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ST. AMBROSE
BISHOP OF MILAN
EXPOSITION OF THE CHRISTIAN FAITH
BOOK I.
PROLOGUE.
The author praises Gratian's zeal for instruction in the Faith, and speaks
lowly of his own merits. Taught of God Himself, the Emperor stands in no need
of human instruction; yet this his devoutness prepares the way to victory.
The task appointed to the author is difficult: in the accomplishment whereof
he will be guided not so much by reason and argument as by authority, especially
that of the Nicene Council.
1. THE Queen of the South, as we read in the Book of the Kings, came to hear
the wisdom of Solomon.(1) Likewise King Hiram sent to Solomon that he might
prove him.(2) So also your sacred Majesty, following these examples of old
time, has decreed to hear my confession of faith. But I am no Solomon, that
you should wonder at my wisdom, and your Majesty is not the sovereign of a
single people; it is the Augustus, ruler of the whole world, that has commanded
the setting forth of the Faith in a book, not for your instruction, but for
your approval.
2. For
why, august Emperor, should your Majesty learn that Faith which, from your
earliest childhood,
you have
ever devoutly and lovingly kept? "Before
I formed thee in thy mother's belly I knew thee," saith the Scripture, "and
before thou camest forth out of the womb I sanctified thee."(3) Sanctification,
therefore, cometh not of tradition, but of inspiration; therefore keep watch
over the gifts of God. For that which no man hath taught you, God hath surely
given and inspired.
3. Your sacred Majesty, being about to go forth to war, requires of me a book,
expounding the Faith, since your Majesty knows that victories are gained more
by faith in the commander, than by valour in the soldiers. For Abraham led
into battle three hundred and eighteen men,(1) and brought home the spoils
of countless foes; and having, by the power of that which was the sign of our
Lord's Cross and Name,(2) overcome the might of five kings and conquering hosts,
he both avenged his neighbour and gained victory and the ransom of his brother's
son. So also Joshua the son of Nun, when he could not prevail against the enemy
with the might of all his army,(3) overcame by sound of seven sacred trumpets,
in the place where he saw and knew the Captain of the heavenly host.(4) For
victory, then, your Majesty makes ready, being Christ's loyal servant and defender
of the Faith, which you would have me set forth in writing.
4. Truly, I would rather take upon me the duty of exhortation to keep the
Faith, than that of disputing thereon; for the former means devout confession,
whereas the latter is liable to rash presumption. Howbeit, forasmuch as your
Majesty has no need of exhortation, whilst I may not pray to be excused from
the duty of loyalty, I will take in hand a bold enterprise, yet modestly withal,
not so much reasoning and disputing concerning the Faith as gathering together
a multitude of witness.(5)
5. Of the Acts of Councils, I shall let that one be my chief guide which three
hundred and eighteen priests, appointed, as it were, after the judgment of
Abraham,(6) made (so to speak) a trophy raised to proclaim their victory over
the infidel throughout the world, prevailing by that courage of the Faith,
wherein all agreed. Verily, as it seems to me, one may herein see the hand
of God, forasmuch as the same number is our authority in the Councils of the
Faith, and an example of loyalty in the records of old.
CHAPTER I.
The author
distinguishes the faith from the errors of Pagans,(1) Jews, and Heretics,
and after explaining
the
significance of the names "God" and "Lord," shows
clearly the difference of Persons in Unity of Essence.(1) In dividing the Essence,
the Arians not only bring in the doctrine of three Gods, but even overthrow
the dominion of the Trinity.
6. Now
this is the declaration of our Faith, that we say that God is One, neither
dividing His Son from
Him, as do the heathen,(3) nor denying, with
the Jews, that He was begotten of the Father before all worlds,(4) and afterwards
born of the Virgin; nor yet, like Sabellius,(5) confounding the Father with
the Word, and so maintaining that Father and Son are one and the same Person;
nor again, as doth Photinus,(1) holding that the Son first came into existence
in the Virgin's womb: nor believing, with Arius,(2) in a number of diverse
Powers,(4) and so, like the benighted heathen, making out more than one God.
For it is written: "Hear, O Israel: the Lord thy God is one God."(3)
7. For
God and Lord is a name of majesty, a name of power, even as God Himself saith: "The Lord is My name,"(5) and as in another place the prophet
declareth: "The Lord Almighty is His name."(6) God is He, therefore,
and Lord, either because His rule is over all, or because He beholdeth all
things, and is feared by all, without difference.(7)
8. If,
then, God is One, one is the name, one is the power, of the Trinity. Christ
Himself, indeed,
saith: "Go ye, baptize the nations in the name
of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit."(1) In the name,
mark you, not in the names."(2)
9. Moreover,
Christ Himself saith: "I and the Father are One."(3) "One," said
He, that there be no separation of power and nature; but again, "We are," that
you may recognize Father and Son, forasmuch as the perfect Father is believed
to have begotten the perfect Son,(4) and the Father and the Son are One, not
by confusion of Person, but by unity of nature.(5)
10. We
say, then, that there is one God, not two or three Gods, this being the error
into which
the impious
heresy of the Arians doth run with its blasphemies.
For it says that there are three Gods, in that it divides the Godhead of the
Trinity; whereas the Lord, in saying, "Go, baptize the nations in the
name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit," hath shown
that the Trinity is of one power. We confess Father, Son, and Spirit, understanding
in a perfect Trinity both fulness of Divinity and unity of power.(6)
11. "Every kingdom divided against itself shall quickly be overthrown," saith
the Lord. Now the kingdom of the Trinity is not divided. If, therefore, it
is not divided, it is one; for that which is not one is divided. The Arians,
however, would have the kingdom of the Trinity to be such as may easily be
overthrown, by division against itself. But truly, seeing that it cannot be
overthrown, it is plainly undivided. For no unity is divided or rent asunder,
and therefore neither age nor corruption has any power over it.(7)
CHAPTER II.
The Emperor is exhorted to display zeal in the Faith. Christ's perfect Godhead
is shown from the unity of will and working which He has with the Father. The
attributes of Divinity are shown to be proper to Christ, Whose various titles
prove His essential unity, with distinction of Person. In no other way can
the unity of God be maintained.
12. "NOT every one that saith unto Me Lord, Lord, shall enter into the
kingdom of heaven,"(8) saith the Scripture. Faith, therefore, august Sovereign,
must not be a mere matter of performance, for it is written, "The zeal
of thine house hath devoured me."(1) Let us then with faithful spirit
and devout mind call upon Jesus our Lord, let us believe that He is God, to
the end that whatever we ask of the Father, we may obtain in His name.(2) For
the Father's will is, that He be entreated through the Son, the Son's that
the Father be entreated.(3)
13. The grace of His submission makes for agreement[with our teaching], and
the acts of His power are not at variance therewith. For whatsoever things
the Father doeth, the same also doeth the Son, in like manner.(4) The Son both
doeth the same things, and doeth them in like manner, but it is the Father's
will that He be entreated in the matter of what He Himself proposeth to do,
that you may understand, not that He cannot do it otherwise, but that there
is one power displayed. Truly, then, is the Son of God to be adored and worshipped,
Who by the power of His Godhead hath laid the foundations of the world, and
by His submission informed our affections.(5)
14. Therefore we ought to believe that God is good, eternal, perfect, almighty,
and true, such as we find Him in the Law and the Prophets, and the rest of
the holy Scriptures,(6) for otherwise there is no God. For He Who is God cannot
but be good, seeing that fulness of goodness is of the nature of God:(7) nor
can God, Who made time, be in time; nor, again, can God be imperfect, for a
lesser being is plainly imperfect, seeing that it lacks somewhat whereby it
could be made equal to a greater. This, then, is the teaching of our faith--that
God is not evil, that with God nothing is impossible, that God exists not in
time, that God is beneath no being. If I am in error, let my adversaries prove
it.(8)
15. Seeing, then, that Christ is God, He is, by consequence, good and almighty
and eternal and perfect and true; for these attributes belong to the essential
nature of the Godhead. Let our adversaries, therefore, deny the Divine Nature
in Christ,-otherwise they cannot refuse to God what is proper to the Divine
Nature.
16. Further, that none may fall into error, let a man attend to those signs
vouchsafed us by holy Scripture, whereby we may know the Son. He is called
the Word, the Son, the Power of God, the Wisdom of God.(9) The Word, because
He is without blemish; the Power, because He is perfect; the Son, because He
is begotten of the Father; the Wisdom, because He is one with the Father, one
in eternity, one in Divinity. Not that the Father is one Person with the Son;
between Father and Son is the plain distinction that comes of generation;(1)
so that Christ is God of God, Everlasting of Everlasting, Fulness of Fulness.(2)
17. Now these are not mere names, but signs of power manifesting itself in
works for while there is fulness of Godhead in the Father, there is also fulness
of Godhead in the Son, not diverse, but one. The Godhead is nothing confused,
for it is an unity: nothing manifold, for in it there is no difference.
18. Moreover, if in all them that believed there was, as it is written, one
soul and one heart:(3) if every one that cleaveth to the Lord is one spirit,(4)
as the Apostle hath said: if a man and his wife are one flesh:(5) if all we
mortal men are, so far as regards our general nature, of one substance: if
this is what the Scripture saith of created men, that, being many, they are
one,(6) who can in no way be compared to Divine Persons, how much more are
the Father and the Son one in Divinity, with Whom there is no difference either
of substance or of will!
19. For how else shall we say that God is One? Divinity maketh plurality,
but unity of power debarreth quantity of number, seeing that unity is not number,
but itself is the principle of all numbers.
CHAPTER III.
By evidence gathered from Scripture the unity of Father and Son is proved,
and firstly, a passage, taken from the Book of Isaiah, is compared with others
and expounded in such sort as to show that in the Son there is no diversity
from the Father's nature, save only as regards the flesh; whence it follows
that the Godhead of both Persons is One. This conclusion is confirmed by the
authority of Baruch.
20. Now
the oracles(7) of the prophets bear witness what close unity holy Scripture
declares to
subsist between
the Father and the Son as regards their
Godhead. For thus saith the Lord of Sabaoth:(8) "Egypt hath laboured,
and the commerce of the Ethiopians and Sabeans: mighty men shall come over
to thee, and shall be thy servants, and in thy train shall they follow, bound
in fetters, and they shall fall down before thee, and to thee shall they make
supplication: for God is in thee, and there is no God beside thee. For thou
art God, and we knew it not, O God of lsrael."(1)
21. Hear
the voice of the prophet: "In Thee," he saith, "is
God, and there is no God beside Thee." How agreeth this with the Arians'
teaching? They must deny either the Father's or the Son's Divinity, unless
they believe, once for all, unity of the same Divinity.
22. "In Thee," saith he, "is God"--forasmuch as the Father
is in the Son. For it is written, "The Father, Who abideth in Me, Himself
speaketh," and "The works that I do, He Himself also doeth."(2)
And yet again we read that the Son is in the Father, saying, "I am in
the Father, and the Father in Me."(3) Let the Arians, if they can, make
away with this kinship(4) in nature and unity in work.
23. There
is, therefore, God in God, but not two Gods; for it is written that there
is one God,(5)
and there
is Lord in Lord,(6) but not two Lords, forasmuch
as it is likewise written: "Serve not two lords."(7) And the Law
saith: "Hear, O lsrael! The Lord thy God is one God;"(8) moreover,
in the same Testament it is written: "The Lord rained from the Lord."(9)
The Lord, it is said, sent rain "from the Lord." So also you may
read in Genesis: "And God said,--and God made,"(10) and, lower down, "And
God made man in the image of God;"(11) yet it was not two gods, but one
God, that made[man]. In the one place, then, as in the other, the unity of
operation and of name is maintained. For surely, when we read "God of
God,"(12) we do not speak of two Gods.
24. Again,
you may read in the forty-fourth psalm(13) how the prophet not only calls
the Father "God" but also proclaims the Son as God, saying: "Thy
throne, O God, is for ever and ever."(14) And further on: "God, even
thy God, hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows."(15)
This God Who anoints, and God Who in the flesh is anointed, is the Son of God.
For what fellows in His anointing hath Christ, except such as are in the flesh?
You see, then, that God is by God anointed, but being anointed in taking upon
Him the nature of mankind, He is proclaimed the Son of God; yet is the principle
of the Law not broken.
25. So
again, when you read, "The Lord rained from the Lord," acknowledge
the unity of Godhead, for unity in operation doth not allow of more than one
individual God, even as the Lord Himself has shown, saying: "Believe Me,
that I am in the Father, and the Father in Me: or believe Me for the very works'
sake."(1) Here, too, we see that unity of Godhead is signified by unity
in operation.
26. The
Apostle, careful to prove that there is one Godhead of both Father and Son,
and one Lordship,
lest
we should run into any error, whether of heathen
or of Jewish ungodliness, showed us the rule we ought to follow, saying: "One
God, the Father, from Whom are all things, and we in Him, and one Lord, Jesus
Christ, by Whom are all things, and we by Him."(2) For just as, in calling
Jesus Christ "Lord," he did not deny that the Father was Lord, even
so, in saying, "One God, the Father," he did not deny true Godhead
to the Son, and thus he taught, not that there was more than one God, but that
the source of power was one, forasmuch as Godhead consists in Lordship, and
Lordship in Godhead, as it is written: "Be ye sure that the Lord, He is
God. It is He that hath made us, and not we ourselves."(3)
27. "In thee," therefore, "is God," by unity of nature,
and "there is no God beside Thee," by reason of personal possession
of the Substance, without any reserve or difference.(4)
28. Again,
Scripture speaks, in the Book of Jeremiah, of One God, and yet acknowledges
both Father and
Son.
Thus we read: "He is our God, and in
comparison with Him none other shall be accounted of. He hath discovered all
the way of teaching, and given it to Jacob, His servant, and to Israel, His
beloved. After these things He appeared upon earth, and conversed with men."
29. The
prophet speaks of the Son, for it was the Son Himself Who conversed with
men, and this is
what he says: "He is our God, and in comparison
with Him none other shall be accounted of." Why do we call Him in question,
of Whom so great a prophet saith that no other can be compared with Him? What
comparison of another can be made, when the Godhead is One? This was the confession
of a people set in the midst of dangers; reverencing religion, and therefore
unskilled in strife of argument.
30. Come, Holy Spirit, and help Thy prophets, in whom Thou art wont to dwell,
in whom we believe. Shall we believe the wise of this world, if we believe
not the prophets? But where is the wise man, where is the scribe? When our
peasant planted figs, he found that whereof the philosopher knew nothing, for
God hath chosen the foolish things of this world to confound the strong.(1)
Are we to believe the Jews? for God was once known in Jewry. Nay, but they
deny that very thing, which is the foundation of our belief, seeing that they
know not the Father, who have denied the Son.(2)
CHAPTER IV.
The Unity
of God is necessarily implied in the order of Nature, in the Faith, and in
Baptism. The gifts of
the Magi declare(1) the Unity of the Godhead;(2)
Christ's Godhead and Manhood. The truth of the doctrine o£ the Trinity
in Unity is shown in the Angel walking in the midst of the furnace with Shadrach,
Meshach, and Abednego.
31. ALL nature testifies to the Unity of God, inasmuch as the universe is
one. The Faith declares that there is one God, seeing that there is one belief
in both the Old and the New Testament. That there is one Spirit, all holy,(3)
grace witnesseth, because there is one Baptism, in the Name of the Trinity.
The prophets proclaim, the apostles hear, the voice of one God. In one God
did the Magi believe, and they brought, in adoration, gold, frankincense, and
myrrh to Christ's cradle, confessing, by the gift of gold, His Royalty, and
with the incense worshipping Him as God. For gold is the sign of kingdom, incense
of God, myrrh of burial.(4)
32. What, then, was the meaning of the mystic offerings in the lowly cattle-stalls,
save that we should discern in Christ the difference between the Godhead and
the flesh? He is seen as man,(1) He is adored as Lord. He lies in swaddling-clothes,
but shines amid the stars; the cradle shows His birth, the stars His dominion;(2)
it is the flesh that is wrapped in clothes, the Godhead that receives the ministry
of angels. Thus the dignity of His natural majesty is not lost, and His true
assumption of the flesh is proved.
33. This is our Faith. Thus did God will that He should be known by all, thus
believed the three children,(3) and felt not the fire into the midst whereof
they were cast, which destroyed and burnt up unbelievers,(4) whilst it fell
harmless as dew upon the faithful,(5) for whom the flames kindled by others
became cold, seeing that the torment had justly lost its power in conflict
with faith. For with them there was One in the form of an angel,(6) comforting
them,(7) to the end that in the number of the Trinity one Supreme Power might
be praised. God was praised, the Son of God was seen in God's angel, holy and
spiritual grace spake in the children.(8)
CHAPTER V.
The various blasphemies uttered by the Arians against Christ are cited. Before
these are replied to, the orthodox(9) are admonished to beware of the captious
arguments of philosophers, forasmuch as in these especially did the heretics
put their trust.
34. Now let us consider the disputings of the Arians concerning the Son of
God.
35. They say that the Son of God is unlike His Father. To say this of a man
would be an insult.(1)
36. They say that the Son of God had a beginning in time,(2) whereas He Himself
is the source and ordainer of time and all that therein is.(3) We are men,
and we would not be limited to time. We began to exist once, and we believe
that we shall have a timeless existence. We desire after immortality--how,
then, can we deny the eternity of God's Son, Whom God declares to be eternal
by nature, not by grace?
37. They say that He was created.(4) But who would reckon an author with his
works, and have him seem to be what he has himself made?
38. They deny His goodness.(5) Their blaspheming is its own condemnation,
and so cannot hope for pardon.
39. They deny that He is truly Son of God, they deny His omnipotence, in that
whilst they admit that all things are made by the ministry of the Son, they
attribute the original source of their being to the power of God. But what
is power, save perfection of nature?(6)
40. Furthermore,
the Arians deny that in Godhead He is One with the Father.(1) Let them annul
the Gospel,
then, and silence the voice of Christ. For Christ
Himself has said: "I and the Father are one."(2) It is not I who
say this: Christ has said it. Is He a deceiver, that He should lie?(3) Is He
unrighteous, that He should claim to be what He never was." But of these
matters we will deal severally, at greater length, in their proper place.
41. Seeing,
then, that the heretic says that Christ is unlike His Father, and seeks to
maintain
this by force
of subtle disputation, we must cite the
Scripture: "Take heed that no man make spoil of you by philosophy and
vain deceit, according to the tradition of men, and after the rudiments of
this world, not according to Christ; for in Him dwelleth all the fulness of
Godhead in bodily shape."(4)
42. For
they store up all the strength of their poisons in dialetical disputation,
which by the
judgment of philosophers
is defined as having no power to establish
aught, and aiming only at destruction. s But it was not by dialectic that it
pleased God to save His people; "for the kingdom of God consisteth in
simplicity of faith, not in wordy contention."(6)
CHAPTER VI.
By way of leading up to his proof that Christ is not different from the Father,
St. Ambrose cites the more famous leaders of the Arian party, and explains
how little their witness agrees, and shows what de-fence the Scriptures provide
against them.
43. THE Arians, then, say that Christ is unlike the Father; we deny it. Nay,
indeed, we shrink in dread from the word. Nevertheless I would not that your
sacred Majesty should trust to argument and our disputation. Let us enquire
of the Scriptures, of apostles, of prophets, of Christ. In a word, let us enquire
of the Father, Whose honour these men say they uphold, if the Son be judged
inferior to Him, But insult to the Son brings no honour to the good Father.
It cannot please the good Father, if the Son be judged inferior, rather than
equal, to His Father.
44. I pray your sacred Majesty to suffer me, if for a little while I address
myself particularly to these men. But whom shall I choose out to cite? Eunomius?(1)
or Arius and Aetius,(2) his instructors? For there are many names, but one
unbelief, constant in wickedness, but in conversation divided against itself;
without difference in respect of deceit, but in common enterprise breeding
dissent. But wherefore they will not agree together I understand not.
45. The Arians reject the person of Eunomius, but they maintain his unbelief
and walk in the ways of his iniquity. They say that he has too generously published
the writings of Arius. Truly, a plentiful lavishing of error! They praise him
who gave the command, and deny him who executed it! Wherefore they have now
fallen apart into several sects. Some follow after Eunomius or Aetius, others
after Palladius or Demophilus and Auxentius, or the inheritors of this form
of unbelief.(3) Others, again, follow different teachers. Is Christ, then,
divided?(4) Nay; but those who divide Him from the Father do with their own
hands cut themselves asunder.
46. Seeing, therefore, that men who agree not amongst themselves have all
alike conspired against the Church of God, I shall call those whom I have to
answer by the common name of heretics. For heresy, like some hydra of fable,
hath waxed great from its wounds, and, being ofttimes lopped short, hath grown
afresh, being appointed to find meet destruction in flames of fire.(1) Or,
like some dread and monstrous Scylla, divided into many shapes of unbelief,
she displays, as a mask to her guile, the pretence of being a Christian sect,
but those wretched men whom she finds tossed to and fro in the waves of her
unhallowed strait, amid the wreckage of their faith, she, girt with beastly
monsters, rends with the cruel fang of her blasphemous doctrine.(2)
47. This
monster's cavern, your sacred Majesty, thick laid, as seafaring men do say
it is, with hidden
lairs,
and all the neighbourhood thereof, where the
rocks of unbelief echo to the howling of her black dogs, we must pass by with
ears in a manner stopped. For it is written: "Hedge thine ears about with
thorns ;"(3) and again: "Beware of dogs, beware of evil workers;"(4)
and yet again: "A man that is an heretic, avoid after the first reproof,
knowing that such an one is fallen, and is in sin, being condemned of his own
judgment."(5) So then, like prudent pilots, let us set the sails of our
faith for the course wherein we may pass by most safely, and again follow the
coasts of the Scriptures.(6)
CHAPTER VII.
The likeness of Christ to the Father is asserted on the authority of St. Paul,
the prophets, and the Gospel, and especially in reliance upon the creation
of man in God's image.
48. THE
Apostle saith that Christ is the image of the Father--for he calls Him the
image of the
invisible God,
the first-begotten of all creation. First-begotten,
mark you, not first-created, in order that He may be believed to be both begotten,
in virtue of His nature,(1) and first in virtue of His eternity. In another
place also the Apostle has declared that God made the Son "heir of all
things, by Whom also He made the worlds, Who is the brightness of His glory,
and the express image of His substance."(2) The Apostle calls Christ the
image of the Father, and Arius says that He is unlike the Father. Why, then,
is He called an image, if He hath no likeness? Men will not have their portraits
unlike them, and Arius contends that the Father is unlike the Son, and would
have it that the Father has begotten one unlike Himself, as though unable to
generate His like.
49. The
prophets say: "In Thy light we shall see light;"(3) and
again: "Wisdom is the brightness of everlasting light, and the spotless
mirror of God's majesty, the image of His goodness."(4) See what great
names are declared! "Brightness," because in the Son the Father's
glory shines clearly: "spotless minor," because the Father is seen
in the Son:(5) "image of goodness," because it is not one body seen
reflected in another, but the whole power [of the Godhead] in the Son. The
word "image" teaches us that there is no difference; "expression," that
He is the counterpart of the Father's form; and "brightness" declares
His eternity.(6) The "image" in truth is not that of a bodily countenance,
not one made up of colours, nor modelled in wax, but simply derived from God,
coming out from the Father, drawn from the fountainhead.
50. By
means of this image the Lord showed Philip the Father. saying, "Philip,
he that sees Me, sees the Father also. How then dost thou say, Show us the
Father? Believest thou not that I am in the Father, and the Father in Me?"(7)
Yes, he who looks upon the Son sees, in portrait, the Father.(8) Mark what
manner of portrait is spoken of. It is Truth, Righteousness, the Power of God:(9)
not dumb, for it is the Word; not insensible, for it is Wisdom; not vain and
foolish, for it is Power; not soulless, for iris the Life; not dead, for it
is the Resurrection.(10) You see, then, that whilst an image is spoken of,
the meaning is that it is the Father, Whose image the Son is, seeing that no
one can be his own image.
51. More
might I set down from the Son's testimony; howbeit, lest He perchance appear
to have asserted
Himself
overmuch let us enquire of the Father. For
the Father said, "Let us make man in Our image and likeness."(1)
The Father saith to the Son "in Our image and likeness," and thou
sayest that the Son of God is unlike the Father.
52. John
saith, "Beloved, we are sons of God, and it doth not yet appear
what we shall be: we know that if He be revealed, we shall be like Him."(2)
O blind madness O shameless obstinacy I We are men, and, so far as we may,
we shall be in the likeness of God: dare we deny that the Son is like God?
53. Therefore
the Father hath said: "Let us make man in Our image and
likeness." At the beginning of the universe itself, as I read, the Father
and the Son existed, and I see one creation. I hear Him that speaketh.(3) I
acknowledge Him that doeth:(4) but it is of one image, one likeness, that I
read. This likeness belongs not to diversity but to unity. What, therefore,
thou claimest for thyself, thou takest from the Son of God, seeing, indeed,
that thou canst not be in the image of God, save by help of the image of God.
CHAPTER VIII.
The likeness of the Son to the Father being proved, it is not hard to prove
the Son's eternity, though, indeed, this may be established on the authority
of the Prophet Isaiah and St. John the Evangelist, by which authority the heretical
leaders are shown to be refuted.
54. IT is plain, therefore, that the Son is not unlike the Father, and so
we may confess the more readily that He is also eternal, seeing that He Who
is like the Eternal must needs be eternal. But if we say that the Father is
eternal, and yet deny this of the Son, we say that the Son is unlike the Father,
for the temporal differeth from the eternal. The Prophet proclaims Him eternal,
and the Apostle proclaims Him eternal; the Testaments, Old and New alike, are
full of witness to the Son's eternity.
55. Let
us take them, then, in their order. In the Old Testament--to cite one out
of a multitude
of testimonies--it
is written: "Before Me hath
there been no other God, and after Me shall there be none."(1) I will
not comment on this place, but ask thee straight: "Who speaks these words,--the
Father or the Son?" Whichever of the two thou sayest, thou wilt find thyself
convinced, or, if a believer, instructed. Who, then, speaks these words, the
Father or the Son? If it is the Son, He says, "Before Me hath there been
no other God;" if the Father, He says, "After Me shall there be none." The
One hath none before Him, the Other none that comes after; as the Father is
known in the Son, so also is the Son known in the Father, for whensoever you
speak of the Father, you speak also by implication of His Son, seeing that
none is his own father; and when you name the Son, you do also acknowledge
His Father, inasmuch as none can be his own son. And so neither can the Son
exist without the Father, nor the Father without the Son.(2) The Father, therefore,
is eternal, and the Son also eternal.
56. "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the
Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God."(3) "Was," mark
you, "with God." "Was"--see, we have "was" four
times over. Where did the blasphemer find it written that He "was not." Again,
John, in another passage--in his Epistle--speaketh of "That which was
in the beginning."(4) The extension of the "was" is infinite.
Conceive any length of time you will, yet still the Son "was."(5)
57. Now
in this short passage our fisherman hath barred the way of all heresy. For
that which was "in the beginning" is not comprehended in time,
is not preceded by any beginning. Let Arius, therefore, hold his peace.(1)
Moreover, that which was "with God" is not confounded and mingled
with Him, but is distinguished by the perfection unblemished which it hath
as the Word abiding with God; and so let Sabellius keep silence.(2) And "the
Word was God," This Word, therefore, consisteth not in uttered speech,
but in the designation of celestial excellence, so that Photinus' teaching
is refuted. Furthermore, by the fact that in the beginning He was with God
is proven the indivisible unity of eternal Godhead in Father and Son, to the
shame and confusion of Eunomius.(3) Lastly, seeing that all things are said
to have been made by Him, He is plainly shown to be author of the Old and of
the New Testament alike; so that the Manichaean can find no ground for his
assaults.(4) Thus hath the good fisherman caught them all in one net, to make
them powerless to deceive, albeit unprofitable fish to take.
CHAPTER IX.
St. Ambrose questions the heretics and exhibits their answer, which is, that
the Son existed, indeed, before all time, yet was not co-eternal with the Father,
whereat the Saint shows that they represent the Godhead as changeable, and
further, that each Person must be believed to be eternal.
58. TELL
me, thou heretic,--for the surpassing clemency of the Emperor grants me this
indulgence of addressing
thee for a short space, not that I desire
to confer with thee, or am greedy to hear thy arguments, but because I am willing
to exhibit them,--tell me, I say, whether there was ever a time when God Almighty
was not the Father, and yet was God. "I say nothing about time," is
thy answer. Well and subtly objected! For if thou bringest time into the dispute,
thou wilt condemn thyself, seeing that thou must acknowledge that there was
a time when the Son was not, whereas the Son is the ruler and creator of time.(2)
He cannot have begun to exist after His own work. Thou, therefore, must needs
allow Him to be the ruler and maker of His work.
59. "I do not say," answerest thou, "that the Son existed not
before time;" but when I call Him "Son," I declare that His
Father existed before Him, for, as you say, father exists before son."[1]
But what means this? Thou deniest that time was before the Son, and yet thou
wilt have it that something preceded the existence of the Son--some creature
of time, --and thou showest certain stages of generation intervening, whereby
thou dost give us to understand that the generation from the Father was a process
in time. For if He began to be a Father, then, in the first instance, He was
God, and afterwards He became a Father. How, then, is God unchangeable?[2]
For if He was first God, and then the Father, surely He has undergone change
by reason of the added and later act of generation.
60. But may God preserve us from this madness; for it was but to confute the
impiety of the heretics that we brought in this question. The devout spirit
affirms a generation that is not in time and so declares Father and Son to
be co-eternal, and does not maintain that God has ever suffered change.
61. Let Father and Son, therefore, be associated in worship, even as They
are associated in Godhead; let not blasphemy put asunder those whom the close
bond of generation hath joined together. Let us honour the Son, that we may
honour the Father also, as it is written in the Gospel.[1] The Son's eternity
is the adornment of the Father's majesty. If the Son hath not been from everlasting,
then the Father hath suffered change; but the Son is from all eternity, therefore
hath the Father never changed, for He is always unchangeable. And thus we see
that they who would deny the Son's eternity would teach that the Father is
mutable.
CHAPTER X.
Christ's eternity being proved from the Apostle's teaching, St. Ambrose admonishes
us that the Divine Generation is not to be thought of alter the fashion of
human procreation, nor to be too curiously pried into. With the difficulties
thence arising he refuses to deal, saying that whats ever terms, taken from
our knowledge of body, are used in speaking of this Divine Generation, must
be understood with a spiritual meaning.
65. Hear
now another argument, showing clearly the eternity of the Son. The Apostle
says that God's Power
and Godhead are eternal, and that Christ is the
Power of God--for it is written that Christ is "the Power of God and the
Wisdom of God."[2] If, then, Christ is the Power of God, it follows that,
forasmuch as God's Power is eternal, Christ also is eternal.
63. Thou
canst not, then, heretic, build up a false doctrine from the custom of human
procreation,
nor yet gather
the wherewithal for such work from our
discourse, for we cannot compass the greatness of infinite Godhead, "of
Whose greatness there is no end,"[3] in our straitened speech. If thou
shouldst seek to give an account of a man's birth, thou must needs point to
a time. But the Divine Generation is above all things; it reaches far and wide,
it rises high above all thought and feeling. For it is written: "No man
cometh to the Father, save by Me."[4] Whatsoever, therefore, thou dost
conceive concerning the Father--yea, be it even His eternity--thou canst not
conceive aught concerning Him save by the Son's aid, nor can any understanding
ascend to the Father save through the Son. "This is My dearly-beloved
Son,"s the Father saith. "Is" mark you--He Who is, what He is,
forever. Hence also David is moved to say: "O Lord, Thy Word abideth for
ever in heaven,"[1]--for what abideth fails neither in existence nor in
eternity.
64. Dost
thou ask me how He is a Son, if He have not a Father existing before Him?
I ask of thee,
in turn,when,
or how, thinkest thou that the Son was begotten.
For me the knowledge of the mystery of His generation is more than I can attain
to,[2]--the mind fails, the voice is dumb--ay, and not mine alone, but the
angels' also. It is above Powers, above Angels, above Cherubim, Seraphim, and
all that has feeling and thought, for it is written: "The peace of Christ,
which passeth all understanding."[3] If the peace of Christ passes all
understanding, how can so wondrous a generation but be above all understanding?
65. Do thou, then (like the angels), cover thy face with thy hands,[4] for
it is not given thee to look into surpassing mysteries I We are suffered to
know that the Son is begotten, not to dispute upon the manner of His begetting.
I cannot deny the one; the other I fear to search into, for if Paul says that
the words which he heard when caught up into the third heaven might not be
uttered,[5] how can we explain the secret of this generation from and of the
Father, which we can neither hear nor attain to with our understanding?
66. But if you will constrain me to the rule of human generation, that you
may be allowed to say that the Father existed before the Son, then consider
whether instances, taken from the generation of earthly creatures, are suitable
to show forth the Divine Generation.[6] If we speak according to what is customary
amongst men, you cannot deny that, in man, the changes in the father's existence
happen before those in the son's. The father is the first to grow, to enter
old age, to grieve, to weep. If, then, the son is after him in time, he is
older in, experience than the son. If the child comes to be born, the parent
escapes not the shame of begetting.[7]
67. Why take such delight in that rack of questioning?[1] You hear the name
of the Son of God; abolish it, then, or acknowledge His true nature. You hear
speak of the womb--acknowledge the truth of undoubted begetting.[2] Of His
heart--know that here is God's word.[3] Of H is right hand--confess His power.[4]
Of His face--acknowledge His wisdom.[5] These words are not to be understood,
when we speak of God, as when we speak of bodies. The generation of the Son
is incomprehensible, the Father begets impassibly,[6] and yet of Himself and
in ages inconceivably remote hath very God begotten very God. The Father loves
the Son,[7] and you anxiously examine His Person; the Father is well. pleased
in Him,[8] you, joining the Jews, look upon Him with an evil eye; the Father
knows the Son,[9] and you join the heathen in reviling Him.[10]
CHAPTER XI.
It cannot be proved from Scripture that the Father existed before the Son,
nor yet can arguments taken from human reproduction avail to this end, since
they bring in absurdities without end. To dare to affirm that Christ began
to exist in the course of time is the height of blasphemy.
68. You
ask me whether it is possible that He Who is the Father should not be prior
in existence.
I ask you to
tell me when the Father existed, the Son
as yet being not; prove this, gather it from argument or evidence of Scripture.
If you lean upon arguments, you have doubtless been taught that God's power
is eternal. Again, you have read the Scripture that saith: "O Israel,
if thou wilt hearken unto Me, there shall be no new God in thee, neither shalt
thou worship a strange God."[11] The first of these commands betokens
[the Son's] eternity, the second His possession of an identical nature, so
that we can neither believe Him to have come into existence after the Father,
nor suppose Him the Son of another Divinity. For if He existed not always with
the Father, He is a "new" [God]; if He is not of one Divinity with
the Father, He is a "strange" [God]. But He is not after the Father,
for He is not "a new God;" nor is He "a strange God," for
He is begotten of the Father, and because, as it is written, He is "God
above all, blessed for ever."[1]
69. But
if the Arians believe Him to be a strange God, why do they worship Him, when
it is written: "Thou shall worship no strange God"?
Else, if they do not worship the Son, let them confess thereto, and the case
is at
an end,--that they deceive no one by their professions of religion. This, then,
we see, is the witness of the Scriptures. If you have any others to produce,
it will be your business to do so.
70. Let
us now go further, and gather the truth in conclusion from arguments. For
although arguments
usually
give place, even to human evidence, 2 still,
heretic, argue as thou wilt. "Experience teaches us," you say, "that
the being which generates is prior to that which is generated." I answer:
Follow our customary experience through all its departments, and if the rest
agree herewith, I oppose not your claim that your point be granted; but if
there be no such agreement, how can you claim assent on this one point, when
in all the rest you lack support? Seeing, then, that you call for what is customary,
it comes about that the Son, when He was begotten of the Father, was a little
child. You have seen Him an infant, crying in the cradle. As the years passed,
He has gone forward from strength to strength--for if He was weak with the
weakness of things begotten, He must also have fallen under the weakness, not
only of birth, but of life also.
71. But perchance you run to such a pitch of folly as not to flinch from asserting
these things of the Son of God, measuring Him, as you do, by the rule of human
infirmity. What, then, if, while you cannot refuse Him the name of God, you
are bent to prove Him, by reason of weakness, to be a man? What if, whilst
you examine the Person of the Son, you are calling the Father in question,
and whilst you hastily pass sentence upon the Former, you include the Latter
in the same condemnation!
72. If the Divine Generation has been subject to the limits of time,--if we
suppose this, borrowing from the custom of human generation, then it follows,
further, that the Father bare the Son in a bodily womb, and laboured under
the burden whilst ten months sped their courses. But how can generation, as
it commonly takes place, be brought about without the help of the other sex?
You see that the common order of generation was not the commencement, and you
think that the courses of generation, which are ruled by certain necessities
whereunto bodies are subject, have always prevailed. You require the customary
course, I ask for difference of sex: you demand the supposition of time, I
that of order: you enquire into the end, I into the beginning. Now surely it
is the end that depends on the beginning, not the beginning on the end.
73. "Everything," say you, "that
is begotten has a beginning, and therefore because the Son is the Son, He
has a beginning, and came first
into existence within limits of time. Let this be taken as the word of their
own mouth; as for myself, I confess that the Son is begotten, but the rest
of their declaration makes me shudder. Man, dost thou confess God, and diminish
His honour by such slander? From this madness may God deliver us.
CHAPTER XII.
Further objections to the Godhead of the Son are met by the same answer--to
wit, that they may equally be urged against the Father also. The Father, then,
being in no way confined by time, place, or anything else created, no such
limitation is to be imposed upon the Son, Whose marvellous generation is not
only of the Father, but of the Virgin also, and therefore, since in His generation
of the Father no distinction of sex, or the like, was involved, neither was
it in His generation of the Virgin.
74. The
next objection is this: "If the Son has not those properties
which all sons have, He is no Son." May Father, Son, and Holy Spirit pardon
me, for I would propound the question in all devoutness. Surely the Father
is, and abides for ever: created things, too, are as God hath ordained them.
Is there any one, then, amongst these creatures which is not subject to the
limitations of place, time, or the fact of having been created, or to some
originating cause or creator,[1] Surely, none. What, then? Is there any one
of them whereof the Father stands in need? So to say were blasphemy. Cease,
then, to apply to the Godhead what is proper only to created existences, or,
if you insist upon forcing the comparison, bethink you whither your wickedness
leads. God forbid that we should even behold the end thereof.
75. We
maintain the answer given by piety. God is Almighty, and therefore God the
Father needs none
of those
things, for in Him there is no changing,
nor any place for such help as we need, we whose weakness is supported by means
of things of this kind. But He Who is Almighty, plainly He is uncreate, and
not confined to any place, and surpasses time. Before God was not anything--nay,
even to speak about anything being before God is a grave sin. If, then, you
grant that in the nature of God the Father there is nought that implies a being
sustained, because He is God, it follows that nothing of this sort can be supposed
to exist in the Son of God, nothing that connotes a beginning, or growth, forasmuch
as He is "very God of very God."[1]
76. Seeing,
then, that we find not the customary order prevailing, be content, Arian,
to believe
in a miraculous
generation of the Son. Be content, I say,
and if you believe me not, at least have respect unto the voice of God saying, "To
whom have ye esteemed Me to be like?"[2] and again: "God is not like
a man that He should repent."[3] If, indeed, God works mysteriously, seeing
that He doth not work any work, or fashion anything, or bring it to completion,
by labor of hands, or in any course of days, "for He spake, and they were
made; He gave the word and they were created,"[4] why should we not believe
that He Whom we acknowledge as a Creator, mysteriously working, discerning
it in His works, also begat His Son in a mysterious manner? Surely it is fitting
that He should be regarded as having begotten the Son in a special and mysterious
way. Let Him Who hath the grace of majesty unrivalled likewise have the glory
of mysterious generation.
77. Not only Christ's generation of the Father, but His birth also of the
Virgin, demands our wonder. You say that the former is like unto the manner
wherein we men are conceived. I will show--nay more, I will compel you yourself
to confess, that the latter also hath no likeness to the manner of our birth.
Tell me how it was that He was born of Mary, with what law did His conception
in a Virgin's womb agree, how there could be any birth without the seed of
a man, how a maiden could become great with child, how she became a mother
before experience of such intercourse as is between wives and husbands. There
was no [visible] cause,--and yet a son was begotten. How, then, came about
this birth, under a new law?
78. If,
then, the common order of human generation was not found in the case of the
Virgin Mary, how
can
you demand that God the Father should beget in
such wise as you were begotten in? Surely the common order is determined by
difference of sex; for this is implanted in the nature of our flesh, but where
flesh is not, how can you expect to find the infirmity of flesh? No man calls
in question one who is better than he is: to believe is enjoined upon you,
without permission to question. For it is written, "Abraham believed God,
and it was accounted to him for righteousness."[1] Language is vain to
set forth, not only the generation of the Son, but even the works of God, for
it is written: "All His works are executed in faithfulness;"[2] His
works, then, are done in faithfulness, but not His generation? Ay, we call
in question that which we see not, we who are bidden to believe rather than
enquire of that we see.
CHAPTER XIII.
Discussion of the Divine Generation is continued. St. Ambrose illustrates
its method by the same example as that employed by the author of the Epistle
to the Hebrews. The duty of believing what is revealed is shown by the example
of Nebuchadnezzar and St. Peter. By the vision granted to St. Peter was shown
the Son's Eternity and Godhead--the Apostle, then, must be believed in preference
to the teachers of philosophy, whose authority was everywhere falling into
discredit. The Arians, on the other hand, are shown to be like unto the heathen.
79. It
will be asked: "In what sort was the Son begotten?" As
one who is for ever, as the Word, as the brightness of eternal light,[3]
for brightness
takes effect in the instant of its coming into existence. Which example is
the Apostle's, not mine. Think not, then, that there was ever a moment of time
when God was without wisdom, any more than that there was ever a time when
light was without radiance. Judge not, Arian, divine things by human, but believe
the divine where thou findest not the human.
80. The heathen king saw in the fire, together with the three Hebrew children,
the form of a fourth, like as of an angel,[4] and because he thought that this
angel excelled all angels, he judged Him to be the Son of God, Whom he had
not read of, but in Whom he believed. Abraham, also, saw Three and adored One.[1]
81. Peter,
when he saw Moses and Elias on the mountain, with the Son of God, was not
deceived as
to their
nature and glory. For he enquired, not of them,
but of Christ what he ought to do, inasmuch as though he prepared to do homage
to all three, yet he waited for the command of one. But since he ignorantly
thought that for three persons three tabernacles should be set up, he was corrected
by the sovereign voice of God the Father, saying, "This is My dearly beloved
Son: hear ye Him."[2] That is to say: "Why dost thou join thy fellow-servants
in equality with thy Lord? "This is My Son." Not "Moses is My
Son," nor "Elias is My Son," but "This is My Son." The
Apostle was not dull to understand the rebuke; he fell on his face brought
low by the Father's voice and the glorious beauty of the Son, but he was raised
up by the Son, Whose wont it is to raise up them that are fallen.[3] Then he
saw one only,[4] the Son of God alone, for the servants had withdrawn, that
He might be seen to be Lord alone, Who alone was entitled Son.
82. What, then, was the purpose of that vision, which signified not that Christ
and His servants were equal, but betokened a mystery, save that it should be
made plain to us that the Law and the Prophets, in agreement with the Gospel,
revealed as eternal the Son of God, Whom they had heralded. When we, therefore,
hear of the Son coming forth of the womb, the Word from the heart, let us believe
that the Son was not fashioned-with hands but begotten of the Father, not the
work of a craftsman but the offspring of a parent.
83. He,
therefore, Who said, "This is My Son," said not, "This
is a creature of time," nor "This being is of My creation, My making,
My servant," but "This is My Son, Whom ye see glorified." This
is the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, the God of Jacob, Who appeared to
Moses in the bush,[5] concerning Whom Moses saith, "He Who is hath sent
me." It was not the Father Who spake to Moses in the bush or in the desert,
but the Son. It was of this Moses-that Stephen said, "This is He Who was
in the church, in the wilderness, with the Angel."[6] This, then, is He
Who gave the Law, Who spake with Moses, saying, "I am the God of Abraham,
the God of Isaac, the God of Jacob." This, then, is the God of the patriarchs,
this is the God of the prophets.
84. It is of the Son, therefore, that we read, thy mind understandeth the
reading, let thy tongue make confession. Away with arguments, where faith is
required; now let dialectic hold her peace, even in the midst of her schools.
I ask not what it is that philosophers say, but I would know what they do.
They sit desolate in their schools. See the victory of faith over argument.
They who dispute subtly are forsaken daily by their fellows; they who with
simplicity believe are daily increased. Not philosophers but fishermen, not
masters of dialectic but taxi-gatherers, now find credence. The one sort, through
pleasures and luxuries, have bound the world's burden upon themselves; the
other, by fasting and mortification, have cast it off, and so doth sorrow now
begin to win over more followers than pleasure.
85. Let us now see how far Arians and pagans do differ. The latter call upon
gods, who are different in sex and unequal in power; the former affirm a Trinity
where there is likewise inequality of power and diversity of Godhead. The pagans
assert that their Gods began to exist once upon a time; the Arians lyingly
declare that Christ began to exist in the course of time. Have they not all
dyed their impiety in the vats of philosophy? But indeed the pagans do extol
that which they worship,[1] the Arians maintain that the Son of God, Who is
God, is a creature.
CHAPTER XIV.
That the Son of God is not a created being is proved by the following arguments:
(I) That He commanded not that the Gospel should be preached to Himself; (2)
that a created being is given over unto vanity; (3) that the Son has created
all things; (4) that we read of Him as begotten; and (5) that the difference
of generation and adoption has always been understood in those places where
both natures --the divine and the human--are declared to co-exist in Him. All
of which testimony is confirmed by the Apostle's interpretation.
86. It
is now made plain, as I believe, your sacred Majesty, that the Lord Jesus
is neither unlike
the Father,
nor one that began to exist in course of
time. We have yet to confute another blasphemy, and to show that the Son of
God is not a created being. Herein is the quickening[2] word that we read as
our help, for we have heard the passage read where the Lord saith: "Go
ye into all the world, and preach the Gospel to all creation."[1] He Who
saith "all creation" excepts nothing. How, then, do they stand who
call Christ a "creature"? If He were a creature, could He have commanded
that the Gospel should be preached to Himself? It is not, therefore, a creature,
but the Creator, Who commits to His disciples the work of teaching created
beings.
87. Christ,
then, is no created being; for "created beings are," as
the Apostle hath said, "given over to vanity."[2] Is Christ given
over unto vanity? Again, "creation"--according to the same Apostle--"groans
and travails together even until now." What, then? Doth Christ take any
part in this groaning and travailing--He Who hath set us miserable mourners
free from death? "Creation," saith the Apostle, "shall be set
free from the slavery of corruption."[3] We see, then, that between creation
and its Lord there is a vast difference for creation is enslaved, but "the
Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom."[4]
88. Who
was it that led first into this error, of declaring Him Who created and made
all things to
be a creature?
Did the Lord, I would ask, create Himself?
We read that "all things were made by Him, and without Him was nothing
made."[5] This being so, did He make Himself? We real--and who shall deny?--that
in wisdom hath God made all things.[6] If so, how can we suppose that wisdom
was made in itself?
89. We
read that the Son is begotten, inasmuch as the Father saith: "I
brought thee forth from the womb before the morning star"[7] We read of
the "first-born" Son,[8] of the "only-begotten"[9]--first-born,
because there is none before Him; only-begotten, because there is none after
Him. Again, we read: "Who shall declare His generation?"[10] "Generation," mark
you, not "creation." What argument can be brought to meet testimonies
so great and mighty as these?
90. Moreover,
God's Son discovers the difference between generation and grace when He says: "I go up to My Father and your Father, to My God and your
God."[11] He did not say, "I go up to our Father," but "I
go up to My Father and your Father." This distinction is the sign of a
difference, inasmuch as He Who is Christ's Father is our Creator.
91. Furthermore
He said, "to My God and your God," because
although He and the Father are One, and the Father is His Father by possession
of the
same nature, whilst God began to be our Father through the office of the Son,
not by virtue of nature, but of grace--still He seems to point us here to the
existence in Christ of both natures, Godhead and Manhood,--Godhead of His Father,
Manhood of His Mother, the former being before all things, the latter derived
from the Virgin. For the first, speaking as the Son, He called God His Father,
and afterward, speaking as man, named Him as God.
92. Everywhere,
indeed, we have witness in the Scriptures to show that Christ, in naming
God as His
God,
does so as man. "My God, My God, why hast Thou
forsaken Me? "[1] And again: "From My mother's womb Thou art My God."[2]
In the former place He suffers as a man; in the latter it is a man who is brought
forth from his mother's womb. And so when He says, "From My mother's womb
Thou art My God," He means that He Who was always His Father is His God
from the moment when He was brought forth from His Mother's womb.
93. Seeing, then, that we read in the Gospel, in the Apostle, in the Prophets,
of Christ as begotten, how dare the Arians to say that He was created or made?
But, indeed, they ought to have bethought them, where they have read of Him
as created, where as made. For it has been plainly shown that the Son of God
is begotten of God, born of God--let them, then, consider with care where they
have read that He was made, seeing that He was not made God, but born as God,
the Son of God; afterward, however, He was, according to the flesh, made man
of Mary.
94. "But when the fulness of time was come, God sent His Son, made of
a woman, made under the Law."[3] "His Son," observe, not as
one of many, not as His in common with another, but His own, and in saying "His
Son," the Apostle showed that it is of the Son's nature that His generation
is eternal. Him the Apostle has affirmed to have been afterwards "made" of
a woman, in order that the making might be understood not of the Godhead, but
of the putting on of a body--"made of a woman," then, by taking on
of flesh; "made under the Law" through observance of the Law. Howbeit,
the former, the spiritual generation is before the Law was, the latter is after
the Law.
CHAPTER XV.
An explanation of Acts ii. 36 and Proverbs viii. 22, which are shown to refer
properly to Christ's manhood alone.
95. To
no purpose, then, is the heretics' customary citation of the Scripture, that "God made Him both Lord and Christ." Let these ignorant persons
read the whole passage, and understand it. For thus it is written. "God
made this Jesus, Whom ye crucified, both Lord and Christ."(1) It was not
the Godhead, but the flesh, that was crucified. This, indeed, was possible,
cause the flesh allowed of being crucified. It follows not, then, that the
Son of God is a created being.
96. Let
us despatch, then, that passage also, which they do use to misrepresent,-let
them learn what
is the
sense of the words, "The Lord created Me."(2)
It is not "the Father created," but "the Lord created Me." The
flesh acknowledgeth its Lord, praise declareth the Father: our created nature
confesseth the first, loveth, knoweth the latter. Who, then, cannot but perceive
that these words announce the Incarnation. Thus the Son speaketh of Himself
as created in respect of that wherein he witnesseth to Himself as being man,
when He says, "Why seek ye to kill Me, a man, Who have told you the truth?" He
speaketh of His Manhood, wherein He was crucified, and died, and was buried.
97. Furthermore,
there is no doubt but that the writer set down as past that which was to
come;
for this is
the usage of prophecy, that things to come are
spoken of as though they were already present or past. For example, in the
twenty-first(3) psalm you have read: "Fat bulls(of Bashan) have beset
me," and again:(4) "They parted My garments among them." This
the Evangelist showeth to have been spoken prophetically of the time of the
Passion, for to God the things that are to come are present, and for Him Who
foreknoweth all things, they are as though they were past and over; as it is
written, "Who hath made the things that are to be."(1)
98. It
is no wonder that He should declare His place to have been set fast before
all worlds, seeing
that the
Scripture tells us that He was foreordained
before the times and ages. The following passage discovers how the words in
question present themselves as a true prophecy of the Incarnation: "Wisdom
hath built her an house, and set up seven pillars to support it, and she hath
slain her victims. She hath mingled her wine in the bowl, and made ready her
table, and sent her servants, calling men together with a mighty voice of proclamation,
saying: 'He who is simple, let him turn in to me.'"(2)Do we not see, in
the Gospel, that all these things were fulfilled after the Incarnation, in
that Christ discIosed the mysteries of the Holy Supper, sent forth His apostles,
and cried with a loud voice, saying, "If any man thirst, let him come
to Me and drink."(3) That which followeth, then, answereth to that which
went before, and we behold the whole story of the Incarnation set forth in
brief by prophecy.
99. Many other passages might readily be seen to be prophecies of this sort
concerning the Incarnation, but I will not delay over books, lest the treatise
appear too wordy.
CHAPTER XVI.
The Arians
blaspheme Christ, if by the words "created" and "begotten" they
mean and understand one and the same thing. If, however, they regard the words
as distinct in meaning, they must not speak of Him, of Whom they have read
that He was begotten, as if He were a created being. This rule is upheld by
the witness of St. Paul, who, professing himself a servant of Christ, forbade
worship of a created being. God being a substance pure and uncompounded, there
is no created nature in Him; furthermore, the Son is not to be degraded to
the level of things created, seeing that in Him the Father is well pleased.
100. Now will I enquire particularly of the Arians, whether they think that
begotten and created are one and the same. If they call them the same, then
is there no difference betwixt generation and creation. It follows then, that
forasmuch as we also are created there is between us and Christ and the elements
no difference. Thus much, however, great as their madness is, they will not
venture to say.
101. Furthermore--to concede that which is no truth, to their folly-I ask
them, if there is, as they think, no difference in the words, why do they not
call upon Him Whom they worship by the better title? Why do they not avail
themselves of the Father's word?(1) Why do they reject the title of honour,
and use a dishonouring name?
102. If,
however, there is--as I think there is--a distinction between "created" and "begotten," then,
when we have read that He is begotten, we shall surely not understand the same
by the terms "begotten" and "created." Let them therefore
confess Him to be begotten of the Father, born of the Virgin, or let them say
how the Son of God can be both begotten and created. A single nature, above
all, the Divine Being, rejects strife(within itself).
103. But
in any case let our private judgment pass: let us enquire of Paul, who, filled
with the Spirit
of God,
and so foreseeing these questionings, hath
given sentence against pagans in general and Arians in particular, saying that
they were by God's judgment condemned, who served the creature rather than
the Creator. Thus, in fact, you may read: "God gave them over to the lusts
of their own heart, that they might one with another dishonour their bodies,
they who changed God's truth into a lie, and worshipped and served the thing
created rather than the Creator, Who is God, blessed for ever."(2)
104. Thus
Paul forbids me to worship a creature, and admonishes me of my duty to serve
Christ. It
follows, then,
that Christ is not a created being. The
Apostle calls himself "Paul, a servant of Jesus Christ,"(1) and this
good servant, who acknowledges his Lord, will likewise have us not worship
that which is created. How, then, could he have been himself a servant of Christ,
if he thought that Christ was a created person? Let these heretics, then, cease
either to worship Him Whom they call a created being, or to call Him a creature,
Whom they feign to worship, lest under colour of being worshippers they fall
into worse impiety. For a domestic is worse than a foreign foe, and that these
men should use the Name of Christ to Christ's dishonour increaseth their guilt.
105. What
better expounder of the Scriptures do we indeed look for than that teacher
of the Gentiles,
that
chosen vessel--chosen from the number of the
persecutors? He who had been the persecutor of Christ confesses Him. He had
read Solomon more, in any case, than Arius hath, and he was well learned in
the Law, and so, because he had read, he said not that Christ was created,
but that He was begotten. For he had read, "He spake, and they were made:
He commanded, and they were created.''(2) Was Christ, I ask, made at a word?
Was He created at a command?
106. Moreover, how can there be any created nature in God? In truth, God is
of an uncompounded nature; nothing can be added to Him, and that alone which
is Divine hath He in His nature; filling all things,(3) yet nowhere Himself
confounded with aught; penetrating all things, yet Himself nowhere to be penetrated;
present in all His fulness at one and the same moment, in heaven, in earth,
in the deepest depth of the sea,(4) to sight invisible, by speech not to be
declared, by feeling not to be measured; to be followed by faith, to be adored
with devotion; so that whatsoever title excels in depth of spiritual import,
in setting forth glory and honour, in exalting power, this you may know to
belong of right to God.
107. Since,
then, the Father is well pleased in the Son; believe that the Son is worthy
of the
Father, that
He came out from God, as He Himself bears
witness, saying: "I went out from God, and am come;"(5) and again: "I
went out from God."(6) He Who proceeded and came forth from God can have
no attributes but such as are proper to God.
CHAPTER XVII.
That Christ is very God is proved from the fact that He is God's own Son,
also from His having been begotten and having come forth from God, and further,
from the unity of will and operation subsisting in Father and Son. The witness
of the apostles and of the centurion--which St. Ambrose sets over against the
Arian teaching--is adduced, together with that of Isaiah and St. John.
108. Hence
it is that Christ is not only God, but very God indeed--very God of very
God, insomuch
that He
Himself is the Truth,(1) If, then, we enquire
His Name, it is "the Truth;" if we seek to know His natural rank
and dignity, He is so truly the very Son of God, that He is indeed God's own
Son; as it is written, "Who spared not His own Son, but gave Him up for
our sakes,"(2) gave Him up, that is, so far as the flesh was concerned.
That He is God's own Son declares His Godhead; that He is very God shows that
He is God's own Son; His pitifulness is the earnest of His submission, His
sacrifice, of our salvation.
109. Lest,
however, men should wrest the Scripture, that "God gave Him
up," the Apostle himself has said in another place,(3) "Peace from
God the Father, and our Lord Jesus Christ, Who gave Himself for our sins;" and
again:(4) "Even as Christ hath loved us, and given Himself for us." If,
then, He both was given up by the Father, and gave Himself up of His own accord,
it is plain that the working and the will of Father and Son is one.
110. If,
then, we enquire into His natural pre-eminence, we find it to consist in
being begotten. To
deny
that the Son of God is begotten[of God] is to deny
that He is God's own Son, and to deny Christ to be God's own Son is to class
Him with the rest of mankind, as no more a Son than any of the rest. If, however,
we enquire into the distinctive property of His generation, it is this, that
He came forth from God. For whilst, in our experience, to come out implies
something already existent, and that which is said to come out seems to proceed
forth from hidden and inward places, we, though it be presented but in short
passages, observe the peculiar attribute of the Divine Generation, that the
Son doth not seem to have come forth out of any place, but as God from God,
a Son from a Father, nor to have had a beginning in the course of time, having
come forth from the Father by being born, as He Himself Who was born said: "I
came forth from the mouth of the Most High."(1)
111. But
if the Arians acknowledge not the Son's nature, if they believe not the Scriptures,
let
them at least
believe the mighty works. To whom doth the
Father say, "Let us make man?"(2) save to Him Whom He knew to be
His true Son? In Whom, save in one who was true, could He recognize His Image?
The son by adoption is not the same as the true Son; nor would the Son say, "I
and the Father are one,"(3) if He, being Himself not true, were measuring
Himself with One Who is true. The Father, therefore, says, "Let us make." He
Who spake is true; can He, then, Who made be not true? Shall the honour rendered
to Him Who speaks be withheld from Him Who makes?
112. But how, unless the Father knew Him to be His true Son, should He commend
to Him His will, for perfect co-operation, and His works, for perfect bringing
in out in actuality? Seeing that the Son worketh the works which the Father
doeth, and that the Son quickens whom He will,(4) as it is written, He is then
equal in power and free in respect of His will. And thus is the Unity maintained,
forasmuch as God's power consists in that the Godhead is proper to each Person,
and freedom lies not in any difference, but in unity of will.
113. The
apostles, being storm-tossed in the sea, as soon as they saw the waters leaping
up round
their Lord's
feet, and beheld His fearless footsteps
on the water, as He walked amid the raging waves of the sea, and the ship,
which was beaten upon by the waves, had rest as soon as Christ entered it,
and they saw the waves and the winds obeying Him,--then, though as yet they
did not believe in their hearts they believed Him to be God's true Son, saying, "Truly
Thou art the Son of God."(5)
114. To
the same effect the confession of the centurion, and others who were with
him, when the foundations
of the
world were shaken at the Lord's Passion,--and
this, heretic, thou deniest! The centurion said, "Truly this was the Son
of God."(6) "Was" said the centurion--"Was not" says
the Arian. The centurion, then, with bloodstained hands, but devout mind, declares
both the truth and the eternity of Christ's generation; and thou, O heretic
deniest its truth, and makest it matter of time! Would that thou hadst imbued
thy hands rather than thy soul! But thou unclean even of hand, and murderous
of intent, seekest Christ's death, so far as in thee lies, seeing that thou
thinkest of Him as mean and weak; nay, and this is a worse sin, thou, albeit
the Godhead can feel no wound, still wouldst do thy diligence to slay in Christ,
not His Body, but His Glory.
115. We cannot then doubt that He is very God, Whose true Godhead even executioners
believed in and devils confessed. Their testimony we require not now, but it
is withal greater than your blasphemies. We have called them in to witness,
to put you to the blush, whilst we have also cited the oracles of God, to the
end that you should believe.
116. The
Lord proclaimeth by the mouth of Isaiah: "In the mouth of them
that serve Me shall a new name be called upon, which shall be blessed over
all the earth, and they shall bless the true God, and they who swear upon earth
shall swear by the true God."(1) These words, I say, Isaiah spake when
he saw God's Glory, and thus in the Gospel it is plainly said that he saw the
Glory of Christ and spoke of Him.(2)
117. But
hear again what John the Evangelist hath written in his Epistle, saying: "We know that the Son of God hath appeared, and hath given us
discernment, to know the Father, and to be in His true Son Jesus Christ, our
Lord. He is very God, and Life Eternal."(3) John calls Him true Son of
God and very God. If, then, He be very God, He is surely uncreate, without
spot of lying or deceit, having in Himself no confusion, nor unlikeness to
His Father.
CHAPTER XVIII.
The errors of the Arians are mentioned in the Nicene Definition of the Faith,
to prevent their deceiving anybody. These errors are recited, together with
the anathema pronounced against them, which is said to have been not only pronounced
at Nicaea, but also twice renewed at Ariminum.
118. Christ,
therefore, is "God
of God, Light of Light, very God of very God; begotten of the Father, not
made; of one substance with the Father."
119. So, indeed, following the guidance of the Scriptures, our fathers declared,
holding, moreover, that impious doctrines should be included in the record
of their decrees, in order that the unbelief of Arius should discover itself,
and not, as it were, mask itself with dye or face-paint.(1) For they give a
false colour to their thoughts who dare not unfold them openly. After the manner
of the censor's rolls, then, the Arian heresy is not discovered by name,(2)
but marked out by the condemnation pronounced, in order that he who is curious
and eager to hear it should be preserved from falling by knowing that it is
condemned already, before he hears, it set forth to the end that he should
believe.
120. "Those," runs the decree, "who say that there was a time
when the Son of God was not, and that before He was born He was not, and who
say that he was made out of nothing, or is of another substance or <greek>ousia</greek>,(3)
or that He is capable of changing, or that with Him is any shadow of turning,--them
the Catholic and Apostolic Church declares accursed."
121. Your sacred Majesty has agreed that they who utter such doctrines are
rightly condemned. It was of no determination by man, of no human counsel,
that three hundred and eighteen bishops met, as I showed above more at length,(4)
in Council, but that in their number the Lord Jesus might prove, by the sign
of His Name and Passion, that He was in the midst, where His own were gathered
together.(5) In the number of three hundred was the sign of His Cross, in that
of eighteen was the sign of the Name Jesus.
122. This also was the teaching of the First Confession in the Council of
Ariminum, and of the Second Correction, after that Council. Of the Confession,
the letter sent to the Emperor Constantine beareth witness, and the Council
that followed declares the Correction.(1)
CHAPTER XIX.
Arius is charged with the first of the above-mentioned errors, and refuted
by the testimony of St. John. The miserable death of the Heresiarch is described,
and the rest of his blasphemous errors are one by one examined and disproved.
123. Arius,
then, says: "There was a time when the Son of God existed
not," but Scripture saith: "He was," not that "He was not." Furthermore,
St. John has written: "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was
with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God."(2)
Observe how often the verb "was" appears, whereas "was not" is
nowhere found. Whom, then, are we to believe?--St. John, who lay on Christ's
bosom, or Arius, wallowing amid the out-gush of his very bowels?--so wallowing
that we might understand how Arius in his teaching showed himself like unto
Judas, being visited with like punishment.
124. For
Arius bowels also gushed out--decency forbids to say where--and so he burst
asunder in
the midst,
falling headlong, and besmirching those foul
lips wherewith he had denied Christ. He was rent, even as the Apostle Peter
said of Judas, because he bought a field with the price of evil-doing, and
falling headlong he burst asunder in the midst, and all his bowels gushed out."(3)
It was no chance manner of death, seeing that like wickedness was visited with
like punishment, to the end that those who denied and betrayed the same Lord
might likewise undergo the same torment.
125. Let
us pass on to further points. Arius says: "Before He was born,
the Son of God was not," but the Scripture saith that all things are maintained
in existence by the Son's office. How, then, could He, Who existed not, bestow
existence upon others? Again, when the blasphemer uses the words "when" and "before," he
certainly uses words which are marks of time. How, then, do the Arians deny
that time was ere the Son was, and yet will have things created in time to
exist before the Son, seeing that the very words, "when," "before," and "did
not exist once," announce the idea of time?
126. Arius says that the Son of God came into being out of nought. How, then,
is He Son of God--how was He begotten from the womb of the Father--how do we
read of Him as the Word spoken of the heart's abundance, save to the end that
we should believe that He came forth, as it is written, from the Father's inmost,
unapproachable sanctuary? Now a son is so called either by means of adoption
or by nature, as we are called sons by means of adoption.(1) Christ is the
Son of God by virtue of His real and abiding nature. How, then, can He, Who
out of nothing fashioned all things, be Himself created out of nothing?
127. He
who knows not whence the Son is hath not the Son. The Jews therefore had
not the Son, for
they knew
not whence He was. Wherefore the Lord said to
them: "Ye know not whence I came;"(2) and again: "Ye neither
have found out Who I am, nor know My Father," for he who denies that the
Son is of the Father knows not the Father, of Whom the Son is; and again, he
knows not the Son, because he knows not the Father.
128. Arius
says:"[The Son is] of another Substance." But what other
substance is exalted to equality with the Son of God, so that simply in virtue
thereof He is Son of God? Or what right have the Arians for censuring us because
we speak, in Greek, of the <greek>ousia</greek>, or in Latin, of
the Substantia of God, when they themselves, in saying that the Son of God
is of another "Substance," assert a divine Substantia.
129. Howbeit,
should they desire to dispute the use of the words "divine
Substance" or "divine Nature," they shall easily be refuted,
for Holy Writ oft-times hath spoken of <greek>ousia</greek> in
Greek, or Substantia in Latin, and St. Peter, as we read, would have us become
partakers in the divine Nature. But if they will have it that the Son is of
another "Substance," they with their own lips confute themselves,
in that they both acknowledge the term "Substance," whereof they
are so afraid, and rank the Son on a level with the creatures above which they
feign to exalt Him.
130. Arius
calls the Son of God a creature, but "not as the rest of the
creatures." Yet what created being is not different from another? Man
is not as angel, earth is not as heaven, the sun is not as water, nor light
as darkness. Arius' preference, therefore, is empty--he hath but disguised
with a sorry dye his deceitful blasphemies, in order to take the foolish.
131. Arius
declares that the Son of God may change and swerve. How, then, is He God
if He is changeable,
seeing
that He Himself hath said: "I am,
I am, and I change not"?(1)
CHAPTER XX.
St. Ambrose declares his desire that some angel would fly to him to purify
him, as once the Seraph did to Isaiah--nay more, that Christ Himself would
come to him, to the Emperor, and to his readers, and finally prays that Gratian
and the rest of the faithful may be exalted by the power and spell of the Lord's
Cup, which he describes in mystic language.
132. Howbeit,
now must I needs confess the Prophet Isaiah's confession, which he makes
before declaring
the word of the Lord: "Woe is me, my heart is
smitten, for I, a man of unclean lips, and living in the midst of a people
of unclean lips, have seen the Lord of Sabaoth."(2) Now if Isaiah said "Woe
is me," who looked upon the Lord of Sabaoth, what shall I say of myself,
who, being "a man of unclean lips," am constrained to treat of the
divine generation? How shall I break forth into speech of things whereof I
am afraid, when David prays that a watch may be set over his mouth in the matter
of things whereof he has knowledge?(3) O that to me also one of the Seraphim
would bring the burning coal from the celestial altar, taking it in the tongs
of the two testaments, and with the fire thereof purge my unclean lips!
133. But
forasmuch as then the Seraph came down in a vision to the Prophet, whilst
Thou, O Lord,
in revelation
of the mystery hast come to us in the flesh,(1)
do Thou, not by any deputy, nor by any messenger, but Thou Thyself cleanse
my conscience from my secret sins, that I too, erstwhile unclean, but now by
Thy mercy made clean through faith, may sing in the words of David: "I
will make music to Thee upon a harp, O God of Israel, my lips shall rejoice,
in all my song to Thee, and so, too, shall my soul, whom Thou hast redeemed."(2)
134. And
so, O Lord, leaving them that slander and hate Thee, come unto us, sanctify
the ears of our sovereign
ruler, Gratian, and all besides into whose
hands this little book shall come--and purge my ears, that no stains of the
infidelity they have heard remain anywhere. Cleanse thoroughly, then, our ears,
not with water of well, river, or rippling and purling brook, but with words
cleansing like water, clearer than any water, and purer than any snow--even
the words Thou hast spoken--"Though your sins be as scarlet, I will make
them white as snow."(3)
135. Moreover, there is a Cup, wherewith Thou dost use to purify the hidden
chambers of the soul, a Cup not of the old order,(4) nor filled from a common
Vine,--a new Cup, brought down from heaven to earth,(5) filled with wine pressed
from the wondrous cluster, which hung in fleshly form upon the tree of the
Cross, even as the grape hangs upon the Vine. From this Cluster, then, is the
Wine that maketh glad the heart of man,(6) uplifts the sorrowful, is fragrant
with, pours into us, the ecstasy of faith, true devotion, and purity.
136. With
this Wine, therefore, O Lord my God, cleanse the spiritual ears of our sovereign
Emperor, to the
end that, just as men, being uplifted with
common wine, love rest and quietness, cast out the fear of death, have no feeling
of injuries,(7) seek not that Which belongs to others, and forget their own;
and so he, too, intoxicated with thy wine, may love peace, and, confident in
the exultation of faith, may never know the death of unbelief, and may display
loving patience, have no part in other men's profanities,(1) and hold the faith
of more account even than kindred and children, as it is written: "Leave
all that thou hast, and come, follow Me."(2)
137. With this Wine, also, Lord Jesus, purify our senses, that we may adore
Thee, and worship Thee, the Creator of things visible and invisible. Truly,
Thou canst not fail of being Thyself invisible and good, Who hast given invisibility
and goodness to the works of Thy Hands.(1)
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