THE FIFTEEN BOOKS OF AURELIUS AUGUSTINUS, BISHOP OF HIPPO, ON THE TRINITY:
BOOK III
BOOK III.
THE QUESTION IS DISCUSSED WITH RESPECT TO THE APPEARANCES OF GOD SPOKEN OF IN
THE PREVIOUS BOOK, WHICH WERE MADE UNDER BODILY FORMS, WHETHER ONLY A CREATURE
WAS FORMED, FOR THE PURPOSE OF MANIFESTING GOD TO HUMAN SIGHT IN SUCH WAY AS HE
AT EACH TIME JUDGED FITTING; OR WHETHER ANGELS, ALREADY EXISTING, WERE SO SENT
AS TO SPEAK IN THE PERSON OF GOD; AND THIS, EITHER BY ASSUMING A BODILY
APPEARANCE FROM THE BODILY CREATURE, OR BY CHANGING THEIR OWN BODIES INTO WHATEVER
FORMS THEY WOULD, SUITABLE TO THE PARTICULAR ACTION, ACCORDING TO THE POWER GIVEN
TO THEM BY THE CREATOR; WHILE THE ESSENCE ITSELF OF GOD WAS NEVER SEEN IN
ITSELF.
PREFACE.--WHY AUGUSTIN WRITES OF THE TRINITY. WHAT HE CLAIMS FROM READERS,
WHAT HAS BEEN SAID IN THE PREVIOUS BOOK.
1. I WOULD have them believe, who are willing to do so, that I had rather
bestow labor in reading, than in dictating what others may read. But let those
who will not believe this, but are both able and willing to make the trial,
grant me whatever answers may be gathered from reading, either to my own
inquiries, or to those interrogations of others, which for the character I bear in the
service of Christ, and for the zeal with which I burn that our faith may be
fortified against the error of carnal and natural men,(1) I must needs bear with;
and then let them see how easily I would refrain from this labor, and with how
much even of joy I would give my pen a holiday. But if what we have read upon
these subjects is either not sufficiently set forth, or is not to be found at
all, or at any rate cannot easily be found by us, in the Latin tongue, while we
are not so familiar with the Greek tongue as to be found in any way competent to
read and understand therein the books that treat of such topics, in which class
of writings, to judge by the little which has been translated for us, I do not
doubt that everything is contained that we can profitably seek;(2) while yet I
cannot resist my brethren when they exact of me, by that law by which I am
made their servant, that I should minister above all to their praiseworthy studies
in Christ by my tongue and by my pen, of which two yoked together in me, Love
is the charioteer; and while I myself confess that I have by writing learned
many things which I did not know: if this be so, then this my labor ought not to
seem superfluous to any idle, or to any very learned reader; while it is
needful in no small part, to many who are busy, and to many who are unlearned, and
among these last to myself. Supported, then, very greatly, and aided by the
writings we have already read of others on this subject, I have undertaken to
inquire into and to discuss, whatever it seems to my judgment can be reverently
inquired into and discussed, concerning the Trinity, the one supreme and supremely
good God; He himself exhorting me to the inquiry, and helping me in the
discussion of it; in order that, if there are no other writings of the kind, there may
be something for those to have and read who are willing and capable; but if
any exist already, then it may be so much the easier to find some such writings,
the more there are of the kind in existence.
2. Assuredly, as in all my writings I desire not only a pious reader, but
also a free corrector, so I especially desire this in the present inquiry,
which is so important that I would there were as many inquirers as there are
objectors. But as I do not wish my reader to be bound down to me, so I do not wish my
corrector to be bound down to himself. Let not the former love me more than
the catholic faith, let not the latter love himself more than the catholic
verity. As I say to the former, Do not be willing to yield to my writings as to the
canonical Scriptures; but in these, when thou hast discovered even what thou
didst not previously believe, believe it unhesitatingly; while in those, unless
thou hast understood with certainty what thou didst not before hold as certain,
be unwilling to hold it fast: so I say to the latter, Do not be willing to amend
my writings by thine own opinion or disputation, but from the divine text, or
by unanswerable reason. If thou apprehendest anything of truth in them, its
being there does not make it mine, but by understanding and loving it, let it be
both thine and mine; but if thou convictest anything of falsehood, though it
have once been mine, in that I was guilty of the error, yet now by avoiding it let
it be neither thine nor mine.
3. Let this third book, then, take its beginning at the point to which the
second had reached. For after we had arrived at this, I that we desired to
show that the Son was not l therefore less than the Father, because the Father
sent and the Son was sent; nor the Holy Spirit therefore less than both, because
we read in the Gospel that He was sent both by the one and by the other; we
undertook then to inquire, since the Son was sent thither, where He already was,
for He came into the world, and "was in the world;"(1) since also the Holy Spirit
was sent thither, where He already was, for "the Spirit of the Lord filleth
the world, and that which containeth all things hath knowledge of the voice;"(2)
whether the Lord was therefore "sent" because He was born in the flesh so as
to be no longer hidden, and, as it were, came forth from the bosom of the
Father, and appeared to the eyes of men in the form of a servant; and the Holy Spirit
also was therefore "sent," because He too was seen as a dove in a corporeal
form,(3) and in cloven tongues, like as of fire;(4) so that, to be sent, when
spoken of them, means to go forth to the sight of mortals in some corporeal form
from a spiritual hiding-place; which, because the Father did not, He is said
only to have sent, not also to be sent. Our next inquiry was, Why the Father also
is not sometimes said to be sent, if He Himself was manifested through those
corporeal forms which appeared to the eyes of the ancients. But if the Son was
manifested at these times, why should He be said to be "sent" so long after, when
the fullness of time was come that He should be born of a woman;(5) since,
indeed, He was sent before also, viz., when He appeared corporeally in those
forms? Or if He were not rightly said to be "sent," except when the Word was made
flesh;(6) why should the Holy Spirit be read of as "sent," of whom such an
incarnation never took place? But if neither the Father, nor the Son, but the Holy
Spirit was manifested through these ancient appearances; why should He too be
said to be "sent" now, when He was also sent before in these various manners? Next
we subdivided the subject, that it might be handled most carefully, and we
made the question threefold, of which one part was explained in the second book,
and two remain, which I shall next proceed to discuss. For we have already
inquired and determined, that not only the Father, nor only the Son, nor only the
Holy Spirit appeared in those ancient corporeal forms and visions. but either
indifferently the Lord God, who is understood to be the Trinity itself, or some
one person of the Trinity, whichever the text of the narrative might signify,
through intimations supplied by the context.
CHAP. 1.--WHAT IS TO BE SAID THEREUPON.
4. Let us, then, continue our inquiry now in order. For under the second
head in that division the question occurred, whether the creature was formed for
that work only, wherein God, in such way as He then judged it to be fitting,
might be manifested to human sight; or whether angels, who already existed, were
so sent as to speak in the person of God, assuming a corporeal appearance from
the corporeal creature for the purpose of their ministry; or else changing and
turning their own body itself, to which they are not subject, but govern it as
subject to themselves, into whatever forms they would, that were appropriate
and fit for their actions, according to the power given to them by the Creator.
And when this part of the question shall have been investigated, so far as God
permit, then, lastly, we shall have to see to that question with which we
started, viz., whether the Son and the Holy Spirit were also "sent" before; and if
it be so, then what difference there is between that sending and the one of
which we read in the Gospel; or whether neither of them were sent, except when
either the Son was made of the Virgin Mary, or when the Holy Spirit appeared in a
visible form, whether as a dove or in tongues of fire.(1)
5. I confess, however, that it reaches further than my purpose can carry
me to inquire whether the angels. secretly working by the spiritual quality of
their body abiding still in them, assume somewhat from the inferior and more
bodily elements, which, being fitted to themselves, they may change and turn like
a garment into any corporeal appearances they will, and those appearances
themselves also real, as real water was changed by our Lord into real wine;(2) or
whether they transform their own bodies themselves into that which they would,
suitably to the particular act. But it does not signify to the present question
which of these it is. And although I be not able to understand these things by
actual experience, seeing that I am a man, as the angels do who do these things,
and know them better than I know them, viz., how far my body is changeable by
the operation of my will; whether it be by my own experience of myself, or by
that which I have gathered from others; yet it is not necessary here to say
which of these alternatives I am to believe upon the authority of the divine
Scriptures, lest I be compelled to prove it, and so my discourse become too long upon
a subject which does not concern the present question.
6. Our present inquiry then is, whether the angels were then the agents
both in showing those bodily appearances to the eyes of men and in sounding those
words in their ears when the sensible creature itself, serving the Creator at
His beck, was turned for the time into whatever was needful; as it is written
in the book of Wisdom, "For the creature serveth Thee, who art the Maker,
increaseth his strength against the unrighteous for their punishment, and abateth his
strength for the benefit of such as put their trust in Thee. Therefore, even
then was it altered into all fashions, and was obedient to Thy grace, that
nourisheth all things according to the of them that longed for Thee."(3) For the
power of the will of God reaches through the spiritual creature even to visible
and sensible effects of the corporeal creature. For where does not the wisdom of
the omnipotent God work that which He wills, which "reacheth from one end to
another mightily, and sweetly doth order all things"?(4)
CHAP. 2.--THE WILL OF GOD IS THE HIGHER CAUSE OF ALL CORPOREAL CHANGE. THIS IS
SHOWN BY AN EXAMPLE.
7. But there is one kind of natural order in the conversion and
changeableness of bodies, which, although itself also serves the bidding of God, yet by
reason of its unbroken continuity has ceased to cause wonder; as is the case,
for instance, with those things which are changed either in very short, or at any
rate not long, intervals of time, in heaven, or earth, or sea; whether it be
in rising, or in setting, or in change of appearance from time to time; while
there are other things, which, although arising from that same order, yet are
less familiar on account of longer intervals of time. And these things, although
the many stupidly wonder at them, yet are understood by those who inquire into
this present world, and in the progress of generations become so much the less
wonderful, as they are the more often repeated and known by more people. Such
are the eclipses of the sun and moon, and some kinds of stars, appearing seldom,
and earthquakes, and unnatural births of living creatures, and other similar
things; of which not one takes place without the will of God; yet, that it is so,
is to most people not apparent. And so the vanity of philosophers has found
license to assign these things also to other causes, true causes perhaps, but
proximate ones, while they are not able to see at all the cause that is higher
than all others, that is, the will of God; or again to false causes, and to such
as are not even put forward out of any diligent investigation of corporeal
things and motions, but from their own guess and error.
8. I will bring forward an example, if I can, that this may be plainer.
There is, we know, in the human body, a certain bulk of flesh and an outward
form, and an arrangement and distraction of limbs, and a temperament of health; and
a soul breathed into it governs this body, and that soul a rational one;
which, therefore, although changeable, yet can be partaker of that unchangeable
wisdom, so that "it may partake of that which is in and of itself;"(5) as it is
written in the Psalm concerning all saints, of whom as of living stones is built
that Jerusalem which is the mother of us all, eternal in the heavens. For so it
is sung, "Jerusalem is builded as a city, that is partaker of that which is in
and of itself."(1) For "in and of itself," in that place, is understood of that
chiefest and unchangeable good, which is God, and of His own wisdom and will.
To whom is sung in another place, "Thou shalt change them, and they shall be
changed; but Thou art the same."(2)
CHAP. 3.--OF THE SAME ARGUMENT.
Let us take, then, the case of a wise man, such that his rational soul is
already partaker of the unchangeable and eternal truth, so that he consults it
about all his actions, nor does anything at all, which he does not by it know
ought to be done, in order that by being subject to it and obeying it he may do
rightly. Suppose now that this man, upon counsel with the highest reason of the
divine righteousness, which he hears with the ear of his heart in secret, and
by its bidding, should weary his body by toil in some office of mercy, and
should contract an illness; and upon consulting the physicians, were to be told by
one that the cause of the disease was overmuch dryness of the body, but by
another that it was overmuch moisture; one of the two no doubt would allege the
true cause and the other would err, but both would pronounce concerning proximate
causes only, that is, corporeal ones. But if the cause of that dryness were to
be inquired into, and found to be the self-imposed toil, then we should have
come to a yet higher cause, which proceeds from the soul so as to affect the body
which the soul governs. Yet neither would this be the first cause, for that
doubtless was a higher cause still, and lay in the unchangeable wisdom itself, by
serving which in love, and by obeying its ineffable commands, the soul of the
wise man had undertaken that self-imposed toil; and so nothing else but the
will of God would be found most truly to be the first cause of that illness. But
suppose now in that office of pious toil this wise man had employed the help of
others to co-operate in the good work, who did not serve God with the same will
as himself, but either desired to attain the reward of their own carnal
desires, or shunned merely carnal unpleasantnesses;--suppose, too, he had employed
beasts of burden, if the completion of the work required such a provision, which
beasts of burden would be certainly irrational animals, and would not therefore
move their limbs under their burdens because they at all thought of that good
work, but from the natural appetite of their own liking, and for the avoiding
of annoyance;--suppose, lastly, he had employed bodily things themselves that
lack all sense, but were necessary for that work, as e.g. corn, and wine, and
oils, clothes, or money, or a book, or anything of the kind;--certainly, in all
these bodily things thus employed in this work, whether animate or inanimate,
whatever took place of movement, of wear and tear, of reparation, of destruction,
of renewal or of change in one way or another, as places and times affected
them; pray, could there be, I say, any other cause of all these visible and
changeable facts, except the invisible and unchangeable will of God, using all these,
both bad and irrational souls, and lastly bodies, whether such as were
inspired and animated by those souls, or such as lacked all sense, by means of that
upright soul as the seat of His wisdom, since primarily that good and holy soul
itself employed them, which His wisdom had subjected to itself in a pious and
religious obedience?
CHAP. 4.--GOD USES ALL CREATURES AS HE WILL, AND MAKES VISIBLE THINGS FOR THE
MANIFESTATION OF HIMSELF
9. What, then, we have alleged by way of example of a single wise man,
although of one still bearing a mortal body and still seeing only in part, may be
allowably extended also to a family, where there is a society of such men, or
to a city, or even to the whole world, if the chief rule and government of human
affairs were in the hands of the wise, and of those who were piously and
perfectly subject to God; but because this is not the case as yet (for it behoves us
first to be exercised in this our pilgrimage after mortal fashion, and to be
taught with stripes by force of gentleness and patience), let us turn our
thoughts to that country itself that is above and heavenly, from which we here are
pilgrims. For there the will of God, "who maketh His angels spirits, and His
ministers a flaming fire,"(3) presiding among spirits which are joined in perfect
peace and friendship, and combined in one will by a kind of spiritual fire of
charity, as it were in an elevated and holy and secret seat, as in its own house
and in its own temple, thence diffuses itself through all things by certain
most perfectly ordered movements of the creature first spiritual, then corporeal;
and uses all according to the unchangeable pleasure of its own purpose, whether
incorporeal things or things corporeal, whether rational or irrational
spirits, whether good by His grace or evil through their own will. But as the mort
gross and inferior bodies are governed in due order by the more subtle and
powerful ones, so all bodies are governed by the living spirit; and the living spirit
devoid of reason, by the reasonable living spirit; and the reasonable living
spirit that makes default and sins, by the living and reasonable spirit that is
pious and just; and that by God Himself, and so the universal creature by its
Creator, from whom and through whom and in whom it is also created and
established.(1) And so it comes to pass that the will of God is the first and the highest
cause of all corporeal appearances and motions. For nothing is done visibly or
sensibly, unless either by command or permission from the interior palace,
invisible and intelligible, of the supreme Governor, according to the unspeakable
justice of rewards and punishments, of favor and retribution, in that
far-reaching and boundless commonwealth of the whole creature.
10. If, therefore, the Apostle Paul, although he still bare the burden of
the body, which is subject to corruption and presseth down the soul,(2) and
although he still saw only in part and in an enigma,(3) wishing to depart and be
with Christ,(4) and groaning within himself, waiting for the adoption, to wit,
the redemption of his body,(5) yet was able to preach the Lord Jesus Christ
significantly, in one way by his tongue, in another by epistle, in another by the
sacrament of His body and blood (since, certainly, we do not call either the
tongue of the apostle, or the parchments, or the ink, or the significant sounds
which his tongue uttered, or the alphabetical signs written on skins, the body
and blood of Christ; but that only which we take of the fruits of the earth and
consecrate by mystic prayer, and then receive duly to our spiritual health in
memory of the passion of our Lord for us: and this, although it is brought by the
hands of men to that visible form, yet is not sanctified to become so great a
sacrament, except by the spirit of God working invisibly; since God works
everything that is done in that work through corporeal movements, by setting in
motion primarily the invisible things of His servants, whether the souls of men, or
the services of hidden spirits subject to Himself): what wonder if also in the
creature of heaven and earth, of sea and air, God works the sensible and
visible things which He wills, in order to signify and manifest Himself in them, as
He Himself knows it to be fitting, without any appearing of His very substance
itself, whereby He is, which is altogether unchangeable, and more inwardly and
secretly exalted than all spirits whom He has created?
CHAP. 5.--WHY MIRACLES ARE NOT USUAL WORKS.
11. For since the divine power administers the whole spiritual and
corporeal creature, the waters of the sea are summoned and poured out upon the face of
the earth on certain days of every year. But when this was done at the prayer
of the holy Elijah; because so continued and long a course of fair weather had
gone before, that men were famished; and because at that very hour, in which
the servant of God prayed, the air itself had not, by any moist aspect, put forth
signs of the coming rain; the divine power was apparent in the great and rapid
showers that followed, and by which that miracle was granted and dispensed.(6)
In like manner, God works ordinarily through thunders and lightnings: but
because these were wrought in an unusual manner on Mount Sinai, and those sounds
were not uttered with a confused noise, but so that it appeared by most sure
proofs that certain intimations were given by them, they were miracles.(7) Who
draws up the sap through the root of the vine to the bunch of grapes, and makes the
wine, except God; who, while man plants and waters, Himself giveth the
increase?(8) But when, at the command of the Lord, the water was turned into wine with
an extraordinary quickness, the divine power was made manifest, by the
confession even of the foolish.(9) Who ordinarily clothes the trees with leaves and
flowers except God? Yet, when the rod of Aaron the priest blossomed, the Godhead
in some way conversed with doubting humanity.(10) Again, the earthy matter
certainly serves in common to the production and formation both of all kinds of
wood and of the flesh of all animals: and who makes these things, but He who said,
Let the earth bring them forth;(11) and who governs and guides by the same
word of His, those things which He has created? Yet, when He changed the same
matter out of the rod of Moses into the flesh of a serpent, immediately and
quickly, that change, which was unusual, although of a thing which was changeable, was
a miracle.(1) But who is it that gives life to every living thing at its
birth, unless He who gave life to that serpent also for the moment, as there was
need.(2)
CHAP. 6.--DIVERSITY ALONE MAKES A MIRACLE.
And who is it that restored to the corpses their proper souls when the
dead rose again,(3) unless He who gives life to the flesh in the mother's womb, in
order that they may come into being who yet are to die? But when such things
happen in a continuous kind of river of ever-flowing succession, passing from
the hidden to the visible, and from the visible to the hidden, by a regular and
beaten track, then they are called natural; when, for the admonition of men,
they are thrust in by an unusual changeableness, then they are called miracles.
CHAP. 7.--GREAT MIRACLES WROUGHT BY MAGIC ARTS.
12. I see here what may occur to a weak judgment, namely, why such
miracles are wrought also by magic arts; for the wise men of Pharaoh likewise made
serpents, and did other like things. Yet it is still more a matter of wonder, how
it was that the power of those magicians, which was able to make serpents, when
it came to very small flies, failed altogether. For the lice, by which third
plague the proud people of Egypt were smitten, are very short-lived little
flies; yet. there certainly the magicians failed, saying, "This is the finger of
God."(4) And hence it is given us to understand that not even those angels and
powers of the air that transgressed, who have been thrust down into that lowest
darkness, as into a peculiar prison, from their habitation in that lofty ethereal
purity, through whom magic arts have whatever power they have, can do anything
except by power given from above. Now that power is given either to deceive
the deceitful, as it was given against the Egyptians, and against the magicians
also themselves, in order that in the seducing of those spirits they might seem
admirable by whom they were wrought, but to be condemned by the truth of God;
or for the admonishing of the faithful, lest they should desire to do anything
of the kind as though it were a great thing, for which reason they have been
handed down to us also by the authority of Scripture; or lastly, for the
exercising, proving, and manifesting of the patience of the righteous. For it was not by
any small power of visible miracles that Job lost all that he had, and both
his children and his bodily health itself.(5)
CHAP. 8.--GOD ALONE CREATES THOSE THINGS WHICH ARE CHANGED BY MAGIC ART.
13. Yet it is not on this account to be thought that the matter of visible
things is subservient to the bidding of those wicked angels; but rather to
that of God, by whom this power is given, just so far as He, who is unchangeable,
determines in His lofty and spiritual abode to give it. For water and fire and
earth are subservient even to wicked men, who are condemned to the mines, in
order that they may do therewith what they will, but only so far as is permitted.
Nor, in truth, are those evil angels to be called creators, because by their
means the magicians, withstanding the servant of God, made frogs and serpents;
for it was not they who created them. But, in truth, some hidden seeds of all
things that are born corporeally and visibly, are concealed in the corporeal
elements of this world. For those seeds that are visible now to our eyes from
fruits and living things, are quite distinct from the hidden seeds of those former
seeds; from which, at the bidding of the Creator, the water produced the first
swimming creatures and fowl, and the earth the first buds after their kind, and
the first living creatures after their kind.(6) For neither at that time were
those seeds so drawn forth into products of their several kinds, as that the
power of production was exhausted in those products; but oftentimes, suitable
combinations of circumstances are wanting, whereby they may be enabled to burst
forth and complete their species. For, consider, the very least shoot is a seed;
for, if fitly consigned to the earth, it produces a tree. But of this shoot
there is a yet more subtle seed in some grain of the same species, and this is
visible even to us. But of this grain also there is further still a seed, which,
although we are unable to see it with our eyes, yet we can conjecture its
existence from our reason; because, except there were some such power in those
elements, there would not so frequently be produced from the earth things which had
not been sown there; nor yet so many animals, without any previous commixture of
male and female; whether on the land, or in the water, which yet grow, and by
commingling bring forth others, while themselves sprang up without any union of
parents. And certainly bees do not conceive the seeds of their young by
commixture, but gather them as they lie scattered over the earth with their mouth.(1)
For the Creator of these invisible seeds is the Creator of all things Himself;
since whatever comes forth to our sight by being born, receives the first
beginnings of its course from hidden seeds, and takes the successive increments of
its proper size and its distinctive forms from these as it were original rules.
As therefore we do not call parents the creators of men, nor farmers the
creators of corn,--although it is by the outward application of their actions that
the power(2) of God operates within for the creating these things;--so it is not
right to think not only the bad but even the good angels to be creators, if,
through the subtilty of their perception and body, they know the seeds of things
which to us are more hidden, and scatter them secretly through fit temperings
of the elements, and so furnish opportunities of producing things, and of
accelerating their increase. But neither do the good angels do these things, except
as far as God commands, nor do the evil ones do them wrongfully, except as far
as He righteously permits. For the malignity of the wicked one makes his own
will wrongful; but the power to do so, he receives rightfully, whether for his own
punishment, or, in the case of others, for the punishment of the wicked, or
for the praise of the good.
14. Accordingly, the Apostle Paul, distinguishing God's creating and
forming within, from the operations of the creature which are applied from without,
and drawing a similitude from agriculture, says, "I planted, Apollos watered;
but God gave the increase."(3) As, therefore, in the case of spiritual life
itself, no one except God can work righteousness in our minds, yet men also are
able to preach the gospel as an outward means, not only the good in sincerity, but
also the evil in pretence;(4) so in the creation of visible things it is God
that works from within; but the exterior operations, whether of good or bad, of
angels or men, or even of any kind of animal, according to His own absolute
power, and to the distribution of faculties, and the several appetites for things
pleasant, which He Himself has imparted, are applied by Him to that nature of
things wherein He creates all things, in like manner as agriculture is to the
soil. Wherefore I can no more call the bad angels, evoked by magic arts, the
creators of the frogs and serpents, than I can say that bad men were creators of
the corn crop, which I see to have sprung up through their labor.
15. Just as Jacob, again, was not the creator of the colors in the flocks,
because he placed the various colored rods for the several mothers, as they
drank, to look at in conceiving.(5) Yet neither were the cattle themselves
creators of the variety of their own offspring, because the variegated image,
impressed through their eyes by the sight of the varied rods, clave to their soul, but
could affect the body that was animated by the spirit thus affected only
through sympathy with this commingling, so far as to stain with color the tender
beginnings of their offspring. For that they are so affected from themselves,
whether the soul from the body, or the body from the soul, arises in truth from
suitable reasons, which immutably exist in that highest wisdom of God Himself,
which no extent of place contains; and which, while it is itself unchangeable, yet
quits not one even of those things which are changeable, because there is not
one of them that is not created by itself. For it was the unchangeable and
invisible reason of the wisdom of God, by which all things are created, which
caused not rods, but cattle, to be born from cattle; but that the color of the
cattle conceived should be in any degree influenced by the variety of the rods, came
to pass through the soul of the pregnant cattle being affected through their
eyes from without, and so according to its own measure drawing inwardly within
itself the rule of formation, which it received from the innermost power of its
own Creator. How great, however, may be the power of the soul in affecting and
changing corporeal substance (although certainly it cannot be called the
creator of the body, because every cause of changeable and sensible substance, and
all its measure and number and weight, by which are brought to pass both its
being at all and its being of such and such a nature, arise from the intelligible
and unchangeable life, which is above all things, and which reaches even to the
most distant and earthly things), is a very copious subject, and one not now
necessary. But I thought the act of Jacob about the cattle should be noticed, for
this reason, viz. in order that it might be perceived that, if the man who
thus placed those rods cannot be called the creator of the colors in the lambs
and kids; nor yet even the souls themselves of the mothers, which colored the
seeds conceived in the flesh by the image of variegated color, conceived through
the eyes of the body, so far as nature permitted it; much less can it be said
that the creators of the frogs and serpents were the bad angel, through whom the
magicians of Pharaoh then made them.
CHAP. 9.--THE ORIGINAL CAUSE OF ALL THINGS IS FROM GOD.
16. For it is one thing to make and administer the creature from the
innermost and highest turning-point of causation, which He alone does who is God the
Creator; but quite another thing to apply some operation from without in
proportion to the strength and faculties assigned to each by Him, so that what is
created may come forth into being at this time or at that, and in this or that
way. For all these things in the way of original and beginning have already been
created in a kind of texture of the elements, but they come forth when they get
the opportunity.(1) For as mothers are pregnant with young, so the world
itself is pregnant with the causes of things that are born; which are not created in
it, except from that highest essence, where nothing either springs up or dies,
either begins to be or ceases. But the applying from without of adventitious
causes,which, although they are not natural, yet are to be applied according to
nature, in order that those things which are contained and hidden in the secret
bosom of nature may break forth and be outwardly created in some way by the
unfolding of the proper measures and numbers and weights which they have received
in secret from Him "who has ordered all things in measure and number and
weight:"(2) this is not only in the power of bad angels, but also of bad men, as I
have shown above by the example of agriculture.
17. But lest the somewhat different condition of animals should trouble
any one, in that they have the breath of life with the sense of desiring those
things that are according to nature, and of avoiding those things that are
contrary to it; we must consider also, how many men there are who know from what
herbs or flesh, or from what juices or liquids you please, of whatever sort,
whether so placed or so buried, or so bruised or so mixed, this or that animal is
commonly born; yet who can be so foolish as to dare to call himself the creator of
these animals? Is it, therefore, to be wondered at, if just as any, the most
worthless of men, can know whence such or such worms and flies are produced; so
the evil angels in proportion to the subtlety of their perceptions discern in
the more hidden seeds of the elements whence frogs and serpents are produced,
and so through certain and known opportune combinations applying these seeds by
secret movements, cause them to be created, but do not create them? Only men do
not marvel at those things that are usually done by men. But if any one chance
to wonder at the quickness of those growths, in that those living beings were
so quickly made, let him consider how even this may be brought about by men in
proportion to the measure of human capability. For whence is it that the same
bodies generate worms more quickly in summer than in winter, or in hotter than
in colder places? Only these things are applied by men with so much the more
difficulty, in proportion as their earthly and sluggish members are wanting in
subtlety of perception, and in rapidity of bodily motion. And hence it arises
that in the case of any kind of angels, in proportion as it is easier for them to
draw out the proximate causes from the elements, so much the more marvellous is
their rapidity in works of this kind.
18. But He only is the creator who is the chief former of these things.
Neither can any one be this, unless He with whom primarily rests the measure,
number, and weight of all things existing; and He is God the one Creator, by whose
unspeakable power it comes to pass, also, that what these angels were able to
do if they were permitted, they are therefore not able to do because they are
not permitted. For there is no other reason why they who made frogs and serpents
were not able to make the most minute flies, unless because the greater power
of God was present prohibiting them, through the Holy Spirit; which even the
magicians themselves confessed, saying, "This is the finger of God."(1) But what
they are able to do by nature, yet cannot do, because they are prohibited; and
what the very condition of their nature itself does not suffer them to do; it
is difficult, nay, impossible, for man to search out, unless through that gift
of God which the apostle mentions when he says, "To another the discerning of
spirits."(2) For we know that a man can walk, yet that he cannot do so if he is
not permitted; but that he cannot fly, even if he be permitted. So those angels,
also, are able to do certain things if they are permitted by more powerful
angels, according to the supreme commandment of God; but cannot do certain other
things, not even if they are permitted by them; because He does not permit from
whom they have received such and such a measure of natural powers: who, even by
His angels, does not usually permit what He has given them power to be able to
do.
19. Excepting, therefore, those corporeal things which are done in the
order of nature in a perfectly usual series of times, as e.g., the rising and
setting of the stars, the generations and deaths of animals, the innumerable
diversities of seeds and buds, the vapors and the clouds, the snow and the rain, the
lightnings and the thunder, the thunderbolts and the hail, the winds and the
fire, cold and heat, and all like things; excepting also those which in the same
order of nature occur rarely, such as eclipses, unusual appearances of stars,
and monsters, and earthquakes. and such like;--all these, I say, are to be
excepted, of which indeed the first and chief cause is only the will of God; whence
also in the Psalm, when some things of this kind had been mentioned, "Fire and
hail, snow and vapor, stormy wind," lest any one should think those to be
brought about either by chance or only from corporeal causes, or even from such as
are spiritual, but exist apart from the will of God, it is added immediately,
"fulfilling His word."(3)
CHAP. 10.--IN HOW MANY WAYS THE CREATURE IS TO BE TAKEN BY WAY OF SIGN. THE
EUCHARIST.
Excepting, therefore, all these things as I just now said, there are some
also of another kind; which, although from the same corporeal substance, are
yet brought within reach of our senses in order to announce something from God,
and these are properly called miracles and signs; yet is not the person of God
Himself assumed in all things which are announced to us by the Lord God. When,
however, that person is assumed, it is sometimes made manifest as art angel;
sometimes in that form which is not an angel in his own proper being, although it
is ordered and ministered by an angel. Again, when it is assumed in that form
which is not an angel in his own proper being; sometimes in this case it is a
body itself already existing, assumed after some kind of change, in order to make
that message manifest; sometimes it is one that comes into being for the
purpose, and that being accomplished, is discarded. Just as, also, when men are the
messengers, sometimes they speak the words of God in their own person, as when
it is premised, "The Lord said," or, "Thus saith the Lord,"(4) or any other
such phrase, but sometimes without any such prefix, they take upon themselves the
very person of God, as e.g.: "I will instruct time, and teach thee in the way
wherein thou shalt go:"(5) so, not only in word, but also in act, the signifying
of the person of God is imposed upon the prophet, in order that he may bear
that person in the ministering of the prophecy; just as he, for instance, bore
that person who divided his garment into twelve parts, and gave ten of them to
the servant of King Solomon, to the future king of Israel.(6) Sometimes, also, a
thing which was not a prophet in his own proper self, and which existed already
among earthly things, was assumed in order to signify this; as Jacob, when he
had seen the dream, upon waking up did with the stone, which when asleep he had
under his head.(7) Sometimes a thing is made in the same kind, for the mere
purpose; so as either to continue a little while in existence, as that brazen
serpent was able to do which was lifted up in the wilderness,(8) and as written
records are able to do likewise; or so as to pass away after having accomplished
its ministry, as the bread made for the purpose is consumed in the receiving of
the sacrament.
20. But because these things are known to men, in that they are done by
men, they may well meet with reverence as being holy things, but they cannot
cause wonder as being miracles. And therefore those things which are done by angels
are the more wonderful to us, in that they are more difficult and more known;
but they are known and easy to them as being their own actions. An angel speaks
in the person of God to man, saying, "I am the God of Abraham, and the God of
Isaac, and the God of Jacob;" the Scripture having said just before, "The angel
of the Lord appeared to him."(1) And a man also speaks in the person of God,
saying, "Hear, O my people, and I will testify unto thee, O Israel: I am the
Lord thy God."(2) A rod was taken to serve as a sign, and was changed into a
serpent by angelical power;(3) but although that power is wanting to man, yet a
stone was taken also by man for a similar sign.(4) There is a wide difference
between the deed of the angel and the deed of the man. The former is both to be
wondered at and to be understood, the latter only to be understood. That which is
understood from both, is perhaps one and the same; but those things from which
it is understood, are different. Just as if the name of God were written both in
gold and in ink; the former would be the more precious, the latter the more
worthless; yet that which is signified in both is one and the same. And although
the serpent that came from Moses' rod signified the same thing as Jacob's
stone, yet Jacob's stone signified something better than did the serpents of the
magicians. For as the anointing of the stone signified Christ in the flesh, in
which He was anointed with the oil of gladness above His fellows;(5) so the rod of
Moses, turned into a serpent, signified Christ Himself made obedient unto
death, even the death of the cross.(6) Whence it is said, "And as Moses lifted up
the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up, that
whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life;."(7)
just as by gazing on that serpent which was lifted up in the wilderness, they did
not perish by the bites of the serpents. For "our old man is crucified with
Him, that the body of sin might be destroyed."(8) For by the serpent death is
understood, which was wrought by the serpent in paradise,(9) the mode of speech
expressing the effect by the efficient. Therefore the rod passed into the serpent,
Christ into death; and the serpent again into the rod, whole Christ with His
body into the resurrection; which body is the Church;(10) and this shall be in
the end of time, signified by the tail, which Moses held, in order that it might
return into a rod.(11) But the serpents of the magicians, like those who are
dead in the world, unless by believing in Christ they shall have been as it were
swallowed up by,(12) and have entered into, His body, will not be able to rise
again in Him. Jacob's stone, therefore, as I said, signified something better
than did the serpents of the magicians; yet the deed of the magicians was much
more wonderful. But these things in this way are no hindrance to the
understanding of the matter; just as if the name of a man were written in gold, and that
of God in ink.
21. What man, again, knows how the angels made or took those clouds and
fires in order to signify the message they were bearing, even if we supposed that
the Lord or the Holy Spirit was manifested in those corporeal forms? Just as
infants do not know of that which is placed upon the altar and consumed after
the performance of the holy celebration, whence or in what manner it is made, or
whence it is taken for religious use. And if they were never to learn from
their own experience or that of others, and never to see that species of thing
except during the celebration of the sacrament, when it is being offered and given;
and if it were told them by the most weighty authority whose body and blood it
is; they will believe nothing else, except that the Lord absolutely appeared
in this form to the eyes of mortals, and that that liquid actually flowed from
the piercing of a side(13) which resembled this. But it is certainly a useful
caution to myself, that I should remember what my own powers are, and admonish my
brethren that they also remember what theirs are, lest human infirmity pass on
beyond what is safe. For how the angels do these things, or rather, how God
does these things by His angels, and how far He wills them to be done even by the
bad angels, whether by permitting, or commanding, or compelling, from the
hidden seat of His own supreme power; this I can neither penetrate by the sight of
the eyes, nor make clear by assurance of reason, nor be carried on to
comprehend it by reach of intellect, so as to speak thereupon to all questions that may
be asked respecting these matters, as certainly as if I were an angel, or a
prophet, or an apostle. "For the thoughts of mortal men are miserable, and our
devices are but uncertain. For the corruptible body presseth down the soul, and
the earthly tabernacle weigheth down the mind, that museth upon many things. And
hardly do we guess aright at things that are upon earth, and with labor do we
find the things that are before us; but the things that are in heaven, who hath
searched out?" But because it goes on to say, "And Thy counsel who hath known,
except Thou give wisdom, and send Thy Holy Spirit from above;"(14) therefore we
refrain indeed from searching out the things which are in heaven, under which
kind are contained I both angelical bodies according to their proper dignity,
and any corporeal action of those bodies; yet, according to the Spirit of God
sent to us from above, and to His grace imparted to our minds, I dare to say
confidently, that neither God the Father, nor His Word, nor His Spirit, which is
the one God, is in any way changeable in regard to that which He is, and whereby
He is that which He is; and much less is in this regard visible. Since there
are no doubt some things changeable, yet not visible, as are our thoughts, and
memories, and wills, and the whole incorporeal creature; but there is nothing
that is visible that is not also changeable.
CHAP. 11.--THE ESSENCE OF GOD NEVER APPEARED IN ITSELF. DIVINE APPEARANCES TO
THE FATHERS WROUGHT BY THE MINISTRY OF ANGELS. AN OBJECTION DRAWN FROM THE
MODE OF SPEECH REMOVED. THAT THE APPEARING OF GOD TO ABRAHAM HIMSELF, JUST AS THAT
TO MOSES, WAS WROUGHT BY ANGELS. THE SAME THING IS PROVED BY THE LAW BEING
GIVEN TO MOSES BY ANGELS. WHAT HAS BEEN SAID IN THIS BOOK, AND WHAT REMAINS TO BE
SAID IN THE NEXT.
Wherefore the substance, or, if it is better so to say, the essence of
God,(1) wherein we understand, in proportion to our measure, in however small a
degree, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit since it is in no way
changeable, can in no way in its proper self be visible.
22. It is manifest, accordingly, that all those appearances to the
fathers, when God was presented to them according to His own dispensation, suitable to
the times, were wrought through the creature. And if we cannot discern in what
manner He wrought them by ministry of angels, yet we say that they were
wrought by angels; but not from our own power of discernment, lest we should seem to
any one to be wise beyond our measure, whereas we are wise so as to think
soberly, as God hath dealt to us the measure of faith;(2) and we believe, and
therefore speak.(3) For the authority is extant of the divine Scriptures, from which
our reason ought not to turn aside; nor by leaving the solid support of the
divine utterance, to fall headlong over the precipice of its own surmisings, in
matters wherein neither the perceptions of the body rule, nor the clear reason of
the truth shines forth. Now, certainly, it is written most clearly in the
Epistle to the Hebrews, when the dispensation of the New Testament was to be
distinguished from the dispensation of the Old, according to the fitness of ages and
of times, that not only those visible things, but also the word itself, was
wrought by angels. For it is said thus: "But to which of the angels said He at any
time, Sit on my right hand, until I make thine enemies thy footstool? Are they
not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be
heirs of salvation?"(4) Whence it appears that all those things were not only
wrought by angels, but wrought also on our account, that is, on account of the
people of God, to whom is promised the inheritance of eternal life. As it is written
also to the Corinthians, "Now all these things happened unto them in a figure:
and they are written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of the world
arecome."(5) And then, demonstrating by plain consequence that as at that time the
word was spoken by the angels, so now by tim Son; "Therefore," he says, "we
ought to give the more earnest heed to the things which we have heard, lest at any
time we should let them slip. For if the word spoken by angels was steadfast,
and every transgression and disobedience received a just recompense of reward;
how shall we escape, if we neglect so great salvation?" And then, as though you
asked, What salvation?--in order to show that he is now speaking of the New
Testament, that is, of the word which was spoken not by angels, but by the Lord,
he says, "Which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord, and was confirmed
unto us by them that heard Him; God also bearing them witness, both with signs
and wonders, and with divers miracles, and gifts of the Holy Ghost, according to
His own will."(6)
23. But some one may say, Why then is it written, "The Lord said to
Moses;" and not, rather, The angel said to Moses? Because, when the crier proclaims
the words of the judge, it is not usually written in the record, so and so the
crier said, but so and so the judge. In like manner also, when the holy prophet
speaks, although we say, The prophet said, we mean nothing else to be
understood than that the Lord said; and if we were to say, The Lord said, we should not
put the prophet aside, but only intimate who spake by him. And, indeed, these
Scriptures often reveal the angel to be the Lord, of whose speaking it is from
time to time I said, "the Lord said," as we have shown already. But on account
of those who, since the Scripture in that place specifies an angel, will have
the Son of God Himself and in Himself to be understood, because He is called an
angel by the prophet, as announcing the will of His Father and of Himself; I
have therefore thought fit to produce a plainer testimony from this epistle, where
it is not said by an angel, but "by angels."
24. For Stephen, too, in the Acts of the Apostles, relates these things in
that manner in which they are also written in the Old Testament: "Men,
brethren, and fathers, hearken," he says; "The God of glory appeared unto our father
Abraham, when he was in Mesopotamia."(1) But lest any one, should think that the
God of glory appeared then to the eyes of any mortal in that which He is in
Himself, he goes on to say that an angel appeared to Moses. "Then fled Moses," he
says, "at that saying, and was a stranger in the land of Midian, where he
begat two sons. And when forty years were expired, there appeared to him in the
wilderness of mount Sinai an angel of the Lord in a flame of fire in a bush. When
Moses saw it, he wondered at the sight: and as he drew near to behold it, the
voice of the Lord came unto him, saying, I am the God of thy fathers, the God of
Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob. Then Moses trembled, and
durst not behold. Then said the Lord to him, Put off thy shoes from thy
feet,"(3) etc. Here, certainly, he speaks both of angel and of Lord; and of the same
as the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob; as is written
in Genesis.
25. Can there be any one who will say that the Lord appeared to Moses by
an angel, but to Abraham by Himself? Let us not answer this question from
Stephen, but from the book itself, whence Stephen took his narrative. For, pray,
because it is written, "And the Lord God said unto Abraham;"(3) and a little
after, "And the Lord God appeared unto Abraham;"(4) were these things, for this
reason, not done by angels? Whereas it is said in like manner in another place,
"And the Lord appeared to him in the plains of Mature, as he sat in the tent door
in the heat of the day;" and yet it is added immediately, "And he lift up his
eyes and looked, and, lo, three men stood by him:"(5) of whom we have already
spoken. For how will these people, who either will not rise from the words to the
meaning, or easily throw themselves down from the meaning to the words,--how,
I say, will they be able to explain that God was seen in three men, except they
confess that they were angels, as that which follows also shows? Because it is
not said an angel spoke or appeared to him, will they therefore venture to say
that the vision and voice granted to Moses was wrought by an angel because it
is so written, but that God appeared and spake in His own substance to Abraham
because there is no mention made of an angel? What of the fact, that even in
respect to Abraham an angel is not left unmentioned? For when his son was ordered
to be offered up as a sacrifice, we read thus: "And it came to pass after
these things that God did tempt Abraham, and said unto him, Abraham: and he said,
Behold, here I am. And He said, Take now thy son, thine only son Isaac, whom
thou lovest, and get thee into the land of Moriah; and offer him there for a
burnt-offering upon one of the mountains that I will tell thee of." Certainly God is
here mentioned, not an angel. But a little afterwards Scripture hath it thus:
"And Abraham stretched forth his hand, and took the knife to slay his son. And
the angel of the Lord called unto him out of heaven, and said, Abraham,
Abraham: and he said, Here am I And he said, Lay not thine hand upon the lad, neither
do thou anything unto him." What can be answered to this? Will they say that
God commanded that Isaac should be slain, and that an angel forbade it? and
further, that the father himself, in opposition to the decree of God, who had
commanded that he should be slain, obeyed the angel, who had bidden him spare him?
Such an interpretation is to be rejected as absurd. Yet not even for it, gross
and abject as it is, does Scripture leave any room, for it immediately adds: "For
now I know that thou fearest God, seeing thou hast not withheld thy son, thine
only son, on account of me."(6) What is "on account of me," except on account
of Him who had commanded him to be slain? Was then the God of Abraham the same
as the angel, or was it not rather God by an angel? Consider what follows.
Here, certainly, already an angel has been most clearly spoken of; yet notice the
context: "And Abraham lifted up his eyes, and looked, and behold behind him a
ram caught in a thicket by his horns: and Abraham went and took the ram, and
offered him up for a burnt-offering in the stead of his son. And Abraham called the
name of that place, The Lord saw:(7) as it is said to this day, In the mount
the Lord was seen."(8) Just as that which a little before God said by an angel,
"For now I know that thou fearest God;" not because it was to be understood
that God then came to know, but that He brought it to pass that through God
Abraham himself came to know what strength of heart he had to obey God, even to the
sacrificing of his only son: after that mode of speech in which the effect is
signified by the efficient,--as cold is said to be sluggish, because it makes men
sluggish; so that He was therefore said to know, because He had made Abraham
himself to know, who might well have not discerned the firmness of his own
faith, had it not been proved by such a trial. So here, too, Abraham called the name
of the place "The Lord saw," that is, caused Himself to be seen. For he goes
on immediately to say, "As it is said to this day, In the mount the Lord was
seen." Here you see the same angel is called Lord: wherefore, unless because the
Lord spake by the angel? But if we pass on to that which follows, the angel
altogether speaks as a prophet, and reveals expressly that God is speaking by the
angel. "And the angel of the Lord," he says, "called unto Abraham out of heaven
the second time, and said, By myself I have sworn, saith the Lord; for because
thou hast done this thing, and hast not withheld thy son, thine only son, on
account of me,"(1) etc. Certainly these words, viz. that he by whom the Lord
speaks should say, "Thus saith the Lord," are commonly used by the prophets also.
Does the Son of God say of the Father, "The Lord saith," while He Himself is
that Angel of the Father? What then? Do they not see how hard pressed they are
about these three men who appeared to Abraham, when it had been said before, "The
Lord appeared to him?" Were they not angels because they are called men? Let
them read Daniel, saying, "Behold the man Gabriel."(2)
26. But why do we delay any longer to stop their mouths by another most
clear and most weighty proof, where not an angel in the singular nor men in the
plural are spoken of, but simply angels; by whom not any particular word was
wrought, but the Law itself is most distinctly declared to be given; which
certainly none of the faithful doubts that God gave to Moses for the control of the
children of Israel, or yet, that it was given by angels. So Stephen speaks: "Ye
stiff-necked," he says, "and uncircumcised in heart and ears, ye do always
resist the Holy Ghost: as your fathers did, so do ye. Which of the prophets have not
your fathers persecuted? and they have slain them which showed before of the
coming of the Just One; of whom ye have been now the betrayers and murderers:
who have received the Law by the disposition of angels,(3) and have not kept
it."(4) What is more evident than this? What more strong than such an authority?
The Law, indeed, was given to that people by the disposition of angels; but the
advent of our Lord Jesus Christ was by it prepared and pre-announced; and He
Himself, as the Word of God, was in some wonderful and unspeakable manner in the
angels, by whose disposition the Law itself was given. And hence He said in the
Gospel, "For had ye believed Moses, ye would have believed me; for he wrote of
me."(5) Therefore then the Lord was speaking by the angels; and the son of God,
who was to be the Mediator of God and men, from the seed of Abraham, was
preparing His own advent by the angels, that He might find some by whom He would be
received, confessing themselves guilty, whom the Law unfulfilled had made
transgressors. And hence the apostle also says to the Galatians, "Wherefore then
serveth the Law? It was added because of transgressions, till the seed should come
to whom the promise was made, which [seed] was ordered(6) through angels in
the hand of a mediator;"(7) that is, ordered through angels in His own hand. For
He was not born in limitation, but in power. But you learn in another place
that he does not mean any one of the angels as a mediator, but the Lord Jesus
Christ Himself, in so far as He deigned to be made man: "For there is one God," he
says, "and one Mediator between God and man, the man Christ Jesus."(8) Hence
that passover in the killing of the lamb:(9) hence all those things which are
figuratively spoken in the Law, of Christ to come in the flesh, and to suffer, but
also to rise again, which Law was given by the disposition of angels; in which
angels, were certainly the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit; and in
which, sometimes the Father, sometimes the Son, sometimes the Holy Spirit, and
sometimes God, without any distinction of person, was figuratively signified by
them, although appearing in visible and sensible forms, yet by His own creature,
not by His substance, in order to the seeing of which, hearts are cleansed
through all those things which are seen by the eyes and heard by the ears.
27. But now, as I think, that which we had undertaken to show in this book
has been sufficiently discussed and demonstrated, according to our capacity;
and it has been established, both by probable reason, so far as a man, or
rather, so far as I am able, and by strength of authority, so far as the divine
declarations from the Holy Scriptures have been made clear, that those words and
bodily appearances which were given to these ancient fathers of ours before the
incarnation of the Saviour, when God was said to appear, were wrought by angels:
whether themselves speaking or doing something in the person of God, as we have
shown that the prophets also were wont to do, or assuming from the creature
that which they themselves were not, wherein God might be shown in a figure to
men; which manner of showing also, Scripture teaches by many examples, that the
prophets, too, did not omit. It remains, therefore, now for us to
consider,--since both in the Lord as born of a virgin, and in the Holy Spirit descending in a
corporeal form like a dove.(1) and in the tongues like as of fire, which
appeared with a sound from heaven on the day of Pentecost, after the ascension of
the Lord,(2) it was not the Word of God Himself by His own substance, in which He
is equal and eternal with the Father, nor the Spirit of the Father and of the
Son by His own substance, in which He Himself also is equal and co-eternal with
both, but assuredly a creature, such as could be formed and exist in these
fashions, which appeared to corporeal and mortal senses,--it remains, I say, to
consider what difference there is between these manifestations and those which
were proper to the Son of God and to the Holy Spirit, although wrought by the
visible creature;(3) which subject we shall more conveniently begin in another
book.