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GREGORY
OF NYSSA
ANSWER TO EUNOMIUS'
SECOND BOOK
PART 1
THE
first part of my contentions against Eunomius has with God's help been
sufficiently
established in
the preceding work, as all who will may see from
what I have worked out, how in that former part his fallacy has been completely
exposed, and its falsehood has no further force against the truth, except in
the case of those who show a very shameless animus against her. But since,
like some robber's ambuscade, he has got together a second work against orthodoxy,
again with God's help the truth takes up arms through me against the array
of her enemies, commanding my arguments like a general and directing them at
her pleasure against the foe; following whose steps I shall boldly venture
on the second part of my contentions, nothing daunted by the array of falsehood,
notwithstanding its display of numerous arguments. For faithful is He who has
promised that "a thousand shall be chased by one," and that "ten
thousand shall be put to flight by two"(2), victory in battle being due
not to numbers, but to righteousness. For even as bulky Goliath, when he shook
against the Israelites that ponderous spear we read of, inspired no fear in
his opponent, though a shepherd and unskilled in the tactics of war, but having
met him in fight loses his own head by a direct reversal of his expectations,
so our Goliath, the champion of this alien system, stretching forth his blasphemy
against his opponents as though his hand were on a naked sword, and flashing
the while with sophisms fresh from his whetstone, has failed to inspire us,
though no soldiers, with any fear of his prowess, or to find himself free to
exult in the dearth of adversaries; on the contrary, he has found us warriors
improvised from the Lord's sheepfold, untaught in logical warfare, and thinking
it no detriment to be so, but simply slinging our plain, rude argument of truth
against him. Since then, that shepherd who is in the record, when he had cast
down the alien with his sling, and broken his helmet with the stone, so that
it gaped under the violence of the blow, did not confine his valour to gazing
on his fallen foe, but running in upon him, and depriving him of his head,
returns bearing it as a trophy to his people, parading that braggart head through
the host of his countrymen; looking to this example it becomes us also to advance
nothing daunted to the second part of our labours, but as far as possible to
imitate David's valour, and, like him, after the first blow to plant our foot
upon the fallen foe, so that enemy of the truth may be exhibited as much as
possible as a headless trunk. For separated as he is from the true faith he
is far more truly beheaded than that Philistine. For since Christ is the head
of every man, as saith the Apostle(3), and it is only reasonable that the believer
alone should be so termed (for Christ, I take it, cannot be the head of the
unbelieving also), it follows that he who is severed from the saving faith
must be headless like Goliath, being severed from the true head by his own
sword which he had whetted against the truth; which head it shall be our task
not to cut off, but to show that it is cut off.
And let
no one suppose that it is through pride or desire of human reputation that
I go down to
this truceless
and implacable warfare to engage with the
foe. For if it were allowed me to pass a peaceful life meddling with no one,
it would be far enough from my disposition to wantonly disturb my tranquillity,
by voluntarily provoking and stirring up a war against myself. But now that
God's city, the Church, is besieged, and the great wall of the faith is shaken,
battered by the encircling engines of heresy, and there is no small risk of
the word of the Lord being swept into captivity through their devilish onslaught,
deeming it a dreadful thing to decline taking part in the Christian conflict,
I have not turned aside to repose, but have looked on the sweat of toil as
more honourable than the relaxation of repose, knowing well that just as every
man, as saith the Apostle, shall receive his own reward(4) according to his
own labour, so as a matter of course he shall receive punishment for neglect
of labour proportioned to his strength. Accordingly I supported the first encounter
in the discussion with good courage, discharging from my shepherd's scrip,
i.e. from the teaching of the Church, my natural and unpremeditated arguments
for the subversion of this blasphemy, needing not at all the equipment of arguments
from profane sources to qualify me for the contest; and now also I do not hang
back from the second part of the encounter, fixing my hope like great David(5)
on Him "Who teacheth my hands to war, and my fingers to fight," if
haply the hand of the writer may in my case also be guided by Divine power
to the overthrow of these heretical opinions, and my fingers may serve for
the overthrow of their malignant array by directing my argument with skill
and precision against the foe. But as in human conflicts those who excel in
valour and might, secured by their armour and having previously acquired military
skill by their training for facing danger, station themselves at the head of
their column, encountering danger for those ranged behind them, while the rest
of the company, though serving only to give an appearance of numbers, seem
nevertheless, if only by their serried shields, to conduce to the common good,
so in these our conflicts that noble soldier of Christ and vehement champion
against the aliens, the mighty spiritual warrior Basil--equipped as he is with
the whole armour described by the Apostle, and secured by the shield of faith,
and ever holding before him that weapon of defence, the sword of the spirit--fights
in the van of the Lord's host by his elaborated argument against this heresy,
alive and resisting and prevailing over the foe, while we the common herd,
sheltering ourselves beneath the shield of that champion of the faith, shall
not hold back from any conflicts within the compass of our power, according
as our captain may lead us on against the foe. As he, then, in his refutation
of the false and untenable opinion maintained by this heresy, affirms that "ungenerate" cannot
be predicated of God except as a mere notion or conception, whereof he has
adduced proofs supported by common sense and the evidence of Scripture, while
Eunomius, the author of the heresy, neither falls in with his statements nor
is able to overturn them, but in his conflict with the truth, the more clearly
the light of true doctrine shines forth, the more, like nocturnal creatures,
does he shun the light, and, no longer able to find the sophistical hiding-places
to which he is accustomed, he wanders about at random, and getting into the
labyrinth of falsehood goes round and round in the same, place, almost the
whole of his second treatise being taken up with this empty trifling--it is
well accordingly that our battle with those opposed to us should take place
on the same ground whereon our champion by his own treatise has been our leader.
First
of all, however, I think it advisable to run briefly over our own doctrinal
views and our
opponent's
disagreement with them, so that our review of the
propositions in question may proceed methodically. Now the main point of Christian
orthodoxy(6) is to believe that the Only-begotten God, Who is the truth and
the true light, and the power of God and the life, is truly all that He is
said to be, both in other respects and especially in this, that He is God and
the truth, that is to say, God in truth, ever being what He is conceived to
be and what He is called, Who never at any time was not, nor ever will cease
to be, Whose being, such as it is essentially, is beyond the reach of the curiosity
that would try to comprehend it. But to us, as saith the word of Wisdom,(7)
He makes Himself known that He is "by the greatness and beauty of His
creatures proportionately" to the things that are known, vouchsafing to
us the gift of faith by the operations of His hands, but not the comprehension
of what He is. Whereas, then, such is the opinion prevailing among all Christians,
(such at least as are truly worthy of the appellation, those, I mean, who have
been taught by the law to worship nothing that is not very God, and by that
very act of worship confess that the Only-begotten is God in truth, and not
a God falsely so called,) there arose this deadly blight of the Church, bringing
barrenness on the holy seeds of the faith, advocating as it does the errors
of Judaism, and partaking to a certain extent in the impiety of the Greeks.
For in its figment of a created God it advocates the error of the Greeks, and
in not accepting the Son it supports that of the Jews. This school, then, which
would do away with the very Godhead of the Lord and teach men to conceive of
Him as a created being, and not that which the Father is in essence and power
and dignity, since these misty ideas find no support when exposed on all sides
to the light of truth, have overlooked all those names supplied by Scripture
for the glorification of God, and predicated in like manner of the Father and
of the Son, and have betaken themselves to the word "ungenerate," a
term fabricated by themselves to throw contempt on the greatness of the Only-begotten
God. For whereas an orthodox confession teaches us to believe in the Only-begotten
God so that all men should honour the Son even as they honour the Father, these
men, rejecting the orthodox terms whereby the greatness of the Son is signified
as on a par with the dignity of the Father, draw from thence the beginnings
and foundations of their heresy in regard to His Divinity. For as the Only-begotten
God, as the voice of the Gospel teaches, came forth from the Father and is
of Him, misrepresenting this doctrine by a change of terms, they make use of
them to rend the true faith in pieces. For whereas the truth teaches that the
Father is from no pre-existing cause, these men have given to such a view the
name of "ungeneracy," and signify the substance of the Only-begotten
from the Father by the term "generation,"--then comparing the two
terms "ungenerate" and "generate" as contradictories to
each other, they make use of the opposition to mislead their senseless followers.
For, to make the matter clearer by an illustration, the expressions, He was
generated and He was not generated, are much the same as, He is seated and
He is not seated, and all such-like expressions. But they, forcing these expressions
away from the natural significance of the terms, are eager to put another meaning
upon them with a view to the subversion of orthodoxy. For whereas, as has been
said, the words "is seated" and "is not seated" are not
equivalent in meaning (the one expression being contradictory of the other),
they pretend that this formal contradiction in expression indicates an essential
difference, ascribing generation to the Son and non-generation to the Father
as their essential attributes. Yet, as it is impossible to regard a man's sitting
down or not as the essence of the man (for one would not use the same definition
for a man's sitting as for the man himself), so, by the analogy of the above
example, the non-generated essence is in its inherent idea something wholly
different from the thing expressed by "not having been generated." But
our opponents, with an eye to their evil object, that of establishing their
denial of the Godhead of the Only-begotten, do not say that the essence of
the Father is ungenerate, but, conversely, they declare ungeneracy to be His
essence, in order that by this distinction in regard to generation they may
establish, by the verbal opposition, a diversity of natures. In the direction
of impiety they look with ten thousand eyes, but with regard to the impracticability
of their own contention they are as incapable of vision as men who deliberately
close their eyes. For who but one whose mental optics are utterly purblind
can fail to discern the loose and unsubstantial character of the principle
of their doctrine, and that their argument in support of ungeneracy as an essence
has thing to stand upon? For this is the way in which their error would establish
itself.
But to the best of my ability I will raise my voice to rebut our enemies'
argument. They say that God is declared to be without generation, that the
Godhead is by nature simple, and that which is simple admits of no composition.
If, then, God Who is declared to be without generation is by His nature without
composition, His title of Ungenerate must belong to His very nature, and that
nature is identical with ungeneracy. To whom we reply that the terms incomposite
and ungenerate are not the same thing, for the former represents the simplicity
of the subject, the other its being without origin, and these expressions are
not convertible in meaning, though both are predicated of one subject. But
from the appellation of Ungenerate we have been taught that He Who is so named
is without origin, and from the appellation of simple that He is free from
all admixture (or composition), and these terms cannot be substituted for each
other. There is therefore no necessity that, because the Godhead is by its
nature simple, that nature should be termed ungeneracy; but in that He is indivisible
and without composition, He is spoken of as simple, while in that He was not
generated, He is spoken of as ungenerate.
Now if
the term ungenerate did not signify the being without origin, but the idea
of simplicity entered
into the meaning of such a term, and He were called
ungenerate in their heretical sense, merely because He is simple and incomposite,
and if the terms simple and ungenerate are the same in meaning, then too must
the simplicity of the Son be equivalent with ungeneracy. For they will not
deny that God the Only-begotten is by His nature simple, unless they are prepared
to deny that He is God. Accordingly the term simplicity will in its meaning
have no such connection with being ungenerate as that, by reason of its incomposite
character, His nature should be termed ungeneracy; or they draw upon themselves
one of two absurd alternatives, either denying the Godhead of the Only-begotten,
or attributing ungeneracy to Him also. For if God is simple, and the term simplicity
is, according to them, identical with ungenerate, they must either make out
the Son to be of composite nature, by which term it is implied that neither
is He God, or if they allow His Godhead, and God (as I have said) is simple,
then they make Him out at the same time to be ungenerate, if the terms simple
and ungenerate are convertible. But to make my meaning clearer I will recapitulate.
We affirm that each of these terms has its own peculiar meaning, and that the
term indivisible cannot be rendered by ungenerate, nor ungenerate by simple;
but by simple we understand uncom-pounded, and by ungenerate we are taught
to understand what is without origin. Furthermore we hold that we are bound
to believe that the Son of God, being Himself God, is Himself also simple,
because God is free from all compositeness; and in like manner in speaking
of Him also by the appellation of Son we neither denote simplicity of substance,
nor in simplicity do we include the notion of Son, but the term Son we hold
to indicate that He is of the substance of the Father, and the term simple
we hold to mean what the word bears upon its face. Since, then, the meaning
of the term simple in regard to essence is one and the same whether spoken
of the Father or of the Son, differing in no degree, while there is a wide
difference between generate and ungenerate (the one containing a notion not
contained in the other), for this reason we assert that there is no necessity
that, the Father being ungenerate, His essence should, because that essence
is simple, be defined by the term ungenerate. For neither of the Son, Who is
simple, and Whom also we believe to be generated, do we say that His essence
is simplicity. But as the essence is simple and not simplicity, so also the
essence is ungenerate and not ungeneracy. In like manner also the Son being
generated, our reason is freed from any necessity that, because His essence
is simple, we should define that essence as generateness; but here again each
expression has its peculiar force. For the term generated suggests to you a
source whence, and the term simple implies freedom from composition. But this
does not approve itself to them. For they maintain that since the essence of
the Father is simple, it cannot be considered as other than ungeneracy; on
which account also He is said to be ungenerate. In answer to whom we may also
observe that, since they call the Father both Creator and Maker, whereas He
Who is so called is simple in regard to His essence, if is high time for such
sophists to declare the essence of the Father to be creation and making, since
the argument about simplicity introduces into His essence any signification
of any name we give Him. Either, then, let them separate ungeneracy from the
definition of the Divine essence, allowing the term no more than its proper
signification, or, if by reason of the simplicity of the subject they define
His essence by the term ungeneracy, by a parity of reasoning let them likewise
see creation and making in the essence of the Father, not as though the power
residing in the essence created and made, but as though the power itself meant
creation and making. But if they reject this as bad and absurd, let them be
persuaded by what logically follows to reject the other proposition as well.
For as the essence of the builder is not the thing built, no more is ungeneracy
the essence of the Ungenerate. But for the sake of clearness and conciseness
I will restate my arguments. If the Father is called ungenerate, not by reason
of His having never been generated, but because His essence is simple and incomposite,
by a parity of reasoning the Son also must be called ungenerate, for He too
is a simple and incomposite essence. But if we are compelled to confess the
Son to be generated because He was generated, it is manifest that we must address
the Father as ungenerate, because He was not generated. But if we are compelled
to this conclusion by truth and the force of our premises, it is clear that
the term ungenerate is no part of the essence, but is indicative of a difference
of conceptions, distinguishing that which is generated from that which is ungenerate.
But let us discuss this point also in addition to what I have said. If they
affirm that the term ungenerate signifies the essence(8) (of the Father), and
not that He has His substance without origin, what term will they use to denote
the Father's being without origin, when they have set aside the term ungenerate
to indicate His essence? For if we are not taught the distinguishing difference
of the Persons by the term ungenerate, but are to regard it as indicating His
very nature as flowing in a manner from the subject-matter, and disclosing
what we seek in articulate syllables, it must follow that God is not, or is
not to be called, ungenerate, there being no word left to express such peculiar
significance in regard to Him. For inasmuch as according to them the term ungenerate
does not mean without origin, but indicates the Divine nature, their argument
will be found to exclude it altogether, and the term ungenerate slips out of
their teaching in respect to God. For there being no other word or term to
represent that the Father is ungenerate, and that term signifying, according
to their fallacious argument, something else, and not that He was not generated,
their whole argument falls and collapses into Sabellianism. For by this reasoning
we must hold the Father to be identical with the Son, the distinction between
generated and ungenerate having been got rid of from their teaching, so that
they are driven to one of two alternatives: either they must again adopt the
view of the term as denoting a difference in the attributes proper to either
Person, and not as denoting the nature, or, abiding by their conclusions as
to the word, they must side with Sabellius. For it is impossible that the difference
of the persons should be without confusion, unless there be a distinction between
generated and ungenerate. Accordingly if the term denotes difference, essence
will in no way be denoted by the appellation. For the definitions of difference
and essence are by no means the same. But if they divert the meaning of the
word so as to signify nature, they must be drawn into the heresy of those who
are called "Son-Fathers(9)," all accuracy of definition in regard
to the Persons being rejected from their account. But if they say that there
is nothing to hinder the distinction between generated and ungenerate from
being rendered by the term ungenerate, and that term represents the essence
too, let them distinguish for us the kindred meanings of the word, so that
the notion of ungenerate may properly apply to either of them taken by itself.
For the expression of the difference by means of this term involves no ambiguity,
consisting as it does of a verbal opposition. For as an equivalent to saying "The
Son has, and the Father has not, been generated," we too assent to the
statement that the latter is ungenerate and the former generated, by a sort
of verbal correlation. But from what point of view a clear manifestation of
essence can be made by this appellation, this they are unable to say. But keeping
silence on this head, our novel theologian weaves us a web of trifling subtleties
in his former treatise. Because God, saith he, being simple, is called ungenerate,
therefore God is ungeneracy. What has the notion of simplicity to do with the
idea of ungenerate? For not only is the Only-begotten generated, but, without
controversy, He is simple also. But, saith he, He is without parts also, and
incomposite. But what is this to the point? For neither is the Son multiform
and composite: and yet He is not on that account ungenerate.
But, saith he, He is without both quantity and magnitude. Granted: for the
Son also is unlimited by quantity and magnitude, and yet is He the Son. But
this is not the point. For the task set before us is this: in what signification
of ungenerate is essence declared? For as this word marks the difference of
the properties, so they maintain that the essence also is indicated without
ambiguity by one of the things signified by the appellation.
But this
thing he leaves untold, and only says that ungeneracy should not be predicated
of God as
a mere conception.
For what is so spoken, saith he,
is dissolved, and passes away with its utterance. But what is there that is
uttered but is so dissolved? For we do not keep undissolved, like those who
make pots or bricks, what we utter with our voice in the mould of the speech
which we form once for all with our lips, but as soon as one speech has been
sent forth by our voice, what we have said ceases to exist. For the breath
of our voice being dispersed again into the air, no trace of our words is impressed
upon the spot in which such dispersion of our voice has taken place: so that
if he makes this the distinguishing characteristic of a term that expresses
a mere conception, that it does not remain, but vanishes with the voice that
gives it utterance, he may as well at once call every term a mere conception,
inasmuch as no substance remains in any term subsequent to its utterance. No,
nor will he be able to show that ungeneracy itself, which he excepts from the
products of conception, is indissoluble and fixed when it has been uttered,
for this expression of the voice through the lips does not abide in the air.
And from this we may see the unsubstantial character of his assertions; because,
even if without speech we describe in writing our mental conceptions, it is
not as though the substantial objects of our thoughts will acquire their significance
from the letters, while the non-substantial will have no part in what the letters
express. For whatever comes into our mind, whether intellectually existing,
or otherwise, it is possible for us at our discretion to store away in writing.
And the voice and letters are of equal value for the expression of thought,
for we communicate what we think by the latter as well as by the former. What
he sees, then, to justify his making the mental conception perish with the
voice only, I fail to comprehend. For in the case of all speech uttered by
means of sound, the passage of the breath indeed which conveys the voice is
towards its kindred element, but the sense of the words spoken is engraved
by hearing on the memory of the hearer's soul, whether it be true or false.
Is not this, then, a weak interpretation of this "conception" of
his that our writer offers, when he characterizes and defines it by the dissolution
of the voice? And for this reason the understanding hearer, as saith Isaiah,
objects to this inconceivable account of mental conception, showing it, to
use the man's own words, to be a veritably dissoluble and unsubstantial one,
and he discusses scientifically the force inherent in the term, advancing his
argument by familiar examples to the contemplation of doctrine. Against whom
Eunomius exalting himself with this pompous writing, endeavours to overthrow
the true account of mental conception, after this manner.
But before we examine what he has written it may be better to enquire with
what purpose it is that he refuses to admit that ungenerate can be predicated
of God by way of conception. Now the tenet which has been held in common by
all who have received the word of our religion is, that all hope of salvation
should be placed in Christ, it being impossible for any to be found among the
righteous, unless faith in Christ supply what is desired. And this conviction
being firmly established in the souls of the faithful, and all honour and glory
and worship being due to the Only-begotten God as the Author of life, Who doeth
the works of the Father, as the Lord Himself saith in the Gospel(1), and Who
falls short of no excellence in all knowledge of that which is good, I know
not how they have been so perverted by malignity and jealousy of the Lord's
honour, that, as though they judged the worship paid by the faithful to the
Only-begotten God to be a detriment to themselves, they oppose His Divine honours,
and try to persuade us that nothing that is said of them is true. For with
them neither is He very God, though called so, it would seem, by Scripture,
nor, though called Son, has He a nature that makes good the appellation, nor
has He a community of dignity or of nature with the Father. For, say they,
it is not possible for Him that is begotten to be of equal honour with Him
Who made Him, either in dignity, or in power, or in nature, because the life
of the latter is infinite, and His existence from eternity, while the life
of the Son is in a manner circumscribed, the beginning of His being begotten
limiting His life at the commencement, and preventing it from being coextensive
with the eternity of the Father, so that His life also is to be regarded as
defective; and the Father was not always what He now is and is said to be,
but, having been something else before, He afterwards determined that He would
be a Father, or rather that He would be so called. For not even of the Son
was He rightly called Father, but of a creature supposititiously invested with
the title of son. And every way, say they, the younger is of necessity inferior
to the elder, the finite to the eternal, that which is begotten by the will
of the begetter, to the begetter himself, both in power, and dignity, and nature,
and precedence due to age, and all other prerogatives of respect. But how can
we justly dignify with the honours due to the true God that which is wanting
in the perfection of the diviner attributes? Thus they would establish the
doctrine that one who is limited in power, and wanting in the perfection of
life, and subject to a superior, and doing nothing of himself but what is sanctioned
by the authority of the more powerful, is in no divine honour and consideration,
but that, while we call him God, we are employing a term empty of all grandeur
in its significance. And since such statements as these, when stripped of their
plausible dress, move indignation and make the hearer shudder at their strangeness
(for Who can tolerate an evil counsellor nakedly and unadvisably urging the
overthrow of the majesty of Christ?), they therefore try to pervert foolish
hearers with these foreign notions by enveloping their malignant and insidious
arguments in a number of seductive fallacies. For after laying down such premises
as might naturally lead the mind of the hearers in the desired direction, they
leave the hearer to draw his conclusion for himself.
For after
saying that the Only-begotten God is not the same in essence with the true
Father, and
after sophistically
inferring this from the opposition
between generate and ungenerate, they work in silence to the conclusion, their
impiety prevailing by the natural course of inference. And as the poisoner
makes his drug acceptable to his victim by sweetening its deadliness with honey,
and, as for himself, has only to offer it, while the drug insinuating itself
into the vitals without further action on the part of the poisoner does its
deadly work,--so, too, do our opponents act. For qualifying their pernicious
teaching with their sophistical refinements, as with honey, when they have
infused into the mind of the hearer the venomous fallacy that God the Only-begotten
is not very God, they cause all the rest to be inferred without saying a word.
For when they are persuaded that He is not truly God, it follows as a matter
of course that no other Divine attribute is truly applicable. For if He is
truly neither Son nor God, except by an abuse of terms, then the other names
which are given to Him in Holy Scripture are a divergence from the truth. For
the one thing cannot be predicated of Him with truth, and the other be destitute
of it; but they must needs follow one another, so that, if He be truly God,
it follows that He is Judge and King, and that His several attributes are such
as they are described, while, if His godhead be falsely asserted, neither will
the truth hold respecting any of His other attributes. They, then, having been
deceived into the persuasion that the attribute of Godhead is falsely applied
to the Only-begotten, it follows that He is not rightly the object of worship
and adoration, or, in fact, of any of the honours that are paid to God. In
order, then, to render their attack upon the Saviour efficacious, this is the
blasphemous method that they have adopted. There is no need, they urge, of
looking at the collective attributes by which the Son's equality in honour
and dignity with the Father is signified, but from the opposition between generate
and un-generate we must argue a distinctive difference of nature; for the Divine
nature is that which is denoted by the term ungenerate. Again, since all men
of sense regard it as impracticable to indicate the ineffable Being by any
force of words, because neither does our knowledge extend to the comprehension
of what transcends knowledge, nor does the ministry of words have such power
in us as to avail for the full enunciation of our thought, where the mind is
engaged on anything eminently lofty and divine,--these wise folk, on the contrary,
convicting men in general of want of sense and ignorance of logic, assert their
own knowledge of such matters, and their ability to impart it to whomsoever
they will; and accordingly they maintain that the divine nature is simply ungeneracy
per se, and declaring this to be sovereign and supreme, they make this word
comprehend the whole greatness of Godhead, so as to necessitate the inference
that if ungeneracy is the main point of the essence, and the other divine attributes
are bound up with it, viz. Godhead, power, im-perishableness and so on--if
(I say) ungeneracy mean these, then, if this ungeneracy cannot be predicated
of something, neither can the rest. For as reason, and risibility, and capacity
of knowledge are proper to man, and what is not humanity may not be classed
among the properties of his nature, so, if true Godhead consists in ungeneracy,
then, to whatsoever thing the latter name does not properly belong, no one
at all of the other distinguishing attributes of Godhead will be found in it.
If, then, ungeneracy is not predicable of the Son, it follows that no other
of His sublime and godlike attributes are properly ascribed to Him. This, then,
they define as a right comprehension of the divine mysteries--the rejection
of the Son's Godhead--all but shouting in the ear of those who would listen
to them; "To you it is given to be perfect in knowledge(2), if only you
believe not in God the Only-begotten as being very God, and honour not the
Son as the Father is honoured, but regard Him as by nature a created being,
not Lord and Master, but slave and subject." For this is the aim and object
of their design, though the blasphemy is cloaked in different terms.
Accordingly,
enveloping his former special-pleading in the mazy evolutions of his sophistries,
and
dealing subtly
with the term ungener-ate, he steals
away the intelligence of his dupes, saying to them, "Well, then, if neither
by way of conception it is so, nor by deprivation, nor by division (for He
is without parts), nor as being another in Himself(3) (for He is the one only
ungenerate), He Himself must be, in essence, ungenerate.
Seeing, then, the mischief resulting to the dupes of this fallacious reasoning--that
to assent to His not being very God is a departure from our confession of Him
as our Lord, to which conclusion indeed his words would bring his teaching--our
master does not indeed deny that ungenerate is no partial predicate of God,
himself also admitting that God is without quantity, or magnitude, or parts;
but the statement that this term ought not to be applied to Him by way of mental
conception he impugns, and gives his proofs. But again, shifting from this
position, our writer in the second of his treatises meets us with his sophistry,
combating his own statements in regard to mental conception.
It will
presently be time to bring to their own recollection the method of this argument.
Suffice it
first to
say this. There is no faculty in human nature
adequate to the full comprehension of the divine essence. It may be that it
is easy to show this in the case of human capacity alone, and to say that the
incorporeal creation is incapable of taking in and comprehending that nature
which is infinite will not be far short of the truth, as we may see by familiar
examples; for as there are many and various things that have fleshly life,
winged things, and things of the earth, some that mount above the clouds by
virtue of their wings, others that dwell in hollows or burrow in the ground,
on comparing which it would appear that there was no small difference between
the inhabitants of air and of land; while, if the comparison be extended to
the stars and the fixed circumference, it will be seen that what soars aloft
on wings is not less widely removed from heaven than from the animals that
are on the earth; so, too, the strength of angels compared with our own seems
preeminently great, because, undisturbed by sensation, it pursues its lofty
themes with pure naked intelligence. Yet, if we weigh even their comprehension
with the majesty of Him Who really is, it may be that if any one should venture
to say that even their power of understanding is not far superior to our own
weakness, his conjecture would fall within the limits of probability, for wide
and insurmountable is the interval that divides and fences off untreated from
created nature. The latter is limited, the former not. The latter is confined
within its own boundaries according to the pleasure of its Maker. The former
is bounded only by infinity. The latter stretches itself out within certain
degrees of extension, limited by time and space: the former transcends all
notion of degree, baffling curiosity from every point of view. In this life
we can apprehend the beginning and the end of all things that exist, but the
beatitude that is above the creature admits neither end nor beginning, but
is above all that is connoted by either, being ever the same, self-dependent,
not travelling on by degrees from one point to another in its life; for there
is no participation of other life in its life, such that we might infer end
and beginning; but, be it what it may, it is life energizing in itself, not
becoming greater or less by addition or diminution. For increase has no place
in the infinite, and that which is by its nature passionless excludes all notion
of decrease. And as, when looking up to heaven, and in a measure apprehending
by the visual organs the beauty that is in the height, we doubt not the existence
of what we see, but if asked what it is, we are unable to define its nature,
but we simply admire as we contemplate the overarching vault, the reverse planetary
motion(4), the so-called Zodiac graven obliquely on the pole, whereby astronomers
observe the motion of bodies revolving in an opposite direction, the differences
of luminaries according to their magnitude, and the specialities of their rays,
their risings and settings that take place according to the circling year ever
at the same seasons undeviatingly, the conjunctions of planets, the courses
of those that pass below, the eclipses of those that are above, the obumbrations
of the earth, the reappearance of eclipsed bodies, the moon's multiform changes,
the motion of the sun midway within the poles, and how, filled with his own
light, and crowned with his encircling beams, and embracing all things in his
sovereign light, he himself also at times suffers eclipse (the disc of the
moon, as they say, passing before him), and how, by the will of Him Who has
so ordained, ever running his own particular course, he accomplishes his appointed
orbit and progress, opening out the four seasons of the year in succession;
we, as I say, when we contemplate these phenomena by the aid of sight, are
in no doubt of their existence, though we are as far from comprehending their
essential nature as if sight had not given us any glimpse whatever of what
we have seen; and even so, with regard to the Creator of the world, we know
that He exists, but of His essential nature we cannot deny that we are ignorant.
But, boasting as they do that they know these things, let them first tell us
about the things of inferior nature; what they think of the body of the heavens,
of the machinery which conveys the stars in their eternal courses, or of the
sphere in which they move; for, however far speculation may proceed, when it
comes to the uncertain and incomprehensible it must stop. For though any one
say that another body, like in fashion (to that body of the heavens), fitting
to its circular shape, checks its velocity, so that, ever turning in its course,
it revolves conformably to that other upon itself, being retained by the force
that embraces it from flying off at a tangent, yet how can he assert that these
bodies will remain unspent by their constant friction with each other? And
how, again, is motion produced in the case of two coeval bodies mutually conformed,
when the one remains motionless (for the inner body, one would have thought,
being held as in a vice by the motionlessness of that which embraces it, will
be quite unable to act); and what is it that maintains the embracing body in
its fixedness, so that it remains unshaken and unaffected by the motion of
that which fits into it? And if in restless curiosity of thought we should
conceive of some position for it that should keep it stationary, we must go
on in logical consistency to search for the base of that base, and of the next,
and of the next, and so on, and so the inquiry, proceeding from like to like,
will go on to infinity, and end in helpless perplexity, still, even when some
body has been put for the farthest foundation of the system of the universe,
reaching after what is beyond, so that there is no stopping in our inquiry
after the limit of the embracing circles. But not so, say others: but (according
to the vain theory of those who have speculated on these matters) there is
an empty space spread over the back of the heavens, working in which vacuum
the motion of the universe revolves i upon itself, meeting with no resistance
from any solid body capable of retarding it by opposition and of checking its
course of revolution. What, then, is that vacuum, which they say is neither
a body nor an idea? How far does it extend, and what succeeds it, and what
relation exists between the firm, resisting body, and that void and unsubstantial
one? What is there to unite things so contrary by nature? and how can the harmony
of the universe consist out of elements so incongruous; and what can any one
say of Heaven itself? That it is a mixture of the elements which it contains,
or one of them or something else beside them? What, again, of the stars themselves?
whence comes their radiance? What is it and how is it composed? and what is
the reason of their difference in beauty and magnitude? and the seven inner
orbs revolving in an opposite direction to the motion of the universe, what
are they, and by what influence are they propelled? Then, too, what is that
immaterial and ethereal empyrean, and the intermediate air which forms a wall
of partition between that element in nature which gives heat and consumes,
and that which is moist and combustible? And how does earth below form the
foundation of the whole, and what is it that keeps it firmly in its place?
what is it that controls its downward tendency? If any one should interrogate
us on these and such-like points, will any of us be found so presumptuous as
to promise an explanation of them? No! the only reply that can be given by
men of sense is this:--that He Who made all things in wisdom can alone furnish
an account of His creation. For ourselves, "through faith we understand
that the worlds were framed by the word of God," as saith the Apostle(5).
If, then,
the lower creation which comes under our organs of sense transcends human
knowledge, how can
He, Who
by His mere will made the worlds, be within
the range of our apprehension? Surely this is vanity, and lying madness, as
saith the Prophet(6), to think it possible to comprehend the things which are
incomprehensible. So may we see tiny children busying themselves in their play.
For oft-times, when a sunbeam streams down upon them through a window, delighted
with its beauty they throw themselves on what they see, and are eager to catch
the sunbeam in their hands, and struggle with one another, and grasp the light
in the clutch of their fingers, and fancy they have imprisoned the ray in them,
but presently when they unclasp their hands and find that the sunbeam which
they held has slipped through their fingers, they laugh and clap their hands.
In like manner the children of our generation, as saith the parable, sit playing
in the market-places; for, seeing the power of God shining in upon their souls
through the dispensations of His providence, and the wonders of His creation
like a warm ray emanating from the natural sun, they marvel not at the Divine
gift, nor adore Him Whom such things reveal, but passing beyond the limits
of the soul's capabilities, they seek with their sophistical understanding
to grasp that which is intangible, and think by their reasonings to lay hold
of what they are persuaded of; but when their argument unfolds itself and discloses
the tangled web of their sophistries, men of discernment see at once that what
they have apprehended is nothing at all; so pettily and so childishly labouring
in vain at impossibilities do they set themselves to include the inconceivable
nature of God in the few syllables of the term "ungenerate," and
applaud their own folly, and imagine God to be such that human reasoning can
include Him under one single term: and while they pretend to follow the teaching
of the sacred writers, they are not afraid of raising themselves above them.
For what cannot be shown to have been said by any of those blessed ones, any
words of whose are recorded in the sacred books, these things, as saith the
Apostle, "understanding neither what they say, nor whereof they affirm(7)," they
nevertheless say they know, and boast of guiding others to such knowledge.
And on this account they declare that they have apprehended that God the Only-begotten
is not what He is called. For to this conclusion they are compelled by their
premises.
How pitiable
are they for their cleverness! how wretched, how fatal is their over-wise
philosophy!
Who is
there who goes of his own accord to the pit so
eagerly as these men labour and bestir themselves to dig out their lake of
blasphemy? How far have they separated themselves from the hope of the Christian!
What a gulf have they fixed between themselves and the faith which saves! How
far have they withdrawn themselves from Abraham the father of the faith! He
indeed, if in the lofty spirit of the Apostle we may take the words allegorically,
and so penetrate to the inner sense of the history, without losing sight of
the truth of its facts--he, I say, went out by Divine command from his own
country and kindred on a journey worthy of a prophet eager for the knowledge
of God(8). For no local migration seems to me to satisfy the idea of the blessings
which it is signified that he found. For going out from himself and from his
country, by which I understand his earthly and carnal mind, and raising his
thoughts as far as possible above the common boundaries of nature, and forsaking
the soul's kinship with the senses,--so that untroubled by any of the objects
of sense his eyes might be open to the things which are invisible, there being
neither sight nor sound to distract the mind in its work,--"walking," as
saith the Apostle, "by faith, not by sight," he was raised so high
by the sublimity of his knowledge that he came to be regarded as the acme of
human perfection, knowing as much of God as it was possible for finite human
capacity at its full stretch to attain. Therefore also the Lord of all creation,
as though He were a discovery of Abraham, is called specially the God of Abraham.
Yet what saith the Scripture respecting him? That he went out not knowing whither
he went, no, nor even being capable of learning the name of Him whom he loved,
yet in no wise impatient or ashamed on account of such ignorance.
This,
then, was the meaning of his safe guidance on the way to what he sought--that
he was not blindly
led
by any of the means ready to hand for his instruction
in the things of God, and that his mind, unimpeded by any object of sense,
was never hindered from its journeying in quest of what lies beyond all that
is known, but having gone by reasoning far beyond the wisdom of his countrymen,
(I mean the philosophy of the Chaldees, limited as it was to the things which
do appear,) and soaring above the things which are cognizable by sense, from
the beauty of the objects of contemplation, and the harmony of the heavenly
wonders, he desired to behold the archetype of all beauty. And so, too, all
the other things which in the course of his reasoning he was led to apprehend
as he advanced, whether the power of God, or His goodness, or His being without
beginning, or His infinity, or whatever else is conceivable in respect to the
divine nature, using them all as supplies and appliances for his onward journey,
ever making one discovery a stepping-stone to another, ever reaching forth
unto those things which were before, and setting in his heart, as saith the
Prophet, each fair stage of his advance(9), and passing by all knowledge acquired
by his own ability as falling short of that of which be was in quest, when
he had gone beyond every conjecture respecting the divine nature which is suggested
by any name amongst all our conceptions of God, having purged his reason of
all such fancies, and arrived at a faith unalloyed and free from all prejudice,
he made this a sure and manifest token of the knowledge of God, viz. the belief
that He is greater and more sublime than any token by which He may be known.
On this account, indeed, after the ecstasy which fell upon him, and after his
sublime meditations, falling back on his human weakness, "I am," saith
he, "but dust and ashes(10)," that is to say, without voice or power
to interpret that good which his mind had conceived. For dust and ashes seem
to denote what is lifeless and barren; and so there arises a law of faith for
the life to come, teaching those who would come to God, by this history of
Abraham, that it is impossible to draw near to God, unless faith mediate, and
bring the seeking soul into union with the incomprehensible nature of God.
For leaving behind him the curiosity that arises from knowledge, Abraham, says
the Apostle, "believed God, and it was counted unto him for righteousness(1)." "Now
it was not written for his sake," the Apostle says, "but for us," that
God counts to men for righteousness their faith, not their knowledge. For knowledge
acts, as it were, in a commercial spirit, dealing only with what is known.
But the faith of Christians acts otherwise. For it is the substance, not of
things known, but of things hoped for. Now that which we have already we no
longer hope for. "For what a man hath," says the Apostle, "why
doth he yet hope for(2)"? But faith makes our own that which we see not,
assuring us by its own certainty of that which does not appear. For so speaks
the Apostle of the believer, that "he endured as seeing Him Who is invisible(3)."
Vain,
therefore, is he who maintains that it is possible to take knowledge of the
divine essence,
by the knowledge
which puffeth up to no purpose. For
neither is there any man so great that he can claim equality in understanding
with the Lord, for, as saith David, "Who is he among the clouds that shall
be compared unto the Lord?(4)" nor is that which is sought so small that
it can be compassed by the reasonings of human shallowness. Listen to the preacher
exhorting not to be hasty to utter anything before God, "for God," (saith
he,) "is in heaven above, and thou upon earth beneath(5)."
He shows, I think, by the relation of these elements to each other, or rather
by their distance, how far the divine nature is above the speculations of human
reason. For that nature which transcends all intelligence is as high above
earthly calculation as the stars are above the touch of our fingers; or rather,
many times more than that.
Knowing, then, how widely the Divine nature differs from our own, let us quietly
remain within our proper limits. For it is both safer and more reverent to
believe the majesty of God to be greater than we can understand, than, after
circumscribing His glory by our misconceptions, to suppose there is nothing
beyond our conception of it.
And on
other accounts also it may be called safe to let alone the Divine essence,
as unspeakable,
and beyond
the scope of human reasoning. For the desire of
investigating what is obscure and tracing out hidden things by the operation
of human reasoning gives an entrance to false no less than to true notions,
inasmuch as he who aspires to know the unknown will not always arrive at truth,
but may also conceive of falsehood itself as truth. But the disciple of the
Gospels and of Prophecy believes that He Who is, is; both from what he has
learnt from the sacred writers, and from the harmony of things which do appear,
and from the works of Providence. But what He is and how--leaving this as a
useless and unprofitable speculation, such a disciple will open no door to
falsehood against truth. For in speculative enquiry fallacies readily find
place. But where speculation is entirely at rest, the necessity of error is
precluded. And that this is a true account of the case, may be seen if we consider
how it is that heresies in the churches have wandered off into many and various
opinions in regard to God, men deceiving themselves as they are swayed by one
mental impulse or another; and how these very men with whom our treatise is
concerned have slipped into such a pit of profanity. Would it not have been
safer for all, following the counsel of wisdom, to abstain from searching into
such deep matters, and in peace and quietness to keep inviolate the pure deposit
of the faith? But since, in fact, human nothingness has commenced intruding
recklessly into matters that are above comprehension, and supporting by dogmatic
teaching the figments of their vain imagination, there has sprung up in consequence
a whole host of enemies to the truth, and among them these very men who are
the subject of this treatise; dogmatizers of deceit who seek to limit the Divine
Being, and all but openly idolize their own imagination, in that they deify
the idea expressed by this "ungeneracy" of theirs, as not being only
in a certain relation discernible in the Divine nature, but as being itself
God, or the essence of God. Yet perchance they would have done better to look
to the sacred company of the Prophets and Patriarchs, to whom "at sundry
times, and in divers manners(6)," the Word of truth spake, and, next in
order, those who were eye-witnesses and ministers of the word, that they might
give honour due to the claims on their belief of the things attested by the
Holy Spirit Himself, and abide within the limits of their teaching and knowledge,
and not venture on themes which are not comprehended in the canon of the sacred
writers. For those writers, by revealing God, so long unknown to human life
by reason of the prevalence of idolatry, and making Him known to men, both
from the wonders which manifest themselves in His works, and from the names
which express the manifold variety of His power, lead men, as by the hand,
to the understanding of the Divine nature, making known to them the bare grandeur
of the thought of God; while the question of His essence, as one which it is
impossible to grasp, and which bears no fruit to the curious enquirer, they
dismiss without any attempt at its solution. For whereas they have set forth
respecting all other things, that they were created, the heaven, the earth,
the sea, times, ages, and the creatures that are therein, but what each is
in itself, and how and whence, on these points they are silent; so, too, concerning
God Himself, they exhort men to "believe that He is, and that He is a
rewarder of them that diligently seek Him(7)," but in regard to His nature,
as being above every name, they neither name it nor concern themselves about
it. For if we have learned any names expressive of the knowledge of God, all
these are related and have analogy to such names as denote human characteristics.
For as they who would indicate some person unknown by marks of recognition
speak of him as of good parentage and descent, if such happen to be the case,
or as distinguished for his riches or his worth, or as in the prime of life,
or of such or such stature, and in so speaking they do not set forth the nature
of the person indicated, but give certain notes of recognition (for neither
advantages of birth, nor of wealth, nor of reputation, nor of age, constitute
the man; they are considered, simply as being observable in the man), thus
too the expressions of Holy Scripture devised for the glory of God set forth
one or another of the things which are declared concerning Him, each inculcating
some special teaching. For by these expressions we are taught either His power,
or that He admits not of deterioration, or that He is without cause and without
limit, or that He is supreme above all things, or, in short, something, be
it what it may, respecting Him. But His very essence, as not to be conceived
by the human intellect or expressed in words, this it has left untouched as
a thing not to be made the subject of curious enquiry, ruling that it be revered
in silence, in that it forbids the investigation of things too deep for us,
while it enjoins the duty of being slow to utter any word before God. And therefore,
whosoever searches the whole of Revelation will find therein no doctrine of
the Divine nature, nor indeed of anything else that has a substantial existence,
so that we pass our lives in ignorance of much, being ignorant first of all
of ourselves, as men, and then of all things besides. For who is there who
has arrived at a comprehension of his own soul? Who is acquainted with its
very essence, whether it is material or immaterial, whether it is purely incorporeal,
or whether it exhibits anything of a corporeal character; how it comes into
being, how it is composed, whence it enters into the body, how it departs from
it, or what means it possesses to unite it to the nature of the body; how,
being intangible and without form, it is kept within its own sphere, what difference
exists among its powers, how one and the same soul, in its eager curiosity
to know the things which are unseen, soars above the highest heavens, and again,
dragged down by the weight of the body, falls back on material passions, anger
and fear, pain and pleasure, pity and cruelty, hope and memory, cowardice and
audacity, friendship and hatred, and all the contraries that are produced in
the faculties of the soul? Observing which things, who has not fancied that
he has a sort of populace of souls crowded together in himself, each of the
aforesaid passions differing widely from the rest, and, where it prevails,
holding lordship over them all, so that even the rational faculty falls under
and is subject to the predominating power of such forces, and contributes its
own co-operation to such impulses, as to a despotic lord? What word, then,
of the inspired Scripture has taught us the manifold and multiform character
of what we understand in speaking of the soul? Is it a unity composed of them
all, and, if so, what is it that blends and harmonizes things mutually opposed,
so that many things become one, while each element, taken by itself, is shut
up in the soul as in some ample vessel? And how is it that we have not the
perception of them all as being involved in it, being at one and the same time
confident and afraid, at once hating and loving and feeling in ourselves the
working as well of all other emotions confused and intermingled; but, on the
contrary, take knowledge only of their alternate control, when one of them
prevails, the rest remaining quiescent? What in short is this composition and
arrangement, and this capacious void within us, such that to each is assigned
its own post, as though hindered by middle walls of partition from holding
intercourse with its neighbour? And then again what account has explained whether
passion is the fundamental essence of the soul, or fear, or any of the other
elements which I have mentioned; and what emotions are unsubstantial? For if
these have an independent subsistence, then, as I have said, there is comprehended
in ourselves not one soul, but a collection of souls, each of them occupying
its distinct position as a particular and individual soul. But if we must suppose
these to be a kind of emotion without subsistence, how can that which has no
essential existence exercise lordship over us, having reduced us as it were
to slave under whichsoever of these things may have happened to prevail? And
if the soul is something that thought only can grasp, how can that which is
manifold and composite be contemplated as such, when such an object ought to
be contemplated by itself, independently of these bodily qualities? Then, as
to the soul's power of growth, of desire, of nutrition, of change, and the
fact that all the bodily powers are nourished, while feeling does not extend
through all, but, as in things without life, some of our members are destitute
of feeling, the bones for example, the cartilages, the nails, the hair, all
of which take nourishment, but do not feel,--tell me who is there that understands
this only half-complete operation of the soul as to these? And why do I speak
of the soul? Even the inquiry as to that thing in the flesh itself which assumes
all the corporeal qualities has not been pursued to any definite result. For
if any one has made a mental analysis of that which is seen into its component
parts, and, having stripped the object of its qualities, has attempted to consider
it by itself, I fail to see what will have been left for investigation. For
when you take from a body its colour, its shape, its degree of resistance,
its weight, its quantity, its position, its forces active or passive, its relation
to other objects, what remains, that can still be called a body, we can neither
see of ourselves, nor are we taught it by Scripture. But how can he who is
ignorant of himself take knowledge of anything that is above himself? And if
a man is familiarized with such ignorance of himself, is he not plainly taught
by the very fact not to be astonished at any of the mysteries that are without?
Wherefore also, of the elements of the world, we know only so much by our senses
as to enable us to receive what they severally supply for our living. But we
possess no knowledge of their substance, nor do we count it loss to be ignorant
of it. For what does it profit me to inquire curiously into the nature of fire,
how it is struck out, how it is kindled, how, when it has caught hold of the
fuel supplied to it, it does not let it go till it has devoured and consumed
its prey; how the spark is latent in the flint, how steel, cold as it is to
the touch, generates fire, how sticks rubbed together kindle flame how water
shining in the sun causes a flash; and then again the cause of its upward tendency,
its power of incessant motion?--Putting aside all which curious questions and
investigations, we give heed only to the subservience of this fire to life,
seeing that he who avails himself of its service fares no worse than he who
busies himself with inquiries into its nature.
Wherefore
Holy Scripture omits all idle inquiry into substance as superfluous and unnecessary.
And
methinks
it was for this that John, the Son of Thunder,
who with the loud voice of the doctrines contained in his Gospel rose above
that of the preaching which heralded them, said at the close of his Gospel, "There
are also many other things which Jesus did, the which if they should be written
every one, I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the books
that should be written(8)." He certainly does not mean by these the miracles
of healing, for of these the narrative leaves none unrecorded, even though
it does not mention the names of all who were healed. For when he tells us
that the dead were raised, that the blind received their sight, that the deaf
heard, that the lame walked, and that He healed all manner of sickness and
all manner of disease, he does not in this leave any miracle unrecorded, but
embraces each and all in these general terms. But it may be that the Evangelist
means this in his profound wisdom: that we are to learn the majesty of the
Son of God not by the miracles alone which He did in the flesh. For these are
little compared with the greatness of His other work. "But look thou up
to Heaven! Behold its glories! Transfer your thought to the wide compass of
the earth, and the watery depths! Embrace with your mind the whole world, and
when you have come to the knowledge of supramundane nature, learn that these
are the true works of Him Who sojourned for thee in the flesh," which
(saith he), "if each were written"--and the essence, manner, origin,
and extent of each given--the world itself could not contain the fulness of
Christ's teaching about the world itself. For since God hath made all things
in wisdom, and to His wisdom there is no limit (for "His understanding," saith
the Scripture, "is infinite"(9)), the world, that is bounded by limits
of its own, cannot contain within itself the account of infinite wisdom. If,
then, the whole world is too little to contain the teaching of the works of
God, how many worlds could contain an account of the Lord of them all? For
perhaps it will not be denied even by the tongue of the blasphemer that the
Maker of all things, which have been created by the mere fiat of His will,
is infinitely greater than all. If, then, the whole creation cannot contain
what might be said respecting itself (for so, according to our explanation,
the great Evangelist testifies), how should human shallowness contain all that
might be said of the Lord of Creation? Let those grand talkers inform us what
man is, in comparison with the universe, what geometrical point is so without
magnitude, which of the atoms of Epicurus is capable of such infinitesimal
reduction in the vain fancy of those who make such problems the object of their
study, which of them falls so little short of non-existence, as human shallowness,
when compared with the universe. As saith also great David, with a true insight
into human weakness, "Mine age is as nothing unto Thee(1)," not saying
that it is absolutely nothing, but signifying, by this comparison to the non-existent,
that what is so exceedingly brief is next to nothing at all.
But, nevertheless,
with only such a nature for their base of operations, they open their mouths
wide
against
the unspeakable Power, and encompass by one
appellation the infinite nature, confining the Divine essence within the narrow
limits of the term ungeneracy, that they may thereby pave a way for their blasphemy
against the Only-begotten; but although the great Basil had corrected this
false opinion, and pointed out, in regard to the terms, that they have no existence
in nature, but are attached as conceptions to the things signified, so far
are they from returning to the truth, that they stick to what they have once
advanced, as to birdlime, and will not loose their hold of their fallacious
mode of argument, nor do they allow the term "ungeneracy" to be used
in the way of a mental conception, but make it represent the Divine nature
itself. Now to go through their whole argument, and to attempt to overthrow
it by discussing word by word their frivolous and long-winded nonsense, would
be a task requiring much leisure, and time, and freedom from calls of business.
Just as I hear that Eunomius, after applying himself at his leisure, and laboriously,
for a number of years exceeding those of the Trojan war, has fabricated this
dream for himself in his deep slumbers studiously seeking, not how to interpret
any of the ideas which he has arrived at, but how to drag and force them into
keeping with his phrases, and going round and collecting out of certain books
the words in them that sound grandest. And as beggars in lack of clothing pin
and tack together tunics for themselves out of rags, so he, cropping here a
phrase and there a phrase, has woven together for himself the patchwork of
his treatise, glueing in and fixing together the joinings of his diction with
much labour and pains, displaying therein a petty and juvenile ambition for
combat, which any man who has an eye to actuality would disdain, just as a
steadfast wrestler, no longer in the prime of life, would disdain to play the
woman by over-niceness in dress. But to me it seems that, when the scope of
the whole question has been briefly run through, his roundabout flourishes
may well be let alone.
I have
said, then (for I make my master's words my own), that reason supplies us
with but a dim
and imperfect
comprehension of the Divine nature; nevertheless,
the knowledge that: we gather from the terms which piety allows us to apply
to it is sufficient for our limited capacity. Now we do not say that all these
terms have a uniform significance; for some of them express qualities inherent
in God, and others qualities that are not, as when we say that He is just or
incorruptible, by the term "just" signifying that justice is found
in Him, and by "incorruptible" that corruption is not. Again, by
a change of meaning, we may apply terms to God in the way of accommodation,
so that what is proper to God may be represented by a term which in no wise
belongs to Him, and what is foreign to His nature may be represented by what
belongs to Him. For whereas justice is the contradictory of injustice, and
everlastingness the contrary of destruction, we may filly and without impropriety
employ contraries in speaking of God, as when we say that He is ever existent,
or that He is not unjust, which is equivalent to saying that He is just, and
that He admits not of corruption. So, too, we may say that other names of God,
by a certain change of signification, may be suitably employed to express either
meaning, for example "good," and "immortal," and all expressions
of like formation; for each of these terms, according as it is taken, is capable
of indicating what does or what does not appertain to the Divine nature, so
that, notwithstanding the formal change, our orthodox opinion in regard to
the object remains immovably fixed. For it amounts to the same, whether we
speak of God as unsusceptible of evil, or whether we call Him good; whether
we confess that He is immortal, or say that He ever liveth. For we understand
no difference in the sense of these terms, but we signify one and the same
thing by both, though the one may seem to convey the notion of affirmation,
and the other of negation. And so again, when we speak of God as the First
Cause of all things, or again, when we speak of Him as without cause, we are
guilty of no contradiction in sense, declaring as we do by either name that
God is the prime Ruler and First Cause of all. Accordingly when we speak of
Him as without cause, and as Lord of all, in the former case we signify what
does not attach to Him, in the latter case what does; it being possible, as
I have said, by a change of the things signified, to give an opposite sense
to the words that express them, and to signify a property by a word which for
the time takes a negative form, and vice versa. For it is allowable, instead
of saying that He Himself has no primal cause, to describe Him as the First
Cause of all, and again, instead of this, to hold that He alone exists ungenerately,
so that while the words seem by the formal change to be at variance with each
other, the sense remains one and the same. For the object to be aimed at, in
questions respecting God, is not to produce a dulcet and melodious harmony
of words, but to work out an orthodox formula of thought, whereby a worthy
conception of God may be ensured. Since, then, it is only orthodox to infer
that He Who is the First Cause of all is Himself without cause, if this opinion
is established, what further contention of words remains for men of sense and
judgment, when every word whereby such a notion is conveyed to us has the same
signification? For whether you say that He is the First Cause and Principle
of all, or speak of Him as without origin, whether you speak of Him as of ungenerate
or eternal subsistence, as the Cause of all or as alone without cause, all
these words are, in a manner, of like force, and equivalent to one another,
as far as the meaning of the things signified is concerned; and it is mere
folly to contend for this or that vocal intonation, as if orthodoxy were a
thing of sounds and syllables rather than of the mind. This view, then, has
been carefully enunciated by our great master, whereby all whose eyes are not
blindfolded by the veil of heresy may clearly see that, whatever be the nature
of God, He is not to be apprehended by sense, and that He transcends reason,
though human thought, busying itself with curious inquiry, with such help of
reason as it can command, stretches out its hand and just touches His unapproachable
and sublime nature, being neither keen-sighted enough to see clearly what is
invisible, nor yet so far withheld from approach as to be unable to catch some
faint glimpse of what it seeks to know. For such knowledge it attains in part
by the touch of reason, in part from its very inability to discern it, finding
that it is a sort of knowledge to know that what is sought transcends knowledge
(for it has learned what is contrary to the Divine nature, as well as all that
may fittingly be conjectured respecting it). Not that it has been able to gain
full knowledge of that nature itself about which it reasons, but from the knowledge
of those properties which are, or are not, inherent in it, this mind of man
sees what alone can be seen, that that which is far removed from all evil,
and is understood in all good, is altogether such as I should pronounce ineffable
and incomprehensible by human reason.
But although
our great master has thus cleared away all unworthy notions respecting the
Divine nature,
and
has urged and taught all that may be reverently and
fittingly held concerning it, viz. that the First Cause is neither a corruptible
thing, nor one brought into being by any birth, but that it is outside the
range of every conception of the kind; and that from the negation of what is
not inherent, and the affirmation of what may be with reverence conceived to
be inherent therein, we may best apprehend what He is--nevertheless this vehement
adversary of the truth opposes these teachings, and hopes with the sounding
word "ungeneracy" to supply a clear definition of the essence of
God.
And yet it is plain to every one who has given any attention to the uses of
words, that the word incorruption denotes by the privative particle that neither
corruption nor birth appertains to God: just as many other words of like formation
denote the absence of what is not inherent rather than the presence of what
is; e.g. harmless, painless, guileless, undisturbed, passionless, sleepless,
undiseased(2), impossible, unblamable, and the like. For all these terms are
truly applicable to God, and furnish a sort of catalogue and muster of evil
qualities from which God is separate. Yet the terms employed give no positive
account of that to which they are applied. We learn from them what it is not;
but what it is, the force of the words does not indicate. For if some one,
wishing to describe the nature of man, were to say that it is not lifeless,
not insentient, not winged, not four-fooled, not amphibious, he would not indicate
what it is: he would simply declare what it is not, and he would be no more
making untrue statements respecting man than he would be positively defining
his subject. In the same way, from the many things which are predicated of
the Divine nature, we learn under what conditions we may conceive God as existing,
but what He is essentially, such statements do not inform us.
While, however, we strenuously avoid all concurrence with absurd notions in
our thoughts of God, we allow ourselves in the use of many diverse appellations
in regard to Him, adapting them to our point of view. For whereas no suitable
word has been found to express the Divine nature, we address God by many names,
each by some distinctive touch adding something fresh to our notions respecting
Him,--thus seeking by variety of nomenclature to gain some glimmerings for
the comprehension of what we seek. For when we question and examine ourselves
as to what God is, we express our conclusions variously, as that He is that
which presides over the system and working of the things that are, that His
existence is without cause, while to all else He is the Cause of being; that
He is that which has no generation or beginning, no corruption, no turning
backward, no diminution of supremacy; that He is that in which evil finds no
place, and from which no good is absent.
And if any one would distinguish such notions by words, he would find it absolutely
necessary to call that which admits of no changing to the worse unchanging
and invariable, and to call the First Cause of all ungenerate, and that which
admits not of corruption incorruptible; and that which ceases at no limit immortal
and never failing; and that which presides over all Almighty. And so, framing
names for all other Divine attributes in accordance with reverent conceptions
of Him, we designate them now by one name, now by another, according to our
varying lines of thought, as power, or strength, or goodness, or ungeneracy,
or perpetuity.
I say, then, that men have a right to such word-building, adapting their appellations
to their subject, each man according to his judgment; and that there is no
absurdity in this, such as our controversialist makes a pretence of, shuddering
at it as at some gruesome hobgoblin, and that we are fully justified in allowing
the use of such fresh applications of words in respect to all things that can
be named, and to God Himself.
For God
is not an expression, neither hath He His essence in voice or utterance.
But God is of Himself
what also
He is believed to be, but He is named, by those
who call upon Him, not what He is essentially (for the nature of Him Who alone
is is unspeakable), but He receives His appellations from what are believed
to be His operations in regard to our life. To take an instance ready to our
hand; when we speak of Him as God, we so call Him from regarding Him as overlooking
and surveying all things, and seeing through the things that are hidden. But
if His essence is prior to His works, and we understand His works by our senses,
and express them in words as we are best able, why should we be afraid of calling
things by words of later origin than themselves? For if we stay to interpret
any of the attributes of God till we understand them, and we understand them
only by what His works teach us, and if His power precedes its exercise, and
depends on the will of God, while His will resides in the spontaneity of the
Divine nature, are we not clearly taught that the words which represent things
are of later origin than the things themselves, and that the words which are
framed to express the operations of things are reflections of the things themselves?
And that this is so, we are clearly taught by Holy Scripture, by the mouth
of great David, when, as by certain peculiar and appropriate names, derived
from his contemplation of the works of God, he thus speaks of the Divine nature: "The
Lord is full of compassion and mercy, long-suffering, and of great goodness(3)." Now
what do these words tell us? Do they indicate His operations, or His nature?
No one will say that they indicate aught but His operations. At what time,
then, after showing mercy and pity, did God acquire His name from their display?
Was it before man's life began? But who was there to be the object of pity?
Was it, then, after sin entered into the world? But sin entered after man.
The exercise, therefore, of pity, and the name itself, came after man. What
then? will our adversary, wise as he is above the Prophets, convict David of
error in applying names to God derived from his opportunities of knowing Him?
or, in contending with him, will he use against him the pretence in his stately
passage as out of a tragedy, saying that "he glories in the most blessed
life of God with names drown from human imagination, whereas it gloried in
itself alone, long before men were born to imagine them"? The Psalmist's
advocate will readily admit that the Divine nature gloried in itself alone
even before the existence of human imagination, but will contend that the human
mind can speak only so much in respect of God as its capacity, instructed by
His works, will allow. "For," as saith the Wisdom of Solomon, "by
the greatness and beauty of the creatures proportionably the Maker of them
is seen(4)."
But in
applying such appellations to the Divine essence, "which passeth
all understanding," we do not seek to glory in it by the names we employ,
but to guide our own selves by the aid of such terms towards the comprehension
of the things which are hidden. "I said unto the Lord," saith the
Prophet, "Thou art my God, my goods are nothing unto Thee(5)." How
then are we glorifying the most blessed life of God, as this man affirms, when
(as saith the Prophet) "our goods are nothing unto Him"? Is it that
he takes "call" to mean "glory in"? Yet those who employ
the latter word rightly, and who have been trained to use words with propriety,
tell us that the word "glory in" is never used of mere indication,
but that that idea is expressed by such words as "to make known," "to
show," "to indicate," or some other of the kind, whereas the
word for "glory in" means to be proud of, or delight in a thing,
and the like. But he affirms that by employing names drawn from human imagination
we "glory in" the blessed life. We hold, however, that to add any
honour to the Divine nature, which is above all honour, is more than human
infirmity can do. At the same time we do not deny that we endeavour, by words
and names devised with due reverence, to give some notion of its attributes.
And so, following studiously in the path of due reverence, we apprehend that
the first cause is that which has its subsistence not from any cause superior
to itself. Which view, if so be one accepts it as true, is praiseworthy for
its truth alone. But if one should judge it to be superior to other aspects
of the Divine nature, and so should say that God, exulting and rejoicing in
this alone, glories in it, as of paramount excellence, one would find support
only from the Muse by whom Eunomius is inspired, when he says, that "ungeneracy" glories
in itself, that which, mark you, he calls God's essence, and styles the blessed
and Divine life.
But let
us hear how, "in the way most needed, and the form that preceded" (for
with such rhymes he again gives us a taste of the flowers of style), let us
hear, I say, how by such means he proposes to refute the opinion formed of
him, and to keep in the dark the ignorance of those whom he has deluded. For
I will use our dithyrambist's own verbal inflections and phraseology. When,
says he, we assert that words by which thought is expressed die as soon as
they are uttered, we add that whether words are uttered or not, whether they
are yet in existence or not, God was and is ungenerate. Let us learn, then,
what connection there is between the conception or the formation of words,
and the things which we signify by this or that mode of utterance. Accordingly,
if God is ungenerate before the creation of man, we must esteem as of no account
the words which indicate that thought, inasmuch as they are dispersed along
with the sounds that express them, if such thought happen to be named after
human notion. For to be, and to be called, are not convertible terms. But God
is by His nature what He is, but He is called by us by such names as the poverty
of our nature will allow us to make use of, which is incapable of enunciating
thought except by means of voice and words. Accordingly, understanding Him
to be without origin, we enunciate that thought by the term ungenerate. And
what harm is it to Him Who indeed is, that He should be named by us as we conceive
Him to be? For His ungenerate existence is not the result of His being called
ungenerate, but the name is the result of the existence. But this our acute
friend fails to see, nor does he take a clear view of his own positions. For
if he did, he would certainly have left off reviling those who flamed the word
ungeneracy to express the idea in their minds. For look at what he says, "Words
so spoken perish as soon as they are spoken; but God both is and was ungenerate,
both after the words were spoken and before. You see that the Supreme Being
is what He is, before the creation of all things, whether silent or not, being
what He is neither in greater nor in less degree; while the use of words and
names was not devised till after the creation of man, endowed by God with the
faculty of reason and speech."
If, then, the creation is of later date than its Creator, and man is the latest
in the scale of creation, and if speech is a distinctive characteristic of
man, and verbs and nouns are the component elements of speech, and ungeneracy
is a noun, how is it that he does not understand that he is combating his own
arguments? For we, on our side, say that by human thought and intelligence
words have been devised expressive of things which they represent, and he,
on his side, allows that those who employ speech are demonstrably later in
point of time than the Divine life, and that the Divine nature is now, and
ever has been, without generation. If, then, he allows the blessed life to
be anterior to man (for to that point I return), and we do not deny man's later
creation, but contend that we have used forms of speech ever since we came
into being and received the faculty of reason from our Maker, and if ungeneracy
is a word expressive of a special idea, and every word is a part of human speech,
-- it follows that he who admits that the Divine nature was anterior to man
must at the same time admit that the name invented by man to express that nature
was itself later in being. For it was not likely that the use of speech should
be exercised before the existence of creatures to use it, any more than that
farming should be exercised before the existence of farmers, or navigation
before that of navigators, or in fact any of the occupations of life before
that of life itself. Why, then, does he contend with us, instead of following
his premises to their legitimate conclusion?
He says that God was what He is, before the creation of man. Nor do we deny
it. For whatsoever we conceive of God existed before the creation of the world.
But we maintain that it received its name after the namer came into being.
For if we use words for this purpose, that they may supply us with teaching
about the things which they signify, and it is ignorance alone that requires
teaching, while the Divine Nature, as comprehending all knowledge, is above
all teaching, it follows that names were invented to denote the Supreme Being,
not for His sake, but for our own. For He did not attach the term ungeneracy
to His nature in order that He Himself might be instructed. For He Who knoweth
all things has no need of syllables and words to instruct Him as to His own
nature and majesty.
But that
we might gain some sort of comprehension of what with reverence may be thought
respecting
Him, we
have stamped our different ideas with certain
words and syllables, labelling, as it were, our mental processes with verbal
formulae to serve as characteristic notes and indications, with the object
of giving a clear and simple declaration of our mental processes by means of
words attached to, and expressive of, our ideas. Why, then, does he find fault
with our contention that the term ungeneracy was devised to indicate the existence
of God without origin or beginning, and that, independently of all exercise
of speech, or silence, or thought, and before the very idea of creation, God
was and remains ungenerate? If, indeed, any one Should argue that God was not
ungenerate till the name ungeneracy had been found, the man might be pardonable
for writing as he has written, in contravention of such an absurdity. But if
no one denies that He existed before speech and reason, whereas, while the
form of words by which the meaning is expressed is said by us to have been
devised by mental conception, the end and aim of his controversy with us is
to show that the name is not of man's device, but that it existed before our
creation, though by whom it was spoken I do not know(6), what has the assertion
that God existed ungenerately before all things, and the contention that(7)
mental conception is posterior to God, got to do with this aim of his? For
that God is not a conception has been fully demonstrated, so that we may press
him with the same sort of argument, and reply, so to say, in his own words,
e.g. "It is utter folly to regard understanding as of earlier birth than
those who exercise it"; or again, as he proceeds a little below, "Nor
as though we intended this, i.e. to make men, the latest of God's works of
creation, anterior to the conceptions of their own understanding." Great
indeed would be the force of the argument, if any one of us, out of sheer folly
and madness, should argue that God was a conception of the mind. But if this
is not so, nor ever has been, (for who would go to such a pitch of folly as
to assert that He Who alone is, and Who brought all else whatsoever into being,
has no substantial existence of His own, and to make Him out to be a mere conception
of a name?) why does he fight with shadows, contending with imaginary propositions?
Is not the cause of this unreasonable litigiousness clear, that, feeling ashamed
of the fallacy respecting ungeneracy with which his dupes have been deluded
(since it has been proved that the word is very far removed from the Divine
essence), he is deliberately shuffling up his arguments, shifting the controversy
from words to things, so that by throwing all into confusion the unwary may
more easily be seduced, by imagining that God has been described by us either
as a conception, or as posterior in existence to the invention of human terminology;
and thus, leaving our argument unrefuted, he is shifting his position to another
quarter of the field? For our conclusion was, as I have said, that the term
ungeneracy does not indicate the Divine nature, but is applicable to it as
the result of a conception by which the fact that God subsists without prior
cause is pointed at. But what they were for establishing was this: that the
word was indicative of the Divine essence itself. Yet how has it been established
that the word has this force? I suppose the handling of this question is in
reserve in some other of his writings. But here he makes it his main object
to show that God exists ungenerately, just as though some one were simply questioning
him on such points as these--what view he held as to the term ungenerate, whether
he thought it invented to show that the First Cause was without beginning and
origin, or as declaring the Divine essence itself; and he, with much assumption
of gravity and wisdom, were replying that he, for his part, had no doubt that
God was the Maker of heaven and earth. How widely this method of proceeding
differs from, and is unconnected with, his first contention, you may see, in
the same way as you may see how little his fine description of his controversy
with us is connected with the question at issue. For let us look at the matter
in this wise.
They say
that God is ungenerate, and in this we agree. But that ungeneracy itself
constitutes the Divine essence,
here we take exception. For we maintain
that this term is declarative of God's ungenerate subsistence, but not that
ungeneracy is God. But of what nature is his refutation? It is this: that before
man's creation God existed ungenerately. But what has this to do with the point
which he promises to establish, that the term and its Subject are identical?
For he lays it down that ungeneracy is the Divine essence. But what sort of
a fulfilment of his promise is it, to show that God existed before beings capable
of speech? What a wonderful, what an irresistible demonstration! what perfection
of logical refinement! Who that has not been initiated in the mysteries of
the awful craft may venture to look it in the face? Yet in particularizing
the meanings of the term "conception," he makes a solemn travesty
of it. For, saith he, of words used to express a conception of the mind, some
exist only in pronunciation, as for instance those which signify nonentity,
while others have their peculiar meaning; and of these some have an amplifying
force, as in the case of things colossal, others a diminishing, as in that
of pigmies, others a multiplying, as in that of many-headed monsters, others
a combinative, as in that of centaurs. After thus reducing the force of the
term "conception" to its lowest value, our clever friend will allow
it, you see, no further extension. He says that it is without sense and meaning,
that it fancies the unnatural, either contracting or extending the limits of
nature, or putting heterogeneous notions together, or juggling with strange
and monstrous combinations.
With such
gibes at the term "conception," he
shows, to the best of his ability, that it is useless and unprofitable for
the life of man. What,
then, was the origin of our higher branches of learning, of geometry, arithmetic,
the logical and physical sciences, of the inventions of mechanical art, of
the marvels of measuring time by the brazen dial and the water-clock? What,
again, of ontology, of the science of ideas, in short of all intellectual speculation
as applied to great and sublime objects? What of agriculture, of navigation,
and of the other pursuits of human life? how comes the sea to be a highway
for man? how are things of the air brought into the service of things of the
earth, wild things tamed, objects of terror brought into subjection, animals
stronger than ourselves made obedient to the rein? Have not all these benefits
to human life been achieved by conception? For, according to my account of
it, conception is the method by which we discover things that are unknown,
going on to further discoveries by means of what adjoins to and follows(8)
from our first perception with regard to the thing studied. For when we have
formed some idea of what we seek to know, by adapting what follows to the first
result of our discoveries we gradually conduct our inquiry to the end of our
proposed research.
But why enumerate the greater and more splendid results of this faculty? For
every one who is not unfriendly to truth can see for himself that all else
that Time has discovered for the service and benefit of human life, has been
discovered by no other instrumentality than that of conception. And it seems
to me, that any one who should judge this faculty more precious than any other
with the exercise of which we are gifted in this life by Divine Providence
would not be far mistaken in his judgment. And in saying this I am supported
by Job's teaching, where he represents God as answering His servant by the
tempest and the clouds, saying both other things meet for Him to say, and that
it is He Who hath set man over the arts, and given to woman her skill in weaving
and embroidery(9).
Now that He did not teach us such things by some visible operation, Himself
presiding over the work, as we may see in matters of bodily teaching, no one
would gainsay whose nature is not altogether animal and brutish. But still
it has been said that our first knowledge of such arts is from Him, and, if
such is the case, surely He Who endowed our nature with such a faculty of conceiving
and finding out the objects of our investigation was Himself our Guide to the
arts. And by the law of causation, whatever is discovered and established by
conception must be ascribed to Him Who is the Author of that faculty. Thus
human life invented the Art of Healing, but nevertheless he would be right
who should assert that Art to be a gift from God. And whatever discovery has
been made in human life, conducive to any useful purposes of peace or war,
came to us from no other quarter but from an intelligence conceiving and discovering
according to our several requirements; and that intelligence is a gift of God.
It is to God, then, that we owe all that intelligence supplies to us. Nor do
I deny the objection made by our adversaries, that lying wonders also are fabricated
by this faculty. For their contention as to this makes for our own side in
the argument. For we too assert that the science of opposites is the same,
whether beneficial or the reverse; e.g. in the case of the arts of healing
and navigation, and so on. For he who knows how to relieve the sick by drugs
will also know, if indeed he were to turn his art to an evil purpose, how to
mix some deleterious ingredient in the food of the healthy. And he who can
steer a boat with its rudder into port can also steer it for the reef or the
rock, if minded to destroy those on board. And the painter, with the same art
by which he depicts the fairest form on his canvas, could give us an exact
representation of the ugliest. So, too, the wrestling-master, by the experience
which he has gained in anointing, can set a dislocated limb, or, should he
wish to do so, dislocate a sound one. But why encumber our argument by multiplying
instances? As in the above-mentioned cases no one would deny that he who has
learned to practise an art for right purposes can also abuse it for wrong ones,
so we say that the faculty of thought and conception was implanted by God in
human nature for good, but, with those who abuse it as an instrument of discovery,
it frequently becomes the handmaid of pernicious inventions. But although it
is thus possible for this faculty to give a plausible shape to what is false
and unreal, it is none the less competent to investigate what actually and
in very truth subsists, and its ability for the one must in fairness be regarded
as an evidence of its ability for the other.
For that one who proposes to himself to terrify or charm an audience should
have plenty of conception to effect such a purpose, and should display to the
spectators many-handed, many-headed, or fire-breathing monsters, or men enfolded
in the coils of serpents, or that he should seem to increase their stature,
or enlarge their natural proportions to a ridiculous extent, or that he should
describe men metamorphosed into fountains and trees and birds, a kind of narrative
which is not without its attraction for such as take pleasure in things of
that sort;--all this, I say, is the clearest of demonstrations that it is possible
to arrive at higher knowledge also by means of this inventive faculty.
For it is not the case that, while the intelligence implanted in us by the
Giver is fully competent to conjure up non-realities, it is endowed with no
faculty at all for providing us with things that may profit us. But as the
impulsive and elective faculty of the soul is established in our nature, to
incite us to what is good and noble, though a man may also abuse it for what
is evil, and no one can call the fact that the elective faculty sometimes inclines
to evil a proof that it never inclines to what is good--so the bias of conception
towards what is vain and unprofitable does not prove its inability for what
is profitable, but, on the contrary, is a demonstration of its not being unserviceable
for what is beneficial and necessary to the mind. For as, in the one case,
it discovers means to produce pleasure or terror, so, in the other, it does
not fail to find ways for getting at truth. Now one of the objects of inquiry
was whether the First Cause, viz. God, exists without beginning, or whether
His existence is dependent on some beginning. But perceiving, by the aid of
thought, that that cannot be a First Cause which we conceive of as the consequence
of another, we devised a word expressive of such a notion, and we say that
He who is without anterior cause exists without origin, or, so to say, ungenerately.
And Him Who so exists we call ungenerate and without origin, indicating, by
that appellation, not what He is, but what He is not.
But as
far as possible to elucidate the idea, I will endeavour to illustrate it
by a still plainer
example. Let
us suppose the inquiry to be about some
tree, whether it is cultivated or wild. If the former, we call it planted,
if the latter, not planted. And such a term exactly hits the truth, for the
tree must needs be after this manner or that. And yet the word does not indicate
the peculiar nature of the plant. From the term "not-planted" we
learn that it is of spontaneous growth; but whether what is thus signified
is a plane, or a vine, or some other such plant, the name applied to it does
not inform us.
This example being understood, it is time to go on to the thing which it illustrates.
This much we comprehend, that the First Cause has His existence from no antecedent
one. Accordingly, we call God ungenerate as existing ungenerately, reducing
this notion of ungeneracy into verbal form. That He is without origin or beginning
we show by the force of the term. But what that Being is which exists ungenerately,
this appellation does not lead us to discern. Nor was it to be supposed that
the processes of conception could avail to raise us above the limits of our
nature, and open up the incomprehensible to our view, and enable us to compass
the knowledge of that which no knowledge can approach(1). Nevertheless, our
adversary storms at our Master, and tries to tear to pieces his teaching respecting
the faculty of thought and conception, and derides what has been said, revelling
as usual in the rattle of his jingling phraseology, and saying that he (Basil)
shrinks from adducing evidence respecting those things of which he presumes
to be the interpreter. For, quoting certain of the Master's speculations on
the faculty of conception, in which he shows that its exercise finds place,
not only in reference to vain and trivial objects, but that it is competent
to deal also with weightier matters, he, by means of his speculation about
the corn, and seed, and other food (in Genesis), brings Basil into court with
the charge, that his language is a following of pagan philosophy(2), and that
he is circumscribing Divine Providence, as not allowing that words were given
to things by God, and that he is fighting in the ranks of the Atheists, and
taking arms against Providence, and that he admires the doctrines of the profane
rather than the laws of God, and ascribes to them the palm of wisdom, not having
observed in the earliest of the sacred records, that before the creation of
man, the naming of fruit and seed are mentioned in Holy Writ.
Such are
his charges against us; not indeed his notions as expressed in his own phraseology,
for we have
made
such alterations as were required to correct
the ruggedness and harshness of his style. What, then, is our answer to this
careful guardian of Divine Providence? He asserts that we are in error, because,
while we do not deny man's having been created a rational being by God, we
ascribe the invention of words to the logical faculty implanted by God in man's
nature. And this is the bitterest of his accusations, whereby our teacher of
righteousness is charged with deserting to the tenets of the Atheists, and
is denounced as partaking with and supporting their lawless company, and indeed
as guilty of all the most atrocious offences. Well, then, let this corrector
of our blunders tell us, did God give names to the things which He created?
For so says our new interpreter of the mysteries: "Before the creation
of man God named germ, and herb, and grass, and seed, and tree, and the like,
when by the word of His power He brought them severally into being." If,
then, he abides by the bare letter, and so far Judaizes, and has yet to learn
that the Christian is a disciple not of the letter but of the Spirit (for the
letter killeth, says the Apostle, but the Spirit giveth life(3)), and quotes
to us the bare literal reading of the words as though God Himself pronounced
them--if, I say, he believes this, that, after the similitude of men, God made
use of fluency of speech, expressing His thoughts by voice and accent--if,
I repeat, he believes this, he cannot reasonably deny what follows as its logical
consequence. For our speech is uttered by the organs of speech, the windpipe,
the tongue, the teeth, and the mouth, the inhalation of air from without and
the breath from within working together to produce the utterance. For the windpipe,
fitting into the throat like a flute, emits a sound from below; and the roof
of the mouth, by reason of the void space above extending to the nostrils,
like some musical instrument, gives volume from above to the voice. And the
checks, too, are aids to speech, contracting and expanding in accordance with
their structural arrangement, or propelling the voice through a narrow passage
by various movements of the tongue, which it effects now with one part of itself
now with another, giving hardness or softness to the sound which passes over
it by contact with the teeth or with the palate. Again, the service of the
lips contributes not a little to the result, affecting the voice by the variety
of their distinctive movements, and helping to shape the words as they are
uttered.
If, then, God gives things their names as our new expositor of the Divine
record assures us, naming germ, and grass, and tree, and fruit, He must of
necessity have pronounced each of these words not otherwise than as it is pronounced;
i. e. according to the composition of the syllables, some of which are sounded
by the lips, others by the tongue, others by both. But if none of these words
could be uttered, except by the operation of vocal organs producing each syllable
and sound by some appropriate movement, he must of necessity ascribe the possession
of such organs to God, and fashion the Divine Being according to the exigencies
of speech. For each adaptation of the vocal organs must be in some form or
other, and form is a bodily limitation. Further, we know very well that all
bodies are composite, but where you see composition you see also dissolution,
and dissolution, as the notion implies, is the same thing as destruction. This,
then, is the upshot of our controversialist's victory over us; to show us the
God of his imagining whom he has fashioned by the name ungeneracy--speaking,
indeed, that He may not lose His share in the invention of names, but provided
with vocal organs with which to utter them, and not without bodily