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GREGORY OF NYSSA
THE LIFE AND WRITINGS
BOOK IX
1.
The ninth book declares that Eunomius' account of the Nature of God is,
up to a certain
point,
well stated. Then in succession he mixes up with his
own argument, on account of its affinity, the expression from Philo's writings, "God
is before all other things, which are generated," adding also the expression, "He
has dominion over His own power." Detesting the excessive absurdity, Gregory
strikingly confutes it(1).
BUT he
now turns to loftier language, and elevating himself and puffing himself
up with empty conceit,
he takes
in hand to say something worthy of God's majesty. "For
God," he says, "being the most highly exalted of all goods, and the
mightiest of all, and free from all necessity--" Nobly does the gallant
man bring his discourse, like some ship without ballast, driven unguided by
the waves of deceit, into the harbour of truth! "God is the most highly
exalted of all goods." Splendid acknowledgment! I suppose he will not
bring a charge of unconstitutional conduct against the great John, by whom,
in his lofty proclamation, the Only-begotten is declared to be God, Who was
with God and was God(2). If he, then, the proclaimer of the Godhead of the
Only-begotten, is worthy of credit, and if "God is the most highly exalted
of all goods," it follows that the Son is alleged by the enemies of His
glory, to be "the most highly exalted of all goods." And as this
phrase is also applied to the Father, the superlative force of "most highly
exalted" admits of no diminution or addition by way of comparison. But,
now that we have obtained from the adversary's testimony these statements for
the proof of the glory of the Only-begotten, we must add in support of sound
doctrine his next statement too. He says, "God, the most highly exalted
of all goods, being without hindrance from nature, or constraint from cause,
or impulse from need, begets and creates according to the supremacy of His
own authority, having His will as power sufficient for the constitution of
the things produced. If, then, all good is according to His will, He not only
determines that which is made as good, but also the time of its being. good,
if, that is to say, as one may assume, it is an indication of weakness to make
what one does not will(3)." We shall borrow so far as this, for the confirmation
of the orthodox doctrines, from our adversaries' statement, percolated as that
statement is by vile and counterfeit clauses. Yes, He Who has, by the supremacy
of His authority, power in His will that suffices for the constitution of the
things that are made, He Who created all things without hindrance from nature
or compulsion from cause, does determine not only that which is made as good,
but also the time of its being good. But He Who made all things is, as the
gospel proclaims, the Only-begotten God. He, at that time when He willed it,
did make the creation; at that time, by means of the circumambient essence,
He surrounded with the body of heaven all that universe that is shut off within
its compass: at that time, when He thought it well that this should be, He
displayed the dry land to view, He enclosed the waters in their hollow places;
vegetation, fruits, the generation of animals, the formation of man, appeared
at that time when each of these things seemed expedient to the wisdom of the
Creator:--and He Who made all these things (I will once more repeat my statement)
is the Only-begotten God Who made the ages. For if the interval of the ages
has preceded existing things, it is proper to employ the temporal adverb, and
to say "He then willed" and "He then made": but since the
age was not, since no conception of interval is present to our minds in regard
to that Divine Nature which is not measured by quantity or by interval, the
force of temporal expressions must surely be void. Thus to say that the creation
has had given to it a beginning in time, according to the good pleasure of
the wisdom of Him Who made all things, does not go beyond probability: but
to regard the Divine Nature itself as being in a kind of extension measured
by intervals, belongs only to those who have been trained in the new wisdom.
What a point is this, embedded in his words, which I intentionally passed by
in my eagerness to reach the subject! I will now resume it, and read it to
show our author's cleverness.
"For He Who is most highly exalted in God Himself(4) before all other
things that are generated," he says, "has dominion over His own power." The
phrase has been transferred by our pamphleteer word for word from the Hebrew
Philo to his own argument, and Eunomius' theft will be proved by Philo's works
themselves to any one who cares about it. I note the fact, however, at present,
not so much to reproach our speech-monger with the poverty of his own arguments
and thoughts, as with the intention of showing to my readers the close relationship
between the doctrine of Eunomius and the reasoning of the Jews. For this phrase
of Philo would not have fitted word for word into his argument had there not
been a sort of kindred between the intention of the one and the other. In the
Hebrew author you may find the phrase in this form: "God, before all other
things that are generated"; and what follows, "has dominion over
His own power," is an addition of the new Judaism. But what an absurdity
this involves an examination of the saying will clearly show. "God," he
says, "has dominion over His own power." Tell me, what is He? over
what has He dominion? Is He something else than His own power, and Lord of
a power that is something else than Himself? Then power is overcome by the
absence of power. For that which is something else than power is surely not
power, and thus He is found to have dominion over power just in so far as He
is not power. Or again, God, being power, has another power in Himself, and
has dominion over the one by the other. And what contest or schism is there,
that God should divide the power that exists in Himself, and overthrow one
section of His power by the other. I suppose He could not have dominion over
His own power without the assistance to that end of some greater and more violent
power! Such is Eunomius' God: a being with double nature, or composite, dividing
Himself against Himself, having one power out of harmony with another, so that
by one He is urged to disorder, and by the other restrains this discordant
motion. Again, with what intent does He dominate the power that urges on to
generation? lest some evil should arise if generation be not hindered? or rather
let i him explain this in the first place,--what is that which is naturally
under dominion? His language points to some movement of impulse and choice,
considered separately and independently. For that which dominates must needs
be one thing, that which is dominated another. Now God "has dominion over
His power "--and this is--what? a self-determining nature? or something
else than this, pressing on to disquiet, or remaining in a state of quiescence?
Well, if he supposes it to be quiescent, that which is tranquil needs no one
to have dominion over it: and if he says "He has dominion," He "has
dominion" clearly over something which impels and is in motion: and this,
I presume he will say, is something naturally different from Him Who rules
it. What then, let him tell us, does he understand in this idea? Is it something
else besides God, considered as having an independent existence? How can another
existence be in God? Or is it some condition in the Divine Nature considered
as having an existence not its own? I hardly think he would say so: for that
which has no existence of its own is not: and that which is not, is neither
under dominion, nor set free from it. What then is that power which was under
dominion, and was restrained in respect of its own activity, while the due
time of the generation of Christ was still about to come, and to set this power
free to proceed to its natural operation? What was the intervening cause of
delay, for which God deferred the generation of the Only-begotten, not thinking
it good as yet to become a Father? And what is this that is inserted as intervening
between the life of the Father and that of the Son, that is not time nor space,
nor any idea of extension, nor any like thing? To what purpose is it that this
keen and clear-sighted eye marks and beholds the separation of the life of
God in regard to the life of the Son? When he is driven in all directions he
is himself forced to admit that the interval does not exist at all.
2. He
then ingeniously shows that the generation of the Son is not according to
the phrase of Eunomius, "The Father begat Him at that time when He
chase, and not before:" but that the Son, being the fulness of all that
is good and excellent, is always contemplated in the Father; using for this
demonstration the support of Eunomius' own arguments.
However,
though there is no interval between them, he does not admit that their communion
is immediate
and intimate,
but condescends to the measure of
our knowledge, and converses with us in human phrase as one of ourselves, himself
quietly confessing the impotence of reasoning and taking refuge in a line of
argument that was never taught by Aristotle and his school. He says, "It
was good and proper that He should beget His Son at that time when He willed:
and in the minds of sensible men there does not hence arise any questioning
why He did not do so before." What does this mean, Eunomius? Are you too
going afoot like us unlettered men? are you leaving your artistic periods and
actually taking refuge in unreasoning assent? you, who so much reproached those
who take in hand to write without logical skill? You, who say to Basil, "You
show your own ignorance when you say that definitions of the terms that express
things spiritual are an impossibility for men," who again elsewhere advance
the same charge, "you make your own impotence common to others, when you
declare that what is not possible for you is impossible for all"? Is this
the way that you, who say such things as these, approach the ears of him who
questions about the reason why the Father defers becoming the Father of such
a Son? Do you think it an adequate explanation to say, "He begat Him at
that time when He chose: let there be no questioning on this point"? Has
your apprehensive fancy grown so feeble in the maintenance of your doctrines?
What has become of your premises that lead to dilemmas? What has become of
your forcible proofs? how comes it that those terrible and inevitable syllogistic
conclusions of your art have dissolved into vanity and nothingness? "He
begat the Son at that time when He chose: let there be no questioning on this
point!" Is this the finished product of your many labours, of your voluminous
undertakings? What was the question asked? "If it is good and fitting
for God to have such a Son, why are we not to believe that the good is always
present with Him(5)?" What is the answer he makes to us from the very
shrine of his philosophy, tightening the bonds of his argument by inevitable
necessity? "He made the Son at that time when He chose: let there be no
questioning as to why He did not do so before." Why, if the inquiry before
us were concerning some irrational being, that acts by natural impulse, why
it did not sooner do whatever it may be,--why the spider did not make her webs,
or the bee her honey, or the turtle-dove her nest,--what else could you have
said? would not the same answer have been ready--" She did it at that
time when she chose: let there be no questioning on this matter"? Nay,
if it were concerning some sculptor or painter who works in paintings or in
sculptures by his imitative art, whatever it may be (supposing that he exercises
his art without being subject to any authority), I imagine that such an answer
would meet the case of any one who wished to know why he did not exercise his
art sooner,--that, being under no necessity, he made his own choice the occasion
of his operation. For men, because they do not always wish the same things(6),
and commonly have not power cooperating with their will, do something which
seems good to them at that time when their choice inclines to the work, and
they have no external hindrance. But that nature which is always the same,
to which no good is adventitious, in which all that variety of plans which
arises by way of opposition, from error or from ignorance, has no place, to
which there comes nothing as a result of change, which was not with it before,
and by which nothing is chosen afterwards which it had not from the beginning
regarded as good,--to say of this nature that it does not always possess what
is good, but afterwards chooses to have something which it did not choose before,--this
belongs to wisdom that surpasses us. For we were taught that the Divine. Nature
is at all times full of all good, or rather is itself the fulness of all goods,
seeing that it needs no addition for its perfecting, but is itself by its own
nature the perfection of good. Now that which is perfect is equally remote
from addition and from diminution; and therefore, we say that perfection of
goods which we behold in the Divine Nature always remains the same, as, in
whatsoever direction we extend our thoughts, we there apprehend it to be such
as it is. The Divine Nature, then, is never void of good: but the Son is the
fulness of all good: and accordingly He is at all times contemplated in that
Father Whose Nature is perfection in all good. But he says, "let there
be no questioning about this point, why He did not do so before:" and
we shall answer him,--"It is one thing, most sapient sir, to lay down
as an ordinance some proposition that you happen to approve(7), and another
to make converts by reasoning on the points of controversy. So long, therefore,
as you cannot assign any reason why we may piously say that the Son was "afterwards" begotten
by the Father, your ordinances will be of no effect with sensible men."
Thus it
is then that Eunomius brings the truth to light for us as the result of his
scientific attack.
And we
for our part shall apply his argument, as
we are wont to do, for the establishment of the true doctrine, so that even
by this passage it may be clear that at every point, constrained against their
will, they advocate our view. For if, as our opponent says, "He begat
the Son at that time when He chose," and if He always chose that which
is good, and His power coincided with His choice, it follows that the Son will
be considered as always with the Father, Who always both chooses that which
is excellent, and is able to possess what He chooses. And if we are to reduce
his next words also to truth, it is easy for us to adapt them also to the doctrine
we hold:--" Let there be no questioning among sensible men on this point,
why He did not do so before"--for the word "before" has a temporal
sense, opposed to what is "afterwards" and "later": but
on the supposition that time does not exist, the terms expressing temporal
interval are surely abolished with it. Now the Lord was before times and before
ages: questioning as to "before" or "after" concerning
the Maker of the ages is useless in the eyes of reasonable men: for words of
this class are devoid of all meaning, if they are not used in reference to
time. Since then the Lord is antecedent to times, the words "before" and "after" have
no place as applied to Him. This may perhaps be sufficient to refute arguments
that need no one to overthrow them, but fall by their own feebleness. For who
is there with so much leisure that he can give himself up to such an extent
to listen to the arguments on the other side, and to our contention against
the silly stuff? Since, however, in men prejudiced by impiety, deceit is like
some ingrained dye, hard to wash out, and deeply burned in upon their hearts,
let us spend yet a little time upon our argument, if haply we may be able to
cleanse their souls from this evil stain. After the utterances that I have
quoted, and after adding to them, in the manner of his teacher Prunicus,(8)
some unconnected and ill-arranged octads of insolence and abuse, he comes to
the crowning point of his arguments, and, leaving the illogical exposition
of his folly, arms his discourse once more with the weapons of dialectic, and
maintains his absurdity against us, as he imagines, syllogistically.
3. He further shows that the pretemporal generation of the San is not the
subject of influences drawn from ordinary and carnal generation, but is without
beginning and without end, and not according to the fabrications constructed
by Eunomius, in ignorance of His power, from the statements of Plato concerning
the soul and from the sabbath rest of the Hebrews.
What he
says runs thus:--" As all generation is not protracted to infinity,
but ceases on arriving at some end, those who admit the origination of the
Son are absolutely obliged to say that He then ceased being generated, and
not to look incredulously on the beginning of those things which cease being
generated, and therefore also surely begin: for the cessation of generation
establishes a beginning of begetting and being begotten: and these facts cannot
be disbelieved, on the ground at once of nature itself and of the Divine laws(9)." Now
since he endeavours to establish his point inferentially, laying down his universal
proposition according to the scientific method of those who are skilled in
such matters, and including in the general premise the proof of the particular,
let us first consider his universal, and then proceed to examine the force
of his inferences. Is it a reverent proceeding to draw from "all generation" evidence
even as to the pre-temporal generation of the Son? and ought we to put forward
ordinary nature as our instructor on the being of the Only-begotten? For my
own part, I should not have expected any one to reach such a point of madness,
that any such idea of the Divine and unsullied generation should enter his
fancy. "All generation," he says, "is not protracted to infinity." What
is it that he understands by "generation"? Is he speaking of fleshly,
bodily birth, or of the formation of inanimate objects? The affections involved
in bodily generation are well known--affections which no one would think of
transferring to the Divine Nature. In order therefore that our discourse may
not, by mentioning the works of nature at length, be made to appear redundant,
we shall pass such matters by in silence, as I suppose that every sensible
man is himself aware of the causes by which generation is protracted, both
in regard to its beginning and to its cessation: it would be tedious and at
the same time superfluous to express them all minutely, the coming together
of those who generate, the formation in the womb of that which is generated,
travail, birth, place, time, without which the generation of a body cannot
be brought about,--things which are all equally alien from the Divine generation
of the Only-begotten: for if any one of these things were admitted, the rest
will of necessity all enter with it. That the Divine generation, therefore,
may be clear of every idea connected with passion, we shall avoid conceiving
with regard to it even that extension which is measured by intervals. Now that
which begins and ends is surely regarded as being in a kind of extension, and
all extension is measured by time, and as time (by which we mark both the end
of birth and its beginning) is excluded, it would be vain, in the case of the
uninterrupted generation, to entertain the idea of end or beginning, since
no idea can be formed to mark either the point at which such generation begins
or that at which it ceases. If on the other hand it is the inanimate creation
to which he is looking, even in this case, in like manner, place, and time,
and matter, and preparation, and power of the artificer, and many like things,
concur to bring the product to perfection. And since time assuredly is concurrent
with all things that are produced, and since with everything that is created,
be it animate or inanimate, there are conceived also bases of construction
relative to the product, we can find in these cases evident beginnings and
endings of the process of formation. For even the procuring of material is
actually the beginning of the fabric, and is a sign of place, and is logically
connected with time. All these things fix for the products their beginnings
and endings; and no one could say that these things have any participation
in the pretemporal generation of the Only-begotten God, so that, by the aid
of the things now under consideration, we are able to calculate, with regard
to that generation, any beginning or end.
Now that
we have so far discussed these matters, let us resume consideration of our
adversaries'
argument.
It says, "As all generation is not protracted
to infinity, but ceases on arriving at some end." Now, since the sense
of "generation" has been considered with respect to either meaning,--whether
he intends by this word to signify the birth of corporeal beings, or the formation
of things created (neither of which has anything in common with the unsullied
Nature), the premise is shown to have no connection with the subject(1). For
it is not a matter of absolute necessity, as he maintains, that, because all
making and generation ceases at some limit, therefore those who accept the
generation of the Son should circumscribe it by a double limit, by supposing,
as regards it, a beginning and an end. For it is only as being circumscribed
in some quantitative way that things can be said either to begin or to cease
on arriving at a limit, and the measure expressed by time (having its extension
concomitant with the quantity of that which is produced) differentiates the
beginning from the end by the interval between them. But how can any one measure
or treat as extended that which is without quantity and without extension?
What measure can he find for that which has no quantity, or what interval for
that which has no extension? or how can any one define the infinite by "end" and "beginning?" for "beginning" and "end" are
names of limits of extension, and, where there is no extension, neither is
there any limit. Now the Divine Nature is without extension, and, being without
extension, it has no limit; and that which is limitless is infinite, and is
spoken of accordingly. Thus it is idle to try to circumscribe the infinite
by "beginning" and "ending"--for what is circumscribed
cannot be infinite. How comes it, then, that this Platonic Phaedrus discon-nectedly
tacks on to his own doctrine those speculations on the soul which Plato makes
in that dialogue? For as Plato there spoke of "cessation of motion," so
this writer too was eager to speak of "cessation of generation," in
order to Impose upon those who have no knowledge of these matters, with fine
Platonic phrases. "And these facts," he tells us, "cannot be
disbelieved, on the ground at once of nature itself and of the Divine laws." But
nature, from our previous remarks, appears not to be trustworthy for instruction
as to the Divine generation,--not even if one were to take the universe itself
as an illustration of the argument: since through its creation also, as we
learn in the cosmogony of Moses, there ran the measure of time, meted out in
a certain order and arrangement by stated days and nights, for each of the
things that came into being: and this even our adversaries' statement does
not admit with regard to the being of the Only-begotten, since it acknowledges
that the Lord was before the times of the ages.
It remains
to consider his support of his point by "the Divine laws," by
which he undertakes to show both an end and a beginning of the generation of
the Son. "God," he says, "willing that the law of creation should
be impressed upon the Hebrews, did not appoint the first day of generation
for the end of creation, or to be the evidence of its beginning; for He gave
them as the memorial of the creation, not the first day of generation but the
seventh, whereon He rested from His works." Will any one believe that
this was written by Eunomius, and that the words cited have not been inserted
by us, by way of misrepresenting his composition so as to make him appear ridiculous
to our readers, in dragging in to prove his point matters that have nothing
to do with the question? For the matter in hand was to show, as he undertook
to do, that the Son, not previously existing, came into being; and that in
being generated, He took a beginning of generation, and of cessation(2),--His
generation being protracted in time, as it were by a kind of travail. And what
is his resource for establishing this The fact that the people of the Hebrews,
according to the Law, keep sabbath on the seventh day! How well the evidence
agrees with the matter in hand! Because the Jew honours his sabbath by idleness,
the fact, as he says, is proved that the Lord both had a beginning of birth
and ceased being born! How many other testimonies on this matter has our author
passed by, not at all of less weight than that which he employs to establish
the point at issue!--the circumcision on the eighth day, the week of unleavened
bread, the mystery on the fourteenth day of the moon's course, the sacrifices
of purification, the observation of the lepers, the ram, the calf, the heifer,
the scapegoat, the he-goat. If these things are far removed from the point,
let those who are so much interested in the Jewish mysteries tell us how that
particular matter is within range of the question. We judge it to be mean and
unmanly to trample on the fallen, and shall proceed to enquire, from what follows
in his writings, whether there is anything there of such a kind as to give
trouble to his opponent. All, then, that he maintains in the next passage,
as to the impropriety of supposing anything intermediate between the Father
and the Son, I shall pass by, as being, in a sense, in agreement with our doctrine.
For it would be alike undiscriminating and unfair not to distinguish in his
remarks what is irreproachable, and what is blamable, seeing that, while he
fights against his own statements, he does not follow his own admissions, speaking
of the immediate character of the connection while refusing to admit its continuity,
and conceiving that nothing was before the Son and having some suspicion that
the Son was while yet contending that He came into being when He was not. We
shall spend but a short time on these points (since the argument has already
been established beforehand), and then proceed to handle the arguments proposed.
It is
not allowable for the same person to set nothing above the existence of the
Only-begotten,
and to say
that before His generation He was not, but
that He was generated then when the Father willed. For "then" and "when" have
a sense which specially and properly refers to the denoting of time, according
to the common use of men who speak soundly, and according to their signification
in Scripture. One may take "then shall they say among the heathen(3)," and "when
I sent you(4)" and "then shall the kingdom of heaven be likened(5)," and
countless similar phrases through the whole of Scripture, to prove this point,
that the ordinary Scriptural use employs these parts of speech to denote time.
If therefore, as our opponent allows, time was not, the signifying of time
surely disappears too: and if this did not exist, it will necessarily be replaced
by eternity in our conception(6). For in the phrase "was not" there
is surely implied "once": as, if he should speak of "not being," without
the qualification "once," he would also deny his existence now: but
if he admits His present existence, and contends against His eternity, it is
surely not "not being" absolutely, but "not being" once
which is present to his mind. And as this phrase is utterly unreal, unless
it rests upon the signification of time, it would be foolish and idle to say
that nothing was before the Son, and yet to maintain that the Son did not always
exist. For if there is neither place nor time, nor any other creature where
the Word that was in the beginning is not, the statement that the Lord "once
was not" is entirely removed from the region of orthodox doctrine. So
he is at variance not so much with us as with himself, who declares that the
Only-begotten both was and was not. For in confessing that the conjunction
of the Son with the Father is not interrupted by anything, He clearly testifies
to His eternity. But if he should say that the Son was not in the Father, we
shall not ourselves say anything against such a statement, but shall oppose
to it the Scripture which declares that the Son is in the Father, and the Father
in the Son, without adding to the phrase "once" or "when" or "then," but
testifying His eternity by this affirmative and unqualified utterance.
4. Then,
having shown that Eunomius' calumny against the great Basil, that he called
the Only-begotten "Ungenerate," is
false, and having again with much ingenuity discussed the eternity, being,
and endlessness of the Only-begotten,
and the creation of light and of darkness, he concludes the book.
With regard
to his attempting to show that we say the Only-begotten God is ungenerate,
it is as though
he
should say that we actually define the Father
to be begotten: for either statement is of the same absurdity, or rather of
the same blasphemous character. If, therefore, he has made up his mind to slander
us, let him add the other charge as well, and spare nothing by which it may
be in his power more violently to exasperate his hearers against us. But if
one of these charges is withheld because its calumnious nature is apparent,
why is the other made? For it is just the same thing, as we have said, so far
as the impiety goes, to call the Son ungenerate and to call the Father generated.
Now if any such phrase can found in our writings, in which the Son is spoken
of as ungenerate, we shall give the final vote against ourselves: but if he
is fabricating false charges and calumnies at his pleasure, making any fictitious
statement he pleases to slander our doctrines, this fact may serve with sensible
men for an evidence of our orthodoxy, that while truth itself fights on our
side, he brings forward a lie to accuse our doctrine and makes up an indictment
for unorthodoxy that has no relation to our statements. To these charges, however,
we can give a concise answer. As we judge that man accursed who says that the
Only-begotten God is ungenerate, let him in turn anathematize the man who lays
it down that He who was in the beginning "once was not." For by such
a method it will be shown who brings his charges truly, and who calumniously.
But if we deny his accusations, if, when we speak of a Father, we understand
as implied in that word a Son also, and if, when we use the name "Son," we
declare that He really is what He is called, being shed forth by generation
from the ungenerate Light, how can the calumny of those who persist that we
say the Only-begotten is ungenerate fail to be manifest? Yet we shall not,
because we say that He exists by generation, therefore admit that He "once
was not." For every one knows that the contradiction between "being" and "not
being" is immediate, so that the affirmation of one of these terms is
absolutely the destruction of the other, and that, just as "being" is
the same in regard to every time at which any of the things that "are" is
supposed to have its existence (for the sky, and stars, and sun, and the rest
of the things that "are," are not more in a state of being now than
they were yesterday, or the day before, or at any previous time), so the meaning
of "not being" expresses non-existence equally at every time, whether
one speaks of it in reference to what is earlier or to what is later. For any
of the things that do not exist(7) is no more in a state of "not being" now
than if it were non-existent before, but the idea of "not being" is
one applied to that which "is not" at any distance of time. And for
this reason, in speaking of living creatures, while we use different words
to denote the dissolution into a state of "not being" of that which
has been, and the condition of non-existence of that which has never had an
entrance into being, and say either that a thing has never come into being
at all, or that which was generated has died, yet by either form of speech
we equally represent by our words "non-existence." For as day is
bounded on each side by night, yet the parts of the night which bound it are
not named alike, but we speak of one as "after night-fall," and of
the other as "before dawn," while that which both phrases denote
is night, so, if any one looks on that which is not in contrast to that which
it, he will give different names to that state which is antecedent to formation
and to that which follows the dissolution of what was formed, yet will conceive
as one the condition which both phrases signify--the condition which is antecedent
to formation and the condition following on dissolution after formation. For
the state of "not being "of that which has not been generated, and
of that which has died, save for the difference of the names, are the same,--with
the exception of the account which we take of the hope of the resurrection.
Now since we learn from Scripture that the Only-begotten God is the Prince
of Life, the very life, and light, and truth, and all that is honourable in
word or thought, we say that it is absurd and impious to contemplate, in conjunction
with Him Who really is, the opposite conception, whether of dissolution tending
to corruption, or of non-existence before formation: but as we extend our thought
in every direction to what is to follow, or to what was before the ages, we
nowhere pause in our conceptions at the condition of "not being," judging
it to tend equally to impiety to cut short the Divine being by non-existence
at any time whatever. For it is the same thing to say that the immortal life
is mortal, that the truth is a lie, that light is darkness, and that which
is not. He, accordingly, who refuses to allow that He will at some future time
cease to be, will also refuse to allow that He "once was not," avoiding,
according to our view, the same impiety on either hand: for, as no death cuts
short the endlessness of the life of the Only-begotten, so, as we look back,
no period of nonexistence will terminate His life in its course towards eternity,
that which in reality is may be clear of all community with that which in reality
is not. For this cause the Lord, desiring that His disciples might be far removed
from this error (that they might never, by themselves searching for something
antecedent to the existence of the Only-begotten, be led by their reasoning
to the idea of non-existence), saith, "I am in the Father, and the Father
in Me(8)," in the sense that neither is that which is not conceived in
that which is, nor that which is in that which is not. And here the very order
of the phrase explains the orthodox doctrine; for because the Father is not
of the Son, but the Son of the Father, therefore He says, "I am in the
Father," showing the fact that He is not of another but of Him, and then
reverses the phrase to, "and the Father in Me," indicating that he
who, in his curious speculation, passes beyond the Son, passes also beyond
the conception of the Father: for He who is in anything cannot be found outside
of that in which He is: so that the man who, while not denying that the Father
is in the Son, yet imagines that he has in any degree apprehended the Father
as external to the Son, is talking idly. Idle too are the wanderings of our
adversaries' fighting about shadows touching the matter of "ungeneracy," proceeding
without solid foundation by means of nonentities. Yet if I am to bring more
fully to light the whole absurdity of their argument, let me be allowed to
spend a little longer on this speculation. As they say that the Only-begotten
God came into existence "later," after the Father, this "unbegotten" of
theirs, whatever they imagine it to be, is discovered of necessity to exhibit
with itself the idea of evil. Who knows not, that, just as the non-existent
is contrasted with the existent, so with every good thing or name is contrasted
the opposite conception, as "bad" with "good," "falsehood "with "truth," "darkness" with "light," and
all the rest that are similarly opposed to one another, where the opposition
admits of no middle term, and it is impossible that the two should co-exist,
but the presence of the one destroys its opposite, and with the withdrawal
of the other takes place the appearance of its contrary?
Now these
points being conceded to us, the further point is also clear to any one,
that, as Moses
says darkness
was before the creation of light, so
also in the case of the Son (if, according to the heretical statement, the
Father "made Him at that time when He willed"), before He made Him,
that Light which the Son is was not; and, light not yet being, it is impossible
that its opposite should not be. For we learn also from the other instances
that nothing that comes from the Creator is at random, but that which was lacking
is added by creation to existing things. Thus it is quite clear that if. God
did make the Son, He made Him by reason of a deficiency in the nature of things.
As, then, while sensible light was still lacking, there was darkness, and darkness
would certainly have prevailed had light not come into being, so also, when
the Son "as yet was not," the very and true Light, and all else that
the Son is, did not exist. For even according to the evidence of heresy, that
which exists has no need of coming into being; if therefore He made Him, He
assuredly made that which did not exist. Thus, according to their view, before
the Son came into being, neither had truth come into being, nor the intelligible
Light, nor the fount of life, nor, generally, the nature of any thing that
is excellent and good. Now, concurrently with the exclusion of each of these,
there is found to subsist the opposite conception: and if light was not, it
cannot be denied that darkness was; and so with the rest,--in place of each
of these more excellent conceptions it is clearly impossible that its opposite
did not exist in place of that which was lacking. It is therefore a necessary
conclusion, that when the Father, as the heretics say, "had not as yet
willed to make the Son," none of those things which the Son is being yet
existent, we must say that He was surrounded by darkness instead of Light,
by falsehood instead of truth, by death instead of life, by evil instead of
good. For He Who creates, creates things that are not; "That which is," as
Eunomius says, "needs not generation"; and of those things which
are considered as opposed, the better cannot be non-existent, except by the
existence of the worse. These are the gifts with which the wisdom of heresy
honours the Father, by which it degrades the eternity of the Son, and ascribes
to God and the Father, before the "production" of the Son, the whole
catalogue of evils!
And let
no one think to rebut by examples from the rest of creation the demonstration
of the doctrinal
absurdity
which results from this argument. One will perhaps
say that, as, when the sky was not, there was no opposite to it, so we are
not absolutely compelled to admit that if the Son, Who is Truth, had not come
into existence, the opposite did exist. To him we may reply that to the sky
there is no corresponding opposite, unless one were to say that its non-existence
is opposed to its existence. But to virtue is certainly opposed that which
is vicious (and the Lord is virtue); so that when the sky was not, it does
not follow that anything was; but when good was not, its opposite was; thus
he who says that good was not, will certainly allow, even without intending
it, that evil was. "But the Father also," he says(9), "is absolute
virtue, and life, and light unapproachable, and all that is exalted in word
or thought: so that there is no necessity to suppose, when the Only-begotten
Light was not, the existence of that darkness which is His corresponding opposite." But
this is just what I say, that darkness never was; for the light-never "was
not," for "the light," as the prophecy says, "is always
in the light(1)." If, however, according to the heretical doctrine, the "ungenerate
light" is one thing, and the "generated light" another, and
the one is eternal, while the other comes into existence at a later time, it
follows of absolute necessity that in the eternal light we should find no place
for the establishment of its opposite; (for if the light always shines, the
power of darkness has no place in it;) and that in the case of the light which
comes into being, as they say, afterwards, it is impossible that the light
should shine forth save out of darkness; and the interval of darkness between
eternal light and that which arises later will be clearly marked in every way(2).
For there would have been no need of the making of the later light, if that
which was created had not been of utility for some purpose: and the one use
of light is that of the dispersion by its means of the prevailing gloom. Now
the light which exists without creation is what it is by nature by reason of
itself; but the created light clearly comes into being by reason of something
else. It must be then that its existence was preceded by darkness, on account
of which the light was of necessity created, and it is not possible by any
reasoning to make plausible the view that darkness did not precede the manifestation
of the Only-begotten Light,--on the supposition, that is, that He is believed
to have been "made" at a later time. Surely such a doctrine is beyond
all impiety! It is therefore clearly shown that the Father of truth did not
make the truth at a time when it was not; but, being the fountain of light
and truth, and of all good, He shed forth from Himself that Only-begotten Light
of truth by which the glory of His Person is expressly imaged; so that the
blasphemy of those who say that the Son was a later addition to God by way
of creation is at all points refuted.
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