ST. ATHANASIUS: THE TREATISE ON THE INCARNATION OF THE WORD
INTRODUCTION TO THE TREATISE
ON THE INCARNATION OF THE WORD
The tract 'against the Gentiles' leaves the reader face to face with the
necessity of restoration by the Divine Word as the remedy for corrupt human
nature. How this necessity is met in the Incarnation is shewn in the pages which
follow. The general design of the second tract is to illustrate and confirm the
doctrine of the Incarnation by shewing (I) its necessity and end, (2) the
congruity of its details, (3) its truth, as against the objections of Jews and
Gentiles, (4) its result. He begins by a review (recapitulating c. Gent. 2--7) of the
doctrine of creation and of man's place therein. The abuse by man of his
special Privilege had resulted in its loss. By foregoing the Divine Life, man had
entered upon a course of endless undoing, of progressive decay, from which none
could rescue him but the original bestower of his life (2--7). Then follows a
description in glowing words of the Incarnation of the Divine Word and of its
efficacy against the plague of corruption (8--10). With the Divine Life, man had
also received, in the knowledge of God, the conscious reflex of the Divine
Likeness, the faculty of reason in its highest exercise. This knowledge their moral
fall dimmed and perverted. Heeding not even the means by which God sought to
remind them of Himself, they fell deeper and deeper into materialism and
superstition. To restore the effaced likeness the presence of the Original was
requisite. Accordingly, condescending to man's sense-bound intelligence--lest men
should have been created in vain in the Image of God--the Word took Flesh and became
an object of Sense, that through the Seen He might reveal the Invisible
(11--16).
Having dwelt (17--19) upon the meaning and purpose of the Incarnation, he
proceeds to speak of the Death and Resurrection of the Incarnate Word. He, Who
alone could renew the handiwork and restore the likeness and give afresh the
knowledge of God, mist needs, in order to pay the debt which all had incurred
(<greek>to</greek> <greek>papa</greek> <greek>pantwn</greek>
<greek>ofeilomenon</greek>), die in our stead, offering the sacrifice on behalf of all, so as to
rise again, as our first-fruits, from the grave (20--32, note especially 20).
After speaking of the especial fitness of the Cross, once the instrument of shame,
now the trophy of victory, and after meeting some difficulties connected with
the manner of the Lord's Death, he passes to the Resurrection. He shews how
Christ by His triumph over the grave changed (27) the relative ascendancy of Death
and Life: and how the Resurrection with its momentous train of consequences,
follows of necessity (31) from the Incarnation of Him in Whom was Life.
The two main divisions of contemporary unbelief are next combated. In
either case the root of the difficulty is moral; with the Greeks it is a frivolous
cynicism, with the Jews, inveterate obstinacy. The latter (33--40) are
confuted, firstly, by their own Scriptures, which predict both in general and in detail
the coming of Jesus Christ Also, the old Jewish polity, both civil and
religious, has passed away, giving place to the Church of Christ. Turning to the
Greeks (41--45), and assuming that they allow the existence of a pervading Spirit,
whose presence is the sustaining principle of all things, he challenges them to
reject, without inconsistency, the Union of that Spirit, the Logos (compare St.
Augustine Conf. VII. ix.), with one in particular of the many constituents of
that Universe wherein he already dwells. And since man alone (43 3) of the
creatures bad departed from the order of his creation, it was man's nature that the
Word united to Himself, thus repairing the breach between the creature and the
Creator at the very point where it had occurred.
God did not restore man by a mere fiat (44) because, just as repentance on
man's part (7) could not eradicate his disease, so such a fiat on God's part
would have amounted to the annihilation of human nature as it was, and the
creation of a fresh race. Man's definite disorder God met with a specific remedy,
overcoming death with life. Thus man has been enabled once more to shew forth, in
common with the rest of Creation, the handiwork and glory of his Maker.
Athanasius then confronts the Greeks, as he had the Jews, with facts.
Since the coming of Christ, paganism, popular and philosophic, had been failing
into discredit and decay. The impotence and rivalries of the philosophic teachers,
the local and heterogeneous character, the low moral ideals of the old
worships, are contrasted with the oneness and inspiring power of the religion of the
Crucified. Such are the two, the dying and the living systems; it remains for
him who will to taste and see what that life is which is the gift of Christ to
them that follow Him (46--end).
The purpose of the tract, in common with the contra Genies, being to
commend the religion of Christ to acceptance, the argument is concerned more with
the Incarnation as a living fact, and with its place in the scheme of God's
dealing with man, than with its analysis as a theological doctrine. He does not
enter upon the question, fruitful of controversy in the previous century at
Alexandria, but soon to burst forth into furious debate, of the Sonship of the Word
and of His relation to God the Father. Still less does he touch the
Christological questions which arose with the decline of the Arian tempest, questions
associated with the names of Apollinarius, Theodore, Cyril, Nestorius, Eutyches,
Theodoret, and Dioscorus. But we feel already that firm grasp of soteriological
principles which mark him out c; the destined conqueror of Arianism, and which
enabled him by a sure instinct to anticipate unconsciously the theological
difficulties which troubled the Church for the century after his death. It is the
broad comprehensive treatment of the subject in its relation to God, human nature,
and sin, that gives the work its interest to readers of the present day. In
strong reaction from modern or medieval theories of Redemption, which to the
thoughtful Christian of to-day seem arbitrary, or worse, it is with relief that men
find that from the beginning it was not so; ,that the theology of the early
Church interpreted the great Mystery of godliness in terms which, if short of the
fulness of the Pauline conception, are yet so free from arbitrary assumptions,
so true to human nature as the wisest of men know it, so true to the worthiest
and grandest ideas of God (see below, p. 33 ad fin.). The de Incarnatione,
then, is perhaps more appreciated in our day than at any date since the days of its
writer.
It may therefore be worth while to devote a word or two to some
peculiarities incidental to its aim and method. We observe first of all how completely
the power of the writer is absorbed in the subject under discussion. It is
therefore highly precarious to infer anything from his silence even on points which
might seem to require explanation in the course of his argument. Not a word is
said of the doctrine of the Trinity, nor of the Holy Spirit; this directly
follows from the purpose of the work, in accordance with the general truth that
while the Church preaches Christ to the World, the Office and Personality of the
Spirit belongs to her inner life. The teaching of the tract with regard to the
constitution of man is another case in point. It might appear ( 3, cf. 11. 2, 13.
2) that Athanasius ascribed the reasonable soul of man, and his immortality
after death, not to the constitution of human nature as such, but to the grace
superadded to it by the Creator (<greek>h</greek> <greek>tou</greek>
<greek>kat</greek> <greek>eakoua</greek> <greek>caris</greek>), a grace which constituted
men <greek>logikoi</greek> (3. 4) by virtue of the power of the Logos, and
which, if not forfeited by sin, involved the privilege of immortality. We have,
then, to carefully consider whether Athanasius held, or meant to suggest, that man
is by nature, and apart from union with God,(1) rational, or(2) immortal. If
we confine our view to the treatise before us, there would be some show of
reason in answering both questions in the negative; and with regard to immortality
this has been recently done by an able correspondent of The Times (April 9,
1890).
But that Athanasius held the essential rationality and immortality of the
soul is absolutely clear, if only from c. Gent. 32 and 33. We have, then, to
find an explanation of his language in the present treatise. With regard to
immortality, it should be observed(1) that the language employed (in 4. 5, where
<greek>kenwqhnai</greek> <greek>tou</greek> <greek>einai</greek>
<greek>aei</greek> is explained by <greek>to</greek> <greek>dialuqentas</greek>
<greek>menein</greek> <greek>en</greek> <greek>tp</greek> <greek>qanatw</greek>
<greek>kai</greek> <greek>th</greek> <greek>fqora</greek>) suggests a continued condition, and
therefore something short of annihilation, although not worthy of the name of
existence or life,--(2) that even in the worst of men the image of God is
defaced, but not effaced (14. 1, &c.), and that even when grace is lost (7. 4), man
cannot be as though the contact with the divine had never taken place;--(3)
that in this work, as by St. Paul in I Cor. xv., the final destiny of the wicked
is passed over (but for the general reference 56. 3) in silence. It may be
added(4) that Athanasius puts together all that separates man from irrational
creatures without clearly drawing the line between what belongs to the natural man
and what to the <greek>kat</greek> <greek>eikona</greek> <greek>karis</greek>.
The subject of eschatology is nowhere dealt with in full by Athanasius; while it
is quite certain (c. Gent. 33) that he did not share the inclination of some
earlier writers (see D.C.B. ii. p. 192) toward the idea of conditional
immortality, there is also no reason to think that he held with the Universalism of
Origen, Gregory of Nyssa and others (see Migne, Patr. Gr. xxvii. p. 1404 A, also
1384 c, where 'the unfortunate Origen's' opinions seem to be rejected, but with an
implied deprecation of harsh judgment). As to his view of the essential
rationality of man (see c. Gent. 32) the consideration(4) urged above once more
applies (compare the discussion in Harnack, Dg. ii. 146 sqq.). Yet he says that man
left to himself can have no idea of God at all (11. 1), and that this would
deprive him of any claim to be considered a rational being (ib. 2). The apparent
inconsistency is removed if we understand that man may be rational potentially
(as all men are) and yet not rational in the sense of exercising reason (which
is the case with very many). In other words, grace gives not the faculty itself,
but its integrity, the latter being the result not of the mere psychological
existence of the faculty, but of the reaction upon it of its highest and
adequate object. (The same is true to a great extent of the doctrine of
<greek>pneuma</greek> in the New Testament.)
A somewhat similar caution is necessary with regard to the analogy drawn
out (41, &c.) between the Incarnation and the Union of the Word with the
Universe. The treatise itself (17. 1, <greek>ektos</greek> <greek>kat</greek>
<greek>ousian</greek>, and see notes on 41) supplies the necessary corrective in this
case. It may be pointed out here that the real difference between Athanasius and
the neo-Platonists was not so much upon the Union of the Word with any created
Substance, which they were prepared to allow, as upon the exclusive Union of
the Word with Man, in Contrast to His essential distinctness from the Universe.
This difference goes back to the doctrine of Creation, which was fixed as a
great gulf between the Christian and the Platonist view of the Universe. The
relation of the latter to the Word is fully discussed in the third part of the
contra Gentes, the teaching of which must be borne in mind while reading the
forty-first and following chapters of the present treatise.
Lastly, the close relation between the doctrine of Creation and that of
Redemption marks off the Soteriology of this treatise from that of the middle
ages and of the Reformation. Athanasius does not leave out of sight the idea of
satisfaction for a debt. To him also the Cross was the central purpose (20. 2,
cf. 9. I, 2, &c.) of His Coming. But the idea of Restoration is most prominent in
his determination of the necessity of the Incarnation. God could have wiped
out our guilt, had He so pleased, by a word(44): but human nature required to be
healed, restored, recreated. This (<greek>anaktisai</greek>) is the foremost of
the three ideas (7. 5) which sum up his account of the 'dignus tanto Vindice
nodus[1].
The translation which follows is that printed in 1885 (D. Nutt, second
edition, 1891) by the editor of this volume, with a very few changes (chiefly 2.
2, 8. 4, 34. 2, 44. 7, 8): it was originally made for the purpose of lectures at
Oxford (1879-1882), and the analytical headings now prefixed to each chapter
are extracted verbatim from notes made for the same course of lectures. The
notes have mostly appeared either in the former edition of the translation, or
appended to the Greek text published (D. Null, 1882) by the translator. A few,
however, have now been added, including some references to the Sermo Major, which
borrows wholesale from the present treatise (Prolegg. ch. III. 1. 37). Two
other English translations have appeared, the one (Parker, 1880) previous, the
other (Religious Tract Society, n.d.) subsequent to that of the present translator.
The text followed is that of the Benedictine editors, with a few exceptions.
Of those that at all affect the sense, 43.6 (<greek>kai</greek>
<greek>to</greek> <greek>spma</greek>) and 51.2 (<greek>kata</greek> <greek>ths</greek>
<greek>eid</greek>) are due to Mr. Marriott (Analecta Christiana, Oxf. 1844). For the
others (13.2, omission of <greek>mh</greek>, 28.3, <greek>kata</greek>
<greek>tou</greek> <greek>puros</greek> rejecting conjectures of Montf. and Marriott,
42. 6, omission of <greek>pepoihkenai</greek> 57.3, <greek>kai</greek>
<greek>ta</greek> for <greek>ta</greek> <greek>ka</greek><s217) the present editor is
alone responsible.
ON THE INCARNATION OF THE WORD
- Introductory.--The subject of this treatise: the humiliation and incarnation
of the Word. Presupposes the doctrine of Creation, and that by the Word. The
Father has saved the world by Him through Whom He first made it.
Whereas in what precedes we have drawn out--choosing a few points from
among many--a sufficient account of the error of the heathen concerning idols, and
of the worship of idols, and how they originally came to be invented; how,
namely, out of wickedness men devised for themselves the worshipping of idols: and
whereas we have by God's grace noted somewhat also of the divinity of the Word
of the Father, and of His universal Providence and power, and that the Good
Father through Him orders all things, and all things are moved by Him, and in Him
are quickened: come now, Macarius[1] (worthy of that name), and true lover of
Christ, let us follow up the faith of our religion[2], and set forth also what
relates to the Word's becoming Man, and to His divine Appearing amongst us,
which Jews traduce and Greeks laugh to scorn, but we worship; in order that, all
the more for the seeming low estate of the Word, your piety toward Him may be
increased and multiplied.
2. For the more He is mocked among the unbelieving, the more witness does
He give of His own Godhead; inasmuch as He not only Himself demonstrates as
possible what then mistake, thinking impossible, but what men deride as unseemly,
this by His own goodness He clothes with seemliness, and what men, in their
conceit of wisdom, laugh at as merely human, He by His own power demonstrates to
be divine, subduing the pretensions of idols by His supposed humiliation--by the
Cross--and those who mock and disbelieve invisibly winning over to recognise
His divinity and power.
3. But to treat this subject it is necessary to recall what has been
previously said; in order that you may neither fail to know the cause of the bodily
appearing of the Word of the Father, so high and so great, nor think it a
consequence of His own nature that the Saviour has worn a body; but that being
incorporeal by nature, and Word from the beginning, He has yet of the
loving-kindness and goodness of His own Father been manifested to us in a human body for our
salvation.
4. It is, then, proper for us to begin the treatment of this subject by
speaking of the creation of the universe, and of God its Artificer, that so it
may be duly perceived that the renewal of creation has been the work of the
self-same Word that made it at the beginning. For it will appear not inconsonant for
the Father to have wrought its salvation in Him by Whose means He made it.
- Erroneous views of Creation rejected.(1) Epicurean (fortuitous generation).
But diversity of bodies and parts argues a creating intellect. (2.) Platonists
(pre-existent matter.) But this subjects God to human limitations, making Him
not a creator but a mechanic. (3) Gnostics (an alien Demiurge). Rejected from
Scripture.
Of the making of the universe and the creation of all things many have
taken different views, and each man has laid down the law just as he pleased. For
some say that all things have come into being of themselves, and in a chance
fashion; as, for example, the Epicureans, who tell us in their self-contempt,
that universal providence does not exist speaking right in the face of obvious
fact and experience.
2. For if, as they say, everything has had its beginning of itself, and
independently of purpose, it would follow that everything had come into[3] mere
being, so as to be alike and not distinct. For it would follow in virtue of the
unity of body that everything must be sun or moon, and in the case of men it
would follow that the whole must be hand, or eye, or foot. But as it is this is
not so. On the contrary, we see a distinction of sun, moon, and earth; and
again, in the case of human bodies, of foot, hand, and head. Now, such separate
arrangement as this tells us not of their having come into being of themselves, but
shews that a cause preceded them; from which cause it is possible to apprehend
God also as the Maker and Orderer of all.
3. But others, including Plato, who is in such repute among the Greeks,
argue that God has made the world out of matter previously existing and without
beginning. For God could have made nothing had not the material existed already;
just as the wood must exist ready at hand for the carpenter, to enable him to
work at all.
4. But in so saying they know not that they are investing God with
weakness. For if He is not Himself the cause of the material, but makes things only of
previously existing material, He proves to be weak, because unable to produce
anything He makes without the material; just as it is without doubt a weakness
of the carpenter not to be able to make anything required without his timber.
For, ex hypothesi, had not the material existed, God would not have made
anything. And how could He in that case be called Maker and Artificer, if He owes His
ability to make to some other source--namely, to the material? So that if this
be so, God will be on their theory a Mechanic only, and not a Creator out of
nothing[4]; if, that is, He works at existing material, but is not Himself the
cause of the material. For He could not in any sense be called Creator unless He
is Creator of the material of which the things created have in their turn been
made.
5. But the sectaries imagine to themselves a different artificer of all
things, other than the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, in deep blindness even as
to the words they use.
6. For whereas the Lord says to the Jews[5]: "Have ye not read that from
the beginning He which created them made them male and female, and said, For
this cause shall a man leave his father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife,
and they twain shall become one flesh?" and then, referring to the Creator,
says, "What, therefore, GOD hath joined together let not man put asunder:" how
come these men to assert that the creation is independent of the Father? Or if, in
the words of John, who says, making no exception, "All things[6] were made by
Him, and "without Him was not anything made," how could the artificer be
another, distinct from the Father of Christ?
- The true doctrine. Creation out of nothing, of God's lavish bounty of being.
Man created above the rest, but incapable of independent perseverance. Hence
the exceptional and supra-natural gift of being in God's Image, with the promise
of bliss conditionally upon his perseverance in grace.
Thus do they vainly speculate. But the godly teaching and the faith
according to Christ brands their foolish language as godlessness. For it knows that
it was not spontaneously, because forethought is not absent; nor of existing
matter, because God is not weak; but that out of nothing, and without its having
any previous existence, God made the universe to exist through His word, as He
says firstly through Moses: "In[7] the beginning God created the heaven and the
earth;" secondly, in the most edifying book of the Shepherd, "First[8] of all
believe that God is one, which created and framed all things, and made them to
exist out of nothing."
2. To which also Paul refers when he says, "By[9] faith we understand that
the worlds have been framed by the Word of God, so that what is seen hath not
been made out of things which do appear."
3. For God is good, or rather is essentially the source of goodness:
nor[1] could one that is good be niggardly of anything: whence, grudging existence
to none, He has made all things out of nothing by His own Word, Jesus Christ our
Lord. And among these, having taken especial pity, above all things on earth,
upon the race of men, and having perceived its inability, by virtue of the
condition of its origin, to continue in one stay, He gave them a further gift, and
He did not barely create man, as He did all the irrational creatures on the
earth, but made them after His own image, giving them a portion even of the power
of His own Word; so that having as it were a kind of reflexion of the Word, and
being made rational, they might be able to abide ever in blessedness, living
the true life which belongs to the saints in paradise.
4. But knowing once more how the will of man could sway to either side, in
anticipation He secured the grace given them by a law and by the spot where He
placed them. For He brought them into His own garden, and gave them a law: so
that, if they kept the grace and remained good, they might still keep the life
in paradise without sorrow or pain or care besides having the promise of
incorruption in heaven; but that if they transgressed and turned back, and became
evil, they might know that they were incurring that corruption in death which was
theirs by nature: no longer to live in paradise, but cast out of it from that
time forth to die and to abide in death and in corruption. 5. Now this is that
of which Holy Writ also gives warning, saying in the Person of God: "Of every
tree[2] that is in the garden, eating thou shalt eat: but of the tree of the
knowledge of good and evil, ye shall not eat of it, but on the day that ye eat,
dying ye shall die." But by "dying ye shall die," what else could be meant than
not dying merely, but also abiding ever in the corruption of death?
- 5. Our creation and God's Incarnation most intimately connected. As by the
Ward man was called from non-existence into being, and further received the grace
of a divine life, so by the one fault which forfeited that life they again
incurred corruption and untold sin and misery filled the world.
You are wondering, perhaps, for what possible reason, having proposed to
speak of the Incarnation of the Word, we are at present treating of the origin
of mankind. But this, too, properly belongs to the aim of our treatise.
2. For in speaking of the appearance of the Saviour amongst us, we must
needs speak also of the origin of men, that you may know that the reason of His
coming down was because of us, and that our transgression[3] called forth the
loving-kindness of the Word, that the Lord should both make haste to help us and
appear among men.
3. For of His becoming Incarnate we were the object, and for our salvation
He dealt so lovingly as to appear and be born even in a human body.
4. Thus, then, God has made man, and willed that he should abide in
incorruption; but men, having despised and rejected the contemplation of God, and
devised and contrived evil for themselves (as was said 4 in the former treatise),
received the condemnation of death with which they had been threatened; and
from thenceforth no longer remained as they were made, but[5] were being corrupted
according to their devices; and death had the mastery over them as king[6].
For transgression of the commandment was turning them back to their natural
state, so that just as they have had their being out of nothing, so also, as might
be expected, they might look for corruption into nothing in the course of time.
5. For if, out of a former normal state of nonexistence, they were called
into being by the Presence and loving-kindness of the Word, it followed
naturally that when men were bereft of the knowledge of God and were turned back to
what was not (for what is evil is not, but what is good is), they should, since
they derive their being from God who is, be everlastingly bereft even of being;
in other words, that they should be disintegrated and abide in death and
corruption.
6. For man is by nature mortal, inasmuch as he is made out of what is not;
but by reason of his likeness to Him that is (and if he still preserved this
likeness by keeping Him in his knowledge) he would stay his natural corruption,
and remain incorrupt; as Wisdom[7] says: "The taking heed to His laws is the
assurance of immortality;" but being incorrupt, he would live henceforth as God,
to which I suppose the divine Scripture refers, when it says: "I have s said ye
are gods, and ye are all sons of the most Highest; but ye die like men, and
fall as one of the princes."
-
For God has not only made us out of nothing; but He gave us freely, by the
Grace of the Word, a life in correspondence with God. But men, having rejected
things eternal, and, by counsel of the devil, turned to the things of
corruption, became the cause[9] of their own corruption in death, being, as I said
before, by nature corruptible, but destined, by the grace following from partaking
of the Word, to have escaped their natural state, had they remained good.
2. For because of the Word dwelling with them, even their natural
corruption did not come near them, as Wisdom also says[1]: "God made man for
incorruption, and as an image of His own eternity; but by envy of the devil death came
into the world." But when this was come to pass, men began to die, while
corruption thence-forward prevailed against them, gaining even more than its natural
power over the whole race, inasmuch as it had, owing to the transgression of the
commandment, the threat of the Deity as a further advantage against them.
3. For even in their misdeeds men had not stopped short at any set limits
; but gradually pressing forward, have passed on beyond all measure: having to
begin with been inventors of wickedness and called down upon themselves death
and corruption; while later on, having turned aside to wrong and exceeding all
lawlessness, and stopping at no one evil but devising all manner of new evils in
succession, they have become insatiable in sinning.
4. For there were adulteries everywhere and thefts, and the whole earth
was full of murders and plunderings. And as to corruption and wrong, no heed was
paid to law, but all crimes were being practised everywhere, both individually
and jointly. Cities were at war with cities, and nations were rising up against
nations; and the whole earth was rent with civil commotions and battles; each
man vying with his fellows in lawless deeds.
5. Nor were even crimes against nature far from them, but, as the Apostle
and witness of Christ says: "For their [2] women changed the natural use into
that which is against nature: and likewise also the men, leaving the natural use
of the women, burned in their lust one toward another, men with men working
unseemliness, and receiving in themselves that recompense of their error which
was meet."
- The human race then was wasting, God's image was being effaced, and His work
ruined. Either, then, God must forego His spoken word by which man had incurred
ruin; or that which had shared in the being of the Word must sink back again
into destruction, in which case God's design would be defeated. What then? was
God's goodness to suitor this? But if so, why had man been made? It could have
been weakness, not goodness on God's part.
For this cause, then, death having gained upon men, and corruption abiding
upon them, the race of man was perishing; the rational man made in God's image
was disappearing, and the handiwork of God was in process of dissolution.
2. For death, as I said above, gained from that time forth a legal [3]
hold over us, and it was impossible to evade the law, since it had been laid down
by God because [4] of the transgression, and the result was in truth at once
monstrous and unseemly.
3. For it were monstrous, firstly, that God, having spoken, should prove
false--that, when once He had ordained that man, if he transgressed the
commandment, should die the death, after the transgression than should not die, but
God's word should be broken. For God would not be true, if, when He had said we
should die, man died not.
4. Again, it were unseemly that creatures once made rational, and having
partaken of the Word, should go to ruin, and turn again toward non-existence by
the way of corruption [5].
5. For it were not worthy of God's goodness that the things He had made
should waste away, because of the deceit practised on men by the devil.
6. Especially it was unseemly to the last degree that God's handicraft
among men should be done away, either because of their own carelessness, or
because of the deceitfulness of evil spirits.
7. So, as the rational creatures were wasting and such works in course of
ruin, what was God in His goodness to do ? Suffer corruption to prevail against
them and death to hold them fast? And where were the profit of their having
been made, to begin with? For better were they not made, than once made, left to
neglect and ruin.
8. For neglect reveals weakness, and not goodness on God's part--if, that
is, He allows His own work to be ruined when once He had made it--more so than
if He had never made man at all.
9. For if He had not made them, none could impute weakness; but once He
had made them, and created them out of nothing, it were most monstrous for the
work to be ruined, and that before the eyes of the Maker.
10. It was, then, out of the question to leave men to the current of
corruption; because this would be unseemly, and unworthy of God's goodness.
- On the other hand there was the consistency of God's nature, not to be
sacrificed for our profit. Were men, then, to be called upon to repent ? But
repentance cannot avert the execution of a law; still less can it remedy a fallen
nature. We have incurred corruption and need to be restored to the Grace of God's
Image. None could renew but He Who had created. He alone could(I) recreate all,
(2) suffer for all, (3) respect all to the Father.
But just as this consequence must needs hold, so, too, on the other side
the just claims [6] of God lie against it: that God should appear true to the
law He had laid down concerning death. For it were monstrous for God, the Father
of truth, to appear a liar for our profit and preservation.
2. So here, once more, what possible course was God to take? To demand
repentance of men for their transgression? For this one might pronounce worthy of
God; as though, just as from transgression men have become set towards
corruption, so from repentance they may once more be set in the way of incorruption.
3. But repentance would, firstly, fail to guard the just claim [7] of God.
For He would still be none the more true, if men did not remain in the grasp
of death; nor, secondly, does repentance call men back from what is their
nature--it merely stays them from acts of sin.
4. Now, if there were merely a misdemeanour in question, and not a
consequent corruption, repentance were well enough. But if, when transgression had
once gained a start, men became involved in that corruption which was their
nature, and were deprived of the grace which they had, being in the image of God,
what further step was needed? or what was required for such grace and such recall,
but the Word of God, which had also at the beginning made everything out of
nought?
5. For His it was once more both to bring the corruptible to incorruption,
and to maintain intact the just claim [7] of the Father upon all. For being
Word of the Father, and above all, He alone of natural fitness was both able to
recreate everything, and worthy to suffer on behalf of all and to be ambassador
for all with the Father.
- The Word, then, visited that earth in which He was yet always present ; and
saw all these evils. He takes a body of our Nature, and that of a spotless
Virgin, in whose womb He makes it His own, wherein to reveal Himself, conquer death,
and restore life.
For this purpose, then, the incorporeal and incorruptible and immaterial
Word of God comes to our realm, howbeit he was not far from us s before. For no
past of Creation is left void of Him: He has filled all things everywhere,
remaining present with His own Father. But He comes in condescension to shew
loving-kindness upon us, and to visit us.
2. And seeing the race of rational creatures in the way to perish, and
death reigning over them by corruption; seeing, too, that the threat against
transgression gave a firm hold to the corruption which was upon us, and that it was
monstrous that [9] before the law was fulfilled it should fall through: seeing,
once more, the unseemliness of what was come to pass: that the things whereof
He Himself was Artificer were passing away: seeing, further, the exceeding
wickedness of men, and how by little and little they had increased it to an
intolerable pitch against themselves: and seeing, lastly, how all men were under
penalty of death: He took pity on our race, and had mercy on our infirmity, and
condescended to our corruption, and, unable to bear that death should have the
mastery--lest the creature should perish, and His Father's handiwork in men be
spent for nought--He takes unto Himself a body, and that of no different sort from
ours.
3. For He did not simply will to become embodied, or will merely to appear
[1]. For if He willed merely to appear, He was able to effect His divine
appearance by some other and higher means as well. But He takes a body of our kind,
and not merely so, but from a spotless and stainless virgin, knowing not a man,
a body clean and in very truth pure from intercourse of men. For being Himself
mighty, and Artificer of everything, He prepares the body in the Virgin as a
temple unto Himself, and makes it His very own [2] as an instrument, in it
manifested, and in it dwelling.
4. And thus taking from our bodies one of like nature, because all were
under penalty of the corruption of death He gave 'it over to death in the stead
of all, and offered it to the Father--doing this, moreover, of His
loving-kindness, to the end that, firstly, all being held to have died in Him, the law
involving the ruin of men might be undone (inasmuch as its power was fully spent in
the Lord's body, and had no longer holding-ground against men, his peers), and
that, secondly, whereas men had turned toward corruption, He might turn them
again toward incorruption, and quicken them from death by the appropriation [2]
of His body and by the grace of the Resurrection, banishing death from them like
straw from floe fire [3].
- The Word, since death alone could stay the plague, took a mortal body which,
united with Him, should avail for all, and by partaking of this immortality
stay the corruption of the Race. By being above all, He made His Flesh an offering
for our souls; by being one with us all, He clothed us with immortality.
Simile to illustrate this.
For the Word, perceiving that no otherwise could the corruption of men be
undone save by death as a necessary condition, while it was impossible for the
Word to suffer death, being immortal, and Son of the Father; to this end He
takes to Himself a body capable of death, that it, by partaking of the Word Who is
above all, might be worthy to die in the stead of all, and might, because of
the Word which was come to dwell in it, remain incorruptible, and that
thenceforth corruption might be stayed from all by the Grace of the Resurrection.
Whence, by offering unto death the body He Himself had taken, as an offering and
sacrifice free from any stain, straightway He put away death from all His peers by
the offering of an equivalent.
2. For being over all, the Word of God naturally by offering His own
temple and corporeal instrument for the life [4] of all satisfied the debt by His
death. And thus He, the incorruptible Son of God, being conjoined with all by a
like nature, naturally clothed all with incorruption, by the promise of the
resurrection. For the actual corruption in death has no longer holding-ground
against men, by reason of the Word, which by His one body has come to dwell among
them.
3. And like as [5] when a great king has entered into some large city and
taken up his abode in one of the houses there, such city is at all events held
worthy of high honour, nor does any enemy or bandit any longer descend upon it
and subject it; but, on the contrary, it is thought entitled to all care,
because of the king's having taken up his residence in a single house there: so,
too, has it been with the Monarch of all.
4. For now that He has come to our realm, and taken up his abode in one
body among His peers, henceforth the whole conspiracy of the enemy against
mankind is checked, and the corruption of death which before was prevailing against
them is done away. For the race of men had gone to ruin, had not the Lord and
Saviour of all, the Son of God, come among us to meet the end of death [6].
- By a like simile, the reasonableness of the work of redemption is shewn. How
Christ wiped away our ruin, and provided its anti-date by His own teaching.
Scripture proofs of the Incarnation of the Word, and of the Sacrifice He wrought.
Now in truth this great work was peculiarly suited to God's goodness. I.
For if a king, having founded a house or city, if it be beset by bandits from
the carelessness of its inmates, does not by any means neglect it, but avenges
and reclaims it as his own work, having regard not to the carelessness of the
inhabitants, but to what beseems himself; much more did God the Word of the
all-good Father not neglect the race of men, His work, going to corruption: but,
while He blotted out the death which had ensued by the offering of His own body, He
corrected their neglect by His own teaching, restoring all that was man's by
His own power.
2. And of this one may be assured at the hands of the Saviour's own
inspired writers, if one happen upon their writings, where they say: "For the love of
Christ [7] constraineth us; because we thus judge, that if one died for all,
then all died, and He died for all that we should no longer live unto ourselves,
but unto Him Who for our sakes died and rose again," our Lord Jesus Christ.
And, again: "But [8] we behold Him, Who hath been made a little lower than the
angels, even Jesus, because of the suffering of death crowned with glory and
honour, that by the grace of God He should taste of death for every man."
3. Then He also points out the reason why it was necessary for none other
than God the Word Himself to become incarnate; as follows: "For it became Him,
for Whom are all things, and through Whom are all things, in bringing many sons
unto glory, to make the Captain of their salvation perfect through suffering;"
by which words He means, that it belonged to none other to bring man back from
the corruption which had begun, than the Word of God, Who had also made them
from the beginning.
4. And that it was in order to the sacrifice for bodies such as His own
that the Word Himself also assumed a body, to this, also, they refer in these
words [9]: "Forasmuch then as the children are the sharers in blood and flesh, He
also Himself in like manner partook of the same, that through death He might
bring to naught Him that had the power of death, that is, the devil; and might
deliver them who, through fear of death, were all their lifetime subject to
bondage."
5. For by the sacrifice of His own body, He both put an end to the law
which was against us, and made a new beginning of life for us, by the hope of
resurrection which He has given us. For since from man it was that death prevailed
over men, for this cause conversely, by the Word of God being made man has come
about the destruction of death and the resurrection of life; as the man which
bore Christ [1] saith: For [2] since by man came death, by man came also the
resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ shall all be
made alive :" and so forth. For no longer now do we die as subject to
condemnation; but as men who rise from the dead we await the general resurrection of
all, "which [3] in its own times He shall show," even God, Who has also wrought
it, and bestowed it upon us.
6. This then is the first cause of the Saviour's being made man. But one
might see from the following reasons also, that His gracious coming amongst us
was fitting to have taken place.
- Second reason for the Incarnation. God knowing that man was not by nature
sufficient to know Him, gave him, in order that he might have some profit in
being, a knowledge of Himself. He made them in the Image of the Word, that thus they
might know the Word, and through Him the Father. Yet man, despising this, fill
into idolatry, leaving the unseen God for magic and astrology; and all this in
spite of God's manifold revelation of Himself.
God, Who has the power over all things, when He was making the race of men
through His own Word, seeing the weakness of their nature, that it was not
sufficient of itself to know its Maker, nor to get any idea at all of God; because
while He was uncreate, the creatures had been made of nought, and while He was
incorporeal, men had been fashioned in a lower way in the body, and because in
every way the things made fell far short of being able to comprehend and know
their Maker--taking pity, I say, on the race of men, inasmuch as He is good, He
did not leave them destitute of the knowledge of Himself, lest they should
find no profit in existing at all [4].
2. For what profit to the creatures if they knew not their Maker? or how
could they be rational without knowing the Word (and Reason) of the Father, in
Whom they received their very being ? For there would be nothing to distinguish
them even from brute creatures if they had knowledge of nothing but earthly
things. Nay, why did God make them at all, as He did not wish to be known by them ?
3. Whence, lest this should be so, being good, He gives them a share in
His own Image, our Lord Jesus Christ, and makes them after His own Image and
after His likeness: so that by such grace perceiving the Image, that is, the Word
of the Father, they may be able through Him to get an idea of the Father, and
knowing their Maker, live the happy and truly blessed life.
4. But men once more in their perversity having set at nought, in spite of
all this, the grace given them, so wholly rejected God, and so darkened their
soul, as not merely to forget their idea of God, but also to fashion for
themselves one invention after another. For not only did they grave idols for
themselves, instead of the truth, and honour things that were not before the living
God, "and [5] serve the creature rather than the Creator," but, worst of all,
they transferred the honour of God even to stocks and stones and to every material
object and to men, and went even further than this, as we have said in the
former treatise.
5. So far indeed did their impiety go, that they proceeded to worship
devils, and proclaimed them as gods, fulfilling their own [6] lusts. For they
performed, as was said above, offerings of brute animals, and sacrifices of men, as
was meet for them [7], binding themselves down all the faster under their
maddening inspirations.
6. For this reason it was also that magic arts were taught among them, and
oracles in divers places led men astray, and all men ascribed the influences
of their birth and existence to the stars and to all the heavenly bodies, having
no thought of anything beyond what was visible.
7. And, in a word, everything was full of irreligion and lawlessness, and
God alone, and His Word, was unknown, albeit He had not hidden Himself out of
men's sight, nor given the knowledge of Himself in one way only; but had, on the
contrary, unfolded it to them in many forms and by many ways.
- For though man was created in grace, God, foreseeing his forgetfulness,
provided also the works of creation to remind man of Him. Yet further, He ordained a
Law and Prophets, whose ministry was meant far all the world. Yet men heeded
only their own lusts.
For whereas the grace of the Divine Image was in itself sufficient to make
known God the Word, and through Him the Father; still God, knowing the
weakness of men, made provision even for their carelessness: so that if they cared not
to know God of themselves, they might be enabled through the works of creation
to avoid ignorance of the Maker.
2. But since men's carelessness, by little and little, descends to lower
things, God made provision, once more, even for this weakness of theirs, by
sending a law, and prophets, men such as they knew, so that even if they were not
ready to look up to heaven and know their Creator, they might have their
instruction from those near at hand. For men are able to learn from men more directly
about higher things.
3. So it was open to them, by looking into the height of heaven, and
perceiving the harmony of creation, to know its Ruler, the Word of the Father, Who,
by His own providence over all things makes known the Father to all, and to
this end moves all things, that through Him all may know God.
4. Or, if this were too much for them, it was possible for them to meet at
least the holy men, and through them to learn of God, the Maker of all things,
the Father of Christ; and that the worship of idols is godlessness, and full
of all impiety.
5. Or it was open to them, by knowing the law even, to cease from all
lawlessness and live a virtuous life. For neither was the law for the Jews alone,
nor were the Prophets sent for them only, but, though sent to the Jews and
persecuted by the Jews, they were for all the world a holy school of the knowledge
of God and the conduct of the soul.
6. God's goodness then and loving-kindness being so great--men
nevertheless, overcome by the pleasures of the moment and by the illusions and deceits
sent by demons, did not raise their heads toward the truth, but loaded themselves
the more with evils and sins, so as no longer to seem rational, but from their
ways to be reckoned void of reason.
- Here again, was God to keep silence? to allow to false gods the worship He
made us to render to HimseIf ? A king whose subjects had revolted would, after
sending letters and messages, go to them in person. How much more shall God
restore in us the grace of His image. This men, themselves but copies, could not do.
Hence the Word Himself must come (1) to recreate, (2) to destroy death in the
Body.
So then, men having thus become brutalized, and demoniacal deceit thus
clouding every place, and hiding the knowledge of the true God, what was God to
do? To keep still silence at so great a thing, and suffer men to be led astray by
demons and not to know God ?
2. And what was the use of man having been originally made in God's image
? For it had been better for him to have been made simply like a brute animal,
than, once made rational, for him to live [8] the life of the brutes.
3. Or where was any necessity at all for his receiving the idea of God to
begin with? For if he be not fit to receive it even now, it were better it had
not been given him at first.
4. Or what profit to God Who has made them, or what glory to Him could it
be, if men, made by Him, do not worship Him, but think that others are their
makers? For God thus proves to have made these for others instead of for Himself.
5. Once again, a merely human king does not let the lands he has colonized
pass to others to serve them, nor go over to other men; but he warns them by
letters, and often sends to them by friends, or, if need be, he comes in person,
to put them to rebuke in the last resort by his presence, only that they may
not serve others and his own work be spent for naught.
6. Shall not God much more spare His own creatures, that they be not led
astray from Him and serve things of naught? especially since such going astray
proves the cause of their ruin and undoing, and since it was unfitting that they
should perish which had once been partakers of God's image.
7. What then was God to do? or what was to be done save the renewing of
that which was in God's image, so that by it men might once more be able to know
Him? But how could this have come to pass save by the presence of the very
Image of God, our Lord Jesus Christ? For by men's means it was impossible, since
they are but made after an image ; nor by angels either, for not even they are
(God's) images. Whence the Word of God came in His own person, that, as He was
the Image of the Father, He might be able to create afresh the man after the
image.
8. But, again, it could not else have taken place had not death and
corruption been done away.
9. Whence He took, in natural fitness, a mortal body, that while death
might in it be once for all done away, men made after His Image might once more be
renewed. None other then was sufficient for this need, save the Image of the
Father.
- A portrait once effaced must be restored from the original. Thus the Son of
the Father came to seek, save, and regenerate. No other way was possible.
Blinded himself, man could not see to heal. The witness of creation had failed to
preserve Him, and could not bring Him back. The Word done could do so. But how ?
only by revealing Himself as man.
For as, when the likeness painted on a panel has been effaced by stains
from without, he whose likeness it is must needs come once more to enable the
portrait to be renewed on the same wood: for, for the sake of his picture, even
the mere wood on which it is painted is not thrown away, but the outline is
renewed upon it;
2. in the same way also the most holy Son of the Father, being the Image
of the Father, came to our region to renew man once made in His likeness, and
find him, as one lost, by the remission of sins; as He says Himself in the
Gospels: "I came [9] to find and to save the lost." Whence He said to the Jews also:
"Except [1] a man be born again," not meaning, as they thought, birth front
woman, but speaking of the soul born and created anew in the likeness of God's
image.
3. But since wild idolatry and godlessness occupied the world, and the
knowledge of God was hid, whose part was it to teach the world concerning the
Father? Man's, might one say ? But it was not in man's power to penetrate
everywhere beneath the sun; for neither had they the physical strength to run so far,
nor would they be able to claim credence in this matter, nor were they sufficient
by themselves to withstand the deceit and impositions of evil spirits.
4. For where all were smitten and confused in soul from demoniacal deceit,
and the vanity of idols, how was it possible for them to win over man's soul
and man's mind whereas they cannot even see them? Or how can a man convert what
he does not see?
5. But perhaps one might say creation was enough; but if creation were
enough, these great evils would never have come to pass. For creation was there
already, and all the same, men were grovelling in the same error concerning God.
6. Who, then, was needed. save the Word of God, that sees both soul and
mind, and that gives movement to all things in creation, and by them makes known
the Father? For He who by His own Providence and ordering of all things was
teaching men concerning the Father, He it was that could renew this same teaching
as well.
7. How, then, could this have been done? Perhaps one might say, that the
same means were open as before, for Him to shew forth the truth about the Father
once more by means of the work of creation. But this was no longer a sure
means. Quite the contrary; for men missed seeing this before, and have turned their
eyes no longer upward but downward.
8. Whence, naturally, willing to profit men, He sojourns here as man,
taking to Himself a body like the others, and from things of earth, that is by the
works of His body [He teaches them], so that they who would not know Him from
His Providence and rule over all things, may even from the works done by His
actual body know the Word of God which is in the body, and through Him the Father.
- Thus the Word condescended to man's engrossment in corporeal things, by even
taking a body. All man's superstitions He met halfway; whether men were
inclined to worship Nature, Man, Demons, or the dead, He shewed Himself Lord of all
these.
For as a kind teacher who cares for His disciples, if some of them cannot
profit by higher subjects, comes down to their level, and teaches them at any
rate by simpler courses; so also did the Word of God. As Paul also says: "For
seeing [2] that in the wisdom of God the world through its wisdom knew not God,
it was God's good pleasure through the foolishness of the word preached to save
them that believe."
2. For seeing that men, having rejected the contemplation of God, and with
their eyes downward, as though sunk in the deep, were seeking about for God in
nature and in the world of sense, feigning gods for themselves of mortal men
and demons; to this end the loving and general Saviour of all, the Word of God,
takes to Himself a body, and as Man walks among men and meets the senses of all
men half-way [3], to the end, I say, that they who think that God is corporeal
may from what the Lord effects by His body perceive the truth, and through Him
recognize [4] the Father.
3. So, men as they were, and human in all their thoughts, on whatever
objects they fixed their senses, there they saw themselves met half way [3], and
taught the truth from every side.
4. For if they looked with awe upon the Creation, yet they saw how she
confessed Christ as Lord; or if their mind was swayed toward men, so as to think
them gods, yet from the Saviour's works, supposing they compared them, the
Saviour alone among men appeared Son of God; for there were no such works done among
the rest as have been done by the Word of God.
5. Or if they were biassed toward evil spirits, even, yet seeing them cast
out by the Word, they were to know that He alone, the Word of God, was God,
and that the spirits were none.
6. Or if their mind had already sunk even to the dead, so as to worship
heroes, and the gods spoken of in the poets, yet, seeing the Saviour's
resurrection, they were to confess them to be false gods, and that the Lord alone is
true, the Word of the Father, that was Lord even of death.
7. For this cause He was both born and appeared as Man, and died, and rose
again, dulling and casting into the shade the works of all former men by His
own, that in whatever direction the bias of men might be, from thence He might
recall them, and teach them of His own true Father, as He Himself says: "I came
to save and to find that which was lost [5]."
- He came then to attract man's sense bound attention to Himself as man, and so
to lead him on to know Him as God.
For men's mind having finally fallen to things of sense, the Word
disguised Himself by appearing in a body, that He might, as Man, transfer men to
Himself, and centre their senses on Himself, and, men seeing Him thenceforth as Man,
persuade them by the works He did that He is not Man only, but also God, and
the Word and Wisdom of the true God.
2. This, too, is what Paul means to point out when he says: "That ye [6]
being rooted and grounded in love, may be strong to apprehend with all the
saints what is the breadth and length, and height and depth, and to know the love of
Christ which passeth knowledge, that ye may be filled unto all the fulness of
God."
3. For by the Word revealing Himself everywhere, both above and beneath,
and in the depth and in the breadth--above, in the creation; beneath, in
becoming man; in the depth, in Hades; and in the breadth, in the world--all things
have been filled with the knowledge of God.
4. Now for this cause, also, He did not immediately upon His coming
accomplish His sacrifice on behalf of all, by offering His body to death and raising
it again, for by this [7] means He would have made Himself invisible. But He
made Himself visible enough by what [7] He did, abiding in it, and doing such
works, and shewing such signs, as made Him known no longer as Man, but as God the
Word.
5. For by His becoming Man, the Saviour was to accomplish both works of
love; first, in putting away death from us and renewing us again; secondly, being
unseen and invisible, in manifesting and making Himself known by His works to
be the Word of the Father, and the Ruler and King of the universe.
- How the Incarnation did not limit the ubiquity of the Word, nor diminish His
Purity. (Simile of the Sun.)
For He was not, as might be imagined, circumscribed in the body, nor,
while present in the body, was He absent elsewhere; nor, while He moved the body,
was the universe left void of His working and Providence; but, thing most
marvellous, Word as He was, so far from being contained by anything, He rather
contained all things Himself; and just as while present in the whole of Creation, He
is at once distinct in being from the universe, and present in oil things by
His own power,-giving order to all things, and over all and in all revealing His
own providence, and giving life to each thing and all things, including the
whole without being included, but being in His own Father alone wholly and in
every respect,--
2. thus, even while present in a human body and Himself quickening it, He
was, without inconsistency, quickening the universe as well, and was in every
process of nature, and was outside the whole, and while known from the body by
His works, He was none the less manifest from the working of the universe as
well.
3. Now, it is the function of soul to behold even what is outside its own
body, by acts of thought, without, however, working outside its own body, or
moving by its presence things remote from the body. Never, that is, does a man,
by thinking of things at a distance, by that fact either move or displace them;
nor if a man were to sit in his own house and reason about the heavenly bodies,
would he by that fact either move the sun or make the heavens revolve. But he
sees that they move and have their being, without being actually able to
influence them.
4. Now, the Word of God in His man's nature was not like that; for He was
not bound to His body, but rather was Himself wielding it, so that He was not
only in it, but was actually in everything, and while external to the universe,
abode in His Father only.
5. And this was the wonderful thing that He was at once walking as man,
and as the Word was quickening all things, and as the Son was dwelling with His
Father. So that not even when the Virgin bore Him did He suffer any change, nor
by being in the body was [His glory] dulled: but, on the contrary, He
sanctified the body also.
6. For not even by being in the universe does He share in its nature, but
all things, on the contrary, are quickened and sustained by Him.
7. For if the sun too, which was made by Him, and which we see, as it
revolves in the heaven, is not defiled [8] by touching the bodies upon earth, nor
is it put out by darkness, but on the contrary itself illuminates and cleanses
them also, much less was the all-holy Word of God, Maker and Lord also of the
sun, defiled by being made known in the body; on the contrary, being
incorruptible, He quickened and cleansed the body also, which was in itself mortal: "who
[9] did," for so it says, "no sin, neither was guile found in His mouth."
- How the Word and Power of God works in His human actions : by casting out
devils, by Miracles, & His Birth of the Virgin.
Accordingly, when inspired writers on this matter speak of Him as eating
and being born, understand [1] that the body, as body, was born, and sustained
with food corresponding to its nature, while God, the Word Himself, Who was
united with the body, while ordering all things, also by the works He did in the
body shewed Himself to be not man, but God the Word. But these things are said of
Him, because the actual body which ate, was born, and suffered, belonged to
none other but to the Lord: and because, having become man, it was proper for
these things to be predicated of Him as man, to shew Him to have a body in truth,
and not in seeming.
2. But just as from these things He was known to be bodily present, so
from the works He did in the body He made Himself known to be Son of God. Whence
also He cried to the unbelieving Jews; "If [2] 1 do not the works of My Father,
believe Me not. But if I do them, though ye believe not Me, believe My works;
that ye may know and understand that the Father is in Me, and I in the Father."
3. For just as, though invisible, He is known through the works of
creation; so, having become man, and being in the body unseen, it may be known from
His works that He Who can do these is not man, but the Power and Word of God.
4. For His charging evil spirits, and their being driven forth, this deed
is not of man, but of God. Or who that saw Him healing the diseases to which
the human race is subject, can still think Him man and not God? For He cleansed
lepers, made lame men to walk, opened the hearing of deaf men, made blind men to
see again, and in a word drove away from men all diseases and infirmities:
from which acts it was possible even for the most ordinary observer to see His
Godhead. For who that saw Him give back [3] what was deficient to men born
lacking, and open the eyes of the man blind from his birth, would have failed to
perceive that the nature of men was subject to Him, and that He was its Artificer
and Maker? For He that gave back that which the man from his birth had not, must
be, it is surely evident, the Lord also of men's natural birth.
5. Therefore, even to begin with, when He was descending to us, He
fashioned His body for Himself from a Virgin, thus to afford to all no small proof of
His Godhead, in that He Who formed this is also Maker of everything else as
well. For who, seeing a body proceeding forth from a Virgin alone without man, can
fail to infer that He Who appears in it is Maker and Lord of other bodies also?
6. Or who, seeing the substance of water changed and transformed into
wine, fails to perceive that He Who did this is Lord and Creator of the substance
of all waters? For to this end He went upon the sea also as its Master, and
walked as on dry land, to afford evidence to them that saw it of His lordship over
all things. And in feeding so vast a multitude on little, and of His own self
yielding abundance where none was, so that from five loaves five thousand had
enough, and left so much again over, did He shew Himself to be any other than the
very Lord Whose Providence is over all things?
- Man, unmoved by nature, was to be taught to know God by that sacred Manhood,
Whose deity all nature confessed, especially in His Death.
But all this it seemed well for the Saviour to do; that since men had
failed to know His Providence, revealed in the Universe, and had failed to perceive
His Godhead shewn in creation, they might at any rate from the works of His
body recover their sight, and through Him receive an idea of the knowledge of the
Father, inferring, as I said before, from particular cases His Providence over
the whole.
2. For who that saw His power over evil spirits, or who that saw the evil
spirits confess that He was their Lord, will hold his mind any longer in doubt
whether this be the Son and Wisdom and Power of God?
3. For He made even the creation break silence: in that even at His death,
marvellous to relate, or rather at His actual trophy over death--the Cross I
mean--all creation was confessing that He that was made manifest and suffered in
the body was not man merely, but the Son of God and Saviour of all. For the
sun hid His face, and the earth quaked and the mountains were rent: all men were
awed. Now these things shewed that Christ on the Cross was God, while all
creation was His slave, and was witnessing by its fear to its Master's presence.
Thus, then, God the Word shewed Himself to men by His works. But our next step
must be to recount and speak of the end of His bodily life and course, and of the
nature of the death of His body; especially as this is the sum of our faith,
and all men without exception are full of it: so that you may know that no whir
the less from this also Christ is known to be God and the Son of God.
- None, then, could bestow incorruption, but He Who had made, none restore the
likeness of God, save His Own Image, none quicken, but the Life, none teach,
but the Word.
And He, to pay our debt of death, must also die for us, and rise again as
our first-fruits from the grave. Mortal therefore His body must be;
corruptible, His Body could not be. We have, then, now stated in part, as far as it was
possible, and as ourselves had been able to understand, the reason of His bodily
appearing; that it was in the power of none other to turn the corruptible to
incorruption, except the Saviour Himself, that had at the beginning also made all
things out of naught and that none other could create anew the likeness of
God's image for men, save the Image of the Father; and that none other could
render the mortal immortal, save our Lord Jesus Christ, Who is the Very Life [4];
and that none other could teach men of the Father, and destroy the worship of
idols, save the Word, that orders all things and is alone the true Only-begotten
Son of the Father.
2. But since it was necessary also that the debt owing from all should be
paid again: for, as I have already said [5], it was owing that all should die,
for which especial cause, indeed, He came among us: to this intent, after the
proofs of His Godhead from His works, He next offered up His sacrifice also on
behalf of all, yielding His Temple to death in the stead of all, in order
firstly to make men quit and free of their old trespass, and further to shew Himself
more powerful even than death, displaying His own body incorruptible, as
first-fruits of the resurrection of all.
3. And do not be surprised if we frequently [6] repeat the same words on
the same subject. For since we are speaking of the counsel of God, therefore we
expound the same sense in more than one form, lest we should seem to be leaving
anything out, and incur the charge of inadequate treatment: for it is better
to submit to the blame of repetition than to leave out anything! that ought to
be set down.
4. The body, then, as sharing the same nature with all, for it was a human
body, though by an unparalleled miracle it was formed of a virgin only, yet
being mortal, was to die also, conformably to its peers. But by virtue of the
union of the Word with it, it was no longer subject to corruption according to its
own nature, but by reason of the Word that was come to dwell [7] in it it was
placed out of the reach of corruption.
5. And so it was that two marvels came to pass at once, that the death of
all was accomplished in the Lord's body, and that death and corruption were
wholly done away by reason of the Word that was united with it. For there was need
of death, and death must needs be suffered on behalf of all, that the debt
owing from all might be paid.
6. Whence, as I said before, the Word, since it was not possible for Him
to die, as He was immortal, took to Himself a body such as could die, that He
might offer it as His own in the stead of all, and as suffering, through His
union [7] with it, on behalf of all, "Bring [8] to naught Him that had the power of
death, that is the devil; and might deliver them who through fear of death
were all their lifetime subject to bondage."
- Death brought to naught by the death of Christ. Why then did not Christ die
privately, or in a more honourable way? He was not subject to natural death, but
had to die at the hands of others. Why then did He die? Nay but for that
purpose He came, and but for that, He could not have risen.
Why, now that the common Saviour of all has died on our behalf, we, the
faithful in Christ, no longer die the death as before, agreeably to the warning
of the law; for this condemnation has ceased; but, corruption ceasing and being
put away by the grace of the Resurrection, henceforth we are only dissolved,
agreeably to our bodies' mortal nature, at the time God has fixed for each, that
we may be able to gain a better resurrection.
2. For like the seeds which are cast into the earth, we do not perish by
dissolution, but sown in the earth, shall rise again, death having been brought
to naught by the grace of the Saviour. Hence it is that blessed Paul, who was
made a surety of the Resurrection to all, says: "This corruptible [9] must put
on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality; but when this
corruptible shall have put on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put on
immortality, then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written, Death is
swallowed up in victory. O death where is thy sting? O grave where is thy victory ?"
3. Why, then, one might say, if it were necessary for Him to yield up His
body to death in the stead of all, did He not lay it aside as man privately,
instead of going as far as even to be crucified? For it were more fitting for Him
to have laid His body aside honourably, than ignominiously to endure a death
like this.
4. Now, see to it, I reply, whether such an objection be not merely human,
whereas what the Saviour did is truly divine and for many reasons worthy of
His Godhead. Firstly, be cause the death which befalls men comes to them
agreeably to the weakness of their nature; for, unable to continue in one stay, they
are dissolved with time. Hence, too, diseases befall them, and they fall sick and
die. But the Lord is not weak, but is the Power of God and Word of God and
Very Life.
5. If, then, He had laid aside His body somewhere in private, and upon a
bed, after the manner of men, it would have been thought that He also did this
agreeably to the weakness of His nature, and because there was nothing in him
more than in other men. But since He was, firstly, the Life and the Word of God,
and it was necessary, secondly, for the death on behalf of all to be
accomplished, for this cause, on the one hand, because He was life and power, the body
gained strength in Him;
6. while on the other, as death must needs come to pass, He did not
Himself take, but received at others' hands, the occasion of perfecting His
sacrifice. Since it was not fit, either, that the Lord should fall sick, who healed the
diseases of others; nor again was it right for that body to lose its strength,
in which He gives strength to the weaknesses of others also.
7. Why, then, did He not prevent death, as He did sickness? Because it was
for this that He had the body, and it was unfitting to prevent it, lest the
Resurrection also should be hindered, while yet it was equally unfitting for
sickness to precede His death, lest it should be thought weakness on the part of
Him that was in the body. Did He not then hunger? Yes; He hungered, agreeably to
the properties of His body. But He did not perish of hunger, because of the
Lord that wore it. Hence, even if He died to ransom all, yet He saw not
corruption. For [His body] rose again in perfect soundness, since the body belonged to
none other, but to the very Life.
- But why did He not withdraw His body from the Jews, and so guard its
immortality?
(1) It became Him not to inflict death on Himself, and yet not to shun it. (2)
He came to receive death as the due of others, therefore it should come to Him
from without. (3) His death must be certain, to guarantee the truth of His
Resurrection. Also, He could not die from infirmity, lest He should be mocked in
His healing of others.
But it were better, one might say, to have hidden from the designs of the
Jews, that He might guard His body altogether from death. Now let such an one
be told that this too was unbefitting the Lord. For as it was not fitting for
the Word of God, being the Life, to inflict death Himself on His own body, so
neither was it suitable to fly from death offered by others, but rather to follow
it up unto destruction, for which reason He naturally neither laid aside His
body of His own accord, nor, again, fled from the Jews when they took counsel
against Him.
2. But this did not shew weakness on the Word's part, but, on the
contrary, shewed Him to be Saviour and Life; in that He both awaited death to destroy
it, and hasted to accomplish the death offered Him for the salvation of all.
3. And besides, the Saviour came to accomplish not His own death, but the
death of men; whence He did not lay aside His body by a death of His own [1] --
for He was Life and had none--but received that death which came from men, in
order perfectly to do away with this when it met Him in His own body.
4. Again, from the following also one might see the reasonableness of the
Lord's body meeting this end. The Lord was especially concerned for the
resurrection of the body which He was set to accomplish. For what He was to do was to
manifest it as a monument of victory over death, and to assure all of His
having effected the blotting out of corruption, and of the incorruption of their
bodies from thenceforward; as a gage of which and a proof of the resurrection in
store for all, He has preserved His own body in-corrupt.
5. If, then, once more, His body had fallen sick, and the word had been
sundered from it in the sight of all, it would have been unbecoming that He who
healed the diseases of others should suffer His own instrument to waste in
sickness. For how could His driving out the diseases of others have been believed
[2] in if His own temple fell sick in Him [3]? For either He had been mocked as
unable to drive away diseases, or if He could, but did not, He would be thought
insensible toward others also.
- Necessity of a public death for the doctrine of the Resurrection.
But even if, without any disease and without any pain, He had hidden His
body away privily and by Himself "in [4] a corner," or in a desert place, or in
a house, or anywhere, and afterwards suddenly appeared and said that He had
been raised from the dead, He would have seemed on all hands to be telling idle
tales [5], and what He said about the Resurrection would have been all the more
discredited, as there was no one at all to witness to His death. Now, death must
precede resurrection, as it would be no resurrection did not death precede; so
that if the death of His body had taken place anywhere in secret, the death
not being apparent nor taking place before witnesses, His Resurrection too had
been hidden and without evidence.
2. Or why, while when He had risen He proclaimed the Resurrection, should
He cause His death to take place in secret? or why, while He drove out evil
spirits in the presence of all, and made the man blind from his birth recover his
sight, and changed the water into wine, that by these means He might be
believed to be the Word of God, should He not manifest His mortal nature as
incorruptible in the presence of all, that He might be believed Himself to be the Life?
3. Or how were His disciples to have boldness in speaking of the
Resurrection, were they not able to say that He first died? Or how could they be
believed, saying that death had first taken place and then the Resurrection, had they
not had as witnesses of His death the men before whom they spoke with boldness?
For if, even as it was, when His death and Resurrection had taken place in the
sight of all, the Pharisees of that day would not believe, but compelled even
those who had seen the Resurrection to deny it, why, surely, if these things
had happened in secret, how many pretexts for disbelief would they have devised?
4. Or how could the end of death, and the victory over it be proved,
unless challenging it before the eyes of all He had shewn it to be dead, annulled
for the future by the incorruption of His body ?
- Further objections anticipated. He did not choose His manner of death; for He
was to prove Conqueror of death in all or any of its forms: (simple of a good
wrestler). The death chosen to disgrace Him proved the Trophy against death:
moreover a preserved His body undivided.
But what others also might have said, we must anticipate in reply. For
perhaps a man might say even as follows: If it was necessary for His death to
take place before all, and with witnesses, that the story of His Resurrection also
might be believed, it would have been better at any rate for Him to have
devised for Himself a glorious death, if only to escape the ignominy of the Cross.
2. But had He done even this, He would give ground for suspicion against
Himself, that He was not powerful against every death, but only against the
death devised for [6] Him; and so again there would have been a pretext for
disbelief about the Resurrection all the same. So death came to His body, not from
Himself, but from hostile counsels, in order that whatever death they offered to
the Saviour, this He might utterly do away.
3. And just as a noble wrestler, great in skill and courage, does not pick
out his antagonists for himself, lest he should raise a suspicion of his being
afraid of some of them, but puts it in the choice of the onlookers, and
especially so if they happen to be his enemies, so that against whomsoever they match
him, him he may throw, and be believed superior to them all; so also the Life
of all, our Lord and Saviour, even Christ, did not devise a death for His own
body, so as not to appear to be fearing some other death; but He accepted on the
Cross, and endured, a death inflicted by others, and above all by His enemies,
which they thought dreadful and ignominious and not to be faced; so that this
also being destroyed, both He Himself might be believed to be the Life, and the
power of death be brought utterly to nought.
4. So something surprising and startling has happened; for the death,
which they thought to inflict as a disgrace, was actually a monument of victory
against death itself. Whence neither did He suffer the death of John, his head
being severed, nor, as Esaias, was He sawn in sunder; in order that even in death
He might still keep His body undivided and in perfect soundness, and no pretext
be afforded to those that would divide the Church.
- Why the Cross, of all deaths? (1) He had to bear the curse for us. (2) On it
He held out His hands to unite all, Jews and Gentiles, in Himself. (3) He
defeated the "Prince of the powers of the air" in his own region, clearing the way
to heaven and opening for us the everlasting doors.
And thus much in reply to those without who pile up arguments for
themselves. But if any of our own people also inquire, not from love of debate, but
from love of learning, why He suffered death in none other way save on the Cross,
let him also be told that no. other way than this was good for us, and that it
was well that the Lord suffered this for our sakes.
2. For if He came Himself to bear the curse laid upon us, how else could
He have "become [7] a curse," unless He received the death set for a curse? and
that is the Cross. For this is exactly what is written: "Cursed [8] is he that
hangeth on a tree."
3. Again, if the Lord's death is the ransom of all, and by His death "the
middle [9] wall of partition" is broken down, and the calling of the nations is
brought about, how would He have called us to Him, had He not been crucified?
For it is only on the cross that a man dies with his hands spread out. Whence
it was fitting for the Lord to bear this also and to spread out His hands, that
with the one He might draw the ancient people, and with the other those from
the Gentiles, and unite both in Himself.
4. For this is what He Himself has said, signifying by what manner of
death He was to ransom all: "I, when [1] I am lifted up," He saith, "shall draw all
men unto Me."
5. And once more, if the devil, the enemy of our race, having fallen from
heaven, wanders about our lower atmosphere, and there bearing rule over his
fellow-spirits, as his peers in disobedience, not only works illusions by their
means in them that are deceived, but tries to hinder them that are going up (and
about this [2] the Apostle says: "According to the prince of the power of the
air, of the spirit that now worketh in the sons of disobedience "); while the
Lord came to cast down the devil, and clear the air and prepare the way for us up
into heaven, as said the Apostle: "Through [3] the veil, that is to say, His
flesh "--and this must needs be by death--well, by what other kind of death
could this have come to pass, than by one which took place in the air, I mean the
cross ? for only he that is perfected on the cross dies in the air. Whence it
was quite fitting that the Lord suffered this death.
6. For thus being lifted up He cleared the air [4] of the malignity both
of the devil and of demons of all kinds, as He says: "I beheld [5] Satan as
lightning fall from heaven ;" and made a new opening of the way up into heaven as
He says once more: "Lift [6] up your gates, O ye princes, and be ye lift up, ye
everlasting doors." For it was not the Word Himself that needed an opening of
the gates, being Lord of all; nor were any of His works closed to their Maker;
but we it was that needed it whom He carried up by His own body. For as He
offered it to death on behalf of all, so by it He once more made ready the way up
into the heavens.
- Reasons for His rising on the Third Day. (I) Not sooner for else His real
death would be denied, nor (2) later; to (a) guard the identity of His body, (b)
not to keep His disciples too long in suspense, nor (c) to wait till the
witnesses of His death were dispersed, or its memory faded.
The death on the Cross, then, for us has proved seemly and fitting, and
its cause has been shewn to be reasonable in every respect; and it may justly be
argued that in no other way than by the Cross was it right for the salvation of
all to take place. For not even thus--not even on the Cross--did He leave
Himself concealed; but far otherwise, while He made creation witness to the
presence of its Maker, He suffered not the temple of His body to remain long, but
having merely shewn it to be dead, by the contact of death with it, He straightway
raised it up on the third day, bearing away, as the mark of victory and the
triumph over death, the incorruptibility and impassibility which resulted to His
body.
2. For He could, even immediately on death, have raised His body and shewn
it alive; but this also the Saviour, in wise foresight, did not do. For one
might have said that He had not did at all, or that death had not come into
perfect contact with Him, if He had manifested the Resurrection at once.
3. Perhaps, again, had the interval of His dying and rising again been one
of two days [7] only, the glory of His incorruption would have been obscure.
So in order that the body might be proved to be dead, the Word tarried yet one
intermediate day, and on the third shewed it incorruptible to all.
4. So then, that the death on the Cross might be proved, He raised His
body on the third day.
5. But lest, by raising it up when it had remained a long time and been
completely corrupted, He should be disbelieved, as though He had exchanged it for
some other body for a man might also from lapse of time distrust what he saw,
and forget what had taken place--for this cause He waited not more than three
days; nor did He keep long in suspense those whom He had told about the
Resurrection:
6. but while the word was still echoing in their ears and their eyes were
still expectant and their mind in suspense, and while those who had slain Him
were still living on earth, and were on the spot and could witness to the death
of the Lord's body, the Son of God Himself, after an interval of three days,
shewed His body, once dead, immortal and incorruptible; and it was made manifest
to all that it was not from any natural weakness of the Word that dwelt in it
that the body had died, but m order that in it death might be done away by the
power of the Saviour.
- The change wrought by the Cross in the relation of Death to Man.
For that death is destroyed, and that the Cross is become the victory over
it, and that it has no more power but is verily dead, this is no small proof,
or rather an evident warrant, that it is despised by all Christ's disciples,
and that they all take the aggressive against it and no longer fear it; but by
the sign of the Cross and by faith in Christ tread it down as dead.
2. For of old, before the divine sojourn of the Saviour took place, even
to the saints death was terrible [8], and all wept for the dead as though they
perished. But now that the Saviour has raised His body, death is no longer
terrible; for all who believe in Christ tread him under as nought, and choose rather
to die than to deny their faith in Christ. For they verily know that when they
die they are not destroyed, but actually [begin to] live, and become
incorruptible through the Resurrection.
3. And that devil that once maliciously exulted in death, now that its [9]
pains were loosed, remained the only one truly dead. And a proof of this is,
that before men believe Christ, they see in death an object of terror, and play
the coward before him. But when they are gone over to Christ's faith and
teaching, their contempt for death is so great that they even eagerly rush upon it,
and become witnesses for the Resurrection the Saviour has accomplished against
it. For while still tender in years they make haste to die, and not men only,
but women also, exercise themselves by bodily discipline against it. So weak has
he become, that even women who were formerly deceived by him, now mock at him
as dead and paralyzed.
4. For as when a tyrant has been defeated by a real king, and bound hand
and foot, then all that pass by laugh him to scorn, buffeting and reviling him,
no longer fearing his fury and barbarity, because of the king who has conquered
him; so also, death having been conquered and exposed by the Saviour on the
Cross, and bound hand and foot, all they who are in Christ, as they pass by,
trample on him, and witnessing to Christ scoff at death, jesting at him, and saying
what has been written against him of old: "O death [1], where is thy victory?
O grave, where is thy sting."
- This exceptional fact must be tested by experience.
"Let those who doubt it become Christians." Is this, then, a slight proof
of the weakness of death? or is it a slight demonstration of the victory won
over him by the Saviour, when the youths and young maidens that are in Christ
despise this life and practise to die?
2. For man is by nature afraid of death and of the dissolution of the
body; but there is this most startling fact, that he who has put on the faith of
the Cross despises even what is naturally fearful, and for Christ's sake is not
afraid of death.
3. And just as, whereas fire has the natural property of burning, if some
one said there was a substance which did not fear its burning, but on the
contrary proved it weak--as the asbestos among the Indians is said to do--then one
who did not believe the story, if he wished to put it to the test, is at any
rate, after putting on the fireproof material and touching the fire, thereupon
assured of the weakness attributed [2] to the fire:
4. or if any one wished to see the tyrant bound, at any rate by going into
the country and domain of his conqueror he may see the man, a terror to
others, reduced to weakness; so if a man is incredulous even still after so many
proofs and after so many who have become martyrs in Christ, and after the scorn
shewn for death every day by those who are illustrious in Christ, still, if his
mind be even yet doubtful as to whether death has been brought to nought and had
an end, he does well to wonder at so great a thing, only let him not prove
obstinate in incredulity, nor case hardened in the face of what is so plain.
5. But just as he who has got the asbestos knows that fire has no burning
power over it, and as he who would see the tyrant bound goes over to the empire
of his conqueror, so too let him who is incredulous about the victory over
death receive the faith of Christ, and pass over to His teaching, and he shall see
the weakness of death, and the triumph over it. For many who were formerly
incredulous and scoffers have afterwards believed and so despised death as even to
become martyrs for Christ Himself.
- Here then are wonderful effects, and a sufficient cause, the Cross, to
account for them, as sunrise accounts for daylight.
Now if by the sign of the Cross, and by faith in Christ, death is trampled
down, it must be evident before the tribunal of truth that it is none other
than Christ Himself that has displayed trophies and triumphs over death, and made
him lose all his strength.
2. And if, while previously death was strong, and for that reason
terrible, now after the sojourn of the Saviour and the death and Resurrection of His
body it is despised, it must be evident that death has been brought to nought and
conquered by the very Christ that ascended the Cross.
3. For as, if after night-time the sun rises, and the whole region of
earth is illumined by him, it is at any rate not open to doubt that it is the sun
who has revealed his light everywhere, that has also driven away the dark and
given light to all things; so, now that death has come into contempt, and been
trodden under foot, from the time when the Saviour's saving manifestation in the
flesh and His death on the Cross took place, it must be quite plain that it is
the very Saviour that also appeared in the body, Who has brought death to
nought, and Who displays the signs of victory over him day by day in His own
disciples.
4. For when one sees men, weak by nature, leaping forward to death, and
not fearing its corruption nor frightened of the descent into Hades, but with
eager soul challenging it; and not flinching from torture, but on the contrary,
for Christ's sake electing to rush upon death in preference to life upon earth,
or even if one be an eye-witness of men and females and young children rushing
and leaping upon death for the sake of Christ's religion; who is so silly, or
who is so incredulous, or who so maimed in his mind, as not to see and infer that
Christ, to Whom the people witness, Himself supplies and gives to each the
victory over death, depriving him of all his power in each one of them that hold
His faith and bear the sign of the Cross.
5. For he that sees the serpent trodden under foot, especially knowing his
former fierceness no longer doubts that he is dead and has quite lost his
strength, unless he is perverted in mind and has not even his bodily senses sound.
For who that sees a lion, either, made sport of by children, fails to see that
he is either dead or has lost all his power?
6. Just as, then, it is possible to see with the eyes the truth of all
this, so, now that death is made sport of and despised by believers in Christ let
none any longer doubt, nor any prove incredulous, of death having been brought
to nought by Christ, and the corruption of death destroyed and stayed.
- The reality of the Resurrection prayed by facts: (1) the victory over death
described above: (2) the Wonders of Grace are the work of one Living, of One who
is God: (3) if the gads be (as alleged) real and living, a fortiori He Who
shatters their power is alive.
What we have so far said, then, is no small proof that death has been
brought to naught, and that the Cross of the Lord is a sign of victory over him.
But of the Resurrection of the body to immortality thereupon accomplished by
Christ, the common Saviour and true Life of all, the demonstration by facts is
clearer than arguments to those whose mental vision is sound.
2. For if, as our argument shewed, death has been brought to naught, and
because of Christ all tread him under foot, much more did He Himself first tread
him down with His own body, and bring him to nought. But supposing death slain
by Him, what could have happened save the rising again of His body, and its
being displayed as a monument of victory against death? or how could death have
been shewn to be brought to nought unless the Lord's body had risen? But if this
demonstration of the Resurrection seem to any one insufficient, let him be
assured of what is said even from what takes place before his eyes.
3. For whereas on a man's decease he can put forth no power, but his
influence lasts to the grave and thenceforth ceases; and actions, and power over
men, belong to the living only; let him who will, see and be judge, confessing the
truth from what appears to sight.
4. For now that the Saviour works so great things among men, and day by
day is invisibly persuading so great a multitude from every side, both from them
that dwell in Greece and in foreign lands, to come over to His faith, and all
to obey His teaching, will any one still hold his mind in doubt whether a
Resurrection has been accomplished by the Saviour, and whether Christ is alive, or
rather is Himself the Life?
5. Or is it like a dead man to be pricking the consciences of men, so that
they deny their hereditary laws and bow before the teaching of Christ? Or how,
if he is no longer active (for this is proper to one dead), does he stay from
their activity those who are active and alive, so that the adulterer no longer
commits adultery, and the murderer murders no more, nor is the inflicter of
wrong any longer grasping, and the profane is henceforth religious? Or how, if He
be not risen but is dead, does He drive away, and pursue, and cast down those
false gods said by the unbelievers to be alive, and the demons they worship?
6. For where Christ is named, and His faith, there all idolatry is deposed
and all imposture of evil spirits is exposed, and any spirit is unable to
endure even the name, nay even on barely hearing it flies and disappears. But this
work is not that of one dead, but of one that lives--and especially of God.
7. In particular, it would be ridiculous to say that while the spirits
cast out by Him and the idols brought to nought are alive, He who chases them
away, and by His power prevents their even appearing, yea, and is being confessed
by them all to be Son of God, is dead.
- If Power is the sign of life, what do we learn from the impotence of idols,
for goad or evil, and the constraining power of Christ and of the Sign of the
Cross? Death and the demons are by this proved to have lost their sovereignty.
Coincidence of the above argument from facts with that from the Personality of
Christ.
But they who disbelieve in the Resurrection afford a strong proof against
themselves, if instead of all the spirits and the gods worshipped by them
casting out Christ, Who, they say, is dead, Christ on the contrary proves them all
to be dead.
2. For if it be true that one dead can exert no power, while the Saviour
does daily so many works, drawing men to religion, persuading to virtue,
teaching of immortality, leading on to a desire for heavenly things, revealing the
knowledge of the Father, inspiring strength to meet death, shewing Himself to each
one, and displacing the godlessness of idolatry, and the gods and spirits of
the unbelievers can do none of these things, but rather shew themselves dead at
the presence of Christ, their pomp being reduced to impotence and vanity;
whereas by the sign of the Cross all magic is stopped, and all witchcraft brought to
nought, and all the idols are being deserted and left, and every unruly
pleasure is checked, and every one is looking up from earth to heaven: Whom is one to
pronounce dead? Christ, that is doing so many works? But to work is not proper
to one dead. Or him that exerts no power at all, but lies as it were without
life? which is essentially proper to the idols and spirits, dead as they are.
3. For the Son of God is [3] "living and active," and works day by day,
and brings about the salvation of all. But death is daily proved to have lost all
his power, and idols and spirits are proved to be dead rather than Christ, so
that henceforth no man can any longer doubt of the Resurrection of His body.
4. But he who is incredulous of the Resurrection of the Lord's body would
seem to be ignorant of the power of the Word and Wisdom of God. For if He took
a body to Himself at all, and--in reasonable consistency, as our argument
shewed-- appropriated it as His own, what was the Lord to do with it? or what should
be the end of the body when the Word had once descended upon it? For it could
not but die, inasmuch as it was mortal, and to be offered unto death on behalf
of all: for which purpose it was that the Saviour fashioned it for Himself. But
it was impossible for it to remain dead, because it had been made the temple
of life. Whence, while it died as mortal, it came to life again by reason of the
Life in it; and of its Resurrection the works are a sign.
- But who is to see Him risen, so as to believe? Nay, God is ever invisible and
known by His works only: and here the works cry out in proof. If you do not
believe, look at those who do, and perceive the Godhead of Christ. The demons see
this, though men be blind. Summary of the argument so far.
But if, because He is not seen, His having risen at all is disbelieved, it
is high time for those who refuse belief to deny the very course of Nature.
For it is God's peculiar property at once to be invisible and yet to be known
from His works, as has been already stated above.
2. If, then, the works are not there, they do well to disbelieve what does
not appear. But if the works cry aloud and shew it clearly, why do they choose
to deny the life so manifestly due to the Resurrection? For even if they be
maimed in their intelligence, yet even with the external senses men may see the
unimpeachable power and Godhead of Christ.
3. For even a blind man, if he see not the sun, yet if he but take hold of
the warmth the sun gives out, knows that there is a sun above the earth. Thus
let our opponents also, even if they believe not as yet, being still blind to
the truth, yet at least knowing His power by others who believe, not deny the
Godhead of Christ and the Resurrection accomplished by Him.
4. For it is plain that if Christ be dead, He could not be expelling
demons and spoiling idols; for a dead man the spirits would not have obeyed. But if
they be manifestly expelled by the naming of His name, it must be evident that
He is not dead; especially as spirits, seeing even what is unseen by men, could
tell if Christ were dead and refuse Him any obedience at all.
5. But as it is, what irreligious men believe not, the spirits see--that
He is God,-and hence they fly and fall at His feet, saying just what they
uttered when He was in the body: "We [4] know Thee Who Thou art, the Holy One of
God;" and, "Ah, what have we to do with Thee, Thou Son of God? I pray Thee, torment
me not."
6. As then demons confess Him, and His works bear Him witness day by day,
it must be evident, and let none brazen it out against the truth, both that the
Saviour raised His own body, and that He is the true Son of God, being from
Him, as from His Father, His own Word, and Wisdom, and Power, Who in ages later
took a body for the salvation of all, and taught the world concerning the
Father, and brought death to nought, and bestowed incorruption upon all by the
promise of the Resurrection, having raised His own body as a first-fruits of this,
and having displayed it by the sign of the Cross as a monument of victory over
death and its corruption.
- Unbelief of Jews and Scoffing of Greeks. The former confounded by their own
Scriptures. Prophecies of His coming as God and as Man.
These things being so, and the Resurrection of His body and the victory
gained over death by the Saviour being clearly proved, come now let us put to
rebuke both the disbelief of the Jews and the scoffing of the Gentiles.
2. For these, perhaps, are the points where Jews express incredulity,
while Gentiles laugh, finding fault with the unseemliness of the Cross, and of the
Word of God becoming man. But our argument shall not delay to grapple with both
especially as the proofs at our command against them are clear as day.
3. For Jews in their incredulity may be refuted from the Scriptures, which
even themselves read; for this text and that, and, in a word, the whole
inspired Scripture, cries aloud concerning these things, as even its express words
abundantly shew. For prophets proclaimed beforehand concerning the wonder of the
Virgin and the birth from her, saying: "Lo, the [5] Virgin shall be with child,
and shall bring forth a Son, and they shall call his name Emmanuel, which is,
being interpreted, God with us."
4. But Moses, the truly great, and whom they believe to speak truth, with
reference to the Saviour's becoming man, having estimated what was said as
important, and assured of its truth, set it down in these words: "There [6] shall
rise a star out of Jacob, and a man out of Israel, and he shall break in pieces
the captains of Moab." And again: "How lovely are thy habitations O Jacob, thy
tabernacles O Israel, as shadowing gardens, and as parks by the rivers, and as
tabernacles which the Lord hath fixed, as cedars by the waters. A man shall
come forth out of his seed, and shall be Lord over many peoples." And again,
Esaias: "Before [7] the Child know how to call father or mother, he shall take the
power of Damascus and the spoils 'of Samaria before the king of Assyria."
5. That a man, then, shall appear is foretold in those words. But that He
that is to come is Lord of all, they predict once more as follows: "Behold [8]
the Lord sitteth upon a light cloud, and shall come into Egypt, and the graven
images of Egypt shall be shaken." For from thence also it is that the Father
calls Him back, saying: "I called [9] My Son out of Egypt."
- Prophecies of His passion and death in all its circumstances.
Nor is even His death passed over in silence: on the contrary, it is
referred to in the divine Scriptures, even exceeding clearly. For to the end that
none should err for want of instruction :in the actual events, they feared not to
mention even the cause of His death,--that He suffers it not for His own
sake, but for the immortality and salvation of all, and the counsels of the Jews
against Him and the indignities offered Him at their hands.
2. They say then: "A man [1] in stripes, and knowing how to bear weakness,
for his face is turned away: he was dishonoured and held in no account. He
beareth our sins, and is in pain on our account; and we reckoned him to be in
labour, and in stripes, and in ill-usage; but he was wounded for our sins, and made
weak for our wickedness. The chastisement of our peace was upon him, and by
his stripes we were healed." O marvel at the loving-kindness of the Word, that
for our sakes He is dishonoured, that we may be brought to honour. "For all we,"
it says, "like sheep were gone astray; man had erred in his way; and the Lord
delivered him for our sins; and he openeth not his mouth, because he hath been
evilly entreated. As a sheep was he brought to the slaughter, and as a lamb dumb
before his shearer, so openeth he not his mouth: in his abasement his judgment
was taken away [2]."
3. Then lest any should from His suffering conceive Him to be a common
man, Holy Writ anticipates the surmises of man, and declares the power (which
worked) for Him [3], and the difference of His nature compared with ourselves,
saying: "But who shall declare his generation? For his life is taken away [2] from
the earth. From the wickedness of the people was he brought to death. And I
will give the wicked instead of his burial, and the rich instead of his death; for
he did no wickedness, neither was guile found in his mouth. And the Lord will
cleanse him from his stripes."
- Prophecies of the Cross. How these prophecies are satisfied in Christ alone.
But, perhaps, having heard the prophecy of His death, you ask to learn
also what is set forth concerning the Cross. For not even this is passed over: it
is displayed by the holy men with great plainness.
2. For first Moses predicts it, and that with a loud voice, when he says:
"Ye shall see [4] your Life hanging before your eyes, and shall not believe."
3. And next, the prophets after him witness of this, saying: "But s I as
an innocent lamb brought to be slain, knew it not; they counselled an evil
counsel against me, saying, Hither and let us cast a tree upon his [6] bread, and
efface him from the land of the living."
4. And again: "They pierced [7] my hands and my feet, they numbered all my
bones, they parted my garments among them, and for my vesture they cast lots."
5. Now a death raised aloft and that takes place on a tree, could be none
other than the Cross: and again, in no other death are the hands and feet
pierced, save on the Cross only.
6. But since by the sojourn of the Saviour among men all nations also on
every side began to know God; they did not leave this point, either, without a
reference but mention is made of this matter as well in the Holy Scriptures. For
"there a shall be," he saith, "the root of Jesse, and he that riseth to rule
the nations, on him shall the nations hope." This then is a little in proof of
what has happened.
7. But all Scripture teems with refutations of the disbelief of the Jews.
For which of the righteous men and holy prophets, and patriarchs, recorded in
the divine Scriptures, ever had his corporal birth of a virgin only? Or what
woman has sufficed without man for the conception of human kind? Was not Abel born
of Adam, Enoch of Jared, Noe of Lamech, and Abraham of Tharra, Isaac of
Abraham, Jacob of Isaac? Was not Judas born of Jacob, and Moses and Aaron of Ameram?
Was not Samuel born of Elkana, was not David of Jesse, was not Solomon of
David, was not Ezechias of Achaz, was not Josias of Amos, was not Esaias of Amos,
was not Jeremy of Chelchias, was not Ezechiel of Buzi? Had not each a father as
author of his existence? Who then is he that is born of a virgin only? For the
prophet made exceeding much of this sign.
8. Or whose birth did a star in the skies forerun, to announce to the
world him that was born? For when Moses was born, he was hid by his parents: David
was not heard of, even by those of his neighbourhood, inasmuch as even the
great Samuel knew him not, but asked, had Jesse yet another son? Abraham again
became known to his neighbours as [9] a great man only subsequently to his birth.
But of Christ's birth the witness was not man, but a star in that heaven whence
He was descending.
- Prophecies of Christ's sovereignty, flight into Egypt, &c.
But what king that ever was, before he had strength to call father or
mother, reigned and gained triumphs over his enemies [10]? Did not David come to
the throne at thirty years of age, and Solomon, when he had grown to be a young
man? Did not Joas enter on the kingdom when seven years old, and Josias, a still
later king, receive the government about the seventh year of his age? And yet
they at that age had strength to call father or mother.
2. Who, then, is there that was reigning and spoiling his enemies almost
before his birth? Or what king of this sort has ever been in Israel and in
Juda--let the Jews, who haves searched out the matter, tell us--in whom all the
nations have placed their hopes and had peace, instead of being at enmity with them
on every side?
3. For as long as Jerusalem stood there was war without respite betwixt
them, and they all fought with Israel; the Assyrians oppressed them, the
Egyptians persecuted them, the Babylonians fell upon them; and, strange to say, they
had even the Syrians their neighbours at war against them. Or did not David war
against them of Moab, and smite the Syrians, Josias guard against his
neighbours, and Ezechias quail at the boasting of Senacherim, and Amalek make war against
Moses, and the Amorites oppose him, and the inhabitants of Jericho array
themselves against Jesus son of Naue? And, in a word, treaties of friendship had no
place between the nations and Israel. Who, then, it is on whom the nations are
to set their hope, it is worth while to see. For there must be such an one, as
it is impossible for the prophet to have spoken falsely.
4. But which of the holy prophets or of the early patriarchs has died on
the Cross for the salvation of all? Or who was wounded and destroyed for the
healing of all? Or which of the righteous men, or kings, went down to Egypt, so
that at his coming the idols of Egypt fell [1]? For Abraham went thither, but
idolatry prevailed universally all the same. Moses was born there, and the deluded
worship of the people was there none the less.
- Psalm xxii. 16, &c. Majesty of His birth and death.Confusion of oracles and
demons in Egypt.
Or who among those recorded in Scripture was pierced in the hands and
feet, or hung at all upon a tree, and was sacrificed on a cross for the salvation
of all? For Abraham died, ending his life on a bed; Isaac and Jacob also died
with their feet raised on a bed; Moses and Aaron died on the mountain; David in
his house, without being the object of any conspiracy at the hands of the
people; true, he was pursued by Saul, but he was preserved unhurt. Esaias was sawn
asunder, but not hung on a tree. Jeremy was shamefully treated, but did not die
under condemnation; Ezechie suffered, not however for the people, but to
indicate what was to come upon the people.
2. Again, these, even where they suffered, were men resembling all in
their common nature; but he that is declared in Scripture to suffer on behalf of
all is called not merely man, but the Life of all, albeit He was in fact like men
in nature. For "ye shall [2] see," it says, "your Life hanging before your
eyes;" and "who shall declare his generation?" For one can ascertain the genealogy
of all the saints, and declare it from the beginning, and of whom each was
born; but the generation of Him that is the Life the Scriptures refer to as not to
be declared.
3. Who then is he of whom the Divine Scriptures say this? Or who is so
great that even the prophets predict of him such great things? None else, now, is
found in the Scriptures but the common Saviour of all, the Word of God, our
Lord Jesus Christ. For He it is that proceeded from a virgin and appeared as man
on the earth, and whose generation after the flesh cannot be declared. For there
is none that can tell His father after the flesh, His body not being of a man,
but of a virgin alone;
4. so that no one can declare the corporal generation of the Saviour from
a man, in the same way as one can draw up a genealogy of David and of Moses and
of all the patriarchs. For He it is that caused the star also to mark the
birth of His body; since it was fit that the Word, coming down from heaven, should
have His constellation also from heaven, and it was fitting that the King of
Creation when He came forth should be openly recognized by all creation.
5. Why, He was born in Judaea, and men from Persia came to worship Him. He
it is that even before His appearing in the body won the victory over His
demon adversaries and a triumph over idolatry. All heathen at any rate from every
region, abjuring their hereditary tradition and the impiety of idols, are now
placing their hope in Christ, and enrolling themselves under Him, the like of
which you may see with your own eyes.
6. For at no other time has the impiety of the Egyptians ceased, save when
the Lord of all, riding as it were upon a cloud, came down there in the body
and brought to nought the delusion of idols, and brought over all to Himself,
and through Himself to the Father.
7. He it is that was crucified before the sun and all creation as
witnesses, and before those who put Him to death: and by His death has salvation come
to all, and all creation been ransomed. He is the Life of all, and He it is that
as a sheep yielded His body to death as a substitute, for the salvation of
all, even though the Jews believe it not.
- Other clear prophecies of the coming of God in the flesh. Christ's miracles
unprecedented.
For if they do not think these proofs sufficient, let them be persuaded at
any rate by other reasons, drawn from the oracles they themselves possess. For
of whom do the prophets say: "I was [3] made manifest to them that sought me
not, I was found of them that asked not for me: I said Behold, here am I, to the
nation that had not called upon my name; I stretched out my hands to a
disobedient and gainsaying people."
2. Who, then, one might say to the Jews, is he that was made manifest? For
if it is the prophet, let them say when he was hid, afterward to appear again.
And what manner of prophet is this, that was not only made manifest from
obscurity, but also stretched out his hands on the Cross? None surely of the
righteous, save the Word of God only, Who, incorporeal by nature, appeared for our
sakes in the body and suffered for all.
3. Or if not even this is sufficient for them, let them at least be
silenced by another proof, seeing how clear its demonstrative force is. For the
Scripture says: "Be strong [4] ye hands that hang down, and feeble knees; comfort
ye, ye of faint mind; be strong, fear not. Behold, our God recompenseth judgment;
He shall come and save us. Then shall the eyes of the blind be opened, and the
ears of the deaf shall hear; then shall the lame man leap as an hart, and the
tongue of the stammerers shall be plain."
4. Now what can they say to this, or how can they dare to face this at
all? For the prophecy not only indicates that God is to sojourn here, but it
announces the signs and the time of His coming. For they connect the blind
recovering their sight, and the lame walking, and the deaf hearing, and the tongue of
the stammerers being made plain, with the Divine Coming which is to take place.
Let them say, then, when such signs have come to pass in Israel, or where in
Jewry anything of the sort has occurred.
5. Naaman, a leper, was cleansed, but no deaf man heard nor lame walked.
Elias raised a dead man; so did Eliseus; but none blind from birth regained his
sight. For in good truth, to raise a dead man is a great thing, but it is not
like the wonder wrought by the Saviour. Only, if Scripture has not passed over
the case of the leper, and of the dead son of the widow, certainly, had it come
to pass that a lame man also had walked and a blind man recovered his sight,
the narrative would not have omitted to mention this also. Since then nothing is
said in the Scriptures, it is evident that these things had never taken place
before.
6. When, then, have they taken place, save when the Word of God Himself
came in the body? Or when did He come, if not when lame men walked, and
stammerers were made to speak plain, and deaf men heard, and men blind from birth
regained their sight? For this was the very thing the Jews said who then witnessed
it, because they had not heard of these things having taken place at any other
time: "Since [5] the world began it was never heard that any one opened the eyes
of a man born blind. If this man were not from God, He could do nothing."
- Do you look for another? But Daniel foretells the escort time. Objections to
this removed.
But perhaps, being unable, even they, to fight continually against plain
facts, they will, without denying what is written, maintain that they are
looking for these things, and that the Word of God is not yet come. For this it is on
which they are for ever harping, not blushing to brazen it out in the face of
plain facts.
2. But on this one point, above all, they shall be all the more refuted,
not at our hands, but at those of the most wise Daniel, who marks both the
actual date, and the divine sojourn of the Saviour, saying: "Seventy [6] weeks are
cut short upon thy people, and upon the holy city, for a full end to be made of
sin, and for sins to be sealed up, and to blot out iniquities, and to make
atonement for iniquities, and to bring everlasting righteousness, and to seal
vision and prophet, and to anoint a Holy of Holies; and thou shalt know and
understand from the going forth of the word to restore [7] and to build Jerusalem unto
Christ the Prince"
3. Perhaps with regard to the other (prophecies) they may be able even to
find excuses and to put off what is written to a future time. But what can they
say to this, or can they face it at all? Where not only is the Christ referred
to, but He that is to be anointed is declared to be not man simply, but Holy
of Holies; and Jerusalem is to stand till His coming, and thenceforth, prophet
and vision cease in Israel.
4. David was anointed of old, and Solomon and Ezechias; but then,
nevertheless, Jerusalem and the place stood, and prophets were prophesying: God and
Asaph and Nathan; and, later, Esaias and Osee and Amos and others. And again, the
actual men that were anointed were called holy, and not Holy of Holies.
5. But if they shield themselves with the captivity, and say that because
of it Jerusalem was not, what can they say about the prophets too? For in fact
when first the people went down to Babylon, Daniel and Jeremy were there, and
Ezechiel and Aggaeus and Zachary were prophesying.
- Argument (I)from the withdrawal of prophecy and destruction of Jerusalem, (2)
from the conversion of the Gentiles, and that to the God of Moses. What more
remains for the Messiah to do, that Christ has not done?
So the Jews are trifling, and the time in question, which they refer to
the future, is actually come. For when did prophet and vision cease from Israel,
save when Christ came, the Holy of Holies? For it is a sign, and an important
proof, of the coming of the Word of God, that Jerusalem no longer stands, nor is
any prophet raised up nor vision revealed to them,--and that very naturally.
2. For when He that was signified was come, what need was there any longer
of any to signify Him? When the truth was there, what need any more of the
shadow? For this was the reason of their prophesying at all,--namely, till the
true Righteousness should come, and He that was to ransom the sins of all. And
this was why Jerusalem stood till then- namely, that there they might be exercised
in the types as a preparation for the reality.
3. So when the Holy of Holies was come, naturally vision and prophecy were
sealed and the kingdom of Jerusalem ceased. For kings were to be anointed
among them only until the Holy of Holies should have been anointed; and Jacob
prophesies that the kingdom of the Jews should be established until Him, as
follows:-"The rulers shall not fail from Juda, nor the Prince from his loins, until
that which is laid up for him shall come; and he is the expectation of the
nations."
4. Whence the Saviour also Himself cried aloud and said: "The [9] law and
the prophets prophesied until John." If then there is now among the Jews king
or prophet or vision, they do well to deny the Christ that is come. But if there
is neither king nor vision, but from that time forth all prophecy is sealed
and the city and temple taken, why are they so irreligious and so perverse as to
see what has happened, and yet to deny Christ, Who has brought it all to pass?
Or why, when they see even heathens deserting their idols, and placing their
hope, through Christ, on the God of Israel, do they deny Christ, Who was born of
the root of Jesse after the flesh and henceforth is King? For if the nations
were worshipping some other God, and not confessing the God of Abraham and isaac
and Jacob and Moses, then, once more, they would be doing well in alleging that
God had not come.
5. But if the Gentiles are honouring the same God that gave the law to
Moses and made the promise to Abraham, and Whose word the Jews dishonoured,--why
are they ignorant, or rather why do they choose to ignore, that the Lord
foretold by the Scriptures has shone forth upon the world, and appeared to it in
bodily form, as the Scripture said: "The [1] Lord God hath shined upon us;" and
again: "He [2] sent His Word and healed them ;" and again: "Not [3] a messenger,
not an angel, but the Lord Himself saved them?"
6. Their state may be compared to that of one out of his right mind, who
sees the earth illumined by the sun, but denies the sun that illumines it. For
what more is there for him whom they expect to do, when he is come? To call the
heathen? But they are called already. To make prophecy, and king, and vision to
cease? This too has already come to pass. To expose the godlessness of
idolatry? It is already exposed and condemned. Or to destroy death? He is already
destroyed.
7. What then has not come to pass, that the Christ must do? What is left
unfulfilled, that the Jews should now disbelieve with impunity? For if, I say,
-which is just what we actually see,--there is no longer king nor prophet nor
Jerusalem nor sacrifice nor vision among them, but even the whole earth is
tilled with the knowledge of God, and gentiles, leaving their godlessness, are now
taking refuge with the God of Abraham, through the Word, even our Lord Jesus
Christ, then it must be plain, even to those who are exceedingly obstinate,
that the Christ is come, and that He has illumined absolutely all with His light,
and given them the true and divine teaching concerning His Father.
8. So one can fairly refute the Jews by these and by other arguments from
the Divine Scriptures.
- Answer to the Greeks. Do they recognized the Logos ? If He manifests Himself
in the organism of the Universe, why not in one Body?
1, 2. For a human body is a part of the same whole. But one cannot but be
utterly astonished at the Gentiles, who, while they laugh at what is no matter
for jesting, are themselves insensible to their own disgrace, which they do not
see that they have set up in the shape of stocks and stones. [2]. Only, as our
argument is not lacking in demonstrative proof, come let us put them also to
shame on reasonable grounds, --mainly from what we ourselves also see. For what
is there on our side that is absurd, or worthy of derision? Is it merely our
saying that the Word has been made manifest in the body? But this even they will
join in owning to have happened without any absurdity, if they show themselves
friends of truth.
3. If then they deny that there is a Word of God at all, they do so
gratuitously [4], jesting at what they know not.
4. But if they confess that there is a Word of God, and He ruler of the
universe, and that in Him the Father has produced the creation, and that by His
Providence the whole receives light and life and being, and that He reigns over
oil, so that from the works of His providence He is known, and through Him the
Father,--consider, I pray you, whether they be not unwittingly raising the jest
against themselves.
5. The philosophers of the Greeks say that the universe is a great body 5;
and rightly so. For we see it and its parts as objects of our senses. If,
then, the Word of God is in the Universe, which is a body, and has united Himself
with the whole and with all its parts, what is there surprising or absurd if we
say that He has united Himself [6] with man also.
6. For if it were absurd for Him to have been in a body at all, it would
be absurd for Him to be united with the whole either, and to be giving light and
movement to all things by His providence. For the whole also is a body.
7. But if it beseems Him to unite Himself with the universe, and to be
made known in the whole, it must beseem Him also to appear in a human body, and
that by Him it should be illumined and work. For mankind is part of the whole as
well as the rest. And if it be unseemly for a part to have been adopted as His
instrument to teach men of His Godhead, it must be most absurd that He should
be made known even by the whole universe.
- His union with the body is based upon His relation to Creation as a whole. He
used a human body, since to man it was that He wished to reveal Himself.
For just as, while the whole body is quickened and illumined by man,
supposing one said it were absurd that man's power should also be in the toe, he
would be thought foolish; because, while granting that he pervades and works in
the whole, he demurs to his being in the part also; thus he who grants and
believes that the Word of God is in the whole Universe, and that the whole is
illumined and moved by Him, should not think it absurd that a single human body also
should receive movement and light from Him.
2. But if it is because the human race is a thing created and has been
made out of nothing, that they regard that manifestation of the Saviour in man,
which we speak of, as not seemly, it is high time for them to eject Him from
creation also; for it too has been brought into existence by the Word out of
nothing.
3. But if, even though creation be a thing made, it is not absurd that the
Word should be in it, then neither is it absurd that He should be in man. For
whatever idea they form of the whole, they must necessarily apply the like idea
to the part. For man also, as I said before, is a part of the whole.
4. Thus it is not at all unseemly that the Word should be in man, while
all things are deriving from Him their light and movement and light, as also
their authors say, "In [7] him we live and move and have our being."
5. So, then, what is there to scoff at in what we say, if the Word has
used that, wherein He is, as an instrument to manifest Himself? For were He not in
it, neither could He have used it; but if we have previously allowed that He
is in the whole and in its parts, what is there incredible in His, manifesting
Himself in that wherein He is?
6. For by His own power He is united s wholly with each and all, and
orders all things without stint, so that no one could have called it out of place
for Him to speak, and make known Himself and His Father, by means of sun, if He
so willed, or moon, or heaven, or earth, or waters, or fire [9]; inasmuch as He
holds in one all things at once, and is in fact not only in oil but also in the
part in question, and there invisibly manifests Himself. In like manner it
cannot be absurd if, ordering as He does the whole, and giving life to all things,
and having willed to make Himself known through men, He has used as His
instrument a human body to manifest the truth and knowledge of the Father. For
humanity, too, is an actual part of the whole.
7. And as Mind, pervading man all through, is interpreted by a part of the
body, I mean the tongue, without any one saying, I suppose, that the essence
of the mind is on that account lowered, so if the Word, pervading all things,
has used a human instrument, this cannot appear unseemly. For, as I have said
previously, if it be unseemly to have used a body as an instrument, it is unseemly
also for Him to be in the Whole.
- He came in human rather than in any nobler forth, because (1) He came to
save, not to impress ; (2) Man alone of creatures had sinned. As men would not
recognise His works in thee Universe, He came and worked among them as Man ; in the
sphere to which they had limited themselves.
Now, if they ask, Why then did He not appear by means of other and nobler
parts of creation, and use some nobler instrument, as the sun, or moon, or
stars, or fire, or air, instead of man merely? let them know that the Lord came not
to make a display, but to heal and teach those who were suffering.
2. For the way for one aiming at display would be, just to appear, and to
dazzle the beholders; but for one seeking to heal and teach the way is, not
simply to sojourn here, but to give himself to the aid of those in want, and to
appear as they who need him can bear it; that he may not, by exceeding the
requirements of the sufferers, trouble the very persons that need him, rendering
God's appearance useless to them.
3. Now, nothing in creation had gone astray with regard to their notions
of God, save man only. Why, neither sun, nor moon, nor heaven, nor the stars,
nor water, nor air had swerved from their order ; but knowing their Artificer and
Sovereign, the Word, they remain as they were made [1]. But men alone, having
rejected what was good, then devised things of nought instead of the truth, and
have ascribed the honour due to God, and their knowledge of Him, to demons and
men in the shape of stones.
4. With reason, then, since it were unworthy of the Divine Goodness to
overlook so grave a matter, while yet men were not able to recognise Him as
ordering and guiding the whole, He takes to Himself as an instrument a part of the
whole, His human body, and unites [2] Himself with that, in order that since men
could not recognise Him in the whole, they should not fail to know Him in the
part; and since they could not look up to His invisible power, might be able,
at any rate, from what resembled themselves to reason to Him and to contemplate
Him.
5. For, men as they are, they will be able to know His Father more quickly
and directly by a body of like nature and by the divine works wrought through
it, judging by comparison that they are not human, but the works of God, which
are done by Him,
6. And if it were absurd, as they say, for the Word to be known through
the works of the body, it would likewise be absurd for Him to be known through
the works of the universe. For just as He is in creation, and yet does not
partake of its nature in the least degree, but rather all things partake s of His
power; so while He used the body as His instrument He partook of no corporeal
property, but, on the contrary, Himself sanctified even the body.
7. For if even Plato, who is in such repute among the Greeks, says [4]
that its author, beholding the universe tempest-tossed, and in peril of going down
to the place of chaos, takes his seat at the helm of the soul and comes to the
rescue and corrects all its calamities; what is there incredible in what we
say, that, mankind being in error, the Word lighted down [5] upon it and appeared
as man, that He might save it in its tempest by His guidance and goodness?
- As God made man by a word, why not restore him by a word? But (1) creation
out of nothing is different from reparation of what already exists. (2) Man was
there with a definite need, calling for a definite remedy. Death was ingrained
in man's nature: He then must wind life closely to human nature. Therefore the
Word became Incarnate that He might meet and conquer death in His usurped
territory. (Simile of straw and asbestos.)
But perhaps, shamed into agreeing with this, they will choose to say that
God, if He wished to reform and to save mankind, ought to have done so by a
mere fiat [6], without His word taking a body, in just the same way as He did
formerly, when He produced them out of nothing.
2. To this objection of theirs a reasonable answer would be: that
formerly, nothing being in existence at all, what was needed to make everything was a
fiat and the bare will to do so. But when man had once been made, and necessity
demanded a cure, not for things that were not, but for things that had come to
be, it was naturally consequent that the Physician and Saviour should appear
in what had come to be, in order also to cure the things that were. For this
cause, then, He has become man, and used His body as a human instrument.
3. For if this were not the right way, how was the Word, choosing to use
an instrument, to appear? or whence was He to take it, save from those already
in being, and in need of His Godhead by means of one like themselves? For it was
not things without being that needed salvation, so that a bare command should
suffice, but man, already in existence, was going to corruption and ruin [7].
It was then natural and right that the Word should use a human instrument and
reveal Himself everywhither.
4. Secondly, you must know this also, that the corruption which had set in
was not external to the body, but had become attached to it; and it was
required that, instead of corruption, life should cleave to it; so that, just as
death has been engendered in the body, so life may be engendered in it also.
5. Now if death were external to the body, it would be proper for life
also to have been engendered externally to it. But if death was wound closely to
the body and was ruling over it as though united to it, it was required that
life also should be would closely to the body, that so the body, by putting on
life in its stead, should cast off corruption. Besides, even supposing that the
Word had come outside the body, and not in it, death would indeed have been
defeated by Him, in perfect accordance with nature, inasmuch as death has no power
against the Life; but the corruption attached to the body would have remained in
it none the less [8].
6. For this cause the Saviour reasonably put on Him a body, in order that
the body, becoming wound closely to the Life, should no longer, as mortal,
abide in death, but, as having put on immortality, should thenceforth rise again
and remain immortal. For, once it had put on corruption, it could not have risen
again unless it had put on life. And death likewise could not, from its very
nature, appear, save in the body. Therefore He put on a body, that He night find
death in the body, and blot it out. For how could the Lord have been proved at
all to be the Life, had He not quickened what was mortal?
7. And just as, whereas stubble is naturally destructible by fire,
supposing (firstly) a man keeps fire away from the stubble, though it is not burned,
yet the stubble remains, for all that, merely stubble, fearing the threat of the
fire--for fire has the natural property of consuming it; while if a man
(secondly) encloses it with a quantity of asbestos, the substance said [9] to be an
antidote to fire, the stubble no longer dreads the fire, being secured by its
enclosure in incombustible matter; 8. in this very way one may say, with regard
to the body and death, that if death had been kept from the body by a mere
command on His part, it would none the less have been mortal and corruptible,
according to the nature of bodies; but, that this should not be, it put on the
incorporeal Word of God, and thus no longer fears either death or corruption, for it
has life as a garment, and corruption is done away in it.
- Thus once again every part of creation manifests the glory of God. Nature,
the witness to her Creator, yields (by miracles) a second testimony to God
Inncarnate. The witness of Nature, perverted by man's sin, was thus forced back to
truth. If these reasons suffice not, let the Greeks look at facts.
Consistently, therefore, the Word of God took a body and has made use of a
human instrument, in order to quicken the body also, and as He is known in
creation by His works so to work in man as well, and to shew Himself everywhere,
leaving nothing void of His own divinity, and of the knowledge of Him.
2. For I resume, and repeat what I said before, that the Saviour did this
in order that, as He fills all things on all sides by His presence, so also He
might fill all things with the knowledge of Him, as the divine Scripture also
says [1]: "The whole earth was filled with the knowledge of the Lord."
3. For if a man will but look up to heaven, he sees its Order, or if he
cannot raise his face to heaven, but only to man, he sees His power, beyond
comparison with that of men, shewn by His works, and learns that He alone among men
is God the Word. Or if a man is gone astray among demons, and is in fear of
them, he may see this man drive them out, and make up his mind that He is their
Master. Or if a man has sunk to the waters [2], and thinks that they are God,-as
the Egyptians, for instance, reverence the water, --he may see its nature
changed by Him, and learn that the Lord is Creator of the waters.
4. But if a man is gone down even to Hades, and stands in awe of the
heroes who have descended thither, regarding them as gods, yet he may see the fact
of Christ's Resurrection and victory over death, and infer that among them also
Christ alone is true God and Lord.
5. For the Lord touched all parts of creation, and freed and undeceived
all of them from every illusion; as Paul says: "Having [3] put off from Himself
the principalities and the powers, He triumphed on the Cross :" that no one
might by any possibility be any longer deceived, but everywhere might find the true
Word of God.
6. For thus man, shut in on every side [4], and beholding the divinity of
the Word unfolded everywhere, that is, in heaven, in Hades, in man, upon earth,
is no longer exposed to deceit concerning God, but is to worship Christ alone,
and through Him come rightly to know the Father.
7. By these arguments, then, on grounds of reason, the Gentiles in their
turn will fairly be put to shame by us. But if they deem the arguments
insufficient to shame them, let them be assured of what we are saying at any rate by
facts obvious to the sight of all.
- Discredit, from the date of the Incarnation, of idol-cultus, oracles,
mythologies, demoniacal energy, magic, and Gentile philosophy. And whereas the old
cults were strictly local and independent, the warship of Christ is catholic and
uniform.
When did men begin to desert the worship-ping of idols, save since God,
the true Word of God, has come among men? Or when have the oracles among the
Greeks, and everywhere, ceased and become empty, save when the Saviour has
manifested Himself upon earth?
2. Or when did those who are called gods and heroes in the poets begin to
be convicted of being merely mortal men [5], save since the Lord erected His
conquest of death, and preserved incorruptible the body he had taken, raising it
from the dead?
3. Or when did the deceitfulness and madness of demons fall into contempt,
save when the power of God, the Word, the Master of all these as well,
condescending because of man's weakness, appeared on earth? Or when [6] did the art
and the schools of magic begin to be trodden down, save when the divine
manifestation of the Word took place among men?
4. And, in a word, at what time has the wisdom of the Greeks become
foolish, save when the true Wisdom of God manifested itself on earth? For formerly
the whole world and every place was led astray by the worship-ping of idols, and
men regarded nothing else but the idols as gods. But now, all the world over,
men are deserting the superstition of the idols, and taking refuge with Christ;
and, worshipping Him as God, are by His means coming to know that Father also
Whom they knew not.
5. And, marvellous fact, whereas the objects of worship were various and
of vast number, and each place had its own idol, and he who was accounted a god
among them had no power to pass over to the neighbouring place, so as to
persuade those of neighbouring peoples to worship him, but was barely served even
among his own people; for no one else worshipped his neighbour's god--on the
contrary, each man kept to his own idol [7], thinking it to be lord of all;--Christ
alone is worshipped as one and the same among all peoples; and what the
weakness of the idols could not do--to persuade, namely, even those dwelling close at
hand,--this Christ has done, persuading not only those close at hand, but
simply the entire world, to worship one and the same Lord, and through Him God, even
His Father.
- The numerous oracles,--fancied of apparitions in sacred places, &c.,
dispelIed by the sign of the Cross. The old gods prove to have been mere men. Magic is
exposed. And whereas Philosophy could only persuade select and local cliques of
Immortality, and goodness,--men of little intellect have infused into the
multitudes of the churches the principle of a supernatural life.
And whereas formerly every place was full of the deceit of the oracles
[8], and the oracles at Delphi and Dodona, and in Boeotia [9] and Lycia [1] and
Libya [2] and Egypt and those of the Cabiri [3], and the Pythoness, were held in
repute by men's imagination, now, since Christ has begun to be preached
everywhere, their madness also has ceased and there is none among them to divine any
more.
2. And whereas formerly demons used to deceive [4] men's fancy, occupying
springs or rivers, trees or stones, and thus imposed upon the simple by their
juggleries; now, after the divine visitation of the Word, their deception has
ceased. For by the Sign of the Cross, though a man but use it, he drives out
their deceits.
3. And while formerly men held to be gods the Zeus and Cronos and Apollo
and the heroes mentioned in the poets, and went astray in honouring them; now
that the Saviour has appeared among men, those others have been exposed as mortal
men [5], and Christ alone has been recognised among men as the true God, the
Word of God.
4. And what is one to say of the magic [6] esteemed among them? that
before the Word sojourned among us this was strong and active among Egyptians, and
Chaldees, and Indians, and inspired awe in those who saw it; but that by the
presence of the Truth, and the Appearing of the Word, it also has been thoroughly
confuted, and brought wholly to nought.
5. But as to Gentile wisdom, and the sounding pretensions of the
philosophers, I think none can need our argument, since the wonder is before the eyes of
all, that while the wise among the Greeks had written so much, and were unable
to persuade even a few [7] from their own neighbourhood, concerning
immortality and a virtuous life, Christ alone, by ordinary language, and by men not
clever with the tongue, has throughout all the world per suaded whole churches full
of men to despise death, and to mind the things of immortality; to overlook
what is temporal and to turn their eyes to what is eternal; to think nothing of
earthly glory and to strive only for the heavenly.
- Further facts. Christian continence of virgins and ascetics. Martyrs. The
power of the Cross against demons and magic. Christ by His Power shews Himself
more than a man, mare than a magician, more than a spirit. For all these are
totally subject to Him. Therefore He is the Word of God.
Now these arguments of ours do not amount merely to words, but have in
actual experience a witness to their truth.
2. For let him that will, go up and behold the proof of virtue in the
virgins of Christ and in the young men that practise holy chastity [8], and the
assurance of immortality in so great a band of His martyrs.
3. And let him come who would test by experience what we have now said,
and in the very presence of the deceit of demons and the imposture of oracles and
the marvels of magic, let him use the Sign of that Cross which is laughed at
among them, and he shall see how by its means demons fly, oracles cease, all
magic and witchcraft is brought to nought.
4. Who, then, and how great is this Christ, Who by His own Name and
Presence casts into the shade and brings to nought all things on every side, and is
alone strong against all, and has filled the whole world with His teaching? Let
the Greeks tell us, who are pleased to laugh, and blush not.
5. For if He is a man, how then has one man exceeded the power of all whom
even themselves bold to be gods, and convicted them by His own power of being
nothing? But if they call Him a magician, how can it be that by a magician all
magic is destroyed, instead of being confirmed? For if lie conquered particular
magicians, or prevailed over one only, it would be proper for them to hold
that He excelled the rest by superior skill;
6. but if His Cross has won the victory over absolutely all magic, and
over the very name of it, it must be plain that the Saviour is not a magician,
seeing that even those demons who are invoked by the other magicians fly from Him
as their Master.
7. Who He is, then, let the Greeks tell us, whose only serious pursuit is
jesting. Perhaps they might say that He, too, was a demon, and hence His
strength. But say this as they will, they will have the laugh against them, for they
can once more be put to shame by our former proofs. For how is it possible that
He should be a demon who drives the demons out?
8. For if He simply drove out particular demons, it might property be held
that by the chief of demons He prevailed against the lesser, just as the Jews
said to Him when they wished to insult Him. But if, by His Name being named,
all madness of the demons is uprooted and chased away, it must be evident that
here, too, they are wrong, and that our Lord and Saviour Christ is not, as they
think, some demoniacal power.
9. Then, if the Saviour is neither a man simply, nor a magician, nor some
demon, but has by His own Godhead brought to nought and cast into the shade
both the doctrine found in the poets and the delusion of the demons and the wisdom
of the Gentiles, it must be plain and will be owned by all, that this is the
true Son of God, even the Word and Wisdom and Power of the Father froth the
beginning. For this is why His works also are no works of man, but are recognised
to be above man, and truly God's works, both from the facts in themselves, and
from comparison with [the rest of] mankind.
- His Birth and Miracles.
You call Asclepius, Heracles, and Dionysus gods for their works. Contrast
their works with His, and the wonders at His death, &c.
For what man, that ever was born, formed a body for himself from a virgin
alone? Or what man ever healed such diseases as the common Lord of all? Or who
has restored what was wanting to man's nature, and made one blind from his
birth to see?
2. Asclepius was deified among them, because he practised medicine and
found out herbs for bodies that were sick; not forming them himself out of the
earth, but discovering them by science drawn from nature. But what is this to what
was done by the Saviour, in that, instead of healing a wound, He modified a
man's original nature, and restored the body whole.
3. Heracles is worshipped as a god among the Greeks because he fought
against men, his peers, and destroyed wild beasts by guile. What is this to what
was done by the Word, in driving away from man diseases and demons and death
itself? Dionysus is worshipped among them because he has taught man drunkenness;
but the true Saviour and Lord of all, for teaching temperance, is mocked by these
people.
4. But let these matters pass. What will they say to the other miracles of
His Godhead? At what man's death was the sun darkened and the earth shaken? Lo
even to this day men are dying, and they died also of old. When did any
such-like wonder happen in their case?
5. Or, to pass over the deeds done through His body, and mention those
after its rising again: what man's doctrine that ever was has prevailed
everywhere, one and the same, from one end of the earth to the other, so that his worship
has winged its way through every land?
6. Or why, if Christ is, as they say, a man, and not God the Word, is not
His worship prevented by the gods they have from passing into the same land
where they are? Or why on the contrary does the Word Himself, sojourning here, by
His teaching stop their worship and put their deception to shame?
- Impotence and rivalries of the Sophists tint to shame by the Death of Christ.
His Resurrection unparalleled even in Greek legend.
Many before this Man have been kings and tyrants of the world, many are on
record who have been wise men and magicians, among the Chaldaeans and
Egyptians and Indians; which of these, I say, not after death, but while still alive,
was ever able so far to prevail as to fill the whole earth with his teaching and
reform so great a multitude from the superstition of idols, as our Saviour has
brought over from idols to Himself?
2. The philosophers of the Greeks have composed many works with
plausibility and verbal skill; what result, then, have they exhibited so great as has the
Cross of Christ? For the refinements they taught were plausible enough till
they died; but even the influence they seemed to have while alive was subject to
their mutual rivalries ; and they were emulous, and declaimed against one
another.
3. But the Word of God, most strange fact, teaching in meaner language,
has cast into the shade the choice sophists; and while He has, by drawing all to
Himself, brought their schools to nought, He has filled His own churches; and
the marvellous thing is, that by going down as man to death, He has brought to
nought the sounding utterances of the wise [9] concerning idols.
4. For whose death ever drove out demons? or whose death did demons ever
fear, as they did that of Christ? For where the Saviour's name is named, there
every demon is driven out. Or who has so rid men of the passions of the natural
man, that whoremongers are chaste, and murderers no longer hold the sword, and
those who were formerly mastered by cowardice play the man?
5. And, in short, who persuaded men of barbarous countries and heathen men
in divers places to lay aside their madness, and to mind peace, if it be not
the Faith of Christ and the Sign of the Cross? Or who else has given men such
assurance of immortality, as has the Cross of Christ, and the Resurrection of His
Body?
6. For although the Greeks have told all manner of false tales, yet they
were not able to feign a Resurrection of their idols,--for it never crossed
their mind, whether it be at all possible for the body again to exist after death.
And here one would most especially accept their testimony, inasmuch as by this
opinion they have exposed the weakness of their own idolatry, while leaving the
possibility open to Christ, so that hence also He might be made known among
all as Son of God.
- The new, virtue of continence. Revolution of Society purified and pacified by
Christianity.
Which of mankind, again, after his death, or else while living, taught
concerning virginity, and that this virtue was not impossible among men? But
Christ, our Saviour and King of all, had such power in His teaching concerning it,
that even children not yet arrived at the lawful age vow that virginity which
lies beyond the law.
2. What man has ever yet been able to pass so far as to come among
Scythians and Ethiopians, or Persians or Armenians or Goths, or those we hear of
beyond the ocean or those beyond Hyrcania, or even the Egyptians and Chaldees, men
that mind magic and are superstitious beyond nature and savage in their ways,
and to preach at all about virtue and self-control, and against the worshipping
of idols, as has the Lord of all, the Power of God, our Lord Jesus Christ?
3. Who not only preached by means of His own disciples, but also carried
persuasion to men's mind, to lay aside the fierceness of their manners, and no
longer to serve their ancestral gods, but to learn to know Him, and through Him
to worship the Father.
4. For formerly, while in idolatry, Greeks and Barbarians used to war
against each other, and were actually cruel to their own kin. For it was impossible
for any one to cross sea or land at all, without arming the hand with swords
[1], because of their implacable fighting among themselves.
5. For the whole course of their life was carried on by arms, and the
sword with them took the place of a staff, and was their support in every
emergency; and still, as I said before, they were serving idols, and offering sacrifices
to demons, while for all their idolatrous superstition they could not be
reclaimed from this spirit.
6. But when they have come over to the school of Christ, then, strangely
enough, as men truly pricked in conscience, they have laid aside the savagery of
their murders and no longer mind the things of war: but all is at peace with
them, and from henceforth what makes for friendship is to their liking.
- Wars, &c., roused by demons, lulled by Christianity.
Who then is He that has done this, or who is He that has united in peace
men that hated one another, save the beloved Son of the Father, the common
Saviour of all, even Jesus Christ, Who by His own love underwent all things for our
salvation? For even from of old it was prophesied of the peace He was to usher
in, where the Scripture says: "They [2] shall beat their swords into
ploughshares, and their pikes into sickles, and nation shall not take the sword against
nation, neither shall they learn war any more."
2. And this is at least not incredible, inasmuch as even now those
barbarians who have an innate savagery of manners, while they still sacrifice to the
idols of their country, are mad against one another, and cannot endure to be a
single hour without weapons:
3. but when they hear the teaching of Christ, straightway instead of
fighting they turn to husbandry, and instead of arming their hands with weapons they
raise them in prayer, and in a word, in place of fighting among themselves,
henceforth they arm against the devil and against evil spirits, subduing these by
self-restraint and virtue of soul.
4. Now this is at once a proof of the divinity of the Saviour, since what
men could not learn among idols [3] they have learned from Him; and no small
exposure of the weakness and nothingness of demons and idols. For demons, knowing
their own weakness, for this reason formerly set men to make war against one
another, lest, if they ceased from mutual strife, they should turn to battle
against demons.
5. Why, they who become disciples of Christ, instead of warring with each
other, stand arrayed against demons by their habits and their virtuous actions:
and they rout them, and mock at their captain the devil; so that in youth they
are self-restrained, in temptations endure, in labours persevere, when
insulted are patient, when robbed make light of it: and, wonderful as it is, they
despise even death and become martyrs of Christ.
- The whole fabric of Gentilism levelled at a blow by Christ secretly
addressing the conscience of man.
And to mention one proof of the divinity of the Saviour, which is indeed
utterly surprising, --what mere man or magician or tyrant or king was ever able
by himself to engage with so many, and to fight the battle against all idolatry
and the whole demoniacal host and all magic, and all the wisdom of the Greeks,
while they were so strong and still flourishing and imposing upon all, and at
one onset to check them all, as was our Lord, the true Word of God, Who,
invisibly exposing each man's error, is by Himself bearing off all men from them all,
so that while they who were worshipping idols now trample upon them, those in
repute for magic burn their books, and the wise prefer to all studies the
interpretation of the Gospels?
2. For whom they used to worship, them they are deserting, and Whom they
used to mock as one crucified, Him they worship as Christ, confessing Him to be
God. And they that are called gods among them are routed by the Sign of the
Cross, while the Crucified Saviour is proclaimed in all the world as God and the
Son of God. And the gods worshipped among the Greeks are falling into ill repute
at their hands, as scandalous beings; while those who receive the teaching of
Christ live a chaster life than they.
3. If, then, these and the like are human works, let him who will point
out similar works on the part of men of former time, and so convince us. But if
they prove to be, and are, not men's works, but God's, why are the unbelievers
so irreligious as not to recognise the Master that wrought them?
4. For their case is as though a man, from the works of creation, failed
to know God their Artificer. For if they knew His Godhead from His power over
the universe, they would have known that the bodily works of Christ also are not
human, but are the works of the Saviour of all, the Word of God. And did they
thus know, "they would not," as Paul said [4], "have crucified the Lord of
glory."
- The Word Incarnate, as is the case with the Invisible God, is known to us by
His works.
By them we recognise His deifying mission. Let us be content to enumerate
a few of them, leaving their dazzling plentitude to him who will behold. As,
then, if a man should wish to see God, Who is invisible by nature and not seen at
all, he may know and apprehend Him from His works: so let him who fails to see
Christ with his understanding, at least apprehend Him by the works of His
body, and test whether they be human works or God's works.
2. And if they be human, let him scoff; but if they are not human, but of
God, let him recognise it, and not laugh at what is no matter for scoffing; but
rather let him marvel that by so ordinary a means things divine have been
manifested to us, and that by death immortality has reached to all, and that by the
Word becoming man, the universal Providence has been known, and its Giver and
Artificer the very Word of God.
3. For He was made man that we might be made God [5]; and He manifested
Himself by a body that we might receive the idea of the unseen Father; and He
endured the insolence of men that we might inherit immortality. For while He
Himself was in no way injured, being impossible and incorruptible and very Word and
God, men who were suffering, and for whose sakes He endured all this, He
maintained and preserved in His own impossibility.
4. And, in a word, the achievements of the Saviour, resulting from His
becoming man, are of such kind and number, that if one should wish to enumerate
them, he may be compared to men who gaze at the expanse of the sea and wish to
count its waves. For as one cannot take in the whole of the waves with his eyes,
for those which are coming on baffle the sense of him that attempts it; so for
him that would take in all the achievements of Christ in the body, it is
impossible to take in the whole, even by reckoning them up, as those which go beyond
his thought are more than those he thinks he has taken in.
5. Better is it, then, not to aim at speaking of the whole, where one
cannot do justice even to a part, but, after mentioning one more, to leave the
whole for you to marvel at. For all alike are marvellous, and wherever a man turns
his glance, he may behold on that side the divinity of the Word, and be struck
with exceeding great awe.
- Summary of foregoing. Cessation of pagan oracles, &c.: propagation of the
faith. The true King has come forth and silenced all usurpers.
This, then, after what we have so far said, it is right for you to
realize, and to take as the sum of what we have already stated, and to marvel at
exceedingly; namely, that since the Saviour has come among us, idolatry not only has
no longer increased, but what there was is diminishing and gradually coming to
an end: and not only does the wisdom of the Greeks no longer advance, but what
there is is now fading away: and demons, so far from cheating any more by
illusions and prophecies and magic arts, if they so much as dare to make the
attempt, are put to shame by the sign of the Cross.
2. And to sum the matter up: behold how the Saviour's doctrine is
everywhere increasing, while all idolatry and everything opposed to the faith of Christ
is daily dwindling, and losing power, and falling. And thus beholding, worship
the Saviour, "who is above all" and mighty, even God the Word; and condemn
those who are being worsted and done away by Him.
3. For as, when the sun is come, darkness no longer prevails, but if any
be still left anywhere it is driven away; so, now that the divine Appearing of
the Word of God is come, the darkness of the idols prevails no more, and all
parts of the world in every direction are illumined by His teaching.
4. And as, when a king is reigning in some country without appearing but
keeps at home in his own house, often some disorderly persons, abusing his
retirement, proclaim themselves; and each of them, by assuming the character,
imposes on the simple as king, and so men are led astray by the name, hearing that
there is a king, but not seeing him, if for no other reason, because they cannot
enter the house; but when the real king comes forth and appears, then the
disorderly impostors are exposed by his presence, while men, seeing the real king,
desert those who previously led them astray:
5. in like manner, the evil spirits formerly used to deceive men,
investing themselves with God's honour; but when the Word of God appeared in a body,
and made known to us His own Father, then at length the deceit of the evil
spirits is done away and stopped, while men, turning their eyes to the true God, Word
of the Father, are deserting the idols, and now coming to know the true God.
6. Now this is a proof that Christ is God the Word, and the Power of God.
For whereas human things cease, and the Word of Christ abides, it is clear to
all eyes that what ceases is temporary, but that He Who abides is God, and the
true Son of God, His only-begotten Word.
- Search then, the Scriptures, if you can, and so fill up this sketch. Learn to
look for the Second Advent and Judgment.
Let this, then, Christ-loving man, be our offering to you, just for a
rudimentary sketch and outline, in a short compass, of the faith of Christ and of
His Divine appearing to usward. But you, taking occasion by this, if you light
upon the text of the Scriptures, by genuinely applying your mind to them, will
learn from them more completely and clearly the exact detail of what we have
said.
2. For they were spoken and written by God, through men who spoke of God.
But we impart of what we have learned from inspired teachers who have been
conversant with them, who have also become martyrs for the deity of Christ, to your
zeal for learning, in turn.
3. And you will also learn about His second glorious and truly divine
appearing to us, when no longer in lowliness, but in His own glory,--no longer in
humble guise, but in His own magnificence,--He is to come, no more to suffer,
but thenceforth to render to all the fruit of His own Cross, that is, the
resurrection and incorruption; and no longer to be judged, but to judge all, by what
each has done in the body, whether good or evil; where there is laid up for the
good the kingdom of heaven, but for them that have done evil everlasting fire
and outer darkness.
4. For thus the Lord Himself also says: "Henceforth [6] ye shall see the
Son of Man sitting at the right hand of power, and coming on the clouds of
heaven in the glory of the Father."
5. And for this very reason there is also a word of the Saviour to prepare
us for that day, in these words: "Be [7] ye ready and watch, for He cometh at
an hour ye know not." For, according to the blessed Paul: "We [8] must all
stand before the judgment-seat of Christ. that each one may receive according as he
hath done in the body, whether it be good or bad."
- Above all, so live that you may have the right to eat of this tree of
knowledge and life, and so come to eternal joys. Doxology.
But for the searching or the Scriptures and true knowledge of them, an
honourable life is needed, and a pure soul, and that virtue which is according to
Christ; so that the intellect guiding its path by it, may be able to attain
what it desires, and to comprehend it, in so far as it is accessible to human
nature to learn concerning the Word of God.
2. For without a pure mind and a modelling of the life after the saints, a
man could not possibly comprehend the words of the saints.
3. For just as, if a man wished to see the light of the sun, he would at
any rate wipe and brighten his eye, purifying himself in some sort like what he
desires, so that the eye, thus becoming light, may see the light of the sun; or
as, if a man would see a city or country, he at any rate comes to the place to
see it;--thus he that would comprehend the mind of those who speak of God must
needs begin by washing and cleansing his soul, by his manner of living, and
approach the saints themselves by imitating their works; so that, associated with
them in the conduct of a common life, he may understand also what has been
revealed to them by God, and thenceforth, as closely knit to them, may escape the
peril of the sinners and their fire at the day of judgment, and receive what is
laid up for the saints in the kingdom of heaven, which "Eye hath not seen [9],
nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man," whatsoever things
are prepared for them that live a virtuous life, and love the God and Father,
in Christ Jesus our Lord: through Whom and with Whom be to the Father Himself,
with the Son Himself, in the Holy Spirit, honour and might and glory for ever
and ever. Amen.