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ST. ATHANASIUS
COUNCIL OF NICAEA
Letter of Eusebius of Caesarea to the people of his Diocese [1].
1. What was transacted concerning ecclesiastical faith at the Great Council
assembled at NicAEa, you have probably learned, Beloved, from other sources,
rumour being wont to precede the accurate account of what is doing. But lest
in such reports the circumstances of the case have been misrepresented, we
have been obliged to transmit to you, first, the formula of faith presented
by ourselves, and next, the second, which [the Fathers] put forth with some
additions to our words. Our own paper, then, which was read in the presence
of our most pious [2] Emperor, and declared to be good and unexceptionable,
ran thus:--
2. "As
we have received from the Bishops who preceded us, and in our first catechisings,
and when
we received
the Holy Layer, and as we have learned
from the divine Scriptures, and as we believed and taught in the presbytery,
and in the Episcopate itself, so believing also at the time present, we report
to you our faith, and it is this [3]:--
3. "We believe in One God, the Father Almighty, the Maker of all things
visible and invisible. And in One Lord Jesus Christ, the Word of God, God from
God, Light from Light, Life from Life, Son Only-begotten, first-born of every
creature, before all the ages, begotten from the Father, by Whom also all things
were made; Who for our salvation was made flesh, and lived among men, and suffered,
and rose again the third day, and ascended to the Father, and will come again
in glory to judge the quick and dead. And we believe also in One Holy Ghost: "believing
each of these to be and to exist, the Father truly Father, and the Son truly
Son, and the Holy Ghost truly Holy Ghost, as also our Lord, sending forth His
disciples for the preaching, said, "Go teach all nations, baptizing them
in the Name of the Father and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost [4]." Concerning
Whom we confidently affirm that so we hold, and so we think, and so we have
held aforetime, and we maintain this faith unto the death, anathematizing every
godless heresy. That this we have ever thought from our heart and soul, from
the time we recollect ourselves, and now think and say in truth, before God
Almighty and our Lord Jesus Christ do we witness, being able by proofs to shew
and to convince you, that, even in times past, such has been our belief and
preaching."
4. On this faith being publicly put forth by us, no room for contradiction
appeared; but our most pious Emperor, before any one else, testified that it
comprised most orthodox statements. He confessed moreover that such were his
own sentiments, and he advised all present to agree to it, and to subscribe
its articles and to assent to them, with the insertion of the single word,
One-in-essence, which moreover he interpreted as not in the sense of the affections
of bodies, nor as if the Son subsisted from the Father in the way of division,
or any severance; for that the immaterial, and intellectual, and incorporeal
nature could not be the subject of any corporeal affection, but that it became
us to conceive of such things in a divine and ineffable manner. And such were
the theological remarks of our most wise and most religious Emperor; but they,
with a view (4a) to the addition of One in essence, drew up the following formula:--
The Faith dictated in the Council.
"We
believe in One God, the Father Almighty, Maker of all things visible and
invisible:--
"And in One Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, begotten of the Father,
Only-begotten, that is, from the essence of the Father; God from God, Light
from Light, Very God from Very God, begotten not made, One in essence with
the Father, by Whom all things were made, both things in heaven and things
in earth; Who for us men and for our salvation came down and was made flesh,
was made man, suffered, and rose again the third day, ascended into heaven,
and cometh to judge quick and dead. "And in the Holy Ghost.
"And
those who say, 'Once He was not,' and 'Before His generation He was not,'
and 'He came to
be from
nothing,' or those who pretend that the Son
of God is 'Of other subsistence or essence (4b),' or 'created' or alterable,'
or 'mutable,' the Catholic Church anathematizes."
5. On
their dictating this formula, we did not let it pass without inquiry in what
sense they introduced" of the essence of the Father," and "one
in essence with the Father." Accordingly questions and explanations took
place, and the meaning of the words underwent the scrutiny of reason. And they
professed, that the phrase "of the essence" was indicative of the
Son's being indeed from the Father, yet without being as if a part of Him.
And with this understanding we thought good to assent to the sense of such
religious doctrine, teaching, as it did, that the Son was from the Father,
not however a part of His essence (5). On this account we assented to the sense
ourselves, without declining even the term "One in essence," peace
being the object which we set before us, and stedfastness in the orthodox view.
6. In
the same way we also admitted "begotten, not made;" since
the Council alleged that "made" was an appellative common to the
other creatures which came to be through the Son, to whom the Son had no likeness.
Wherefore, say they, He was not a work resembling the things which through
Him came to be (6), but was of an essence which is too high for the level of
any work; and which the Divine oracles teach to have been generated from the
Father 7, the mode of generation being inscrutable and incalculable to every
originated nature.
7. And
so too on examination there are grounds for saying that the Son is "one
in essence" with the Father; not in the way of bodies, nor like mortal
beings, for He is not such by division of essence, or by severance no nor by
any affection, or alteration, or changing of the Father's essence and power
s (since from all such the unoriginate nature of the Father is alien), but
because "one in essence with the Father" suggests that the Son of
God bears no resemblance to the originated creatures, but that to His Father
alone Who begat Him is He in every way assimilated, and that He is not of any
other subsistence and essence, but from the Father (9). To which term also,
thus interpreted, it appeared well to assent; since we were aware that even
among the ancients, some learned and illustrious Bishops and writers (1) have
used the term "one in essence," in their theological teaching concerning
the Father and Son.
8. So
much then be said concerning the faith which was published; to which all
of us assented, not
without inquiry,
but according to the specified senses,
mentioned before the most religious Emperor himself, and justified by thee
forementioned considerations. And as to the anathematism published by them
at the end of the Faith, it did not pain us, because it forbade to use words
not in Scripture, from which almost all the confusion and disorder of the Church
have come. Since then no divinely inspired Scripture has used the phrases, "out
of nothing," and "once He was not," and the rest which follow,
there appeared no ground for using or teaching them; to which also we assented
as a good decision, since it had not been our custom hitherto to use these
terms.
9. Moreover
to anathematize "Before His generation He was not," did
not seem preposterous, in that it is confessed by all, that the Son of God
was before the generation according to the flesh (2).
10. Nay, our most religious Emperor did at the time prove, in a speech, that
He was in being even according to His divine generation which is before all
ages, since even before He was generated in energy, He was in virtue (3) with
the Father ingenerately, the Father being always Father, as King always, and
Saviour always, being all things in virtue, and being always in the same respects
and in the same way.
11. This we have been forced to transmit to you, Beloved, as making clear
to you the deliberation of our inquiry and assent, and how reasonably we resisted
even to the last minute as long as we were offended at statements which differed
from our own, but received without contention what no longer pained us, as
soon as, on a candid examination of the sense of the words, they appeared to
us to coincide with what we ourselves have professed in the faith which we
have already published.
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