AGAINST THE SABELLIANS / CONFESSION OF OUR CHRISTIAN FAITH, COMMONLY CALLED
THE CREED OF ST. ATHANASIUS
AGAINST THE SABELLIANS(1)
1. Now truly it would be just to dispute against those who, by dividing
and rending the monarchy, which is the most august announcement of the Church of
God, into, as it were, three powers, and distinct substances (hypostases), and
three deities, destroy it.(2) For I have heard that some who preach and teach
the word of God among you are teachers of this opinion, who indeed
diametrically, so to speak, are opposed to the opinion of Sabellius. For he blasphemes in
saying that the Son Himself is the Father, and vice versa; but these in a certain
manner announce three gods, in that they divide the holy unity into three
different substances, absolutely separated from one another. For it is essential
that the Divine Word should be united to the God of all, and that the Holy Spirit
should abide and dwell in God; and thus that the Divine Trinity should be
reduced and gathered into one, as if into a certain head--that is, into the
omnipotent God of all. For the doctrine of the foolish Marcion, which Gilts and
divides the monarchy into three elements, is assuredly of the devil, and is not of
Christ's true disciples, or of those to whom the Saviour's teaching is agreeable.
For these indeed rightly know that the Trinity is declared in the divine
Scripture, but that the doctrine that there are three gods is, neither taught in the
Old nor in the New Testament.
2. But neither are they less to be blamed who think that the Son was a
creation, and decided that the Lord was made just as one of those things which
really were made; whereas the divine declarations testify that He was begotten, as
is fitting and proper, but not that He was created or made. It is therefore
not a trifling, but a very great impiety, to say that the Lord was in any wise
made with hands. For if the Son was made, there was a time when He was not; but
He always was, if, as He Himself declares,(3) He is undoubtedly in the Father.
And if Christ is the Word, the Wisdom, and the Power,--for the divine writings
tell us that Christ is these, as ye yourselves know,--assuredly these are powers
of God. Wherefore, if the Son was made, there was a time when these were not
in existence;(4) and thus there was a time when God was without these things,
which is utterly absurd. But why should I discourse at greater length to you
about these matters, since ye are men filled with the Spirit, and especially
understanding what absurd results follow from the opinion which asserts that the Son
was made? The leaders of this view seem to me to have given very little heed to
these things, and for that reason to have strayed absolutely, by explaining
the passage otherwise than as the divine and prophetic Scripture demands. "The
Lord created me the beginning of His ways."(5) For, as ye know, there is more
than one signification of the word "created;" and in this place "created" is the
same as "set over" the works made by Himself--made, I say, by the Son Himself.
But this "created" is not to be understood in the same manner as "made." For to
make and to create are different from one another. "Is not He Himself thy
Father, that hath possessed thee and created thee?"(6) says Moses in the great song
of Deuteronomy. And thus might any one reasonably convict these men. Oh
reckless and rash men! was then "the first-born of every creature"(7) something
made?--"He who was begotten from the womb before the morningstar?"(8)--He who in the
person of Wisdom says, "Before all the hills He begot me?"(9) Finally, any one
may read in many parts of the divine utterances that the Son is said to have
been begotten, but never that He was made. From which considerations, they who
dare to say that His divine and inexplicable generation was a creation, are
openly convicted of thinking that which is false concerning the generation of the
Lord.
3. That admirable and divine unity, therefore, must neither be separated
into three divinities, nor must the dignity and eminent greatness of the Lord be
diminished by having applied to it the name of creation, but we must believe
on God the Father Omnipotent, and on Christ Jesus His Son, and on the Holy
Spirit. Moreover, that the Word is united to the God of all, because He says, "I and
the Father are one;"(1) and, "I am in the Father, and the Father is in Me."(2)
Thus doubtless will be maintained in its integrity the doctrine of the divine
Trinity, and the sacred announcement of the monarchy.
ELUCIDATIONS.
THE Confession, improperly called "the Creed of Athanasius," is
acknowledged to embody the (Athanasian) doctrine of the Nicene Council; and I append it
here as an index to the state of theology at the period which is the limit of
our series. Nothing is properly a "creed" which has never been accepted as such
by the whole Church, and the Greeks knew no other creed than that called Nicene.
The Anglo-American Church has ceased to recite this Confession in public
worship, but does not depart from it as doctrine. The "Reformed" communion in
America(1) retains it among her liturgical forms, and I suppose the same is true of
the Lutherans. It is a Western Confession, and, like the Te Deum, is a hymn
rather than a symbol, though breathing the spirit of the Creed.
Usher adopts A.D. 447 as its date, and Beveridge assigns it to the fourth
century. Dupin gives it a later origin than Usher, and a considerable number of
eminent authorities agree with him in the date A.D. 484.
What are called the anathemas are the enacting clauses (so to speak), and,
like the same in the Nicene Creed, may be regarded as no part of the
Confession itself. If they have disappeared from the Great Symbol itself, as unsuitable
to liturgical recitation, why not apply the same rule here?
CONFESSION OF OUR CHRISTIAN FAITH, COMMONLY CALLED THE CREED OF
ST. ATHANASIUS.
Quicunque vult.
¶ Whosoever will be saved: before all things it is necessary that he hold the
Catholick Faith. Which Faith except everyone do keep whole and undefiled:
without doubt he shall perish everlastingly.
I.
And the Catholick Faith is this: That we worship one God in Trinity,
and Trinity in Unity;
Neither confounding the Persons: nor dividing the Substance.
For there is one Person of the Father, another of the Son: and another
of the Holy Ghost.
But the God-head of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, is
all one: the Glory equal, the Majesty co-eternal.
Such as the Father is, such is the Son: and such is the Holy Ghost.
The Father un-create, the Son un-create: and the Holy Ghost un-create.
The Father incomprehensible, the Son incomprehensible: and the
HolyGhost incomprehensible.
The Father eternal, the Son eternal: and theHoly Ghost eternal. And yet
they are not three eternal: but one eternal.
As also there are not three incomprehensible, nor three un-created: but
one un-created, and one incomprehensible.
So likewise the Father is Almighty, the Son Almighty: and the Holy
Ghost Almighty.
And yet they are not three Almighties: but one Almighty.
So the Father is God, the Son is God: and the Holy Ghost is God.
And yet they are not three Gods: but one God.
So likewise the Father is Lord, the Son is Lord: and the Holy Ghost is
Lord.
And yet not three Lords: but one Lord.
For like as we are compelled by the Christian verity: to acknowledge
every Person by Himself to be God and Lord;
So we are forbidden by the Catholick Religion: to say, there be three
Gods, or three Lords.
The Father is made of none: neither created, nor begotten.
The Son is of the Father alone: not made, nor created, but begotten.
The Holy Ghost is of the Father and of the Son:(1) neither made, nor
created, nor begotten, but proceeding.
So there is one Father, not three Fathers; one Son, not three Sons: one
Holy Ghost, not three Holy Ghosts.
And in this Trinity none is afore, or after other: none is greater, or
less than another;
But the whole three Persons are co-eternal together: and co-equal.
So that in all things, as is aforesaid: the Unity in Trinity, and the
Trinity in Unity, is to be worshipped.
¶ He therefore that will be saved: must thus think of the Trinity.
II.
Furthermore, it is necessary to everlasting salvation: that he also
believe rightly the Incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ.
For the right Faith is, that we believe and confess; that our Lord
Jesus Christ, the Son of God, is God and Man;
God, of the Substance of the Father, begotten before the worlds: and
Man, of the Substance of His Mother, born in the world;
Perfect God, and perfect Man: of a reasonable soul and human flesh
subsisting;
Equal to the Father, as touching His God-head' and inferior to the
Father, as touching His Manhood.
Who although He be God and Man: yet He is not two, but one Christ;
One; not by conversion of the God-head into flesh: but by taking of the
Manhood into God;
One altogether; not by confusion of Substance: but by unity of Person.
For as the reasonable soul and flesh is one man: so God and Man is one
Christ;
Who suffered for our Salvation: descended into hell, rose again the
third day from the dead.
He ascended into heaven, He sitteth on the right hand of the Father,
God Almighty: from whence He shall come to judge the quick and the dead.
At whose coming all men shall rise again with their bodies: and shall
give account for their own works.
And they that have done good shall go into life everlasting: and they
that have done evil into everlasting fire.
¶ This is the Catholick Faith: which except a man believe faithfully,
he cannot be saved.
II.
It is with regret that I am forced to take exception to the most useful
Ecclesiastical History of the learned Professor Schaff, in this connection. I
quote from that work(2) as follows:--
"He, Dionysius, maintained distinctly, in (a) controversy with Dionysius
of Alexandria, at once the unity of essence and the real personal distinction,
etc., . . . and avoided tritheism, Sabellianism, and (b) subordination, with the
instinct of orthodoxy, and also with the art of anathematizing, (c) already
familiar to (d) the popes."
Such a paragraph must convey to the youthful student a great confusion of
ideas; all the greater, because the same valuable work elsewhere invites him to
conclusions quite the reverse. Thus, (a) there was no controversy whatever
between the two Dionysii; with a holy jealousy they entered into fraternal
explanations of the same truth, held by each, but by neither very technically
elucidated. The mere reader would probably infer that the greater of the two was guilty
of tritheism or Sabellianism, although that is not the meaning of these
unguarded expressions. But (b) the "subordinationism" which he repudiated was the
doctrine of the subjection of the Son, not of the subordination, which orthodoxy
has always maintained. Again, (c) I see no such "anathematizing" in the letter
of Dionysius as is here charged; indeed, it contains no anathema(1) whatever,
much less the artificial cursing of the Papacy which is thus assumed. And last,
(d) what can be meant by the expression, "already familiar to the popes?" The
learned pages of the same author sufficiently prove that there were no such
things(2) as "popes" till a much later period of history; and, as to the "art of
anathematizing," if it existed at all in those days, we find it much more freely
exemplified by the Greek Fathers than by bishops of Rome. I say, if it existed
at because the primitive anathema was a purely scriptural enforcement of St.
Paul's great canon (Gal. i. 8, 9); while the "art of anathematizing," so justly
credited to "the popes," was a vindictive and monstrous assertion, at a later
date, of prerogatives which they impiously arrogated to themselves, against other
churches.