THE FIFTEEN BOOKS OF AURELIUS AUGUSTINUS, BISHOP OF HIPPO, ON THE TRINITY:
BOOK V
BOOK V.
PROCEEDS TO TREAT OF THE ARGUMENTS PUT FORWARD BY THE HERETICS, NOT FROM
SCRIPTURE, BUT FROM THEIR OWN REASON. THOSE ARE REFUTED, WHO THINK THE SUBSTANCE OF
THE FATHER AND OF THE SON TO BE NOT THE SAME, BECAUSE EVERYTHING PREDICATED OF
GOD IS, IN THEIR OPINION, PREDICATED OF HIM ACCORDING TO SUBSTANCE; AND
THEREFORE IT FOLLOWS, THAT TO BEGET AND TO BE BEGOTTEN, OR TO BE BEGOTTEN AND
UNBEGOTTEN, BEING DIVERSE, ARE DIVERSE SUBSTANCES; WHEREAS IT IS HERE DEMONSTRATED THAT
NOT EVERYTHING PREDICATED OF GOD IS PREDICATED ACCORDING TO SUBSTANCE, IN SUCH
MANNER AS HE IS CALLED GOOD AND GREAT ACCORDING TO SUBSTANCE, OR ANYTHING ELSE
THAT IS PREDICATED OF HIM IN RESPECT TO HIMSELF; BUT THAT SOME THINGS ARE ALSO
PREDICATED OF HIM RELATIVELY, I. E. NOT IN RESPECT TO HIMSELF, BUT TO
SOMETHING NOT HIMSELF, AS HE IS CALLED FATHER IN RESPECT TO THE SON, AND LORD IN
RESPECT TO THE CREATURE THAT SERVETH HIM; IN WHICH CASE, IF ANYTHING THUS PREDICATED
RELATIVELY, I. E. IN RESPECT TO SOMETHING NOT HIMSELF, IS EVEN PREDICATED AS
HAPPENING IN TIME, AS E. G. "LORD, THOU HAST BECOME OUR REFUGE," YET NOTHING
HAPPENS TO GOD SO AS TO WORK A CHANGE IN HIM, BUT HE HIMSELF REMAINS ABSOLUTELY
UNCHANGEABLE IN HIS OWN NATURE OR ESSENCE.
CHAP. 1.--WHAT THE AUTHOR ENTREATS FROM GOD, WHAT FROM THE READER. IN GOD
NOTHING IS TO BE THOUGHT CORPOREAL OR CHANGEABLE.
1. Beginning, as I now do henceforward, to speak of subjects which cannot
altogether be spoken as they are thought, either by any man, or, at any rate,
not by myself; although even our very thought, when we think of God the Trinity,
falls (as we feel) very far short of Him of whom we think, nor comprehends Him
as He is; but He is seen, as it is written, even by those who are so great as
was the Apostle Paul, "through a glass and in an enigma:"(1) first, I pray to
our Lord God Himself, of whom we ought always to think, and of whom we are not
able to think worthily, in praise of whom blessing is at all times to be
rendered,(2) and whom no speech is sufficient to declare, that He will grant me both
help for understanding and explaining that which I design, and pardon if in
anything I offend. For I bear in mind, not only my desire, but also my infirmity.
I ask also of my readers to pardon me, where they may perceive me to have had
the desire rather than the power to speak, what they either understand better
themselves, or fail to understand through the obscurity of my language, just as I
myself pardon them what they cannot understand through their own dullness.
2. And we shall mutually pardon one another the more easily, if we know,
or at any rate firmly believe and hold, that whatever is said of a nature,
unchangeable, invisible and having life absolutely and sufficient to itself, must
not be measured after the custom of things visible, and changeable, and mortal,
or not self-sufficient. But although we labor, and yet fail, to grasp and know
even those things which are within the scope of our corporeal senses, or what we
are ourselves in the tuner man; yet it is with no shamelessness that faithful
piety burns after those divine and unspeakable things which are above: piety, I
say, not inflated by the arrogance of its own power, but inflamed by the grace
of its Creator and Saviour Himself. For with what understanding can man
apprehend God, who does not yet apprehend that very understanding itself of his own,
by which he desires to apprehend Him? And if he does already apprehend this,
let him carefully consider that there is nothing in his own nature better than
it; and let him see whether he can there see any outlines of forms, or brightness
of colors, or greatness of space, or distance of parts, or extension of size,
or any movements through intervals of place, or any such thing at all.
Certainly we find nothing of all this in that, than which we find nothing better in our
own nature, that is, in our own intellect, by which we apprehend wisdom
according to our capacity. What, therefore, we do not find in that which is our own
best, we ought not to seek in Him who is far better than that best of ours; that
so we may understand God, if we are able, and as much as we are able, as good
without quality, great without quantity, a creator though He lack nothing,
ruling but from no position, sustaining all things without "having" them, in His
wholeness everywhere, yet without place, eternal without time, making things that
are changeable, without change of Himself, and without passion. Whoso thus
thinks of God, although he cannot yet find out in all ways what He is, yet piously
takes heed, as much as he is able, to think nothing of Him that He is not.
CHAP. 2.--GOD THE ONLY UNCHANGEABLE ESSENCE.
3. He is, however, without doubt, a substance, or, if it be better so to
call it, an essence, which the Greeks call <greek>onsia</greek>. For as wisdom
is so called from the being wise, and knowledge from knowing; so from being(1)
comes that which we call essence. And who is there that is, more than He who
said to His servant Moses, "I am that I am;" and, "Thus shall thou say unto the
children of Israel, He who is hath sent me unto you?"(2) But other things that
are called essences or substances admit of accidents, whereby a change, whether
great or small, is produced in them. But there can be no accident of this kind
in respect to God; and therefore He who is God is the only unchangeable
substance or essence, to whom certainly BEING itself, whence comes the name of essence,
most especially and most truly belongs. For that which is changed does not
retain its own being; and that which can be changed, although it be not actually
changed, is able not to be that which it had been; and hence that which not only
is not changed, but also cannot at all be changed, alone falls most truly,
without difficulty or hesitation, under the category of BEING.
CHAP. 3.--THE ARGUMENT OF THE ARIANS IS REFUTED, WHICH IS DRAWN FROM THE WORDS
BEGOTTEN AND UNBEGOTTEN.
4. Wherefore,--to being now to answer the adversaries of our faith,
respecting those things also, which are neither said as they are thought, nor thought
as they really are:--among the many things which the Arians are wont to
dispute against the Catholic faith, they seem chiefly to set forth this, as their
most crafty device, namely, that whatsoever is said or understood of God, is said
not according to accident, but according to substance: and therefore, to be
unbegotten belongs to the Father according to substance, and to be begotten
belongs to the Son according to substance; but to be unbegotten and to be begotten
are different; therefore the substance of the Father and that of the Son are
different. To whom we reply, If whatever is spoken of God is spoken according to
substance, then that which is said, "I and the Father are one,"(3) is spoken
according to substance. Therefore there is one substance of the Father and the Son.
Or if this is not said according to substance, then something is said of God
not according to substance, and therefore we are no longer compelled to
understand unbegotten and begotten according to substance. it is also said of the Son,
"He thought it not robbery to be equal with God."(4) We ask, equal according
to what? For if He is not said to be equal according to substance, then they
admit that something may be said of God not according to substance. Let them
admit, then, that unbegotten and begotten are not spoken according to substance. And
if they do not admit this, on the ground that they will have all things to be
spoken of God according to substance, then the Son is equal to the Father
according to substance.
CHAP. 4.--THE ACCIDENTAL ALWAYS IMPLIES SOME CHANGE IN THE THING.
5. That which is accidental commonly implies that it can be lost by some
change of the thing to which it is an accident. For although some accidents are
said to be inseparable, which in Greek are called <greek>akprista</greek>, as
the color black is to the feather of a raven; yet the feather loses that color,
not indeed so long as it is a feather, but because the feather is not always.
Wherefore the matter itself is changeable; and whenever that animal or that
feather ceases to be, and the whole of that body is changed and turned into earth,
it loses certainly that color also. Although the kind of accident which is
called separable may likewise be lost, not by separation, but by change; as, for
instance, blackness is called a separable accident to the hair of men, because
hair continuing to be hair can grow white; yet, if carefully considered, it is
sufficiently apparent, that it is not as if anything departed by separation away
from the head when it grows white, as though blackness departed thence and went
somewhere and whiteness came in its place, but that the quality of color there
is turned and changed. Therefore there is nothing accidental in God, because
there is nothing changeable or that may be lost. But if you choose to call that
also accidental, which, although it may not be lost, yet can be decreased or
increased,--as, for instance, the life of the soul: for as long as it is a soul,
so long it lives, and because the soul is always, it always lives; but because
it lives more when it is wise, and less when it is foolish, here, too, some
change comes to pass, not such that life is absent, as wisdom is absent to the
foolish, but such that it is less;--nothing of this kind, either, happens to God,
because He remains altogether unchangeable.
CHAP. 5.--NOTHING IS SPOKEN OF GOD ACCORDING TO ACCIDENT, BUT ACCORDING TO
SUBSTANCE OR ACCORDING TO RELATION.
6. Wherefore nothing in Him is said in respect to accident, since nothing
is accidental to Him, and yet all that is said is not said according to
substance. For in created and changeable things, that which is not said according to
substance, must, by necessary alternative, be said according to accident. For
all things are accidents to them, which can be either lost or diminished, whether
magnitudes or qualities; and so also is that which is said in relation to
something, as friendships, relationships, services, likenesses, equalities, and
anything else of the kind; so also positions and conditions,(1) places and times,
acts and passions. But in God nothing is said to be according to accident,
because in Him nothing is changeable; and yet everything that is said, is not said,
according to substance. For it is said in relation to something, as the Father
in relation to the Son and the Son in relation to the Father, which is not
accident; because both the one is always Father, and the other is always Son: yet
not "always," meaning from the time when the Son was born [natus], so that the
Father ceases not to be the Father because the Son never ceases to be the Son,
but because the Son was always born, and never began to be the Son. But if He
had begun to be at any time, or were at any time to cease to be, the Son, then
He would be called Son according to accident. But if the Father, in that He is
called the Father, were so called in relation to Himself, not to the Son; and
the Son, in that He is called the Son, were so called in relation to Himself, not
to the Father; then both the one would be called Father, and the other Son,
according to substance. But because the Father is not called the Father except in
that He has a Son, and the Son is not called Son except in that He has a
Father, these things are not said according to substance; because each of them is
not so called in relation to Himself, but the terms are used reciprocally and in
relation each to the other; nor yet according to accident, because both the
being called the Father, and the being called the Son, is eternal and unchangeable
to them. Wherefore, although to be the Father and to be the Son is different,
yet their substance is not different; because they are so called, not according
to substance, but according to relation, which relation, however, is not
accident, because it is not changeable.
CHAP. 6.--REPLY IS MADE TO THE CAVILS OF THE HERETICS IN RESPECT TO THE SAME
WORDS BEGOTTEN AND UNBEGOTTEN.
7. But if they think they can answer this reasoning thus,--that the Father
indeed is so called in relation to the Son, and the Son in relation to the
Father, but that they are said to be unbegotten and begotten in relation to
themselves, not in relation each to the other; for that it is not the same thing to
call Him unbegotten as it is to call Him the Father, because there would be
nothing to hinder our calling Him unbegotten even if He had not begotten the Son;
and if any one beget a son, he is not therefore himself unbegotten, for men, who
are begotten by other men, themselves also beget others; and therefore they
say the Father is called Father in relation to the Son, and the Son is called Son
in relation to the Father, but unbegotten is said in relation to Himself, and
begotten in relation to Himself; and therefore, if whatever is said in relation
to oneself is said according to substance, while to be unbegotten and to be
begotten are different, then the substance is different:--if this is what they
say, then they do not understand that they do indeed say something that requires
more careful discussion in respect to the term unbegotten, because neither is
any one therefore a father because unbegotten, nor therefore unbegotten because
he is a father, and on that account he is supposed to be called unbegotten, not
in relation to anything else, but in respect to himself; but, on the other
hand, with a wonderful blindness, they do not perceive that no one can be said to
be begotten except in relation to something. For he is therefore a son because
begotten; and because a son, therefore certainly begotten. And as is the
relation of son to father, so is the relation of the begotten to the begetter; and as
is the relation of father to son, so is the relation of the begetter to the
begotten. And therefore any one is understood to be a begetter under one notion,
but understood to be unbegotten under another. For though both are said of God
the Father, yet the former is said in relation to the begotten, that is to the
Son, which, indeed, they do not deny; but that He is called unbegotten, they
declare to be said in respect to Himself. They say then, If anything is said to
be a father in respect to itself, which cannot be said to be a son in respect to
itself, and whatever is said in respect to self is said according to
substance; and He is said to be unbegotten in respect to Himself, which the Son cannot
be said to be; therefore He is said to be unbegotten according to substance; and
because the Son cannot be so said to be, therefore He is not of the same
substance. This subtlety is to be answered by compelling them to say themselves
according to what it is that the Son is equal to the Father; whether according to
that which is said in relation to Himself, or according to that which is said in
relation to the Father. For it is not according to that which is said in
relation to the Father, since in relation to the Father He is said to be Son, and
the Father is not Son, but Father. Since Father and Son are not so called in
relation to each other in the same way as friends and neighbors are; for a friend
is so called relatively to his friend, and if they love each other equally, then
the same friendship is in both; and a neighbor is so called relatively to a
neighbor, and because they are equally neighbors to each other (for each is
neighbor to the other, in the same degree as the other is neighbor to him), there
is the same neighborhood in both. But because the Son is not so called
relatively to the Son, but to the Father. it is not according to that which is said in
relation to the Father that the Son is equal to the Father; and it remains that
He is equal according to that which is said in relation to Himself. But
whatever is said in relation to self is said according to substance: it remains
therefore that He is equal according to substance; therefore the substance of both
is the same. But when the Father is said to be unbegotten, it is not said what
He is, but what He is not; and when a relative term is denied, it is not denied
according to substance, since the relative itself is not affirmed according to
substance.
CHAP. 7.--THE ADDITION OF A NEGATIVE DOES NOT CHANGE THE PREDICAMENT.
8. This is to be made clear by examples. And first we must notice, that by
the word begotten is signified the same thing as is signified by the word son.
For therefore a son, because begotten, and because a son, therefore certainly
begotten. By the word unbegotten, therefore, it is declared that he is not son.
But begotten and unbegotten are both of them terms suitably employed; whereas
in Latin we can use the word "filius," but the custom of the language does not
allow us to speak of "infilius." It makes no difference, however, in the
meaning if he is called "non filius;" just as it is precisely the same thing if he is
called "non genitus," instead of "ingenitus." For so the terms of both
neighbor and friend are used relatively, yet we cannot speak of "invicinus" as we can
of "inimicus." Wherefore, in speaking of this thing or that, we must not
consider what the usage of our own language either allows or does not allow, but what
clearly appears to be the meaning of the things themselves. Let us not
therefore any longer call it unbegotten, although it can be so called in Latin; but
instead of this let us call it not begotten, which means the same. Is this then
anything else than saying that he is not a son? Now the prefixing of that
negative particle does not make that to be said according to substance, which,
without it, is said relatively; but that only is denied, which, without it, was
affirmed, as in the other predicaments. When we say he is a man, we denote
substance. He therefore who says he is not a man, enunciates no other kind of
predicament, but only denies that. As therefore I affirm according to substance in saying
he is a man, so I deny according to substance in saying he is not a man. And
when the question is asked how large he is? and I say he is quadrupedal, that
is, four feet in measure, I affirm according to quantity, and he who says he is
not quadrupedal, denies according to quantity. I say he is white, I affirm
according to quality; if I say he is not white, I deny according to quality. I say
he is near, I affirm according to relation; if I say he is not near, I deny
according to relation. I affirm according to position, when I say he lies down; I
deny according to position, when I say he does not lie down. I speak according
to condition/when I say he is armed; I deny according to condition, when I say
he is not armed; and it comes to the same thing as if I should say he is
unarmed. I affirm according to time, when I say he is of yesterday; I deny according
to time, when I say he is not of yesterday. And when I say he is at Rome, I
affirm according to place; and I deny according to place, when I say he is not at
Rome. I affirm according to the predicament of action, when I say he smites; but
if I say he does not smite, I deny according to action, so as to declare that
he does not so act. And when I say he is smitten, I affirm according to the
predicament of passion; and I deny according to the same, when I say he is not
smitten. And, in a word, there is no kind of predicament according to which we may
please to affirm anything, without being proved to deny according to the same
predicament, if we prefix the negative particle. And since this is so, if I
were to affirm according to substance, in saying son, I should deny according to
substance, in saying not son. But because I affirm relatively when I say he is a
son, for I refer to the father therefore I deny relatively if I say he is not
a son, for I refer the same negation to the father, in that I wish to declare
that he has not a parent. But if to be called son is precisely equivalent to the
being called begotten (as we said before), then to be called not begotten is
precisely equivalent to the being called not son. But we deny relatively when we
say he is not son, therefore we deny relatively when we say he is not
begotten. Further, what is unbegotten, unless not begotten? We do not escape,
therefore, from the relative predicament, when he is called unbegotten. For as begotten
is not said in relation to self, but in that he is of a begetter; so when one
is called unbegotten, he is not so called in relation to himself, but it is
declared that he is not of a begetter. Both meanings, however, turn upon the same
predicament, which is called that of relation. But that which is asserted
relatively does not denote substance, and accordingly, although begotten and
unbegotten are diverse, they do not denote a different substance; because, as son is
referred to father, and not son to not father, so it follows inevitably that
begotten must be referred to begetter, and not-begotten to not-begetter.(2)
CHAP. 8.--WHATEVER IS SPOKEN OF GOD ACCORDING TO SUBSTANCE, AS SPOKEN OF EACH
PERSON SEVERALLY, AND TOGETHER OF THE TRINITY ITSELF. ONE ESSENCE IN GOD, AND
THREE, IN GREEK, HYPOSTASES, IN LATIN, PERSONS.
9. Wherefore let us hold this above all, that whatsoever is said of that
most eminent and divine loftiness in respect to itself, is said in respect to
substance, but that which is said in relation to anything, is not said in respect
to substance, but relatively; and that the effect of the same substance in
Father and Son and Holy Spirit is, that whatsoever is said of each in respect to
themselves, is to be taken of them, not in the plural in sum, but in the
singular. For as the Father is God, and the Son is God, and the Holy Spirit is God,
which no one doubts to be said in respect to substance, yet we do not say that
the very Supreme Trinity itself is three Gods, but one God. So the Father is
great, the Son great, and the Holy Spirit great; yet not three greats, but one
great. For it is not written of the Father alone, as they perversely suppose, but
of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, "Thou art great: Thou art God
alone."(3) And the Father is good, the Son good, and the Holy Spirit good; yet not
three goods, but one good, of whom it is said, "None is good, save one, that
is, God." For the Lord Jesus, lest He should be understood as man only by him
who said, "Good Master," as addressing a man, does not therefore say, There is
none good, save the Father alone; but, "None is good, save one, that is, God."(4)
For the Father by Himself is declared by the name of Father; but by the name
of God, both Himself and the Son and the Holy Spirit., because the Trinity is
one God. But position, and condition, and places, and times, are not said to be
in God properly, but metaphorically and through similitudes. For He is both said
to dwell between the cherubims,(1) which is spoken in respect to position; and
to be covered with the deep as with a garment,(2) which is said in respect to
condition; and "Thy years shall have no end,"(3) which is said in respect of
time; and, "If I ascend up into heaven, Thou art there,"(4) which is said in
respect to place. And as respects action (or making), perhaps it may be said most
truly of God alone, for God alone makes and Himself is not made. Nor is He
liable to passions as far as belongs to that substance whereby He is God. So the
Father is omnipotent, the Son omnipotent, and the Holy Spirit is omnipotent; yet
not three omnipotents, but one omnipotent:(5) "For of Him are all things, and
through Him are all things, and in Him are all things; to whom be glory."(6)
Whatever, therefore, is spoken of God in respect to Himself, is both spoken singly
of each person, that is, of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit; and
together of the Trinity itself, not plurally but in the singular. For inasmuch
as to God it is not one thing to be, and another thing to be great, but to Him
it is the same thing to be, as it is to be great; therefore, as we do not say
three essences, so we do not say three greatnesses, but one essence and one
greatness. I say essence, which in Greek is called <greek>ousia</greek>, and which
we call more usually substance.
10. They indeed use also the word hypostasis; but they intend to put a
difference, I know not what, between <greek>ousia</greek> and hypostasis: so that
most of ourselves who treat these things in the Greek language, are accustomed
to say, <greek>mian</greek> <greek>ousian</greek> <greek>treis</greek>
<greek>upostaseis</greek> or in Latin, one essence, three substances?
CHAP. 9.--THE THREE PERSONS NOT PROPERLY SO CALLED [IN A HUMAN SENSE].
But because with us the usage has already obtained, that by essence we
understand the same thing which is understood by substance; we do not dare to say
one essence, three substances, but one essence or substance and three persons:
as many writers in Latin, who treat of these things, and are of authority, have
said, in that they could not find any other more suitable way by which to
enunciate in words that which they understood without words. For, in truth, as the
Father is not the Son, and the Son is not the Father, and that Holy Spirit who
is also called the gift of God is neither the Father nor the Son, certainly
they are three. And so it is said plurally, "I and my Father are one."(8) For He
has not said, "is one," as the Sabellians say; but, "are one." Yet, when the
question is asked, What three? human language labors altogether under great
poverty of speech. The answer, however, is given, three "persons," not that it might
be [completely] spoken, but that it might not be left [wholly] unspoken.
CHAP. 10.--THOSE THINGS WHICH BELONG ABSOLUTELY TO GOD AS AN ESSENCE, ARE
SPOKEN OF THE TRINITY IN THE SINGULAR, NOT IN THE PLURAL.
11. As, therefore, we do not say three essences, so we do not say three
greatnesses, or three who are great. For in things which are great by partaking
of greatness, to which it is one thing to be, and another to be great, as a
great house, and a great mountain, and a great mind; in these things, I say,
greatness is one thing, and that which is great because of greatness is another, and
a great house, certainly, is not absolute greatness itself. But that is
absolute greatness by which not only a great house is great, and any great mountain is
great, but also by which every other thing whatsoever is great, which is
called great; so that greatness itself is one thing, and those things are another
which are called great from it. And this greatness certainly is primarily great,
and in a much more excellent way than those things which are great by partaking
of it. But since God is not great with that greatness which is not Himself, so
that God, in being great, is, as it were, partaker of that
greatness;--otherwise that will be a greatness greater than God, whereas there is nothing greater
than God; therefore, He is great with that greatness by which He Himself is
that same greatness. And, therefore, as we do not say three essences, so neither
do we say three greatnesses; for it is the same thing to God to be, and to be
great. For the same reason neither do we say three greats, but one who is great;
since God is not great by partaking of greatness, but He is great by Himself
being great, because He Himself is His own greatness. Let the same be said also
of the goodness, and of the eternity, and of the omnipotence of God, and, in
short, of all the predicaments which can be predicated of God, as He is spoken of
in respect to Himself, not metaphorically and by similitude, but properly, if
indeed anything can be spoken of Him properly, by the mouth of man.
CHAP. 11.--WHAT IS SAID RELATIVELY IN THE TRINITY.
12. But whereas, in the same Trinity, some things severally are specially
predicated, these are in no way said in reference to themselves in themselves,
but either in mutual reference, or in respect to the creature; and, therefore,
it is manifest that such things are spoken relatively, not in the way of
substance. For the Trinity is called one God, great, good, eternal, omnipotent; and
the same God Himself may be called His own deity, His own magnitude, His own
goodness, His own, eternity, His own omnipotence: but the Trinity cannot in the
same way be called the Father, except perhaps metaphorically, in respect to the
creature, on account of the adoption of sons. For that which is written, "Hear,
O Israel: the Lord our God is one Lord,"(1) ought certainly not to be
understood as if the Son were excepted, or the Holy Spirit were excepted; which one Lord
our God we rightly call also our Father, as regenerating us by His grace.
Neither can the Trinity in any wise be called the Son, but it can be called, in its
entirety, the Holy Spirit, according to that which is written, "God is a
Spirit;"(2) because both the Father is a spirit and the Son is a spirit, and the
Father is holy and the Son is holy. Therefore, since the Father, the Son and the
Holy Spirit are one God, and certainly God is holy, and God is a spirit, the
Trinity can be called also the Holy Spirit. But yet that Holy Spirit, who is not
the Trinity, but is understood as in the Trinity, is spoken of in His proper
name of the Holy Spirit relatively, since He is referred both to the Father and to
the Son, because the Holy Spirit is the Spirit both of the Father and of the
Son. But the relation is not itself apparent in that name, but it is apparent
when He is called the gift of God;(3) for He is the gift of the Father and of
the Son, because "He proceeds from the Father,"(4) as the Lord says; and because
that which the apostle says, "Now, if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he
is none of His,"(5) he says certainly of the Holy Spirit Himself. When we
say, therefore, the gift of the giver, and the giver of the gift, we speak in both
cases relatively in reciprocal reference. Therefore the Holy Spirit is a
certain unutterable communion of the Father and the Son; and on that account,
perhaps, He is so called, because the same name is suitable to both the Father and
the Son. For He Himself is called specially that which they are called in common;
because both the Father is a spirit and the Son a spirit, both the Father is
holy and the Son holy.(6) In order, therefore, that the communion of both may be
signified from a name which is suitable to both, the Holy Spirit is called the
gift of both. And this Trinity is one God, alone, good, great, eternal,
omnipotent; itself its own unity, deity, greatness, goodness, eternity, omnipotence.
CHAP. 12.--IN RELATIVE THINGS THAT ARE RECIPROCAL, NAMES ARE SOMETIMES WANTING.
13. Neither ought it to influence us--since we have said that the Holy
Spirit is so called relatively, not the Trinity itself, but He who is in the
Trinity--that the designation of Him to whom He is referred, does not seem to answer
in turn to His designation. For we cannot, as we say the servant of a master,
and the master of a servant, the son of a father and the father of a son, so
also say here--because these things are said relatively. For we speak of the Holy
Spirit of the Father; but, on the other hand, we do not speak of the Father of
the Holy Spirit, test the Holy Spirit should be understood to be His Son. So
also we speak of the Holy Spirit of the Son; but we do not speak of the Son of
the Holy Spirit, lest the Holy Spirit be understood to be His Father. For it is
the case in many relatives, that no designation is to be found by which those
things which bear relation to each other may [in name] mutually correspond to
each other. For what is more clearly spoken relatively than the word earnest?
Since it is referred to that of which it is an earnest, and an earnest is always
an earnest of something. Can we then, as we say, the earnest of the Father and
of the Son,(1) say in turn, the Father of the earnest or the Son of the earnest?
But, on the other hand, when we say the gift of the Father and of the Son, we
cannot indeed say the Father of the gift, or the Son of the gift; but that
these may correspond mutually to each other, we say the gift of the giver and the
giver of the gift; because here a word in use may be found, there it cannot.
CHAP. 13.--HOW THE WORD BEGINNING (PRINCIPIUM) IS SPOKEN RELATIVELY IN THE
TRINITY.
14. The Father is called so, therefore, relatively, and He is also
relatively said to be the Beginning, and whatever else there may be of the kind; but
He is called the Father in relation to the Son, the Beginning in relation to all
things, which are from Him. So the Son is relatively so called; He is called
also relatively the Word and the Image. And in all these appellations He is
referred to the Father, but the Father is called by none of them. And the Son is
also called the Beginning; for when it was said to Him, "Who art Thou?" He
replied, "Even the Beginning, who also speak to you."(2) But is He, pray, the
Beginning of the Father? For He intended to show Himself to be the Creator when He
said that He was the Beginning, as the Father also is the beginning of the
creature in that all things are from Him. For creator, too, is spoken relatively to
creature, as master to servant. And so when we say, both that the Father is the
Beginning, and that the Son is the Beginning, we do not speak of two beginnings
of the creature; since both the Father and the Son together is one beginning in
respect to the creature, as one Creator, as one God. But if whatever remains
within itself and produces or Works anything is a beginning to that thing which
it produces or works; then we cannot deny that the Holy Spirit also is rightly
called the Beginning, since we do not separate Him from the appellation of
Creator: and it is written of Him that He works; and assuredly, in working, He
remains within Himself; for He Himself is not changed and turned into any of the
things which He works. And see what it is that He works: "But the manifestation
of the Spirit," he says, "is given to every man to profit withal. For to one is
given by the Spirit the word of wisdom; to another the word of knowledge by the
same Spirit; to another faith by the same Spirit; to another the gifts of
healing by the same Spirit; to another the working of miracles; to another
prophecy; to another the discerning of spirits; to another divers kinds of tongues; to
another the interpretation of tongues: but all these worketh that one and the
self-same Spirit, dividing to every man severally as He will;" certainly as
God--for who can work such great things but God?--but "it is the same God which
worketh all in all."(3) For if we are asked point by point concerning the Holy
Spirit, we answer most truly that He is God; and with the Father and the Son
together He is one God. Therefore, God is spoken of as one Beginning in respect to
the creature, not as two or three beginnings.
CHAP. 14.--THE FATHER AND THE SON THE ONLY BEGINNING (PRINCIPIUM) OF THE HOLY
SPIRIT.
15. But in their mutual relation to one another in the Trinity itself, if
the begetter is a beginning in relation to that which he begets, the Father is
a beginning in relation to the Son, because the begets Him; but whether the
Father is also a beginning in relation to the Holy Spirit, since it is said, "He
proceeds from the Father," is no small question. Because, if it is so, He will
not only be a beginning to that thing which He begets or makes, but also to that
which He gives. And here, too, that question comes to light, as it can, which
is wont to trouble many, Why the Holy Spirit is not also a son, since He, too,
comes forth from the Father, as it is read in the Gospel? For the Spirit came
forth, not as born, but as given; and so He is not called a son, because He was
neither born, as the Only-begotten, nor made, so that by the grace of God He
might be born into adoption, as we are. For that which is born of the Father, is
referred to the Father only when called Son, and so the Son is the Son of the
Father, and not also our Son; but that which is given is referred both to Him
who gave, and to those to whom He gave; and so the Holy Spirit is not only the
Spirit of the Father and of the Son who gave Him, but He is also called ours, who
have received Him: as "The salvation of the Lord,"(1) who gives salvation, is
said also to be our salvation, who have received it. Therefore, the Spirit is
both the Spirit of God who gave Him, and ours who have received Him. Not,
indeed, that spirit of ours by which we are, because that is the spirit of a man
which is in him; but this Spirit is ours in another mode, viz. that in which we
also say, "Give us this day our bread."(2) Although certainly we have received
that spirit also, which is called the spirit of a man. "For what hast thou," he
says, "which thou didst not receive?"(3) But that is one thing, which we have
received that we might be; another, that which we have received that we might be
holy. Whence it is also written of John, that he "came in the spirit and power
of Elias;"(4) and by the spirit of Elias is meant the Holy Spirit, whom Elias
received. And the same thing is to be understood of Moses, when the Lord says to
him, "And I will take of thy spirit, and will put it upon them;"(5) that is, I
will give to them of the Holy Spirit, which I have already given to thee. If,
therefore, that also which is given has him for a beginning by whom it is given,
since it has received from no other source that which proceeds from him; it
must be admitted that the Father and the Son are a Beginning of the Holy Spirit,
not two Beginnings; but as the Father and Son are one God, and one Creator, and
one Lord relatively to the creature, so are they one Beginning relatively to
the Holy Spirit. But the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit is one Beginning
in respect to the creature, as also one Creator and one God.(6)
CHAP. 15.--WHETHER THE HOLY SPIRIT WAS A GIFT BEFORE AS WELL AS AFTER HE WAS
GIVEN.
16. But it is asked further, whether, as the Son, by being born, has not
only this, that He is the Son, but that He is absolutely; and so also the Holy
Spirit, by being given, has not only this, that He is given, but that He is
absolutely--whether therefore He was, before He was given, but was not yet a gift;
or whether, for the very reason that God was about to give Him, He was already
a gift also before He was given. But if He does not proceed unless when He is
given, and assuredly could not proceed before there was one to whom He might be
given; how, in that case, was He [absolutely] in His very substance, if He is
not unless because He is given? just as the Son, by being born, not only has
this, that He is a Son, which is said relatively, but His very substance
absolutely, so that He is. Does the Holy Spirit proceed always, and proceed not in time,
but from eternity, but because He so proceeded that He was capable of being
given, was already a gift even before there was one to whom He might be given?
For there is a difference in meaning between a gift and a thing that has been
given. For a gift may exist even before it is given; but it cannot be called a
thing that has been given unless it has been given.
CHAP. 16.--WHAT IS SAID OF GOD IN TIME, IS SAID RELATIVELY, NOT ACCIDENTALLY.
17. Nor let it trouble us that the Holy Spirit, although He is co-eternal
with the Father and the Son, yet is called something which exists in time; as,
for instance, this very thing which we have called Him, a thing that has been
given. For the Spirit is a gift eternally, but a thing that has been given in
time. For if a lord also is not so called unless when he begins to have a slave,
that appellation likewise is relative and in time to God; for the creature is
not from all eternity, of which He is the Lord. How then shall we make it good
that relative terms themselves are not accidental, since nothing happens
accidentally to God in time, because He is incapable of change, as we have argued in
the beginning of this discussion? Behold! to be the Lord, is not eternal to God;
otherwise we should be compelled to say that the creature also is from
eternity, since He would not be a lord from all eternity unless the creature also was
a servant from all eternity. But as he cannot be a slave who has not a lord,
neither can he be a lord who has not a slave. And if there be any one who says
that God, indeed, is alone eternal, and that times are not eternal on account of
their variety and changeableness, but that times nevertheless did not begin to
be in time (for there was no time before times began, and therefore it did not
happen to God in time that He should be Lord, since He was Lord of the very
times themselves, which assuredly did not begin in time): what will he reply
respecting man, who was made in time, and of whom assuredly He was not the Lord
before he was of whom He was to be Lord? Certainly to be the Lord of man happened
to God in time. And that all dispute may seem to be taken away, certainly to be
your Lord, or mine, who have only lately begun to be, happened to God in time.
Or if this, too, seems uncertain on account of the obscure question respecting
the soul, what is to be said of His being the Lord of the people of Israel?
since, although the nature of the soul already existed, which that people had (a
matter into which we do not now inquire), yet that people existed not as yet,
and the time is apparent when it began to exist. Lastly, that He should be Lord
of this or that tree, or of this or that corn crop, which only lately began to
be, happened in time; since, although the matter itself already existed, yet it
is on, thing to be Lord of the matter (materiae), another to be Lord of the
already created nature (naturae).(1) For man, too, is lord of the wood at one
time, and at another he is lord of the chest, although fabricated of that same
wood; which he certainly was not at the time when he was already the lord of the
wood. How then shall we make it good that nothing is said of God according to
accident, except because nothing happens to His nature by which He may be changed,
so that those things are relative accidents which happen in, connection with
some change of the things of which they are spoken. As a friend is so called
relatively: for he does not begin to be one, unless when he has begun to love;
therefore some change of will takes place, in order that he may be called a
friend. And money, when it is called a price, is spoken of relatively, and yet it was
not changed when it began to be a price; nor, again, when it is called a
pledge, or any other thing of the kind. If, therefore, money can so often be spoken
of relatively with no change of itself, so that neither when it begins, nor
when it ceases to be so spoken of, does any change take place in that nature or
form of it, whereby it is money; how much more easily ought we to admit,
concerning that unchangeable substance of God, that something may be so predicated
relatively in respect to the creature, that although it begin to be so predicated
in time, yet nothing shall be understood to have happened to the substance
itself of God, but only to that creature in respect to which it is predicated?
"Lord," it is said, "Thou hast been made our refuge."(2) God, therefore, is said to
be our refuge relatively, for He is referred to us, and He then becomes our
refuge when we flee to Him; pray does anything come to pass then in His nature,
which, before we fled to Him, was not? In us therefore some change does take
place; for we were worse before we fled to Him, and we become better by fleeing to
Him: but in Him there is no change. So also He begins to be our Father, when we
are regenerated through His grace, since He gave us power to become the sons
of God.(3) Our substance therefore is changed for the better, when we become His
sons; and He at the same time begins to be our Father, but without any change
of His own substance. Therefore that which begins to be spoken of God in time,
and which was not spoken of Him before, is manifestly spoken of Him relatively;
yet not according to any accident of God, so that anything should have
happened to Him, but clearly according to some accident of that, in respect to which
God begins to be called something relatively. When a righteous man begins to be
a friend of God, he himself is changed; but far be it from us to say, that God
loves any one in time with as it were a new love, which was not in Him before,
with whom things gone by have not passed away and things future have been
already done. Therefore He loved all His saints before the foundation of the world,
as He predestinated them; but when they are converted and find them; then they
are said to begin to be loved by Him, that what is said may be said in that
way in which it can be comprehended by human affections. So also, when He is said
to be wroth with the unrighteous, and gentle with the good, they are changed,
not He: just as the light is troublesome to weak eyes, pleasant to those that
are strong; namely, by their change, not its own.