore willed not to be, He would in no wise have willed
the seeming to be. When a thing is distasteful, the very notion
of it is scouted; because it makes no difference whether a thing
exist or do not exist, if, when it does not exist, it is yet assumed
to exist. It is of course of the greatest importance that there
should be nothing false (or pretended) attributed to that which
really does not exist. But, say you, His own consciousness (of the
truth of His nature) was enough for Him. If any supposed that He
had been born, because they saw Him as a man, that was their concern.
c.
Yet with how much more dignity and consistency would He have sustained
the human character on the supposition that He was truly born; for
if He were not born, He could not have undertaken the said character
without injury to that consciousness of His which you on your side
attribute to His confidence of being able to sustain, although not
born, the character of having been born even against! His own consciousness!
Why, I want to know, was it of so much importance, that Christ should,
when perfectly aware what He really was, exhibit Himself as being
that which He was not?
d.
You cannot express any apprehension that, if He had been born and
truly clothed Himself with man's nature, He would have ceased to
be God, losing what He was, while becoming what He was not. For
God is in no danger of losing His own state and condition. But,
say you, I deny that God was truly changed to man in such wise as
to be born and endued with a body of flesh, on this ground, that
a being who is without end is also of necessity incapable of change.
For being changed into something else puts an end to the former
state. Change, therefore, is not possible to a Being who cannot
come to an end.
e.
Without doubt, the nature of things which are subject to change
is regulated by this law, that they have no permanence in the state
which is undergoing change in them, and that they come to an end
from thus wanting permanence, whilst they lose that in the process
of change which they previously were. But nothing is equal with
God; His nature is different from the condition of all things. If,
then, the things which differ from God, and from which God differs,
lose what existence they had whilst they are undergoing change,
wherein will consist the difference of the Divine Being from all
other things except in His possessing the contrary faculty of theirs,in
other words, that God can be changed into all conditions, and yet
continue just as He is?
f.
On any other supposition, He would be on the, same level with those
things which, when changed, lose the existence they had before;
whose equal, of course, He is not in any other respect, as He certainly
is not in the changeful issues of their nature.
g.
You have sometimes read and believed that the Creator's angels have
been changed into human form, and have even borne about so veritable
a body, that Abraham even washed their feet, and Lot was rescued
from the Sodomites by their hands; an angel, moreover, wrestled
with a man so strenuously with his body, that the latter desired
to be let loose, so tightly was he held. Has it, then, been permitted
to angels, which are inferior to God, after they have been changed
into human bodily form, nevertheless to remain angels? And will
you deprive God, their superior, of this faculty, as if Christ could
not continue to be God, after His real assumption of the nature
of man? Or else, did those angels appear as phantoms of flesh? You
will not, however, have the courage to say this; for if it be so
held in your belief, that the Creator's angels are in the same condition
as Christ, then Christ will belong to the same God as those angels
do, who are like Christ in their condition.
h.
If you had not purposely rejected in some instances, and corrupter
in others, the Scriptures which are opposed to your opinion, you
would have been confuted in this matter by the Gospel of John, when
it declares that the Spirit descended in the body of a dove, and
sat upon the Lord. When the said Spirit was in this condition, He
was as truly a dove as He was also a spirit; nor did He destroy
His own proper substance by the assumption of an extraneous substance.
But you ask what becomes of the dove's body, after the return of
the Spirit back to heaven, and similarly in the case of the angels.
Their withdrawal was effected in the same manner as their appearance
had been. If you had seen how their production out of nothing had
been effected, you would have known also the process of their return
to nothing. If the initial step was out of sight, so was also the
final one. Still there was solidity in their bodily substance, whatever
may have been the force by which the body became visible. What is
written cannot but have been.
Chapter
4God's Honour in the Incarnation of His Son Vindicated. Marcion's
Disparagement of Human Flesh Inconsistent as Well as Impious. Christ
Has Cleansed the Flesh. The Foolishness of God is Most Wise.
a.
Since, therefore, you do not reject the assumption of a body as
impossible or as hazardous to the character of God, it remains for
you to repudiate and censure it as unworthy of Him. Come now, beginning
from the nativity itself, declaim against the uncleanness of the
generative elements within the womb, the filthy concretion of fluid
and blood, of the growth of the flesh for nine: months long out
of that very mire. Describe the womb as it enlarges from day to
day, heavy, troublesome, restless even in sleep, changeful in its
feelings of dislike and desire. Inveigh now likewise against the
shame itself of a woman in travail which, however, ought rather
to be honoured in consideration of that peril, or to be held sacred
in respect of (the mystery of) nature.
b.
Of course you are horrified also at the infant, which is shed into
life with the embarrassments which accompany it from the womb; you
likewise, of course, loathe it even after it is washed, when it
is dressed out in its swaddling-clothes, graced with repeated anointing,
smiled on with nurse's fawns. This reverend course of nature, you,
O Marcion, (are pleased to) spit upon; and yet, in what way were
you born? You detest a human being at his birth; then after what
fashion do you love anybody? Yourself, of course, you had no love
of, when you departed from the Church and the faith of Christ. But
never mind, if you are not on good terms with yourself, or even
if you were born in a way different from other people. Christ, at
any rate, has loved even that man who was condensed in his mother's
womb amidst all its uncleanness, even that man who was brought into
life out of the said womb, even that man who was nursed amidst the
nurse's simpers. For his sake He came down (from heaven), for his
sake He preached, for his sake "He humbled Himself even unto
deaththe death of the cross." He loved, of course, the
being whom He redeemed at so great a cost. If Christ is the Creator's
Son, it was with justice that He loved His own (creature); if He
comes from another god, His love was excessive, since He redeemed
a being who belonged to another. Well, then, loving man He loved
his nativity also, and his flesh as well.
c.
Nothing can be loved apart from that through which whatever exists
has its existence. Either take away nativity, and then show us your
man; or else withdraw the flesh, and then present to our view the
being whom God has redeemedsince it is these very conditions
which constitute the man whom God has redeemed. And are you for
turning these conditions into occasions of blushing to the very
creature whom He has redeemed, (censuring them), too, us unworthy
of Him who certainly would not have redeemed them had He not loved
them? Our birth He reforms from death by a second birth from heaven;
our flesh He restores from every harassing malady; when leprous,
He cleanses it of the stain; when blind, He rekindles its light;
when palsied, He renews its strength; when possessed with devils,
He exorcises it; when dead, He reanimates it,then shall we
blush to own it?
d.
If, to be sure, He had chosen to be born of a mere animal, and were
to preach the kingdom of heaven invested with the body of a beast
either wild or tame, your censure (I imagine) would have instantly
met Him with this demurrer: "This is disgraceful for God, and
this is unworthy of the Son of God, and simply foolish." For
no other reason than because one thus judges. It is of course foolish,
if we are to judge God by our own conceptions. But, Marcion, consider
well this Scripture, if indeed you have not erased it: "God
has chosen the foolish things of the world, to confound the wise."
e.
Now what are those foolish things? Are they the conversion of men
to the worship of the true God, the rejection of error, the whole
training in righteousness, chastity, mercy, patience, and innocence?
These things certainly are not "foolish." Inquire again,
then, of what things he spoke, and when you imagine that you have
discovered what they are will you find anything to be so "foolish"
as believing in a God that has been born, and that of a virgin,
and of a fleshly nature too, who wallowed in all the beforementioned
humiliations of nature? But some one may say, "These are not
the foolish things; they must be other things which God has chosen
to confound the wisdom of the world." And yet, according to
the world's wisdom, it is more easy to believe that Jupiter became
a bull or a swan, if we listen to Marcion, than that Christ really
became a man.
Chapter
5Christ Truly Lived and Died in Human Flesh. Incidents of
His Human Life on Earth, and Refutation of Marcion's Docetic Parody
of the Same.
a.
There are, to be sure, other things also quite as foolish (as the
birth of Christ), which have reference to the humiliations and sufferings
of God. Or else, let them call a crucified God "wisdom."
But Marcion will apply the knife to this doctrine also, and even
with greater reason. For which Is more unworthy of God, which is
more likely to raise a blush of shame, that God should be born,
or that He should die? that He should bear the flesh, or the cross?
be circumcised, or be crucified? be cradled, or be coffined? be
laid in a manger, or in a tomb? Talk of "wisdom!" You
will show more of that if you refuse to believe this also. But,
after all, you will not be "wise" unless you become a
"fool" to the world, by believing" the foolish things
of God."
b.
Have you, then, cut away all sufferings from Christ, on the ground
that, as a mere phantom, He was incapable of experiencing them?
We have said above that He might possibly have undergone the unreal
mockeries of an imaginary birth and infancy. But answer me at once,
you that murder truth: Was not God really crucified? And, having
been really crucified, did He not really die? And, having indeed
really died, did He not really rise again?
c.
Falsely did Paul determine to know nothing amongst us but Jesus
and Him crucified; falsely has he impressed upon us that He was
buried; falsely inculcated that He rose again. False, therefore,
is our faith also. And all that we hope for from Christ will be
a phantom. O thou most infamous of men, who has acquitted of all
guilt the murderers of God! For nothing did Christ suffer from them,
if He really suffered nothing at all. Spare the whole world's one
only hope, thou who art destroying the indispensable dishonour of
our faith Whatsoever is unworthy of God, is of gain to me. I am
safe, if I am not ashamed of my Lord. "Whosoever," says
He, "shall be ashamed of me, of him will I also be ashamed."
[Mat 10.33]
d.
Other matters for shame find I none which can prove me to be shameless
in a good sense, and foolish in a happy one, by my own contempt
of shame. The Son of God was crucified; I am not ashamed because
men must needs be ashamed of it. And the Son of God died; it is
by all means to be believed, because it is absurd. And He was buried,
and rose again; the fact is certain, because it is impossible. But
how will all this be true in Him, if He was not Himself trueif
He really had not in Himself that which might be crucified, might
die, might be buried, and might rise again? I mean this flesh suffused
with blood, built up with bones, interwoven with nerves, entwined
with veins, a flesh which knew how to be born, and how to die, human
without doubt, as born of a human being. It will therefore be mortal
in Christ, because Christ is man and the Son of man. Else why is
Christ man and the Son of man, if he has nothing of man, and nothing
from man?
e.
Unless it be either that man is anything else than flesh, or man's
flesh comes from any other source than man, or Mary is anything
else than a human being, or Marcion's man is as Marcion's god. Christ
could not be described as being man without flesh, nor the Son of
man without any human parent; just as He is not God without the
Spirit of God, nor the Son of God without having God for His father.
f.
Thus the nature of the two substances displayed Him as man and God,in
one respect born, in the other unborn; in one respect fleshly in
the other spiritual; in one sense weak in the other exceeding strong;
in on sense dying, in the other living. This property of the two
statesthe divine and the humanis distinctly asserted
with equal truth of both natures alike, with the same belief both
in respect of the Spirit and of the flesh. The powers of the Spirit,
proved Him to be God, His sufferings attested the flesh of man.
If His powers were not without the Spirit in like manner, were not
His sufferings without the flesh. if His flesh with its sufferings
was fictitious, for the same reason was the Spirit false with all
its powers. Wherefore halve Christ with a lie? He was wholly the
truth. Believe me, He chose rather to be born, than in any part
to pretendand that indeed to His own detrimentthat He
was bearing about a flesh hardened without bones, solid without
muscles, bloody without blood, clothed without the tunic of skin,
hungry without appetite, eating without teeth, speaking without
a tongue, so that His word was a phantom to the ears through an
imaginary voice. A phantom, too, it was of course after the resurrection,
when, showing His hands and His feet for the disciples to examine,
He said, "Behold and see that it is I myself, for a spirit
has not flesh and bones, as ye see me have; " without doubt,
hands, and feet, and bones are not what a spirit possesses, but
only the flesh. How do you interpret this statement, Marcion, you
who tell us that Jesus comes only from the most excellent God, who
is both simple and good? See how He rather cheats, and deceives,
and juggles the eyes of all, and the senses of all, as well as their
access to and contact with Him! You ought rather to have brought
Christ down, not from heaven, but from some troop ofcharlatans,
not as God besides man, but simply as a man, a magician; not as
the High Priest of our salvation, but as the conjurer in a show;
not as the raiser of the dead, but as the misleader of the living,except
that, if He were a magician, He must have had a nativity!
Chapter
10 Another Class of Heretics Refuted. They Alleged that Christ's
Flesh Was of a Finer Texture, Animalis, Composed of Soul.
a.
I now turn to another class, who are equally wise in their own conceit.
They affirm that the flesh of Christ is composed of soul, that His
soul became flesh, so that His flesh is soul; and as His flesh is
of soul, so is His soul of flesh. But here, again, I must have some
reasons.
b.
If, in order to save the soul, Christ took a soul within Himself,
because it could not be saved except by Him having, it within Himself,
I see no reason why, in clothing Himself with flesh, He should have
made that flesh one of soul, as if He could not have saved the soul
in any other way than by making flesh of it. For while He saves
our souls, which are not only not of flesh, but are even distinct
from flesh, how much more able was He to secure salvation to that
soul which He took Himself, when it was also not of flesh?
c.
Again, since they assume it as a main tenet, that Christ came forth
not to deliver the flesh, but only our soul, how absurd it is, in
the first place, that, meaning to save only the soul, He yet made
it into just that sort of bodily substance which He had no intention
of saving! And, secondly, if He had undertaken deliver our souls
by means of that which He carried, He ought, in that soul which
He carried to have carried our soul, one (that is) of the same condition
as ours; and whatever is the condition of our soul in its secret
nature, it is certainly not one of flesh. However, it was not our
soul which He saved, if His own was of flesh; for ours is not of
flesh. Now, if He did not save our soul on the ground, that it was
a soul of flesh which He saved, He is nothing to us, because He
has not saved our soul. Nor indeed did it need salvation, for it
was not our soul really, since it was, on the supposition, a soul
of flesh. But yet it is evident that it has been saved. Of flesh,
therefore, it was not composed, and it was ours; for it was our
soul that was saved, since that was in peril of damnation. We therefore
now conclude that as in Christ the soul was not of flesh, so neither
could His flesh have possibly been composed of soul.
Hippolytus
Refutation
of All Heresies
Book
10
Chapter 28 -- The Doctrine of the Truth.
a.
The first and only (one God), both Creator and Lord of all, had
nothing co-eqal with Himself; not infinite chaos, nor measureless
water, nor solid earth, nor dense air, not warm fire, nor refined
spirit, nor the azure canopy of the stupendous firmament. But He
was One, alone in Himself. By an exercise of His will He created
things that are, which antecedently had no existence, except that
He willed to make them. For He is fully acquainted with whatever
is about to take place, for foreknowledge also is present to Him.
The different principles, however, of what will come into existence,
He first fabricated, viz., fire and spirit, water and earth, from
which diverse elements He proceeded to form His own creation. And
some objects He formed of one essence, but others He compounded
from two, and others from three, and others from four. And those
formed of one substance were immortal, for in their case dissolution
does not follow, for what is one will never be dissolved. Those,
on the other hand, which are formed out of two, or three, or four
substances, are dissoluble; wherefore also are they named mortal.
For this has been denominated death; namely, the dissolution of
substances connected. I now therefore think that I have sufficiently
answered those endued with a sound mind, who, if they are desirous
of additional instruction, and are disposed accurately to investigate
the substances of these things, and the causes of the entire creation,
will become acquainted with these points should they peruse a work
of ours comprised (under the title), Concerning the Substance of
the Universe. I consider, however, that at present it is enough
to elucidate those causes of which the Greeks, not being aware,
glorified, in pompous phraseology, the parts of creation, while
they remained ignorant of the Creator. And from these the heresiarchs
have taken occasion, and have transformed the statements previously
made by those Greeks into similar doctrines, and thus have framed
ridiculous heresies.
Chapter 29 -- The Doctrine of the Truth Continued.
a.
Therefore this solitary and supreme Deity, by an exercise of reflection,
brought forth the Logos first; not the word in the sense of being
articulated by voice, but as a ratiocination of the universe, conceived
and residing in the divine mind. Him alone He produced from existing
things; for the Father Himself constituted existence, and the being
born from Him was the cause of all things that are produced. The
Logos was in the Father Himself, bearing the will of His progenitor,
and not being unacquainted with the mind of the Father. For simultaneously
with His procession from His Progenitor, inasmuch as He is this
Progenitor's first-born, He has, as a voice in Himself, the ideas
conceived in the Father. And so it was, that when the Father ordered
the world to come into existence, the Logos one by one completed
each object of creation, thus pleasing God. And some things which
multiply by generation He formed male and female; but whatsoever
beings were designed for service and ministration He made either
male, or not requiring females, or neither male nor female. For
even the primary substances of these, which were formed out of nonentities,
viz., fire and spirit, water and earth, are neither male nor female;
nor could male or female proceed from any one of these, were it
not that God, who is the source of all authority, wished that the
Logos might render assistance in accomplishing a production of this
kind. I confess that angels are of fire, and I maintain that female
spirits are not present with them. And I am of opinion that sun
and moon and stars, in like manner, are produced from fire and spirit,
and are neither male nor female. And the will of the Creator is,
that swimming and winged animals are from water, male and female.
For so God, whose will it was, ordered that there should exist a
moist substance, endued with productive power. And in like manner
God commanded, that from earth should arise reptiles and beasts,
as well males and females of all sorts of animals; for so the nature
of the things produced admitted. For as many things as He willed,
God made from time to time. These things He created through the
Logos, it not being possible for things to be generated otherwise
than as they were produced. But when, according as He willed, He
also formed (objects), He called them by names, and thus notified
His creative effort [or will]. And making these, He formed the ruler
of all, and fashioned him out of all composite substances. The Creator
did not wish to make him a god, and failed in His aim; nor an angel,
-- be not deceived, -- but a man. For if He had willed to make you
a god, He could have done so. You have the example of the Logos.
His will, however, was, that you should be a man, and He has made
you a man. But if you art desirous of also becoming a god, obey
Him that has created you, and resist not now, in order that, being
found faithful in that which is small, you may be enabled to have
entrusted to you also that which is great [Matt. 25.21, 23; Luke
16.10-12].
b.
The Logos alone of this God is from God himself; wherefore also
the Logos is God, being the substance of God. Now the world was
made from nothing [creatio ex nihilo]; wherefore it is not
God; as also because this world admits of dissolution whenever the
Creator so wishes it. But God, who created it, did not, nor does
not, make evil. He makes what is glorious and excellent; for He
who makes it is good. Now man, that was brought into existence,
was a creature endued with a capacity of self-determination, yet
not possessing a sovereign intellect, nor holding sway over all
things by reflection, and authority, and power, but a slave to his
passions, and comprising all sorts of contrarieties in himself.
But man, from the fact of his possessing a capacity of self-determination,
brings forth what is evil, that is, accidentally; which evil is
not consummated except you actually commit some piece of wickedness.
For it is in regard of our desiring anything that is wicked, or
our meditating upon it, that what is evil is so denominated. Evil
had no existence from the beginning, but came into being subsequently.
Since man has free will, a law has been defined for his guidance
by the Deity, not without answering a good purpose. For if man did
not possess the power to will and not to will, why should a law
be established? For a law will not be laid down for an animal devoid
of reason, but a bridle and a whip; [cf. Ps 32.9] whereas to man
has been given a precept and penalty to perform, or for not carrying
into execution what has been enjoined. For man thus constituted
has a law been enacted by just men in primitive ages. Nearer our
own day was there established a law, full of gravity and justice,
by Moses, to whom allusion has been already made, a devout man,
and one beloved of God.
c.
Now the Logos of God controls all these; the first begotten Child
of the Father, the voice of the Dawn antecedent to the Morning Star
[Ps 110.3; 2 Pet 1.18, 19]. Afterwards just men were born, friends
of God; and these have been styled prophets, on account of their
foreshadowing future events. And the word of prophecy was committed
unto them, not for one age only; but also the utterances of events
predicted throughout all generations, were vouchsafed in perfect
clearness. And this, too, not at the time merely when seers furnished
a reply to those present; but also events that would happen throughout
all ages, have been manifested beforehand; because, in speaking
of incidents gone by, the prophets brought them back to the recollection
of humanity; whereas, in showing forth present occurrences, they
endeavoured to persuade men not to be remiss; while, by foretelling
future events, they have rendered each one of us terrified on beholding
events that had been predicted long before, and on expecting likewise
those events predicted as still future. Such is our faith, O all
you men, -- ours, I say, who are not persuaded by empty expressions,
nor caught away by sudden impulses of the heart, nor beguiled by
the plausibility of eloquent discourses, yet who do not refuse to
obey words that have been uttered by divine power. And these injunctions
has God given to the Word. But the Word, by declaring them, promulgated
the divine commandments, thereby turning man from disobedience,
not bringing him into servitude by force of necessity, but summoning
him to liberty through a choice involving spontaneity.
d.
This Logos the Father in the latter days sent forth, no longer to
speak by a prophet, and not wishing that the Word, being obscurely
proclaimed, should be made the subject of mere conjecture, but that
He should be manifested, so that we could see Him with our own eyes.
This Logos, I say, the Father sent forth, in order that the world,
on beholding Him, might reverence Him who was delivering precepts
not by the person of prophets, nor terrifying the soul by an angel,
but who was Himself -- He that had spoken -- corporally present
amongst us. This Logos we know to have received a body from a virgin,
and to have remodelled the old man by a new creation. And we believe
the Logos to have passed through every period in this life, in order
that He Himself might serve as a law for every age, [cf. Irenaeus?]
and that, by being present (among) us, He might exhibit His own
manhood as an aim for all men. And that by Himself in person He
might prove that God made nothing evil, and that man possesses the
capacity of self-determination, inasmuch as he is able to will and
not to will, and is endued with power to do both. This Man we know
to have been made out of the compound of our humanity. For if He
were not of the same nature with ourselves, in vain does He ordain
that we should imitate the Teacher. For if that Man happened to
be of a different substance from us, why does He lay injunctions
similar to those He has received on myself, who am born weak; and
how is this the act of one that is good and just? In order, however,
that He might not be supposed to be different from us, He even underwent
toil, and was willing to endure hunger, and did not refuse to feel
thirst, and sunk into the quietude of slumber. He did not protest
against His Passion, but became obedient unto death, and manifested
His resurrection. Now in all these acts He offered up, as the first-fruits,
His own manhood, in order that you, when you art in tribulation,
may not be disheartened, but, confessing thyself to be a man (of
like nature with the Redeemer), may dwell in expectation of also
receiving what the Father has granted unto this Son.
Chapter 30 -- The Author's Concluding Address.
a.
Such is the true doctrine in regard of the divine nature, O you
men, Greeks and Barbarians, Chaldeans and Assyrians, Egyptians and
Libyans, Indians and Ethiopians, Celts, and you Latins, who lead
armies, and all you that inhabit Europe, and Asia, and Libya. And
to you I am become an adviser, inasmuch as I am a disciple of the
benevolent Logos, and hence humane, in order that you may hasten
and by us may be taught who the true God is, and what is His well-ordered
creation. Do not devote your attention to the fallacies of artificial
discourses, nor the vain promises of plagiarizing heretics, but
to the venerable simplicity of unassuming truth. And by means of
this knowledge you shall escape the approaching threat of the fire
of judgement, and the rayless scenery of gloomy Tartarus, where
never shines a beam from the irradiating voice of the Word!
b.
You shall escape the boiling flood of hell's eternal lake of fire
and the eye ever fixed in menacing glare of fallen angels chained
in Tartarus as punishment for their sins; and you shall escape the
worm that ceaselessly coils for food around the body whose scum
has bred it. Now such (torments) as these shall you avoid by being
instructed in a knowledge of the true God. And you shall possess
an immortal body, even one placed beyond the possibility of corruption,
just like the soul. And you shall receive the kingdom of heaven,
you who, whilst you did sojourn in this life, did know the Celestial
King. And you shall be a companion of the Deity, and a co-heir with
Christ, no longer enslaved by lusts or passions, and never again
wasted by disease. For you have become God: [cf. 2 Pet 1.4 compared
with John 17.22, 23 & Rev 3.21] for whatever sufferings you
did undergo while being a man, these He gave to you, because you
was of mortal mould, but whatever it is consistent with God to impart,
these God has promised to bestow upon you, because you have been
deified, and begotten unto immortality [cf. John 10.34 with Rev
5.10]. This constitutes the import of the proverb, "Know thyself;
" i.e., discover God within thyself, for He has formed you
after His own image. For with the knowledge of self is conjoined
the being an object of God's knowledge, for you art called by the
Deity Himself. Be not therefore inflamed, O you men, with enmity
one towards another, nor hesitate to retrace with all speed your
steps. For Christ is the God above all, and He has arranged to wash
away sin from human beings, rendering regenerate the old man. And
God called man His likeness from the beginning, and has evinced
in a figure His love towards you. And provided you obey His solemn
injunctions, and becomes a faithful follower of Him who is good,
you shall resemble Him, inasmuch as you shall have honour conferred
upon you by Him. For the Deity, (by condescension,) does not diminish
any of the divinity of His divine perfection; having made you even
God unto His glory!
Novatian
On the Trinity
Chapter
10 -- Argument -- That Jesus Christ is the Son of God and Truly Man,
as Opposed to the Fancies of Heretics, Who Deny that He Took Upon
Him True Flesh.
a.
But of this I remind you, that Christ was not to be expected in
the Gospel in any other wise than as He was promised before by the
Creator, in the Scriptures of the Old Testament; especially as the
things that were predicted of Him were fulfilled, and those things
that were fulfilled had been predicted. As with reason I might truly
and constantly say to that fanciful -- I know not what -- of those
heretics who reject the authority of the Old Testament, as to a
Christ feigned and coloured up from old wives' fables: "Who
art you? Whence art you? By whom art you sent? Wherefore have you
now chosen to come? Why such as you art? Or how have you been able
to come? Or wherefore have you not gone to your own, except that
you have proved that you have none of your own, by coming to those
of another? What have you to do with the Creator's world? What have
you to do with the Creator's man? What have you to do with the image
of a body from which you take away the hope of resurrection? Why
come you to another man's servant, and desire you to solicit another
man's son? Why do you strive to take me away from the Lord? Why
do you compel me to blaspheme, and to be impious to my Father? Or
what shall I gain from you in the resurrection, if I do not receive
myself when I lose my body? If you wish to save, you should have
made a man to whom to give salvation. If you desire to snatch from
sin, you should have granted to me previously that I should not
fall into sin. But what approbation of law do you carry about with
you? What testimony of the prophetic word have you? Or what substantial
good can I promise myself from you, when I see that you have come
in a phantasm and not in a bodily substance? What, then, have you
to do with the form of a body, if you hate a body? Nay, you wilt
be refitted as to the hatred of bearing about the substance of a
body, since you have been willing even to take up its form. For
you ought to have hated the imitation of a body, if you hated the
reality; because, if you art something else, you ought to have come
as something else, lest you should be called the Son of the Creator
if you had even the likeness of flesh and body. Assuredly, if you
hate being born because you hate ' the Creator's marriage-union,
' you ought to refuse even the likeness of a man who is born by
the 'marriage of the Creator.'"
b.
Neither, therefore, do we acknowledge that that is a Christ of the
heretics who was -- as it is said -- in appearance and not in reality
[ = Docetism]; for of those things which he did, he could
have done nothing real, if he himself was a phantasm, and not reality.
Nor him who wore nothing of our body in himself, seeing "he
received nothing from Mary; "neither did he come to us, since
he appeared "as a vision, not in our substance." Nor do
we acknowledge that to be Christ who chose an ethereal or starry
flesh, as some heretics have pretended. Nor can we perceive any
salvation of ours in him, if in him we do not even recognise the
substance of our body; nor, in short, any other who may have worn
any other kind of fabulous body of heretical device. For all such
fables as these are confuted as well by the nativity as by the death
itself of our Lord. For John says: "The Word was made flesh,
and dwelt among us; " [Jn 1.14] so that, reasonably, our body
should be in Him, because indeed the Word took on Him our flesh.
And for this reason blood flowed forth from His hands and feet,
and from His very side, so that He might be proved to be a sharer
in our body by dying according to the laws of our dissolution. And
that He was raised again in the same bodily substance in which He
died, is proved by the wounds of that very body, and thus He showed
the laws of our resurrection in His flesh, in that He restored the
same body in His resurrection which He had from us. For a law of
resurrection is established, in that Christ is raised up in the
substance of the body as an example for the rest; because, when
it is written that "flesh and blood do not inherit the kingdom
of God," [2 Cor 16.50] it is not the substance of the flesh
that is condemned, which was built up by the divine hands that it
should not perish, but only the guilt of the flesh is rightly rebuked,
which by the voluntary daring of man rebelled against the claims
of divine law. Because in baptism and in the dissolution of death
the flesh is raised up and returns to salvation, by being recalled
to the condition of innocency when the mortality of guilt is put
away.
Chapter 11 -- And Indeed that Christ Was Not Only Man, But God Also;
That Even as He Was the Son of Man, So Also He Was the Son of God.
a.
But lest, from the fact of asserting that our Lord Jesus Christ,
the Son of God, the Creator, was manifested in the substance of
the true body, we should seem either to have given assent to other
heretics, who in this place maintain that He is man only and alone,
and therefore desire to prove that He was a man bare and solitary;
and lest we should seem to have afforded them any ground for objecting,
we do not so express doctrine concerning the substance of His body,
as to say that He is only and alone man, but so as to maintain,
by the association of the divinity of the Word in that very materiality,
that He was also God according to the Scriptures. For there is a
great risk of saying that the Saviour of the human race was only
man; that the Lord of all, and the Chief of the world, to whom all
things were delivered, and all things were granted by His Father,
by whom all things were ordained, all things were created, all things
were arranged, the King of all ages and times, the Prince of all
the angels, before whom there is none but the Father, was only man,
and denying to Him divine authority in these things. For this contempt
of the heretics will recoil also upon God the Father, if God the
Father could not beget God the Son. But, moreover, no blindness
of the heretics shall prescribe to the truth. Nor, because they
maintain one thing in Christ and, do not maintain another, they
see one side of Christ and do not see another, shall there be taken
away from us that which they do not see for the sake of that which
they do. For they regard the weaknesses in Him as if they were a
man's weaknesses, but they do not count the powers as if they were
a God's powers. They keep in mind the infirmities of the flesh,
they exclude the powers of the divinity; when if this argument from
the infirmities of Christ is of avail to the result of proving Him
to be man from His infirmities, the argument of divinity in Him
gathered from His powers avails to the result also of asserting
Him to be God from His works. For if His sufferings show in Him
human frailty, why may not His works assert in Him divine power?
For if this should not avail to assert Him to be God from His powers,
neither can His sufferings avail to show Him to be man also from
them. For whatever principle be adopted on one or the other side,
will be found to be maintained. For there will be a risk that He
should not be shown to be man from His sufferings, if He could not
also be approved as God by His powers.
b.
We must not then lean to one side and evade the other side, because
any one who should exclude one portion of the truth will never hold
the perfect truth. For Scripture as much announces Christ as also
God, as it announces God Himself as man. It has as much described
Jesus Christ to be man, as moreover it has also described Christ
the Lord to be God. Because it does not set forth Him to be the
Son of God only, but also the Son of man; nor does it only say,
the Son of man, but it has also been accustomed to speak of Him
as the Son of God. So that being of both, He is both, lest if He
should be one only, He could not be the other. For as nature itself
has prescribed that he must be believed to be a man who is of man,
so the same nature prescribes also that He must be believed to be
God who is of God; but if he should not also be God when be is of
God, no more should he be man although he should be of man. And
thus both doctrines would be endangered in one and the other way,
by one being convicted to have lost belief in the other. Let them,
therefore, who read that Jesus Christ the Son of man is man, read
also that this same Jesus is called also God and the Son of God.
For in the manner that as man He is of Abraham, so also as God He
is before Abraham himself. And in the same manner as He is as man
the "Son of David," [Mt 23.42ff.] so as God He is proclaimed
David's Lord. And in the same manner as He was made as man "under
the law," [Gal 4.4] so as God He is declared to be "Lord
of the Sabbath." [Lk 6.5]. And in the same manner as He suffers,
as man, the condemnation, so as God He is found to have all judgement
of the quick and dead. And in the same manner as He is born as man
subsequent to the world, so as God He is manifested to have been
before the world. And in the same way as He was begotten as man
of the seed of David, so also the world is said to have been ordained
by Him as God. And in the same way as He was as man after many,
so as God He was before all. And in the same manner as He was as
man inferior to others, so as God He was greater than all. And in
the same manner as He ascended as man into heaven, so as God He
had first descended thence. And in the same manner as He goes as
man to the Father, so as the Son in obedience to the Father He shall
descend thence. So if imperfections in Him prove human frailty,
majesties in Him affirm divine power. For the risk is, in reading
of both, to believe not both, but one of the two. Wherefore as both
are read of in Christ, let both be believed; that so finally the
faith may be true, being also complete. For if of two principles
one gives way in the faith, and the other, and that indeed which
is of least importance, be taken up for belief, the rule of truth
is thrown into confusion; and that boldness will not confer salvation,
but instead of salvation will effect a great risk of death from
the overthrow of the faith.
Chapter
31 -- Argument -- But that God, the Son of God, Born of God the Father
from Everlasting, Who Was Always in the Father, is the Second Person
to the Father, Who Does Nothing Without His Father's Decree; And
that He is Lord, and the Angel of God's Great Counsel, to Whom the
Father's Godhead is Given by Community of Substance.
a.
Thus God the Father, the Founder and Creator of all things, who
only knows no beginning, invisible, infinite, immortal, eternal,
is one God; to whose greatness, or majesty, or power, I would not
say nothing can be preferred, but nothing can be compared; of whom,
when He willed it, the Son, the Word, was born, who is not received
in the sound of the stricken air, or in the tone of voice forced
from the lungs, but is acknowledged in the substance of the power
put forth by God, the mysteries of whose sacred and divine nativity
neither an apostle has learnt, nor prophet has discovered, nor angel
has known, nor creature has apprehended. To the Son alone they are
known, who has known the secrets of the Father. He then, since He
was begotten of the Father, is always in the Father. And I thus
say always, that I may show Him not to be unborn, but born. But
He who is before all time must be said to have been always in the
Father; for no time can be assigned to Him who is before all time.
And He is always in the Father, unless the Father be not always
Father, only that the Father also precedes Him, -- in a certain
sense, -- since it is necessary -- in some degree -- that He should
be before He is Father. Because it is essential that He who knows
no beginning must go before Him who has a beginning; even as He
is the less as knowing that He is in Him, having an origin because
He is born, and of like nature with the Father in some measure by
His nativity, although He has a beginning in that He is born, inasmuch
as He is born of that Father who alone has no beginning.
b.
He, then, when the Father willed it, proceeded from the Father,
and He who was in the Father came forth from the Father; and He
who was in the Father because He was of the Father, was subsequently
with the Father, because He came forth from the Father, -- that
is to say, that divine substance whose name is the Word, whereby
all things were made, and without whom nothing was made. For all
things are after Him, because they are by Him. And reasonably, He
is before all things, but after the Father, since all things were
made by Him, and He proceeded from Him of whose will all things
were made. Assuredly God proceeding from God, causing a person second
to the Father as being the Son, but not taking from the Father that
characteristic that He is one God. For if He had not been born --
compared with Him who was unborn, an equality being manifested in
both -- He would make two unborn beings, and thus would make two
Gods. If He had not been begotten -- compared with Him who was not
begotten, and as being found equal -- they not being begotten, would
have reasonably given two Gods, and thus Christ would have been
the cause of two Gods. Had He been formed without beginning as the
Father, and He Himself the beginning of all things as is the Father,
this would have made two beginnings, and consequently would have
shown to us two Gods also. Or if He also were not the Son, but the
Father begetting from Himself another Son, reasonably, as compared
with the Father, and designated as great as He, He would have caused
two Fathers, and thus also He would have proved the existence of
two Gods. Had He been invisible, as compared with the Invisible,
and declared equal, He would have shown forth two Invisibles, and
thus also He would have proved them to be two Gods. If incomprehensible,
if also whatever other attributes belong to the Father, reasonably
we say, He would have given rise to the allegation of two Gods,
as these people feign.
c.
But now, whatever He is, He is not of Himself, because He is not
unborn; but He is of the Father, because He is begotten, whether
as being the Word, whether as being the Power, or as being the Wisdom,
or as being the Light, or as being the Son; and whatever of these
He is, in that He is not from any other source, as we have already
said before, than from the Father, owing His origin to His Father,
He could not make a disagreement in the divinity by the number of
two Gods, since He gathered His beginning by being born of Him who
is one God. In which kind, being both as well only -- begotten as
first -- begotten of Him who has no beginning, He is the only one,
of all things both Source and Head. And therefore He declared that
God is one, in that He proved Him to be from no source nor beginning,
but rather the beginning and source of all things. Moreover, the
Son does nothing of His own will, nor does anything of His own determination;
nor does He come from Himself, but obeys all His Father's commands
and precepts; so that, although birth proves Him to he a Son, yet
obedience even to death declares Him the minister of the will of
His Father, of whom He is. Thus making Himself obedient to His Father
in all things, although He also is God, yet He shows the one God
the Father by His obedience, from whom also He drew His beginning.
And thus He could not make two Gods, because He did not make two
beginnings, seeing that from Him who has no beginning He received
the source of His nativity before all time. For since that is the
beginning to other creatures which is unborn, -- which God the Father
only is, being beyond a beginning of whom He is who was born, --
while He who is born of Him reasonably comes from Him who has no
beginning, proving that to be the beginning from which He Himself
is, even although He is God who is born, yet He shows Him to be
one God whom He who was born proved to be without a beginning. He
therefore is God, but begotten for this special result, that He
should be God.
d.
He is also the Lord, but born for this very purpose of the Father,
that He might be Lord. He is also an Angel, but He was destined
of the Father as an Angel to announce the Great Counsel of God.
And His divinity is thus declared, that it may not appear by any
dissonance or inequality of divinity to have caused two Gods. For
all things being subjected to Him as the Son by the Father, while
He Himself, with those things which are subjected to Him, is subjected
to His Father, He is indeed proved to be Son of His Father; but
He is found to be both Lord and God of all else. Whence, while all
things put under Him are delivered to Him who is God, and all things
are subjected to Him, the Son refers all that He has received to
the Father, remits again to the Father the whole authority of His
divinity. The true and eternal Father is manifested as the one God,
from whom alone this power of divinity is sent forth, and also given
and directed upon the Son, and is again returned by the communion
of substance to the Father. God indeed is shown as the Son, to whom
the divinity is beheld to be given and extended. And still, nevertheless,
the Father is proved to be one God; while by degrees in reciprocal
transfer that majesty and divinity are again returned and reflected
as sent by the Son Himself to the Father, who had given them; so
that reasonably God the Father is God of all, and the source also
of His Son Himself whom He begot as Lord. Moreover, the Son is God
of all else, because God the Father put before all Him whom He begot.
Thus the Mediator of God and men, Christ Jesus, having the power
of every creature subjected to Him by His own Father, inasmuch as
He is God; with every creature subdued to Him, found at one with
His Father God, has, by abiding in that condition that He moreover
"was heard," [Heb 5.7] briefly proved God His Father to
be one and only and true God.
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