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ST. HILARY
ON THE TRINITY
BOOK III.
1. THE words of the Lord, I in the Father, and the Father in Me(1), confuse
many minds, and not unnaturally, for the powers of human reason cannot provide
them with any intelligible meaning. It seems impossible that one object should
be both within and without another, or that (since it is laid down that the
Beings of whom we are treating, though They do not dwell apart, retain their
separate existence and condition) these Beings can reciprocally contain One
Another, so that One should permanently envelope, and also be permanently enveloped
by, the Other, whom yet He envelopes. This is a problem which the wit of man
will never solve, nor will human research ever find an analogy for this condition
of Divine existence. But what man cannot understand, God can be. I do not mean
to say that the fact that this is an assertion made by God renders it at once
intelligible to us. We must think for ourselves, and come to know the meaning
of the words, I in the Father, and the Father in Me: but this will depend upon
our success in gasping the truth that reasoning based upon Divine verities
can establish its conclusions, even though they seem to contradict the laws
of the universe.
2. In order to solve as easily as possible this most difficult problem, we
must first master the knowledge which the Divine Scriptures give of Father
and of Son, that so we may speak with more precision, as dealing with familiar
and accustomed matters. The eternity of the Father, as we concluded after full
discussion in the last Book, transcends space, and time, and appearance, and
all the forms of human thought. He is without and within all things, He contains
all and can be contained by none, is incapable of change by increase or diminution,
invisible, incomprehensible, full, perfect, eternal, not deriving anything
that He has from another, but, if ought be derived from Him, still complete
and self-sufficing.
3. He therefore, the Unbegotten, before time was begot a Son from Himself;
not from any pre-existent matter, for all things are through the Son; not from
nothing, for the Son is from the Father's self; not by way of childbirth, for
in God there is neither change nor void; not as a piece of Himself cut or torn
off or stretched out, for God is passionless and bodiless, and only a possible
and embodied being could so be treated, and, as the [Apostle says, in Christ
dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily(2). Incomprehensibly, ineffably,
before time or worlds, He begat the Only-begotten from His own unbegotten substance,
bestowing through love and power His whole Divinity upon that Birth. Thus He
is the Only-begotten, perfect, eternal Son of the unbegotten, perfect, eternal
Father. But those properties which He has in consequence of the Body which
He took, are the fruit of His goodwill toward our salvation. For He, being
invisible and bodiless and incomprehensible, as the Son of God, took upon Him
such a measure of matter and of lowliness as was needed to bring Him within
the range of our understanding, and perception, and contemplation. It was a
condescension to our feebleness rather than a surrender of His own proper attributes.
4. He, therefore, being the perfect Father's perfect Son. the Only-begotten
Offspring of the unbegotten God, who has received all from Him Who possesses
all, being God from God, Spirit from Spirit, Light from Light, says boldly,
The Father in Me, and I in the Father(3). For as the Father is Spirit, so is
the Son Spirit; as the Father is God, so is the Son God; as the Father is Light,
so is the Son Light. Thus those properties which are in the Father are the
source of those wherewith the Son is endowed; that is, He is wholly Son of
Him Who is wholly Father; not imported from without, for before the Son nothing
was; not made from nothing, for the Son is from God; not a son partially, for
the fulness of the Godhead is in the Son; not a Son in some respects, but in
all; a Son according to the will of Him who had the power, after a manner which
He only knows. What is in the Father is in the Son also; what is in the Unbegotten
is in the Only-begotten also. The One is from the Other, and they Two are a
Unity; not Two made One, yet One in the Other, for that which is in Both is
the same. The Father is in the Son, for the Son is from Him; the Son is in
the Father, because the Father is His sole Origin; the Only-begotten is in
the Unbegotten, because He is the Only-begotten from the Unbegotten. Thus mutually
Each is in the Other, for as all is perfect in the Unbegotten Father, so all
is perfect in the Only-begotten Son. This is the Unity which is in Son and
Father, this the power, this the love; our hope, and faith, and truth, and
way, and life is not to dispute the Father's powers or to depreciate the Son,
but to reverence the mystery and majesty of His birth; to set the unbegotten
Father above all rivalry, and count the Only-begotten Son as His equal in eternity
and might, confessing concerning God the Son that He is from God.
5. Such powers are there in God; powers which the methods of our reason cannot
comprehend, but of which our faith, on the sure evidence of His action, is
convinced. We shall find instances of this action in the bodily sphere as well
as in the spiritual, its manifestation taking, not the form of an analogy which
might illustrate the Birth, but of a deed marvellous yet comprehensible. On
the wedding day in Galilee water was made wine. Have we words to tell or senses
to ascertain what methods produced the change by which the tastelessness of
water disappeared, and was replaced by the full flavour of wine? It was not
a mixing; it was a creation, and a creation which was not a beginning, but
a transformation. A weaker liquid was not obtained by admixture of a stronger
element; an existing thing perished and a new thing came into being. The bridegroom
was anxious. the household in confusion, the harmony of the marriage feast
imperilled. Jesus is asked for help. He does not rise or busy Himself; He does
the work without an effort. Water is poured into the vessels, wine drawn out
in the cups. The evidence of the senses of the pourer contradicts that of the
drawer. They who poured expect water to be drawn; they who draw think that
wine must have been poured in. The intervening time cannot account for any
gain or loss of character in the liquid. The mode of action baffles sight and
sense, but the power of God is manifest in the result achieved.
6. In the case of the five loaves a miracle of the same type excites our wonder.
By their increase five thousand men and countless women and children are saved
from hunger; the method eludes our powers of observation. Five loaves are offered
and broken; while the Apostles are dividing them a succession of new-created
portions passes, they cannot tell how, through their hands. The loaf which
they are dividing grows no smaller, yet their hands are continually full of
the pieces. The swiftness of the process baffles sight; you follow with the
eye a hand full of portions, and meantime you see that the contents of the
other hand are not diminished, and all the while the heap of pieces grows.
The carvers are busy at their task, the eaters are hard at work; the hungry
are satisfied, and the fragments fill twelve baskets. Sight or sense cannot
discover the mode of so noteworthy a miracle. What was not existent is created;
what we see passes our understanding. Our only resource is faith in God's omnipotence.
7. There is no deception in these miracles of God, no subtle pretence to please
or to deceive. These works of the Son of God were done from no desire for self-display;
He Whom countless myriads of angels serve never deluded man. What was there
of ours that He could need, through Whom all that we have was created? Did
He demand praise from us who now are heavy with sleep, now sated with lust,
now laden with the guilt of riot and bloodshed, now drunken from revelling;--He
Whom Archangels, and Dominions, and Principalities, and Powers, without sleep
or cessation or sin, praise in heaven with everlasting and unwearied voice?
They praise Him because He, the Image of the Invisible God, created all their
host in Himself, made the worlds, established the heavens, appointed the stars,
fixed the earth, laid the foundations of the deep; because in after time He
was born, He conquered death, broke the gates of hell, won for Himself a people
to be His fellow-heirs, lifted flesh from corruption up to the glory of eternity.
There was nothing, then, that He might gain from us, that could induce Him
to assume the splendour of these mysterious and inexplicable works, as though
He needed our praise. But God foresaw how human sin and folly would be misled,
and knew that disbelief would dare to pass its judgment even on the things
of God, and therefore He vanquished presumption by tokens of His power which
must give pause to our boldest.
8. For there are many of those wise men of the world whose wisdom is folly
with God, who contradict our proclamation of God from God, True from True,
Perfect from Perfect, One from One, as though we taught things impossible They
pin their faith to certain conclusions which they have reached by process of
logic:--Nothing can be born of one, far every birth requires two parents, and
If this Son be born of One He has received a part of His Begetter: if He be
a part, then Neither of the Two is perfect, for something is missing from Him
from Whom the Son issued, and there cannot be fulness in One Who consists of
a portion of Another. Thus Neither is perfect, for the Begetter has lost His
fulness, and the Begotten has not acquired it. This is that wisdom of the world
which was foreseen by God even in the prophet's days, and condemned through
him in the words, I will destroy the wisdom of the wise, and reject the understanding
of the prudent(4). And the apostle says: Where is the wise? Where is the scribe?
Where is the inquirer of this world? Hath na God made foolish the wisdom of
this world? For because in the wisdom of God he world through wisdom knew not
God, it pleased God through the foolishness of preaching to save them that
believe. For the Jews seek signs, and the Greeks seek wisdom, but we preach
Christ crucified, to the Jews indeed a stumbling-block and to the Gentiles
foolishness, but unto them that are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the
power of God and the wisdom of God. Because the foolishness of God is wiser
than men, and the weakness of God is stronger than men(5).
9. The Son of God, therefore, having the charge of mankind, was first made
man, that men might believe on Him; that He might be to us a witness, sprung
from ourselves, of things Divine, and preach to us, weak and carnal as we are,
through the weakness of the flesh concerning God the Father, so fulfilling
the Father's will, even as He says, I came not to do Mine own will, but the
will of Him that sent Me(6). It was not that He Himself was unwilling, but
that He might manifest His obedience as the result of His Father's will, for
His own will is to do His Father's. This is that will to carry out the Father's
will of which He testifies in the words: Father, the hour is come; ,glorify
Thy Son, that Thy Son may glorify Thee; even as Thou hast given Him power over
all flesh, that whatsoever Thou hast given Him, He should give it eternal life.
And this is life eternal, that they should know Thee the only true God, and
Him Whom Thou didst send, Jesus Christ. I have glorified Thee upon earth, having
accomplished the work which Thou gavest Me to do. And now, O Father, glorify
Me with Thine own Self with the glory which I had with Thee before the world
was. I have manifested Thy Name unto the men whom Thou hast given Me(7). In
words short and few He has revealed the whole task to which He was appointed
and assigned. Yet those words, short and few as they are, are the true faith's
safeguard against every suggestion of the devil's cunning. Let us briefly consider
the force of each separate phrase.
10. He says, Father the hour is come; glorify Thy Son, that Thy Son may glorify
Thee. He says that the hour, not the day nor the time, is come. An hour is
a fraction of a day. What hour must this be? The hour, of course, of which
lie speaks, to strengthen His disciples, at the time of His passion:--Lo, the
hour is come that the Son of Man should be glorified(8). This then is the hour
in which He prays to be glorified by the Father, that He Himself may glorify
the Father. But what does He mean? Does One who is about to give glory look
to receive it? Does One who is about to confer honour make request for Himself?
Is He in want of the very thing which He is about to repay? Here let the world's
philosophers, the wise men of Greece, beset our path, and spread their syllogistic
nets to entangle the truth. Let them ask How? and Whence? and Why? When they
can find no answer, let us tell them that it is because God has chosen the
foolish things of the world to confound the wise(9). That is the reason why
we in our foolishness understand(1) things incomprehensible to the world's
philosophers.The Lordhad said, Father, the hour is come; He had revealed the
hour of His passion, for these words were spoken at the very moment; and then
He added, Glorify Thy Son. But how was the Son to be glorified? He had been
born of a virgin, from cradle and childhood He had grown to man's estate, through
sleep and hunger and thirst anti weariness and tears He had lived man's life:
even now He was to be spitted on, scourged, crucified And why? These things
were ordained for our assurance that in Christ is pure man. But the shame of
the cross is not ours; we are not sentenced to the scourge, nor defiled by
spitting. The Father glorifies the Son; how? He is next nailed to the cross.
Then what followed? The sun, instead of setting, fled. How so? It did not retire
behind a cloud, but abandoned its appointed orbit, and all the elements of
the world felt that same shock of the death of Christ. The stars in their courses,
to avoid complicity in the crime, escaped by self-extinction from beholding
the scene. What did the earth? It quivered beneath the burden of the Lord hanging
on the tree, protesting that it was powerless to confine Him who was dying.
Yet surely rock and stone will not refuse Him a resting-place. Yes, they are
rent and cloven, and their strength fails. They must confess that the rock-hewn
sepulchre cannot imprison the Body which awaits its burial.
11. And next? The centurion of the cohort, the guardian of the cross, cries
out, Truly this was the Son of God(2). Creation is set free by the mediation
of this Sin-offering; the very rocks lose their solidity and strength. They
who had nailed Him to the cross confess that truly this is the Son of God.
The outcome justifies the assertion. The Lord had said, Glorify Thy Son. He
had asserted, by that word Thy, that He was God's Son not in name only, but
in nature. Multitudes of us are sons of God; He is Son in another sense. For
He is God's true and own Son, by origin and not by adoption, not by name only
but in truth, born and not created. So, after He was glorified, that confession
touched the truth; the centurion confessed Him the true Son of God, that no
believer might doubt a fact which even the servant of His persecutors could
not deny.
12. But perhaps some may suppose that He was destitute of that glory for which
He prayed, and that His looking to be glorified by a Greater is evidence of
want of power. Who, indeed, would deny that the Father is the greater; the
Unbegotten greater than the Begotten, the Father than the Son, the Sender than
the Sent, He that wills than He that obeys? He Himself shall be His own witness:--The
Father is greater than I. It is a fact which we must recognise, but we must
take heed lest with unskilled thinkers the majesty of the Father should obscure
the glory of the Son. Such obscuration is forbidden by this same glory for
which the Son prays; for the prayer, Father glorify Thy Son, is completed by,
That the San may glorify Thee. Thus there is no lack of power in the Son, Who,
when He has received this glory, will make His return for it in glory. But
why, if He were not in want, did He make the prayer? No one makes request except
for something which he needs. Or can it be that the Father too is in want?
Or has He given His glory away so recklessly that He needs to have it returned
Him by the Son? No; the One has never been in want, nor the Other needed to
ask, and yet Each shall give to the Other. Thus the prayer for glory to be
given and to be paid back is neither a robbery of the Father nor a depreciation
of the Son, but a demonstration of the power of one Godhead resident in Both.
The Son prays that He may be glorified by the Father; the Father deems it no
humiliation to be glorified by the Son, The exchange of glory given and received
proclaims the unity of power in Father and in Son.
13. We must next ascertain what and whence this glorifying is. God, I am sure,
is subject to no change; His eternity admits not of defect or amendment, of
gain or of loss. It is the character of Him alone, that what He is, He is from
everlasting. What He from everlasting is, it is by His nature impossible that
He should ever cease to be. How then can He receive glory, a thing which He
fully possesses, and of which His store does not diminish; there being no fresh
glory which He can obtain, and none that He has lost and can recover? We are
brought to a standstill. But the Evangelist does not fail us, though our reason
has displayed its help- lessness. To tell us what return of glory it was that
the Son should make to the Father, he gives the words: Even as Thou hast given
Him power over all flesh, that whatsoever Thou hast given Him He may give it
eternal life. And this is life eternal that they should know Thee, the only
true God, and Jesus Christ Whom Thou hast sent. The Father, then, is glorified
through the Son, by His being made known to us. And the glory was this, that
the Son, being made flesh, received from Him power over all flesh, and the
charge of restoring eternal life to us, ephemeral beings burdened with the
body. Eternal life for us was the result not of work done, but of innate power;
not by a new creation, but simply by knowledge of God, was the glory of that
eternity to be acquired. Nothing was added to God's glory; it had not decreased,
and so could not be replenished. But He is glorified through the Son in the
sight of us, ignorant, exiled, defiled, dwelling in hopeless death and lawless
darkness; glorified inasmuch as the Son, by virtue of that power over all flesh
which the Father gave Him, was to bestow on us eternal life. It is through
this work of the Son that the Father is glorified. So when the Son received
all things from the Father, the Father glorified Him; and conversely, when
all things were made through the Son, He glorified the Father. The return of
glory given lies herein, that all the glory which the Son has is the glory
of the Father, since everything He has is the Father's gift. For the glory
of Him who executes a charge redounds to the glory of Him Who gave it, the
glory of the Begotten to the glory of the Begetter.
14. But in what does eternity of life consist? His own words tell us:--That
they way know Thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ Whom Thou hast sent.
Is there any doubt or difficulty here, or any inconsistency? It is life to
know the true God; but the bare knowledge of Him does not give it. What, then,
does He add? And Jesus Christ Whom Thou hast sent. In Thee, the only true God,
the Son pays the honour due to His Father; by the addition, And Jesus Christ
Whom Thou hast sent, He associates Himself with the true Godhead. The believer
in his confession draws no line between the Two, for his hope of life rests
in Both, and indeed, the true God is inseparable from Him Whose Name follows
in the creed. Therefore when we read, That they may know Thee, the only true
God, and Jesus Christ Whom Thou hast sent, these terms of Sender and of Sent
are not intended, under any semblance of distinction or discrimination, to
convey a difference between the true Godhead of Father and of Son, but to be
a guide to the devout confession of Them as Begetter and Begotten.
15. And so the Son glorifies the Father fully and finally in the words which
follow, I have glorified Thee on the earth, having accomplished the work which
Thou hast given Me to do. All the Father's praise is from the Son, for every
praise bestowed upon the Son is praise of the Father, since all that He accomplished
is what the Father had willed The Son of God is born as man; but the power
of God is in the virgin-birth. The Son of God is seen as man; but God is president
in His human actions. The Son of God is nailed to the cross; but on the cross
God conquers human death. Christ, the Son of God, dies; but all flesh is made
alive in Christ. The Son of God is in hell; but man is carried back to heaven.
In proportion to our praise of Christ for these His works, will be the praise
we bring to Him from Whom Christ's Godhead is. These are the ways in which
the Father glorifies the Son on earth; and in return the Son reveals by works
of power to the ignorance of the heathen and to the foolishness of the world,
Him from Whom He is. This exchange of glory, given anti received, implies no
augmentation of the Godhead, but means the praises rendered for the knowledge
granted to those who had lived in ignorance of God. What, indeed, could there
be which the Father, from Whom are all things, did not richly possess? In what
was the Son lacking, in Whom all the fulness of the Godhead had been pleased
to dwell? The Father is glorified on earth because the work which He had commanded
is finished.
16. Next let us see what this glory is which the Son expects to receive from
the Father; and then our exposition will be complete. The sequel is, I have
glorified Thee on the earth, having accomplished the work which Thou hast given
Me to do. And now, O Father, glorify Thou Me with Thine own Self with the glory
which I had with Thee before the world was. I have manifested Thy name unto
men. It is, then, by the Son's works that the Father is glorified, in that
He is recognised as God, as Father of God time Only-begotten, Who for our salvation
willed that His Son should be born as man, even of a virgin; that Son Whose
whole life, consummated in the Passion, was consistent with the humiliation
of the virgin birth. Thus, because the Son of God, all-perfect and horn from
everlasting in the fulness of the Godhead, had now by incarnation become Man
and was ready for His death, He prays that He may be glorified with God, even
as He was glorifying His Father on the earth; for at that moment the powers
of God were being glorified in the flesh before the eyes of a world that knew
Him not. But what is this glory with the Father, for which He looks? It is
that, of course, which He had with Him before the world was. He had the fulness
of the Godhead; He has it still, for He is God's Son. But He Who was the Son
of God had become the Son of man also, for The Word was made flesh. He had
not lost His former being, but He had become what He was not before; He had
not abdicated His own position, yet He had taken ours; He prays that the nature
which He had assumed may be promoted to the glory which He had never renounced.
Therefore, since the Son is the Word, and the Word was made flesh, and the
Word was God, and was in the beginning with God, and the Word was Son before
the foundation of the world; this Son, now incarnate, prayed that flesh might
be to the Father what the Son had been. He prayed that flesh, born in time,
might receive the splendour of the everlasting glory, that the corruption of
the flesh might be swallowed up, transformed into the power of God and the
purity of the Spirit. It is His prayer to God, the Son's confession of the
Father, the entreaty of that flesh wherein all shall see Him on the Judgment-day,
pierced and bearing the marks of the cross; of that flesh wherein His glory
was foreshown upon the Mount, wherein He ascended to heaven and is set down
at the right hand of God, wherein Paul saw Him, anti Stephen paid Him worship.
17. The name Father has thus been revealed to men; the question arises, What
is this Father's own name? Yet surely the name of God has never been unknown.
Moses heard it from the bush, Genesis announces it at the beginning of the
history of creation, the Law has proclaimed and the prophets extolled it, the
history of the world has made mankind familiar with it; the very heathen have
worshipped it under a veil of falsehood. Men have never been left in ignorance
of the name of God. And yet they were, in very truth, in ignorance. For no
man knows God unless He confess Him as Father, Father of the Only-begotten
Son, and confess also the Son a Son by no partition or extension or procession,
but born of Him, as Son of Father, ineffably and incomprehensibly, and retaining
the fulness of that Godhead from which and in which He was born as true and
infinite and perfect God. This is what the fulness of the Godhead means. If
any of these things be lacking, there will not be that fulness which was pleased
to dwell in Him. This is the message of the Son, His revelation to men in their
ignorance. The Father is glorified through the Son when men recognise that,
He is Father of a Son so Divine.
18. The Son, wishing to assure us of the truth of this, His Divine birth,
has appointed His works to serve as an illustration, that from the ineffable
power displayed in ineffable deeds we may learn the lesson of the ineffable
birth. For instance, When water was made wine, and five loaves satisfied five
thousand men, beside women and children, and twelve baskets were filled with
the fragments, we see a fact though we cannot understand it; a deed is done
though it bares our reason; the process cannot be followed, though the result
is obvious. It is folly to intrude in the spirit of carping, when the matter
into which we enquire is such that we cannot probe it to the bottom. For even
as the Father is ineffable because He is Unbegotten, so is the Son ineffable
because He is the Only-begotten, since the Begotten is the Image of the Unbegotten.
Now it is by the use of our senses and of language that we have to form our
conception of an image; and it must be by the same means that we form our idea
of that which the image represents. But in this case we, whose faculties can
deal only with visible and tangible things, are straining after the invisible,
and striving to grasp the impalpable. Yet we take no shame to ourselves, we
reproach ourselves with no irreverence, when we doubt and criticise the mysteries
and powers of God. How is He the Son? Whence is He? What did the Father lose
by His birth? Of what portion of the Father was He born? So we ask; yet all
the while there has been confronting us the evidence of works done to assure
us that God's action is not limited by our power of comprehending His methods.
19. You ask what was the manner in which, as the Spirit teaches, the Son was
born? I will put a question to you as to things corporal. I ask not in what
manner He was born of a virgin; I ask only whether her flesh, in the course
of bringing His flesh to readiness for birth, suffered any loss. Assuredly
she did not conceive Him in the common way, or suffer the shame of human intercourse,
in order to bear Him: yet she bore Him, complete in His human Body, without
loss of her own completeness. Surely piety requires that we should regard as
possible with God a thing which we see became possible through his power in
the case of a human being(3).
20. But you, whoever you are that would seek into the unsearchable, and in
all seriousness form an opinion upon the mysteries and powers of God;--I turn
to you for counsel, and beg you to enlighten me, an unskilled and simple believer
of all that God says, as to a circumstance which I am about to mention. I listen
to the Lord's words and, since I believe what is recorded, I am sure that after
His Resurrection He offered Himself repeatedly in the Body to the sight of
multitudes of unbelievers. At any rate, He did so to Thomas who had protested
that he would not believe unless he handled His wounds. His words are, Unless
I shall see in His hands the print of the nails, and put my finger into the
place of the nails, and thrust my hand into His side, I will not believe(4).
The Lord stoops to the level even of our feeble understanding; to satisfy the
doubts of unbelieving minds He works a miracle of His invisible power. Do you,
my critic of the ways of heaven, explain His action if you can. The disciples
were in a closed room; they had met and held their assembly in secret since
the Passion of the Lord. The Lord presents Himself to strengthen the faith
of Thomas by meeting his challenge; He gives him His Body to feel, His wounds
to handle. He, indeed, who would be recognised as having suffered wounds must
needs produce the body in which those wounds were received. I ask at what point
in the walls of that closed house the Lord bodily entered. The Apostle has
recorded the circumstances with careful precision; Jesus came when the doors
were shut, and stood in the midst(5). Did He penetrate through bricks and mortar,
or through stout woodwork, substances whose very nature it is to bar progress?
For there He stood in bodily presence; there was no suspicion of deceit Let
the eye of your mind follow His path as He enters; let your intellectual vision
accompany Him as He passes into that closed dwelling. There is no breach in
the walls, no door has been unbarred; yet lo, He stands in the midst Whose
might no barrier can resist. You are a critic of things invisible; I ask you
to explain a visible event. Everything remains firm as it was; no body is capable
of insinuating itself through the interstices of wood and stone. The Body of
the Lord does not disperse itself, to come together again after a disappearance;
yet whence comes He Who is standing in the midst? Your senses and your words
are powerless to account for it; the fact is certain, but it lies beyond the
region of human explanation. If, as you say, our account of the Divine birth
is a lie, then prove that this account of tile Lord's entrance is a fiction.
If we assume that an event did not happen, because we cannot discover how it
was done, we make the limits of our understanding into the limits of reality.
But the certainty of the evidence proves the falsehood of our contradiction.
The Lord did stand in a closed house in the midst of the disciples; the Son
was born of the Father. Deny not that He stood, because your puny wits cannot
ascertain how He came there; renounce a disbelief in GOd the Only-begotten
and perfect Son of God the Unbegotten and perfect Father, which is based only
on the incapacity of sense and speech to comprehend the transcendent miracle
of that birth.
21. Nay more, the whole constitution of nature would bear us out against the
impiety of doubting the works and powers of God. And yet our disbelief tilts
even against obvious truth; we strive in our fury to pluck even God from His
throne. If we could, we would climb by bodily strength to heaven, would fling
into confusion the ordered courses of sun and stars, would disarrange the ebb
and flow of tides, check rivers at their source or make their waters flow backward,
would shake the foundations of the world, in the utter irreverence of our rage
against the paternal work of God. It is well that our bodily limitations confine
us within more modest bounds. Assuredly, there is no concealment of the mischief
we would do if we could. In one respect we are free; and so with blasphemous
insolence we distort the truth and turn our weapons against the words of God.
22. The Son has said, Father, I have manifested Thy Name unto men. What reason
is there for denunciation or fury here? Do you deny the Father? Why, it was
the primary purpose of the Son to enable us to know the Father. But in fact
you do deny Him when, according to you, the Son was not born of Him. Yet why
should He have the name of Son if He be, as others are, an arbitrary creation
of God? I could feel awe of God as Creator of Christ as well as Founder of
the universe; it were an exercise of power worthy of Him to be the Maker of
Him Who made Archangels and Angels, things visible and things invisible, heaven
and earth and the whole creation around us. But the work which the Lord came
to do was not to enable you to recognise the omnipotence of God as Creator
of all things, but to enable you to know Him as the Father of that Son Who
addresses you. In heaven there are Powers beside Himself, Powers mighty and
eternal; there is but one Only-begotten Son, and the difference between Him
and them is not one of mere degree of might, but that they all were made through
Him. Since He is the true and only Son, let us not make Him a bastard by asserting
that He was made out of nothing. You hear the name Son; believe that He is
the Son. You hear the name Father; fix it in your mind that He is the Father.
Why surround these names with doubt and illwill and hostility? The things of
God are provided with names which give a true indication of the realities;
why force an arbitrary meaning upon their obvious sense Father and Son are
spoken of; doubt not that the words mean what they say. The end and aim of
the revelation of the Son is that you should know the Father. Why frustrate
the labours of the Prophets, the Incarnation of the Word, the Virgin's travail,
the effect of miracles, the cross of Christ? It was all spent upon you, it
is all offered to you, that through it all Father and Son may be manifest to
you. And you replace the truth by a theory of arbitrary action, of creation
or adoption. Turn your thoughts to the warfare, the conflict waged by Christ.
He describes it thus:--Father, I have manifested Thy Name unto men. He does
not say, Thou hast created the Creator of all the heavens, or Thou hast made
the Maker of the whole earth. He says, Father, I have manifested Thy Name unto
men. Accept your Saviour's gift of knowledge. Be assured that there is a Father
Who begot, a Son Who was born; born in the truth of His Nature of the Father,
Who is. Remember that the revelation is not of the Father manifested as God,
but of God manifested as the Father.
23. You hear the words, I and the Father are one(6). Why do you rend and tear
the Son away from the Father? They are a unity: an absolute Existence having
all things in perfect communion with that absolute Existence, from Whom He
is. When you hear the Son saying, I and the Father are one, adjust your view
of facts to the Persons; accept the statement which Begetter and Begotten make
concerning Themselves. Believe that They are One, even as They are also Begetter
and Begotten. Why deny the common nature? Why impugn the true Divinity? You
hear again, The Father in Me, and I in the Father(7). That this is true of
Father and of Son is demonstrated by the Son's works. Our science cannot envelope
body in body, or pour one into another, as water into wine; but we confess
that in Both is equivalence of power and fulness of the Godhead. For the Son
has received all things from the Father; He is the Likeness of God, the Image
of His substance. The words, Image of His substance(8), discriminate between
Christ and Him from Whom He is but only to establish Their distinct existence
not to teach a difference of nature; and the meaning of Father in Son and Son
in Father is that there is the perfect fulness of the Godhead in Both. The
Father is not impaired by the Son's existence, nor is the Son a mutilated fragment
of the Father. An image implies its original; likeness is a relative term.
Now nothing can be like God unless it have its source in Him; a perfect likeness
can be reflected only from that which it represents; an accurate resemblance
forbids the assumption of any element of difference. Disturb not this likeness;
make no separation where truth shews no variance, for He Who said, Let us make
man after our image and likeness(9), by those words Our likeness revealed the
existence of Beings, Each like the Other. Touch not handle not, pervert not.
Hold fast the Names which teach the truth, hold fast the Son's declaration
of Himself. I would not have you flatter the Son with praises of your own invention;
it is well with you if you be satisfied with the written word.
24. Again, we must not repose so blind a confidence in human intellect as
to imagine that we have complete knowledge of the objects of our thought, or
that the ultimate problem is solved as soon as we have formed a symmetrical
and consistent theory. Finite minds cannot conceive the Infinite; a being dependent
for its existence upon another cannot attain to perfect knowledge either of
its Creator or of itself, for its consciousness of self is coloured by its
circumstances, and bounds are set which its perception cannot pass. Its activity
is not self-caused, but due to the Creator, and a being dependent on a Creator(1)
has perfect possession of none of its faculties, since its origin lies outside
itself. Hence by an inexorable law it is folly for that being to say that it
has perfect knowledge of any matter; its powers have limits which it cannot
modify, and only while it is under the delusion that its petty bounds are coterminous
with infinity can it make the empty boast of possessing wisdom. For of wisdom
it is incapable, its knowledge being limited to the range of its perception,
and sharing the impotence of its dependent existence. And therefore this masquerade(2)
of a finite nature boasting that it possesses the wisdom Which springs only
from infinite knowledge earns the scorn and ridicule of the Apostle, who calls
its wisdom folly. He says, For Christ sent me not to baptize, but to preach
the Gospel, not in the language of wisdom, lest the cross of Christ should
be made void. Far the word of the cross is foolishness to then that are perishing,
but unto them that are being saved it is the power of God. For it is written,
I will destroy the wisdom of the wise and the understanding of the prudent
I will reject. Where is the wise? Where is the scribe? Where is the enquirer
of this world? Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world? For seeing
that in the wisdom of God the world through its wisdom knew not God, God decreed
through the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe. For the Jews
ask for signs and the Greeks seek after wisdom, but we preach Christ crucified,
unto Jews indeed a stumbling-block and to Gentiles foolishness, but unto them
that are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom
of God. Because the weakness of God is stranger than men, and the foolishness
of God is wiser than men(3). Thus all unbelief is foolishness, for it takes
such wisdom as its own finite perception can attain, and, measuring infinity
by that petty scale, concludes that what it cannot understand must be impossible.
Unbelief is the result of incapacity engaged in argument. Men are sure that
an event never happened, because they have made up their minds that it could
not happen.
25. Hence the Apostle, familiar with the narrow assumption of human thought
that what it does not know is not truth, says that he does not speak in the
language of knowledge, lest his preaching should be in vain. To save himself
from being regarded as a preacher of foolishness he adds that the word of the
cross is foolishness to them that perish, He knew that the unbelievers held
that the only true knowledge was that which formed their own wisdom, and that,
since their wisdom was cognisant only of matters which lay within their narrow
horizon, the other wisdom, which alone is Divine and perfect, seemed foolishness
to them. Thus their foolishness actually consisted, in that feeble imagination
which they mistook for wisdom. Hence it is that the very things which to them
that perish are foolishness are the power of God to them that are saved; for
these last never use their own inadequate faculties as a measure, but attribute
to the Divine activities the omnipotence of heaven. God rejects the wisdom
of the wise and the understanding of the prudent in this sense, that just because
they recognise their own foolishness, salvation is granted to them that believe.
Unbelievers pronounce the verdict of foolishness on everything that lies beyond
their ken, while believers leave to the power and majesty of God the choice
of the mysteries wherein salvation is bestowed. There is no foolishness in
the things of God; the foolishness lies in that human wisdom which demands
of God, as the condition of belief, signs and wisdom. It is the foolishness
of the Jews to demand signs; they have a certain knowledge of the Name of God
through long acquaintance with the Law, but the offence of the cross repels
them. The foolishness of the Greeks is to demand wisdom; with Gentile folly
and the philosophy of men they seek the reason why God was lifted up on the
cross. And because, in consideration for the weakness of our mental powers,
these things have been hidden in a mystery, this foolishness. of Jews and Greeks
turns to unbelief; for they denounce, as unworthy of reasonable credence, truths
which their mind is inherently incapable of comprehending. But, because the
world's wisdom was so foolish,--for previously through God's wisdom it knew
not God, that is, the splendour of the universe, and the wonderful order which
He planned for His handiwork, taught it no reverence for its Creator--God was
pleased through the preaching of foolishness to save them that believe, that
is, through the faith of the cross to make everlasting life the lot of mortals;
that so the self-confidence of human wisdom might be put to shame, and salvation
found where men had thought that foolishness dwelt. For Christ, Who is foolishness
to Gentiles, and offence to Jews, is the Power of God and the Wisdom of God;
because what seems weak and foolish to human apprehension in the things of
God transcends in true wisdom and might the thoughts and the powers of earth.
26. And therefore the action of God must not be canvassed by human faculties;
the Creator must not be judged by those who are the work of His hands. We must
clothe ourselves in foolishness that we may gain wisdom; not in the foolishness
of hazardous conclusions, but in the foolishness of a modest sense of our own
infirmity, that so the evidence of God's power may teach us truths to which
the arguments of earthly philosophy cannot attain. For when we are fully conscious
of our own foolishness, and have felt the helplessness and destitution of our
reason, then through the counsels of Divine Wisdom we shall be initiated into
the wisdom of God; setting no bounds to boundless majesty and power, nor tying
the Lord of nature down to nature's laws; sure that for us the one true faith
concerning God is that of which He is at once the Author and the Witness.
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