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GREGORY OF NYSSA
THE LIFE AND WRITINGS
BOOK III
1.
This third book shows a third fall of Eunomius, as refuting himself,
and sometimes saying
that
the Son is to be called Only-begotten in virtue of, natural
generation, and that Holy Scripture proves this from the first; at other times,
that by reason of His being created He should not be called a Son, but a "product," or "creature."
IF, when
a man "strives lawfully(1)," he finds a limit to his struggle
in the contest by his adversary's either refusing the struggle, and withdrawing
of his own accord in favour of his conqueror from his effort for victory, or
being thrown according to the rules of wrestling in three falls (whereby the
glory of the crown is bestowed with all the splendour of proclamation upon
him who has proved victorious in the umpire's judgment), then, since Eunomius,
though he has been already twice thrown in our previous arguments, does not
consent that truth should hold the tokens of her victory over falsehood, but
yet a third time raises the dust against godly doctrine in his accustomed arena
of falsehood with his composition, strengthening himself for his struggle on
the side of deceit, our statement of truth must also be now called forth to
put his falsehood to rout, placing its hopes in Him Who is the Giver and the
Judge of victory, and at the same time deriving strength from the very unfairness
of the adversaries' tricks of wrestling. For we are not ashamed to confess
that we have prepared for our contest no weapon of argument sharpened by rhetoric,
that we can bring forward to aid us in the fight with those arrayed against
us, no cleverness or sharpness of dialectic, such as with inexperienced judges
lays even on truth the suspicion of falsehood. One strength our reasoning against
falsehood has--first the very Word Himself, Who is the might of our word,(2)
and in the next place the rottenness of the arguments set against us, which
is overthrown and falls by its own spontaneous action. Now in order that it
may be made as clear as possible to all men, that the very efforts of Eunomius
serve as means for his own overthrow to those who contend with him, I will
set forth to my readers his phantom doctrine (for so I think that doctrine
may be called which is quite outside the truth), and I would have you all,
who are present at our struggle, and watch the encounter now taking place between
my doctrine and that which is matched with it, to be just judges of the lawful
striving of our arguments, that by your just award the reasoning of godliness
may be proclaimed as victor to the whole theatre of the Church, having won
undisputed victory over ungodliness, and being decorated, in virtue of the
three falls of its enemy, with the unfading crown of them that are saved. Now
this statement is set forth against the truth by way of preface to his third
discourse, and this is the fashion of it:--"Preserving," he says, "natural
order, and abiding by those things which are known to us from above, we do
not refuse to speak of the Son, seeing He is begotten, even by the name of
'product of generation(3),' since the generated essence and(4) the appellation
of Son make such a relation of words appropriate." I beg the reader to
give his attention carefully to this point, that while he calls God both "begotten" and "Son," he
refers the reason of such names to "natural order," and calls to
witness to this conception the knowledge possessed from above: so that if anything
should be found in the course of what follows contrary to the positions be
has laid down, it is clear to all that he is overthrown by himself, refuted
by his own arguments before ours are brought against him. And so let us consider
his statement in the light of his own words. He confesses that the name of "Son" would
by no means be properly applied to the Only-begotten God, did not "natural
order," as he says, confirm the appellation. If, then, one were to withdraw
the order of nature from the consideration of the designation of "Son," his
use of this name, being deprived of its proper and natural significance, will
be meaningless. And moreover the fact that he says these statements are confirmed,
in that they abide by the knowledge possessed from above, is a strong additional
support to the orthodox view touching the designation of "Son," seeing
that the inspired teaching of the Scriptures, which comes to us from above,
confirms our argument on these matters. If these things are so, and this is
a standard of truth that admits of no deception, that these two concur--the "natural
order," as he says, and the testimony of the knowledge given from above
confirming the natural interpretation--it is clear, that to assert anything
contrary to these, is nothing else than manifestly to fight against the truth
itself. Let us hear again what this writer, who makes nature his instructor
in the matter of this name, and says that he abides by the knowledge given
to us from above by the instruction of the saints, sets out at length a little
further on, after the passage I have just quoted. For I will pretermit for
the time the continuous recital of what is set next in order in his treatise,
that the contradiction in what he has written may not escape detection, being
veiled by the reading of the intervening matter. "The same argument," he
says, "will apply also in the case of what is made and created, as both
the natural interpretation and the mutual relation of the things, and also
the use of the saints, give us free authority for the use of the formula: wherefore
one would not be wrong in treating the thing made as corresponding to the maker,
and the thing created to the creator." Of what product of making or of
creation does he speak, as having naturally the relation expressed in its name
towards its maker and creator? If of those we contemplate in the creation,
visible and invisible (as Paul recounts, when he says that by Him all things
were created, visible and invisible)(5), so that this relative conjunction
of names has a proper and special application, that which is made being set
in relation to the maker, that which is created to the creator,--if this is
his meaning, we agree with him. For in fact, since the Lord is the Maker of
angels, the angel is assuredly a thing made by Him that made him: and since
the Lord is the Creator of the world, clearly the world itself and all that
is therein are called the creature of Him that created them. If however it
is with this intention that he makes his interpretation of "natural order," systematizing
the appropriation of relative terms with a view to their mutual relation in
verbal sense, even thus it would be an extraordinary thing, seeing that every
one is aware of this, that he should leave his doctrinal statement to draw
out for us a system of grammatical trivialities(6). But if it is to the Only-begotten
God that he applies such phrases, so as to say that He is a thing made by Him
that made Him, a creature of Him that created Him, and to refer this terminology
to "the use of the saints," let him first of all show us in his statement
what saints he says there are who declared the Maker of all things to be a
product and a creature, and whom he follows in this audacity of phrase. The
Church knows as saints those whose hearts were divinely guided by the Holy
Spirit,--patriarchs, lawgivers, prophets, evangelists, apostles. If any among
these is found to declare in his inspired words that God over all, Who "upholds
all things with the word of His power," and grasps with His hand all things
that are, and by Himself called the universe into being by the mere act of
His will, is a thing created and a product, he will stand excused, as following,
as he says, the "use of the saints(7)" in proceeding to formulate
such doctrines. But if the knowledge of the Holy Scriptures is freely placed
within the reach of all, and nothing is forbidden to or hidden from any of
those who choose to share in the divine instruction, how comes it that he endeavours
to lead his hearers astray by his misrepresentation of the Scriptures, referring
the term "creature," applied to the Only-begotten, to "the use
of the saints"? For that by Him all things were made, you may hear almost
from the whole of their holy utterance, from Moses and the prophets and apostles
who come after him, whose particular expressions it would be tedious here to
set forth. Enough for our purpose, with the others, and above the others, is
the sublime John, where in the preface to his discourse on the Divinity of
the Only-begotten he proclaims aloud the fact that there is none of the things
that were made which was not made through Him(8), a fact which is an incontestable
and positive proof of His being Lord of the creation, not reckoned in the list
of created things. For if all things that are made exist by no other but by
Him (and John bears witness that nothing among the things that are, throughout
the creation, was made without Him), who is so blinded in understanding as
not to see in the Evangelist's proclamation the truth, that He Who made all
the creation is assuredly something else besides the creation? For if all that
is numbered among the things that were made has its being through Him, while
He Himself is" in the beginning," and is" with God," being
God, and Word, and Life, and Light, and express Image, and Brightness, and
if none of the things that were made throughout creation is named by the same
names--(not Word, not God, not Life, not Light, not Truth not express Image,
not Brightness, not any of the other names proper to the Deity is to be found
employed of the creation)--then it is clear that He Who is these things is
by nature something else besides the creation, which neither is nor is called
any of these things. If, indeed, there existed in such phrases an identity
of names between the creation and its Maker, he might perhaps be excused for
making the name of "creation" also common to the thing created and
to Him Who made it, on the ground of the community of the other names: but
if the characteristics which are contemplated by means of the names, in the
created and in the uncreated nature, are in no case reconcilable or common
to both, how can the misrepresentation of that man fail to be manifest to all,
who dares to apply the name of servitude to Him Who, as the Psalmist declares, "ruleth
with His power for ever(9)," and to bring Him Who, as the Apostle says, "in
all things hath the pre-eminence(1)," to a level with the servile nature,
by means of the name and conception of "creation"? For that all(2)
the creation is in bondage the great Paul declares(3),--he who in the schools
above the heavens was instructed in that knowledge which may not be spoken,
learning these things in that place where every voice that conveys meaning
by verbal utterance is still, and where unspoken meditation becomes the word
of instruction, teaching to the purified heart by means of the silent illumination
of the thoughts those truths which transcend speech. If then on the one hand
Paul proclaims aloud "the creation is in bondage," and on the other
the Only-begotten God is truly Lord and God over all, and John bears witness
to the fact that the whole creation of the things that were made is by Him,
how can any one, who is in any sense whatever numbered among Christians, hold
his peace when he sees Eunomius, by his inconsistent and inconsequent systematizing,
degrading to the humble state of the creature, by means of an identity of name:
that tends to servitude, that power of Lordship which surpasses all rule and
all authority? And if he says that he has some of the saints who declared Him
to be a slave, or created, or made, or any of these lowly and servile names,
lo, here are the Scriptures. Let him, or some other on his behalf, produce
to us one such phrase, and we will hold our peace. But if there is no such
phrase (and there could never be found in those inspired Scriptures which we
believe any such thought as to support this impiety), what need is there to
strive further upon points admitted with one who not only misrepresents the
words of the saints, but even contends against his own definitions? For if
the "order of nature," as he himself admits, bears additional testimony
to the Son's name by reason of His being begotten, and thus the correspondence
of the name is according to the relation of the Begotten to the Begetter, how
comes it that he wrests the significance of the word "Son" from its
natural application, and changes the relation to "the thing made and its
maker"--a relation which applies not only in the case of the elements
of the universe, but might also be asserted of a gnat or an ant--that in so
far as each of these is a thing made, the relation of its name to its maker
is similarly equivalent? The blasphemous nature of his doctrine is clear, not
only from many other passages, but even from those quoted: and as for that "use
of the saints" which he alleges that he follows in these expressions,
it is clear that there is no such use at all.
2. He
then once more excellently, approximately, and clearly examines and expounds
the passage, "The Lord
created Me."
Perhaps
that passage in the Proverbs might be brought forward against us which the
champions of heresy
are wont
to cite as a testimony that the Lord was created--the
passage," The Lord created me in the beginning of His ways, for His works(4)." For
because these words are spoken by Wisdom, and the Lord is called Wisdom by
the great Paul(5), they allege this passage as though the Only-begotten God
Himself, under the name of Wisdom, acknowledges that He was created by the
Maker of all things. I imagine, however, that the godly sense of this utterance
is clear to moderately attentive and painstaking persons, so that, in the case
of those who are instructed in the dark sayings of the Proverbs, no injury
is done to the doctrine of the faith. Yet I think it well briefly to discuss
what is to be said on this subject, that when the intention of this passage
is more clearly explained, the heretical doctrine may have no room for boldness
of speech on the ground that it has evidence in the writing of the inspired
author. It is universally admitted that the name of "proverb," in
its scriptural use, is not applied with regard to the evident sense, but is
used with a view to some hidden meaning, as the Gospel thus gives the name
of "proverbs(6)" to dark and obscure sayings; so that the "proverb," if
one were to set forth the interpretation of the name by a definition, is a
form of speech which, by means of one set of ideas immediately presented, points
to something else which is hidden, or a form of speech which does not point
out the aim of the thought directly, but gives its instruction by an indirect
signification. Now to this book such a name is especially attached as a title,
and the force of the appellation is at once interpreted in the preface by the
wise Solomon. For he does not call the sayings in this book "maxims," or "counsels," or "clear
instruction," but "proverbs," and proceeds to add an explanation.
What is the force of the signification of this word? "To know," he
tells us, "wisdom and instruction(7)"; not setting before us the
course of instruction in wisdom according to the method common in other kinds
of learning; he bids a man, on the other hand (8), first to become wise by
previous training, and then so to receive the instruction conveyed by proverb.
For he tells us that there are "words of wisdom" which reveal their
aim "by a turn(9)." For that which is not directly understood needs
some turn for the apprehension of the thing concealed; and as Paul, when about
to exchange the literal sense of the history for figurative contemplation,
says that he will "change his voice(1),'' so here the manifestation of
the hidden meaning is called by Solomon a "turn of the saying," as
if the beauty of the thoughts could not be perceived, unless one were to obtain
a view of the revealed brightness of the thought by turning the apparent meaning
of the saying round about, as happens with the plumage with which the peacock
is decked behind. For in him, one who sees the back of his plumage quite despises
it for its want of beauty and tint, as a mean sight; but if one were to turn
it round and show him the other view of it, he then sees the varied painting
of nature, the half-circle shining in the midst with its dye of purple, and
the golden mist round the circle ringed round and glistening at its edge with
its many rainbow hues. Since then there is no beauty in what is obvious in
the saying (for "all the glory of the king's daughter is within(2)," shining
with its hidden ornament in golden thoughts), Solomon of necessity suggests
to the readers of this book "the turn of the saying," that thereby
they may "understand a parable and a dark saying, words of the wise and
riddles(3)." Now as this proverbial teaching embraces these elements,
a reasonable man will not receive any passage cited from this book, be it never
so clear and intelligible at first sight, without examination and inspection;
for assuredly there is some mystical contemplation underlying even those passages
which seem manifest. And if the obvious passages of the work necessarily demand
a somewhat minute scrutiny, how much more do those passages require it where
even immediate apprehension presents to us much that is obscure and difficult?
Let us
then begin our examination from the context of the passage in question, and
see whether
the reading
of the neighbouring clauses gives any clear sense.
The discourse describes Wisdom as uttering certain sayings in her own person.
Every student knows what is said in the passage(4) where Wisdom makes counsel
her dwelling-place, and calls to her knowledge and understanding, and says
that she has as a possession strength and prudence (while she is herself called
intelligence), and that she walks in the ways of righteousness and has her
conversation in the ways of just judgement, and declares that by her kings
reign, and princes write the decree of equity, and monarchs win possession
of their own land. Now every one will see that the considerate reader will
receive none of the phrases quoted without scrutiny according to the obvious
sense. For if by her kings are advanced to their rule. and if from her monarchy
derives its strength, it follows of necessity that Wisdom is displayed to us
as a king-maker, and transfers to herself the blame of those who bear evil
rule in their kingdoms. But we know of kings who in truth advance under the
guidance of Wisdom to the rule that has no end--the poor in spirit, whose possession
is the kingdom of heaven(5), as the Lord promises, Who is the Wisdom of the
Gospel: and such also we recognize as the princes who bear rule over their
passions, who are not enslaved by the dominion of sin, who inscribe the decree
of equity upon their own life, as it were upon a tablet. Thus, too, that laudable
despotism which changes, by the alliance of Wisdom, the democracy of the passions
into the monarchy of reason, brings into bondage what were running unrestrained
into mischievous liberty, I mean all carnal and earthly thoughts: for "the
flesh lusteth against the Spirit(6)," and rebels against the government
of the soul. Of this land, then, such a monarch wins possession, whereof he
was, according to the first creation, appointed as ruler by the Word.
Seeing
then that all reasonable men admit that these expressions are to be read
in such a sense as this,
rather than in that which appears in the words
at first sight, it is consequently probable that the phrase we are discussing,
being written in close connection with them, is not received by prudent men
absolutely and without examination. "If I declare to you," she says, "the
things that happen day by day, I will remember to recount the things from everlasting:
the Lord created me(7)." What pray, has the slave of the literal text,
who sits listening closely to the sound of the syllables, like the Jews, to
say to this phrase? Does not the conjunction, "If I declare to you the
things that happen day by day, the Lord created me," ring strangely in
the ears of those who listen attentively? as though, if she did not declare
the things that happen day by day, she will by consequence deny absolutely
that she was created. For he who says, "If I declare, I was created." leaves
you by his silence to understand, "I was not created, if I do not declare." "The
Lord created me," she says, "in the beginning of His ways, for His
works. He set me up from everlasting, in the beginning, before He made the
earth, before He made the depths, before the springs of the waters came forth,
before the mountains were settled, before all hills, He begetteth me(8)." What
new order of the formation of a creature is this? First it is created, and
after that it is set up, and then it is begotten. "The Lord made," she
says, "lands, even uninhabited, and the inhabited extremes of the earth
under heaven(9)." Of what Lord does she speak as the maker of land both
uninhabited and inhabited? Of Him surely, who made wisdom. For both the one
saying and the other are uttered by the same person; both that which says, "the
Lord created me," and that which adds, "the Lord made land, even
uninhabited." Thus the Lord will be the maker equally of both, of Wisdom
herself, and of the inhabited and uninhabited land. What then are we to make
of the saying, "All things were made by Him, and without Him was riot
anything made(1)"? For if one and the same Lord creates both Wisdom (which
they advise us to understand of the Son), and also the particular things which
are included in the Creation, how does the sublime John speak truly, when he
says that all things were made by Him? For this Scripture gives a contrary
sound to that of the Gospel, in ascribing to the Creator of Wisdom the making
of land uninhabited and inhabited. So, too, with all that follows(2):--she
speaks of a Throne of God set apart upon the winds, and says that the clouds
above are made strong, and the fountains under the heaven sure; and the context
contains many similar expressions, demanding in a marked degree that interpretation
by a minute and clear-sighted intelligence, which is to be observed in the
passages already quoted. What is the throne that is set apart upon the winds?
What is the security of the fountains under the heaven? How are the clouds
above made strong? If any one should interpret the passage with reference to
visible objects(3), he will find that the facts are at considerable variance
with the words. For who knows not that the extreme parts of the earth under
heaven, by excess in one direction or in the other, either by being too close
to the sun's heat, or by being too far removed from it, are uninhabitable;
some being excessively dry and parched, other parts superabounding in moisture,
and chilled by frost, and that only so much is inhabited as is equally removed
from the extreme of each of the two opposite conditions? But if it is the midst
of the earth that is occupied by man, how does the proverb say that the extremes
of the earth under heaven are inhabited? Again, what strength could one perceive
in the clouds, that that passage may have a true sense, according to its apparent
intention, which says that the clouds above have been made strong? For the
nature of cloud is a sort of rather slight vapour diffused through the air,
which, being light, by reason of its great subtilty, is borne on the breath
of the air, and, when forced together by compression, falls down through the
air that held it up, in the form of a heavy drop of rain. What then is the
strength in these, which offer no resistance to the touch? For in the cloud
you may discern the slight and easily dissolved character of air. Again, how
is the Divine throne set apart on the winds that are by nature unstable? And
as for her saying at first that she is "created," finally, that she
is "begotten," and between these two utterances that she is" set
up," what account of this could any one profess to give that would agree
with the common and obvious sense? The point also on which a doubt was previously
raised in our argument, the declaring, that is, of the things that happen day
by day, and the remembering to recount the things from everlasting, is, as
it were, a condition of Wisdom's assertion that she was created by God.
Thus,
since it has been clearly shown by what bus been said, that no part of this
passage is such
that its
language should be received without examination
and reflection, it may be well, perhaps, as with the rest, so not to interpret
the text, "The Lord created me," according to that sense which immediately
presents itself to us from the phrase, but to seek with all attention and care
what is to be piously understood from the utterance. Now, to apprehend perfectly
the sense of the passage before us, would seem to belong only to those who
search out the depths by the aid of the Holy Spirit, and know how to speak
in the Spirit the divine mysteries: our account, however, will only busy itself
with the passage in question so far as not to leave its drift entirely unconsidered.
What, then, is our account? It is not, I think, possible that that wisdom which
arises in any man from divine illumination should come alone, apart from the
other gifts of the Spirit, but there must needs enter in therewith also the
grace of prophecy. For if the apprehension of the truth of the things that
are is the peculiar power of wisdom, and prophecy includes the clear knowledge
of the things that are about to be, one would not be possessed of the gift
of wisdom in perfection, if he did not further include in his knowledge, by
the aid of prophecy, the future likewise. Now, since it is not mere human wisdom
that is claimed for himself by Solomon, who says, "God hath taught me
wisdom(4)," and who, where he says "all my words are spoken from
God(5)," refers to God all that is spoken by himself, it might be well
in this part of the Proverbs to trace out the prophecy that is mingled with
his wisdom. But we say that in the earlier part of the book, where he says
that "Wisdom has builded herself a house(6)" he refers darkly in,
these words to the preparation of the flesh of the Lord: for the trite Wisdom
did not dwell in another's building, but built for Itself that dwelling-place
from the body of the Virgin. Here, however, he adds to his discourse(7) that
which of both is made one--of the house, I mean, and of the Wisdom which built
the house, that is to say, of the Humanity and of the Divinity that was commingled
with man(8); and to each of these he applies suitable and fitting terms, as
you may see to be the case also in the Gospels, where the discourse, proceeding
as befits its subject, employs the more lofty and divine phraseology to indicate
the Godhead, and that which is humble and lowly to indicate the Manhood. So
we may see in this passage also Solomon prophetically moved, and delivering
to us in its fulness the mystery of the Incarnation(9). For we speak first
of the eternal power and energy of Wisdom; and here the evangelist, to a certain
extent, agrees with him in his very words. For as the latter in his comprehensive(1)
phrase proclaimed Him to be the cause and Maker of all things, so Solomon says
that by Him were made those individual things which are included in the whole.
For he tells us that God by Wisdom established the earth, and in understanding
prepared the heavens, and all that follows these in order, keeping to the same
sense: and that he might not seem to pass over without mention the gift of
excellence in men, he again goes on to say, speaking in the person of Wisdom,
the words we mentioned a little earlier; I mean, "I made counsel my dwelling-place,
and knowledge, and understanding(2)," and all that relates to instruction
in intellect and knowledge.
After
recounting these and the like matters, he proceeds to introduce also his
teaching concerning
the dispensation
with regard to man, why the Word was
made flesh. For seeing that it is clear to all that God Who is over all has
in Himself nothing as a thing created or imported, not power nor wisdom, nor
light, nor word, nor life, nor truth, nor any at all of those things which
are contemplated in the fulness of the Divine bosom (all which things the Only-begotten
God is, Who is in the bosom of the Father(3), the name of "creation" could
not properly be applied to any of those things which are contemplated in God,
so that the Son Who is in the Father, or the Word Who is in the Beginning,
or the Light Who is in the Light, or the Life Who is in the Life, or the Wisdom
Who is in the Wisdom, should say, "the Lord created me." For if the
Wisdom of God is created (and Christ is the Power of God and the Wisdom of
God(4)), God, it would follow, has His Wisdom as a thing imported, receiving
afterwards, as the result of making, something which He had not at first. But
surely He Who is in the bosom of the Father does not permit us to conceive
the bosom of the Father as ever void of Himself. He Who is in the beginning
is surely not of the things which come to be in that bosom from without, but
being the fulness of all good, He is conceived as being always in the Father,
not waiting to arise in Him as the result of creation, so that the Father should
not be conceived as at any time void of good, but He Who is conceived as being
in the eternity of the Father's Godhead is always in Him, being Power, and
Life, and Truth, and Wisdom, and the like. Accordingly the words "created
me" do not proceed from the Divine and immortal nature, but from that
which was commingled with it in the Incarnation from our created nature. How
comes it then that the same, called wisdom, and understanding, and intelligence,
establishes the earth, and prepares the heavens, and breaks up the deeps, and
yet is here "created for the beginning of His works(5)"? Such a dispensation,
he tells us, is not set forward without great cause. But since men, after receiving
the commandment of the things we should observe, cast away by disobedience
the grace of memory, and became forgetful, for this cause, "that I may
declare to you the things that happen day by day for your salvation, and may
put you in mind by recounting the things from everlasting, which you have forgotten
(for it is no new gospel that I now proclaim, but I labour at your restoration
to your first estate),--for this cause I was created, Who ever am, and need
no creation in order to be; so that I am the beginning of ways for the works
of God, that is for men. For the first way being destroyed, there must needs
again be consecrated for the wanderers a new and living way(6), even I myself,
Who am the way." And this view, that the sense of "created me" has
reference to the Humanity, the divine apostle more clearly sets before us by
his own words when he charges us, "Put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ(7)," and
also where (using the same word) he says, "Put on the new man which after
God is created(8)" For if the garment of salvation is one, and that is
Christ, one cannot say that "the new man, which after God is created," is
any other than Christ, but it is clear that he who has "put on Christ" has "put
on the new man which after God is created." For actually He alone is properly
named "the new man," Who did not appear in the life of man by the
known and ordinary ways of nature, but in His case alone creation, in a strange
and special form, was instituted anew. For this reason he haines the same Person,
when regarding the wonderful manner of His birth(9), "the new man, which
after God is created," and, when looking to the Divine nature, which was
blended(1) in the creation of this "new man," he calls Him "Christ":
so that the two names (I mean the name of "Christ" and the name of "the
new man which after God is created") are applied to one and the same Person.
Since,
then, Christ is Wisdom, let the intelligent reader consider our opponent's
account of the
matter,
and our own, and judge which is the more pious, which
better preserves in the text those conceptions which are befitting the Divine
nature; whether that which declares the Creator and Lord of all to have been
made, and places Him on a level with the creation that is in bondage, or that
rather which looks to the Incarnation, and preserves the due proportion with
regard to our conception alike of the Divinity and of the Humanity, bearing
in mind that the great Paul testifies in favour of our view, who sees in the "new
man" creation, and in the true Wisdom the power of creation. And, further,
the order of the passage agrees with this view of the doctrine it conveys.
For if the "beginning of the ways" bad not been created among us,
the foundation of those ages for which we look would not have been laid; nor
would the Lord have become for us "the Father of the age to come(2), "had
not a Child been born to us, according to Isaiah, and His name been called,
both all the other titles which the prophet gives Him, and withal" The
Father of the age to come." Thus first there came to pass the mystery
wrought in virginity, and the dispensation of the Passion, and then the wise
master-builders of the Faith laid the foundation of the Faith: and this is
Christ, the Father of the age to come, on Whom is built the life of the ages
that have no end. And when this has come to pass, to the end that in each individual
believer may be wrought the divine decrees of the Gospel law, and the varied
gifts of the Holy Spirits--(all which the divine Scripture figuratively names,
with a suitable significance, "mountains" and "hills," calling
righteousness the "mountains" of God, and speaking of His judgments
as "deeps(3)," and giving the name of "earth" to that which
is sown by the Word and brings forth abundant fruit; or in that sense in which
we are taught by David to understand peace by the "mountains," and
righteousness by the "hills(4)"),--Wisdom is begotten in the faithful,
and the saying is found true. For He Who is in those who have received Him,
is not yet begotten in the unbelieving. Thus, that these things may be wrought
in us, their Maker must be begotten in us. For if Wisdom is begotten in us,
then in each of us is prepared by God both land, and land uninhabited,--the
land, that which receives the sowing and the ploughing of the Word, the uninhabited
land, the heart cleared of evil inhabitants,--and thus our dwelling will be
upon the extreme parts of the earth. For since in the earth some is depth,
and some is surface, when a man is not buried in the earth, or, as it were,
dwelling in a cave by reason of thinking of things beneath (as is the life
of those who live in sin, who "stick fast in the deep mire where no ground
is(5)," whose life is truly a pit, as the Psalm says, "let not the
pit shut her mouth upon me(6)")--if, I say, a man, when Wisdom is begotten
in him, thinks of the things that are above, and touches the earth only so
much as he needs must, such a man inhabits "the extreme parts of the earth
under heavens," not plunging deep in earthly thought; with him Wisdom
is present, as he prepares in himself heaven instead of earth: and when, by
carrying out the precepts into act, he makes strong for himself the instruction
of the clouds above, and, enclosing the great and widespread sea of wickedness,
as it were with a beach, by his exact conversation, hinders the troubled water
from proceeding forth from his mouth; and if by the grace of instruction he
be made to dwell among the fountains, pouring forth the stream of his discourse
with sure caution, that he may not give to any man for drink the turbid fluid
of destruction in place of pure water, and if he be lifted up above all earthly
paths and become aerial in his life, advancing towards that spiritual life
which he speaks of as "the winds," so that he is set apart to be
a throne of Him Who is seated in him (as was Paul separated for the Gospel
to be a chosen vessel to bear the name of God, who, as it is elsewhere expressed,
was made a throne, bearing Him that sat upon him)--when, I say, he is established
in these and like ways, so that he who has already fully made up in himself
the land inhabited by God, now rejoices in gladness that he is made the father,
not of wild and senseless beasts, but of men (and these would be godlike thoughts,
which are fashioned according to the Divine image, by faith in Him Who has
been created and begotten, and set up in us;--and faith, according to the words
of Paul, is conceived as the foundation whereby wisdom is begotten in the faithful,
and all the things that I have spoken of are wrought)--then, I say, the life
of the man who has been thus established is truly blessed, for Wisdom is at
all times in agreement with him, and rejoices with him who daily finds gladness
in her alone. For the Lord rejoices in His saints, and there is joy in heaven
over those who are being saved, and Christ, as the father, makes a feast for
his rescued son. Though we have spoken hurriedly of these matters, let the
careful man read the original text of the Holy Scripture, and fit its dark
sayings to our reflections, testing whether it is not far better to consider
that the meaning of these dark sayings has this reference, and not that which
is attributed to it at first sight. For it is not possible that the theology
of John should be esteemed true, which recites that all created things are
the work of the Word, if in this passage He Who created Wisdom be believed
to have made together with her all other things also. For in that case all
things will not be by her, but she will herself be counted with the things
that were made.
And that
this is the reference of the enigmatical sayings is clearly revealed by the
passage that follows,
which says, "Now therefore hearken unto me,
my son: and blessed is he that keepeth my ways(7)," meaning of course
by "ways" the approaches to virtue, the beginning of which is the
possession of Wisdom. Who, then, who looks to the divine Scripture, will not
agree that the enemies of the truth are at once impious and slanderous?--impious,
because, so far as in them lies, they degrade the unspeakable glory of the
Only-begotten God, and unite it with the creation, striving to show that the
Lord Whose power over all things is only-begotten, is one of the things that
were made by Him: slanderous, because, though Scripture itself gives them no
ground for such opinions, they arm themselves against piety as though they
drew their evidence from that source. Now since they can by no means show any
passage of the Holy Scriptures which leads us to look upon the pre-temporal
glory of the Only-begotten God in conjunction with the subject creation, it
is well, these points being proved, that the tokens of victory over falsehood
should be adduced as testimony to the doctrine of godliness, and that sweeping
aside these verbal systems of theirs by which they make the creature answer
to the creator, and the thing made to the maker, we should confess, as the
Gospel from heaven teaches us, the well-beloved Son--not a bastard, not a counterfeit;
but that, accepting with the name of Son all that naturally belongs to that
name, we should say that He Who is of Very God is Very God, and that we should
believe of Him all that we behold in the Father, because They are One, and
in the one is conceived the other, not overpassing Him, not inferior to Him,
not altered or subject to change in any Divine or excellent property.
3. He
then shows, from the instance of Adam and Abel, and other exam files, the
absence of alienation
of essence
in the case of the "generate" and "ungenerate."
Now seeing
that Eunomius' conflict with himself has been made manifest, where he has
been shown to
contradict
himself, at one time saying, "He ought
to be called 'Son,' according to nature, because He is begotten," at another
that, because He is created, He is no more called "Son," but a "product," I
think it right that the careful and attentive reader, as it is not possible,
when two statements are mutually at variance, that the truth should be found
equally in both, should reject of the two that which is impious and blasphemous--that,
I mean, with regard to the "creature" and the "product," and
should assent to that only which is of orthodox tendency, which confesses that
the appellation of "Son" naturally attaches to the Only-begotten
God: so that the word of truth would seem to be recommended even by the voice
of its enemies.
I resume
my discourse, however, taking up that point of his argument which we originally
set aside. "We do not refuse," he says, "to call
the Son. seeing He is generate, even by the name of 'product of generation(8),
since the generated essence itself, and the appellation of 'Son,' make such
a relation of words appropriate" Meanwhile let the reader who is critically
following the argument remember this, that in speaking of the "generated
essence" in the case of the Only-begotten, he by consequence allows us
to speak of the "ungenerate essence" in the case of the Father, so
that neither absence of generation, nor generation, can any longer be supposed
to constitute the essence, but the essence must be taken separately, and its
being, or not being begotten, must be conceived separately by means of the
peculiar attributes contemplated in it. Let us, however, consider more carefully
his argument on this point. He says that an essence has been begotten, and
that the name of this generated essence is "Son." Well, at this point
our argument will convict that of our opponents on two grounds, first, of an
attempt at knavery, secondly, of slackness in their attempt against ourselves.
For he is playing the knave when he speaks of "generation of essence," in
order to establish his opposition between the essences, when once they are
divided in respect of a difference of nature between "generate" and "ungenerate":
while the slackness of their attempt is shown by the very positions their knavery
tries to establish. For he who says the essence is generate, clearly defines
generation as being something else distinct from the essence, so that the significance
of generation cannot be assigned to the word "essence." For he has
not in this passage represented the matter as he often does, so as to say that
generation is itself the essence, but acknowledges that the essence is generated,
so that there is produced in his readers a distinct notion in the case of each
word: for one conception arises in him who hears that it was generated, and
another is called up by the name of "essence." Our argument may be
made clearer by example. The Lord says in the Gospel(9) that a woman, when
her travail is drawing near, is in sorrow, but afterwards rejoices in gladness
because a man is born into the world. As then in this passage we derive from
the Gospel two distinct conceptions,--one the birth which we conceive to be
by way of generation, the other that which results from the birth (for the
birth is not the man, but the man is by the birth),--so here too, when Eunomius
confesses that the essence was generated, we learn by the latter word that
the essence comes from something, and by the Former we conceive that subject
itself which has its real being from something. If then the signification of
essence is one thing, and the word expressing generation suggests to us another
conception, their clever contrivances are quite gone to ruin, like earthen
vessels hurled one against the other, and mutually smashed to pieces. For it
will no longer be possible for them, if they apply the opposition of "generate" and "ungenerate" to
the essence of the Father and the Son, to apply at the same time to the things
themselves the mutual conflict between these names(1). For as it is confessed
by Eunomius that the essence is generate (seeing that the example from the
Gospel explains the meaning of such a phrase, where, when we hear that a man
is generated, we do not conceive the man to be the same thing as his generation,
but receive a separate conception in each of the two words), heresy will surely
no longer be permitted to express by such words her doctrine of the difference
of the essences. In order, however, that our account of these matters may be
cleared up as far as possible, let us once more discuss the point in the following
way. He Who framed the universe made the nature of man with all things in the
beginning, and after Adam was made, He then appointed for men the law of generation
one from another, saying, "Be fruitful and multiply(2)." Now while
Abel came into existence by way of generation, what reasonable man would deny
that, in the actual sense of human generation, Adam existed ungenerately? Yet
the first man had in himself the complete definition of man's essential nature,
and he who was generated of him was enrolled under the same essential name.
But if the essence that was generated was made anything other than that which
was not generated, the same essential name would not apply to both: for of
those things whose essence is different, the essential name also is not the
same. Since, then, the essential nature of Adam and of Abel is marked by the
same characteristics, we must certainly agree that one essence is in both,
and that the one and the other are exhibited in the same nature. For Adam and
Abel are both one so far as the definition of their nature is concerned, but
are distinguished one from the other without confusion by the individual attributes
observed in each of them. We cannot therefore properly say that Adam generated
another essence besides himself, but rather that of himself he generated another
self, with whom was produced the whole definition of the essence of him who
generated him. What, then, we learn in the case of human nature by means of
the inferential guidance afforded to us by the definition, this I think we
ought to take for our guidance also to the pure apprehension of the Divine
doctrines. For when we have shaken off from the Divine and exalted doctrines
all carnal and material notions, we shall be most surely led by the remaining
conception, when it is purged of such ideas, to the lofty and unapproachable
heights. It is confessed even by our adversaries that God, Who is over all,
both is and is called the Father of the Only-begotten, and they moreover give
to the Only-begotten God, Who is of the Father, the name of "begotten," by
reason of His being generated. Since then among men the word "father" has
certain significances attaching to it, from which the pure nature is alien,
it behoves a man to lay aside all material conceptions which enter in by association
with the carnal significance of the word "father,"' and to form in
the case of the God and Father a conception befitting the Divine nature, expressive
only of the reality of the relationship. Since, therefore, in the notion of
a human father there is included not only all that the flesh suggests to our
thoughts, but a certain notion of interval is also undoubtedly conceived with
the idea of human fatherhood, it would be well, in the case of the Divine generation,
to reject, together with bodily pollution, the notion of interval also, that
so what properly belongs to matter may be completely purged away, and the transcendent
generation may be clear, not only from the idea of passion, but from that of
interval. Now he who says that God is a Father will unite with the thought
that God is, the further thought that He is something: for that which has its
being from some beginning, certainly also derives from something the beginning
of its being, whatever it is: but He in Whose case being had no beginning,
has not His beginning from anything, even although we contemplate in Him some
other attribute than simple existence. Well, God is a Father. It follows that
He is what He is from eternity: for He did not become, but is a Father: for
in God that which was, both is and will be. On the other hand, if He once was
not anything, then He neither is nor will be that thing: for He is not believed
to be the Father of a Being such that it may be piously asserted that God once
existed by Himself without that Being. For the Father is the Father of Life,
and Truth, and Wisdom, and Light, and Sanctification, and Power, and all else
of a like kind that the Only-begotten is or is called. Thus when the adversaries
allege that the Light "once was not," I know not to which the greater
injury is done, whether to the Light, in that the Light is not, or to Him that
has the Light, in that He has not the Light. So also with Life and Truth and
Power, and all the other characters in which the Only-begotten fills the Father's
bosom, being all things in His own fulness. For the absurdity will be equal
either way, and the impiety against the Father will equal the blasphemy against
the Son: for in saying that the Lord "once was not," you will not
merely assert the non-existence of Power, but you will be saying that the Power
of God, Who is the Father of the Power, "was not." Thus the assertion
made by your doctrine that the Son "once was not," establishes nothing
else than a destitution of all good in the case of the Father. See to what
an end these wise men's acuteness leads, how by them the word of the Lord is
made good, which says, "He that despiseth Me despiseth Him that sent Me(3):" for
by the very arguments by which they despise the existence at any time of the
Only-begotten, they also dishonour the Father, stripping off by their doctrine
from the Father's glory every good name and conception.
4. He
thus shows the oneness of the Eternal Son with the Father the identity of
essence and the community
of nature (wherein is a natural inquiry into the
production of wine), and that the terms "Son" and "product" in
the naming of the Only-begotten include a like idea of relationship.
What has
been said, therefore, has clearly exposed the slackness which is to be found
in the knavery of
our author, who, while he goes about to establish
the opposition of the essence of the Only-begotten to that of the Father, by
the method of calling the one "ungenerate," and the other "generate," stands
convicted of playing the fool with his inconsistent arguments. For it was shown
from his own words, first, that the name of "essence" means one thing,
and that of "generation" another; and next, that there did not come
into existence, with the Son, any new and different essence besides the essence
of the Father, but that what the Father is as regards the definition of His
nature, that also He is Who is of the Father, as the nature does not change
into diversity in the Person of the Son, according to the truth of the argument
displayed by our consideration of Adam and Abel. For as, in that instance,
he that was not generated after a like sort was yet, so far as concerns the
definition of essence, the same with him that was generated, and Abel's generation
did not produce any change in the essence, so, in the case of these pure doctrines,
the Only-begotten God did not, by His own generation, produce in Himself any
change in the essence of Him Who is ungenerate (coming forth, as the Gospel
says, from the Father, and being in the Father,) but is, according to the simple
and homely language of the creed we profess, "Light of Light, very God
of very God," the one being all that the other is, save being that other.
With regard, however, to the aim for the sake of which he carries on this system-making,
I think there is no need for me at present to express any opinion, whether
it is audacious and dangerous, or a thing allowable and free from danger, to
transform the phrases which are employed to signify the Divine nature from
one to another, and to call Him Who is generated by the name of "product
of generation."
I let
these matters pass, that my discourse may not busy itself too much in the
strife against lesser
points,
and neglect the greater; but I say that we
ought carefully to consider the question whether the natural relation does
introduce the use of these terms: for this surely Eunomius asserts, that with
the affinity of the appellations there is also asserted an essential relationship.
For he would not say, I presume, that the mere names themselves, apart from
the sense of the things signified, have any mutual relation or affinity; but
all discern the relationship or diversity of the appellations by the meanings
which the words express. If, therefore, he confesses that "the Son" has
a natural relation with "the Father," let us leave the appellations,
and consider the force that is found in their significations, whether in their
affinity we discern diversity of essence, or that which is kindred and characteristic.
To say that we find diversity is downright madness. For how does something
without kinship or community "preserve order," connected and conformable,
in the names, where "the generated essence itself," as he says, "and
the appellation of 'Son,' make such a relation of words appropriate"?
If, on the other hand, he should say that these appellations signify relationship,
he will necessarily appear in the character of an advocate of the community
of 'essence, and as maintaining the fact that by affinity of names is signified
also the connection of subjects: and this he often does in his composition
without being aware of it(4). For, by the arguments wherewith he endeavours
to destroy the truth, he is often himself unwittingly drawn into an advocacy
of the very doctrines against which he is contending: Some such thing the history
tells us concerning Saul, that once, when moved with wrath against the prophets,
he was overcome by grace, and was found as one of the inspired, (the Spirit
of prophecy willing, as I suppose, to instruct the apostate by means of himself,)
whence the surprising nature of the event became a proverb in his after life,
as the history records such an expression by way of wonder, "Is Saul also
among the prophets(5)?"
At what
point, then, does Eunomius assent to the truth? When he says that the Lord
Himself, "being the Son of the living God, not being ashamed
of His birth from the Virgin, often named Himself, in His own sayings, 'the
Son of Man"'? For this phrase we also allege for proof of the community
of essence, because the name of "Son" shows the community of nature
to be equal in both cases. For as He is called the Son of Man by reason of
the kindred of His flesh to her of whom He was born, so also He is conceived,
surely, as the Son of God, by reason of the connection of His essence with
that from which He has His existence, and this argument is the greatest weapon
of the truth. For nothing so clearly points to Him Who is the "mediator
between God and man(6)" (as the great Apostle called Him), as the name
of "Son," equally applicable to either nature, Divine or Human. For
the same Person is Son of God, and was made, in the Incarnation, Son of Man,
that, by His communion with each, He might link together by Himself what were
divided by nature. Now if, in becoming Son of Man, he were without participation
in human nature, it would be logical to say that neither. does He share in
the Divine essence, though He is Son of God. But if the whole compound nature
of man was in Him (for He was "in all points tempted like as we are, yet
without sin(7)), it is surely necessary to believe that every property of the
transcendent essence is also in Him, as the Word "Son" claims for
Him both alike--the Human in the man, but in the God the Divine.
If then
the appellations, as Eunomius says, indicate relationship, and the existence
of relationship
is observed
in the things, not in the mere sound
of the words (and by things I mean the things conceived in themselves, if it
be not over-bold thus to speak of the Son and the Father), who would deny that
the very champion of blasphemy has by his own action been dragged into the
advocacy of orthodoxy, overthrowing by his own means his own arguments, and
proclaiming community of essence in the case of the Divine doctrines? For the
argument that he unwillingly casts into the scale on the side of truth does
not speak falsely as regards this point,--that He would not have been called
Son if the natural conception of the names did not verify this calling. For
as a bench is not called the son of the workman, and no sane man would say
that the builder engendered the house, and we do not say that the vineyard
is the "product(8)" of the vine-dresser, but call what a man makes
his work, and him who is begotten of him the son of a man, (in order, I suppose,
that the proper meaning might be attached by means of the names to the respective
subjects,) so too, when we are taught that the Only-begotten is Son of God,
we do not by this appellation understand a creature of God, but what the word "Son" in
its signification really displays. And even though wine be named by Scripture
the "product(9)" of the vine, not even so will our argument with
regard to the orthodox doctrine suffer by this identity of name. For we do
not call wine the "product" of the oak, nor the acorn the "product" of
the vine, but we use the word only if there is some natural community between
the "product" and that from which it comes. For the moisture in the
vine, which is drawn out from the root through the stem by the pith, is, in
its natural power, water: but, as it passes in orderly sequence along the ways
of nature, and flows from the lowest to the highest, it changes to the quality
of wine, a change to which the rays of the sun contribute in some degree, which
by their warmth draw out the moisture from the depth to the shoots, and by
a proper and suitable process of ripening make the moisture wine: so that,
so far as their nature is concerned, there is no difference between the moisture
that exists in the vine and the wine that is produced from it. For the one
form of moisture comes from the other, and one could not say that the cause
of wine is anything else than the moisture which naturally exists in the shoots.
But, so far as moisture is concerned, the differences of quality produce no
alteration, but are found when some peculiarity discerns the moisture which
is in the form of wine from that which is in the shoots, one of the two forms
being accompanied by astringency, or sweetness, or sourness, so that in substance
the two are the same, but are distinguished by qualitative differences. As,
therefore, when we hear from Scripture that the Only-begotten God is Son of
man, we learn by the kindred expressed in the name His kinship with true man,
so even, if the Son be called, in the adversaries' phrase, a "product," we
none the less learn, even by this name, His kinship in essence with Him that
has "produced(1)" Him, by the fact that wine, which is called the "product" of
the vine has been found not to be alien, as concerns the idea of moisture,
from the natural power that resides in the vine. Indeed, if one were judiciously
to examine the things that are said by our adversaries, they tend to our doctrine,
and their sense cries out against their own fabrications, as they strive at
all points to establish their "difference in essence." Yet it is
by no means an easy matter to conjecture whence they were led to such conceptions.
For if the appellation of "Son" does not merely signify "being
from something," but by its signification presents to us specially, as
Eunomius himself says, relationship in point of nature, and wine is not called
the "product" of an oak, and those "products" or "generation
of vipers(2)," of which the Gospel somewhere speaks, are makes and not
sheep, it is clear, that in the case of the Only-begotten also, the appellation
of "Son" or of "product" would not convey the meaning of
relationship to something of another kind: but even if, according to our adversaries'
phrase, He is called a "product of generation," and the name of "Son," as
they confess, has reference to nature, the Son is surely of the essence of
Him Who has generated or "produced" Him, not of that of some other
among the things which we contemplate as external to that nature. And if He
is truly from Him, He is not alien from all that belongs to Him from Whom He
is, as in the other cases too it was shown that all that has its existence
from anything by way of generation is clearly of the same kind as that from
whence it came.
5. He
discusses the incomprehensibility of the Divine essence, and the saying to
the woman of Samaria, "Ye worship
ye know not what."
Now if
any one should ask for some interpretation, and description, and explanation
of the Divine
essence, we
are not going to deny that this kind of wisdom we
are unlearned, acknowledging only so much as this, that it is not possible
that which is by nature infinite should be comprehended in any conception expressed
by words. The fact that the Divine greatness has no limit is proclaimed by
prophecy, which declares expressly that of His splendour, His glory, His holiness, "there
is no end(3):" and if His surroundings have no limit, much more is He
Himself in His essence, whatever it may be, comprehended by no limitation in
any way. If then interpretation by way of words and names implies by its meaning
some sort of comprehension of the subject, and if, on the other hand, that
which is unlimited cannot be comprehended, no one could reasonably blame us
for ignorance, if we are not bold in respect of what none should venture upon.
For by what name can I describe the incomprehensible? by what speech can I
declare the unspeakable? Accordingly, since the Deity is too excellent and
lofty to be expressed in words, we have learnt to honour in silence what transcends
speech and thought: and if he who "thinketh more highly than he ought
to think(4)," tramples upon this cautious speech of ours making a jest
of our ignorance of things incomprehensible, and recognizes a difference of
unlikeness in that which is without figure, or limit, or size, or quantity
(I mean in the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit), and brings forward to
reproach our ignorance that phrase which is continually alleged by the disciples
of deceit, " 'Ye worship ye know not what(5),' if ye know not the essence
of that which ye worship," we shall follow the advice of the prophet,
and not fear the reproach of fools(6), nor be led by their reviling to talk
boldly of things unspeakable, making that unpractised speaker Paul our teacher
in the mysteries that transcend knowledge, who is so far from thinking that
the Divine nature is within the reach of human perception, that he calls even
the judgments of God "unsearchable," and His ways "past finding
out(7)," and affirms that the things promised to them that love Him, for
their good deeds done in this life, are above comprehension so that it is not
possible to behold them with the eye, nor to receive them by hearing, nor to
contain them in the heart(8). Learning this, therefore, from Paul, we boldly
declare that, not only are the judgments of God too high for those who try
to search them out, but that the ways also that lead to the knowledge of Him
are even until now untrodden and impassable. For this is what we understand
that the Apostle wishes to signify, when he calls the ways that lead to the
incomprehensible "past finding out," showing by the phrase that that
knowledge is unattainable by human calculations, and that no one ever yet set
his understanding on such a path of reasoning, or showed any trace or sign
of an approach, by way of perception, to the things incomprehensible.
Learning
these things, then, from the lofty words of the Apostle, we argue, by the
passage quoted,
in this
way:--If His judgments cannot be searched out,
and His ways are not traced, and the promise of His good things transcends
every representation that our conjectures can frame, by how much more is His
actual Godhead higher and loftier, in respect of being unspeakable and unapproachable,
than those attributes which are conceived as accompanying it, whereof the divinely
instructed Paul declares that there is no knowledge:--and by this means we
confirm in ourselves the doctrine they'd ride, confessing ourselves inferior
to them in the knowledge of those things which are beyond the range of knowledge,
and declare that we really worship what we know. Now we know the loftiness
of the glory of Him Whom we worship, by the very fact that we are not able
by reasoning to comprehend in our thoughts the incomparable character of His
greatness; and that saying of our Lord to the Samaritan woman, which is brought
forward against us by our enemies, might more properly be addressed to them.
For the words, "Ye worship ye know not what," the Lord speaks to
the Samaritan woman, prejudiced as she was by corporeal ideas in her opinions
concerning God: and to her the phrase "Well applies, because the Samaritans,
thinking that they worship God, and at the same time supposing the Deity to
be corporeally settled in place, adore Him in name only, worshipping something
else, and not God. For nothing is Divine that is conceived as being circumscribed,
but it belongs to the Godhead to be in all places, and to pervade all things,
and not to be limited by anything: so that those who fight against Christ find
the phrase they adduce against us turned into an accusation of themselves.
For, as the Samaritans, supposing the Deity to be compassed round by some circumscription
of place, were rebuked by the words they heard, "'Ye worship ye know not
what,' and your service is profitless to you, for a God that is deemed to be
settled in any place is no God,"--so one might well say to the new Samaritans, "In
supposing the Deity to be limited by the absence of generation, as it were
by some local limit, 'ye worship ye know not what,' doing service to Him indeed
as God, but not knowing that the infinity of God exceeds all the significance
and comprehension that names can furnish."
6. Thereafter
he expounds the appellation of "Son," and of "product
of generation," and very many varieties of" sons," of God, of
men, of rams, of perdition, of light, and of day.
But our
discourse has diverged too far from the subject before us, in following one
the questions
which
arise from time to time by way of inference. Let us
therefore once more resume its sequence, as I imagine that the phrase trader
examination has been sufficiently shown, by what we have said, to be contradictory
not only to the truth, but also to itself. For if, according to their view,
the natural relation to the Father is established by the appellation of "the
Son," and so with that of the "product of generation" to Him
Who has begotten Him (as these men's wisdom falsely models the terms significant
of the Divine nature into a verbal arrangement, according to some grammatical
frivolity), no one could longer doubt that the mutual relation of the names
which is established by nature is a proof of their kindred, or rather of their
identity of essence. But let not our discourse merely turn about our adversaries'
words, that the orthodox doctrine may not seem to gain the victory only by
the weakness of those who fight against it, but appear to have an abundant
supply of strength in itself. Let the adverse argument, therefore, be strengthened
as much as may be by us ourselves with more energetic advocacy, that the superiority
of our force may be recognized with full confidence, as we bring to the unerring
test of truth those arguments also which our adversaries have omitted. He who
contends on behalf of our adversaries will perhaps say that the name of "Son," or "product
of generation," does not by any means establish the fact of kindred in
nature. For in Scripture the term "child of wrath(9)" is used, and "son
of perdition(1)," and "product of a viper(2);" and in such names
Surely no community of nature is apparent. For Judas, who is called "the
son of perdition," is not in his substance the same with perdition, according
to what we understand by the word(3). For the signification of the "man" in
Judas is one thing, and that of "perdition" is another. And the argument
may be established equally from an opposite instance. For those who are called
in a certain sense "children of light," and "children of the
day(4)," are not the same with light and day in respect of the definition
of their nature, and the stones are made Abraham's children s when they claim
their kindred with him by faith and works; and those who are "led by the
Spirit of God," as the Apostle says, are called "Sons of God(6)," without
being the same with God in respect of nature; and one may collect many such
instances from the inspired Scripture, by means of which deceit, like some
image decked with the testimonies of Scripture, masquerades in the likeness
of truth.
Well,
what do we say to this? The divine Scripture knows how to use the word "Son" in
both senses, so that in some cases such an appellation is derived from nature,
in others it is adventitious and artificial. For when it speaks of "sons
of men," or "sons of rams(7)," it marks the essential relation
of that which is begotten to that from which it has its being: but when it
speaks of "sons of power," or "children of God," it presents
to us that kinship which is the result of choice. And, moreover, in the opposite
sense, too, the same persons are called "sons of Eli," and "sons
of Belial(8)," the appellation of "sons" being easily adapted
to either idea. For when they are called "sons of Eli," they are
declared to have natural relationship to him, but in being called "sons
of Belial," they are reproved for the wickedness of their choice, as no
longer emulating their father in their life, but addicting their own purpose
to sin. In the case, then, of this lower nature of ours, and of the things
with which we are concerned, by reason of human nature being equally inclined
to either side (I mean, to vice and to virtue), it is in our power to become
sons either of night or of day, while our nature yet remains, so far as the
chief part of it is concerned, within its proper limits. For neither is he
'who by sin becomes a child of wrath alienated from his human generation, nor
does he who by choice addicts himself to good reject his human origin by the
refinement of his habits, but, while their nature in each case remains the
same, the differences of their purpose assume the names of their relationship,
according as they become either children of God by virtue, or of the opposite
by vice.
But how
does Eunomius, in the case of the divine doctrines at least--he who" preserves
the natural order" (for I will use our author's very words), "and
abides by those things which are known to us from the beginning, and does not
refuse to call Him that is begotten by the name of 'product of generation,'
since the generated essence itself" (as he says) "and the appellation
of 'Son' makes such a relation of words appropriate",--how does he alienate
the Begotten from essential kindred with Him that begat Him? For in the case
of those who are called "sons" or "products" by way of
reproach, or again where some praise accompanies such names, we cannot say
that any one is called "a child of wrath," being at the same time
actually begotten by wrath; nor again had any one the day for his mother, in
a corporeal sense, that he should be called its son; but it is the difference
of their will which gives occasion for names of such relationship. Here, however,
Eunomius says, "we do not refuse to call the Son, seeing He is begotten,
by the name of 'product of generation,' since the generated essence," he
tells us, "and the appellation of ' Son,' makes such a relation of words
appropriate." If, then, he confesses that such a relation of words is
made appropriate by the fact that the Son is really a "product of generation," how
is it opportune to assign such a rationale of names, alike to those which are
used inexactly by way of metaphor, and to those where the natural relation,
as Eunomius tells us, makes such a use of names appropriate? Surely such an
account is true only in the case of those whose nature is a border-land between
virtue and vice, where one often shares in turn opposite classes of names,
becoming a child, now of light, then again of darkness, by reason of affinity
to the good or to its opposite. But where contraries have no place, one could
no longer say that the word "Son" is applied metaphorically, in like
manner as in the case of those who by choice appropriate the title to themselves.
For one could not arrive at this view, that, as a man casting off the works
of darkness becomes, by his decent life, a child of light, so too the Only-begotten
God received the more honourable name as the result of a change from the inferior
state. For one who is a man becomes a son of God by being joined to Christ
by spiritual generation: but He Who by Himself makes the man to be a son of
God does not need another Son to bestow on Him the adoption of a son, but has
the name also of that which He is by nature. A man himself changes himself,
exchanging the old man for the new; but to what shall God be changed, so that
He may receive what He has not? A man puts off himself, and puts on the Divine
nature; but what does He put off, or in what does He array Himself, Who is
always the same? A man becomes a son of God, receiving what he has not, and
laying aside what he has; but He Who has never been in the state of vice has
neither anything to receive nor anything to relinquish. Again, the man may
be on the one hand truly called some one's son, when one speaks with reference
to his nature; and, on the other hand, he may be so called inexactly, when
the choice of his life imposes the name. But God, being One Good, in a single
and uncompounded nature, looks ever the same way, and is never changed by the
impulse of choice, but always wishes what He is, and is, assuredly, what He
wishes: so that He is in both respects properly and truly called Son of God,
since His nature contains the good, and His choice also is never severed from
that which is more excellent, so that this word is employed, without inexactness,
as His name. Thus there is no room for these arguments (which, in the person
of our adversaries, we have been opposing to ourselves), to be brought forward
by our adversaries as a demurrer to the affinity in respect of nature.
7. Then
he ends the book with an exposition of the Divine and Human names of the
Only-begotten, and
a discussion
of the terms "generate" and "ungenerate."
But as,
I know not how or why, they hate and abhor the truth, they give Him indeed
the name of "Son," but in order to avoid the testimony which
this word would give to the community of essence, they separate the word from
the sense included in the name, and concede to the Only-begotten the name of "Son" as
an empty thing, vouchsafing to Him only the mere sound of the word. That what
I say is true, and that I am not taking a false aim at the adversaries' mark,
may be clearly learnt from the actual attacks they make upon the truth. Such
are those arguments which are brought forward by them to establish their blasphemy,
that we are taught by the divine Scriptures many names of the Only-begotten--a
stone, an axe, a rock, a foundation, bread, a vine, a door, a way, a shepherd,
a fountain, a tree, resurrection, a teacher, light, and many such names. But
we may not piously use any of these names of the Lord, understanding it according
to its immediate sense. For surely it would be a most absurd thing to think
that what is incorporeal and immaterial, simple, and without figure, should
be fashioned according to the apparent senses of these names, whatever they
may be, so that when we hear of an axe we should think of a particular figure
of iron, or when we hear of light, of the light in the sky, or of a vine, of
that which grows by the planting of shoots, or of any one of the other names,
as its ordinary use suggests to us to think; but we transfer the sense of these
names to what better becomes the Divine nature, and form some other conception,
and if we do designate Him thus, it is not as being any of these things, according
to the definition of His nature, but as being called these things while He
is conceived by means of the names employed as something else than the things
themselves. But if such names are indeed truly predicated of the Only-begotten
God, without including the declaration of His nature, they say that, as a consequence,
neither should we admit the signification of "Son," as it is understood
according to the prevailing use, as expressive of nature, but should find some
sense of this word also, different from that which is ordinary and obvious.
These, and others like these, are their philosophical arguments to establish
that the Son is not what He is and is called. Our argument was hastening to
a different goal, namely to show that Eunomius' new discourse is false and
inconsistent, and argues neither with the truth nor with itself. Since, however,
the arguments which we employ to attack their doctrine are brought into the
discussion as a sort of support for their blasphemy(9), it may be well first
briefly to discusst his point, and then to proceed to the orderly examination
of his writings.
What can
we say, then, to such things without relevance? That while, as they say,
the names which
Scripture
applies to the Only-begotten are many, we assert
that none of the other names is closely connected with the reference to Him
that begat Him. For we do not employ the name "Stone," or "Resurrection," or "Shepherd," or "Light," or
any of the rest, as we do the name "Son of the Father," with a reference
to the God of all. It is possible to make a twofold division of the signification
of the Divine names, as it were by a scientific rule: for to one class belongs
the indication of His lofty and unspeakable glory; the other class indicates
the variety of the providential dispensation: so that, as we suppose, if that
which received His benefits did not exist, neither would those words be applied
with respect to them(1) which indicate His bounty. All those on the other hand,
that express the attributes of God, are applied suitably and properly to the
Only-begotten God, apart from the objects of the dispensation. But that we
may set forth this doctrine clearly, we wilt examine the names themselves.
The Lord would not have been called a vine, save for the planting of those
who are rooted in Him, nor a shepherd, had not the sheep of the house of Israel
been lost, nor a physician, save for the sake of them that were sick, nor would
He have received for Himself the rest of these names, had He not made the titles
appropriate, in a manner advantageous with regard to those who were benefited
by Him, by some action of His providence. What need is there to mention individual
instances, and to lengthen our argument upon points that are acknowledged?
On the other hand, He is certainly called "Son," and "Right
Hand," and "Only-begotten," and "Word," and "Wisdom," and "Power," and
all other such relative names, as being named together with the Father in a
certain relative conjunction. For He is called the "Power of God," and
the "Right Hand of God," and the "Wisdom of God," and the "Son
and Only-begotten of the Father," and the "Word with God," and
so of the rest. Thus, it follows from what we have stated, that in each of
the names we are to contemplate some suitable sense appropriate to the subject,
so that we may not miss the right understanding of them, and go astray from
the doctrine of godliness. As, then, we transfer each of the other terms to
that sense in which they may be applied to God, and reject in their case the
immediate sense, so as not to understand material light, or a trodden way,
or the bread which is produced by husbandry, or the word that is expressed
by speech, but, instead of these, all those thoughts which present to us the
magnitude of the power of the Word of God,--so, if one were to reject the ordinary
and natural sense of the word "Son," by which we learn that He is
of the same essence as Him that begat Him, he will of course transfer the name
to some more divine interpretation. For since the change to the more glorious
meaning which has been made in each of the other terms has adapted them to
set forth the Divine power, it surely follows that the significance of this
name also should be transferred to what is loftier. But what more Divine sense
could we find in the appellation of "Son," if we were to reject,
according to Our adversaries' view, the natural relation to Him that begat
Him? I presume no one is so daring in impiety as to think that, in speech concerning
the Divine nature, what is humble and mean is more appropriate than what is
lofty and great. If they can discover, therefore, any sense of more exalted
character than this, so that to be of the nature of the Father seems a thing
unworthy to conceive of the Only-begotten, let them tell us whether they know,
in their secret wisdom, anything more exalted than the nature of the Father,
that, in raising the Only-begotten God to this level, they should lift Him
also above His relation to the Father. But if the majesty of the Divine nature
transcends all height, and excels every power that calls forth our wonder,
what idea remains that can carry the meaning of the name "Son" to
something greater still? Since it is acknowledged, therefore, that every significant
phrase employed of the Only-begotten, even if the name be derived from the
ordinary use of our lower life, is properly applied to Him with a difference
of sense in the direction of greater majesty, and if it is shown that we can
find no more noble conception of the title "Son" than that which
presents to us the reality of His relationship to Him that begat Him, I think
that we need spend no more time on this topic, as our argument has sufficiently
shown that it is not proper to interpret the title of "Son" in like
manner with the other names.
But we
must bring back our enquiry once more to the book. It does not become the
same persons "not to refuse" (for I will use their own words) "to
call Him that is generated a ' product of generation,' since both the generated
essence itself and the appellation of Son make such a relation of words appropriate," and
again to change the names which naturally belong to Him into metaphorical interpretations:
so that one of two things has befallen them,--either their first attack has
failed, and it is in vain that they fly to "natural order" to establish
the necessity of calling Him that is generated a "product of generation";
or, if this argument holds good, they will find their second argument brought
to nought by what they have already established. For the person who is called
a "product of generation" because He is generated, cannot, for the
very same reason, be possibly called a "product of making," or a "product
of creation." For the sense of the several terms differs very widely,
and one who uses his phrases advisedly ought to employ words with due regard
to the subject, that we may not, by improperly interchanging the sense of our
phrases, fall into any confusion of ideas. Hence we call that which is wrought
out by a craft the work of the craftsman, and call him who is begotten by a
man that man's son; and no sane person would call the work a son, or the son
a work; for that is the language of one who confuses and obscures the true
sense by an erroneous use of names. It follows that we must truly affirm of
the Only-begotten one of these two things,--if He is a Son, that He is not
to be called a "product of creation," and if He is created, that
He is alien from the appellation of "Son(2)," just as heaven and
sea and earth, and all individual things, being things created, do not assume
the name of "Son." But since Eunomius bears witness that the Only-begotten
God is begotten (and the evidence of enemies is of aditional value for establishing
the truth), he surely testifies also, by saying that He is begotten, to the
fact that He is not created. Enough, however, on these points: for though many
arguments crowd upon us, we will be content, lest their number lead to disproportion,
with those we have already adduced on the subject before us.
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