ON THE TRINITY. FRAGMENT FROM THE DISCOURSE
ON THE TRINITY.
FRAGMENT FROM THE DISCOURSE.(1)
GREGORY THAUMATURGUS, Bishop of Neo-Caesareia in Pontus,(2) near successor
of the apostles, in his discourse on the Trinity, speaks thus: --
I see in all three essentials--substance, genus, name. We speak of man,
servant, curator (curatorem),--man, by reason of substance; servant, by reason of
genus or condition; curator, by reason of denomination. We speak also of
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit: these, however, are not names which have only
supervened at some after period, but they are subsistences. Again, the denomination of
man is not in actual fact a denomination, but a substance common to men, and is
the denomination proper to all men. Moreover, names are such as these,--Adam,
Abraham, Isaac, Jacob: these, I say, are names. But the Divine Persons are
names indeed: and the names are still the persons; and the persons then signify
that which is and subsists,--which is the essence of God. The name also of the
nature signifies subsistence;(3) as if we should speak of the man. All (the
persons) are one nature, one essence, one will, and are called the Holy Trinity; and
these also are haines subsistent, one nature in three persons, and one genus.
But the person of the Son is composite in its oneness (unita est), being one
made up of two, that is, of divinity and humanity together, which two constitute
one. Yet the divinity does not consequently receive any increment, but the
Trinity remains as it was. Nor does anything new befall the persons even or the
names, but these are eternal and without time. No one, however, was sufficient to
know these until the Son being made flesh manifested them, saying: "Father, I
have manifested Thy name to men; glorify Thou me also, that they may know me as
Thy Son."(4) And on the mount the Father spake, and said, "This is my beloved
Son."(5) And the same sent His Holy Spirit at the Jordan. And thus it was
declared to us that there is an Eternal Trinity in equal honour. Besides, the
generation of the Son by the Father is incomprehensible and ineffable; and because it
is spiritual, its investigation becomes impracticable: for a spiritual object
can neither be understood nor traced by a corporeal object, for that is far
removed from human nature. We men know indeed the generation proper to us, as also
that of other objects; but a spiritual matter is above human condition, neither
can it in any manner be understood by the minds of men. Spiritual substance can
neither perish nor be dissolved; ours, however, as is easy to understand,
perishes and is dissolved. How, indeed, could it be possible for man, who is
limited on six sides--by east, west, south, north, deep, and sky--understand a matter
which is above the skies, which is beneath the deeps, which stretches beyond
the north and south, and which is present in every place, and fills all vacuity?
But if, indeed, we are able to scrutinize spiritual substance, its excellence
truly would be undone. Let us consider what is done in our body; and,
furthermore, let us see whether it is in our power to ascertain in what manner thoughts
are born of the heart, and words of the tongue, and the like. Now, if we can by
no means apprehend things that are done in ourselves, how could it ever be
that we should understand the mystery of the uncreated Creator, which goes beyond
every mind? Assuredly, if this mystery were one that could be penetrated by
man, the inspired John would by no means have affirmed this: "No man hath seen God
at any time."(6) He then, whom no man hath seen at any time,--whom can we
reckon Him to resemble, so that thereby we should understand His generation? And
we, indeed, without ambiguity apprehend that our soul dwells in us in union with
the body; but still, who has ever seen his own soul? who has been able to
discern its conjunction with his body? This one thing is all we know certainly, that
there is a soul within us conjoined with the body. Thus, then, we reason and
believe that the Word is begotten by the Father, albeit we neither possess nor
know the clear rationale of the fact. The Word Himself is before every
creature--eternal froth the Eternal, like spring from spring, and light from light. The
vocable Word, indeed, belongs to those three genera of words which are named in
Scripture, and which are not substantial,--namely, the word conceived,(1) the
word uttered,(2) and the word articulated.(3) The word conceived, certainly, is
not substantial. The word uttered, again, is that voice which the prophets
hear from God, or the prophetic speech itself; and even this is not substantial.
And, lastly, the word articulated is the speech of man formed forth in air (aere
efformatus), composed of terms, which also is not substantial.(4) But the Word
of God is substantial, endowed with an exalted and enduring nature, and is
eternal with Himself, and is inseparable from Him, and can never fall away, but
shall remain in an everlasting union. This Word created heaven and earth, and in
Him were all things made. He is the arm and the power of God, never to be
separated from the Father, in virtue of an indivisible nature, and, together with
the Father, He is without beginning. This Word took our substance of the Virgin
Mary; and in so far as He is spiritual indeed, He is indivisibly equal with the
Father; but in so far as He is corporeal, He is in like manner inseparably
equal with us. And, again, in so far as He is spiritual, He supplies in the same
equality (oequiparat) the Holy Spirit, inseparably and without limit. Neither
were there two natures, but only one nature of the Holy Trinity before the
incarnation of the Word, the Son; and the nature of the Trinity remained one also
after the incarnation of the Son. But if any one, moreover, believes that any
increment has been given to the Trinity by reason of the assumption of humanity by
the Word, he is an alien from us, and from the ministry of the Catholic and
Apostolic Church. This is the perfect, holy, Apostolic faith of the holy God.
Praise to the Holy Trinity for ever through the ages of the ages. Amen.
ELUCIDATION.
PETAVIUS, to whom the translator refers his readers, may be trusted in
points where he has no theory of his own to sustain, but must always be accepted
with caution. The Greek Fathers in this very series, from Justin(2) onward,
enable us to put the later terminology to the test of earlier exposition (see
examples in the notes to the Praxeas of Tertullian, and consult Dr. Holmes' valuable
note embodied in my elucidations).(2) We may go back to Theophilus for the
distinction between the <greek>endiaqetos</greek> and the
<greek>proforikos</greek>, the immanent and the uttered Word.(3) Compare Tertullian, also, against
Marcion.(4) Evidences, therefore, are abundant and archaic, indeed, to prove that
the Ante-Nicene Fathers, with those of the Nicene and the Post-Nicene periods,
were of one mind, and virtually of one voice.