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ST. HILARY
ON THE TRINITY
BOOK VIII
1. THE Blessed Apostle Paul in laying down the form for appointing a bishop
and creating by his instructions an entirely new type of member of the Church,
has taught us in the following words the sum total of all the virtues perfected
in him:--Holding fast the word according to the doctrine of faith that he may
be able to exhort to sound doctrine and to convict gainsavers. For there are
many unruly men, vain talkers and deceivers(1). For in this way he points out
that the essentials of orderliness and morals are only profitable for good
service in the priesthood if at the same time the qualities needful for knowing
how to teach and preserve the faith are not lacking, for a man is not straightway
made a good and useful priest(2) by a merely innocent life or by a mere knowledge
of preaching. For an innocent minister is profitable to himself alone unless
he be instructed also; while he that is instructed has nothing to support his
teaching unless he be innocent. For the words of the Apostle do not merely
fit a man for his life in this world by precepts of honesty and uprightness,
nor on the other hand do they educate in expertness of teaching a mere Scribe
of the Synagogue for the expounding of the Law: but the Apostle is training
a leader of the Church, perfected by the perfect accomplishment of: the greatest
virtues, so that his life may be adorned by his teaching, and his teaching
by his life. Accordingly he has provided Titus, the person to whom his words
were addressed, with an injunction as to the perfect practice of religion to
this effect:--In all things shewing thyself an ensample of good works, teaching
with gravity sound words that cannot be condemned, that the adversary may be
ashamed, having nothing disgraceful or evil to say of us(3). This teacher of
the Gentiles and elect doctor of the Church, from his consciousness of Christ
who spoke and dwelt within him, knew well that the infection of tainted speech
would spread abroad, and that the corruption of pestilent doctrine would furiously
rage against the sound form of faithful words, and infusing the poison of its
own evil tenets into the inmost soul, would creep on with deep-seated mischief.
For it is of these that he says, Whose word spreadeth like a cancer(4), tainting
the health of the mind, invaded by it with a secret and stealthy contagion.
For this reason, he wished that there should be in the bishop the teaching
of sound words, a good conscience in the faith and expertness in exhortation
to withstand wicked and false and wild gainsayings. For there are many who
pretend to the faith, but are not subject to the faith, and rather set up a
faith for themselves than receive that which is given, being puffed up with
the thoughts of human vanity, knowing the things they wish to know and unwilling
to know the things that are true; since it is a mark of true wisdom sometimes
to know what we do not like. However, this will-wisdom is followed by foolish
preaching, for what is foolishly learnt must needs be foolishly preached. Yet
how great an evil to those who hear is foolish preaching, when they are misled
into foolish opinions by conceit of wisdom! And for this cause the Apostle
described them thus: There are many unruly, vain talkers and deceivers(5).
Hence we must utter our voice against arrogant wickedness and boastful arrogance
and seductive boastfulness,--yes, we must speak against such things through
the soundness of our doctrine, the truth of our faith, the sincerity of our
preaching, so that we may have the purity of truth and the truth of sound doctrine.
2. The reason why I have just mentioned this utterance of the Apostle is this;
men of crooked minds and false professions, void of hope and venomous of speech,
lay upon me the necessity of inveighing against them, because under the guise
of religion they instil deadly doctrines, infectious thoughts and corrupt desires
into the simple minds of their hearers. And this they do with an utter disregard
of the true sense of the apostolic teaching, so that the Father is not a Father,
nor the Son, Son, nor the Faith, the Faith. In resisting their wild falsehoods,
we have extended the course of our reply so far, that after proving from the
Law that God and God were distinct and that very God was in very God, we then
shewed from the teaching of evangelists and apostles the perfect and true birth
of the Only-begotten God; and lastly, we pointed out in the due course of our
argument that the Son of God is very God, and of a nature identical with the
Father's, so that the faith of the Church should neither confess that God is
single nor that there are two Gods. For neither would the birth of God allow
God to be solitary, nor would a perfect birth allow different natures to be
ascribed to two Gods. Now in refuting their vain speaking we have a twofold
object, first that we may teach what is holy and perfect and sound, and, that
our discourse should not by straying through any by-paths and crooked ways,
and struggling out of devious and winding tunnels, seem rather to search for
the truth than declare it. Our second object is that we should reveal to the
conviction of all men the folly and absurdity of those crafty arguments of
their vain and deceitful opinions which are adapted to a plausible show of
seductive truth. For it is not enough for us to have pointed out what things
are good, unless they are understood to be absolutely good by our refutation
of their opposites.
3. But as it is the nature and endeavour of the good and wise to prepare themselves
wholly for securing either the reality or the opportunity of some precious
hope lest their preparedness should in some respects fall short of that which
they look for,--so in like manner those who are filled with the madness of
heretical frenzy make it their chiefest. anxiety to labour with all the ingenuity
of their impiety against the truth of pious faith, in order that against those
who are religious they may establish their own irreligion; that they may surpass
the hope of our life in the hopelessness of their own, and that they may spend
more thought over false than we spend over true teaching. For against the pious
assertions of our faith they have carefully devised such objections of their
impious misbelief, as first to ask whether we believe in one God, next, whether
Christ also be God, lastly, whether the Father is greater than the Son, in
order that when they hear us confess that God is one they may use our reply
to shew that Christ cannot be God. For they do not enquire concerning the Son
whether He be God; all they wish for in asking questions about Christ is to
prove that He is not a Son, that by entrapping men of simple faith they may
through the belief in one God divert them from the belief in Christ as God,
on the ground that God is no longer one if Christ also must be acknowledged
as God. Again with what subtlety of worldly wisdom do they contend when they
say, If God is one, whosoever that other shall be shewn to be, he will not
he God. For if there be another God He can no longer be one, since nature does
not permit that where there is another there should be one only, or that where
there is only one there should be another. Afterwards, when by the crafty cunning
of this insidious argument they have misled those who are ready to believe
and listen, they then apply this proposition (as if they could now establish
it by an easier method), that Christ is God rather in name than in nature,
because this generic name in Him can destroy in none that only true belief
in one God: and they contend that through this the Father is greater than the
Son, because, the natures being different, as there is but one God, the Father
is greater from the essential character of His nature; and that the Other is
only called Son while He is really a creature subsisting by the will of the
Father, because He is less than the Father; and also that He is not God, because
God being one does not admit of another God, since he who is less must necessarily
be of a nature alien from that of the person who is greater. Again, how foolish
they are in their attempts to lay down a law for God when they maintain that
no birth can take place from one single being, because throughout the universe
birth arises from the union of two; moreover, that the unchangeable God cannot
accord from Himself birth to one who is born, because that which is changeless
is incapable of addition, nor can the nature of a solitary and single being
contain within itself the property of generation.
4. We, on the contrary, having by spiritual teaching arrived at the faith
of the evangelists and apostles, and following after the hope of eternal blessedness
by our confession of the Father and the Son, and having proved out of the Law
the mystery of God and God, without overstepping the limits of our faith in
one God, or failing to proclaim that Christ is God, have adopted this method
of reply from the Gospels, that we declare the true nativity of Only-begotten
God from God the Father, because that through this He was both very God and
not alien from the nature of the One very God, and thus neither could His Godhead
be denied nor Himself be described as another God, because while the birth
made Him God, the nature within him of one God of God did not separate Him
off as another God. And although our human reason led us to this conclusion,
that the names of distinct natures could not meet together in the same nature,
and not be one, where the essence of each did not differ in kind; nevertheless,
it seemed good that we should prove this from the express sayings of our Lord,
Who after frequently making known that the God of our faith and hope was One,
in order to affirm the mystery of the One God, while declaring and proving
His own Godhead, said, I and the Father are one; and, If ye had known Me, ye
would have known My Father also; and, He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father
also; and, Believe Me, that the Father is in Me, and I in the Father: or else
believe for the very works' sake (6). He has signified His own birth in the
name Father, and declares that in the knowledge of Himself the Father is known.
He avows the unity of nature, when those who see Him see the Father. He bears
witness that He is indivisible from the Father, when He dwells in the Father
Who dwells in Him. He possesses the confidence of self-knowledge when He demands
credit for His words from the operations of His power. And thus in this most
blessed faith of the perfect birth, every error, as well that of two Gods as
of a single God, is abolished, since They Who are one in essence are not one
person, and He Who is not one person with HIM WHO IS, is yet so free from difference
from Him that They Two are One God.
5. Now seeing that heretics cannot deny these things because they are so clearly
stated and understood, they nevertheless pervert them by the most foolish and
wicked lies so as afterwards to deny them. For the words of Christ, I and the
Father are one(7), they endeavour to refer to a mere concord of unanimity,
so that there may be in them a unity of will not of nature, that is, that they
may be one not by essence of being, but by identity of will. And they apply
to the support of their case the passage in the Acts of the Apostles, Now of
the multitude of them that believed the heart and soul were one(8), in order
to prove that a diversity of souls and hearts may be united into one heart
and soul through a mere conformity of will. Or else they cite those words to
the Corinthians, Now he that planteth and he that watereth are one(9), to shew
that, since They are one in Their work for our salvation, and in the revelation
of one mystery, Their unity is an unity of wills. Or again, they quote the
prayer of our Lord for the salvation of the nations who should believe in Him:
Neither for these only do I pray, but for them also that shall believe on Me
through their Word; that they all may be one; even as Thou, Father, art in
Me, and I in Thee, that they also may be in Us(1), to shew that since men cannot,
so to speak, be fused back into God or themselves coalesce into one undistinguished
mass, this oneness must arise from unity of will, while all perform actions
pleasing to God, and unite one with another in the harmonious accord of their
thoughts, and that thus it is not nature which makes them one, but will.
6. He clearly knows not wisdom who knows not God. And since Christ is Wisdom
he must needs be beyond the pale of wisdom who knows not Christ or hates Him(2).
As, for instance, they do who will have it that the Lord of Glory, and King
of the Universe, and Only-begotten God is a creature of God and not His Son,
and in addition to such foolish lies shew a still more foolish cleverness in
the defence of their falsehood. For even putting aside for a little that essential
character of unity which exists in God the Father and God the Son, they can
be refuted out of the very passages which they adduce.
7. For as to those whose soul and heart were one, I ask whether they were
one through faith in God? Yes, assuredly, through faith, for through this the
soul and heart of all were one. Again I ask, is the faith one or is there a
second faith? One undoubtedly, and that on the authority of the Apostle himself,
who proclaims one faith even as one Lord, and one baptism, and one hope, and
one God(3). If then it is through faith, that is, through the nature of one
faith, that all are one, how is it that thou dost not understand a natural
unity in the case of those who through the nature of one faith are one? For
all were born again to innocence, to immortality, to the knowledge of God,
to the faith of hope. And if these things cannot differ within themselves because
there is both one hope and one God, as also there is one Lord and one baptism
of regeneration; if these things are one rather by agreement than by nature,
ascribe a unity of will to those also who have been born again into them. If,
however, they have been begotten again into the nature of one life and eternity,
then, inasmuch as their soul anti heart are one, the unity of will fails to
account for their case who are one by regeneration into the same nature.
8. These are not our own conjectures which we offer, nor do we falsely put
together any of these things in order to deceive the ears of our bearers by
perverting the meaning of words; but holding fast the form of sound teaching
we know and preach the things which are true. For the Apostle shews that this
unity of the faithful arises from the nature of the sacraments when be writes
to the Galatians. Fear as many of you as were baptized into Christ did put
on Christ. There is neither few nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free,
there is neither male nor female; for ye are all one in Christ Jesus(4). That
these are one amid so great diversities of race, condition, sex,--is it from
an agreement of will or from the unity of the sacrament, since these have one
baptism and have all put on one Christ? What, therefore, will a concord of
minds avail here when they are one in that they have put on one Christ through
the nature of one baptism?
9. Or, again, since he who plants and he who waters are one, are they not
one because, being themselves born again in one baptism they form a ministry
of one regenerating baptism? Do not they do the same thing? Are they not one
in One? So they who are one through the same thing are one also by nature,
not only by will, inasmuch as they themselves have been made the same thing
and are ministers of the same thing and the same power.
10. Now the contradiction of fools always serves to prove their folly, because
with regard to the faults which they contrive by the devices of an unwise or
crooked understanding against the truth, while the latter remains unshaken
and immovable the things which are opposed to it must needs be regarded as
false and foolish. For heretics in their attempt to deceive others by the words,
I and the Father are ones(5), that there might not be acknowledged in them
the unity and like essence of deity, but only a oneness arising from mutual
love and an agreement of wills--these heretics, I say, have brought forward
an instance of that unity, as we have shewn above, even from the words of our
Lord, That they all may be one, as Thou Father art in Me, and I in Thee, that
they also may be in Us(6). Every man is outside the promises of the Gospel
who is outside the faith in them, and by the guilt of an evil understanding
has lost all simple hope. For to know not what thou believest demands not so
much excuse as a reward, for the greatest service of faith is to hope for that
which thou knowest not. But it is the madness of most consummate wickedness
either not to believe things which are understood or to have corrupted the
sense in which one believes.
11. But although the wickedness of man can pervert his intellectual powers,
nevertheless the words retain their meaning. Our Lord prays to His Father that
those who shall believe in Him may be one, and as He is in the Father and the
Father in Him, so all may be one in Them. Why dost thou bring in here an identity
of mind, why a unity of soul and heart through agreement of will? For there
would have been no lack of suitable words for our Lord, if it were will that
made them one, to have prayed in this fashion,--Father, as We are one in will,
so may they also be one in will, that we may all be one through agreement.
Or could it be that He Who is the Word was unacquainted with the meaning of
words? and that He Who is Truth knew not how to speak the truth? and He Who
is Wisdom went astray in foolish talk? and He Who is Power was compassed about
with such weakness that He could not speak what He wished to be understood?
He has clearly spoken the true and sincere mysteries of the faith of the Gospel.
And He has not only spoken that we may comprehend, He has also taught that
we may believe, saying, That they all may be one, as Thou Father art in Me,
and I in Thee, that they also may be in Us. For those first of all is the prayer
of whom it is said, That they all may be one. Then the promotion of unity is
set forth by a pattern of unity, when He says, as Thou, Father, art in Me,
and I in Thee, that they also may be in Us, so that as the Father is in the
Son and the Son in the Father, so through the pattern of this unity all might
be one in the Father and the Son.
12. But because it is proper to the Father alone and the Son that They should
be one by nature because God is from God, and the Only-begotten from the Unbegotten
can subsist in no other nature than that of His origin; so that He Who was
begotten should exist in the substance of His birth, and the birth should possess
no other and different truth of deity than that from which it issued; for our
Lord has left us in no doubt as to our belief by asserting throughout the whole
of the discourse which follows the nature of this complete unity. For the next
words are these, That the world may believe that Thou didst send Me(7). Thus
the world is to believe that the Son has been sent by the Father because all
who shall believe in Him will be one in the Father and the Son. And how they
will be so we are soon told,--And the glory which Than hast given Me I have
given unto them(8). Now I ask whether glory is identical with will, since will
is an emotion of the mind while glory is an ornament or embellishment of nature.
So then it is the glory received from the Father that the Son hath given to
all who shall believe in Him, and certainly not will. Had this been given,
faith would carry with it no required, for a necessity of will attached to
us would also impose faith upon us. However He has shewn what is effected by
the bestowal of the glory received, That they may be one, even as We are one(9).
It is then with this object that the received glory was bestowed, that all
might be one. So now all are one in glory, because the glory given is none
other than that which was received: nor has it been given for any other cause
than that all should be one. And since all are one through the glory given
to the Son and by the Son bestowed upon believers, I ask how can the Son be
of a different glory from the Father's, since the glory of the Son brings all
that believe into the unity of the Father's glory. Now it may be that the utterance
of human hope in this case may be somewhat immoderate, yet it will not be contrary
to faith; for though to hope for this were presumptuous, yet not tO have believed
it is sinful, for we have one and the same Author both of our hope and of our
faith. We will treat of this matter more clearly and at greater length in its
own place, as is fitting. Yet in the meantime it is easily seen from our present
argument that this hope of ours is neither vain nor presumptuous. So then through
the glory received and given all are one. I hold the faith and recognise the
cause of the unity, but I do not yet understand how it is that the glory given
makes all one.
13. Now our Lord has not left the minds of His faithful followers in doubt,
but has explained the manner in which His nature operates, saying, That they
may be one, as We are one: I in them and Thou in Me, that they may be perfected
in one(1). Now I ask those who bring forward a unity of will between Father
and Son, whether Christ is in us to-day through verity of nature or through
agreement of will. For if in truth the Word has been made flesh and we in very
truth receive the Word made flesh as food from the Lord, are we not bound to
believe that He abides in us naturally, Who, born as a man, has assumed the
nature of our flesh now inseparable from Himself, and has conjoined the nature
of His own flesh to the nature of the eternal Godhead in the sacrament by which
His flesh is communicated to us? For so are we all one, because the Father
is in Christ and Christ in us. Whosoever then shall deny that the Father is
in Christ naturally must first deny that either he is himself in Christ naturally,
or Christ in him, because the Father in Christ and Christ in us make us one
in Them. Hence, if indeed Christ has taken to Himself the flesh of our body,
and that Man Who was born froth Mary was induced Christ, and we indeed receive
in a mystery the flesh of His body--(and for this cause we shall be one, because
the Father is in Him and He in us), -- how can a unity of will be maintained,
seeing that the special property of nature received through the sacrament is
the sacrament of a perfect unity(2)?
14. The words in which we speak of the things of God must be used in no mere
human and worldly sense, nor must the perverseness of an alien and impious
interpretation be extorted from the soundness of heavenly words by any violent
and headstrong preaching. Let us read what is written, let us understand what
we read, and then fulfil the demands of a perfect faith. For as to what we
say concerning the reality of Christ's nature within us, unless we have been
taught by Him, our words are foolish and impious. For He says Himself, My flesh
is meat indeed, and My blood is drink indeed. He that eateth My flesh and drinketh
My blood abideth in Me, and I in him(3). As to the verity of the flesh and
blood there is no room left for doubt. For now both from the declaration of
the Lord Himself and our own faith, it is verily flesh and verily blood. And
these when eaten and drunk, bring it to pass that both we are in Christ and
Christ in us. Is not this true? Yet they who affirm that Christ Jesus is not
truly God are welcome to find it false. He therefore Himself is in us through
the flesh and we in Him, whilst together with Him our own selves are in God.
15. Now how it is that we are in Him through the sacrament of the flesh and
blood bestowed upon us, He Himself testifies, saying, And the world will no
longer see Me, but ye shall see Me ; because I live ye shall live also; because
I am in My Father, and ye in Me, and I in you(4). If He wished to indicate
a mere unity of will, why did He set forth a kind of gradation and sequence
in the completion of the unity, unless it were that, since He was in the Father
through the nature of Deity, and we on the contrary in Him through His birth
in the body, He would have us believe that He is in us through the mystery
of the sacraments? and thus there might be taught a perfect unity through a
Mediator, whilst, we abiding in Him, He abode in the Father, and as abiding
in the Father abode also in us; and so we might arrive at unity with tile Father,
since in Him Who dwells naturally in the Father by birth, we also dwell naturally,
while He Himself abides naturally in us also.
16. Again, how natural this unity is in us He has Himself testified on this
wise,--He who eateth My flesh and drinketh My blood abideth in Me, and I in
him(5). For no man shall dwell in Him, save him in whom He dwells Himself,
for the only flesh which He has taken to Himself is the flesh of those who
have taken His. Now He had already taught before the sacrament of this perfect
unity, saying, As the living Father sent Me, and I live through the Father,
so he that eateth My flesh shall himself also live through Me(6). So then He
lives through the Father, and as He lives through the Father in like manner
we live through His flesh. For all comparison is chosen to shape our understanding,
so that we may grasp the subject of which we treat by help of the analogy set
before us. This is the cause of our life that we have Christ dwelling within
our carnal selves through the flesh, and we shall live through Him in the same
manner as He lives through the Father. if, then, we live naturally through
Him according to the flesh, that is, have partaken of the nature of His flesh,
must He not naturally have the Father within Himself according to the Spirit
since He Himself lives through the Father? And He lives through the Father
because His birth has not implanted in Him an alien and different nature inasmuch
as His very being is from Him yet is not divided from Him by any barrier of
an unlikeness of nature, for within Himself He has the Father through the birth
in the power of the nature.
17. I have dwelt upon these facts because the heretics falsely maintain that
the union between Father and Son is one of will only, and make use of the example
of our own union with God, as though we were trailed to the Son and through
the Son to the Father by mere obedience and a devout will, and none of the
natural verity of communion were vouchsafed us through the sacrament of the
Body and Blood; although the glory of the Son bestowed upon us through the
Son abiding in us after the flesh, while we are united in Him corporeally and
inseparably, bids us preach the mystery of the true and natural unity.
18. So we have made our reply to the folly of our violent opponents, merely
to prove the emptiness of their falsehoods and so prevent them from misleading
the unwary by the error of their vain and foolish statements. But the faith
of the Gospel did not of necessity require our answer. The Lord prayed on our
behalf for our union with God, but God keeps His own unity and abides in it.
It is not through any mysterious appointment of God that they are one, but
through a birth of nature, for God loses nothing in begetting Him from Himself.
They are one, for the things which are not plucked out of His hand are not
plucked out of the hand of the Father(7), for, when He is known, the Father
is known, for, when He is seen, the Father is seen, for what He speaks the
Father speaks as abiding in Him, for in His works the Father works, for He
is in the Father and the Father in Him(8). This proceeds from no creation but
from birth; it is not brought about by will but by power; it is no agreement
of mind that speaks, it is nature; because to be created and to be born are
not one and the same, any more than to will and to be able; neither is it the
same thing to agree and to abide
19. Thus we do not deny a unanimity between the Father and the Son,--for heretics
are accustomed to utter this falsehood, that since we do not accept concord
by itself as the bond of unity we declare Them to be at variance. But let them
listen how it is that we do not deny such a unanimity. The Father and the Son
are one in nature, honour, power, and the same nature cannot will things that
are contrary. Moreover, let them listen to the testimony of the Son as touching
the unity of nature between Himself and the Father, for He says, When that
advocate is come, Whom I shall send to you from the Father, the Spirit of truth
Who proceedeth front the Father, He shall testify of Me(9). The Advocate shall
come and the Son shall send Him from the Father, and He is the Spirit of truth
Who proceedeth from the Father. Let the whole following of heretics arouse
the keenest powers of their wit; let them now seek for what lies they can tell
to the unlearned, and declare what that is which the Son sends from the Father.
He Who sends manifests His power in that which He sends. But as to that which
He sends from the Father, how shall we regard it, as received or sent forth
or begotten? For His words that He will send from the Father must imply one
or other of these modes of sending. And He will send from the Father that Spirit
of truth which proceedeth from the Father; He therefore cannot be the Recipient,
since He is revealed as the Sender. It only remains to make sure of our conviction
on the point, whether we are to believe an egress of a co-existent Being, or
a procession of a Being begotten.
20. For the present I forbear to expose their licence of speculation, some
of them holding that the Paraclete Spirit comes from the Father or from the
Son. For our Lord has not left this in uncertainty, for after these same words
He spoke thus,--I have yet many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear
them now. When He, the Spirit of truth, is come, He shall guide you into all
truth: for He shall not speak from Himself: but what things soever He shall
hear, these shall He speak; and He shall declare unto you the things that are
to come. He shall glorify Me: for He shall receive of Mine and stroll declare
it unto you. All things whatsoever the Father hath are Mine: therefore said
I, He shall receive of Mine and shall declare it unto you(1). Accordingly He
receives from the Son, Who is both sent by Him, and proceeds from the Father.
Now I ask whether to receive from the Son is the same thing as to proceed from
the Father. But if one believes that there is a difference between receiving
from the Son and proceeding from the Father, surely to receive from the Son
and to receive from the Father will be regarded as one and the same thing.
For our Lord Himself says, Because He shall receive of Mine and shall declare
it unto you. All things whatsoever the Father hath are Mine: therefore said
I, He shall receive of Mine and shall declare it unto you. That which He will
receive,--whether it will be power, or excellence, or teaching,--the Son has
said must be received from Him, and again He indicates that this same thing
must be received from the Father. For when tie says that all things whatsoever
the Father hath are His, and that for this cause He declared that it must be
received from His own, He teaches also that what is received from the Father
is yet received from Himself, because all things that the Father hath are His.
Such a unity admits no difference, nor does it make any difference from whom
that is received, which given by the Father is described as given by the Son.
Is a mere unity of will brought forward here also? All things which the Father
hath are the Son's, and all things which the Son hath are the Father's. For
He Himself saith, And all Mine are Thine, and Thine are Mine(2). It is not
yet the place to shew wily He spoke thus, For He shall receive of Mine: for
this points to some subsequent time, when it is revealed that He shall receive.
Now at any rate He says that He will receive of Himself, because all things
that the Father had were His. Dissever if thou canst the unity of the nature,
and introduce some necessary unlikeness through which the Son may not exist
in unity of nature. For the Spirit of truth proceedeth from the Father and
is sent from the Father by the Son. All things that the Father hath are the
Son's; and for this cause whatever He Who is to be sent shall receive, He shall
receive from the Son, because all things that the Father hath are the Son's.
The nature in all respects maintains its law, and because Both are One that
same Godhead is signified as existing in Both through generation and nativity;
since the Son affirms that that which the Spirit of truth shall receive from
the Father is to be given by Himself. So the frowardness of heretics must not
be allowed an unchecked licence of impious beliefs, in refusing to acknowledge
that this saying of the Lord,--that because all things which the Father hath
are His, therefore the Spirit of truth shall receive of Him,--is to be referred
to unity of nature.
21. Let us listen to that chosen vessel and teacher of the Gentiles, when
he had already commended the faith of the people of Rome because of their understanding
of the truth. For wishing to teach the unity of nature in the case of the Father
and the Son, he speaks thus, But ye are not in the flesh but in the Spirit,
if indeed the Spirit of God is in you. But if any have not the Spirit of Christ,
he is none of His. But if Christ is in you, the body indeed is dead through
sin, but the Spirit is life through righteousness. But if the Spirit of Him
Who raised up Christ from the dead dwelleth in you; He Who raised up Christ
from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies, because of His Spirit
Who dwelleth in you(3). We are all spiritual if the Spirit of God dwells in
us. But this Spirit of God is also the Spirit of Christ, and though the Spirit
of Christ is in us, yet His Spirit is also in us Who raised Christ from the
dead, and He Who raised Christ from the dead shall quicken our mortal bodies
also on account of His Spirit that dwelleth in us. We are quickened therefore
on account of the Spirit of Christ that dwelleth in us, through Him Who raised
Christ from the dead. And since the Spirit of Him Who raised Christ from the
dead dwells in us, and yet the Spirit of Christ is in us, nevertheless the
Spirit Which is in us cannot but be the Spirit of God. Separate, then, O heretic,
the Spirit of Christ from the Spirit of God, and the Spirit of Christ raised
from the dead from the Spirit of God Which raises Christ from the dead; when
the Spirit of Christ that dwelleth in us is the Spirit of God, and when the
Spirit of Christ Who was raised from the dead is yet the Spirit of God Who
raises Christ from the dead.
22. And now I ask whether thou thinkest that in the Spirit of God is signified
a nature or a property belonging to a nature. For a nature is not identical
with a thing belonging to it, just as neither is a man identical with what
belongs to a man, nor fire with what belongs to fire itself, and in like manner
God is not the same as that which belongs to God.
23. For I am aware that the Son of God is revealed under the title Spirit
of God in order that we may understand the presence of the Farther in Him,
and that the term Spirit of God may be employed to indicate Either, and that
this is shewn not only on the authority of prophets but of evangelists also,
when it is said, The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me; therefore He hath anointed
Me(4). And again, Behold My Servant Whom I have chosen, My beloved in Whom
My soul is well pleased, I will put My Spirit upon Him(5). And when the Lord
Himself bears witness of Himself, But if I in the Spirit of God cast out devils,
then has the kingdom of God come upon you(6). For the passages seem without
any doubt to denote either Father or Son, while they yet manifest the excellence
of nature.
24. For I think that the expression 'Spirit of God' was used with respect
to Each, lest we should believe that the Son was present in the Father or the
Father in the Son in a merely corporeal manner, that is, lest God might be
thought to abide in one position and exist nowhere else apart from Himself.
For a man or any other thing like him, when he is in one place, cannot be in
another, because what is in one place is confined to the place where it is:
his nature cannot allow him to be everywhere when he exists in some one position.
But God is a living Force, of infinite power, present everywhere and nowhere
absent, and manifests His whole self through His own, and signifies that His
own are naught else than Himself, so that where they are He may be understood
to be Himself. Yet we must not think that, after a corporeal fashion, when
He is in one place He ceases to be everywhere, for through His own things He
is still present in all places, while the things which are His are none other
than His own self. Now these things have been said to make us understand what
is meant by 'nature.'
25. Now
I think that it ought to be clearly understood that God the Father is denoted
by the Spirit
of God,
because our Lord Jesus Christ declared that
the Spirit of the Lord was upon Him since He anoints Him and sends Him to preach
the Gospel. For in Him is made manifest the excellence of the Father's nature,
disclosing that the Son partakes of His nature even when born in the flesh
through the mystery of this spiritual unction, since after the birth ratified
in. His baptism this intimation of His inherent Sonship was heard as a voice
bore witness from Heaven:--Thou art My Son; this day have begotten Thee(7).
For not even He Himself can be understood as resting upon Himself or coming
to Himself from Heaven, or as bestowing on Himself the title of Son: but all
this demonstration was for our faith, in order that under the mystery of a
complete and true birth we should recognise that the unity of the nature dwells
in the Son Who had begun to be also man. We have thus found that in the Spirit
of God the Father is designated; but we understand that the Son is indicated
in the same way, when He says: But if I in the Spirit of God cast out devils,
then has the kingdom of God come upon you. That is, He shews clearly that He,
by the power of His nature, casts out devils, which cannot be cast out save
by the Spirit of God. The phrase 'Spirit of God' denotes also the Paraclete
Spirit, and that not only on the testimony of prophets but also of apostles,
when it is said:--This is that which was spoken through the Prophet, It shall
come to pass on the last day, saith the Lord, I will pour out of My Spirit
upon all flesh, and their sans and their daughters shall prophesy(8)• And
we learn that all this prophecy was fulfilled in the case of the Apostles,
when, after the sending of the Holy Spirit, they all spoke with the tongues
of the Gentiles.
26. Now we have of necessity set these things forth with this object, that
in whatever direction the deception of heretics betakes itself, it might yet
be kept in check by the boundaries and limits of the gospel truth. For Christ
dwells in us, and where Christ dwells God dwells. And when the Spirit of Christ
dwells in us, this indwelling means not that any other Spirit dwells in us
than the Spirit of God. But if it is understood that Christ dwells in us through
the Holy Spirit, we must yet recognise this Spirit of God as also the Spirit
of Christ. And since the nature dwells in us as the nature of one substantive
Being, we must regard the nature of the Son as identical with that of the Father,
since the Holy Spirit Who is both the Spirit of Christ and the Spirit of God
is proved to be a Being of one nature. I ask now, therefore, how can They fail
to be one by nature? The Spirit of Truth proceeds from the Father, He is sent
by the Son and receives from the Son. But all things that the Father hath are
the Son's, and for this cause He Who receives from Him is the Spirit of God
but at the same time the Spirit of Christ. The Spirit is a Being of the nature
of the Son but the same Being is of the nature of the Father. He is the Spirit
of Him Who raised Christ from the dead; but this is no other than the Spirit
of Christ Who was so raised. The nature of Christ and of God must differ in
some respect so as not to be the same, if it can be shewn that the Spirit which
is of God is not the Spirit of Christ also.
27. But you, heretic, as you wildly rave and are driven about by the Spirit
of your deadly doctrine the Apostle seizes and constrains, establishing Christ
for us as the foundation of our faith, being well aware also of that saying
of our Lord, If a man love Me, he will also keep My word; and My Father will
love him, and We will come unto him, and make Our abode with him(9). For by
this He testified that while the Spirit of Christ abides in us the Spirit of
God abides in us, and that the Spirit of Him that was raised from the dead
differs not from the Spirit of Him that raised Him from the dead. For they
come and dwell in us: and I ask whether they will come as alleges associated
together and make Their abode, or in unity of nature? Nay, the teacher of the
Gentiles contends that it is not two Spirits--the Spirits of God and of Christ--that
are present in those who believe, but the Spirit of Christ which is also the
Spirit of God. This is no joint indwelling, it is one indwelling: yet an indwelling
under the mysterious semblance of a joint indwelling, for it is not the case
that two Spirits indwell, nor is one that indwells different from the other.
For there is in us the Spirit of God and there is also in us the Spirit of
Christ, and when the Spirit of Christ is in us there is also in us the Spirit
of God. And so since what is of God is also of Christ, and what is of Christ
is also of God, Christ cannot be anything different from what God is. Christ,
therefore, is God, one Spirit with God.
28. Now the Apostle asserts that those words in the Gospel, I and the Father
are one(9), imply unity of nature and not a solitary single Being, as he writes
to the Corinthians, Wherefore I give you to understand, that no man in the
Spirit of God calleth Jesus anathema(1). Perceivest thou now, O heretic, in
what spirit thou callest Christ a creature? For since they are under a curse
who have served the creature more than the Creator--in affirming Christ to
be a creature, learn what thou art, since thou knowest full well that the worship
of the creature is accursed. And observe what follows, And no one can call
Jesus Lord, but in the Holy Spirit(2). Dost thou perceive what is lacking to
thee, when thou deniest Christ what is His own? If thou holdest that Christ
is Lord through His Divine nature, thou hast the Holy Spirit. But if He be
Lord merely by a name of adoption thou lackest the Holy Spirit, and art animated
by a spirit of error: because no one can call Jesus Lord, but in the Holy Spirit.
But when thou sayest that He is a creature rather than God, although thou stylest
Him Lord, still thou dost not say that He is the Lord. For to thee He is Lord
as one of a common class and by a familiar name, rather than by nature. Yet
learn from Paul His nature.
29. For the Apostle goes on to say, Now there are diversities of gifts, but
there is the same Spirit; and there are diversities of ministrations but one
and the same Lord; and there are di- versities of workings but the same God,
Who worketh all things in all. But to each one is given the manifestation of
the Spirit for that which profiteth(3). In this passage before us we perceive
a fourfold statement: in the diversity of gifts it is the same Spirit, in the
diversity of ministrations it is the very same Lord, in the diversity of workings
it is the same God, and in the bestowal of that which is profitable there is
a manifestation of the Spirit. And in order that the bestowal of what is profitable
might be recognised in the manifestation of the Spirit, he continues: To one
indeed is given through the Spirit the word of wisdom; and to another the word
of knowledge according to the same Spirit; to another faith in the same Spirit;
to another the gift of healing in the same Spirit; to another the working of
miracles; to another prophecy; to another discerning of spirits; to another
kinds of tongues ; to another the interpretation of tongues(4).
30. And indeed that which we called the fourth statement, that is the manifestation
of the Spirit in the bestowal of what is profitable, has a clear meaning. For
the Apostle has enumerated the profitable gifts through which this manifestation
of the Spirit took place. Now in these diverse activities that Gift is set
forth in no uncertain light of which our Lord had spoken to the apostles when
He taught them not to depart from Jerusalem; but wait, said He, for the promise
of the Father which ye heard from My lips: for John indeed baptized with water,
but ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost, which ye shall also receive not
many days hence(5). And again: But ye shall receive power when the Holy Ghost
cometh upon you; and ye shah be My witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judaea,
and in Samaria, and unto the uttermost part of the earth(6). He bids them wait
for the promise of the Father of which they had beard from His lips. We may
be sure that here(7) we have a reference to the Father's same promise. Hence
it is by these miraculous workings that the manifestation of the Spirit takes
place. For the gift of the Spirit is manifest, where wisdom makes utterance
and the words of life are heard, and where there is the knowledge that comes
of God-given insight, lest after the fashion of beasts through ignorance of
God we should fail to know the Author of our life; or by faith in God, lest
by not believing the Gospel of God, we should be outside His Gospel; or by
the gift of healings, that by the cure of diseases we should bear witness to
His grace Who bestoweth these things; or by the working of miracles, that what
we do may be understood to be the power of God, or by prophesy, that through
our understanding of doctrine we might be known to be taught of God; or by
discerning of spirits, that we should not be unable to tell whether any one
speaks with a holy or a perverted spirit; or by kinds of tongues, that the
speaking in tongues may be bestowed as a sign of the gift of the Holy Spirit;
or by the interpretation of tongues, that the faith of those that hear may
not be imperilled through ignorance, since the interpreter of a tongue explains
the tongue to those who are ignorant of it. Thus in all these things distributed
to each one to profit withal there is the manifestation of the Spirit, the
gift of the Spirit being apparent through these marvellous advantages vestowed
upon each.
31. Now the blessed Apostle Paul in revealing the secret of these heavenly
mysteries, most difficult to human comprehension, has preserved a clear enunciation
and a carefully worded caution in order to shew that these diverse gifts are
given through the Spirit and in the Spirit (for to be given through the Spirit
and in the Spirit is not the same thing), because the granting of a gift which
is exercised in the Spirit is yet bestowed through the Spirit. But he sums
up these diversities of gifts thus: Now all these things worketh one and the
same Spirit, dividing to each one as He will(8). Now, therefore, I ask what
Spirit works these things, dividing to each one according as He wills: is it
He by Whom or He in Whom there is this distribution of gifts(9)? But if any
one shall dare to say that it is the same Person which is indicated, the Apostle
will refute so faulty an opinion, for he says above, And there are diversities
of workings, but the same God Who worketh all things in all. So there is one
Who distributes and another in Whom the distribution is vouchsafed. Yet know
that it is always God Who worketh all these things, but in such a way that
Christ works, and the Son in His working performs the Father's work. And if
in the Holy Spirit thou confessest Jesus to be Lord, understand the force of
that threefold indication in the Apostle's letter; forasmuch as in the diversities
of gifts, it is the same Spirit, and in the diversities of ministrations it
is the same Lord, and in the diversities of workings it is the same God; and
again, one Spirit that worketh all things distributing to each according as
He will. And grasp the idea if thou canst that the Lord in the distribution
of ministrations, and God in the distribution of workings, are this one and
the same Spirit Who both works and distributes as He will; because in the distribution
of gifts there is one Spirit, and the same Spirit works and distributes.
32. But if this one Spirit of one Divinity, one in both God and Lord through
the mystery of the birth, does not please thee, then point out to me what Spirit
both works and distributes these diverse gifts to us, and in what Spirit He
does this. But, thou must shew me nothing but what accords with our faith,
because the Apostle shews us Who is to be understood, saying, For as the body
is one, and hath many members, and all the members of the body, being many,
are one body, so also is Christ(9a). He affirms that diversities of gifts come
from one Lord Jesus Christ Who is the body of all. Because after he had made
known the Lord in ministration, and made known also God in workings, he yet
shews that one Spirit both works and distributes all these things, distributing
these varieties of His gracious gifts for the perfecting of one body.
33. Unless perchance we think that the Apostle did not keep to the principle
of unity in that he said, And there are diversities of ministrations, and the
same Lord, and there are diversities of workings, but the same God(1). So that
because he referred ministrations to the Lord and workings to God, be does
not appear to have understood one and the same Being in ministrations and operations.
Learn how these members which minister are also members which work, when he
says, Ye are the body of Christ, and of Him members indeed. For God hath set
same in the Church, first apostles, in whom is the word of wisdom; secondly
prophets, in whom is the gift of knowledge thirdly teachers, in whom is the
doctrine of faith; next mighty works, among which are the healing of diseases,
the power to help,, governments by the prophets, and gifts of either speaking
or interpreting divers kinds of tongues. Clearly these are the Church's agents
of ministry and work of whom the body of Christ consists; and God has ordained
them. But perhaps thou maintainest that they have not been ordained by Christ,
because it was God Who ordained them. But thou shall hear what the Apostle
says himself: Now to each one of us was the grace given according to the measure
of the gift of Christ. And again, He that descended is the same also that ascended
far above all the heavens that He might fill all things. And he gave some to
be apostles; and some, prophets; and some, evangelists; and same, pastors and
teachers; for the perfecting of the saints, for the work of ministering(2).
Are not then the gifts of ministration Christ's, while they are also the gifts
of God?
34. But if impiety has assumed to itself that because he says, The same Lord
and the same God(3), they are not in unity of nature, I will support this interpretation
with what you deem still stronger arguments. For the same Apostle says, But
for us there is one God, the Father, of Whom are all things, and we in Him,
and one Lord Jesus Christ, through Whom are all things, and we through Him(4).
And again, One Lord, one .faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, Who
is both through all, and in us all(5). By these words one God and one Lord
it would seem that to God only is attributed, as to one God, the property of
being God; since the property of oneness does not admit of partnership with
another. Verily how rare and hard to attain are such spiritual gifts! How truly
is the manifestation of the Spirit seen in the bestowal of such useful gifts!
And with reason has this order in the distribution of graces been appointed,
that the foremost should be the word of wisdom; for true it is, And no one
can call Jesus Lord but in the Holy Spirit(6), because but through this word
of wisdom Christ could not be understood to be Lord; that then there should
follow next the word of understanding, that we might speak with understanding
what we know, and might know the word of wisdom; and that the third gift should
consist of faith, seeing that those leading and higher graces would be unprofitable
gifts did we not believe that He is God. So that in the true sense of this
greatest and most noble utterance of the Apostle no heretics possess either
the word of wisdom or the word of knowledge or the faith of religion, inasmuch
as wilful wickedness, being incapable of understanding, is void of knowledge
of the word and of genuineness of faith. For no one utters what he does not
know; nor can he believe that which he cannot utter; and thus when the Apostle
preached one God, a proselyte as He was from the Law, and called to the gospel
of Christ, he has attained to the confession of a perfect faith. And lest the
simplicity of a seemingly unguarded statement might afford heretics any opportunity
for denying through the preaching of one God the birth of the Son, the Apostle
has set forth one God while indicating His peculiar attribute in these words,
One God the Father, of Whom are all thing, and we in Him(7), in order that
He Who is God might also be acknowledged as Father. Afterwards, inasmuch as
this bare belief in one God the Father would not suffice for salvation, he
added, And one, our Lord Jesus Christ, throughh Whom are all things, and we
through Him, shewing that the purity of saving faith consists in the preaching
of one God and one Lord, so that we might believe in one God the Father and
one Lord Jesus Christ. For he knew full well how our Lord had said, For this
is the will of My Father, that every one that seeth the Son and believeth on
Him should have eternal life(8). But in fixing the order of the Church's faith,
and basing our faith upon the Father and the Son, he has uttered the mystery
of that indivisible and indissoluble unity and faith in the words one God and
one Lord.
35. First of all, then, O heretic that hast no part in the Spirit which spoke
by the Apostle, learn thy folly. If thou wrongly employest the confession of
one God to deny the Godhead of Christ, on the ground that where one God exists
He must be regarded as solitary, and that to be One is characteristic and peculiar
to Him Who is One,--what sense wilt thou assign to the statement that Jesus
Christ is one Lord? For if, as thou assertest, the fact that the Father alone
is God has not left to Christ the possibility of Godhead, it must needs be
also according to thee that the fact of Christ being one Lord does not leave
God the possibility of being Lord, seeing that thou wilt have it that to be
One must be the essential property of Him Who is One. Hence if thou deniest
that the one Lord Christ is also God, thou must needs deny that the one God
the Father is also Lord. And what will the greatness of God amount to if He
be not Lord, and the power of the Lord if He be not God: since it(viz., the
greatness or power) causes that to be God which is Lord, and makes that Lord
which is God?
36. Now the Apostle, maintaining the true sense of the Lord's saying, I and
the Father are one(9), whilst He asserts that Both are One, signifies that
Both are One not after the manner of the soleness of a single being, but in
the unity of the Spirit; for one God the Father and one Christ the Lord, since
Each is both Lord and God, do not yet admit in our creed either two Gods or
two Lords. So then Each is one, and though one, neither is sole. We shall not
be able to express the mystery of the faith except in the words of the Apostle.
For there is one God and one Lord, and the fact that there is one God and one
Lord proves that there is at once Lordship in God, and Godhead in the Lord.
Thou canst not maintain a trojan of person, so making God single; nor yet canst
thou divide the Spirit, so preventing the Two from being One(1). Nor in the
one God and one Lord wilt thou be able to separate the power, so that He Who
is Lord should not also be God, and He Who is God should not also be Lord.
For the Apostle in the enunciation of the Names has taken care not to preach
either two Gods or two Lords. And for this reason he has employed such a method
of teaching as in the one Lord Christ to set forth also one God, and in the
one God the Father to set forth also one Lord. And, not to misguide us into
the blasphemy that God is solitary, which would destroy the birth of the Only-begotten
God, he has confessed both Father and Christ.
37. Unless perchance the frenzy of utter desperation will venture to rush
to such lengths that, inasmuch as the Apostle has called Christ Lord, no one
ought to acknowledge Him as aught else save Lord, and that because He has the
property of Lord He has not the true Godhead. But Paul knows full well that
Christ is God, for he says, Whose are the fathers, and of whom is Christ, Who
is Gad over all(2). It is no creature here who is reckoned as God; nay, it
is the God of things created Who is God over all.
38. Now that He Who is God over all is also Spirit inseparable from the Father,
learn also from that very utterance of the Apostle, of which we are now speaking.
For when he confessed one God the Father from Whom are all things, and one
Lord Jesus Christ through Whom are all things; what difference, I ask, dirt
he intend by saying that all things are from God and that all things are through
Christ? Can He possibly be regarded as of a nature and spirit separable from
Himself, He from Whom and through Whom are all things? For all things have
come into being through the Son out of nothing, and the Apostle has referred
them to God the Father, From Whom are all things, but also to the Son, through
Whom are all things. And I find here no difference, since by Each is exercised
the same power. For if with regard to the subsistence of the universe it was
an exact sufficient statement that things created are from God, what need was
there to state that the things which are from God are through Christ, unless
it be one and the same thing to be through Christ and from God? But as it has
been ascribed to Each of Them that They are Lord and God in such wise that
each title belongs to Both, so too from Whom and through Whom is here referred
to Both; and this to shew the unity of Both, not to make known God's singleness.
The language of the Apostle affords no opening for wicked error, nor is his
faith too exalted for careful statement. For he has guarded himself by those
specially appropriate words from being understood to mean two Gods or a solitary
God: for while he rejects oneness of person he yet does not divide the unity
of Godhead. For this from Whom are all things and through Whom are all things,
although it did not posit a solitary Deity in the sole possession of majesty,
must yet set forth One not different in efficiency, since from Whom are all
things and through Whom are all things must signify an Author of the same nature
engaged in the same work. He affirms, moreover, that Each is properly of the
same nature. For after announcing the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge
of God, and after asserting the mystery of His inscrutable judgments and avowing
our ignorance of His ways past finding out, he has yet made use of the exercise
of human faith, and rendered this homage to the depth of the unsearchable and
inscrutable mysteries of heaven, for of Him and through Him and in Him are
all things: to Him be glory for ever. Amen(3). He employs to indicate the one
nature, that which cannot but be the work of one nature.
39. For whereas he has specially ascribed to God that all things are from
Him, and he has assigned as a peculiar property to Christ, that all things
are through Him, and it is now the glory of God that from Him and through Him
and in Him are all things; and whereas the Spirit of God is the same as the
Spirit of Christ, or whereas in the ministration of the Lord and in the working
of God, one Spirit both works and divides, They cannot but be one Whose properties
are those of one; since in the same Lord the Son, and in the same God the Father,
one and the same Spirit distributing in the same Holy Spirit accomplishes all
things. How worthy is this saint of the knowledge of exalted and heavenly mysteries,
adopted and chosen to share in the secret things of God, preserving a due silence
over things which may not be uttered, true apostle of Christ! How by the announcement
of his clear teaching has he restrained the imaginations of human wilfulness,
confessing, as he does, one God the Father and one Lord Jesus Christ, so that
meanwhile no one can either preach two Gods or one solitary God; although He
Who is not one person cannot multiply into two Gods, nor on the other hand
can They Who are not two Gods be understood to be one single person; while
meantime the revelation of God as Father demonstrates the true nativity of
Christ.
40. Thrust out now your quivering and hissing tongues, ye vipers of heresy,
whether it be thou Sabellius or thou Photinus, or ye who now preach that the
Only-begotten God is a creature. Whosoever denies the Son shall hear of one
God the Father, because inasmuch as a father becomes a father only by having
a son, this name Father necessarily connotes the existence of the Son. And
again, let him who takes away from the Son the unity of an identical nature,
acknowledge one Lord Jesus Christ. For unless through unity of the Spirit He
is one Lord room will not be left for God the Father to be Lord. Again, let
him who holds the Son to have become Son in time and by His Incarnation, learn
that through Him are all things and we through Him, and that His timeless Infinity
was creating all things before time was. And meanwhile let him read again that
there is one hope of our calling, and one baptism, and one faith; if, after
that, he oppose himself to the preaching of the Apostle, he, being accursed
because he framed strange doctrines of his own device, is neither called nor
baptized nor believing; because in one God the Father and in one Lord Jesus
Christ there lies the one faith of one hope and baptism. And no alien doctrine
can boast that it has a place among the truths which belong to one God and
Lord and hope and baptism and faith.
41. So then the one faith is, to confess the Father in the Son and the Son
in the Father through the unity of an indivisible nature, not confused but
inseparable, not intermingled but identical, not conjoined but coexisting,
not incomplete but perfect. For there is birth not separation, there is a Son
not an adoption; and He is God, not a creature. Neither is He a God of a different
kind, but the Father and Son are one: for the nature was not altered by birth
so as to be alien from the property of its original. So the Apostle holds the
faith of the Son abiding in the Father and the Father in the Son when he proclaims
that for him there is one God the Father and one Lord Christ, since in Christ
the Lord there was also God, and in God the Father there was also Lord, and
They Two are that unity which is God, and They Two are also that unity which
is the Lord, for reason indicates that there must be something imperfect in
God unless He be Lord, and in the Lord unless He were God. And so since Both
are one, and Both are implied under either name, and neither exists apart from
the unity, the Apostle has not gone beyond the preaching of the Gospel in his
teaching, nor does Christ when He speaks in Paul differ from the words which
He spoke while abiding in the world in bodily form.
42. For the Lord had said in the gospels, Work not for the meat which `perisheth,
but for the meat which abideth unto life eternal, which the Son of Man shall
give unto you: for Him the Father, even God, hath sealed. They said therefore
unto Him, What must we do that we may work the works of God? And He said unto
them, This is the work of God, that ye believe on Him Whom He hath sent(4).
In setting forth the mystery of His Incarnation and His Godhead our Lord has
also uttered the teaching of our faith and hope that we should work for food,
not that which perisheth but that which abideth for ever; that we should remember
that this food of eternity is given us by the Son of Man; that we should know
the Son of Man as sealed by God the Father; that we should know that this is
the work of God, even faith in Him Whom He has sent. And Who is it Whom the
Father has sent? Even He Whom the Father has sealed. And Who is He Whom the
Father has sealed? In truth, the Son of Man, even He who gives the food of
eternal life. And further who are they to whom He gives it? They who shall
work for the food that does not perish. Thus, then, the work for this food
is at the same time the work of God, namely, to believe on Him Whom He has
sent. But these words are uttered by the Son of Man. And how shall the Son
of Man give the food of life eternal? Why, he knows not the mystery of his
own salvation, who knows not that the Son of Man, bestowing food unto life
eternal, has been sealed by God the Father. At this point I now ask in what
sense are we to understand that the Son of Man has been sealed by God the Father?
43. Now we ought to recognise first of all that God has spoken not for Himself
but for us, and that He has so far tempered the language of His utterance as
to enable the weakness of our nature to grasp and understand it. For after
being rebuked by the Jews for having made Himself the equal of God by professing
to be the Son of God, He had answered that He Himself did all things that the
Father did, and that He had received all judgment from the Father; moreover
that He must be honoured even as the Father. And in all these things having
before declared Himself Son, He had made Himself equal to the FAther in honour,
power and nature. Afterwards He had said that as the Father had life in Himself,
so He had given the Son to have life in Himself, wherein He signified that
by virtue of the mystery of the birth He possessed the unity of the same nature.
For when He says that He has what the Father has, He means that He has the
Father's self. For that God is not after human fashion of a composite being,
so that in Him there is a difference of kind between Possessor and Possessed;
but all that He is is life, a nature, that is, complete, absolute and infinite,
not composed of dissimilar elements but with one life permeating the whole.
And since this life was in such wise given as it was possessed, although the
fact the it was given manifestly reveals the birth of the Recipient, it yet
does not involve a difference of kind since the life given was such as was
possessed.
44. Therefore after this manifold and precise revelation of the presence of
the Father's nature in Himself, He goes on to say, For Him hath the Father
sealed, even God(5). It is the nature of a seal to exhibit the whole form of
the figure graven upon it, and that an impression taken from it reproduces
it in every respect; and since it receives the whole of that which is impressed,
it displays also in itself wholly whoever has been impressed upon it. Yet this
comparison is not adequate to exemplify the Divine birth, because in seals
there is a matter, difference of nature, and an act of impression, whereby
the likeness of stronger natures is impressed upon things of a more yielding
nature. But the Only-begotten God, Who was also through the Mystery of our
salvation the Son of Man, desiring to point out to us the likeness of His Father's
proper nature in Himself, said that He was sealed by God; because the Son of
Man was about to give the food of eternal life, and that we thereby might perceive
in Him the power of giving food unto eternity, in that He possessed within
Himself all the fulness of His Father's form, even of the God Who sealed Him:
so that what God had sealed should display in itself none other than the form
of the God Who sealed it. These things indeed the Lord spoke to the Jews, who
could not receive His saying because of unbelief.
45. But in us the preacher of the Gospel by the Spirit of Christ Who spoke
through him, instils the knowledge of this His proper nature when he says,
Who, being in the form of God, thought it not a thing to grasp a that He was
equal with God, but emplied Himself, taking the form of a servant(6). For He,
Whom God had sealed, could be naught else than the form of God, and that which
has been sealed in the form of God must needs present at the same time imaged
forth within itself all that God possesses. And for this cause the Apostle
taught that He Whom God sealed is God abiding in the form of God. For when
about to speak of the Mystery of the batty assumed and born in Him, he says,
He thought it not a thing to grasp at that He was equal with God, but emptied
Himself, taking the form of a servant(7). As regards His being in the form
of God, by virtue of God's seal upon Him, he still remained God. But inasmuch
as He was to take the form of a servant and become obedient unto death, not
grasping at His equality with God, He emptied Himself through obedience to
take the form of a slave. And He emptied Himself of the form of God, that is,
of that wherein He was equal with God--not that He regarded His equality with
God as any encroachment,--although He was in the form of God and equal with
God and sealed by God as God.
46. At this point I ask whether He Who abides as God in the form of God is
a God of another kind, as we perceive in the case of seals in respect of the
likenesses which stamp and those which are stamped, since a steel die impressed
upon lead or a gem upon wax shapes the figure cut in it or imprints that which
stands in relief upon it. But if there be any one so foolish and senseless
as to think that that, pertaining to Himself, which God fashions to be God,
is aught but God, and that He Who is in the form of God is in any respect anything
else save God after the mystery of His Incarnation and of His humility, made
perfect through obedience even unto the death of the cross, he shall hear,
by the confession of things in heaven and things on earth and things under
the earth and of every tongue, that Jesus is in the glory of God the Father.
If then, when His form had become that of a slave He abides in such glory,
how, I ask, did He abide when in the form of God? Must not Christ the Spirit
have been in the nature of Gods--for this is what is meant by 'in the glory
of God'--when Christ as Jesus, that is, born as man, exists in the glory of
God the Father?
47. In all things the blessed Apostle preserves the unchangeable teaching
of the Gospel faith. The Lord Jesus Christ is proclaimed as God in such wise
that neither does the Apostle's faith, by calling Him a God of a different
order, fall away to the confession of two Gods, nor by making God the Son inseparable
from the Father does it leave an opening for the unholy doctrine of a single
and solitary God. For when he says, in the form of God and in the glory of
the Father the Apostle neither teaches that They differ one from another, nor
allows us to think of Him as not existing. For He Who is in the form of God
neither ends by becoming another God nor Himself loses His Godhead: for He
cannot be severed from the form of God since He exists in it, nor is He, Who
is in the form of God, not God Just as He Who is in the glory of God cannot
be aught else than God, and, since He is God in the glory of God, cannot be
proclaimed as another god and one different from the true God, seeing that
by reason of the fact that He is in the glory of God He possesses naturally
from Him in Whose glory He is, the property of divinity.
48. But there is no danger that the one faith will cease to be such through
diversity in its preaching. The Evangelist had taught that our Lord said, He
that hath seen Me, hath seen the Father also(8). But has Paul, the teacher
of the Gentiles, forgotten or kept back the meaning of the Lord's words, when
he says, Who is the image of the invisible God(9)? I ask whether He is the
visible likeness of the invisible God, and whether the infinite God can also
be presented to view under the likeness of a finite form? For a likeness must
needs repeat the form of that of which it is the likeness. Let those, however,
who will have a nature of a different sort in the Son determine what sort of
likeness of the invisible God they wish the Son to be. Is it a bodily likeness
exposed to the gaze, and moving from place to place with human gait and motion?
Nay, but let them remember that according to the Gospels and the Prophets both
Christ is a Spirit and God is a Spirit. If they confine this Christ the Spirit
within the bounds of shape and body, such a corporeal Christ will not be the
likeness of the invisible God, nor will a finite limitation represent that
which is infinite.
49. But, as it is, neither did the Lord leave us in doubt: He who hath seen
Me, hath seen the Father also; nor was the Apostle silent as to His nature,
Who is the image of the invisible God. For the Lord had said, If I do not the
works of My Father, believe Me not(1), teaching them to see the Father in Himself
in that He did the works of the Father; that through perceiving the power of
His nature they might understand the nature of that power which they perceived.
Wherefore the Apostle proclaiming that this is the image of God, says, Who
is the image of the invisible God, the first-born of all creation; for in Him
were all things made in the heavens and upon the earth, things visible and
things invisible, whether thrones or dominions or principalities or powers;
all things have been created through Him and in Him, and He is before all,
and for Him all things consist. And He is the head of the body, the Church,
Who is the beginning, the first-born from the dead, that in all things He might
have the pre-eminence. For it was the good pleasure of the Father that in Him
should all the fulness dwell, and through Him all things should be reconciled
to Him(2). So through the power of these works He is the image of God. For
assuredly the Creator of things invisible is not compelled by any necessity
inherent in His nature to be the visible image of the invisible God. And lest
He should be regarded as the likeness of the form and not of the nature, He
is styled the likeness of the invisible God in order that we may understand
by His exercise of the powers (not the invisible attributes) of the Divine
nature, that that nature is in Him.
50. He is accordingly the first-born of every creature because in Him all
things were created. And lest any one should dare to refer to any other than
Him the creation of all things in Himself, he says, All things have been created
through Him and in Him, and He is before all, and far Him all things consist.
All things then consist for Him Who is before all things, and in Whom are all
things. Now this indeed describes the origin of created things. But concerning
the dispensation by which He assumed our body, he adds, And He is the head
of the body, the Church: Who is the beginning, the first-born from the dead:
that in all things He might have the pre-eminence. For it was the good pleasure
of the Father that in Him should all the fulness dwell, and that through Him
all things should be reconciled to Him. The Apostle has assigned to the spiritual
mysteries their material effects. For He Who is the image of the invisible
God is Himself the head of His body, the Church, and He Who is the first-born
of every creature is at the same time the beginning, the first born from the
dead: that in all things He might have the pre-eminence, being for us the Body,
while He is also the image of God, since He, Who is the first-born of created
things, is at the same time the first-born for eternity; so that as to Him
things spiritual, being created in the First-born, owe it that they abide,
even so all things human also owe it to Him that in the First-born from the
dead they are born again into eternity. For He is Himself the beginning, Who
as Son is therefore the image, and because the image, is of God. Further He
is the first-born of every created thing, possessing in Himself the origin
of the universe: and again He is the head of His body, the Church, and the
first-born from the dead, so that in all things He has the pre-eminence. And
because all things consist for Him, in Him the fulness of the Godhead is pleased
to dwell, for in Him all things are reconciled through Him to Him, through
Whom all things were created in Himself.
51. Do you now perceive what it is to be the image of God? It means that all
things are created in Him through Him. Whereas all things are created in Him,
understand that He, Whose image He is, also creates all things in Him. And
since all things which are created in Him are also created through Him, recognize
that in Him Who is the image there is present the nature of Him, Whose image
He is. For through Himself He creates the things which are created in Him,
just as through Himself all things are reconciled in Him. Inasmuch as they
are reconciled in Him, recognise in Him the nature of the Father's unity, reconciling
all things to Himself in Him. Inasmuch as all things are reconciled through
Him, perceive Him reconciling to the Father in Himself all things which He
reconciled through Himself. For the same Apostle says, But all things are from
God, Who reconciled us to Himself through Christ, and gave unto us the ministry
of reconciliation: to wit, that God was in Christ reconciling the world unto
Himself(3). Compare with this the whole mystery of the faith of the Gospel.
For He Who is seen when Jesus is seen, Who works in His works, and speaks in
His words, also reconciles in His reconciliation. And for this cause, in Him
and through Him there is reconciliation, because the Father abiding in Him
through a like nature restored the world to Himself by reconciliation through
and in Him.
52. Thus God out of regard for human weakness has not set forth the faith
in bare and uncertain statements. For although the authority of our Lord's
mere words of itself compelled their acceptance, He nevertheless has informed
our reason by a revelation which explains their meaning, that we might learn
to know His words, I and the Father are one(4), by means of that which was
itself the cause of the unity in question. For in saying that the Father speaks
in His words, and works through His working, and judges through His judgment,
and is seen in His manifestation, and reconciles through His reconciliation,
and abides in Him, while He in turn abides in the Father,--what more fitting
words, I ask, could He have employed in His teaching to suit the faculties
of our reason, that we might believe in Their unity, than those by which, through
the truth of the birth and the unity of the nature, it is declared that whatever
the Son did and said, the Father said and did in the Son? This says nothing
of a nature foreign to Himself, or added by creation to God, or born into Godhead
by a partition of God, but it betokens the divinity of One Who by a perfect
birth is begotten perfect God, Who has so confident an assurance of His nature
that He says, I in the Father and the Father in Me(5), and again, All things
whatsoever the Father hath are Mine(6). For nought of the Godhead is lacking
in Him, in Whose working and speaking and manifestation God works and speaks
and is beheld. They are not two Gods, Who in their working and words and manifestation
put on a semblance of unity. Neither is He a solitary God. Who in the works
and words and sight of God, Himself worked and spoke and was seen as God. The
Church understands this. The Synagogue does not believe, philosophy does not
know, that being One of One, Whole of Whole, God and Son, He has neither by
His birth deprived the Father of His completeness, nor failed to possess the
same completeness in Himself by right of His birth. And whosoever is caught
in this folly of unbelief is a disciple either of the Jews or of the heathen.
53. Now that you may understand the saying of the Lord, when He said, All
things whatsoever the Father hath are Mine(7), learn the teaching and faith
of the Apostle who said, Take heed lest any lead you astray through philosophy
and vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after the elements of the world
and not after Christ; for in Him dwelleth the fulness of Godhead bodily(8).
That man is of the world and savours of the teaching of men and is the victim
of philosophy, who does not know Christ to be the true God, who does not recognise
in Him the fulness of Godhead. The mind of man knows only that which it understands,
and the world's powers of belief are limited, since it judges according to
the laws of the material elements that that alone is possible which it can
see or do. For the elements of the world have come into being out of nothing,
but Christ's continuity of existence did not begin in the non-existent, nor
did He ever begin to exist, but He took from the beginning a beginning which
is eternal. The elements of the world are either without life, or have issued
out of this stage into life, but Christ is life, born to be living God from
the living God. The elements of the world have been established by God, but
they are not God: Christ as God of God is Himself wholly all that God is. The
elements of the world, since they are within it, cannot possibly rise out of
their condition and cease to be within it, but Christ, while having God within
Himself through the Mystery, is Himself in God. The elements of the universe,
generating from themselves creatures with a life like their own, do indeed
through the exercise of their bodily functions bestow upon them from their
own bodies the beginnings of life, but they are not themselves present as living
beings in their offspring, whereas in Christ all the fulness of the Godhead
is present in bodily shape.
54. Now I ask, whose Godhead is it whereof the fulness dwells in Him? If it
be not that of the Father, what other God do you, misleading preacher of one
God, thrust upon me as Him Whose Godhead dwells fully in Christ? But if it
be that of the Father, inform me how this fulness dwells in Him in bodily fashion.
If you hold that the Father abides in the Son in bodily fashion, the Father,
while dwelling in the Son, will not exist in Himself. If on the other hand,
and this is more true, the Godhead abiding in Him in bodily shape displays
within Him the verity of the nature of God from God, inasmuch as God is in
Him, abiding neither through condescension nor through will but by birth, true
and wholly in bodily fulness according as He is; and inasmuch as, in the whole
compass of His being, He was born by His divine birth to be God, and within
the Godhead there is no difference or dissimilarity, except that in Christ
He dwells in bodily form, and yet whatever dwells in Him bodily is according
to the fulness of Godhead; why follow after the doctrines of men? Why cleave
to the teaching of empty falsehoods? Why talk of 'agreement' or 'harmony of
will' or 'a creature?' The fulness of Godhead dwells in Christ bodily.
55. The Apostle has herein held fast to the canon of his faith, by teaching
that the fulness of the Godhead dwelt in Christ bodily; and this, in order
that the teaching of the faith might not degenerate into an unholy profession
of a oneness of Persons or sinful frenzy break forth into the belief of two
different natures. For the fulness of Godhead which dwells in Christ in bodily
fashion is neither solitary nor separable; for the fulness in bodily form does
not admit any partition from the other bodily fulness, and the indwelling Godhead
cannot be regarded as also the dwelling-place of the Godhead. And Christ is
so constituted that the fulness of Godhead dwells in Him in bodily fashion,
and that this fulness must be held one in nature with Christ. Lay hands on
every chance that offers for your quibbles, sharpen the points of your blasphemous
wit. Name, at least, the imaginary being whose fulness of Godhead it is which
dwells in Christ in bodily fashion. For He is Christ, and there is dwelling
in Him in bodily fashion the fulness of Godhead.
56. And if you would know what it is to 'dwell in bodily fashion,' understand
what it is to speak in one that speaks, to be seen in one who is seen, to work
in one who works, to be God in God, whole of whole, one of one; and thus learn
what is meant by the fulness of God in bodily shape. Remember, too, that the
Apostle does not keep silence on the question, whose Godhead it is, which dwells
fully in Christ in bodily fashion, for he says, For the invisible things of
Him since the creation of the world are clearly seen, being perceived through
the things that are made, even His everlasting power and divinity(9). So it
is His Godhead that dwells in Christ in bodily fashion, not partially but wholly,
not parcelwise but in fulness; and so dwelling that the Two are one, and so
one, that the One Who is God does not differ from the Other Who is God: Both
so equally divine, as a perfect birth engendered perfect God. And the birth
exists thus in its perfection, because the fulness of the Godhead dwells bodily
in God born of God.
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