THE WORKS OF DIONYSIUS. EXTANT FRAGMENTS. PART I.--SECTION III.--FROM THE
BOOKS AGAINST SABELLIUS & SECTION IV.--EPISTLE TO DIONYSIUS BISHOP OF ROME
III.--FROM THE BOOKS AGAINST SABELLIUS.(10) ON THE NOTION THAT MATTER IS
UNGENERATED.(11)
These certainly are not to be deemed pious who hold that matter is
ungenerated, while they allow, indeed, that it is brought under the hand of God so far
as its arrangement and regulation are concerned; for they do admit that, being
naturally passive "and pliable, it yields readily to the alterations impressed
upon it by God. It is for them, however, to show us plainly how it can
possibly be that the like and the unlike should be predicated as subsisting together
in God and matter. For it becomes necessary thus to think of one as a superior
to either, and that is a thought which cannot legitimately be entertained with
regard to God. For if there is this defect of generation which is said to be the
thing like in both, and if there is this point of difference which is
conceived of besides in the two, whence has this arisen in them? If, indeed, God is the
ungenerated, and if this defect of generation is, as we may say, His very
essence, then matter cannot be ungenerated; for God and matter are not one and the
same. But if each subsists properly and independently--namely, God and
matter--and if the defect of generation also belongs to both, then it is evident that
there is something different from each, and older and higher than both. But the
difference of their contrasted constitutions is completely subversive of the
idea that these can subsist on an equality together, and more, that this one of
the two--namely, matter--can subsist of itself. For then they will have to
furnish an explanation of the fact that, though both are supposed to be ungenerated,
God is nevertheless impassible, immutable, imperturbable, energetic; while
matter is the opposite, impressible, mutable, variable, alterable. And now, how
can these properties harmoniously co-exist and unite? Is it that God has adapted
Himself to the nature of the matter, and thus has skilfully wrought it? But it
would be absurd to suppose that God works in gold, as men are wont to do, or
hews or polishes stone, or puts His hand to any of the other arts by which
different kinds of matter are made capable of receiving form and figure. But if, on
the other hand, He has fashioned matter according to His own will, and after the
dictates of His own wisdom, impressing upon it the rich and manifold forms
produced by His own operation, then is this account of ours one both good and
true, and still further one that establishes the position that the ungenerated God
is the hypostasis (the life and foundation) of all things in the universe. For
with this fact of the defect of generation it conjoins the proper mode of His
being. Much, indeed, might be said in confutation of these teachers, but that is
not what is before us at present. And if they are put alongside the most
impious polytheists,[1] these will seem the more pious in their speech.
IV.--EPISTLE TO DIONYSIUS BISHOP OF ROME[2]
FROM THE FIRST BOOK.
1. There certainly was not a time when God was not the Father.[3]
2. Neither, indeed, as though He had not brought forth these things, did
God afterwards beget the Son, but because the Son has existence not flora
Himself, but from the Father.
And after a few words he says of the Son Himself:--
3. Being the brightness of the eternal Light, He Himself also is
absolutely eternal. For since light is always in existence, it is manifest that its
brightness also exists, because light is perceived to exist from the fact that it
shines, and it is impossible that light should not shine. And let us once more
come to illustrations. If the sun exists, there is also day; if nothing of this
be manifest, it is impossible that the sun should be there. If then the sun
were eternal, the day would never end; but now, for such is not really the state
of the case, the day begins with the beginning of the sun, and ends with its
ending. But God is the eternal Light, which has neither had a beginning, nor shall
ever fail. Therefore the eternal brightness shines forth before Him, and
co-exists with Him, in that, existing without a beginning, and always begotten, He
always shines before Him; and He is that Wisdom which says, "I was that wherein
He delighted, and I was daily His delight before His face at all times."[4]
And a little after he thus pursues his discourse from the same point:--
4. Since, therefore, the Father is eternal, the Son also is eternal, Light
of Light. For where there is the begetter, there is also the offspring. And if
there is no offspring, how and of what can He be the begetter? But both are,
and always are. Since, then, God is the Light, Christ is the Brightness. And
since He is a Spirit--for says He, "God is a Spirit"[5]--fittingly again is Christ
called Breath; for "He,"[6] saith He, "is the breath of God's power."[7]
And again he says:--
5. Moreover, the Son alone, always co-existing with the Father, and filled
with Him who is, Himself also is, since He is of the Father.
FROM THE SAME FIRST BOOK.
6. But when I spoke of things created, and certain works to be considered,
I hastily put forward illustrations of such things, as it were little
appropriate, when I said neither is the plant the same as the husbandman, nor the boat
the same as the boatbuilder.[8] But then I lingered rather upon things suitable
and more adapted to the nature of the thing, and I unfolded in many words, by
various carefully considered arguments, what things were more true; which
things, moreover, I have set forth to you in another letter. And in these things I
have also proved the falsehood of the charge which they bring against me--to
wit, that I do not maintain that Christ is consubstantial with God. For although I
say that I have never either found or read this word in the sacred Scriptures,
yet other reasonings, which I immediately subjoined, are in no wise discrepant
from this view, because I brought forward as an illustration human offspring,
which assuredly is of the same kind as the begetter; and I said that parents
are absolutely distinguished from their children by the fact alone that they
themselves are not their children, or that it would assuredly be a matter of
necessity that there would neither be parents nor children. But, as I said before, I
have not the letter in my possession, on account of the present condition of
affairs; otherwise I would have sent you the very words that I then wrote, yea,
and a copy of the whole letter, and I will send it if at any time I shall have
the opportunity. I remember, further, that I added many similitudes from things
kindred to one another. For I said that the plant, whether it grows up from
seed or from a root, is different from that whence it sprouted, although it is
absolutely of the same nature; and similarly, that a river flowing from a spring
takes another form and name: for that neither is the spring called the river,
nor the river the spring, but that these are two things, and that the spring
indeed is, as it were, the father, while the river is the water from the spring.
But they feign that they do not see these things and the like to them which are
written, as if they were blind; but they endeavour to assail me from a distance
with expressions too carelessly used, as if they were stones, not observing
that on things of which they are ignorant, and which require interpretation to be
understood, illustrations that are not only remote, but even contrary, will
often throw light.
FROM THE SAME FIRST BOOK.
7. It was said above that God is the spring of all good things, but the
Son was called the river flowing from Him; because the word is an emanation of
the mind, and--to speak after human fashion--is emitted from the heart by the
mouth. But the mind which springs forth by the tongue is different from the word
which exists in the heart. For this latter, after it has emitted the former,
remains and is what it was before; but the mind sent forth flies away, and is
carried everywhere around, and thus each is in each although one is from the other,
and they are one although they are two. And it is thus that the Father and the
Son are said to be one, and to be in one another.
FROM THE SECOND BOOK.
8. The individual haines uttered by me can neither be separated from one
another, nor parted.[1] I spoke of the Father, and before I made mention of the
Son I already signified Him in the Father. I added the Son; and the Father,
even although I had not previously named Him, had already been absolutely
comprehended in the Son. I added the Holy Spirit; but, at the same time, I conveyed
under the name whence and by whom He proceeded. But they are ignorant that neither
the Father, in that He is Father, can be separated from the Son, for that name
is the evident ground of coherence and conjunction; nor can the Son be
separated from the Father, for this word Father indicates association between them.
And there is, moreover, evident a Spirit who can neither be disjoined from Him
who sends, nor from Him who brings Him. How, then, should I who use such names
think that these are absolutely divided and separated the one from the other?
After a few words he adds:--
9. Thus, indeed, we expand the indivisible Unity into a Trinity; and again
we contract the Trinity, which cannot be diminished, into a Unity.
FROM THE SAME SECOND BOOK.
10. But if any quibbler, from the fact that I said that God is the Maker
and Creator of all things, thinks that I said that He is also Creator of Christ,
let him observe that I first called Him Father, in which word the Son also is
at the same time expressed.[2] For after I called the Father the Creator, I
added, Neither is He the Father of those things whereof He is Creator, if He who
begot is properly understood to be a Father (for we will consider the latitude
of this word Father in what follows). Nor is a maker a father, if it is only a
framer who is called a maker. For among the Greeks, they who are wise are said
to be makers of their books. The apostle also says, "a doer (soil. maker) of the
law."[3] Moreover, of matters of the heart, of which kind are virtue and vice,
men are called doers (scil. makers); after which manner God said, "I expected
that it should make judgment, but it made iniquity."[4]
11. That neither must this saying be thus blamed;[5] for he says that he
used the name of Maker on account of the flesh which the Word had assumed, and
which certainly was made. But if any one should suspect that that had been said
of the Word, even this also was to be heard without contentiousness. For as I
do not think that the Word was a thing made, so I do not say that God was its
Maker, but its Father. Yet still, if at any time, discoursing of the Son, I may
have casually said that God was His Maker, even this mode of speaking would not
be without defence. For the wise men among the Greeks call themselves the
makers of their books, although the same are fathers of their books. Moreover,
divine Scripture calls us makers of those motions which proceed from the heart, when
it calls us doers of the law of judgment and of justice.
FROM THE SAME SECOND BOOK.
12. In the beginning was the Word.[6] But that was not the Word which
produced the Word.[7] For" the Word was with God."[6] The Lord is Wisdom; it was
not therefore Wisdom that produced Wisdom; for "I was that" says He, "wherein He
delighted[8] Christ is truth; but "blessed," says He, "is the God of truth."
FROM THE THIRD BOOK.
13. Life is begotten of life in the same way as the river has flowed forth
from the spring, and the brilliant light is ignited from the inextinguishable
light.[9]
FROM THE FOURTH BOOK.
14. Even as our mind emits from itself a word,[7]--as says the prophet,
"My heart hath uttered forth a good word,"[10]--and each of the two is distinct
the one from the other, and maintaining a peculiar place, and one that is
distinguished from the other; since the former indeed abides and is stirred in the
heart, while the latter has its place in the tongue and in the mouth. And yet
they are not apart from one another, nor deprived of one another; neither is the
mind without the word, nor is the word without the mind; but the mind makes the
word and appears in the word, and the word exhibits the mind wherein it was
made. And the mind indeed is, as it were, the word immanent, while the word is the
mind breaking forth.[1] The mind passes into the word, and the word transmits
the mind to the surrounding hearers; and thus the mind by means of the word
takes its place in the souls of the hearers, entering in at the same time as the
word. And indeed the mind is, as it were, the father of the word, existing in
itself; but the word is as the son of the mind, and cannot be made before it nor
without it, but exists with it, whence it has taken its seed and origin. In the
same manner, also, the Almighty Father and Universal Mind has before all
things the Son, the Word, and the discourse,[2] as the interpreter and messenger of
Himself.
ABOUT THE MIDDLE OF THE TREATISE.
15. If, from the fact that there are three hypostases, they say that they
are divided, there are three whether they like it or no, or else let them get
rid of the divine Trinity altogether.[3]
AND AGAIN:
For on this account after the Unity there is also the most divine
Trinity.[4]
THE CONCLUSION OF THE ENTIRE TREATISE.
16. In accordance with all these things, the: form, moreover, and rule
being received from the elders who have lived before us, we also, with a voice in
accordance with them, will both acquit ourselves of thanks to you, and of the
letter which we are now writing. And to God the Father, and His Son our Lord
Jesus Christ, with the Holy Spirit, be glory and dominion for ever and ever.
Amen.[5]