THE FIFTEEN BOOKS OF AURELIUS AUGUSTINUS, BISHOP OF HIPPO, ON THE TRINITY:
BOOK II
BOOK II.
AUGUSTIN PURSUES HIS DEFENSE OF THE EQUALITY OF THE TRINITY; AND IN TREATING
OF THE SENDING OF THE SON AND OF THE HOLY SPIRIT, AND OF THE VARIOUS APPEARANCES
OF GOD, DEMONSTRATES THAT HE WHO IS SENT IS NOT THEREFORE LESS THAN HE WHO
SENDS, BECAUSE THE ONE HAS SENT, THE OTHER HAS BEEN SENT; BUT THAT THE TRINITY,
BEING IN ALL THINGS EQUAL, AND ALIKE IN ITS OWN NATURE UNCHANGEABLE AND INVISIBLE
AND OMNIPRESENT, WORKS INDIVISIBLY IN EACH SENDING OR APPEARANCE.
PREFACE.
WHEN men seek to know God, and bend their minds according to the capacity
of human weakness to the understanding of the Trinity; learning, as they must,
by experience, the wearisome difficulties of the task, whether from the sight
itself of the mind striving to gaze upon light unapproachable, or, indeed, from
the manifold and various modes of--speech employed in the sacred writings
(wherein, as it seems to me, the mind is nothing else but roughly exercised, in
order that it may find sweetness when glorified by the grace of Christ);--such men,
I say, when they have dispelled every ambiguity, and arrived at something
certain, ought of all others most easily to make allowance for those who err in the
investigation of so deep a secret. But there are two things most hard to bear
with, in the case of those who are in error: hasty assumption before the truth
is made plain; and, when it has been made--plain, defence of the falsehood
thus hastily assumed. From which two faults, inimical as they are to the finding
out of the truth, and to the handling of the divine and sacred books, should
God, as I pray and hope, defend and protect me with the shield of His good
will,(1) and with the grace of His mercy, I will not be slow to search out the
substance of God, whether through His Scripture or through the creature. For both of
these are set forth for our contemplation to this end, that He may Himself be
sought, and Himself be loved, who inspired the one, and created the other. Nor
shall I be afraid of giving my opinion, in which I shall more desire to be
examined by the upright, than fear to be carped at by the perverse. For charity,
most excellent and unassuming, gratefully accepts the dovelike eye; but for the
dog's tooth nothing remains, save either to shun it by the most cautious
humility, or to blunt it by the most solid truth; and far rather would I be censured
by any one whatsoever, than be praised by either the erring or the flatterer.
For the lover of truth need fear no one's censure. For he that censures, must
needs be either enemy or friend. And if an enemy reviles, he must be borne with:
but a friend, if he errs, must be taught; if he teaches, listened to. But if one
who errs praises you, he confirms your error; if one who flatters, he seduces
you into error. "Let the righteous," therefore, "smite me, it shall be a
kindness; and let him reprove me; but the oil of the sinner shall not anoint my
head."(2)
CHAP. 1.--THERE IS A DOUBLE RULE FOR UNDERSTANDING THE SCRIPTURAL MODES OF
SPEECH CONCERNING THE SON OF GOD. THESE MODES OF SPEECH ARE OF A THREEFOLD KIND.
2. Wherefore, although we hold most firmly, concerning our Lord Jesus
Christ, what may be called the canonical rule, as it is both disseminated through
the Scriptures, and has been demonstrated by learned and Catholic handlers of
the same Scriptures, namely, that the Son of God is both understood to be equal
to the Father according to the form of God in which He is, and less than the
Father according to the form of a servant which He took;(1) in which form He was
found to be not only less than the Father, but also less than the Holy Spirit;
and not only so, but less even than Himself,--not than Himself who was, but than
Himself who is; because, by taking the form of a servant, He did not lose the
form of God, as the testimonies of the Scriptures taught us, to which we have
referred in the former book: yet there are some things in the sacred text so put
as to leave it ambiguous to which rule they are rather to be referred; whether
to that by which we understand the Son as less, in that He has taken upon Him
the creature, or to that by which we understand that the Son is not indeed less
than, but equal to the Father, but yet that He is from Him, God of God, Light
of light. For we call the Son God of God; but the Father, God only; not of God.
Whence it is plain that the Son has another of whom He is, and to whom He is
Son; but that the Father has not a Son of whom He is, but only to whom He is
father. For every son is what he is, of his father, and is son to his father; but
no father is what he is, of his son, but is father to his son.(2)
3. Some things, then, are so put in the Scriptures concerning the Father
and the Son, as to intimate the unity and equality of their substance; as, for
instance, "I and the Father are one;"(3) and, "Who, being in the form of God,
thought it not robbery to be equal with God;"(4) and whatever ether texts there
are of the kind. And some, again, are so put that they show the Son as less on
account of the form of a servant, that is, of His having taken upon Him the
creature of a changeable and human substance; as, for instance, that which says,
"For my Father is greater than I;"(5) and, "The Father judgeth no man, but hath
committed all judgment unto the Son." For a little after he goes on to say, "And
hath given Him authority to execute judgment also, because He is the Son of
man." And further, some are so put, as to show Him at that time neither as less
nor as equal, but only to intimate that He is of the Father; as, for instance,
that which says, "For as the Father hath life in Himself, so hath He given to
the Son to have life in Himself;" and that other: "The Son can do nothing of
Himself, but what He seeth the Father do."(6) For if we shall take this to be
therefore so said, because the Son is less in the form taken from the creature,
it will follow that the Father must have walked on the water, or opened the eyes
with clay and spittle of some other one born blind, and have done the other
things which the Son appearing in the flesh did among men, before the Son did
them;(7) in order that He might be able to do those things, who said that the Son
was not able to do anything of Himself, except what He hath seen the Father do.
Yet who, even though he were mad, would think this? It remains, therefore,
that these texts are so expressed, because the life of the Son is unchangeable as
that of the Father is, and yet He is of the Father; and the working of the
Father and of the Son is indivisible, and yet so to work is given to the Son from
Him of whom He Himself is, that is, from the Father; and the Son so sees the
Father, as that He is the Son in the very seeing Him. For to be of the Father,
that is, to be born of the Father. is to Him nothing else than to see the Father;
and to see Him working, is nothing else than to work with Him: but therefore
not from Himself, because He is not from Himself. And, therefore, those things
which "He sees the Father do, these also doeth the Son likewise," because He is
of the Father. For He neither does other things in like manner, as a painter
paints other pictures, in the same way aS he sees others to have been painted by
another man; nor the same things in a different manner, as the body expresses
the same letters, which the mind has thought; but "whatsoever things," saith
He, "the Father doeth, these same things also doeth the Son likewise."(8) He has
said both these same things," and "likewise;" and hence the working of both the
Father and the Son is indivisible and equal, but it is from the Father to the
Son. Therefore the Son cannot do anything of Himself, except what He seeth the
Father do. From this rule, then, whereby the Scriptures so speak as to mean,
not to set forth one as less than another, but only to show which is of which,
some have drawn this meaning, as if the Son were said to be less. And some among
ourselves who are more unlearned and least instructed in these things,
endeavoring to take these texts according to the form of a servant, and so
mis-interpreting them, are troubled. And to prevent this, the rule in question is to be
observed whereby the Son is not less, but it is simply intimated that He is of the
Father, in which words not His inequality but His birth is declared.
CHAP. 2.--THAT SOME WAYS OF SPEAKING CONCERNING THE SON ARE TO BE UNDERSTOOD
ACCORDING TO EITHER RULE.
4. There are, then, some things in the sacred books, as I began by saying,
so put, that it is doubtful to which they are to be referred: whether to that
rule whereby the Son is less on account of His having taken the creature; or
whether to that whereby it is intimated that although equal, yet He is of the
Father. And in my opinion, if this is in such way doubtful, that which it really
is can neither be explained nor discerned, then such passages may without
danger be understood according to either rule, as that, for instance, "My doctrine
is not mine, but His that sent me."(1) For this may both be taken according to
the form of a servant, as we have already treated it in the former book;(2) or
according to the form of God, in which He is in such way equal to the Father,
that He is yet of the Father. For according to the form of God, as the Son is not
one and His life another, but the life itself is the Son; so the Son is not
one and His doctrine another, but the doctrine itself is the Son. And hence, as
the text, "He hath given life to the Son," is no otherwise to be understood
than, He hath begotten the Son, who is life; so also when it is said, He hath given
doctrine to the Son, it may be rightly understood to mean, He hath begotten
the Son, who is doctrine so that, when it is said, "My doctrine is not mine, but
His who sent me," it is so to be understood as if it were, I am not from
myself, but from Him who sent me.
CHAP. 3.--SOME THINGS CONCERNING THE HOLY SPIRIT ARE TO BE UNDERSTOOD
ACCORDING TO THE ONE RULE ONLY.
5. For even of the Holy Spirit, of whom it is not said, "He emptied
Himself, and took upon Him the form of a servant;" yet the Lord Himself says,
"Howbeit, when He the Spirit of Truth is come, He will guide you into all truth. For
He shall not speak of Himself, but whatsoever He shall hear that shall He speak;
and He will show you things to come. He shall glorify me; for He shall receive
of mine, and shall show it unto you." And except He had immediately gone on to
say after this, "All things that the Father hath are mine; therefore said I,
that He shall take of mine, and shall show it unto you;"(3) it might, perhaps,
have been believed that the Holy Spirit was so born of Christ, as Christ is of
the Father. Since He had said of Himself, "My doctrine is not mine, but His that
sent me;" but of the Holy Spirit," For He shall not speak of Himself, but
whatsoever he shall hear, that shall He speak;" and, "For He shall receive of mine,
and shall show it unto you." But because He has rendered the reason why He
said, "He shall receive of mine" (for He says, "All things that the Father hath
are mine; therefore said I, that He shall take of mine "); it remains that the
Holy Spirit be understood to have of that which is the Father's, as the Son also
hath. And how can this be, unless according to that which we have said above,
"But when the Comforter is come, whom I will send unto you from the Father, even
the Spirit of truth which proceedeth from the Father, He shall testify of
me"?(4) He is said, therefore, not to speak of Himself, in that He proceedeth from
the Father; and as it does not follow that the Son is less because He said,
"The Son can do nothing of Himself, but what He seeth the Father do" (for He has
not said this according to the form of a servant, but according to the form of
God, as we have already shown, and these words do not set Him forth as less
than, but as of the Father), so it is not brought to pass that the Holy Spirit is
less, because it is said of Him, "For He shall not speak of Himself, but
whatsoever He shall hear, that shall He speak;" for the words belong to Him as
proceeding from the Father. But whereas both the Son is of the Father, and the Holy
Spirit proceeds from the Father, why both are not called sons, and both not said
to be begotten, but the former is called the one only-begotten Son, and the
latter, viz. the Holy Spirit, neither son nor begotten, because if begotten, then
certainly a son, we will discuss in another place, if God shall grant, and so
far as He shall grant.(5)
CHAP. 4.--THE GLORIFICATION OF THE SON BY THE FATHER DOES NOT PROVE INEQUALITY.
6. But here also let them wake up if they can, who have thought this, too,
to be a testimony on their side, to show that the Father is greater than the
Son, because the Son hath said, "Father, glorify me." Why, the Holy Spirit also
glorifies Him. Pray, is the Spirit, too, greater than He? Moreover, if on that
account the Holy Spirit glorifies the Son, because He shall receive of that
which is the Son's, and shall therefore receive of that which is the Son's because
all things that the Father has are the Son's also; it is evident that when the
Holy Spirit glorifies the Son, the Father glorifies the Son. Whence it may be
perceived that all things that the Father hath are not only of the Son, but
also of the Holy Spirit, because the Holy Spirit is able to glorify the Son, whom
the Father glorifies. But if he who glorifies is greater than he whom he
glorifies, let them allow that those are equal who mutually glorify each other. But
it is written, also, that the Son glorifies the Father; for He says, "I have
glorified Thee on the earth."(1) Truly let them beware test the Holy Spirit be
thought greater than both, because He glorifies the Son whom the Father glorifies,
while it is not written that He Himself is glorified either by the Father or
by the Son.
CHAP. 5.--THE SON AND HOLY SPIRIT ARE NOT THEREFORE LESS BECAUSE SENT. THE SON
IS SENT ALSO BY HIMSELF. OF THE SENDING OF THE HOLY SPIRIT.
7. But being proved wrong so far, men betake themselves to saying, that he
who sends is greater than he who is sent: therefore the Father is greater than
the Son, because the Son continually speaks of Himself as being sent by the
Father; and the Father is also greater than the Holy Spirit, because Jesus has
said of the Spirit, "Whom the Father will send in my name;"(2) and the Holy
Spirit is less than both, because both the Father sends Him, as we have said, and
the Son, when He says, "But if I depart, I will send Him unto you." I first ask,
then, in this inquiry, whence and whither the Son was sent. "I," He says, "came
forth from the Father, and am come into the world."(3) Therefore, to be sent,
is to come forth forth from the Father, and to come into the world. What, then,
is that which the same evangelist says concerning Him, "He was in the world,
and the world was made by Him, and the world knew Him not;" and then he adds,
"He came unto His own?"(4) Certainly He was sent thither, whither He came; but if
He was sent into the world, because He came forth from the Father, then He
both came into the world and was in the world. He was sent therefore thither,
where He already was. For consider that, too, which is written in the prophet, that
God said, "Do not I fill heaven . and earth?"(5) If this is said of the Son
(for some will have it understood that the Son Himself spoke either by the
prophets or in the prophets), whither was He sent except to the place where He
already was? For He who says, "I fill heaven and earth," was everywhere. But if it is
said of the Father, where could He be without His own word and without His own
wisdom, which "reacheth from one end to another mightily, and sweetly ordereth
all things?"(6) But He cannot be anywhere without His own Spirit. Therefore,
if God is everywhere, His Spirit also is everywhere. Therefore, the Holy Spirit,
too, was sent thither, where He already was. For he, too, who finds no place
to which he might go from the presence of God, and who says, "If I ascend up
into heaven, Thou art there; if I shall go down into hell, behold, Thou art
there;" wishing it to be understood that God is present everywhere, named in the
previous verse His Spirit; for He says," Whither shall I go from Thy Spirit? or
whither shall I flee from Thy presence?"(7)
8. For this reason, then, if both the Son and the Holy Spirit are sent
thither where they were, we must inquire, how that sending, whether of the Son or
of the Holy Spirit, is to be understood; for of the Father alone, we nowhere
read that He is sent. Now, of the Son, the apostle writes thus: "But when the
fullness of the time was come, God sent forth His Son, made of a woman, made under
the law, to redeem them that were under the law."(8) "He sent," he says, "His
Son, made of a woman." And by this term, woman,(9) what Catholic does not know
that he did not wish to signify the privation of virginity; but, according to a
Hebraism, the difference of sex? When, therefore, he says, "God sent His Son,
made of a woman," he sufficiently shows that the Son was "sent" in this very
way, in that He was "made of a woman." Therefore, in that He was born of God, He
was in the world; but in that He was born of Mary, He was sent and came into
the world. Moreover, He could not be sent by the Father without the Holy Spirit,
not only because the Father, when He sent Him, that is, when He made Him of a
woman, is certainly understood not to have so made Him without His own Spirit;
but also because it is most plainly and expressly said in the Gospel in answer
to the Virgin Mary, when she asked of the angel, "How shall this be?" "The Holy
Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall overshadow
thee."(1) And Matthew says, "She was found with child of the Holy Ghost."(2)
Although, too, in the prophet Isaiah, Christ Himself is understood to say of His own
future advent, "And now the Lord God and His Spirit hath sent me."(3)
9. Perhaps some one may wish to drive us to say, that the Son is sent also
by Himself, because the conception and childbirth of Mary is the working of
the Trinity, by whose act of creating all things are created. And how, he will go
on to say, has the Father sent Him, if He sent Himself? To whom I answer
first, by asking him to tell me, if he can, in what manner the Father hath
sanctified Him, if He hath sanctified Himself? For the same Lord says both; "Say ye of
Him," He says, "whom the Father hath sanctified and sent into the world, Thou
blasphemest, because I said, I am the Son of God;"(4) while in another place He
says, "And for their sake I sanctify myself."(6) I ask, also, in what manner the
Father delivered Him, if He delivered Himself? For the Apostle Paul says both:
"Who," he says, "spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all;"(6)
while elsewhere he says of the Saviour Himself, "Who loved me, and delivered
Himself for me."(7) He will reply, I suppose, if he has a right sense in these
things, Because the will of the Father and the Son is one, and their working
indivisible. In like manner, then, let him understand the incarnation and nativity
of the Virgin, wherein the Son is understood as sent, to have been wrought by
one and the same operation of the Father and of the Son indivisibly; the Holy
Spirit certainly not being thence excluded, of whom it is expressly said, "She
was found with child by the Holy Ghost." For perhaps our meaning will be more
plainly unfolded, if we ask in what manner God sent His Son. He commanded that He
should come, and He, complying with the commandment, came. Did He then request,
or did He only suggest? But whichever of these it was, certainly it was done
by a word, and the Word of God is the Son of God Himself. Wherefore, since the
Father sent Him by a word, His being sent was the work of both the Father and
His Word; therefore the same Son was sent by the Father and the Son, because the
Son Himself is the Word of the Father. For who would embrace so impious an
opinion as to think the Father to have uttered a word in time, in order that the
eternal Son might thereby be sent and might appear in the flesh in the fullness
of time? But assuredly it was in that Word of God itself which was in the
beginning with God and was God, namely, in the wisdom itself of God, apart from
time, at what time that wisdom must needs appear in the flesh. Therefore, since
without any commencement of time, the Word was in the beginning, and the Word was
with God, and the Word was God, it was in the Word itself without any time, at
what time the Word was to be made flesh and dwell among us.(8) And when this
fullness of time had come, "God sent His Son, made of a woman,"(9) that is, made
in time, that the Incarnate Word might appear to men; while it was in that
Word Himself, apart from time, at what time this was to be done; for the order of
times is in the eternal wisdom of God without time. Since, then, that the Son
should appear in the flesh was wrought by both the Father and the Son, it is
fitly said that He who appeared in that flesh was sent, and that He who did not
appear in it, sent Him; because those things which are transacted outwardly
before the bodily eyes have their existence from the inward structure (apparatu) of
the spiritual nature, and on that account are filly said to be sent. Further,
that form of man which He took is the person of the Son, not also of the Father;
on which account the invisible Father, together with the Son, who with the
Father is invisible, is said to have sent the same Son by making Him visible. But
if He became visible in such way as to cease to be invisible with the Father,
that is, if the substance of the invisible Word were turned by a change and
transition into a visible creature, then the Son would be so understood to be sent
by the Father, that He would be found to be only sent; not also, with the
Father, sending. But since He so took the form of a servant, as that the
unchangeable form of God remained, it is clear that that which became apparent in the Son
was done by the Father and the Son not being apparent; that is, that by the
invisible Father, with the invisible Son, the same Son Himself was sent so as to
be visible. Why, therefore, does He say, "Neither came I of myself?" This, we
may now say, is said according to the form of a servant, in the same way as it is
said, "I judge no man."(10)
10. If, therefore, He is said to be sent, in so far as He appeared
outwardly in the bodily creature, who inwardly in His spiritual nature is always
hidden from the eyes of mortals, it is now easy to understand also of the Holy
Spirit why He too is said to be sent. For in due time a certain outward appearance
of the creature was wrought, wherein the Holy Spirit might be visibly shown;
whether when He descended upon the Lord Himself in a bodily shape as a dove,(1) or
when, ten days having past since His ascension, on the day of Pentecost a
sound came suddenly from heaven as of a rushing mighty wind, and cloven tongues
like as of fire were seen upon them, and it sat upon each of them.(2) This
operation, visibly exhibited, and presented to mortal eyes, is called the sending of
the Holy Spirit; not that His very substance appeared, in which He himself also
is invisible and unchangeable, like the Father and the Son, but that the hearts
of men, touched by things seen outwardly, might be turned from the
manifestation in time of Him as coming to His hidden eternity as ever present.
CHAP. 6.--THE CREATURE IS NOT SO TAKEN BY THE HOLY SPIRIT AS FLESH IS BY THE
WORD.
11. It is, then, for this reason nowhere written, that the Father is
greater than the Holy Spirit, or that the Holy Spirit is less than God the Father,
because the creature in which the Holy Spirit was to appear was not taken in the
same way as the Son of man was taken, as the form in which the person of the
Word of God Himself should be set forth not that He might possess the word of
God, as other holy and wise men have possessed it, but "above His fellows;" a not
certainly that He possessed the word more than they, so as to be of more
surpassing wisdom than the rest were, but that He was the very Word Himself. For the
word in the flesh is one thing, and the Word made flesh is another; i.e. the
word in man is one thing, the Word that is man is another. For flesh is put for
man, where it is said, "The Word was made flesh;"(4) and again, "And all flesh
shall see the salvation of God.'' For it does not mean flesh without soul and
without mind; but "all flesh," is the same as if it were said, every man. The
creature, then, in which the Holy Spirit should appear, was not so taken, as
that flesh and human form were taken, of the Virgin Mary. For the Spirit did not
beatify the dove, or the wind, or the fire, and join them for ever to Himself
and to His person in unity and "fashion."(6) Nor, again, is the nature of the
Holy Spirit mutable and changeable; so that these things were not made of the
creature, but He himself was turned and changed first into one and then into
another, as water is changed into ice. But these things appeared at the seasons at
which they ought to have appeared, the creature serving the Creator, and being
changed and converted at the command of Him who remains immutably in Himself, in
order to signify and manifest Him in such way as it was fit He should be
signified and manifested to mortal men. Accordingly, although that dove is called the
Spirit;(7) and in speaking of that fire, "There appeared unto them," he says,
"cloven tongues, like as of fire, and it sat upon each of them; and they began
to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit gave them utterance;(8) in order to
show that the Spirit was manifested by that fire, as by the dove; yet we cannot
call the Holy Spirit both God and a dove, or both God and fire, in the same
way as we call the Son both God and man; nor as we call the Son the Lamb of God;
which not only John the Baptist says, "Behold the Lamb of God,"(9) but also
John the Evangelist sees the Lamb slain in the Apocalypse.(10) For that prophetic
vision was not shown to bodily eyes through bodily forms, but in the spirit
through spiritual images of bodily things. But whosoever saw that dove and that
fire, saw them with their eyes. Although it may perhaps be disputed concerning
the fire, whether it was seen by the eyes or in the spirit, on account of the
form of the sentence. For the text does not say, They saw cloven tongues like
fire, but, "There appeared to them." But we are not wont to say with the same
meaning, It appeared to me; as we say, I saw. And in those spiritual visions of
corporeal images the usual expressions are, both, It appeared to me; and, I saw:
but in those things which are shown to the eyes through express corporeal forms,
the common expression is not, It appeared to me; but, I saw. There may,
therefore, be a question raised respecting that fire, how it was seen; whether within
in the spirit as it were outwardly, or really outwardly before the eyes of the
flesh. But of that dove, which is said to have descended in a bodily form, no
one ever doubted that it was seen by the eyes. Nor, again, as we call the Son a
Rock (for it is written, "And that Rock was Christ"(11)), can we so call the
Spirits dove or fire. For that rock was a thing already created, and after the
mode of its action was called by the name of Christ, whom it signified; like the
stone placed under Jacob's head, and also anointed, which he took in order to
signify the Lord;(1) or as Isaac was Christ, when he carried the wood for the
sacrifice of himself.(2) A particular significative action was added to those
already existing things; they did not, as that dove and fire, suddenly come into
being in order simply so to signify. The dove and the fire, indeed, seem to me
more like that flame which appeared to Moses in the bush,(3) or that pillar
which the people followed in the wilderness,(4) or the thunders and lightnings
which came when the Law was given in the mount.(5) For the corporeal form of these
things came into being for the very purpose, that it might signify something,
and then pass away.(6)
CHAP. 7.--A DOUBT RAISED ABOUT DIVINE APPEARANCES.
12. The Holy Spirit, then, is also said to be sent, on account of these
corporeal forms which came into existence in time, in order to signify and
manifest Him, as He must needs be manifested, to human senses; yet He is not said to
be less than the Father, as the Son, because He was in the form of a servant,
is said to be; because that form of a servant inhered in the unity of the person
of the Son, but those corporeal forms appeared for a time, in order to show
what was necessary to be shown, and then ceased to be. Why, then, is not the
Father also said to be sent, through those corporeal forms, the fire of the bush,
and the pillar of cloud or of fire, and the lightnings in the mount, and
whatever other things of the kind appeared at that time, when (as we have learned from
Scripture testimony) He spake face to face with the fathers, if He Himself was
manifested by those modes and forms of the creature, as exhibited ant
presented corporeally to human sight? But if the Son was manifested by them, why is He
said to be sent so long after, when He was made of a woman, as the apostle
says, "But when the fullness of time was come, God sent forth His Son, made of a
woman,"(7) seeing that He was sent also before, when He appeared to the fathers
by those changeable forms of the creature? Or if He cannot rightly be said to be
sent, unless when the Word was made flesh, why is the Holy Spirit said to be
sent, of whom no such incarnation was ever wrought? But if by those visible
things, which are put before us in the Law and in the prophets, neither the Father
nor the Son but the Holy Spirit was manifested, why also is He said to be sent
now, when He was sent also before after these modes?
13. In the perplexity of this inquiry, the Lord helping us, we must ask,
first, whether the Father, or the Son, or the Holy Spirit; or whether, sometimes
the Father, sometimes the Son, sometimes the Holy Spirit; or whether it was
without any distinction of persons, in such way as the one and only God is Spoken
of, that is, that the Trinity itself appeared to the Fathers by those forms of
the creature. Next, whichever of these alternatives shall have been found or
thought true, whether for this purpose only the creature was fashioned, wherein
God, as He judged it suitable at that time, should be shown to human sight; or
whether angels, who already existed, were so sent, as to speak in the person of
God, taking a corporeal form from the corporeal creature, for the purpose of
their ministry, as each had need; or else, according to the power the Creator
has given them, changing and converting their own body itself, to which they are
not subject, but govern it as subject to themselves, into whatever appearances
they would that were suited and apt to their several actions. Lastly, we shall
discern that which it was our purpose to ask, viz. whether the Son and the Holy
Spirit were also sent before; and, if they were so sent, what difference there
is between that sending, and the one which we read of in the Gospel; or
whether in truth neither of them were sent, except when either the Son was made of
the Virgin Mary, or the Holy Spirit appeared in a visible form, whether in the
dove or in tongues of fire.
CHAP. 8.--THE ENTIRE TRINITY INVISIBLE.
14. Let us therefore say nothing of those who, with an over carnal mind,
have thought the nature of the Word of God, and the Wisdom, which, "remaining in
herself, maketh all things new,"(8) whom we call the only Son of God, not only
to be changeable, but also to be visible. For these, with more audacity than
religion, bring a very dull heart to the inquiry into divine things. For whereas
the soul is a spiritual substance, and whereas itself also was made, vet could
not be made by any other than by Him by whom all things were made, and without
whom nothing is made,(1) it, although changeable, is yet not visible; and this
they have believed to be the case with the Word Himself and with the Wisdom of
God itself, by which the soul was made; whereas this Wisdom is not only
invisible, as the soul also is, but likewise unchangeable, which the soul is not. It
is in truth the same unchangeableness in it, which is referred to when it was
said, "Remaining in herself she maketh all things new." Yet these people,
endeavoring, as it were, to prop up their error in its fall by testimonies of the
divine Scriptures, adduce the words of the Apostle Paul; and take that, which is
said of the one only God, in whom the Trinity itself is understood, to be said
only of the Father, and neither of the Son nor of the Holy Spirit: "Now unto the
King eternal, immortal, invisible, the only wise God, be honor and glory for
ever and ever;"(2) and that other passage, "The blessed and only Potentate, the
King of kings, and Lord of lords; who only hath immortality, dwelling in the
light which no man can approach unto; whom no man hath seen, nor can see."(3) How
these passages are to be understood, I think we have already discoursed
sufficiently.(4)
CHAP. 9.--AGAINST THOSE WHO BELIEVED THE FATHER ONLY TO BE IMMORTAL AND
INVISIBLE. THE TRUTH TO BE SOUGHT BY PEACEFUL STUDY.
15. But they who will have these texts understood only of the Father, and
not of the Son or the Holy Spirit, declare the Son to be visible, not by having
taken flesh of the Virgin, but aforetime also in Himself. For He Himself, they
say, appeared to the eyes of the Fathers. And if you say to them, In whatever
manner, then, the Son is visible in Himself, in that manner also He is mortal
in Himself; so that it plainly follows that you would have this saying also
understood only of the Father, viz., "Who only hath immortality;" for if the Son is
mortal from having taken upon Him our flesh, then allow that it is on account
of this flesh that He is also visible: they reply, that it is not on account of
this flesh that they say that the Son is mortal; but that, just as He was also
before visible, so He was also before mortal. For if they say the Son is
mortal from having taken our flesh, then it is not the Father alone without the Son
who hath immortality; because His Word also has immortality, by which all
things were made. For He did not therefore lose His immortality, because He took
mortal flesh; seeing that it could not happen even to the human soul, that it
should die with the body, when the Lord Himself says, "Fear not them which kill the
body, but are not able to kill the soul."(5) Or, forsooth, also the Holy
Spirit took flesh: concerning whom certainly they will, without doubt, be troubled
to say--if the Son is mortal on account of taking our flesh--in what manner they
understand that the Father only has immortality without the Son and the Holy
Spirit, since, indeed, the Holy Spirit did not take our flesh; and if He has not
immortality, then the Son is not mortal on account of taking our flesh; but if
the Holy Spirit has immortality, then it is not said only of the Father, "Who
only hath immortality." And therefore they think they are able to prove that
the Son in Himself was mortal also before the incarnation, because changeableness
itself is not unfitly called mortality, according to which the soul also is
said to die; not because it is changed and turned into body, or into some
substance other than itself, but because, whatever in its own selfsame substance is
now after another mode than it once was, is discovered to be mortal, in so far as
it has ceased to be what it was. Because then, say they, before the Son of God
was born of the Virgin Mary, He Himself appeared to our fathers, not in one
and the same form only, but in many forms; first in one form, then in another; He
is both visible in Himself, because His substance was visible to mortal eyes,
when He had not yet taken our flesh, and mortal, inasmuch as He is changeable.
And so also the Holy Spirit, who appeared at one time as a dove, and another
time as fire. Whence, they say, the following texts do not belong to the Trinity,
but singularly and properly to the Father only: "Now unto the King eternal,
immortal, and invisible, the only wise God;" and, "Who only hath immortality,
dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto; whom no man hath seen, nor
can see."
16. Passing by, then, these reasoners, who are unable to know the
substance even of the soul, which is invisible, and therefore are very far indeed from
knowing that the substance of the one and only God, that is, the Father and the
Son and the Holy Spirit, remains ever not only invisible, but also
unchangeable, and that hence it possesses true and real immortality; let us, who deny that
God, whether the Father, or the Son, or the Holy Spirit, ever appeared to
bodily eyes, unless through the corporeal creature made subject to His own power;
let us, I say--ready to be corrected, if we are reproved in a fraternal and
upright spirit, ready to be so, even if carped at by an enemy, so that he speak the
truth--in catholic peace and with peaceful study inquire, whether God
indiscriminately appeared to our fathers before Christ came in the flesh, or whether it
was any one person of the Trinity, or whether severally, as it were by turns.
CHAP. 10--WHETHER GOD THE TRINITY INDISCRIMINATELY APPEARED TO THE FATHERS, OR
ANY ONE PERSON OF THE TRINITY. THE APPEARING OF GOD TO ADAM. OF THE SAME
APPEARANCE. THE VISION TO ABRAHAM.
17. And first, in that which is written in Genesis, viz., that God spake
with man whom He had formed out of the dust; if we set apart the figurative
meaning, and treat it so as to place faith in the narrative even in the letter, it
should appear that God then spake with man in the appearance of a man. This is
not indeed expressly laid down in the book, but the general tenor of its
reading sounds in this sense, especially in that which is written, that Adam heard
the voice of the Lord God, walking in the garden in the cool of the evening, and
hid himself among the trees of the garden; and when God said, "Adam, where art
thou?"(1) replied, "I heard Thy voice, and I was afraid because I was naked,
and I hid myself from Thy face." For I do not see how such a walking and
conversation of God can be understood literally, except He appeared as a man. For it
can neither be said that a voice only of God was framed, when God is said to have
walked, or that He who was walking in a place was not visible; while Adam,
too, says that he hid himself from the face of God. Who then was He? Whether the
Father, or the Son, or the Holy Spirit? Whether altogether indiscriminately did
God the Trinity Himself speak to man in the form of man? The context, indeed,
itself of the Scripture nowhere, it should seem, indicates a change from person
to person; but He seems still to speak to the first man, who said, "Let there
be light," and, "Let there be a firmament," and so on through each of those
days; whom we usually take to be God the Father, making by a word whatever He
willed to make. For He made all things by His word, which Word we know, by the right
rule of faith, to be His only Son. If, therefore, God the Father spake to the
first man, and Himself was walking in the garden in the cool of the evening,
and if it was from His face that the sinner hid himself amongst the trees of the
garden, why are we not to go on to understand that it was He also who appeared
to Abraham and to Moses, and to whom He would, and how He would, through the
changeable and visible creature, subjected to Himself, while He Himself remains
in Himself and in His own substance, in which He is unchangeable and invisible?
But, possibly, it might be that the Scripture passed over in a hidden way from
person to person, and while it had related that the Father said "Let there be
light," and the rest which it mentioned Him to have done by the Word, went on
to indicate the Son as speaking to the first man; not unfolding this openly, but
intimating it to be understood by those who could understand it.
18. Let him, then, who has the strength whereby he can penetrate this
secret with his mind's eye, so that to him it appears clearly, either that the
Father also is able, or that only the Son and Holy Spirit are able, to appear to
human eyes through a visible creature; let him, I say, proceed to examine these
things if he can, or even to express and handle them in words; but the thing
itself, so far as concerns this testimony of Scripture, where God spake with man,
is, in my judgment, not discoverable, because it does not evidently appear even
whether Adam usually saw God with the eyes of his body; especially as it is a
great question what manner of eyes it was that were opened when they tasted the
forbidden fruit;(2) for before they had tasted, these eyes were closed. Yet I
would not rashly assert, even if that scripture implies Paradise to have been a
material place, that God could not have walked there in any way except in some
bodily form. For it might be said, that only words were framed for the man to
hear, without seeing any form. Neither, because it is written, "Adam hid
himself from the face of God," does it follow forthwith that he usually saw His face.
For what if he himself indeed could not see, but feared to be himself seen by
Him whose voice he had heard, and had felt His presence as he walked? For Cain,
too, said to God, "From Thy face I will hide myself;"(3) yet we are not
therefore compelled to admit that he was wont to behold the face of God with his
bodily eyes in any visible form, although he had heard the voice of God questioning
and speaking with him of his sin. But what manner of speech it was that God
then uttered to the outward ears of men, especially in speaking to the first man,
it is both difficult to discover, and we have not undertaken to say in this
discourse. But if words alone and sounds were wrought, by which to bring about
some sensible presence of God to those first men, I do not know why I should not
there understand the person of God the Father, seeing that His person is
manifested also in that voice, when Jesus appeared in glory on the mount before the
three disciples;(1) and in that when the dove descended upon Him at His
baptism;(2) and in that where He cried to the Father concerning His own glorification
and it was answered Him, "I have both glorified, and will glorify again."(3) Not
that the voice could be wrought without the work of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit (since the Trinity works indivisibly), but that such a voice was wrought
as to manifest the person of the Father only; just as the Trinity wrought that
human form from the Virgin Mary, yet it is the person of the Son alone; for the
invisible Trinity wrought the visible person of the Son alone. Neither does
anything forbid us, not only to understand those words spoken to Adam as spoken by
the Trinity, but also to take them as manifesting the person of that Trinity.
For we are compelled to understand of the Father only, that which is said,
"This is my beloved Son."(4) For Jesus can neither be believed nor understood to be
the Son of the Holy Spirit, or even His own Son. And where the voice uttered,
"I have both glorified, and will glorify again," we confess it was only the
person of the Father; since it is the answer to that word of the Lord, in which He
had said, "Father, glorify thy Son," which He could not say except to God the
Father only, and not also to the Holy Spirit, whose Son He was not. But here,
where it is written, "And the Lord God said to Adam," no reason can be given why
the Trinity itself should not be understood.
19. Likewise, also, in that which is written, "Now the Lord had said unto
Abraham, Get thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and thy father's
house," it is not clear whether a voice alone came to the ears of Abraham, or
whether anything also appeared to his eyes. But a little while after, it is
somewhat more clearly said, "And the Lord appeared unto Abraham, and said, Unto thy
seed will I give this land."(5) But neither there is it expressly said in what
form God appeared to him, or whether the Father, or the Son, or the Holy Spirit
appeared to him. Unless, perhaps, they think that it was the Son who appeared
to Abraham, because it is not written, God appeared to him, but "the Lord
appeared to him." For the Son seems to be called the Lord as though the name was
appropriated to Him; as e.g. the apostle says, "For though there be that are
called gods, whether in heaven or in earth, (as there be gods many and lords many,)
but to us there is but one God, the Father, of whom are all things, and we in
Him; and one Lord Jesus Christ, by whom are all things, and we by Him."(6) But
since it is found that God the Father also is called Lord in many places,--for
instance, "The Lord hath said unto me, Thou art my Son; this day have I
begotten Thee;"(7) and again, "The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit Thou at my right hand;
"a since also the Holy Spirit is found to be called Lord, as where the apostle
says, "Now the Lord is that Spirit;" and then, lest any one should think the
Son to be signified, and to be called the Spirit on account of His incorporeal
substance, has gone on to say, "And where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is
liberty;(9) and no one ever doubted the Spirit of the Lord to be the Holy Spirit:
therefore, neither here does it appear plainly whether it was any person of the
Trinity that appeared to Abraham, or God Himself the Trinity, of which one God
it is said, "Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God, and Him only shall thou
serve."(10) But under the oak at Mature he saw three men, whom he invited, and
hospitably received, and ministered to them as they feasted. Yet Scripture at the
beginning of that narrative does not say, three men appeared to him, but, "The Lord
appeared to him." And then, setting forth in due order after what manner the
Lord appeared to him, it has added the account of the three men, whom Abraham
invites to his hospitality in the plural number, and afterwards speaks to them in
the singular number as one; and as one He promises him a son by Sara, viz. the
one whom the Scripture calls Lord, as in the beginning of the same narrative,
"The Lord," it says, "appeared to Abraham." He invites them then, and washes
their feet, and leads them forth at their departure, as though they were men; but
he speaks as with the Lord God, whether when a son is promised to him, or when
the destruction is shown to him that was impending over Sodom.(11)
CHAP. 11.--OF THE SAME APPEARANCE.
20. That place of Scripture demands neither a slight nor a passing
consideration. For if one man had appeared, what else would those at once cry out, who
say that the Son was visible also in His own substance before He was born of
the Virgin, but that it was Himself? since it is said, they say, of the Father,
"To the only invisible God."(1) And yet, I could still go on to demand, in what
manner "He was found in fashion as a man," before He had taken our flesh,
seeing that his feet were washed, and that He fed upon earthly food? How could that
be, when He was still "in the form of God, and thought it not robbery to be
equal with God?"(2) For, pray, had He already "emptied Himself, taking upon Him
the form of a servant, and made in the likeness of men, and found in fashion as
a man?" when we know when it was that He did this through His birth of the
Virgin. How, then, before He had done this, did He appear as one man to Abraham?
or, was not that form a reality? I could put these questions, if it had been one
man that appeared to Abraham, and if that one were believed to be the Son of
God. But since three men appeared, and no one of them is said to be greater than
the rest either in form, or age, or power, why should we not here understand,
as visibly intimated by the visible creature, the equality of the Trinity, and
one and the same substance in three persons?(3)
21. For, lest any one should think that one among the three is in this way
intimated to have been the greater, and that this one is to be understood to
have been the Lord, the Son of God, while the other two were His angels;
because, whereas three appeared, Abraham there speaks to one as the Lord: Holy
Scripture has not forgotten to anticipate, by a contradiction, such future cogitations
and opinions, when a little while after it says that two angels came to Lot,
among whom that just man also, who deserved to be freed from the burning of
Sodom, speaks to one as to the Lord. For so Scripture goes on to say, "And the Lord
went His way, as soon as He left communing with Abraham; and Abraham returned
to his place."(4)
CHAP. 12.--THE APPEARANCE TO LOT IS EXAMINED.
"But there came two angels to Sodom at even." Here, what I have begun to
set forth must be considered more attentively. Certainly Abraham was speaking
with three, and called that one, in the singular number, the Lord. Perhaps, some
one may say, he recognized one of the three to be the Lord, but the other two
His angels. What, then, does that mean which Scripture goes on to say, "And the
Lord went His way, as soon as He had left communing with Abraham; and Abraham
returned to his place: and there came two angels to Sodom at even?" Are we to
suppose that the one who, among the three, was recognized as the Lord, had
departed, and had sent the two angels that were with Him to destroy Sodom? Let us
see, then, what follows. "There came," it is said, "two angels to Sodom at even;
and Lot sat in the gate of Sodom: and Lot seeing them, rose up to meet them; and
he bowed himself with his face toward the ground; and he said, Behold now, my
lords, turn in, I pray you, into your servant's house." Here it is clear, both
that there were two angels, and that in the plural number they were invited to
partake of hospitality, and that they were honorably designated lords, when
they perchance were thought to be men.
22. Yet, again, it is objected that except they were known to be angels of
God, Lot would not have bowed himself with his face to the ground. Why, then,
is both hospitality and food offered to them, as though they wanted such human
succor? But whatever may here lie hid, let us now pursue that which we have
undertaken. Two appear; both are called angels; they are invited plurally; he
speaks as with two plurally, until the departure from Sodom. And then Scripture
goes on to say, "And it came to pass, when they had brought them forth abroad,
that they said, Escape for thy life; look not behind thee, neither stay thou in
all the plain; escape to the mountain, and there thou shalt be saved,(5) lest
thou be consumed. And Lot said unto them, Oh! not so, my lord: behold now, thy
servant hath found grace in thy sight,"(6) etc. What is meant by his saying to
them, "Oh! not so, my lord," if He who was the Lord had already departed, and had
sent the angels? Why is it said, "Oh! not so, nay lord," and not, "Oh! not so,
my lords?" Or if he wished to speak to one of them, why does Scripture say,
"But Lot said to them. Oh! not so, my lord: behold now, thy servant hath found
grace in thy sight," etc.? Are we here, too, to understand two persons in the
plural number, but when the two are addressed as one, then the one Lord God of one
substance? But which two persons do we here understand?--of the Father and of
the Son, or of the Father and of the Holy Spirit, or of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit? The last, perhaps, is the more suitable; for they said of themselves
that they were sent, which is that which we say of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit. For we find nowhere in the Scriptures that the Father was sent.(1)
CHAP. 13.--THE APPEARANCE IN THE BUSH.
23. But when Moses was sent to lead the children of Israel out of Egypt,
it is written that the Lord appeared to him thus: "Now Moses kept the flock of
Jethro his father-in-law, the priest of Midian: and he led the flock to the back
side of the desert, and came to the mountain of God, even to Horeb. And the
Angel of the Lord appeared unto him in a flame of fire, out of the midst of a
bush; and he looked, and, behold, the bush burned with fire, and the bush was not
consumed. And Moses said, I will now turn aside, and see this great sight, why
the bush is not burnt. And when the Lord saw that he turned aside to see, God
called unto him out of the midst of the bush, and said, I am the God of thy
father, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob."(2) He is here
also first called the Angel of the Lord, and then God. Was an angel, then, the
God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob? Therefore He may be
rightly understood to be the Saviour Himself, of whom the apostle says, "Whose
are the fathers, and of whom as concerning the flesh Christ came, who is over
all, God blessed for ever."(3) He, therefore, "who is over all, God blessed for
ever," is not unreasonably here understood also to be Himself the God of
Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob. But why is He previously called the
Angel of the Lord, when He appeared in a flame of fire out of the bush? Was it
because it was one of many angels, who by an economy [or arrangement] bare the
person of his Lord? or was something of the creature assumed by Him in order
to bring about a visible appearance for the business in hand, and that words
might thence be audibly uttered, whereby the presence of the Lord might be shown,
in such way as was fitting, to the corporeal senses of man, by means of the
creature made subject? For if he was one of the angels, who could easily affirm
whether it was the person of the Son which was imposed upon him to announce, or
that of the Holy Spirit, or that of God the Father, or altogether of the Trinity
itself, who is the one and only God, in order that he might say, "I am the God
of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob?" For we cannot say
that the Son of God is the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of
Jacob, and that the Father is not; nor will any one dare to deny that either the
Holy Spirit, or the Trinity itself, whom we believe and understand to be the
one God, is the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob. For
he who is not God, is not the God of those fathers. Furthermore, if not only the
Father is God, as all, even heretics, admit; but also the Son, which, whether
they will or not, they are compelled to acknowledge, since the apostle says,
"Who is over all, God blessed for ever;" and the Holy Spirit, since the same
apostle says, "Therefore glorify God in your body;" when he had said above, "Know
ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost, which is in you, which ye
have of God?"(4) and these three are one God, as catholic soundness believes:
it is not sufficiently apparent which person of the Trinity that angel bare, if
he was one of the rest of the angels, and whether any person, and not rather
that of the Trinity itself. But if the creature was assumed for the purpose of
the business in hand, whereby both to appear to human eyes, and to sound in
human ears, and to be called the Angel of the Lord, and the Lord, and God; then
cannot God here be understood to be the Father, but either the Son or the Holy
Spirit. Although I cannot call to mind that the Holy Spirit is anywhere else
called an angel, which yet may be understood from His work; for it is said of Him,
"And He will show you s things to come;"(6) and "angel" in Greek is certainly
equivalent to "messenger"(7) in Latin: but we read most evidently of the Lord
Jesus Christ in the prophet, that He is called "the Angel of Great Counsel,"(1)
while both the Holy Spirit and the Son of God is God and Lord of the angels.
CHAP. 14.--OF THE APPEARANCE IN THE PILLAR OF CLOUD AND OF FIRE.
24. Also in the going forth of the children of Israel from Egypt it is
written, "And the Lord went before them, by day in a pillar of cloud to lead them
the way, and by night in a pillar of fire. He took not away the pillar of the
cloud by day, nor the pillar of fire by night, from before the people."(2) Who
here, too, would doubt that God appeared to the eyes of mortal men by the
corporeal creature made subject to Him, and not by His own substance? But it is not
similarly apparent whether the Father, or the Son, or the Holy Spirit, or the
Trinity itself, the one God. Nor is this distinguished there either, in my
judgment, where it is written, "The glory of the Lord appeared in the cloud, and the
Lord spake unto Moses, saying, I have heard the murmurings of the children of
Israel,"(3) etc.
CHAP. 15.--OF THE APPEARANCE ON SINAI. WHETHER THE TRINITY SPAKE IN THAT
APPEARANCE OR SOME ONE PERSON SPECIALLY.
25. But now of the clouds, and voices, and lightnings, and the trumpet,
and the smoke on Mount Sinai, when it was said, "And Mount Sinai was altogether
on a smoke, because the Lord descended upon it in fire, and the smoke thereof
ascended as the smoke of a furnace; and all the people that was in the camp
trembled; and when the voice of the trumpet sounded long and waxed louder and
louder, Moses spake, and God answered him by a voice."(4) And a little after, when
the Law had been given in the ten commandments, it follows in the text, "And all
the people saw the thunderings, and the lightnings, and the noise of the
trumpet, and the mountain smoking." And a little after, "And [when the people saw
it,] they removed and stood afar off, and Moses drew near unto the thick
darkness(5) where God was, and the Lord said unto Moses,"(6) etc. What shall I say about
this, save that no one can be so insane as to believe the smoke, and the fire,
and the cloud, and the darkness, and whatever there was of the kind, to be the
substance of the word and wisdom of God which is Christ, or of the Holy
Spirit? For not even the Arians ever dared to say that they were the substance of God
the Father. All these things, then, were wrought through the creature serving
the Creator, and were presented in a suitable economy (dispensatio) to human
senses; unless, perhaps, because it is said,"And Moses drew near to the cloud
where God was," carnal thoughts must needs suppose that the cloud was indeed seen
by the people, but that within the cloud Moses with the eyes of the flesh saw
the Son of God, whom doting heretics will have to be seen in His own substance.
Forsooth, Moses may have seen Him with the eyes of the flesh, if not only the
wisdom of God which is Christ, but even that of any man you please and howsoever
wise, can be seen with the eyes of the flesh; or if, because it is written of
the elders of Israel, that "they saw the place where the God of Israel had
stood," and that "there was under His feet as it were a paved work of a sapphire
stone, and as it were the body of heaven in his clearness,"(7) therefore we are
to believe that the word and wisdom of God in His own substance stood within the
space of an earthly place, who indeed "reacheth firmly from end to end, and
sweetly ordereth all things;"(8) and that the Word of God, by whom all things
were made,(9) is in such wise changeable, as now to contract, now to expand
Himself; (may the Lord cleanse the hearts of His faithful ones from such thoughts !)
But indeed all these visible and sensible things are, as we have often said,
exhibited through the creature made subject in order to signify the invisible and
intelligible God, not only the Father, but also the Son and the Holy Spirit,"
of whom are all things, and through whom are all things, and in whom are all
things;"(10) although "the invisible things of God, from the creation of the
world, are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His
eternal power and Godhead."(11)
26. But as far as concerns our present undertaking, neither on Mount Sinai
do I see how it appears, by all those things which were fearfully displayed to
the senses of mortal men, whether God the Trinity spake, or the Father, or the
Son, or the Holy Spirit severally. But if it is allowable, without rash
assertion, to venture upon a modest and hesitating conjecture from this passage, if
it is possible to understand it of one person of the Trinity, why do we not
rather understand the Holy Spirit to be spoken of, since the Law itself also, which
was given there, is said to have been written upon tables of stone with the
finger of God,(1) by which name we know the Holy Spirit to be signified in the
Gospel.(2) And fifty days are numbered from the slaying of the lamb and the
celebration of the Passover until the day in which these things began to be done in
Mount Sinai; just as after the passion of our Lord fifty days are numbered from
His resurrection, and then came the Holy Spirit which the Son of God had
promised. And in that very coming of His, which we read of in the Acts of the
Apostles, there appeared cloven tongues like as of fire, and it sat upon each of
them:(3) which agrees with Exodus, where it is written, "And Mount Sinai was
altogether on a smoke, because the Lord descended upon it in fire;" and a little
after, "And the sight of the glory of the Lord," he says, "was like devouring fire
on the top of the mount in the eyes of the children of Israel."(4) Or if these
things were therefore wrought because neither the Father nor the Son could be
there presented in that mode without the Holy Spirit, by whom the Law itself
must needs be written; then we know doubtless that God appeared there, not by His
own substance, which remains invisible and unchangeable, but by the appearance
above mentioned of the creature; but that some special person of the Trinity
appeared, distinguished by a proper mark, as far as my capacity of understanding
reaches, we do not see.
CHAP. 16.--IN WHAT MANNER MOSES SAW GOD.
26. There is yet another difficulty which troubles most people, viz. that
it is written, "And the Lord spake unto Moses face to face, as a man speaketh
unto his friend;" whereas a little after, the same Moses says, "Now therefore, I
pray Thee, if I have found grace in Thy sight, show me now Thyself plainly,
that I may see Thee, that I may find grace in Thy sight, and that I may consider
that this nation is Thy people;" and a little after Moses again said to the
Lord, "Show me Thy glory." What means this then, that in everything which was
done, as above said. God was thought to have appeared by His own substance; whence
the Son of God has been believed by these miserable people to be visible not by
the creature, but by Himself; and that Moses, entering into the cloud,
appeared to have had this very object in entering, that a cloudy darkness indeed might
be shown to the eyes of the people, but that Moses within might hear the words
of God, as though he beheld His face; and, as it is said, "And the Lord spake
unto Moses face to face, as a man speaketh unto his friend;" and yet, behold,
the same Moses says, "If I have found grace in Thy sight, show me Thyself
plainly?" Assuredly he knew that he saw corporeally, and he sought the true sight of
God spiritually. And that mode of speech accordingly which was wrought in
words, was so modified, as if it were of a friend speaking to a friend. Yet who sees
God the Father with the eyes of the body? And that Word, which was in the
beginning, the Word which was with God, the Word which was God, by which all things
were made,(5)--who sees Him with the eyes of the body? And the spirit of
wisdom, again, who sees with the eyes of the body? Yet what is, "Show me now Thyself
plainly, that I, may see Thee," unless, Show me Thy substance? But if Moses
had not said this, we must indeed have borne with those foolish people as we
could, who think that the substance of God was made visible to his eyes through
those things which, as above mentioned, were said or done. But when it is here
demonstrated most evidently that this was not granted to him, even though he
desired it; who will dare to say, that by the like forms which had appeared visibly
to him also, not the creature serving God, but that itself which is God,
appeared to the eyes of a mortal man?
28. Add, too, that which the Lord afterward said to Moses, "Thou canst not
see my face: for there shall no man see my face, and live. And the Lord said,
Behold, there is a place by me, and thou shall stand upon a rock: and it shall
come to pass, while my glory passeth by, that I will put thee into a
watch-tower(6) of the rock, and will cover thee with my hand while I pass by: and I will
take away my hand, and thou shalt see my back parts; but my face shall not be
seen."(7)
CHAP. 17.--HOW THE BACK PARTS OF GOD WERE SEEN. THE FAITH OF THE RESURRECTION
OF CHRIST. THE CATHOLIC CHURCH ONLY IS THE PLACE FROM WHENCE THE BACK PARTS OF
GOD ARE SEEN. THE BACK PARTS OF GOD WERE SEEN BY THE ISRAELITES. IT IS A RASH
OPINION TO THINK THAT GOD THE FATHER ONLY WAS NEVER SEEN BY THE FATHERS.
Not unfitly is it commonly understood to be prefigured from the person of
our Lord Jesus Christ, that His "back parts" are to be taken to be His flesh,
in which He was born of the Virgin, and died, and rose again; whether they are
called back parts(1) on account of the posteriority of mortality, or because it
was almost in the end of the world, that is, at a late period,(2) that He
deigned to take it: but that His "face" was that form of God, in which He "thought
it not robbery to be equal with God,"(3) which no one certainly can see and
live; whether because after this life, in which we are absent from the Lord,(4) and
where the corruptible body presseth down the soul,(5) we shall see "face to
facet,"(6) as the apostle says--(for it is said in the Psalms, of this life,
"Verily every man living is altogether vanity;"(7) and again, "For in Thy sight
shall no man living be justified;"(8) and in this life also, according to John,
"It doth not yet appear what we shall be, but we know," he says, "that when He
shall appear, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is,"(9) which he
certainly intended to be understood as after this life, when we shall have paid
the debt of death, and shall have received the promise of the
resurrection);--or whether that even now, in whatever degree we spiritually understand the
wisdom of God, by which all things were made, in that same degree we die to carnal
affections, so that, considering this world dead to us, we also ourselves die to
this world, and say what the apostle says, "The world is crucified unto me,
and I unto the world."(10) For it was of this death that he also says,
"Wherefore, if ye be dead with Christ, why as though living in the world are ye subject
to ordinances?"(11) Not therefore without cause will no one be able to see the
"face," that is, the manifestation itself of the wisdom of God, and live. For it
is this very appearance, for the contemplation of which every one sighs who
strives to love God with all his heart, and with all his soul, and with all his
mind; to the contemplation of which, he who Loves his neighbor, too, as himself
builds up his neighbor also as far as he may; on which two commandments hang
all the law and the prophets.(12) And this is signified also in Moses himself.
For when he had said, on account of the love of God with which he was specially
inflamed, "If I have found grace in thy sight, show me now Thyself plainly, that
I may find grace in Thy sight;" he immediately subjoined, on account of the
love also of his neighbor, "And that I may know that this nation is Thy people."
It is therefore that "appearance" which hurries away every rational soul with
the desire of it, and the more ardently the more pure that soul is; and it is
the more pure the more it rises to spiritual things; and it rises the more to
spiritual things the more it dies to carnal things. But whilst we are absent from
the Lord, and walk by faith, not by sight,(13) we ought to see the "back parts"
of Christ, that is His flesh, by that very faith, that is, standing on the
solid foundation of faith, which the rock signifies,(14) and beholding it from
such a safe watch-tower, namely in the Catholic Church, of which it is said, "And
upon this rock I will build my Church."(15) For so much the more certainly we
love that face of Christ, which we earnestly desire to see, as we recognize in
His back parts how much first Christ loved us.
29. But in the flesh itself, the faith in His resurrection saves and
justifies us. For, "If thou shalt believe," he says, "in thine heart, that God hath
raised Him from the dead, thou shalt be saved;"(16) and again, "Who was
delivered," he says, "for our offenses, and was raised again for our
justification."(17) So that the reward of our faith is the resurrection of the body of our
Lord.(18) For even His enemies believe that that flesh died on the cross of His
passion, but they do not believe it to have risen again. Which we believing most
firmly, gaze upon it as from the solidity of a rock: whence we wait with certain
hope for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body;(19) because we hope
for that in the members of Christ, that is, in ourselves, which by a sound
faith we acknowledge to be perfect in Him as in our Head. Thence it is that He
would not have His back parts seen, unless as He passed by, that His resurrection
may be believed. For that which is Pascha in Hebrew, is translated Passover.(20)
Whence John the Evangelist also says, "Before the feast of the Passover, when
Jesus knew that His hour was come, that He should pass out of this world unto
the Father."(21)
30. But they who believe this, but believe it not in the Catholic Church,
but in some schism or in heresy, do not see the back parts of the Lord from
"the place that is by Him." For what does that mean which the Lord says, "Behold,
there is a place by me, and thou shalt stand upon a rock?" What earthly place
is "by" the Lord, unless that is "by Him" which touches Him spiritually? For
what place is not "by" the Lord, who "reacheth from one end to another mightily,
and sweetly doth order all things,"(1) and of whom it is said, "Heaven is His
throne, and earth is His footstool;" and who said, "Where is the house that ye
build unto me, and where is the place of my rest? For has not my hand made all
those things?"(2) But manifestly the Catholic Church itself is understood to be
"the place by Him," wherein one stands upon a rock, where he healthfully sees
the "Pascha Domini," that is, the "Passing by"(3) of the Lord, and His back
parts, that is, His body, who believes in His resurrection. "And thou shalt stand,"
He says, "upon a rock while my glory passeth by." For in reality, immediately
after the majesty of the Lord had passed by in the glorification of the Lord, in
which He rose again and ascended to the Father, we stood firm upon the rock.
And Peter himself then stood firm, so that he preached Him with confidence,
whom, before he stood firm, he had thrice from fear denied;(4) although, indeed,
already before placed in predestination upon the watch-tower of the rock, but
with the hand of the Lord still held over him that he might not see. For he was to
see His back parts, and the Lord had not yet "passed by," namely, from death
to life; He had not yet been glorified by the resurrection.
31. For as to that, too, which follows in Exodus, "I will cover thee with
mine hand while I pass by, and I will take away my hand and thou shalt see my
back parts;" many Israelites, of whom Moses was then a figure, believed in the
Lord after His resurrection, as if His hand had been taken off from their eyes,
and they now saw His back parts. And hence the evangelist also mentions that
prophesy of Isaiah, "Make the heart of this people fat, and make their ears
heavy, and shut their eyes."(5) Lastly, in the Psalm, that is not unreasonably
understood to be said in their person, "For day and night Thy hand was heavy upon
me." "By day," perhaps, when He performed manifest miracles, yet was not
acknowledged by them; but "by night," when He died in suffering, when they thought
still more certainly that, like any one among men, He was cut off and brought to an
end. But since, when He had already passed by, so that His back parts were
seen, upon the preaching to them by the Apostle Peter that it behoved Christ to
suffer and rise again, they were pricked in their hearts with the grief of
repentance,(6) that that might come to pass among the baptized which is said in the
beginning of that Psalm, "Blessed are they whose transgressions are forgiven,
and whose sins are covered;" therefore, after it had been said, "Thy hand is
heavy upon me," the Lord, as it were, passing by, so that now He removed His hand,
and His back parts were seen, there follows the voice of one who grieves and
confesses and receives remission of sins by faith in the resurrection of the
Lord: "My moisture," he says, "is turned into the drought of summer. I acknowledged
my sin unto Thee, and mine iniquity have I not hid. I said, I will confess my
transgressions unto the Lord, and Thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin."(7)
For we ought not to be so wrapped up in the darkness of the flesh, as to think
the face indeed of God to be invisible, but His back visible, since both appeared
visibly in the form of a servant; but far be it from us to think anything of
the kind in the form of God; far be it from us to think that the Word of God and
the Wisdom of God has a face on one side, and on the other a back, as a human
body has, or is at all changed either in place or time by any appearance or
motion.(8)
35. Wherefore, if in those words which were spoken in Exodus, and in all
those corporeal appearances, the Lord Jesus Christ was manifested; or if in some
cases Christ was manifested, as the consideration of this passage persuades
us, in others the Holy Spirit, as that which we have said above admonishes us; at
any rate no such result follows, as that God the Father never appeared in any
such form to the Fathers. For many such appearances happened in those times,
without either the Father, or the Son, or the Holy Spirit being expressly named
and designated in them; but yet with some intimations given through certain very
probable interpretations, so that it would be too rash to say that God the
Father never appeared by any visible forms to the fathers or the prophets. For
they gave birth to this opinion who were not able to understand in respect to the
unity of the Trinity such texts as, "Now unto the King eternal, immortal,
invisible, the only wise God;"(9) and, "Whom no man hath seen, nor can see."(1)
Which texts are understood by a sound faith in that substance itself, the highest,
and in the highest degree divine and unchangeable, whereby both the Father and
the Son and the Holy Spirit is the one and only God. But those visions were
wrought through the changeable creature, made subject to the unchangeable God, and
did not manifest God properly as He is, but by intimations such as suited the
causes and times of the several circumstances.
CHAP. 18.--THE VISION OF DANIEL.
33. (2)I do not know in what manner these men understand that the Ancient
of Days appeared to Daniel, from whom the Son of man, which He deigned to be
for our sakes, is understood to have received the kingdom; namely, from Him who
says to Him in the Psalms, "Thou art my Son; this day have I begotten Thee; ask
of me, and I shall give Thee the heathen for Thine inheritance; and who has
"put all things under His feet."(4) If, however, both the Father giving the
kingdom, and the Son receiving it, appeared to Daniel in bodily form, how can those
men say that the Father never appeared to the prophets, and, therefore, that He
only ought to be understood to be invisible whom no man has seen, nor can see?
For Daniel has told us thus: "I beheld," he says, "till the thrones were
set,(5) and the Ancient of Days did sit, whose garment was white as snow, and the
hair of His head like the pure wool: His throne was like the fiery flame, and His
wheels as burning fire; a fiery stream issued and came forth from before Him:
thousand thousands ministered unto Him, and ten thousand times ten thousand
stood before Him: the judgment was set, and the books were opened," etc. And a
little after, "I saw," he says, "in the night visions, and behold, one like the Son
of man came with the clouds of heaven, and came to the Ancient of Days, and
they brought Him near before Him. And there was given Him dominion, and glory,
and a kingdom, that all peoples, nations, and languages should serve Him: His
dominion is an everlasting dominion, which shall not pass away, and His kingdom
that which shall not be destroyed."(6) Behold the Father giving, and the Son
receiving, an eternal kingdom; and both are in the sight of him who prophesies, in
a visible form. It is not, therefore, unsuitably believed that God the Father
also was wont to appear in that manner to mortals.
34. Unless, perhaps, some one shall say, that the Father is therefore not
visible, because He appeared within the sight of one who was dreaming; but that
therefore the Son and the Holy Spirit are visible, because Moses saw all those
things being awake; as if, forsooth, Moses saw the Word and the Wisdom of God
with fleshly eyes, or that even the human spirit which quickens that flesh can
be seen, or even that corporeal thing which is called wind;--how much less can
that Spirit of God be seen, who transcends the minds of all men, and of angels,
by the ineffable excellence of the divine substance? Or can any one fall
headlong into such an error as to dare to say, that the Son and the Holy Spirit are
visible also to men who are awake, but that the Father is not visible except to
those who dream? How, then, do they understand that of the Father alone, "Whom
no man hath seen, nor can see."? When men sleep, are they then not men? Or
cannot He, who can fashion the likeness of a body to signify Himself through the
visions of dreamers, also fashion that same bodily creature to signify Himself
to the eyes of those who are awake? Whereas His own very substance, whereby He
Himself is that which He is, cannot be shown by any bodily likeness to one who
sleeps, or by any bodily appearance to one who is awake; but this not of the
Father only, but also of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. And certainly, as to
those who are moved by the visions of waking men to believe that not the Father,
but only the Son, or the Holy Spirit, appeared to the corporeal sight of men,--to
omit the great extent of the sacred pages, and their manifold interpretation,
such that no one of sound reason ought to affirm that the person of the Father
was nowhere shown to the eyes of waking men by any corporeal appearance;--but,
as I said, to omit this, what do they say of our father Abraham, who was
certainly awake and ministering, when, after Scripture had premised, "The Lord
appeared unto Abraham," not one, or two, but three men appeared to him; no one of
whom is said to have stood prominently above the others, no one more than the
others to have shone with greater glory, or to have acted more authoritatively?(7)
35. Wherefore, since in that our threefold division we determined to
inquire,(8) first, whether the Father, or the Son, or the Holy Spirit; or whether
sometimes the Father, sometimes the Son, sometimes the Holy Spirit; or whether,
without any distinction of persons, as it is said, the one and only God, that
is, the Trinity itself, appeared to the fathers through those forms of the
creature: now that we have examined, so far as appeared to be sufficient what places
of the Holy Scriptures we could, a modest and cautious consideration of divine
mysteries leads, as far as I can judge, to no other conclusion, unless that we
may not rashly affirm which person of the Trinity appeared to this or that of
the fathers or the prophets in some body or likeness of body, unless when the
context attaches to the narrative some probable intimations on the subject. For
the nature itself, or substance, or essence, or by whatever other name that very
thing, which is God, whatever it be, is to be called, cannot be seen
corporeally: but we must believe that by means of the creature made subject to Him, not
only the Son, or the Holy Spirit, but also the Father, may have given
intimations of Himself to mortal senses by a corporeal form or likeness. And since the
case stands thus, that this second book may not extend to an immoderate length,
let us consider what remains in those which follow.