LETTERS OF THE BLESSED THEODORET, BISHOP OF CYRUS, LETTERS CXXI TO CL
CXXI. To Anatolius the patrician.(2)
The Lord who overlooks and governs all things has shewn both the apostolic
truth of my doctrines, and the falsehood of the slander laid at my door. For
the writings sent from the right godly and holy lord Leo, archbishop of Great
Rome, to Flavianus of holy memory and to the rest assembled at Ephesus, are
entirely in harmony with what I myself have written and have always preached in
church. So soon therefore as I had read them, I praised the loving-kindness of the
Lord, in that He had not wholly forsaken the churches, but had protected the
spark of orthodoxy; or--shall I not rather say?--not a spark, but a very great
torch, such as might enkindle and enlighten the world; for he has truly, in his
writings, observed the apostolic stamp, and in them we have found at once what
has been delivered by the holy and blessed prophets and apostles, and their
successors in the preaching of the Gospel, and moreover the holy Fathers assembled
at Nicaea. By these I confess that I abide, and indict all who hold other
doctrines as guilty of impiety. Side by side with these writings of mine I have set
one of the letters sent by him to Ephesus, to the end that when your excellency
reads them you may remember the words which I have often spoken in church, may
recognise the harmony of the doctrines, and may bate the utterers of the lie
as well as those who have set up their new heresy in opposition to the doctrines
of the Apostle.
CXXII.(1) To Uranius(2) bishop of Emesa.
I have been greatly delighted that we who correspond in character should
have corresponded by letter. But I do not quite see what you mean by saying "Are
not these my words?" If it were said only for the sake of salutation, I am not
annoyed at it; but if it is intended to remind me of the advice which
recommended silence, and of the so-called oeconomy,(3) I am very much obliged, but I do
not accept the suggestion. For the divine Apostle charges us to take quite the
opposite course. "Be instant in season and out of season."(4) And the Lord
says to this very spokesman, "Be not afraid, but speak"(5) and to Isaiah, "Cry
aloud, spare not"(8) and to Moses "Go down, charge the people"(7) and to Ezekiel
"I have made thee a watchman unto the house of Israel," and it shall be "if thou
warn not the wicked,"(8) and the like: for I think it needless to write at
length to one who knows. Not only therefore are we not distressed at having spoken
freely, but we even rejoice and are glad, and laud Him who has thought us
worthy of these sufferings; aye and call on my friends to encounter the same perils.
If they know that we do not keep the apostolic rule of the faith, but
swerve to the right hand or the left, let them hate us; let them join the opposite
side; let them be ranked with them that are at war with us. But if they bear
witness to our holding the right teaching of the gospel message, we hail them
with the cry, "Do you too 'stand having your loins girt about with truth, ... and
your feet shod with the preparation of the gospel of peace,'"(1) and so on,
for it is said that virtue comprises not only temperance, righteousness, and
prudence, but also courage, and that by means of courage the rest of its component
parts are preserved. For righteousness needs the alliance of courage in its war
against wrong; temperance vanquishes intemperance by the aid of courage. And
for this reason the God of all said to the prophet "The just shall live by his
faith, and if any man draw back, my soul shall have no pleasure in him."(2)
Shrinking he calls cowardice. Hold fast then, my dear friend, to the apostolic
doctrines, for "He that shall come will come, and will not tarry,"(3) and "He shall
render to every man according to his deeds,"(4) for "the fashion of this world
passeth away,"(5) and the truth shall be made manifest.
CXXIII. To the same.
Your letter was a long one, and a pleasant one, and it shews how warm and
genuine is your affection. So delighted am I with it that I am not at all sorry
for having erroneously conjectured the meaning of the beginning of your former
one. For my misapprehension of the intention of your letter has disclosed your
brotherly love, made plain the sincerity of your faith, and shewn your zeal
for the true religion. We have indeed shared between us the words and the trials
of the prophet; your holiness has used the words; I am buffeted by the
hurricane and billows, and against the towers of the ship I exclaim in his words "They
that observe lying vanities forsake their own mercy."(6) Perhaps He who is
Jonah's Lord and mine will grant that I too may rise and be released from the
monster. But if the surge continue to boil I trust that even thus I shall enjoy the
divine protection, and learn by my own experience how His strength is "made
perfect in weakness,"(7) for He has measured the peril by my infirmity. The divine
prophet whom I have mentioned was flung into the sea by his shipmates one and
all, but I am granted the consolation of your holiness, and of other godly men.
For them and for your godliness I pray that the blessing bestowed upon the
excellent Onesiphorus may be yours, for you have not blushed at my gibes; nay
rather you have shared in my afflictions for the faith's sake.
And one thing which I wish you to know is that, though other godly bishops
have sent me their bounty, I have declined to receive it;--not from any want
of respect to the senders, God forbid;--but because hitherto food convenient for
me has been provided by Him Who gives it even to the ravens without stint. In
the case of your reverence I have acted differently, for really the warmth of
your affection has overcome what has hitherto been my fixed principle. For be
well assured, thy godly friend, that ever since friendship grew up between us the
fire of our love has been kindled to greater heat.
CXXIV. To the learned Maranas.(1)
I too am distressed at the calamities of the Church, and wail over the
storm that is raging; for myself I am glad to be quit of agitation, and to be
enjoying a calm which is delightful to me. As to the men whom your learning states
to be still carrying on their iniquities, the day is not far distant when they
will pay the penalty of their present rash lawlessness. All things are governed
by the Lord of all with weight and rule, and whenever any fall away into
unbounded iniquity His long suffering comes to an end, and He then acts as Judge and
appoints punishment. Foreseeing this I pray that they may cease from their
license that I may not be compelled to weep once more for them as I behold them
undergoing chastisement.
Your excellency I can never forget, and I beg our common Master to fill
your house with blessing.
CXXV. To Aphthonius, Theodoritus, Nonnus, Scylacius, Apthonius, Joannes,
Magistrates of the Zeugmatensis.
I know the strength and stability of your faith, and have been filled with
the greatest possible delight, for, since we worshippers of the eternal
Trinity constitute one body, it is only natural that together with the members that
are sound the rest of the members should rejoice. So says the divine Apostle;
"Whether one member be honoured all the members rejoice with it."(2) I therefore
rejoice with you in your struggles on behalf of the apostolic doctrines and
your following of the famous Naboth in more excellent things. Naboth for his
vineyard's sake suffered most unrighteous slaughter, because he would not give up
the heritage of his fathers. You are fighting not for vineyards, but for divine
doctrines, and reject this new-fangled and spurious heresy as blackening the
brightness of the teaching of the gospel; you do not suffer the number of the
blessed Trinity to be diminished or increased. For it is diminished by those who
ascribe the passion of the only begotten to the Godhead; it is increased by those
who have the audacity to introduce a second son. You believe in one only
begotten, as you do in one Father and in one Holy Ghost. In the only begotten made
flesh you behold the assumed nature which He took from us and offered on our
behalf. The denial of this nature puts our salvation far from us; for if the
Godhead of the only begotten is impassible, as the nature of the Trinity is
impassible, and we refuse to acknowledge that which is by nature adapted to suffer,
then the preaching of a passion which never happened is idle and vain. For if
that which suffers has no existence how could there be a passion? We declare that
the divine nature is impassible;--a doctrine confessed by our opponents as well
as by ourselves. How then could there be a passion when there is no subject
capable of suffering? The great mystery of the oeconomy will appear an
appearance, a mere seeming instead of the reality. This is the fable started by
Valentinus, Bardesanes, Marcion and Manes. But the teaching handed down to the churches
from the beginning recognises, even after the incarnation, one Son, our Lord
Jesus Christ, and confesses the same to be everlasting God, and man made at the
end of days; made man not by the mutation of the Godhead but by the assumption
of the manhood. For suppose the divine nature to have undergone mutation into
the human nature, then it did not remain what it was; and if it is not what it
was, they who have these objects of worship are false in calling Him God. We, on
the contrary, recognise the only begotten Son of God to be immutable as God,
and Son of the very God. For we have learnt from the divine Scripture that being
in the form of God He took the form of the servant;(1) and took on Him the seed
of Abraham, not was changed into Abraham's seed; and shared just as we do both
in flesh and blood and in a soul immortal and immaculate. Preserving these for
our sinful bodies He offered His sinless body and for our souls His soul free
from all stain. It is for this reason that we have the hope of the common
resurrection for the race will assuredly share with its first fruits, and as we have
shared with Adam in his death, so too with Christ our Saviour shall we be
sharers in His life. This the divine Apostle has plainly taught us, for "now" he
says "is Christ risen from the dead and become the first fruits of them that
slept. For since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of the dead
for as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive."(1)
I write thus not to inform you but to remind you. I have tried to be
brief, but I fear I have transgressed the limits of a letter. I was however urged to
write by the very reverend and godly presbyter and archimandrite Mecimas, who,
in obedience to the law of love, has undertaken so long a journey, told us of
your excellency's zeal, and begged us to inflame it by a letter. I have
therefore granted his supplication, and written my letter, and I implore the Lord of
all to keep you safe in the faith and make stronger than him who sifts us.(2)
CXXVI. To the Bishop Sabinianus.(3)
I praised your holiness on your quitting the envied see. Once it was
venerable; now it is ridiculous, for we have made it a thing to be bought and sold.
I was astounded to hear of your having appealed to the men who ejected you. You
ought to have done just the contrary, and, on being invited to grasp the
tiller, to have declined to do so, on the ground that your shipmates had become your
foes. Are you not aware, most godly sir, what our Saviour, through His sacred
apostles, taught us to preach? Do you not know what the heirs of the apostolic
doctrines have just now laid down as objects of worship? For who of the old
teachers from the time when the message was first preached down to the period of
the darkness that now obtains, ever listened to any one preaching one nature of
flesh and Godhead or dared at any time to call the nature of the only begotten
passible? These doctrines in our day are by some men openly and boldly uttered,
while among others their utterance is overlooked, and by silence men become
participators in the blasphemy. What then, may well be asked, is the proper
course to be taken by, those who abominate such doctrines? They have, I should
reply, two alternatives before them; they may either come to close quarters, and
prove the spuriousness of the doctrines, or they may decline communion with their
opponents as openly impious.
I, indeed, have received the wrong done me as a divine blessing. I do not
mean that I have thanked them that have wronged me; how could I thank
fratricides, and men who have become followers of Cain?
But I praise my Master for thinking me worthy of the lot of them that
suffer wrong, for separating me from wrong-doers and blasphemers, and for giving me
my most delightful rest.
CXXVII. To Jobius, presbyter and archimandrite.(1)
The patriarch Abraham won a victory in his old age.(2) The great Moses was
now an old man when, so long as he stretched out his hands in prayer, he
vanquished Amalek.(3) The divine Samuel(4) was an old man when he put the aliens to
flight. These are emulated by your venerable old age. In our wars for true
religion's sake you are playing the man, and championing the cause of the gospel
doctrines, and putting young men in the shade by the vigour of your spirit.
I rejoice to hear it, and am glad, and long to embrace your right
venerable gray hairs. This I cannot do, for your reverence is kept at home by your
years, and I am kept in durance here by the imperial decree. But I cheat my love by
this letter, and give your piety this most loving embrace. I call upon you in
your prayers to help the churches now whelmed in the storm, and to win for me
the divine support, assailed as I am for the sake of the doctrines of the
gospel, and standing sorely in need of help from above.
CXXVIII. To Candidus, presbyter and archimandrite.(5)
I am afraid that the vigour of your godly soul has been overcome by old
age, and that you do not keep your hands stretched out as usual. So Amalek is
trying to win. May there be some to succour your weakness, as once of old Ur and
Aaron supported the hands of the law-giver, that you may overthrow Amalek and
save Israel. These are days when we specially need more earnest prayers, when
Gentiles and Jews and every heresy are at peace, and the Church alone is beaten by
the storm and surrounded by the boisterous billows.
We indeed specially need the aid of your prayers, for those whom we
reckoned to be fighting on our side are fighting on that of our foes.
CXXIX. To Magnus Antoninus the presbyter.(1)
Sailors at night are cheered by the sight of the harbour lights, and so
are they who are in peril for the sake of the apostolic faith by the zeal of them
that share the faith. We have great comfort in what we hear of your
godliness's efforts on behalf of the divine doctrines, for this mind has been given you
by the Giver of all good gifts and for the safe keeping of these doctrines you
undergo every toil. Now I, comforted by your zeal, make an insignificant return,
calling on you to persevere in your divine labours, to despise your
adversaries as an easy prey, (for what is weaker than they who are destitute of the
truth?) and to trust in Him who said "I will not fail thee nor forsake thee,"(2) and
"Lo I am with you alway even unto the end of the world. Help me too with your
prayers that I may confidently say "The Lord is on my side; I will not fear:
what can man do unto me?"(4)
CXXX. To Bishop Timotheus.(5)
Not without purpose does the supreme Ruler allow the spirits that are
against us to agitate the waves of impiety. He does so that He may try the courage
of the sailors, and, while He exhibits some men's manliness, convicts others of
cowardice, stripping the mask from the faces of some who put on an appearance
of piety, and proclaiming others as foremost fighters in the ranks of the
truth. We have seen an instance of this in the present time. The storm rose high;
some shewed their secret impiety; some abandoned the truth which they were
holding, went over to the phalanx of our foes, and now, with them, are smiting the
very men whom they used to call their chiefs. The witnesses of these things
detest the enemy and pity the deserters, but are afraid to give aid to the victims
of the attack upon the apostolic doctrines. Nay, suppose the traitors to urge
them with greater insistency, they will perhaps themselves pass over to the side
of the assailants, will give no quarter to their fellow-believers, but will
drive against them their barbs side by side with the very men whom they accuse.
They will act thus though they have been taught by the divine Scripture that a
wrong done to one's neighbour incurs punishment, while the suffering of injustice
entails great and lasting rewards.
Your own piety, your zeal for the faith, and your good will to myself,
have been proved by this agitation. Twice you have written me a letter in contempt
of all that might deter you, and have thus shewn your brotherly affection. You
have also indicated the conflict you are sustaining on behalf of the apostolic
doctrines. You ask me to tell you by letter what we ought to think and preach
concerning the passion of salvation. I have received your request with delight,
and, not indeed to give you information but only to remind one who is beloved
of God, will proceed to tell you what I have learnt from the divine Scripture
and from the Fathers who have interpreted it.
Know then, most godly sir, that before all things it is necessary to
observe the distinction of terms, and, in addition to this, the cause of the divine
incarnation. Once let these be made clear, and there will be no ambiguity left
about the passion. We will therefore first, to those who endeavour to
contradict us, put this enquiry. Which of the names given to the only begotten Son of
God are anterior to the incarnation, and which posterior, or rather, connected
with the operation of the economy? They will reply that the terms anterior are,
"God the Word," "only begotten Son," "Almighty," and "Lord of all creation"; and
that the names "Jesus Christ" belong to the incarnation. For, after the
incarnation, God the Word, the only begotten Son of God is called Jesus Christ; for
"Behold" He says "unto you is born this day Christ the Lord"(1) and because
others had been called christs, priests, kings, and prophets, lest any one should
suppose Him to be like unto them, the angels conjoined the title Lord with that
of Christ, in order to prove the supreme dignity of Him that was born. And,
again, Gabriel says to the blessed Virgin, "Behold thou shall conceive in thy
womb, and bring forth a son and shalt call His name Jesus"(1) "for He shall save
His people from their sins."(2) Before the incarnation, however, He was never
called either Christ or Jesus. For truly the divine Prophets, in their predictions
of things to come, used the words, just as they prophesied about the birth,
the cross, and the passion, when the events had not yet come to pass.
Nevertheless, even after the incarnation He is called God the Word, Lord, Almighty, only
begotten Son, Maker, and Creator. For He was not made man by mutation, but,
remaining just what He was, assumed what we are, for "Being in the form of God,"
to use the words of the divine Apostle "He took the form of a servant."(3) On
this account, therefore, even after the incarnation, He is called also by the
titles which are anterior to the incarnation, since His nature is invariable and
immutable. But when relating the passion the divine Scripture nowhere uses the
term God, since that is the name of the absolute nature. No one on bearing the
words "In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God, and the Word was
God"(4) and similar expressions, would suppose that the flesh existed before
the ages, or is of one substance with the God of the universe, or was Creator of
the world. Every one knows that these terms are proper to the Godhead. Nor
would any one on reading the genealogy of St. Matthew suppose that David and
Abraham according to nature were forefathers of God, for it is the assumed nature
which is derived from them.
Since then these points are plain and indubitable even among extreme
heretics, and we acknowledge both the nature which is before the ages, and that
which is of recent time, so are we bound to recognise at once the passibility of
the flesh, and the impassibility of the Godhead, not dividing the union nor
separating the only begotten into two persons, but contemplating the properties of
the natures in the one Son. In the case of soul and body, which are of natures
contemporary and naturally united, we are accustomed to make this distinction,
describing the soul as simple, reasonable, and immortal, but the body as
complex, passible, and mortal. We do not divide the union, nor cut one man in two. Far
rather, then, in the case of the Godhead, begotten of the Father before the
ages, and of the manhood assumed of David's seed, is it becoming to adopt a
similar course, and distinctly to recognise the everlasting, eternal, simple,
uncircumscribed, immortal, and invariable character of the one nature, and the
recent, complex, circumscribed, and fluctuating nature of the other. We acknowledge
the flesh to be now immortal and incorruptible, although before the resurrection
it was susceptible of death and of passion; for how otherwise was it nailed to
the tree, and committed to the tomb? And though we recognise the distinction
of the natures, we are bound to worship one Son, and to acknowledge the same as
Son of God and Son of man, form of God, and form of a servant, Son of David,
and Lord of David, seed of Abraham, and creator of Abraham. The union causes the
names to be common, but the community of names does not confound the natures.
With them that are right-minded some names are plainly appropriate as to God,
and others as to man; and in this way both the passible and the impassible are
properly used of the Lord Christ, for in His humanity He suffered, while as God
He remained impassible. If, according to the argument of the impious, it was in
the Godhead that He suffered, then, I apprehend, the assumption of the flesh,
was supererogatory; for suppose the divine nature to have been capable of
undergoing passion, then He did not need the passible manhood. But grant that, as
even their own argument contends, the Godhead was impassible, and the passion was
real, let them beware of denying that which suffered, lest they deny with it
the reality of the passion; for if that which suffers does not exist, then the
passion is unreal. Now for any one who likes to open the quaternion(1) of the
sacred evangelists, it is easy to perceive that the divine Scripture distinctly
proclaims the passion of the body, and to learn from them how Joseph of
Arimathaea came to Pilate, and begged the body of Jesus; how Pilate ordered the body of
Jesus to be delivered, how Joseph took down the body of Jesus from the tree and
wrapped the body of Jesus in the linen cloth, and laid it in the new tomb. All
this is described by the four evangelists with frequent mention of the body.
But if our opponents adduce the words of the angel to Mary and her companions,
"Come where the Lord lay,"(1) let them be referred to the passage in the Acts
which states that devout men "carried Stephen to his burial"(2) and observe that
it was not the soul, but the body, of the victorious Stephen, to which the
customary rites were paid. And to this very day, when we approach the shrines of
the victorious martyrs, we commonly enquire what is the name of him who is buried
in the grave, and those who are acquainted with the facts reply peradventure
"Julian the martyr," or "Romanus," or, "Timotheus."(3)
Very often it is not entire bodies that are buried, but only very small
remains, yet nevertheless we speak of the body by the name that belongs to the
whole man. It was in this sense that the angel called the body of the Lord,
"Lord," because it was the body of the Lord of the universe. Moreover the Lord
Himself promised to give on behalf of the life of the world, not His invisible
nature, but His body. "For," He says, "the bread that I will give is my flesh which
I will give for the life of the world,"(4) and when He took the symbol of
divine mysteries, He said, "This is my body which is given for you."(5) Or according
to the version of the Apostle, "broken."(6) In no place where He spoke of the
passion did He mention the impossible Godhead.
It is therefore before all things necessary that the question should be
put to those who are endeavouring to contradict us whether they confess that the
perfect manhood was assumed by God the Word, and assert the union to have been
made without confusion. Once let these points be admitted, and the rest will
follow in due course, and the passion will be attributed to the passible nature.
I have now summed up these heads and have exceeded the limits of my letter. I
have sent also what I lately wrote at the suggestion of a very godly and holy
man of God, the lord(7) in the form of a concise instruction designed to teach
the truth of the apostolic doctrines. Should I find a good copyist, I will also
send your holiness what I have written in the form of a dialogue,(8) extending
the argument, and strengthening my positions, by the teaching of the Fathers. I
have moreover now sent a few statements of the ancient teachers, sufficient to
shew the drift of their instruction. Give me in return, most godly sir, the
succour of your prayers, that I may pass through the terrible tempest and reach
the quiet haven of the Saviour.
CXXXI. To Longinus, Archimandrite of Doliche.(1)
You have shewn alike your zeal for the true religion, and your love for
your neighbour, both of which are at the present time clearly connected, for it
is for the sake of the apostolic decrees that I am being attacked, because I
refuse to give up the heritage of my fathers, and prefer to undergo any suffering
to looking lightly on the robbery of one tittle from the faith of the Gospel.
You have accepted fellowship in my sufferings, not only by comforting me by
means of your letter, but further by sending to me the very honourable and pious
Matthew and Isaac. You shall hear, I am well assured. from the lips of the
righteous Lord, "I was in prison, and ye visited me."(2) We are small and of no
account, and burdened by a great load of sins, but the Lord is bountiful and
generous. He remembers the small rather than the great, and says, "Inasmuch as ye
have done it unto one of the least of these"(3) "which believe in me"(4) "ye have
done it unto me."(5) I pray you in that yon are conspicuous for right
doctrine, and shine by worthiness of life, and therefore have great boldness before
God, help me in your prayers, that I may be able "to stand," to use the words of
the Apostle,(6) "against the wiles of error," escape the sins of the destroyer,
and stand, though with little boldness, in the day of the appearing before the
righteous Judge.
CXXXII. To Ibas, bishop of Edessa.(7)
The Lord has taught them that suffer wrong not to be east down, but to
rejoice, and to derive consolation from the examples of old. For from the period
of the first men down to our own days we find instances of men who have been
zealous in the worship of the God of all, and vet have been wronged by those with
whom their lot was cast, and have fallen into many and grievous troubles. Of
these I would have gone through the entire list, had I not been writing to one of
accurate knowledge of the divine Scriptures. But since you, O beloved of God,
have been nurtured from your boyhood in tim divine oracles, I have thought it
needless so to do. I only ask you to cast your eyes on them, and to look on all
the kind-hearted clergy that have done wrong, with sorrow; on all that look
lightly on wrong doing, with pity; and to be sorrowful for the disquiet of the
Church. I ask you to rejoice and be glad that I am a sharer in suffering for the
sake of true religion, and to praise without ceasing Him who has imposed this
lot on me. As for honour and comfort and the dignity of sees and wretched
reputation, let us yield them to the murderers.(1)
Let us cleave only to the doctrines of the gospel, and with them, if need
be, endure any extremity of pain, and choose honourable penury rather than
wealth with its many cares.
I am not writing ill these terms in order to give you exhortation, for I
know the courage of your holiness in trouble. My object is to make my own mind
known to your piety, and to inform you that you have on your side comrades who
are gladly incurring peril for the truth's sake. I have been anxious for some
time to write thus to you, but I have been unable to find anyone to convey my
letter. Now I have met with the very honourable and pious presbyter Ozeas, a man
who is at once engaged in the battle for truth and attached to your piety. So I
write and salute your holiness, and beg you to give me both the prop of your
prayers and the comfort of a letter from you.
CXXXIII. To John, bishop of Germanicia.(2)
I have always known, sir, that you are not unmindful of our friendship.
And it has ever been my wish and prayer that your piety should give heed to
exact truth, and shun the communion of traitors to true religion, ascribing to the
Supreme Ruler His care on our behalf. For indeed, while I have been silent and
inactive, He has put an end to our very keen and terrible sufferings, and has
replaced the dire tempest by this bright calm. And now that the loving-kindness
of the Lord has granted us this blessing, I find the quiet of my retreat indeed
delightful, for I feel the necessity of persuading those who have been led
away by the slanders launched against me, and of both convincing them of the
truth of the teaching of the gospels, and refuting the attack of falsehood. When
once this refutation is finished, and the victory of the truth is secured, it is
my purpose to quit public life, and withdraw to the rest that I so greatly long
for. As to the foes of the truth I cry with the prophet, "Their memorial is
perished with a noise, but the Lord shall endure for ever."(1) As to ourselves, I
sing with the Psalmist, "He sent from above, He took me, He drew me out of
many waters, He delivered me from my strong enemy."(2)
This letter is in reply to two received from your holiness, one conveyed
by Anastasius, the presbyter of Beroea, and one by the standard-bearer
Theodotus. In your last letter you mention another, but this has not been delivered. As
to my journey thither I can say nothing till I know what orders are given
concerning me by the most pious emperor. His letter has not yet arrived.
CXXXIV. To Theoctistus, Bishop of Beroea.(3)
Our Saviour, Lawgiver, and Lord, was once asked, "What is the first
commandment?" His reply was "Thou shall love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and
with all thy soul, and with all thy mind." And He added "This is the first
commandment: and the second is like unto it, Thou shall love the neighbour as
thyself." Then He said further "On these two commandments bang all the law and tim
prophets."(4)
He then who keeps these, according to the definition of the Lord, plainly
fulfils the Law; and he who transgresses them is guilty of transgressing the
whole Law. Let us then examine, before the exact and righteous tribunal of our
conscience, whether we have fulfilled the divine commandments. Now the first is
kept by him who guards the faith given by God in its integrity, who abominates
its assailants as enemies of the truth and hates heartily all those who hate the
beloved; and the second by him who most highly esteems the care of his
neighbour and who, not only in prosperity but also in apparent misfortunes, observes
the laws of friendship. They, on the other hand, who look after their own
safety, as they suppose, who on its account make little of the laws of friendship and
take no heed of their friends when assaulted and attacked, are reckoned to
belong to the number of the wicked and of them that are without. The Lord of all
requires better things at the hands of His disciples. "Love" He says "your
enemies, for if ye love them which love you, what reward have ye? for the sinners
and the publicans do this."(1) I, however, have not received even such kindness
as publicans receive. Publicans, do I say? I have not even received the
consolation given to murderers and wizards in their dungeons. If every one had imitated
this cruelty, nothing else would have been left then for me in my life time
but to be wasted by want, and, at my death, instead of being committed to a tomb,
to be made meat(2) for dogs and wild beasts. But I have found support in those
who care nought for this present life, but await the enjoyment of everlasting
blessings, and these furnish me with manifold consolation. But the loving Lord
"caused judgment to be heard from heaven; the earth feared and was still, when
God arose to judgment."(3) But the wicked shall perish.(4) The falsehood of the
new heresy has been proscribed, and the truth of the divine Gospels is
publicly proclaimed. I for my part exclaim with the blessed David, "Blessed be the
Lord God whet only doeth wondrous things, and blessed be His glorious name: and
let the whole earth be filled with His glory; amen and amen."(5)
CXXXV. To Bishop Romulus.(6)
You have reminded me of the ancient story, and remarked how the King of
the Syrians, bethinking him of the loving kindness of the kings of lsrael,
assumed the form of a suppliant and failed not to obtain his petition. Remember
therefore, sir, the divine wrath. God delivered Ahab to utter destruction for using
mercy, and delivered his sentence through the mouth of the prophet, saying "Thy
life shall go for his life and thy people for his people."(1) We are thus
commanded to temper mercy with justice, since not every kind of mercy is pleasing
to the God of all. The present state of affairs specially requires prudent
council; for we are contending on behalf of the divine doctrines, wherein we have
the hope of our salvation. But herein, too, may be seen the great difference
between man and man. Some men are verily infected with the common impiety; while
others, without distinction, advance at one time one doctrine, and at another its
opposite. Some who know the truth conceal it in the secret chambers of their
soul, while they preach impiety with the rest; others again who are filled with
envy have made their private ill-will an occasion of waging war against the
truth, and wreak all kinds of mischief against the prophets of the truth. Again,
there are who embrace the truth of the apostolic doctrines, and yet because they
are afraid of the power of the dominant party are too cowed to proclaim it,
and though they lament at the abundance of our misfortunes, nevertheless side
with them that set the mighty surge a-rolling. It is in this last category that
we place your reverence. We have believed you to be sound in the divine
doctrines, and think that you keep your affection for me, and are borne along with the
time for no other reason than your cowardice. Under these circumstances though
I am not writing to any of the rest, I write to year holiness, and receive your
reply. I see your drift and to some extent I pardon your pusillanimity. But
the loving Lord has now removed all occasions of cowardice, by exhibiting the
new-fangled impiety, and shewing the plain truth of the gospels. I, even though my
mouths were as many as my hairs, cannot praise as I ought the loving-kindness
of the Lord for compelling my strongest opponents openly to preach what has
been preached by me. For I have heard that he who shares your holiness's roof,
when he heard that anathemas had been published in the great cities, ceased to
imitate the crooked gait of crabs, and, after disputing in a certain assembly
about doctrines, walked in the straight road. Never must we suit our words to the
season, but ever preserve the unbending rule of truth.
CXXXVI. To Cyrus Magistrianus.(1)
I was very much distressed to hear of the trouble which had befallen you.
How indeed could I fail to suffer, making as I do your interest mine, and
remembering the apostolic law which bids us not only "rejoice with them that do
rejoice, but also weep with them that weep"?(2) Suffering itself is able to draw
even those that are at enmity with one another into sympathy.
What is so grievous as to lose a wife; one who bore blamelessly the yoke
of wedlock. one who made her husband's life pleasant, one who shared the care of
the family; one who managed the household and shared in the direction of
everything; one who was ready to suggest whatever might be likely to be of service,
and to comply with the wishes of her husband? But what sorrow could surpass the
committal to the tomb of the mother at the same moment as the son whom she
bore; a son who had been carefully trained and had received a learned education;
one who, you hoped, would be the stay of your old age; buried in the very spring
of his manhood, when the down was just beginning to grow upon his cheeks? Did
we only look at the character of the calamity, it admits of no consolation. But
when we bethink us how our race is doomed to die; that against that race the
divine fiat has gone forth; that suffering is common, for life is full of such
woes; we shall bravely bear what has happened, shall repel the assaults of
despair, and shall raise that wonderful song of praise "The Lord gave and the Lord
hath taken away; the Lord hath done what seemed to him good; blessed be the name
of the Lord."(3) But we have many more reasons for consolation. We have been
distinctly taught the hopes of the resurrection, and we look for the time when
the dead shall live again. We know how the Lord many times called death sleep.
If we trust, as in truth we do, the Saviour's words we are bound not to mourn
those that have fallen asleep, even though their sleep lasts somewhat longer than
it is wont. We must await the resurrection. We must remember that the Ruler of
the world in His wisdom, and clearly knowing as He does not the present only
but the future also, guides events for our good. A wise man who knew all this
full well reasons about deaths of this kind and says, "Yea; speedily was he taken
away, lest that wickedness should alter his understanding."(1)
Let us submit I beg you to the wise Ruler of all; let us submit to His
decrees. Whether they be pleasant or whether they be grievous, they are good and
profitable, they make men wise; for them that endure they ordain crowns.
CXXXVII. To the Archimandrite John.(2)
The blessed David fell into several errors, which God, who wisely orders
all things, has caused to be recorded for the good of them that were to come
after. But it was not on their account that Absalom, parricide, murderer, impious,
and altogether vile, started his wild war against his father. The reason of
his beginning that most unrighteous struggle was because he coveted the
sovereignty. The divine David, however, when these events were coming to pass, began to
remember the wrong that he had done. I too am conscious within myself of the
guilt of many errors, but I have kept undefiled the dogmatic teaching of the
Apostles. And they who have trampled upon all laws human and divine, and condemned
me in my absence, have not sentenced me for what I have done wrong, for my
secret deeds are not made manifest to them; but they have contrived false witness
and calumny against me, or rather in their open attack upon the doctrines of the
Apostles have proscribed me for my obedience to them. "So the Lord awaked as
one out of sleep; He smote His enemies in the hinderparts and put them to a
perpetual shame."(3) Counterfeit and spurious doctrines tie has scattered to the
winds, and has provided for the free preaching of those which He has handed down
to us in the holy Gospels. To me this suffices for complete delight. I do not
even long for a city in which I have passed all my time in hard work; all I long
for is to see the establishment of the truth of the Gospels. And now the Lord
has satisfied this longing. I am therefore very glad and happy, and I sing
praises to our generous Lord, and I invite your reverence to rejoice with the, and,
with our praises, to put up the earnest prayer that the men who say now one
thing and now another and change about to suit the hour, like the chameleons who
assume the colour of the leaves, may be strengthened by the loving-kindness of
the Lord, established upon the rocks and, of His mercy, made to pay the highest
honour to the truth.
CXXXVIIl. To Anatolius the patrician.(1)
I have cordially welcomed the rest which has fallen to my lot, and am
harvesting its beneficial and pleasant results. Our Christ-loving Emperor,"(2)
after reaping the empire as fruit of his true piety, has offered as first-fruits of
his sovereignty to Him that bestowed it, the calm of the storm-tossed
churches, the triumph of the invaded faith, the victory of the doctrines of the Gospel.
To these he has added the righting of the wrong done to me. Of a wrong so
great and of such a kind who ever heard? What murderer was ever doomed in his
absence? What violator of wedlock was ever condemned without a hearing? What
burglar, grave-breaker. wizard, church-robber, or doer of any other unlawful deed,
was ever prevented, when eager to appeal to the law, and slain when far away by
the sentence of his judge? In their cases nothing of the kind was ever known.
For, by our law, plaintiff and defendant are bidden to stand face to face
before the judge, while the judge has to wait for the production of plain truth, and
then and not till then, either dismiss the accused as innocent, or punish him
as being reached by the indictment. In my case the course pursued has been just
the opposite. The emperor's letter forbade me to approach the far-famed synod,
and the most righteous judges condemned me in my absence, not after fair
trial. but after extravagant laudation of the documents which were produced to
incriminate me. Neither the law of God nor shame of man staved the deed of blood.
Orders were given by the president,(3) flinging the truth to the winds, and
courting the power of the hour. He was obeyed by men who think as I do, whose
doctrines are my doctrines, and who had expressed admiration of me and mine. None the
less did that day convict some men of treachery; some of cowardice; while to
me a ground of confidence was given by my sufferings for the truth's sake. And
to me our master Christ hath granted the boon "not only of believing on Him but
also of suffering for His sake."(1) For the greatest of all gifts of grace are
sufferings for the Master's sake, and the divine Apostle puts them even before
great marvels.
In these boons I too glory, humble and insignificant as I am, and having
no other ground of boasting. And I beseech your excellency to offer on behalf of
my poor self expressions of thanksgiving to the emperor, lover of Christ, and
to the most pious Augusta,(2) clear to God, instructress of the good, for that
she has requited our generous Lord with such gifts, and has made her zeal for
true religion the Connotation and groundwork of bet sway. Besides this, beg
their godly majesties to complete the work that has been so well marked out, and to
summon a council, not, like the last, composed of a turbulent rabble,
but--kept quite clear of all of these--of men who decide on and highly value divine
things, and esteem all human affairs as of less account than the truth. If their
majesties wish to bring about the ancient peace for the churches, and I am sure
that they do, beg their pious graces to take part in the proceedings, that
their presence may overawe those of a contrary mind and the truth may have none to
gainsay her, but may herself by her own unaided powers examine into the
position of affairs, and the character of the apostolic doctrines.
I make this request to your excellency, not because I long to see Cyrus
again, for your lordship knows what a solitary town it is, and how I have somehow
or other managed to conceal its ugliness by my great expenditure on all kinds
of buildings, but to the end that what I preach may be shewn to be in agreement
with apostolic doctrines while the inventions of my opponents are counterfeit
and base. Once let this come to pass, by God's help be it spoken, and I shall
pass the remainder of my days in cheerful contentment, wherever the Master may
bid me dwell. To you who have been brought up in the true religion, and are
dowered with the wealth of goodness it is becoming to make this effort, and by your
urgent counsel to render yet more zealous our most pious emperor and the
Christ-loving Augusta, zealous already as they are to strengthen their glorious
empire by laudable and rightful energy.
CXXXIX. To Aspar, Consular and Patrician. (1)
To the other good deeds of your excellency must be added your having
acquainted our pious and most christian emperor, whom God's grace has appointed for
the blessing of his subjects, of the enormous wrong done against me, and your
having by a righteous edict annulled an edict which was nothing of the kind.
Supported by divine Providence I have made what they reckoned a punishment a means
of good, and I have welcomed my rest with delight; but none the less I have
been wrongly and illegally treated, though in no single point guilty of the
errors which the enemies of the truth slanderously laid at my door, but yet made to
suffer the penalty of the greatest criminals. Nay, my fate has been yet harder
than theirs. I was judged without a trial; I was doomed in my absence; when
forbidden by the emperor's orders to go to Ephesus I received the most righteous
sentence of my holy judges. All this has now been undone by his most serene
majesty, through the active interposition of your excellency. I, for my part,
feeling that I should be wrong to keep silent and not offer yon my thanks, have
availed myself of this letter, whereby I beseech your excellency to speak in warm
terms in my behalf both to the victorious and Christian emperor and to the
very godly and pious Augusta. On their behalf I implore our good Lord as earnestly
as lies in my power to guard their empire in security, and to grant that it
may be at once a source of loving protection for their subjects, and of terror to
their foes, and establish honourable peace for all. May your excellency be
induced to petition them completely to put an end to the agitation of the Church,
and order the assembling of the council; not, like the last, of men who from
their habits of unruliness throw the synod into confusion, but, in peace and
quiet, of members instructed in divine things, and in the habit of confirming the
apostolic decrees and rejecting what is spurious and at variance with the truth.
And I express this hope to the end that your excellency may reap the good
which such a course of conduct is likely to produce.
CXL. To the Master Vincomalus.(1)
I have been much astonished to learn that your magnificence, though quite
unacquainted with me and mine, and knowing only the wrong that had been done
me, stood up as my advocate, and left no means untried to undo the results of the
conspiracy against me. But your excellency will assuredly receive recompense
from our bountiful Lord, for He who promised to give a reward for a little water
will doubtless give greater recompense to the givers of greater gifts.
I have indeed endured such sufferings as none, or at least very few, of
the ancients have undergone, and this not only from my open foes, but, as I
apprehend, from my real friends. The former attacked me, the latter betrayed me.
Who in the world ever heard of such a trial? Who ever commanded a criminal
to be tried in his absence after chaining him up at a distance of more than
five and thirty stages? What judge has ever been so savage and inhuman as not
only to try men, aye but to condemn men the sound of whose voice he has never
heard, and this in most savage and inhuman fashion? The Lord has ordered the erring
brother, who spurns advice, after a first, second and third admonition, to be
treated as "an heathen man and a publican"(2) Now these most equitable and
righteous judges have not even given to them of the same faith with themselves the
treatment which they give to heathen men and publicans. These indeed they do
see and occasionally converse with, and that with all honour and deference where
they appear to be of rank and dignity. But they have ordered me to be cut off
from home, from water, from everything. This is the way in which they have
wished to become imitators of our Father in heaven "Who maketh His sun to rise on
the evil and on the good and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust."(1) But
of these men I will say no more. The tribunal of the Lord is at hand where is
required not stage pretence but the reality of life. Now I beseech your
excellency to express my thanks to the emperor, the lover of Christ and victorious, and
to the very pious and godly Augusta, for having made true religion the firm
root of their pious empire, and to implore their majesties to make the peace of
the churches firm by commanding the assembling of a council, not · of men of
violence who throw the discussion into confusion, but of the lovers of the truth
who confirm the apostolic teaching, and repudiate this new fangled and spurious
heresy. And I pray that of these honourable endeavours you may reap the fruit
at the hands of our loving Lord.
CXLI. To Marcellus, Archimandrite of the Acoemetae.(2)
Bright is made your holiness by your goodly life, exhibiting on earth the
image of the conversation of the angels, but it is made still brighter by your
zeal for the apostolic faith. As keel to boat, as corner-stone to house, so to
them that choose to live in piety is the truth of the doctrines of the Gospel.
For this truth when assailed you have bravely fought, not striving to protect
it as though it were weak, but shewing your godly disposition; for the teaching
of our Master Christ is gifted with stability and strength, in accordance with
the promise of the same Saviour, "that the gates of hell shall not prevail
against it."(3) It is the loving and bountiful Lord who has thought right that I
too should be dishonoured and slain on behalf of this doctrine. For truly we have
reckoned dishonour honour, and death life. We have heard the words of the
apostle "For unto us it is given by God not only to believe on Him, but also to
suffer for His sake."(4) But the Lord arose like the sleeper, and stopped the
mouths of them that uttered blasphemy against God and injustice against me. But He
has made the tongues of the pious pour forth their fountains in their wonted
message. I, however, am gathering the delightful fruits of rest; as I look at the
agitation of the churches I am grieved, but I rejoice and am glad at being
freed from cares. I have ever been gratified at your admirable piety, but
heretofore I have not written, not from any lack of regard for the dictates of charity,
but because I have waited for some suitable occasion. Just now, having fallen
in with the most pious and prudent monks who have been sent by your holiness on
other business, I have lost no time in carrying out my wish. I salute your
godliness. I beg you in the first place to support me with your prayers, and
further to cheer me by a letter, for by God's grace I have been attacked for the
Gospel's sake.
CXLII. To the same.
I have already addressed your reverence in another letter, and have
delivered it to your much respected brethren. Now again I address your holiness. I am
induced to do so both by your admirable life, and by the praiseworthy zeal
which you have shewn on behalf of the apostolic faith, fearless alike of imperial
power and of episcopal combination. For granted that the majority of the
council consented under coercion, still they did confirm the new fangled heresy by
their signatures. Your holiness, however, was shaken by none of these things, but
abided by the ancient doctrines which the Lord, by means of both the prophets
and the apostles, has taught the churches to hold. These decrees I pray that I
may preserve, and keep to the end my faith and confession in one Father, one
Son and one Holy Ghost. For the incarnation of the only begotten made no addition
to the number of the Trinity. Even after the incarnation the Trinity is still
a Trinity. This is the teaching I have received from the beginning; this has
been my faith; in this was I baptized; this have I preached; in this have I
baptized, this I continue to hold. Of them that utter a lie about the Father the
Lord has said "When he speaketh a lie he speaketh of his own,"(1) for what is
said of the teacher is appropriate to the disciples. So these men who employ lies
against me speak of their own, and do not describe what is mine. I am comforted
by my Master's words "Blessed are ye when men shall revile you and persecute
you and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely for my sake. Rejoice
and be exceeding glad for great is your reward in heaven."(1)
I entreat your piety to pray that I may not have my part among the wrong
doers, but among them that suffer wrong on account of the truth of the Gospels.
CXLIII. To Andrew, Monk of Constantinople.(2)
I have never seen your piety nor have we ever communicated by letter, but
I have become warmly attached to you. What has wrought the charm and continues
to inflame it is the report unanimously brought by the tasters of your honey.
All express admiration of the orthodoxy of your faith, the brightness of your
life, the constancy of your soul, the harmoniousness of your character, the
attractiveness and sweetness of your society and all the other characteristics of
the true foster child of philosophy. For all these reasons I am attached to your
godliness, and my longing has made me even begin a correspondence; but, my dear
sir, grant me as soon as possible what I desire and let me have written
communication from you. For when friends are at a distance considerable comfort is
given them by epistolary communication. You will write to no man of heterodox
opinions, but to one nurtured in the teaching of the apostles and preacher not of
a quaternity but of a Trinity, for in reality I see little difference in the
impiety of those who have the hardihood to endeavour to contract into one the two
natures of the Only-begotten and those who endeavour to divide our Lord Jesus
Christ, the Son of the living God, God the Word made man, into two sons; if
such indeed there be; I cannot think so; but Arians, Eunomians, and Apollinarians
too have ever shamelessly fabricated this slander against the Church, and
indeed laborious students may easily perceive that our far famed Fathers,(3) lights
of the churches, laboured at the hands of the foes of the truth under this
accusation which is now levelled against me by the most excellent champions of the
new fangled heresy. Our wise Lord has laid bare their impiety, for He could not
endure to confirm the unholy heresy by His long suffering.
Be sure then, sir, that you will be writing to one of like sentiments with
your own; and of this you can easily assure yourself from my copious writings.
Write then to me in return, and again your letter, by God's leave, shall
serve to kindle affection. And before you write, give me the help of your
prayers, and beseech our good Lord to guide my feet into the right road, that I may
travel the rest of my journey in accordance with His laws. You who have won
right of access from your unstained life will easily persuade Him Who is eager to
give us His good gifts.
CXLIV. To the soldiers.(1)
Human nature is everywhere the same, but pursuits in life are many and
various. Some men prefer a sailor's career, some a soldier's; some men become
athletes, some husbandmen; some ply one craft trod some another. To pass by all
other differences, some men are zealous and diligent about divine things, and get
themselves instructed in the exact teaching of the apostolic doctrines; while
others, on the contrary, become slaves of the belly, and suppose that the
enjoyment of base pleasures is happiness. Others again are there, lying in a mean
between these two extremes, who do not exhibit this praiseworthy enthusiasm, nor
embrace a life of incontinence, but still honour the simplicity of the faith.
Men who attack the statement that some things are altogether impossible with God
must not, I apprehend, be classed with the zealous and the well instructed in
divine things, but rather either with those who have no exact knowledge of the
apostolic doctrines, or those who have been enslaved by pleasures and shift
hither and thither at the caprice of a moment, setting forth now one thing and now
another.
You have asked me to write on these points. I should prefer at the present
time to keep silence. But in obedience to the commandment of the Lord, "Give
to every man that asketh of time,"(2) I am constrained briefly to reply.
I say then that the God of the universe can do all things, but that in the
word "all" is comprehended only what is right and good, for He who is
naturally both wise and good admits of nothing that is of a contrary nature, but only
what becomes his nature. If any objectors gainsay this statement, ask them if
the God of the universe, the lawgiver of truth, can lie. If they say that lying
is possible to God, expel them from your company as impious and blasphemous.
Should they agree that lying is not possible to the God of the universe, ask them
in the second place, if He who is the fount of justice can become unjust.
Should they allow that this too is impossible to the God of all, you must yet again
enquire if the unfathomable depth of wisdom can become unwise, God cease to be
God, the Lord cease to be the Lord, the Creator be no Creator, the Good not
good but evil and the true Light not light but its opposite. If they admit that
all these things and the like are impossible to God, you must say to them
therefore many things are impossible with God; and that their being impossible so far
from being a proof of want of power, indicates on the contrary the greatest
power.
Even in the case of our own soul, when we say that it cannot die, we do
not predicate weakness of it, but we proclaim its capacity of immortality. And
similarly when we confess the immutability, impassibility, and immortality of
God, we cannot attribute to the divine nature change, passion, or death. Suppose
them to urge that God can do whatever He will, you must reply to them that He
wishes to do nothing which it is not His nature to do; He is by nature good,
therefore He does not wish anything evil; He is by nature just, therefore He does
not wish anything unjust He is by nature true, therefore He abominates
falsehood; He is by nature immutable, therefore He does not admit of change; and if He
does not admit of change He is always in the same state and condition. This He
Himself asserts through the prophet. "I am the Lord I change not."(1) And the
blessed David says "Thou art the same and Thy years shall have no end."(2) If He
is the same He undergoes no change. If He is naturally superior to change and
mutation He has not become from immortal, mortal nor from impassible, passible,
for had this been possible He would not have taken on Him our nature. But
since He has an immortal nature, He took a body capable of suffering, and with the
body a human soul. Both of these He kept unstained from the defilements of sin,
and gave His soul for the sake of the souls that had sinned, and His body for
the sake of the bodies that had died. And since the body that was assumed is
described as body of the very only begotten Son of God, He refers the passion of
the body to Himself. But the four evangelists testify that it was not the
divine nature but the body which was nailed to the cross, all teaching with one
voice that Joseph of Arimathea came to Pilate and begged the body of Jesus; that he
took down the body of Jesus from the tree and wrapped in fine linen, and laid
in his own new tomb the body of Jesus; that Mary the Magdalene came to the tomb
seeking the body of Jesus and ran to His disciples, and reported these things
when she could not find the body of Jesus.
This is the unanimous teaching of the evangelists. But if your opponents
urge that the angels said "Come see the place where the Lord lay"(1) let the
foolish folk learn that the divine Scripture says also about the victorious
Stephen "And devout men carried Stephen to his burial."(2) And yet it was the body
only which was deemed proper for burial, while the soul was not buried together
with the body; nevertheless the body alone was spoken of by the common name.
Similarly the blessed Jacob said to his sons "Bury me with my fathers."(3) He did
not say "Bury my body." Then he went on "There they buried Abraham and Sarah
his wife; there they buried Isaac and Rebekah his wife; and there I buried
Leah."(4) He did not say "their bodies." The names are common to bodies or souls, but
nevertheless it is only the bodies which he called by the common names. In
this manner too we constantly describe the shrines of the holy apostles, prophets
and martyrs, one it may be of Dionysius, another of Julianus another of
Cosmas.(5) And yet we know that only fragmentary remains of bodies lie there, while
the souls in diviner regions are at rest. Precisely the same custom is to be
found in common use, for such an one, We say, died; and such all one lies in this
place; although we know that the soul is immortal and does not share the tomb
with the body. In this sense the angel said "Come see the place where the Lord
lay"(6) not because he shut the Godhead in the tomb, but because he spoke of the
Lord's body by the Lord's name.
In proof of this being the view of the holy Fathers let them mark the
words of Athanasius, illustrious archbishop of Alexandria, who adorned his
episcopate with confession. He exclaims "Life cannot die, but rather quickens the dead."
Let them hear too the words of the farfamed Damasus bishop of Rome, "If
anyone allege that on the cross pain was undergone by the Godhead and not by the
body with the soul, the form of the servant which He had taken in its
completeness, let him be anathema."(1)
Let them hear too the very sacred and holy bishop of the Church of the
Romans, the lord Leo, who has now written "The Son of God suffered as He was
capable of suffering, not according to the nature which assumed but that which was
assumed. For the impassible nature assumed the passible body, and gave it for
us, to the end that He might work out our salvation and at the same time
preserve His own nature impassible."
And again "For He did not come to destroy His own nature but to save
ours."(2)
If therefore they accuse us for saying that God can do what He wishes, but
that He wishes what is becoming to His own nature, and what is unbecoming He
neither wishes nor is capable of; let them accuse too these saints and all the
rest who maintain this position. Let them accuse even the Apostle who say's
'That by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lie."(3) And
again "If we believe not, yet He abideth faithful: He cannot deny Himself."(4)
Repeat these passages to your opponents, and if they are convinced, praise
the good Lord for that, by means of your zeal, He has benefited them. If they
remain unconvinced, enter into no discussion with them about doctrines, for it
is forbidden by the divine apostle to "strive about words to no profit but to
the subverting of the hearers."(5) But do you keep inviolate the teaching of the
Gospels, that in the day of His appearing you may bring to the righteous Judge
what has been entrusted to you with its due interest, and may hear the longed
for words "Well done good and faithful servant; thou hast been faithful over a
few things I will make thee ruler over many things. Enter thou into the joy of
thy Lord."(6)
CXLV. To the Monks of Constantinople.(7)
There is nothing new or surprising in the fact that the men who have made
their tongues weapons against our God and Saviour should also aim their shahs
of falsehood against His right minded servants. It must needs be that the
servants who grieve sorely at the outrage inflicted on their Master should share it.
That so it should be they have been forwarned by their Lord Himself, Who
consoles His holy disciples with the words "If they have persecuted me they will also
persecute you."(1) "If they have called the Master of the house Beelzebub, how
much more shall they call them of His household."(2) Then He cheered them by
pointing out that calumny is easily detected, for He went on "There is nothing
covered that shall not be revealed and hid that shall not be known."(3) I have
often seen the truth of the divine prediction, but I see it with special
clearness now. The authors of the calumny against me, who have bought my destruction
for large sums of money, have been distinctly seen to be involved in the
unsoundness of Valentinus and Bardesanes. They had hoped to cloke their own iniquity
if only they could whet their tongues on the hone of falsehood in order to wound
me. For ever since I saw that the heresy long ago extinguished had been
renewed by these men I never ceased to cry aloud, hearing my testimony in private and
in public, as well in social gatherings as in the temples of God, and strive
to confute their conspiracy against the faith. They have consequently poured out
their insults on my head, and allege that I preach two sons. But they ought to
have convicted me to my face, not slandered me behind my back. They have done
just the contrary. They tied me band and foot at Cyrus by the imperial decree;
they compelled the very righteous judges to condemn me without a trial, and
delivered their most equitable sentence against a man who was five and thirty
stages away. Such treatment was never suffered by any criminal charged with
witchcraft or robbery of the dead, by murderer or by adulterer. But for the present I
will leave the judges alone, for the Lord is at hand "Who judges the world with
righteousness and the people with his truth;"(4) Who exacts an account not
only of words and deeds, but even of evil thoughts. But think it right to refute
the false charge which has been made. What proof have they of my asserting two
sons? Had I been one of the silent kind there might have been some ground for
the suspicion, but my task has been to contend on behalf of the apostolic
decrees, to bring the pasture of instruction to the Lord's flocks, and to this end I
have written five and thirty books interpreting the divine Scripture, and
proving the falsehood of the heresies. The falsehoods these men have concocted are
therefore easy of refutation. Tens on tens of thousands of hearers testify that I
have taught the truth of the doctrines of the Gospel, and for any one who
likes to bring them to the test my writings lie before the world. Not on behalf of
a duality of sons, but of the only begotten Son of God, against the heathen,
against Jews, against the recipients of the plague of Arius and Eunomius, against
the supporters of the madness of Apollinarius, against the victims of the
corruption of Marcion, I have never ceased to struggle; trying to convince the
heathen that the Eternal Son of the ever living God is Himself Creator of the
Universe; the Jews that about Him the prophets: uttered their predictions, the
Arians and Eunomians that He is of one substance, of one dignity and of equal power
with the Father; Marcion's mad adherents that He is not only good but just;
and Saviour not, as they fable, of another's works, but of His own. Once for all,
fighting against each heresy, I charge men to fall clown and worship the one
Son.
And what need is there of many words, when it is possible to refute
falsehood in few? We provide that those who year by year come up for holy baptism
should carefully learn the faith set forth at Nicaea by the holy and blessed
Fathers; and initiating them as we have been bidden,(1) we baptize them in the name
of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, pronouncing each name
singly. Furthermore when performing divine service in the churches, both at the
beginning and the decline of day and when dividing the day itself into three parts,
we glorify the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost.(2) If, as our slanderers
allege, we preach two sons, which do we glorify and which do we leave
unworshipped? It were the wildest folly to believe that there are two sons, and to give the
doxology to one alone. And who is so distraught as, while hearing the words of
the divine Paul "one Lord, one faith, one baptism,"(2) and again "there is one
Lord Jesus Christ by Whom are all things,"(4) to lay down the law at variance
with the teaching of the Spirit, and cut the one in two. But I am prating
unnecessarily, for these men, nurtured in falsehood as they are, do not even dare to
assert that they have ever heard me say anything of the kind; but they affirm
that I preach two sons because I confess the two natures of our Master Christ.
And they refuse to perceive that every human being has both an immortal soul
and a mortal body; yet no one has hitherto been found to call Paul two Pauls
because he has both soul and body, any more than Peter two Peters or Abraham or
Adam. Everyone recognises the distinction of the natures, and does not call one
man two Pauls. Precisely in the same way, when styling our Lord Jesus Christ the
only begotten Son of God, God the Word incarnate, both Son of God and Son of
Man, as we have been taught by the divine Scripture, we do not assert two sons,
but we do confess the peculiar properties of the Godhead and of the manhood.
The party however who deny the nature assumed of us men cannot hear these
arguments without irritation.
It is only right that I should point out from what sources they have
derived this impiety. Simon, Menander, Cerdo, and Marcion absolutely deny the
incarnation, and call the birth from a Virgin fable. Valentinus, however, Basilides,
Bardesanes, and Harmonius and their following, accept the conception of the
Virgin and the birth; but they deny that God the Word took anything from the
Virgin, but made as it were a transit through her as through a conduit, and appeared
to mankind in semblance only, and seeming to be a man, in like manner as He
was seen by Abraham and certain others of the ancients: Arius and Eunomius on the
contrary held that He assumed a body, but that the Godhead played the part of
the soul, in order that they may attribute to it what was lowly in His words
and deeds. Apollinarius did indeed assert that He assumed a soul with the body,
not the reasonable soul, but the soul which is called animal or phytic.(1) Their
contention is that the Godhead took the part of the mind. He had learnt the
distinction of soul and of mind from the philosophers that are without while
divine Scripture says that man consists of soul and body. For we read "And the Lord
God formed man of the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the
breath of life and man became a living soul."(2) And the Lord in the sacred
Gospels said to His apostles "Fear not them which kill the body but are not able to
kill the soul."(3)
So great is the divergence between the doctrines. These men have now done
their best to outdo Apollinarius, Arius and Eunomius, in their impiety and have
now endeavoured to plant anew the heresy sown of old by Valentinus and
Bardesanes, and afterwards uprooted by most excellent husbandmen. Like Valentinus and
Bardesanes they have denied that the body of our Lord was assumed of our
nature. But the Church, following the footprints of the Apostles, contemplates in the
Lord Christ both perfect Godhead and perfect manhood. For just as He took a
body, not that He needed a body, but by its means to give immortality to all
bodies; so too He took a soul, the guide of the body, that every soul by its means
might share His immutability. For even if souls are immortal, they are not
however immutable; for they undergo many and frequent changes, as they experience
pleasure, now from one object, and now from another. Whence it cometh about that
we err when we are changed and are inclined to what is worse. But after the
resurrection our bodies enjoy immortality and incorruptibility, and our souls
impassibility and immutability. For this reason the only begotten Son of God took
both a body and a soul, preserved them free from all blame, and offered the
sacrifice for the race. And this is why He is called our high priest; and He is
named high priest not as God but as man. He makes the offering as man, and
accepts the sacrifice with the Father and the Holy Spirit as God. If only Adam's body
had sinned, it alone should have benefited by the cure. But since the soul not
only shared in the sin but was first in the sin, for first the thought forms
an image of the sin and then carries it out by means of the body, it was just, I
ween, that the soul too should be healed. But it is perhaps superfluous to
demonstrate these points by reasoning, when the divine Scripture clearly proclaims
them. This doctrine is distinctly taught by the holy David and the very divine
Peter, the one foretelling from distant ages, and the other interpreting his
prediction. The words of the first of the apostles are "David therefore being a
prophet, and knowing that God had sworn with an oath to him, that of the fruit
of his loins, according to the flesh, He would raise up Christ to sit on his
throne; he seeing this before spake of the resurrection of Christ that His soul
was not left in hell neither His flesh did see corruption."(1) Now he has
given us much instruction on the same point in these few words. First he states
that the assumed nature derives its descent from the loins of David; secondly
that He took not a body only, but also an immortal soul, and thirdly that He
delivered body and soul to death, and, after taking them again, raised them as He
would. His own words are "Destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it
up."(1) But we have learnt that the divine nature is immortal. What suffered
was the passible, and the impassible remained impassible. For God the Word was
made math not to render the impassible nature passible, but on the passible
nature, by means of the Passion, to bestow the boon of impassibility. And the Lord
Himself in the holy Gospels at one time says "I have power to lay down my life
and I have power to take it again, no man taketh it from me but I lay it down
of myself;" "That I may take it again."(2) Anti again "Therefore doth my Father
love me because I lay down my life for the sheep,"(3) and again "Now is my soul
troubled"(4) "my soul is exceeding sorrowful even unto death."(5) and of His
body He says "The bread that I will give is my flesh which I will give for the
life of the world,"(6) and when He delivered the divine mysteries and broke the
symbol and distributed it, He added "This is my body which is being broken for
you for the remission of sins,"(7) and again "This is my blood which is shed
for many for the remission of sins,"(8) and again "Except ye eat the flesh of the
Son of Man and drink His blood ye have no life in you"(9) and "Whosoever
eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternal life" "in himself" he adds.(10)
Innumerable passages of the same character may be quoted, both in the old
Testament find the new, pointing out the assumption both of the body and of the soul,
and that they are descended from Abraham and David. Joseph of Arimathea when
he came to Pilate begged the body of Jesus, and the fourfold authority(11) of
the holy Gospels tells us how he received the body, wrapped it in the linen
cloth, and committed it to the tomb. I do, indeed, sorrow and lament that I am
compelled by the attacks of error to adduce against men supposed to be of one and
the same faith with myself the arguments which I have already urged against the
victims of the plague of Marcion,--of whom, by God's grace, I have converted
more than ten thousand, and brought them to Holy Baptism. What child of the church
ever had any doubts on these points? Who has not cited this teaching of the
holy Fathers? The works of the great Basil are full of it; as well, as those of
his fellow soldiers Gregory and Amphilochius, and of those who in the West have
been illustrious teachers of grace, Damasus, bishop of great Rome, and Ambrose
of Milan; and Cyprian of Carthage who for the sake of these doctrines won the
martyr's crown. Five times was the famous Athanasius driven from his flock and
compelled to dwell in exile; and in the cause of these doctrines strove too his
master Alexander. Eustathius, Meletius, and Flavianus, luminaries of the East,
and Ephraim, harp of the Spirit, who daily waters the people of Syria with the
streams of grace; John and Atticus, lend heralds of the truth; and men of an
earlier age than they, Ignatius, Polycarp, Irenaeus, Justin, and Hippolytus, of
whom the more part not only shine at the head of the company of bishops, but
also adorn the martyr's band.
He, too, who now rules great Rome and diffuses in all directions from the
West the rays of right teaching, the most holy Leo, has expressed to me this
distinctive mark of the faith in his own letters. All these have clearly taught
that the only begotten Son of God and everlasting God, ineffably begotten of the
Father, is one Son; and that after the incarnation He was called both Son of
man and man, not because He was changed into manhood, for His nature is
immutable, but because He took what was ours. They teach too that He was both
impassible and immortal as God, and mortal and passible as man; but after the
resurrection even in relation to His humanity He received impassibility and immortality,
for, though the body remained a body, still it is impassible and immortal,
verily a divine body and glorified with divine glory. This is distinctly told us by
the blessed Paul in the words "For our conversation is in heaven from whence
also we look for the Saviour, our Lord Jesus Christ, who shall change our vile
body that it may be fashioned like unto the body of His glory."(2) He does not
say to "His glory" but to "the body of His glory," and the Lord Himself, when
He had said to His apostles "There be some standing here which shall not taste
of death till they see the Son of man coming in His Father's glory,"(1) took
them after six days into an exceeding high mountain, and was transfigured before
them, and His face became as the sun, and His raiment was bright like the
light.(2) By these means He shewed the manner of the second advent. He taught that
the assumed nature is not uncircumscribed (for this is characteristic of the
Godhead alone) but that it shall send forth flashes of the divine glory, and
emit rays of light transcending the powers of the sense of sight. With this glory
He was taken up; with this the angels said that He should come; for their words
were "He who was taken from you into heaven shall so come in like manner as ye
have seen him go into heaven."(2) When moreover He was seen by the divine
apostles after the resurrection, He shewed them both hands and feet; and to Thomas
He shewed also His side and the wounds of the nails and of the spear. For on
account of those men who positively deny the assumption of the flesh, and further
of those others who assert that after the resurrection the nature of the body
was changed into the nature of Godhead, He preserved unaltered the prints of
the nails and of the spear. And while raising all other bodies free from every
disfigurement,(4) in His own body He left the marks of His sufferings. to the end
that deniers of the assumption of the body may be convicted of their error by
means of His sufferings; and holders of the notion that His body was changed
into another nature may be taught by the print of the nails that it abides in its
own proper qualities. Suppose any one to imagine that he has a proof that the
body of the Lord did not remain a body after the resurrection in the fact that
He came in to the disciples when the doors were shut, let such an one remember
how He walked upon the sea while His body was still mortal, how He was born
after keeping the seals of virginity intact, and how again when encircled by them
that were plotting against Him He frequently escaped from their hands. But why
need I mention the Lord, who was not only man, but God before the ages, and to
whom it was easy to do whatsoever He would? Let them tell how Habakkuk was
translated from Judaea into Babylon in a moment of time and passed through the
covering of the den, and brought the food to Daniel, and returned again. without
destroying the seals of the den.(5) It is sheer foolishness to enquire into the
manner of the miracles of the Lord, but in addition to what has been said it
ought also to be known that after the resurrection our bodies also will be
incorruptible and immortal, and being released from what is earthly will become light
and aethereal. This moreover is distinctly taught us by the divine Paul in the
words "It is sown in corruption, it is raised in incorruption, it is sown in
weakness it is raised in power; it is sown in dishonour it is raised in glory; it
is sown a natural body it is raised a spiritual body"' and in another place
"We shall be caught up in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air."(2) If then the
bodies of the saints become light and aethereal and easily travel through the
air, we cannot wonder that the Lord's body united to the Godhead of the only
begotten, when, after the resurrection, it had become immortal, entered in when
the doors were shut.
Countless other proofs might be quoted without difficulty from apostles
and prophets. But what has been already said is enough to show the drift of my
teaching. I believe in one Father, one Son and one Holy Ghost; and I confess one
Godhead, one Lordship, one substance and three hypostases. For the incarnation
of the only begotten did not add to the number of the Trinity, and make the
Trinity a quaternity, but, even after the incarnation the Trinity was still a
Trinity. And while confessing that the only begotten Son of God was made man I do
not deny the nature which He took, but confess, as I have said, both the nature
which took and the nature which was taken. The union did not confound the
properties of the natures. For if the air by receiving the light through all its
parts does not cease to be air, nor yet at the same time destroy the nature of the
light, for with our eves we behold the light and by our feeling we recognise
the air, as it meets us cold or hot, or moist or dry, so it were sheer folly to
call the union of the Godhead and the manhood confusion. If created natures
which share at once subordinate anti temporal existence, when united and in some
sense mingled, yet remain unimpaired, and, when the light withdraws, the nature
of the air is left alone, much more proper is it, I apprehend, for the nature
which fashioned all things, when conjoined with and united to the nature which
it assumed from us, to be acknowledged to continue itself in its purity, and in
like manner to preserve unimpaired that which it had assumed. Gold, too, when
brought in contact with the fire, participates both in the colour and power of
fire, but it does not lose its own nature, but at the same time remains gold and
has the active qualities of fire. In this manner also the Lord's body is a
body, but impassible, incorruptible, immortal, of the Lord, divine and glorified
with the divine glory. It is not separated from the Godhead, nor yet is of any
one else, save of the only begotten Son of God Himself. For it does not show to
us another person, but the only-begotten Himself clad in our nature.
This is the doctrine which I am continually preaching. They on the other
hand who deny the incarnation wrought on our behalf have called me a heretic,
adopting a course something like that of unchaste females, who, while they sell
their own charms, assail honest women with the insults of their profession, and
apply language proper to their own wantonness to women who hold such wantonness
in abhorrence. This is how Egypt has acted. She has herself fallen willingly
into the thraldom of base desire. She has lavished her servile adulation on a
man of chaste character. Then, failing to entice him by her wiles, or to trap him
in the snares of her voluptuous passion, she describes one who is faithful to
purity as an adulterer.
But these men will be called to account by God, as well for their devices
against the faith as for the snares they have laid against me. I only charge
those who have been influenced by the false accusations uttered against me to
keep one ear for the accused, and not to give both to the accusers. In this manner
they will fulfil the divine law which lays down "Thou shall not raise a false
report,"(3) and "Judge righteously between every man and his brother."(2) In
these words the divine law charges us not to believe the calumnies uttered
against the absent but to judge the accused face to face.
CXLVI. To John the OEconomus.(3)
Rest and a life free from care are very grateful to me. I have therefore
blocked the door of the monastery, and decline intercourse with my friends.
But I have received information that fresh attacks are being made against
the Faith of the Gospels, and therefore conclude that there may be danger in my
silence. When wrong has been done some mortal prince, not only the guilty
authors of the outrage but they also who have been standing by and made no effort
to drive off the assailants, are in peril of punishment: What penalty then ought
not to be undergone by men who can venture to look lightly on the utterance of
blasphemy against our God and Saviour? This is the fear which has impelled me
now to write and expose the innovations of which I have been informed.
It is said that a common report in the city represents that after certain
presbyters had offered prayer, and concluded it in the wonted manner, while
some said "For to Thee belongs glory and to thy Christ and to the Holy Ghost;" and
others "Through grace and loving kindness of thy Christ, with whom belongs
glory to Thee with thy holy Spirit," the very wise archdeacon prohibited the use
of the expression, "the Christ" and said that the "only begotten" ought to be
glorified. If this is true it were impossible to exceed the impiety. For he
either divides the one Lord Jesus Christ into two sons and regards the only begotten
Son as lawful and natural, but the Christ as adopted and spurious, and
consequently unmeet for being honoured in doxology; or else he is endeavouring to
support the heresy which has now burst in on us with the riot of wild revelry. Had
a grievous tempest been now oppressing us, any one might have supposed that the
blasphemer suited his blasphemy to the necessity of the moment. through fear
of the power of the originators of the heresy. But now that He who is blasphemed
has rebuked the winds and the sea, and blessed the storm-tossed churches with
a calm, while everywhere by land and sea the proclamation of the apostles is
preached, what room is there for the blasphemy? While not even they who have
lately basely inserted among the doctrines of the Church that flesh and godhead are
of one and the same nature have ever forbidden the offering of praise to the
Lord Christ. This fact may be easily ascertained from those who have returned
thence. A man holding the foremost place in the ecclesiastical rank ought to have
known the divine Scripture, and to have learnt from it that just as the
heralds of the truth rank the only begotten Son with the Father, so accordingly using
the title of "the Christ" instead of that of "Son" they number Him sometimes
with the Father and sometimes with the Holy Ghost; for the Christ is none other
than the only begotten Son of God. So we may quote the divine Paul writing to
the Corinthians, but teaching the world, that "There is one God the Father of
whom are all things and one Lord Jesus Christ by whom are all things."(1) Thus
he calls the same person, Christ, Jesus, Lord, and Creator of all things. And
writing to the Thessalonians he says "Now God Himself and our Father and our Lord
Jesus Christ direct our way unto you."(2) And in his second epistle to the
same he puts the Christ before the Father, not to invert the order, but to teach
that the order of the haines does not indicate a distinction of dignity and
nature. His words are "Now our Lord Jesus Christ Himself, and God, even our Father,
which hath loved us, and hath given us everlasting consolation and good hope
through grace, comfort your hearts, and stablish you in every good word and
work."(3) And at the end of his Epistle to the Romans after certain exhortations he
adds "I beseech you brethren for the Lord Jesus Christ's sake and for the love
of the spirit."(4) Now if he had known the Christ as being any other than the
Son he would not have put Him before the Holy Ghost. Writing to the
Corinthians, at the very beginning of his letter, he mentions the name of Christ as alone
sufficient to influence the faithful. "Now I beseech you brethren by the name
of our Lord Jesus Christ that ye all speak the same thing"(5) and when writing
to them a second time he thus concludes "The peace of our Lord Jesus Christ and
the love of God the Father and the communion of the Holy Ghost be with you
all."(6) Here he puts the name of Christ not only before the Spirit, but also
before the Father and this in all the churches is the beginning of the Liturgy of
the Mystery.
According, then, to this extraordinary regulation the august name of our
God and Saviour, Jesus Christ, ought to be omitted from the mystic writings. But
it is unnecessary to say more on this point. The opening of every one of his
letters is distinguished by the divine Apostle with this address. At one time it
is "Paul a servant of Jesus Christ called to be an apostle."' At another "Paul
called to be an apostle of Jesus Christ."(8) At another "Paul a servant of God
and an apostle of Jesus Christ."(9) And suiting his benediction to his
exordium he deduces it from the same source and links the title of the Son with God
the Father, saying "Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus
Christ."(10) And he graces the conclusion of his letters with the blessing
"The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all, amen."(1)
Copious additional evidence may be found whereby it may be learnt without
difficulty that our Lord Jesus Christ is no other person than the Son which
completes the Trinity. For the same before the ages was only begotten Son and God
the Word, and after the resurrection He was called Jesus and Christ. receiving
the names from the facts. Jesus means Saviour; "Thou shall call His name Jesus
for He shall save His people from their sins."(2)
He is named Christ from being as man anointed with the Holy Ghost, and
called our High Priest, Apostle, Prophet and King. Long ago the divine Moses
exclaimed "The Lord thy God will raise up unto thee a prophet, from the midst of
thee, of thy brethren, like unto me."(3) And the divine David cries "The Lord hath
sworn and will not repent, Thou art a priest forever after the order of
Melchisedek."(4) This prophecy is confirmed by the divine Apostle.(5) And again
"seeing then that we have a great High Priest that has passed into the heavens.
Jesus the Son of God, let us hold fast our profession."(6)
That as God, He is king before the ages that prophetic minstrelsy teaches
us in the words "Thy throne, O God, is for ever and ever; the sceptre of Thy
kingdom is a right sceptre."(7)
His majesty as man is also shown us. For having the sovereignty of all
things as God and Creator, He assumes this majesty as man, wherefore it is added
"Thou lovest righteousness and hatest wickedness, therefore God thy God hath
anointed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows."(8) And in the second
psalm the anointed one himself says "Yet was I set as king by Him upon the holy
hill of Sion, I will declare the decree of the Lord. The Lord hath said unto me
'Thou art my Son this day have I begotten Thee; ask of me and I shall give Thee
the heathen for thine inheritance and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy
possession.'"(9) This He said as man, for as man He receives what as God He
possesses. And at the very beginning of the psalm the gift of prophecy ranks Him
with God the Father in the words "Why do the heathen rage and the people
imagine a vain thing. The kings of the earth set themselves and the rulers take
counsel together against the Lord and against His anointed."(10)
Let no one then foolishly suppose that the Christ is any other than the
only begotten Son. Let us not imagine ourselves wiser than the gift of the
Spirit. Let us hear the words of the great Peter, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of
the living God."(1) Let us hear the Lord Christ confirming this confession, for
"On this rock," He says, "I will build my church and the gates of Hell shall not
prevail against it."(2) Wherefore too the wise Paul, most excellent master
builder of the churches, fixed no other foundation than this. "I," he says, "as a
wise master builder have laid the foundation, and another buildeth thereon. But
let every man take heed how he buildeth thereon. For other foundation can no
man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ."(3) How then can they think of
any other foundation, when they are bidden not to fix a foundation, but to
build on that which is laid? The divine writer recognises Christ as the
foundation, and glories in this title, as when he says, "I am crucified with Christ:
nevertheless I live; yet not I but Christ liveth in me."(4) And again "To me to
live is Christ and to die is gain,"(5) and again "For I determined not to know
anything among you save Jesus Christ and Him crucified."(6) And a little before he
says, "But we preach Christ crucified to the Jews a stumbling-block and to the
Greeks foolishness, but unto them which are called both Jews and Greeks,
Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God."(7) And in his Epistle to the
Galatians be writes, "But when it pleased God who separated me from my mother's womb
and called me by His grace to reveal His Son in me that I might preach Him among
the heathen."(8) But when writing to the Corinthians he does not say we preach
"the Son" but "Christ crucified," herein doing no violence to his commission,
but recognising the same to be Jesus, Christ, Lord, only begotten, and God the
Word. For the same reason too at the beginning of his letter to the Romans he
calls himself "servant of Jesus Christ" and describes himself as "separated unto
the gospel of God, which He had promised afore by His prophets in the Holy
Scriptures, concerning His Son Jesus Christ our Lord, which was made of the seed
of David according to the flesh; and declared to be the Son of God with
powers"(1) and so on. He calls the same both Jesus Christ, and Son of David, and Son of
God, as God and Lord of all, and yet in the middle of his epistle, after
making mention of the Jews, he adds, "whose are the fathers, and of whom as
concerning the flesh Christ came, who is over all God blessed for ever, amen."(2) Here
he says that He who according to the flesh derived His descent froth the Jews
is eternal God and is praised by the right minded as Lord of all created things.
The same teaching is given us in the Apostle's words to the excellent Titus
"Looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and
our Saviour Jesus Christ."(3) Here he calls the same both Saviour, and great
God, and Jesus Christ. And in another place he writes, "In the kingdom of Christ
and of God."(4) Moreover the chorus of the angels announced to the shepherds "
Unto you is born this day in the city of David ... Christ the Lord."(5)
But to men who meditate on God's law day and night, it is indeed needless
to write all the proofs of this kind; the above are sufficient to persuade even
the most obstinate opponents not to divide the divine titles. One point,
however, I cannot endure to omit. He is alleged to have said that there are many
Christs but one Son. Into this error I suppose he fell through ignorance. For if
he had read the divine Scripture, he would have known that the title of the Son
has also been bestowed by our bountiful Lord on many. The lawgiver Moses, the
writer of the ancient history, says "And the sons of God saw the daughters of
men that they were fair and they took them wives of them,"(6) and the God of all
Himself said to this Prophet "Thou shalt say unto Pharaoh, Israel is my son
even my first-born."(7) In the great song he says "Rejoice O ye nations with His
people and let all the sons of God be strong in Him;"(8) and by the mouth of the
prophet Isaiah He says "I have nourished and brought up sons (children) and
they have rebelled against me;"(9) and through the thrice blessed David "I have
said ye are gods and all of you are children of the Most High,"(10) and to the
Romans the wise Paul wrote in this manner, "For as many as are led by the
Spirit of God, they are the sons of God. For ye have not received the spirit of
bondage again to fear; but ye have received the I spirit of adoption, whereby we
cry, Abba, Father. For the Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit, that
we are the children of God. And if children, then heirs; heirs of God and
joint-heirs with Christ: if so be that we suffer with Him that we may be also
glorified together;"(1) and to the Galatians he writes "And because ye are sons God
hath sent forth the spirit of His Son into your hearts, crying, Abba, Father.
Wherefore thou art no more a servant but a son; and if a son then an heir of God
through Jesus Christ."(2) The lesson he gives to the Ephesians is "in love
having predestinated us into the adoption of children by Jesus Christ to Himself."(3)
If then, because the name of the Christ is common, we ought not to glorify
the Christ as God, we shall equally shrink from worshipping Him as Son, since
this also is a name which has been bestowed upon many. And why do I say the
Son? The very name of God itself has been given by God to many. "The Lord the God
of gods hath spoken and called the earth."(4) And "I have said Ye are gods,"(5)
and "Thou shalt not revile the gods."(6) Many too have appropriated tiffs name
to themselves. The daemons who have deceived mankind have given this title to
idols; whence Jeremiah exclaims, "The gods that have not made the heavens and
the earth even they shall perish from the earth and from under these
heavens;"(7) and again "They made to themselves gods of silver and gods of gold;"(8) and
the prophet Isaiah when he had mocked the making of the idols, and said " He
burneth part thereof in the fire with part thereof he eateth flesh he warmeth
himself and saith Aha I am warm I have seen the fire,"(9) went on "and the residue
thereof he maketh a god and falleth down unto it and saith 'Deliver me for thou
art my god'"(10) and so the prophet laments over them and says "Know that
their heart is ashes."(11) And the Psalmist David has taught us to sing "For all
the gods of the nations are idols, but the Lord made the heavens."(12)
But this common use of titles gives no offence to men who are instructed
in true religion. We are aware that the daemons have falsely bestowed upon
themselves and on idols the divine name, while the saints have received this honour
of free grace.
In reality and by nature it is the God of all, and His only-begotten Son
and the Holy Spirit which are God. This is distinctly taught us by the admirable
Paul in the words "For though there be that are called gods whether in heaven
or in earth, as there are gods many and lords many, but to us there is but one
God, the Father, of whom are all things, and we in Him; and one Lord by whom
are all things and we by Him."(1) And the Holy Spirit is called the Spirit of God
and so also is the soul of man, for, it is written, "His breath goeth
forth,"(2) and "O ye spirits and souls of the righteous bless ye the Lord,"(3) and the
Psalmist David called the angels spirits. "Who maketh His angels spirits and
His ministers a flame of fire."(4) Why indeed do I mention the angels and the
souls of men? Even the daemons are so called by the Lord "He shall take unto him
seven other spirits more wicked than himself and they shall enter in, and the
last state of that man shall be worse than the first."(5) But even this
application of the name does not offend the pious reader, for the Father and His only
begotten Son and His Holy Spirit are one God by nature; and the divine Word made
man, our Lord Jesus Christ, is by nature one Son, only begotten of the Father;
and the Comforter who completes the number of the Trinity is one Holy Ghost.
Thus though many are named fathers, we worship one Father, the Father before the
ages, who Himself gave this title to men, as the Apostle says, "For this cause
I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, of whom every
fatherhood in heaven and earth is named."(6) Let us not then, because others are called
christs, rob ourselves of the worship of our Lord Jesus Christ. For just as
though many are called gods and fathers, there is one God and Father over all
and before the ages; and though many are called sons, there is one real and
natural Son; and though many are styled spirits there is one Holy Ghost; just so
though many are called christs there is one Lord Jesus Christ by Whom are all
things. And very properly does the Church cling to this name; for she has heard
Paul, escorter of the Bride, exclaiming "I have espoused you to one husband that
I may present you as a chaste virgin to Christ,"(7) and again "Husbands love
your wives as Christ also loved the Church,"(1) and again "For this cause shall
a man leave his father and mother, and shall be joined unto his wife, and they
two shall be one flesh. This is a great mystery; but I speak concerning Christ
and the Church."(2) Listen to him as he says "Christ hath redeemed us from the
curse of the law, being made a curse for us,"(3) and elsewhere "Know ye not
that so many of us as were baptized unto Jesus Christ were baptized into His
death,"(4) and in another place, "For as many of you as have been baptized into
Christ have put on Christ,"(5) and again "Put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make
not provision for the flesh, to fulfil the lust thereof."(6)
They who are blessed by the boons of God and have learnt to know these
passages and others like them, kindled with warm love for their bountiful Master,
constantly carry on their lips this His dearest name and cry in the words of
the Song of Songs "My beloved is mine and I am his;" "I sat down under his shadow
with great delight, and his fruit was sweet to my taste."(7) And besides all
this that name of ours which we love so well we have derived from the name of
Christ. We are called Christians.(8)
Of this name the Lord of all says, "The Lord God shall call His servants
by another name which shall be blessed on the earth"(9) and the following is the
reason why the Church specially clings to this name. When the only-begotten
Son of God was made man, then He was named Christ, then human nature received the
beams of intellectual light; then the heralds of the truth shed their beams
upon the world. Teachers of the Church, however, constantly used the names of the
only begotten without distinction; at one time they glorify the Father the Son
and the Holy Ghost; at another the Father with Christ and the Holy Ghost; yet
as far as the sense is concerned there is here no difference. Wherefore after
the Lord had commanded to baptize in the name of the Father and of the Son and
of the Holy Ghost the blessed Peter said to them who received his preaching and
asked what they must do, "Believe and be baptized every one of you in the name
of our Lord Jesus Christ,"(1) as though this name contained in itself all the
potency of the divine command. The same teaching is clearly given us by the
great Basil, luminary of the Cappadocians,(2) or rather of the world. His words are
"the ham e of Christ is the confession of the whole." It indicates at once the
Father, who anointed, the Son, who was anointed, and the Holy Ghost whereby He
was anointed. Furthermore the thrice blessed Fathers assembled in council at
Nicaea, after saying that we must believe in one God, the Father, added "and in
one Lord Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son of God." Thereby they teach that
the Lord Jesus Christ is Himself the only begotten Son of God.
To what has been said it must also be added that we must not affirm that
after the ascension the Lord Christ is not Christ but only begotten Son. The
divine Gospels and the history of the Acts and the Epistles of the Apostle himself
were, as we know, written after the ascension. It is after the ascension that
the divine Paul exclaims "Seeing then that we have a great High Priest that is
passed into the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold fast our
profession."(3) And again, "For Christ is not entered into the holy places made with
hands, which are the figures of the true; but into Heaven itself, now to appear in
the presence of God for us."(4) And again after speaking of our hope in God he
adds" which hope we have as an anchor both sure and stedfast, and which entereth
into that within the veil; whither the forerunner is for us entered, even
Jesus made an High Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec."(1) And when,
writing to the blessed Titus about the second advent he says," Looking for that
blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus
Christ."(2) And to the Thessalonians he wrote in similar terms "For they
themselves show of us what manner of entering in we had unto you, and how we turned
to God from idols to serve the living and true God; and to wait for His Son from
heaven, whom He raised from the dead, even Jesus, which delivered us from the
wrath to come."(3) And again "And the Lord make you to increase and abound in
love one toward another, and toward all men, even as we do toward you: to the
end he may stablish your hearts unblamable in holiness before God, even our
Father, at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ with all his saints."(4) And again
when writing to the same a second time he says, "Now we beseech you, brethren, by
the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and by our gathering together unto
him."(5) And a little further on when predicting the destruction of antichrist he
adds, "Whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit of his mouth, and shall destroy
with the brightness of his coming."(6) And when exhorting the Romans to
concord he says, "But why dost thou judge thy brother? or why dost thou set at naught
thy brother? for we shall all stand before the judgment seat of Christ. For it
is written, as I live, saith the Lord, every knee shall bow to me, and every
tongue shall confess to God."(7) And the Lord Himself when announcing His second
advent besides other things says too this "Then if any man shall say unto you,
Lo, here is Christ, or there; believe it not. For as the lightning cometh out
of the east, and shineth even unto the west, so shall also the coming of the
Son of Man be."(8)
And after the immortality and incorruptibility of His body He called
Himself Son of Man, naming Himself from the nature which was seen, inasmuch as the
divine nature is indeed invisible to angels, as the Lord Himself had said "No
one hath seen God at any time."(9) And to the great Moses He said "There shall no
man see me and live."(10)
The words "Henceforth know we no man after the flesh; yea, though we have
known Christ after the flesh; yet now henceforth know we Him no more,"(1) were
not written by the divine Apostle in order to annul the assumed nature, but for
the confirmation of our own future incorruption, immortality, and spiritual
life.
The Apostle therefore continues "Therefore if any man be in Christ he is a
new creature; old things are passed away; behold all things are become
new."(2) He speaks of what is to be in the future as though it had already come to
pass. We have not yet been gifted with immortality, but we shall be; and when so
gifted we shall not become bodiless, but we shall put on immortality. "For" says
the divine Apostle, "we would not be unclothed, but clothed upon, that
mortality might be swallowed up of life."(3) And again "For this corruptible must put
on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality."(4) Thus he did not
speak of the Lord as bodiless, but taught us to believe that even the visible
nature is incorruptible, and glorified with the divine glory. This instruction he
has given us yet more clearly in the Epistle to the Philippians; "For our
conversation" he writes "is in heaven; from whence also we look for the Saviour,
the Lord Jesus Christ; who shall change our vile body, that it may be fashioned
like unto his glorious body."(5) By these words he teaches us distinctly that
the body of the Lord is a body, but a divine body, and glorified with the divine
glory.
Let us, then, not shun the name whereby we enjoy salvation, and whereby
all things are made new, as says our teacher himself in his Epistle to the
Ephesians,--"According to His good pleasure which He hath purposed in Himself; that
in the dispensation of the fulness of time He might gather together in one all
things in Christ, both which are in heaven, and which are on earth, even in
Him."(6) Let us rather learn from this blessed language how we are bound to glorify
our benefactor, by connecting the name of Christ with our God and Father. In
his Epistle to the Romans the Apostle says "my gospel, and the preaching of
Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery, which was kept secret
since the world began, but now is made manifest, and by the scriptures of the
prophets, according to the commandment of the everlasting God, made known to all
nations for the obedience of faith; to God only will be glory through Jesus
Christ forever. Amen."(1) Writing to the Ephesians he thus gives praise--"Now unto
Him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think,
according to the power that worketh in us, unto Him be glory in the Church by
Christ Jesus throughout all ages, world without end. Amen.And a little before he
says, "For this cause I bow my knee unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ of
whom the whole family in heaven and earth is named."(3) And considerably farther
on he says "Giving thanks always for all things unto God and the Father in the
name of our Lord Jesus Christ."(4) And when he requites with benediction the
liberality of the Philippians he says "But my God shall supply all your need
according to His riches m glory by Christ Jesus."(5) And for the Hebrews he prayed,
"Now the God of peace, that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus Christ,
that great shepherd of the sheep, through the blood of the everlasting
covenant, make you perfect in every good work, to do His will, working in you that
which is well pleasing in His sight, through Jesus Christ; to whom be glory for
ever and ever. Amen."(6) And not only when glorifying, but also when exhorting
and protesting, the Apostle conjoins the Christ with God the Father. To the
blessed Timothy he exclaims "I charge thee therefore before God and the Lord Jesus
Christ."(7) And again "I give thee charge in the sight of God who quickeneth all
things, and before Jesus Christ, who before Pontius Pilate witnessed a good
confession; that thou keep this commandment without spot, unrebukable, until the
appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ; which in His times He shall shew, who is
the blessed and only Potentate, the King of kings and Lord of lords; who only
hath immortality, dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto; whom no
man hath seen, nor can see; to whom be honour and power everlasting. Amen."(8)
These are the lessons we have learnt from the divine Apostles; this is the
teaching given us by John and Matthew, those mighty rivers of the gospel
message. The latter says "The book of the generation of Jesus Christ the son of
David, the son of Abraham;"(9) and the former when he shewed the things which were
before the ages wrote, "In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God
and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God. All things were
made by Him."
CXLVII.(2) To John, Bishop of Germanicia.
Immediately on receipt of your holiness's former letter I replied. About
the present state of affairs, it is impossible to entertain any good hope. I
apprehend that this is the beginning of the general apostasy. For when we see
that those who lament what was done as they say, by violence, at Ephesus, show no
signs of repentance, but abide by their unlawful deeds and are building up a
superstructure at once of injustice and of impiety; when we see that the rest
take no concerted action to deny their deeds and do not refuse to hold communion
with men who abide by their unlawful action, what hope of good is it possible
for us to entertain? Had they been expressing their admiration of what has
happened as though all had been well and rightly done, it would only have been proper
for them to abide by what they themselves commend. But if, as they say, they
are lamenting what has been done and stating it to have been done by force and
violence, why in the world do they not repudiate what has been unlawfully done?
Why is the present, which lasts for such a little time, preferred before what
is sure to come to pass? Why in the world do they openly lie and deny that any
innovation has been introduced into doctrine? On account of what murders and
witchcrafts have I been expelled? What adulteries did the man commit? What tombs
did the man violate? It is perfectly clear even to outsiders that it was for
doctrine that I and the rest were expelled. Why the Lord Domnus too, because he
would not accept "the Chapters"(3) was deposed by these excellent persons who
called them admirable and confessed that they abided by them. I had read their
propositions, and they rejected me as the head and front of the heresy and
expelled others for the same reason.(4)
What has happened proves plainly enough that they supposed the Saviour to
have laid down the law of practical virtue rather for Hamaxobians(1) than for
them. When some men had given in charges against Candidianus, the Pisidian,(2)
accusing him of several acts of adultery and other iniquities, it is said that
the president of the council remarked, "If you are bringing accusation on points
of doctrine, we receive your charges; we have not come here to decide about
adulteries." Accordingly Athenius and Athanasius(3) who had been expelled by the
Eastern Synod were bidden to return to their own churches; just as though our
Saviour had laid down no laws about conduct, and had only ordered us to observe
doctrines--which those most sapient persons have been foremost in corrupting.
Let them then cease to mock; let them no longer attempt to conceal the impiety
which they have confirmed by blows as well as by words. If this is not the case,
let them tell us the reasons of the massacres; let them own in writing the
distinction between the natures of our Saviour, and that the union is without
confusion; let them declare that after the union both Godhead and manhood remained
unimpaired. "God is not mocked."(4) Let the chapters be denied which they have
often repudiated, and now at Ephesus have sanctioned. Do not let them trick
your holiness by their lies. They used to praise my utterances at Antioch, being
brethren, and when made readers, and ordained deacons, presbyters and bishops;
and at the end of my discourse they used to embrace me and kiss me, on head, on
breast, on hands; and some of them would cling to my knees, calling my doctrine
apostolic,--the very doctrine that they have now condemned, and anathematized.
They used to call me luminary, not only of the East, but of the whole world,
and now I forsooth have been proscribed and, so far as lies in their power, I
have not even bread to eat. They have anathematized even all who converse with
me. But the man whom but a little while ago they deposed and called Valentinian
and Apollinarian they have honoured as a martyr of the faith, rolling at his
feet, asking his pardon and calling him spiritual father. Do even woodlice change
their colour to match the stones or chameleons their skin to suit the leaves,
as these men do their mind to match the times? I give up to them see, dignity,
rank, and all the luxury of this life. On the side of the apostolic doctrines I
await the evils which they deem terrible, finding sufficient consolation in the
thought of the judgment of the Lord. For I hope that for the sake of this
injustice the Lord will remit me many of my sins.
Now I implore your holiness to beware of the fellowship of iniquity and to
insist on their repudiation of what has been done. If they refuse shun them as
traitors to the faith. That your reverence should wait awhile to see if the
tempest will pass, we have not thought subject for blame. But after the
ordination of the primate of the East(1) every man's mind will be made manifest. Deign,
Sir, to pray for me. At this time I am sorely in want of that help that I may
hold out against all that is being devised against me.
CXLVIII in the Edition of Garnerius is "the minute of the most holy bishop
Cyril, delivered to Posidonius, when sent by him to Rome, in the matter of
Nestorius." (Cyrill. Ep. XI. tom. lxxvii. 85.)
CXLIX is "Copy of the Letter written by John, bishop of Antioch, to Nestorius."
This letter has sometimes been supposed to have been really composed by
Theodoret.(2)
CL.Letter of Theodoretus, bishop of Cyrus, to Joannes, bishop of Antioch.(3)
I have been much distressed at reading the anathematisms which you have
sent to request me to refute in writing, and to make plain to all their heretical
sense. I have been distressed at the thought that one appointed to the
shepherd's office, entrusted with the charge of so great a flock and appointed to heal
the sick among his sheep, is both himself unsound, and that to a terrible
degree, and is endeavouring to infect his lambs with his disease and treats the
sheep of his folds with greater cruelty than that of wild beasts. They, indeed,
tear and rend the sheep that are dispersed and separated from the flock; but be
in its very midst, and while thought to be its saviour and its guardian
introduces secret error among the victims of their confidence in him. Against an open
assault it is possible to take precautions, but when an attack is made in the
guise of friendship, its victim is found off his guard and hurt is easily done
him. Hence foes who make war from within are far more dangerous than those who
attack from without.
I am yet more grieved that it should be in the name of true religion and
with the dignity of a shepherd that he should give utterance to his heretical
and blasphemous words, and renew that vain and impious teaching of Apollinarius
which was long ago stamped out. Besides all this there is the fact that he not
only supports these views but even dares to anathematize those who decline to
participate in his blasphemies;--if he is really the author of these productions
and they have not proceeded from some enemy of the truth who has composed them
in his name and, as the old story has it, flung the apple of discord(2) in the
midst, and so fanned the flame on high.
But whether this composition comes from himself or from some other in his
name, I, for my part, by the aid of the light of the Holy Ghost, in the
investigation of this heretical and corrupt opinion, according to the measure of the
power given me, have refuted them as best I could. I have confronted them with
the teaching of evangelists and apostles. I have exposed the monstrosity of the
doctrine, and proved how vast is its divergence from divine truth. This I have
done by comparing it with the words of the Holy Spirit, and pointing out what
strange and jarring discord there is between it and the divine.
Against the hardihood of this anathematizing, thus much I will say, that
Paul, the clear-voiced herald of truth, anathematized those who had corrupted
the evangelic and apostolic teaching and boldly did so against the angels, not
against those who abided by the laws laid down by theologians; these he
strengthened with blessings, saying, "And as many as walk according to this rule, peace
be on them and mercy and on the Israel of God."(1) Let then the author of these
writings reap from the Apostle's curse the due rewards of his labours and the
harvest of his seeds of heresy. We will abide in the teaching of the holy
Fathers.
To this letter I bare appended my counter arguments, that on reading them
you may judge whether I have effectively destroyed the heretical propositions.
Setting down each of the anathematisms by itself, I have annexed the counter
statement that readers may easily understand, and that the refutation of the
dogmas may he clear.(2)