THE EXTANT WORKS AND FRAGMENTS OF HIPPOLYTUS: PART II. F. THE DISCOURSE ON THE
HOLY THEOPHANY
THE DISCOURSE ON THE HOLY THEOPHANY.
1. Good, yea, very good, are all the works of our God and Saviour--all of
them that eye seeth and mind perceiveth, all that reason interprets and hand
handles, all that intellect comprehends and human nature understands. For what
richer beauty can there be than that of the circle(1) of heaven? And what form of
more blooming fairness than that of earth's surface? And what is there swifter
in the course than the chariot of the sun? And what more graceful car than the
lunar orb?(2) And what work more wonderful than the compact mosaic of the
stars?(3) And what more productive of supplies than the seasonable winds? And what
more spotless mirror than the light of day? And what creature more excellent
than man? Very good, then, are all the works of our God and Saviour. And what
more requisite gift, again, is there than the element(4) of water? For with water
all things are washed and nourished, and cleansed and bedewed. Water bears the
earth, water produces the dew, water exhilarates the vine; water matures the
corn in the ear, water ripens the grapecluster, water softens the olive, water
sweetens the palm-date, water reddens the rose and decks the violet, water makes
the lily bloom with its brilliant cups. And why should I speak at length?
Without the element of water, none of the present order of things can subsist. So
necessary is the element of water; for the other elements(1) took their places
beneath the highest vault of the heavens, but the nature of water obtained a seat
also above the heavens. And to this the prophet himself is a witness, when he
exclaims, "Praise the Lord, ye heavens of heavens, and the water that is above
the heavens."(2)
2. Nor is this the only thing that proves the dignity(3) of the water. But
there is also that which is more honourable than all--the fact that Christ,
the Maker of all, came down as the rain,(4) and was known as a spring,(5) and
diffused Himself as a river,(6) and was baptized in the Jordan.(7) For you have
just heard how Jesus came to John, and was baptized by him in the Jordan. Oh
things strange beyond compare! How should the boundless Rivers that makes glad the
city of God have been dipped in a little water! The illimitable Spring that
bears life to all men, and has no end, was covered by poor and temporary waters!
He who is present everywhere, and absent nowhere--who is incomprehensible to
angels and invisible to men--comes to the baptism according to His own good
pleasure. When you hear these things, beloved, take them not as if spoken literally,
but accept them as presented in a figure.(9) Whence also the Lord was not
unnoticed by the watery element in what He did in secret, in the kindness of His
condescension to man. "For the waters saw Him, and were afraid."(10) They wellnigh
broke from their place, and burst away from their boundary. Hence the prophet,
having this in his view many generations ago, puts the question, "What aileth
thee, O sea, that thou reddest; and thou, Jordan, that thou wast driven
back?"(11) And they in reply said, We have seen the Creator of all things in the "form
of a servant,"(12) and being ignorant of the mystery of the economy, we were
lashed with fear.
3. But we, who know the economy, adore His mercy, because He hath come to
save and not to judge the world. Wherefore John, the forerunner of the Lord,
who before knew not this mystery, on learning that He is Lord in truth, cried
out, and spake to those who came to be baptized of him, "O generation of
vipers,"(13) why look ye so earnestly at me? "I am not the Christ;"(14) I am the
servant, and not the lord; I am the subject, and not the king; I am the sheep, and not
the shepherd; I am a man, and not God. By my birth I loosed the barrenness of
my mother; I did not make virginity barren.(15) I was brought up from beneath;
I did not come down from above. I bound the tongue of my father;(16) I did not
unfold divine grace. I was known by my mother, and I was not announced by a
star.(17) I am worthless, and the least; but "after me there comes One who is
before me"(18)--after me, indeed, in time, but before me by reason of the
inaccessible and unutterable light of divinity. "There comes One mightier than I, whose
shoes I am not worthy to bear: He shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost, and
with fire."(19) I am subject to authority, but He has authority in Himself. I am
bound by sins, but He is the Remover of sins. apply(20) the law, but He
bringeth grace to light. teach as a slave, but He judgeth as the Master. I have the
earth as my couch, but He possesses heaven. I baptize with the baptism of
repentance, but He confers the gift of adoption: "He shall baptize you with the Holy
Ghost, and with fire." Why give ye attention to me? I am not the Christ.
4. As John says these things to the multitude, and as the people watch in
eager expectation of seeing some strange spectacle with their bodily eyes, and
the devil(21) is struck with amazement at such a testimony from John, lo, the
Lord appears, plain, solitary, uncovered,(22) without escort,(23) having on Him
the body of man like a garment, and hiding the dignity of the Divinity, that He
may elude the snares of the dragon. And not only did He approach John as Lord
without royal retinue; but even like a mere man, and one involved in sin, He
bent His head to be baptized by John. Wherefore John, on seeing so great a
humbling of Himself, was struck with astonishment at the affair, and began to prevent
Him, saying, as ye have just heard, "I have need to be baptized of Thee, and
comest Thou to me?"(1) What doest Thou, O Lord? Thou teachest things not
according to rule.(2) I have preached one thing (regarding Thee), and Thou performest
another; the devil has heard one thing, and perceives another. Baptize me with
the fire of Divinity; why waitest Thou for water? Enlighten me with the
Spirit; why dost Thou attend upon a creature? Baptize me, the Baptist, that Thy
pre-eminence may be known. I, O Lord, baptize with the baptism of repentance, and I
cannot baptize those who come to me unless they first confess fully their sins.
Be it so then that I baptize Thee, what hast Thou to confess? Thou art the
Remover of sins, and wilt Thou be baptized with the baptism of repentance? Though
I should venture to baptize Thee, the Jordan dares not to come near Thee. "I
have need to be baptized of Thee, and comest Thou to me?"
5. And what saith the Lord to him? "Suffer it to be so now, for thus it
becometh us to fulfil all righteousness."(3) "Suffer it to be so now," John; thou
art not wiser than I. Thou seest as man; I foreknow as God. It becomes me to
do this first, and thus to teach. I engage in nothing unbecoming, for I am
invested with honour. Dost thou marvel, O John, that I am not come in my dignity?
The purple robe of kings suits not one in private station, but military splendour
suits a king: am I come to a prince, and not to a friend? "Suffer it to be so
now for thus it becometh us to fulfil all righteousness:" I am the Fulfiller of
the law; I seek to leave nothing wanting to its whole fulfilment, that so
after me Paul may exclaim, "Christ is the fulfilling of the law for righteousness
to every one that believeth."(4) "Suffer it to be so now, for thus it becometh
us to fulfil all righteousness." Baptize me, John, in order that no one may
despise baptism. I am baptized by thee, the servant, that no one among kings or
dignitaries may scorn to be baptized by the hand of a poor priest. Suffer me to go
down into the Jordan, in order that they may hear my Father's testimony, and
recognise the power of the Son. "Suffer it to be so now, for thus it becometh us
to fulfil all righteousness." Then at length John suffers Him. "And Jesus,
when He was baptized, went up straightway out of the water: and the heavens were
opened unto Him; and, lo, the Spirit of God descended like a dove, and rested
upon Him. And a voice (came) from heaven, saying, This is my beloved Son, in whom
I am well pleased."(5)
6. Do you see, beloved, how many and how great blessings we would have
lost, if the Lord had yielded to the exhortation of John, and declined baptism?
For the heavens were shut before this; the region above was inaccessible. We
would in that case descend to the lower parts, but we would not ascend to the
upper. But was it only that the Lord was baptized? He also renewed the old man, and
committed to him again the sceptre of adoption. For straightway "the heavens
were opened to Him." A reconciliation took place of the visible with the
invisible; the celestial orders were filled with joy; the diseases of earth were
healed; secret things were made known; those at enmity were restored to amity. For
you have heard the word of the evangelist, saying, "The heavens were opened to
Him," on account of three wonders. For when Christ the Bridegroom was baptized,
it was meet that the bridal-chamber of heaven should open its brilliant gates.
And in like manner also, when the Holy Spirit descended in the form of a dove,
and the Father's voice spread everywhere, it was meet that "the gates of heaven
should be lifted up."(6) "And, lo, the heavens were opened to Him; and a voice
was heard, saying, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased."
7. The beloved generates love, and the light immaterial the light
inaccessible? "This is my beloved Son," He who, being manifested on earth and yet
unseparated from the Father's bosom, was manifested, and yet did not appear.(8) For
the appearing is a different thing, since in appearance the baptizer here is
superior to the baptized. For this reason did the Father send down the Holy
Spirit from heaven upon Him who was baptized. For as in the ark of Noah the love of
God toward man is signified by the dove, so also now the Spirit, descending in
the form of a dove, bearing as it were the fruit of the olive, rested on Him to
whom the witness was borne. For what reason? That the faithfulness of the
Father's voice might be made known, and that the prophetic utterance of a long time
past might be ratified. And what utterance is this? "The voice of the Lord
(is) on the waters, the God of glory thundered; the Lord (is) upon many
waters."(9) And what voice? "This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased." This is
He who is named the son of Joseph, and (who is) according to the divine essence
my Only-begotten. "This is my beloved Son"--He who is hungry, and yet
maintains myriads; who is weary, and yet gives rest to the weary; who has not where to
lay His head,(1) and yet bears up all things in His hand; who suffers, and yet
heals sufferings; who is smitten,(2) and yet confers liberty on the world;(3)
who is pierced in the side,(4) and yet repairs the side of Adam.(5)
8. But give me now your best attention, I pray you, for I wish to go back
to the fountain of life, and to view the fountain that gushes with healing. The
Father of immortality sent the immortal Son and Word into the world, who came
to man in order to wash him with water and the Spirit; and He, begetting us
again to incorruption of soul and body, breathed into us the breath (spirit) of
life, and endued us with an incorruptible panoply. If, therefore, man has become
immortal, he will also be God.(6) And if he is made God by water and the Holy
Spirit after the regeneration of the layer(7) he is found to be also joint-heir
with Christ(8) after the resurrection from the dead. Wherefore I preach to this
effect: Come, all ye kindreds of the nations, to the immortality of the
baptism. I bring good tidings of life to you who tarry in the darkness of ignorance.
Come into liberty from slavery, into a kingdom from tyranny, into incorruption
from corruption. And how, saith one, shall we come? How? By water and the Holy
Ghost. This is the water in conjunction with the Spirit, by which paradise is
watered, by which the earth is enriched, by which plants grow, by which animals
multiply, and (to sum up the whole in a single word) by which man is begotten
again and endued with life, in which also Christ was baptized, and in which the
Spirit descended in the form of a dove.
9. This is the Spirit that at the beginning "moved upon the thee of the
waters;"(9) by whom the world moves; by whom creation consists, and all things
have life; who also wrought mightily in the prophets,(10) and descended in flight
upon Christ.(11) This is the Spirit that was given to the apostles in the form
of fiery tongues.(12) This is the Spirit that David sought when he said,
"Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me."(13) Of this
Spirit Gabriel also spoke to the Virgin, "The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee,
and the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee."(14) By this Spirit Peter
spake that blessed word, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God."(15)
By this Spirit the rock of the Church was stablished.(16) This is the Spirit,
the Comforter, that is sent because of thee,(17) that He may show thee to be the
Son(18) of God.
10. Come then, be begotten again, O man, into the adoption of God. And
how? says one. If thou practisest adultery no more, and committest not murder, and
servest not idols; if thou art not overmastered by pleasure; if thou dost not
suffer the feeling of pride to rule thee; if thou cleanest off the filthiness
of impurity, and puttest off the burden of sin; if thou castest off the armour
of the devil, and puttest on the breastplate of faith, even as Isaiah saith,
"Wash you, and seek judgment, relieve the oppressed, judge the fatherless, and
plead for the widow. And come and let us reason together, saith the Lord. Though
your sins be as scarlet, I shall make them white as snow; and though they be
like crimson, I shall make them white as wool. And if ye be willing, and hear my
voice, ye shall eat the good of the land."(19) Do you see, beloved, how the
prophet spake beforetime of the purifying power of baptism? For he who comes down
in faith to the layer of regeneration, and renounces the devil, and joins
himself to Christ; who denies the enemy, and makes the confession that Christ is God;
who puts off the bondage, and puts on the adoption,--he comes up from the
baptism brilliant as the sun,(20) flashing forth the beams of righteousness, and,
which is indeed the chief thing, he returns a son of God and joint-heir with
Christ. To Him be the glory and the power, together with His most holy, and good,
and quickening Spirit, now and ever, and to all the ages of the ages. Amen.