FOUR DISCOURSES AGAINST THE ARIANS (WRITTEN BETWEEN 356 AND 360), DISCOURSE IV
EXCURSUS C
INTRODUCTORY(1) TO THE FOURTH DISCOURSE AGAINST THE ARIANS
THE fourth Discourse, as has been already observed (p. 304), stands on a
footing of its own. To begin with, it is not quoted in antiquity, as the first
three are, as part of the work of Ath. against the Arians (details in Newman, p.
499). Again, the fact that not only the Ep. AEg., but even the dubious de
Incar. c. Arian., are in some MSS. included in the Orationes, while our present
oration appears sometimes as the 'fifth' sometimes as the 'sixth,' cast a shade of
doubt upon its claim to be included in the 'Pentabiblus against the Arians'
referred to by Photius. In addition to these external considerations, Newman lays
stress on the apparent want of continuity in its argument; on its
non-conformity to the structural plan of Orat. i.--iii., on the use of the term
<greek>omoousion</greek> ( 10, 22, contrast Orat. i. 9, p. 311, note 12); on certain
peculiarities of style which seem characteristic of disjointed notes rather than of
a systematic treatise; on the reference to 'Eusebius' (of Caesarea) as
apparently still living ( 8); and on the general absence of personal reference to
opponents, while yet a definite and extant system seems to be combated.
Now a comparison with the works of Eusebius against Marcellus leaves
little doubt that the system combated by Athan. is that of the latter (described
briefly Prolegg. ch. ii. 3(2) c).
After laying down as a thesis ( 1) the substantive existence of the divine
Word or Wisdom, Athan. proceeds to combat the idea that the Word has no
personality distinct from that of the Father. Setting aside the alternative errors of
Sabellius ( 2) and Arius ( 3), he taxes with the consequence of involving two
'A<greek>rkai</greek> a view that the Word had a substantive existence and was
then united to the Father (cf. Euseb. c. Marcell. 32 A, 108 A, 106 C, D). This
consequence can only be avoided by falling into the Sabellian alternative of a
<greek>Qeos</greek> <greek>difuhs</greek> cf. Tertullian's 'Deum versipellem'),
unless the true solution, that of the eternal divine <greek>gennhsis</greek>,
be accepted ( 3 worked out in 4, 5). The argument, apparently interrupted by an
anti-Arian digression 6, 7, is resumed 8, whence it proceeds without break
to 24. Eusebius, insisting against Marcellus on the eternity of Christ's
Kingdom, inconsistently defends those who deny the eternity of His Person. But if so,
how inconsistent are those who deny the Son any pre-existence, while yet
repelling the Arian formulae with indignation! In 9-12, taking Joh. x. 30 as his
text, Athan. asks his opponents in what sense Christ and the Father 'are one,'
distinguishing from his own answer that of Sabellius(9, 10), and that of
Marcellus(11, 12), whom he presses with the paradoxical character of his explanation of
the divine <greek>gennhsis</greek>. In 13, 14, he examines the (Marcellian,
not Sabellian) doctrine of <greek>platusmos</greek> and <greek>sustolh</greek>,
charging it with Sabellianism as its consequence. Next ( 15-24) Ath. turns upon
the radically weak point of the system of Marcellus (Prolegg. ubi supra), and
asks What do his followers mean by 'the Son?' Do they mean merely (a) the man,
Christ ( 20, Photinus), or (b) the union of Word and Man, or (c) the Word
regarded as Incarnate? The latter was the answer ( 22) of Marcellus himself. This
last point leads to a discussion ( 24) of those O. T. passages on which Marcellus
notoriously relied. 25, which Zahn understands as a direct polemic against
Sabellius, is far more probably, as Newman maintains in his note, a supplemental
argument against Marcellianism, for the view combated is said to lead
inevitably to Sabellianism. The concluding portion, 26--36, turns the argument of 24,
that Scripture declares the identity of Son and Word, against those who
(adopting alternative (a) supra) drift from Marcellianism toward the Samosatene rather
than toward the Sabellian position (on the connection of the two see Prolegg.
ch. ii. 3 (2) a and c). Even here, the name of Photinus, to whose position the
section specially applies, is significantly withheld. Such is the course of
the argument in the Fourth Oration; and with the exception of 6, 7, and again
possibly 25, it forms a homogeneous, if not a finished and elaborated piece of
argument. Its date and composition may be left an open question; but its purpose
as an appendix to Oral. i.--iii., is we think open to little doubt (supr. p.
304). Of Sabellius, who left no writings(2), the age of Athanasius knew little,
except that he identified Father and Son (<greek>uiopattwr</greek>), and denied
the Trinity of Persons. Most that is told us of Sabellius from the fourth
century onwards requires careful sifting, in order to eliminate what really belongs
to Marcellus, Photinus, or others who were taxed with Sabellianism, and
combated as 'Sabellians.' But with the simple patri-passianism which is the one
undoubted element in the teaching of Sabellius, Marcellus had little or nothing in
common. The criticism of Marcellus that Sabellius 'knew not the Word' reveals
the true difference between them. To Sabellius, creation and redemption were the
work of the one God under successive changes of manifestation; to Marcellus,
they were the realisation of a process eternally latent in God; but both
Marcellus and apparently Sabellius referred to the divine Nature what the theology of
the Church has consistently referred to the divine Will.
The following table will make the foregoing scheme dear.
1. Introductory. Thesis: the co-eternal personality of the Son or Word.
2--5. Those who, while rejecting Arianism, would avoid Sabellianism, must
accept the eternal divine Generation of the Son.
6, 7. [Digression: the humiliation of the Word explained against the
Arians.]
8. The eternity of Christ's Kingdom and of His Person implied each in the
other.
9--12. In what sense Christ and the Father are, and are not, one. The
divine <greek>gennhsis</greek>.
13, 14. The doctrine of divine dilatation and contraction denies true
personal distinctions in the Godhead.
15--24. The Son and the Word identical Refutation of the three alternative
suppositions, and of the argument alleged from the O. T. in support of them.
25. Final refutation of the doctrine of dilatation.
26--36. The Scriptural identification of Son and Word refutes the
restriction of the former title to the man Jesus.
DISCOURSE IV
- -5. The substantiality of the Word proved from Scripture. If the One Origin be
substantial, Its Word is substantial. Unless the Word and Son be a second
Origin, or a work, or an attribute (and so God be compounded), or at the same time
Father, or involve a second nature in God, He is from the Father's Essence and
distinct from Him. Illustration of John x. 30, drawn from Deut. iv. 4.
1. THE Word is God from God; for 'the Word was God(1),' and again, 'Of
whom are the Fathers, and of whom Christ, who is God over all, blessed for ever.
Amen(2).' And since Christ is God from God, and God's Word, Wisdom, Son, and
Power, therefore but One God is declared in the divine Scriptures. For the Word,
being Son of the One God, is referred to Him of whom also He is; so that Father
and Son are two, yet the Monad of the Godhead is indivisible and inseparable.
And thus too we preserve One Beginning of Godhead and not two Beginnings, whence
there is strictly a Monarchy. And of this very Beginning the Word is by nature
Son, not as if another beginning, subsisting by Himself, nor having come into
being externally to that Beginning, lest from that diversity a Dyarchy and
Polyarchy should ensue; but of the one Beginning He is own Son, own Wisdom, own
Word, existing from It. For, according to John, 'in' that 'Beginning was the Word,
and the Word was with God,' for the Beginning was God; and since He is from
It, therefore also 'the Word was God.' And as there is one Beginning and
therefore one God, so one is that Essence and Subsistence which indeed and truly and
really is, and which said 'I am that I am(3),' and not two, that there be not two
Beginnings; and from the One, a Son in nature and truth, is Its own Word, Its
Wisdom, Its Power, and inseparable from It. And as there is not another
essence, lest there be two Beginnings, so the Word which is from that One Essence has
no dissolution, nor is a sound significative, but is an essential Word and
essential Wisdom, which is the true Son. For were He not essential, God will be
speaking into the air(3a), and having a body, in nothing differently from men; but
since He is not man, neither is His Word according. to the infirmity of
man(4). For as the Beginning is one Essence, so Its Word is one, essential, and
subsisting, and Its Wisdom. For as He is God from God, and Wisdom from the Wise, and
Word from the Rational, and Son from Father, so is He from Subsistence
Subsistent, and from Essence Essential and Substantive, and Being from Being.
2. Since were He not essential Wisdom and substantive Word, and Son
existing, but simply Wisdom and Word and Son in the Father, then the Father Himself
would have a nature compounded of Wisdom and Word. But if so, the forementioned
absurdities would follow; and He will be His own Father, and the Son begetting
and begotten by Himself; or Word, Wisdom, Son, is a name only, and He does not
subsist who owns, or rather who is, these titles. If then He does not subsist,
the names are idle and empty, unless we say that God is Very Wisdom(5) and Very
Word. But if so, He is His own Father and Son; Father, when Wise, Son, when
Wisdom; but these things are not in God as a certain quality; away with the
dishonourable(6) thought; for it will issue in this, that God is compounded of
essence and quality(7). For whereas all quality is in essence, it will clearly
follow that the Divine Monad, indivisible as it is, must be compound, being severed
into essence and accident(8). We must ask then these headstrong men; The Son
was proclaimed as God's Wisdom and Word; how then is He such? if as a quality,
the absurdity has been shewn; but if God is that Very Wisdom, then it is the
absurdity of Sabellius; therefore He is so, as an Offspring in a proper sense from
the Father Himself, according to the illustration of light. For as there is
light from fire, so from God is there a Word, and Wisdom from the Wise, and from
the Father a Son. For in this way the Monad remains undivided and entire, and
Its Son, Word not unessential, nor not subsisting, but essential truly. For were
it not so, all that is said would be said notionally(1) and verbally(2). But if
we must avoid that absurdity, then is a true Word essential. For as there is a
Father truly, so Wisdom truly. In this respect then they are two; not because,
as Sabellius said, Father and Son are the same, but because the Father is
Father and the Son Son, and they are one, because He is Son of the Essence of the
Father by nature, existing as His own Word. This the Lord said, viz. 'I and the
Father are One(3);' for neither is the Word separated from the Father, nor was
or is the Father ever Wordless; on this account He says, 'I in the Father and
the Father in Me(4).'
3. And again, Christ is the Word of God. Did He then subsist by Himself,
and subsisting, has He become joined to the Father, or did God make Him or call
Him His Word? If the former, I mean if He subsisted by Himself and is God, then
there are two Beginnings; and moreover, as is plain, He is not the Father's
own, as being not of the Father, but of Himself. But if on the contrary He be
made externally, then is He a creature. It remains then to say that He is from
God Himself; but if so, that which is from another is one thing, and that from
which it is, is a second; according to this then there are two. But if they be
not two, but the names belong to the same, cause and effect will be the same, and
begotten and begetting, which has been shewn absurd in the instance of
Sabellius. But if He be from Him, yet not another, He will be both be-getting and not
begetting; begetting because He produces from Himself, and not begetting,
because it is nothing other than Himself. But if so, the same is called Father and
Son notionally. But if it be unseemly so to say, Father and Son must be two;
and they are one, because the Son is not from without, but begotten of God. But
if any one shrinks from saying 'Offspring,' and only says that the Word exists
with God, let such a one fear lest, shrinking from what is said in Scripture, he
fall into absurdity, making God a being of double nature. For not granting
that the Word is from the Monad, but simply as if He were joined to the Father, he
introduces a twofold essence, and neither of them Father of the other. And the
same of Power. And we may see this more clearly, if we consider it with
reference to the Father; for there is One Father, and not two, but from that One the
Son. As then there are not two Fathers, but One, so not two Beginnings, but
One, and from that One the Son essential.
4. But the Arians we must ask contrariwise: (for the Sabellianisers must
be confuted from the notion of a Son, and the Arians from that of a Father:) let
us say then--Is God wise and not word-less: or on the contrary, is He
wisdom-less and word-less(1)? if the latter, there is an absurdity at once; if the
former, we must ask, how is He wise and not word-less? does He possess the Word and
the Wisdom from without, or from Himself? If from without, there must be one
who first gave to Him, and before He received He was wisdom-less and word-less.
But if from Himself, it is plain that the Word is not from nothing, nor once
was not; for He was ever; since He of whom He is the Image, exists ever. But if
they say that He is indeed wise and not wordless, but that He has in Himself His
own wisdom and own word, and that, not Christ, but that by which He made
Christ, we must answer that, if Christ in that word was brought to be, plainly so
were all things; and it must be He of whom John says, 'All things were made by
Him,' and the Psalmist, 'In Wisdom hast Thou made them all(2).' And Christ will
be found to speak untruly, 'I in the Father,' there being another in the Father.
And 'the Word became flesh(3)' is not true according to them. For if He in
whom 'all things came to be,' Himself became flesh, but Christ is not in the
Father, as Word 'by whom all things came to be,' then Christ has not become flesh,
but perhaps Christ was named Word. But if so, first, there will be another
besides the name, next, all things were not by Him brought to be, but in that other,
in whom Christ also was made. But if they say that Wisdom is in the Father as
a quality or that He is Very Wisdom(4), the absurdities will follow already
mentioned. For He will be compounds, and will prove His own Son and Father(6).
Moreover, we must confute and silence them on the ground, that the Word which is
in God cannot be a creature nor out of nothing; but if once a Word be in God,
then He must be Christ who says, 'I am in the Father and the Father in Me(7),'
who also is therefore the Only-begotten, since no other was begotten from Him.
This is One Son, who is Word, Wisdom, Power; for God is not compounded of these,
but is generative(8) of them. For as He frames the creatures by the Word, so
according to the nature of His own Essence has He the Word as an Offspring,
through whom He frames and creates and dispenses all things. For by the Word and
the Wisdom all things have come to be, and all things together remain according
to His ordinance(9). And the same concerning the word 'Son;' if God be without
Son(10), then is He without Work; for the Son is His Offspring through whom He
works(11); but if not, the same questions and the same absurdities will follow
their audacity.
5. From Deuteronomy; 'But ye that did attach yourselves unto the Lord your
God are alive every one of you this days(1).' From this we may see the
difference, and know that the Son of God is not a creature. For the Son says, 'I and
the Father are One,' and, 'I in the Father, and the Father in Me; 'but things
originate, when they make advance, are attached unto the Lord. The Word then is
in the Father as being His own; but things originate, being external, are
attached, as being by nature foreign, and attached by free choice. For a son which is
by nature, is one(2) with him who begat him; but he who is from without, and
is made a son, will be attached to the family. Therefore he immediately adds,
'What nation is there so great who hath God drawing nigh unto them(3)?' and
elsewhere, 'I a God drawing nigh(4);' for to things originate He draws nigh, as
being strange to Him, but to the Son, as being His own, He does not draw nigh, but
He is in Him. And the Son is not attached to the Father, but co-exists with
Him; whence also Moses says again in the same Deuteronomy, 'Ye shall obey His
voice, and apply yourselves unto Him(5);' but what is applied, is applied from
without.
6, 7. When the Word and Son hungered, wept, and was wearied, He acted as our
Mediator, taking on Him what was ours, that He might impart to us what was His.
6. But in answer to the weak and human notion of the Arians, their
supposing that the Lord is in want, when He says, 'Is given unto Me,' and 'I
received,' and if Paul says, 'Wherefore He highly exalted Him,' and 'He set Him at the
right hand(1),' and the like, we must say that our Lord, being Word and Son of
God, bore a body, and became Son of Man, that, having become Mediator between
God, and men, He might minister the things of God to us, and ours to God. When
then He is said to hunger and weep and weary, and to cry Eloi, Eloi, which are
our human affections, He receives them from us and offers to the Father(2),
interceding for us, that in Him they may be annulled(3). And when it is said, 'All
power is given unto Me,' and 'I received,' and 'Wherefore God highly exalted
Him,' these are gifts given from God to us through Him, For the Word was never in
want(4), nor has come into beings; nor again were men sufficient to minister
these things for themselves, but through the Word they are given to us;
therefore, as if given to Him, they are imparted to us. For this was the reason of His
becoming man, that, as being given to Him, they might pass on to us(6). For of
such gifts mere man had not become worthy; and again the mere Word had not
needed them 7 the Word then was united to us, and then imparted to us power, and
highly exalted us(8). For the Word being in man, highly exalted man himself; and,
when the Word was in man, man himself received. Since then, the Word being in
flesh, man himself was exalted, and received power, therefore these things are
referred to the Word, since they were given on His account; for on account of
the Word in man were these gifts given. And as 'the Word became flesh(9),' so
also man himself received the gifts which came through the Word. For all that man
himself has received, the Word is said to have received(10); that it might be
shewn, that man himself, being unworthy to receive, as far as his own nature is
concerned, yet has received because of the Word become flesh. Wherefore if
anything be said to be given to the Lord, or the like, we must consider that it is
given, not to Him as needing it, but to man himself through the Word. For every
one interceding for another, receives the gift in his own person, not as
needing, but on his account for whom he intercedes.
7. For as He takes our infirmities, not being infirm(1), and hungers not
hungering, but sends up what is ours that it may be abolished, so the gifts
which come from God instead of our infirmities, doth He too Himself receive, that
man, being united to Him, may be able to partake them. Hence it is that the Lord
says, All things whatsoever Thou hast given Me, have given them,' and again,
'I pray for them(2).' For He prayed for us, taking on Him what is ours, and He
was giving what He received. Since then, the Word being united to man himself,
the Father, regarding Him, vouchsafed to man to be exalted, to have all power
and the like; therefore are referred to the Word Himself, and are as if given to
Him, all things which through Him we receive. For as He for our sake became
man, so we for His sake are exalted. It is no absurdity then, if, as for our sake
He humbled Himself, so also for our sake He is said to be highly exalted. So
'He gave to Him,' that is, 'to us for His sake;' 'and He highly exalted Him(3),'
that is, 'us in Him.' And the Word Himself, when we are exalted, and receive,
and are succoured, as if He Himself were exalted and received and were
succoured, gives thanks to the Father, referring what is ours to Himself, and saying,
'All things, whatsoever Thou hast given Me, I have given unto them(4).'
8. Arians date the Son's beginning earlier than Marcellus, &c.
8. Eusebius and his fellows, that is, the Ario-maniacs, ascribing a
beginning of being to the Son, yet pretend not to wish Him to have a beginning of
kingship(5). But this is ridiculous; for he who ascribes to the Son a beginning of
being, very plainly ascribes to Him also a beginning of reigning; so blind are
they, confessing what they deny. Again, those who say that the Son is only a
name, and that the Son of God, that is, the Word of the Father, is unessential
and non-subsistent, pretend to be angry with those who say, 'Once He was not.'
This is ridiculous also; for they who give Him no being at all, are angry with
those who at least grant Him to be in time. Thus these also confess what they
deny, in the act of censuring the others. And again Eusebius and his fellows,
confessing a Son, deny that He is the Word by nature, and would have the Son
called Word notionally; and the others confessing Him to be Word, deny Him to be
Son, and would have the Word called Son notionally, equally void of footing.
9, 10. Unless Father and Son are two in name only, or as parts and so each
imperfect, or two gods, they are coessential, one in Godhead, and the Son from the
Father.
9. 'I and the Father are One(1).' You say that the two things are one, or
that the one has two names, or again that the one is divided into two. Now if
the one is divided into two, that which is divided must need be a body, and
neither part perfect, for each is a part and not a whole. But if again the one have
two names, this is the expedient of Subellius, who said that Son and Father
were the same, and did away with either, the Father when there is a Son, and the
Son when there is a Father. But if the two are one, then of necessity they are
two, but one according to the Godhead, and according to the Son's
coessentiality with the Father, and the Word's being from the Father Himself; so that there
are two, because there is Father, and Son, namely the Word; and one because one
God. For if not, He would have said, 'I am the Father,' or 'I and the Father
am;' but, in fact, in the 'I' He signifies the Son, and in the 'And the Father,'
Him who begot Him; and in the 'One' the one Godhead and His coessentiality(2).
For the Same is not, as the Gentiles hold, Wise and Wisdom, or the Same Father
and Word; for it were unfit for Him to be His own Father, but the divine
teaching knows Father and Son, and Wise and Wisdom, and God and Word; while it ever
guards Him indivisible and inseparable and indissoluble in all respects.
10. But if any one, on hearing that the Father and the Son are two,
misrepresent us as preaching two Gods (for this is what some feign to themselves, and
forthwith mock, saying, 'You hold two Gods'), we must answer to such, If to
acknowledge Father and Son, is to hold two Gods, it instantly(3) follows that to
confess but one we must deny the Son and Subellianise. For if to speak of two
is to fall into Gentilism, therefore if we speak of one, we must fall into
Sabellianism. But this is not so; perish the thought! but, as when we say that
Father and Son are two, we still confess one God, so when we say that there is one
God, let us consider Father and Son two, while they are one in the Godhead, and
in the Father's Word being indissoluble and indivisible and inseparable from
Him. And let the fire and the radiance from it be a similitude of man, which are
two in being and in appearance, but one in that its radiance is from it
indivisibly.
11, 12. Marcellus and his disciples, like Arians, say that the Word was, not
indeed created, but issued, to create us, as if the Divine silence were a state
of inaction, and when God spake by the Word, He acted; or that there was a
going forth and return of the Word; a doctrine which implies change and
imperfection in Father and Son.
11. They fall into the same folly with the Arians; for Arians also say
that He was created for us, that He might create us, as if God waited till our
creation for His issue, as the one party say, or His creation, as the other.
Arians then are more bountiful to us than to the Son; for they say, not we for His
sake, but He for ours, came to be; that is, if He was therefore created, and
subsisted, that God through Him might create us. And these, as irreligious or more
so, give to God less than to us. For we oftentimes, even when silent, yet are
active in thinking, so as to form the results of our thoughts into images; but
God they would have inactive when silent, and when He speaks then to exert
strength; if, that is, when silent He could not make, and when speaking He began to
create. For it is just to ask them, whether the Word, when He was in God, was
perfect, so as to be able to make. If on the one hand He was imperfect, when in
God, but by being begotten became perfect[1], we are the cause of Iris
perfection, that is, if He has been begotten for us; for on our behalf He has received
the power of making. But if He was perfect in God, so as to be able to make,
His generation is superfluous; for He, even when in the Father, could frame the
world; so that either He has not been begotten, or He was begotten, not for us,
but because He is ever from the Father. For His generation evidences, not that
we were created, but that He is from God; for He was even before our creation.
12. And the same presumption will be proved against them concerning the
Father; for if, when silent, He could not make, of necessity He has gained power
by begetting, that is, by speaking. And whence has He gained it? and wherefore?
If, when He had the Word within Him, He could make, He begets needlessly,
being able to make even in silence. Next, if the Word was in God before He was
begotten, then being begotten He is without and external to Him. But if so, how
says He now, 'I in the Father and the Father in Me[2]?' but if He is now in the
Father, then always was He in the Father, as He is now, and needless is it to
say, 'For us was He begotten, and He reverts after we are formed, that He may be
as He was.' For He was not anything which He is not now, nor is He what He was
not; but He is as He ever was, and in the same state and in the same respects;
otherwise He will seem to be imperfect and alterable. For if, what He was, that
He shall be afterwards, as if now He were not so, it is plain, He is not now
what He was and shall be. I mean, if He was before in God, and afterwards shall
be again, it follows that now the Word is not in God. But the Lord refutes such
persons when He says, 'I in the Father and the Father in Me;' for so is He now
as He ever was. But if so He now is, as He was ever, it follows, not that at
one time He was begotten and not at another, nor that once there was silence with
God, and then He spake, but there is ever a Father [3], and a Son who is His
Word, not in name[4] alone a Word, nor the Word in notion only a Son, but
existing coessential[5] with the Father, not begotten for us, for we are brought
into being for Him. For, if He were begotten for us, and in His begetting we were
created, and in His generation the creature consists, and then He returns that
He may be what He was before, first, He that was begotten will be again not
begotten. For if His progression be generation, His return will be the close[6] of
that generation, for when He has come to be in God, God will be silent again.
But if He shall be silent, there will be what there was when He was silent,
stillness and not creation, for the creation will cease to be. For, as on the
Word's outgoing, the creation came to be, and existed, so on the Word's retiring,
the creation will not exist. What use then for it to come into being, if it is
to cease? or why did God speak, that then He should be silent? and why did He
issue One whom He recalls? and why did He beget One whose generation He willed to
cease? Again it is uncertain what He shall be. For either He will ever be
silent, or He will again beget, and will devise a different creation (for He will
not make the same, else that which was made would have remained, but another);
and in due course He will bring that also to a close, and will devise another,
and so on without end[7].
13, 14. Such a doctrine precludes all real distinctions of personality in the
Divine Nature. Illustration of the Scripture doctrine from 2 Cor. vi. 11, &c.
13. This perhaps he[1] borrowed from the Stoics, who maintain that their
God contracts and again expands with the creation, and then rests without end.
For what is dilated is first straitened; and what is expanded is at first
contracted; and it is what it was, and does but undergo an affection. If then the
Monad being dilated became a Triad, and the Monad was the Father[1a], and the
Triad is Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, first the Monad being dilated, underwent an
affection and became what it was not; for it was dilated, whereas it had not
been dilate. Next, if the Monad itself was dilated into a Triad, and that, Father
and Son and Holy Ghost, then Father and Son and Spirit prove the same, as
Sabellius held, unless the Monad which he speaks of is something besides the Father,
and then he ought not to speak of dilatation, since the Monad was to make
Three, so that there was a Monad, and then Father, Son, and Spirit. For if the
Monad were dilated, and expanded itself, it must itself be that which was expanded.
And a Triad when dilated is no longer a Monad, and when a Monad it is not yet
a Triad. And so, He that was Father was not yet Son and Spirit; but, when
become These, is no longer only Father. And a man who thus should lie, must ascribe
a body to God, and represent Him as possible; for what is dilatation, but an
affection of that which is dilated? or what the dilated, but what before was not
so, but was strait indeed; for it is the same, in time only differing from
itself.
14. And this the divine Apostle knows, when he writes to the Corinthians,
'Be ye not straitened in us, but be ye yourselves dilated, O Corinthians[2];'
for he advises identical persons to change from straitness to dilatation. And
as, supposing the Corinthians being straitened were in turn dilated, they had not
been others, but still Corinthians, so if the Father was dilated into a Triad,
the Triad again is the Father alone. And he says again the same thing, 'Our
heart is dilated[3];' and Noah says, 'May God dilate for Japheth[4],' for the
same heart and the same Japheth is in the dilatation. If then the Monad dilated,
it would dilate for others; but if it dilated for itself, then it would be that
which was dilated; and what is that but the Son and Holy Spirit? And it is well
to ask him, when thus speaking, what was the action[5] of this dilatation? or,
in very truth, wherefore at all it took place? for what does not remain the
same, but is in course of time dilated, must necessarily have a cause of
dilatation. If then it was in order that Word and Spirit should be with Him, it is
beside the purpose to say, 'First Monad, and then dilated;' for Word and Spirit
were not afterwards, but ever, or God would be wordless[6], as the Arians hold. So
that if Word and Spirit were ever, ever was it dilated, and not at first a
Monad; but if it were dilated afterwards, then afterwards is there a Word. But if
for the Incarnation it was dilated, and then became a Triad, then before the
Incarnation there was not yet a Triad. And it will seem even that the Father
became flesh, if, that is, He be the Monad, and was dilated in the Man; and thus
perhaps there will only be a Monad, and flesh, and thirdly Spirit; if, that is,
He was Himself dilated; and there will be in name only a Triad. It is absurd too
to say that it was dilated for creating; for it were possible for it,
remaining a Monad, to make all; for the Monad did not need dilatation, nor was wanting
in power before being dilated; it is absurd surely and impious, to think or
speak thus in the case of God. Another absurdity too will follow. For if it was
dilated for the sake of the creation, and while it was a Monad the creation was
not, but upon the Consummation it will be again a Monad after dilatation, then
the creation too will come to nought. For as for the sake of creating it was
dilated, so, the dilatation ceasing, the creation will cease also.
15--24. Since the Word is from God, He must be Son. Since the Son is from
everlasting, He must be the Word; else either He is superior to the Word, or the
Word is the Father. Texts of the New Testament which state the unity of the Son
with the Father; therefore the Son is the Word. Three hypotheses refuted--1.
That the Man is the Son; 2. That the Word and Man together are the Son; 3. That
the Word became Son on His incarnation. Texts of the Old Testament which speak of
the Son. If they are merely prophetical, then those concerning the Word may be
such also.
15. Such absurdities will be the consequence of saying that the Monad is
dilated into a Triad. But since those who say so venture to separate Word and
Son, and to say that the Word is one and the Son another, and that first was the
Word and then the Son, come let us consider this doctrine also. Now their
presumption takes various forms; for some say that the man whom the Saviour assumed
is the Son[1]; and others both that the man and the Word then became Son, when
they were united[2]. And others say that the Word Himself then became Son when
He became man[3]; for from being Word, they say, He has become Son, not being
Son before, but only Word. Now both are Stoic[4] doctrines, whether to say that
God was dilated or to deny the Son, but especially is it absurd to name the
Word, yet deny Him to be Son. For if the Word be not from God, reasonably might
they deny Him to be Son; but if He is from God, how see they not that what exists
from anything is son of him from whom it is? Next, if God is Father of the
Word, why is not the Word Son of His own Father? for one is and is called father,
whose is the son; and one is and is called son of another, whose is the father.
If then God is not Father of Christ, neither is the Word Son; but if God be
Father, then reasonably also the Word is Son. But if afterwards there is Father,
and first God, this is an Arian thought[4a]. Next, it is absurd that God should
change; for that belongs to bodies; but if they argue that in the instance of
creation He became afterwards a Maker, let them know that the change is in the
things s which afterwards came to be, and not in God.
16. If then the Son too were a work, well might God begin to be a Father
towards Him as others; but if the Son is not a work, then ever was the Father
and ever the Son[1]. But if the Son was ever, He must be the Word; for if the
Word be not Son, and this is what a man waxes bold to say, either he holds that
Word to be Father or the Son superior to the Word. For the Son being 'in the
bosom of the Father[2],' of necessity either the Word is not before the Son (for
nothing is before Him who is in the Father), or if the Word be other than the
Son, the Word must be the Father in whom is the Son. But if the Word is not Father
but Word, the Word must be external to the Father, since it is the Son who is
'in the bosom of the Father.' For not both the Word and the Son are in the
bosom, but one must be, and He the Son, who is Only-begotten. And it follows for
another reason, if the Word is one, and the Son another, that the Son is superior
to the Word; for 'no one knoweth the Father save the Son[3],' not the Word.
Either then the Word does not know, or if He knows, it is not true that 'no one
knows.' And the same of 'He that hath seen Me, hath seen the Father,' and 'I and
the Father are One,' for this is uttered by the Son, not the Word, as they
would have it, as is plain from the Gospel; for according to John when the Lord
said, 'I and the Father are One,' the Jews took up stones to stone Him. 'Jesus[4]
answered them, Many good works have I shewed you from My Father, for which of
those works do ye stone Me? The Jews answered Him, saying, For a good work we
stone Thee not, but for blasphemy, and because that Thou, being a man, makest
Thyself God. Jesus answered them, Is it not written in your law, I said, Ye are
gods? If he called them gods unto whom the Word of God came, and the Scripture
cannot be broken, say ye of Him, whom the Father hath sanctified and sent into
the world, Thou blasphemest, because I said, I am the Son of God? If I do not
the works of My Father, believe Me not. But if I do, though ye believe not Me,
believe the works, that ye may know and believe that the Father is in Me, and I
in the Father.' And yet, as far as the surface of the words intimated, He said
neither 'I am God,' nor 'I am Son of God,' but 'I and the Father are One.'
17. The Jews then, when they heard 'One,' thought like Sabellius that He
said that He was the Father, but our Saviour shews their sin by this argument:
'Though I had said "God," you should have remembered what is written, "I said,
Ye are gods; "' then to clear up 'I and the Father are One,' He has explained
the Son's oneness with the Father in the words, 'Because I said, I am the Son of
God.' For if He did not say it in words, still He has referred the sense of
'are One' to the Son. For nothing is one with the Father, but what is from Him.
What is that which is from Him but the Son? And therefore He adds, 'that ye may
know that I am in the Father, and the Father in Me.' For, when expounding the
One,' He said that the union and the inseparability lay, not in This being That,
with which It was One, but in His being in the Father and the Father in the
Son. For thus He overthrows both Sabellius, in saying, 'I am' not, "the Father,"
but, 'the Son of God;' and Arius, in saying, 'are One.' If then the Son and the
Word are not the same, it is not that the Word is one with the Father, but the
Son; nor he that hath seen the Word 'hath seen the Father,' but 'he that hath
seen' the Son. And from this it follows, either that the Son is greater than the
Word, or the Word has nothing beyond the Son. For what can be greater or more
perfect than 'One,' and 'I in the Father and the Father in Me,' and 'He that
hath seen Me, hath seen the Father?' for these utterances also belong to the Son.
And hence the same John says, 'He that hath seen Me, hath seen Him that sent
Me,' and, 'He that receiveth Me, receiveth Him that sent Me;' and, 'I am come a
light into the world, that whosoever believeth in Me, should not abide in
darkness. And, if any one hear My words and observe them not, I judge him not; for I
came not to judge the world, but to save the world. The word which he shall
hear, the same shall judge him in the last day, because I go unto the Father[5].'
The preaching, He says, judges him who has not observed the commandment; 'for
if,' He says, 'I had not come and spoken unto them, they had not had sin; but
now they shall have no cloke[6], He says, having heard My words, through which
those who observe them shall reap salvation.
18. Perhaps they will have so little shame as to say, that this utterance
belongs not to the Son but to the Word; but from what preceded it appeared
plainly that the speaker was the Son. For He who here says, 'I came not to judge
the world but to save[1],' is shewn to be no other than the Only-begotten Son of
God, by the same John's saying before[2], 'For God so loved the world that He
gave His Only-begotten Son, that whosoever believeth on Him should not perish,
but have everlasting life. For God sent not His Son into the world to condemn
the world, but that the world through Him might be saved. He that believeth on
Him is not condemned, but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he
hath not believed in the Name of the Only-begotten Son of God. And this is the
condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather
than light, because their deeds are evil[3].' If He who says, 'For I came not
to judge the world, but that I might save it,' is the Same as says, 'He that
seeth Me, seeth Him that sent Me[4],' and if He who came to save the world and not
judge it is the Only-begotten Son of God, it is plain that it is the same Son
who says, 'He that seeth Me, seeth Him that sent Me.' For He who said, 'He that
believeth on Me,' and, 'If any one hear My words, I judge him not,' is the Son
Himself, of whom Scripture says, 'He that believeth on Him is not condemned,
but He that believeth not is condemned already, because He hath not believed in
the Name of the Only-begotten Son of God.' And again: 'And this is the
condemnation' of him who believeth not on the Son, 'that light hath come into the
world,' and they believed not in Him, that is, in the Son; for He must be 'the Light
which lighteth every man that cometh into the world[5].' And as long as He was
upon earth according to the Incarnation, He was Light in the world, as He said
Himself, 'While ye have light, believe in the light, that ye may be the
children of light;' for 'I,' says He, 'am come a light into the world[6].'
19. This then being shewn, it follows that the Word is the Son. But if the
Son is the Light, which has come into the world, beyond all dispute the world
was made by the Son. For in the beginning of the Gospel, the Evangelist,
speaking of John the Baptist, says, 'He was not that Light, but that he might bear
witness concerning that Light[1].' For Christ Himself was, as we have said
before, the True Light that lighteth every man that cometh into the world. For if 'He
was in the world, and the world was made by Him[2],' of necessity He is the
Word of God, concerning whom also the Evangelist witnesses that all things were
made by Him. For either they will be compelled to speak of two worlds, that the
one may have come into being by the Son and the other by the Word, or, if the
world is one and the creation one, it follows that Son and Word are one and the
same before all creation, for by Him it came into being. Therefore if as by the
Word, so by the Son also all things came to be, it will not be contradictory,
but even identical to say, for instance, 'In the beginning was the Word,' or,
'In the beginning was the Son.' But if because John did not say, 'In the
beginning was the Son,' they shall maintain that the attributes of the Word do not
suit with the Son, it at once follows that the attributes of the Son do not suit
with the Word. But it was shewn that to the Son belongs, 'I and the Father are
One,' and that it is He 'Who is in the bosom of the Father,' and, 'He that
seeth Me, seeth Him that sent Me[3];' and that 'the world was brought into being by
Him,' is common to the Word and the Son; so that from this the Son is shewn to
be before the world; for of necessity the Framer is before the things brought
into being. And what is said to Philip must belong, according to them, not to
the Word, but to the Son. For, 'Jesus said,' says Scripture, 'Have I been so
long time with you, and yet thou hast not known Me, Philip? He that hath seen Me,
hath seen the Father. And how sayest thou then, Shew us the Father? Believest
thou not, that I am in the Father and the Father in Me? the words that I speak
unto you, I speak not of Myself, but the Father that dwelleth in Me, He doeth
the works. Believe Me that I am in the Father and the Father in Me, or else,
believe Me for the very works' sake. Verily, verily, I say unto you, he that
believeth on Me, the works that I do shall he do also, and greater works than these
shall he do, because I go unto the Father. And whatsoever ye shall ask in My
Name, that will I do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son[4].' Therefore
if the Father be glorified in the Son, the Son must be He who said, 'I in the
Father and the Father in Me;' and He who said, 'He that hath seen Me, hath seen
the Father;' for He, the same who thus spoke, shews Himself to be the Son, by
adding, 'that the Father may be glorified in the Son.'
20. If then they say that the Man whom the Word wore, and not the Word, is
the Son of God the Only-begotten, the Man must be by consequence He who is in
the Father, in whom also the Father is; and the Man must be He who is One with
the Father, and who is in the bosom of the Father, and the True Light. And they
will be compelled to say that through the Man Himself the world came into
being, and that the Man was He who came not to judge the world but to save it; and
that He it was who was in being before Abraham came to be. For, says Scripture,
Jesus said to them, 'Verily, verily, I say unto you, before Abraham was, I
am[5].' And is it not absurd to say, as they do, that one who came of the seed of
Abraham after two and forty generations[6], should exist before Abraham came to
be? is it not absurd, if the flesh, which the Word bore, itself is the Son, to
say that the flesh from Mary is that by which the world was made? and how will
they retain 'He was in the world?' for the Evangelist, by way of signifying
the Son's antecedence to the birth according to the flesh, goes on to say, 'He
was in the world.' And how, if not the Word but the Man is the Son, can He save
the world, being Himself one of the world? And if this does not shame them,
where shall be the Word, the Man being in the Father? And where will the Word stand
to the Father, the Man and the Father being One? But if the Man be
Only-begotten, what will be the place of the Word? Either one must say that He comes
second, or, if He be above the Only-begotten, He must be the Father Himself. For as
the Father is One, so also the Only-begotten from Him is One; and what has the
Word above the Man, if the Word is not the Son? For, while Scripture says that
through the Son and the Word the world was brought to be, and it is common to
the Word and to the Son to frame the world, yet Scripture proceeds to place the
sight of the Father, not in the Word but in the Son, and to attribute the
saving of the world, not to the Word, but to the Only-begotten Son. For, saith it,
Jesus said, 'Have I been so long while with you, and yet hast thou not known Me,
Philip? He that hath seen Me, hath seen the Father.' Nor does Scripture say
that the Word knows the Father, but the Son; and that not the Word sees the
Father, but the Only-begotten Son who is in the bosom of the Father.
21. And what more does the Word contribute to our salvation than the Son,
if, as they hold, the Son is one, and the Word another? for the command is that
we should believe, not in the Word, but in the Son. For John says, 'He that
believeth on the Son, hath everlasting life; but he that believeth not the Son,
shall not see life[1].' And Holy Baptism, in which the substance of the whole
faith is lodged, is administered not in the Word, but in Father, Son, and Holy
Ghost. If then, as they hold, the Word is one and the Son another, and the Word
is not the Son, Baptism has no connection with the Word. How then are they able
to hold that the Word is with the Father, when He is not with Him in the giving
of Baptism? But perhaps they will say, that in the Father's Name the Word is
included? Wherefore then not the Spirit also? or is the Spirit external to the
Father? and the Man indeed (if the Word is not Son) is named after the Father,
but the Spirit after the Man? and then the Monad, instead of dilating into a
Triad, dilates according to them into a Tetrad, Father, Word, Son, and Holy Ghost.
Being brought to shame on this ground, they have recourse to another, and say
that not the Man by Himself whom the Lord bore, but both together, the Word and
the Man, are the Son; for both joined together are named Son, as they say.
Which then is cause of which? and which has made which a Son? or, to speak more
clearly, is the Word a Son because of the flesh? or is the flesh called Son
because of the Word? or is neither the cause, but the concurrence of the two? If
then the Word be a Son because of the flesh, of necessity the flesh is Son, and
all those absurdities follow which have been already drawn from saying that the
Man is Son. But if the flesh is called Son because of the Word, then even before
the flesh the Word certainly, being such, was Son. For how could a being make
other sons, not being himself a son, especially when there was a father[2]? If
then He makes sons for Himself, then is He Himself Father; but if for the
Father, then must He be Son, or rather that Son, by reason of Whom the rest are made
sons.
22. For if, while He is not Son, we are sons, God is our Father and not
His. How then does He appropriate the name instead, saying, 'My Father,' and 'I
from the Father[3]?' for if He be common Father of all, He is not His Father
only, nor did He alone come out the Father. But he says, that He is sometimes
called our Father also, because He has Himself become partaker in our flesh. For on
this account the Word has become flesh, that, since the Word is Son,
therefore, because of the Son dwelling in us[4], He may be called our Father also; for
'He sent forth,' says Scripture, 'the Spirit of His Son into our hearts, crying,
Abba, Father[5].' Therefore the Son in us, calling upon His own Father, causes
Him to be named our Father also. Surely in whose hearts the Son is not, of
them neither can God be called Father. But if because of the Word the Man is
called Son, it follows necessarily, since the ancients[6] are called sons even
before the Incarnation, that the Word is Son even before His sojourn among us; for
'I begat sons,' saith Scripture; and in the time of Noah, 'When the sons of God
saw,' and in the Song, 'Is not He thy Father[7]?' Therefore there was also that
True Son, for whose sake they too were sons. But if, as they say again,
neither of the two is Son, but it depends on the concurrence of the two, it follows
that neither is Son; I say, neither the Word nor the Man, but some cause, on
account of which they were united; and accordingly that cause which makes the Son
will precede the uniting. Therefore in this way also the Son was before the
flesh. When this then is urged, they will take refuge in another pretext, saying,
neither that the Man is Son, nor both together, but that the Word was Word
indeed simply in the beginning, but when He became Man, then He was named[7a] Son;
for before His appearing He was not Son but Word only; and as the 'Word be came
flesh,' not being flesh before, so the Word became Son, not being Son before.
Such are their idle words; but they admit of an obvious refutation.
23. For if simply, when made Man, He has become Son, the becoming Man is
the cause. And if the Man is cause of His being Son, or both together, then the
same absurdities result. Next, if He is first Word and then Son, it will appear
that He knew the Father afterwards, not before; for not as being Word does He
know Him, but as Son. For 'No one knoweth the Father but the Son.' And this too
will result, that He has come afterwards to be 'in the bosom of the
Fathers[1],' and afterwards He and the Father have become One; and afterwards is, 'He
that hath seen Me, hath seen the Father[2].' For all these things are said of the
Son. Hence they will be forced to say, The Word was nothing but a name. For
neither is it He who is in us with the Father, nor whoso has seen the Word, hath
seen the Father, nor was the Father known to any one at all, for through the Son
is the Father known (for so it is written, 'And he to whomsoever the Son will
reveal Him'), and, the Word not being yet Son, not yet did any know the Father.
How then was He seen by Moses, how by the fathers? for He says Himself in the
Kingdoms, 'Was I not plainly revealed to the house of thy father[3]?' But if
God was revealed, there must have been a Son to reveal, as He says Himself, 'And
he to whomsoever the Son will reveal Him.' It is irreligious then and foolish
to say that the Word is one and the Son another, and whence they gained such an
idea it were well to ask them. They answer, Because no mention is made in the
Old Testament of the Son, but of the Word; and for this reason they are positive
in their opinion that the Son came later than the Word, because not in the
Old, but in the New only, is He spoken of. This is what they irreligiously say;
for first to separate between the Testaments, so that the one does not hold with
the other, is the device of Manichees and Jews, the one of whom oppose the Old,
and the other the New[4]. Next, on their shewing, if what is contained in the
Old is of older date, and what in the New of later, and times depend upon the
writing, it follows that 'I and the Father are One,' and 'Only-begotten,' and
'He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father[5],' are later, for these testimonies
are adduced not from the Old but from the New.
24. But it is not so; for in truth much is said in the Old also about the
Son, as in the second Psalm, 'Thou art My Son, this day have I begotten
Thee[1];' and in the ninth the title[2], Unto the 'end concerning the hidden things of
the Son, a Psalm of David;' and in the forty-fourth, 'Unto the end, concerning
the things that shall be changed to the Sons of Korah for understanding, a
song about the Well-beloved;' and in Isaiah, 'I will sing to my Well-beloved a
song of my Well-beloved touching my vineyard. My Well-beloved hath a vineyard[3];'
Who is this 'Well-beloved' but the Only-begotten Son? as also in the hundred
and ninth, 'From the womb I begat Thee before the morning star[4],' concerning
which I shall speak afterwards; and in the Proverbs, 'Before the hills He begat
me;' and in Daniel, 'And the form of the Fourth is like the Son of Gods[5];'
and many others. If then from the Old be ancientness, ancient must be the Son,
who is clearly described in the Old Testament in many places. Yes,' they say, 'so
it is, but it must be taken prophetically.' Therefore also the Word must be
said to be spoken of prophetically; for this is not to be taken one way, that
another. For if 'Thou art My Son' refer to the future, so does 'By the Word of the
Lord were the heavens established;' for it is not said 'were brought to be,'
nor 'He made.' But that 'established' refers to the future, it states elsewhere:
'The Lord reigned[5a],' followed by 'He so established the earth that it can
never be moved.' And if the words in the forty-fourth Psalm 'for My
Well-beloved' refer to the future, so does what follows upon them, 'My heart uttered a good
Word.' And if From the womb' relates to a man, therefore also 'From the
heart.' For if the womb is human, so is the heart corporeal. But if what is from the
heart is eternal, then what is 'From the womb' is eternal. And if the
'Only-be-gotten' is 'in the bosom,' therefore the 'Well-beloved' is 'in the bosom.' For
'Only-be-gotten' and 'Well-beloved' are the same, as in the words 'This is My
Well-beloved Son[6].' For not as wishing to signify His love towards Him did He
say 'Well-beloved,' as if it might appear that He hated others, but He made
plain thereby His being Only-begotten, that He might shew that He alone was from
Him. And hence the Word, with a view of conveying to Abraham the idea of
'Only-begotten,' says, 'Offer thy son thy well-beloved[7];' but it is plain to any
one that Isaac was the only son from Sara. The Word then is Son, not lately come
to be, or named Son, but always Son. For if not Son, neither is He Word; and if
not Word, neither is He Son. For that which is from the father is a son; and
what is from the Father, but that Word that went forth from the heart, and was
born from the womb? for the Father is not Word, nor the Word Father, but the one
is Father, and the other Son; and one begets, and the other is begotten.
25. Marcellian illustration from 1 Cor. xii. 4, refuted.
25. Arius then raves in saying that the Son is from nothing, and that once
He was not, while Sabellius also raves in saying that the Father is Son, and
again, the Son Father[1], in subsistence[2] One, in name Two; and he[3] raves
also in using as an example the grace of the Spirit. For he says, 'As there are
"diversities of gifts, but the same Spirit," so also the Father is the same[4],
but is dilated into Son and Spirit.' Now this is full of absurdity; for if as
with the Spirit, so it is with God, the Father will be Word and Holy Spirit, to
one becoming Father, to another Son, to another Spirit, accommodating himself
to the need of each, and in name indeed Son and Spirit, but in reality Father
only; having a beginning in that He becomes a Son, and then ceasing to be called
Father, and made man in name, but in truth not even coming among us; and untrue
in saying 'I and the Father,' but in reality being Himself the Father, and the
other absurdities which result in the instance of Sabellius. And the name of
the Son and the Spirit will necessarily cease, when the need has been supplied;
and what happens will altogether be but make-belief, because it has been
displayed, not in truth, but in name. And the Name of Son ceasing, as they hold, then
the grace of Baptism will cease too; for it was given in the Son[5]. Nay, what
will follow but the annihilation of the creation? for if the Word came forth
that we might be created[6], and when He was come forth, we were, it is plain
that when He retires into the Father, as they say, we shall be no longer. For He
will be as He was; so also we shall not be, as then we were not; for when He is
no more gone forth, there will no more be a creation. This then is absurd.
26--36. That the Son is the Co-existing Word, argued from the New Testament.
Texts from the Old Testament continued; especially Ps. cx. 3. Besides, the Word
in Old Testament may be Son in New, as Spirit in Old Testament is Paraclete in
New. Objection from Acts x. 36; answered by parallels, such as 1 Cor. i. 5.
Lev. ix. 7. &c. Necessity of the Word's taking flesh, viz. to sanctify, yet
without destroying, the flesh.
26. But that the Son has no beginning of being, but before He was made man
was ever with the Father, John makes clear in his first Epistle, writing thus:
'That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen
with our eyes, which we have looked upon, and our hands have handled of the Word
of Life; and the Life was manifested, and we have seen it; and we bear witness
and declare unto you that Eternal Life, which was with the Father, and was
manifested unto us[1].' While he says here that 'the Life,' not 'became,' but 'was
with the Father,' in the end of his Epistle he says the Son is the Life,
writing, 'And we are in Him that is True, even in His Son, Jesus Christ; this is the
True God and Eternal Life[2].' But if the Son is the Life, and the Life was
with the Father, and if the Son was with the Father, and the same Evangelist says,
'And the Word was with God[3],' the Son must be the Word, which is ever with
the Father. And as the 'Son' is 'Word,' so 'God' must be 'the Father.' Moreover,
the Son, according to John, is not merely 'God' but 'True God;' for according
to the same Evangelist, 'And the Word was God;' and the Son said, 'I am the
Life[4].' Therefore the Son is the Word and Life which is with the Father. And
again, what is said in the same John, 'The Only-begotten Son which is in the bosom
of the Father[5],' shews that the Son was ever. For whom John calls Son, Him
David mentions in the Psalm as God's Hand[6], saying, 'Why stretchest Thou not
forth Thy Right Hand out of Thy bosom[7]?' Therefore if the Hand is in the
bosom, and the Son in the bosom, the Son will be the Hand, and the Hand will be the
Son, through whom the Father made all things l for it is written, 'Thy Hand
made all these things,' and 'He led out His people with His Hand[8];' therefore
through the Son. And if 'this is the changing of the Right Hand of the Most
Highest,' and again, 'Unto the end, concerning the things that shall be changed, a
song for My Well-beloved[9];' the Well-beloved then is the Hand that was
changed; concerning whom the Divine Voice also says, 'This is My Beloved Son.' This
'My Hand' then is equivalent to 'This My Son. '
27. But since there are ill-instructed men who, while resisting the
doctrine of a Son, think little of the words, 'From the womb before the morning star
I begat Thee[1];' as if this referred to His relation to Mary, alleging that He
was born of Mary 'before the morning star,' for that to say 'womb' could not
refer to His relation towards God, we must say a few words here. If then,
because the 'womb' is human, therefore it is foreign to God, plainly 'heart' too has
a human meaning[2], for that which has heart has womb also. Since then both are
human, we must deny both, or seek to explain both. Now as a word is from the
heart, so is an offspring from the womb; and as when the heart of God is spoken
of, we do not conceive of it as human, so if Scripture says 'from the womb,' we
must not take it in a corporeal sense. For it is usual with divine Scripture
to speak and signify in the way of man what is above man. Thus speaking of the
creation it says, 'Thy hands made me and fashioned me,' and, 'Thy hand made all
these things,'and, 'He commanded and they were created[3].' Suitable then is
its language about everything; attributing to the Son 'propriety' and
'genuineness,' and to the creation 'the beginning of being.' For the one God makes and
creates; but Him He begets from Himself, Word or Wisdom. Now 'womb' and 'heart'
plainly declare the proper and the genuine; for we too have this from the womb;
but our works we make by the hand.
28. What means then, say they, 'Before the morning star?' I would answer,
that if 'Before the morning star' shews that His birth from Mary was wonderful,
many others besides have been born before the rising of the star. What then is
said so wonderful in His instance, that He should record it as some choice
prerogative[4], when it is common to many? Next, to beget differs from bringing
forth; for begetting involves the primary foundation, but to bring forth is
nothing else than the production of what exists. If then the term belongs to the
body, let it be observed that He did not then receive a beginning of coming to be
when he was evangelized to the shepherds by night, but when the Angel spoke to
the Virgin. And that was not night, for this is not said; on the contrary, it
was night when He issued from the womb. This difference Scripture makes, and
says on the one hand that He was begotten before the morning star, and on the
other speaks of His proceeding from the womb, as in the twenty-first Psalm, 'Thou
art be that drew Me from the womb[5].' Besides, He did not say, 'before the
rising of the morning star,' but simply 'before the morning star.' If then the
phrase must be taken of the body, then either the body must be before Adam, for
the stars were before Adam, or we have to investigate the sense of the letter.
And this John enables us to do, who says in the Apocalypse, 'I am Alpha and
Omega, the first and the last, the beginning and the end. Blessed are they who
make broad their robes, that they may have right to the tree of life, and may
enter in through the gates into the city. For without are dogs, and sorcerers, and
whoremongers, and murderers, and idolaters, and whosoever maketh and loveth a
lie. I Jesus have sent My Angel, to testify these things in the Churches. I am
the Root and the Offspring of David, the Bright and Morning Star. And the Spirit
and the Bride say, Come; and let him that heareth say, Come; and let him that
is athirst, Come; and whosoever will, let him take of the water of life
freely[6].' If then 'the Offspring of David' be the 'Bright and Morning Star,' it is
plain that the flesh of the Saviour is called 'the Morning Star,' which the
Offspring from God preceded; so that the sense of the Psalm is this, 'I have
begotten Thee from Myself before Thy appearance in the flesh;' for 'before the
Morning Star' is equivalent to 'before the Incarnation of the Word.'
29. Thus in the Old also, statements are plainly made concerning the Son;
at the same time it is superfluous to argue the point; for if what is not
stated in the Old is of later date, let them who are thus disputatious, say where in
the Old is mention made of the Spirit, the Paraclete? for of the Holy Spirit
there is mention, but nowhere of the Paraclete. Is then the Holy Spirit one, and
the Paraclete another, and the Paraclete the later, as not mentioned in the
Old? but far be it to say that the Spirit is later, or to distinguish the Holy
Ghost as one and the Paraclete as another; for the Spirit is one and the same,
then and now hallowing and comforting those who are His recipients; as one and
the same Word and Son led even then to adoption of sons those who were worthy[1].
For sons under the Old were made such through no other than the Son. For
unless even before Mary there were a Son who was of God, how is He before all, when
they are sons before Him? and how also 'First-born,' if He comes second after
many? But neither is the Paraclete second, for He was before all, nor the Son
later; for 'in the beginning was the Word[2].' And as the Spirit and Paraclete
are the same, so the Son and Word are the same; and as the Saviour says
concerning the Spirit, 'But the Paraclete which is the Holy Ghost, whom the Father will
send in My Name[3],' speaking of One and Same, and not distinguishing, so John
describes similarly when he says, 'And the Word became flesh, and dwelt among
us, and we beheld His glory, glory as of one Only-begotten from the Father[4].'
For here too he does not distinguish but witnesses the identity. And as the
Paraclete is not one and the Holy Ghost another, but one and the same, so Word is
not one, and Son another, but the Word is Only-Begotten; for He says not the
glory of the flesh itself, but of the Word. He then who dares distinguish between
Word and Son, let him distinguish between Spirit and Paraclete; but if the
Spirit cannot be distinguished, so neither can the Word, being also Son and Wisdom
and Power. Moreover, the word 'Well-beloved' even the Greeks who are skilful
in phrases know to be equivalent with 'Only-begotten.' For Homer speaks thus of
Telemachus, who was the only-begotten of Ulysses, in the second book of the
Odyssey:
Over the wide earth, dear youth, why seek to run,
An only child, a well-beloved[5] son?
He whom you mourn, divine Ulysses, fell
Far from his country, where the strangers dwell.
Therefore he who is the only son of his father is called well-beloved.
30. Some of the followers of the Samosatene, distinguishing the Word from
the Son, pretend that the Son is Christ, and the Word another; and they ground
this upon Peter's words in the Acts, which he spoke well, but they explain
badly[6]. It is this: 'The Word He sent to the children of Israel, preaching peace
by Jesus Christ; this is Lord of all[7].' For they say that since the Word
spoke through Christ, as in the instance of the Prophets, 'Thus saith the Lord,'
the prophet was one and the Lord another. But to this it is parallel to oppose
the words in the first to the Corinthians, 'waiting for the revelation of our
Lord Jesus Christ, who shall also confirm you unto the end unblameable in the day
of our Lord Jesus Christ[8].' For as one Christ does not confirm the day of
another Christ, but He Himself confirms in His own day those who wait for Him, so
the Father sent the Word made flesh, that being made man He might preach by
means of Himself. And therefore he straightway adds, 'This is Lord of all;' but
Lord of all is the Word.
31. 'And Moses said unto Aaron, Go unto the altar and offer thy
sin-offering, and thy burnt-offering, and make an atonement for thyself and for the
people; and offer the offering of the people, and make an atonement for them, as the
Lord commanded Moses[1].' See now here, though Moses be one, Moses himself
speaks as if about another Moses, 'as the Lord commanded Moses.' In like manner
then, if the blessed Peter speak of the Divine Word also, as sent to the children
of Israel by Jesus Christ, it is not necessary to understand that the Word is
one and Christ another, but that they were one and the same by reason of the
uniting which took place in His divine and loving condescension and becoming man.
And even if He be considered in two ways[2], still it is without any division
of the Word, as when the inspired John says, 'And the Word became flesh, and
dwelt among us[3].' What then is said well and rightly[4] by the blessed Peter,
the followers of the Samosatene, understanding badly and wrongly, stand not in
the truth. For Christ is understood in both ways in Divine Scripture, as when it
says Christ 'God's power and God's wisdom[5].' If then Peter says that the
Word was sent through Jesus Christ unto the children of Israel, let him be
understood to mean, that the Word incarnate has appeared to the children of Israel, so
that it may correspond to 'And the Word became flesh.' But if they understand
it otherwise, and, while confessing the Word to be divine, as He is, separate
from Him the Man that He has taken, with which also we believe that He is made
one, saying that He has been sent through Jesus Christ, they are, without
knowing it, contradicting themselves. For those who in this place separate the divine
Word from the divine Incarnation, have, it seems, a degraded notion of the
doctrine of His having become flesh, and entertain Gentile thoughts, as they do,
conceiving that the divine Incarnation is an alteration of the Word. But it is
not so; perish the thought.
32. For in the same way that John here preaches that incomprehensible
union. 'the mortal being swallowed up of life[1],' nay, of Him who is Very Life (as
the Lord said to Martha, 'I am the Life[2]'), so when the blessed Peter says
that through Jesus Christ the Word was sent, he implies the divine union also.
For as when a man heard 'The Word became flesh,' he would not think that the
Word ceased to be, which is absurd, as has been said before, so also hearing of
the Word which has been united to the flesh, let him understand the divine
mystery one and simple. More clearly however and indisputably than all reasoning does
what was said by the Archangel to the Bearer of God herself, shew the oneness
of the Divine Word and Man. For he says, 'The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee,
and the Power of the Highest shall overshadow thee therefore also that Holy
Thing which shall be born of thee, shall be called the Son of God[3].'
Irrationally then do the followers of the Samosatene separate the Word who is clearly
declared to be made one with the Man from Mary. He is not therefore sent through
that Man; but He rather in Him sent, saying, 'Go ye, teach all nations[4].'
33. And this is usual with Scriptures[5], to express itself in
inartificial and simple phrases. For so also in Numbers we shall find, Moses said to
Raguel the Midianite, the father-in-law of Moses; for there was not one Moses who
spoke, and another whose father-in-law was Raguel, but Moses was one. And if in
like manner the Word of God is called Wisdom and Power and Right-Hand and Arm
and the like, and if in His love to man He has become one with us, putting on our
first-fruits and blended with it, therefore the other titles also have, as was
natural, become the Word's portions. For that John has said, that in the
beginning was the Word, and He with God and Himself God, and alI things through Him,
and without Him nothing made, shews clearly that even man is the formation of
God the Word. If then after taking him, when enfeebled[6], into Himself, He
renews him again through that sure renewal unto endless permanence, and therefore
is made one with him in order to raise him to a diviner lot, how can we
possibly say that the Word was sent through the Man who was from Mary, and reckon Him,
the Lord of Apostles, with the other Apostles, I mean prophets, who were sent
by Him? And how can Christ be called a mere man? on the contrary, being made
one with the Word, He is with reason called Christ and Son of God, the prophet
having long since loudly and clearly ascribed the Father's subsistence to
Him, and said, 'And I will send My Son Christ[7],' and in the Jordan, 'This is My
Well-beloved Son.' For when He had fulfilled His promise, He shewed, as was
suitable, that He was He whom He said He had sent.
34. Let us then consider Christ in both ways, the divine Word made one in
Mary with Him which is from Mary. For in her womb the Word fashioned for
Himself His house, as at the beginning He formed Adam from the earth; or rather more
divinely, concerning whom Solomon too says openly, knowing that the Word was
also called Wisdom, 'Wisdom builded herself an house[1];' which the Apostle
interprets when he says, 'Which house are we[2],' and elsewhere calls us a temple,
as far as it is fitting to God to inbabit a temple, of which the image, made of
stones, He by Solomon commanded the ancient people to build; whence, on the
appearance of the Truth, the image ceased. For when the ruthless men wished to
prove the image to be the truth, and to destroy that true habitation which we
surely believe His union with us to be, He threatened them not; but knowing that
their crime was against themselves, He says to them, 'Destroy this Temple, and in
three days I will raise it up[3],' He, our Saviour, surely shewing thereby
that the things about which men busy themselves, carry their dissolution with
them. For unless the Lord had built the house, and kept the city, in vain did the
builders toil, and the keepers watch[4]. And so the works of the Jews are
undone, for they were a shadow; but the Church is firmly established; it is 'founded
on the rock,' and 'the gates of hades shall not prevail against it[5].'
Theirs[6] it was to say, 'Why dost Thou, being a man, make Thyself God[7]?' and their
disciple is the Samosatene; whence to his followers with reason does he teach
his heresy. But 'we did not so learn Christ, if so be that we heard' Him, and
were taught from Him, 'putting off the old man, which is corrupt according to the
deceitful lusts,' and taking up 'the new, which after God is created in
righteousness and true holiness[8].' Let Christ then in both ways be religiously
considered.
35. But if Scripture often calls even the body by the name of Christ, as
in the blessed Peter's words to Cornelius, when he teaches him of 'Jesus of
Nazareth, whom God anointed with the Holy Ghost,' and again to the Jews, 'Jesus of
Nazareth, a Man approved of God for you[1],' and again the blessed Paul to the
Athenians, 'By that Man, whom He ordained, giving assurance to all men, in that
He raised Him from the dead[2]' (for we find the appointment and the mission
often synonymous with the anointing; from which any one who will may learn, that
there is no discordance in the words of the sacred writers, but that they but
give various names to the union of God the Word with the Man from Mary,
sometimes as anointing, sometimes as mission, sometimes as appointment), it follows
that what the blessed Peter says is rights, and he proclaims in purity the
Godhead of the Only begotten, without separating the subsistence of God the Word from
the Man from Mary (perish the thought! for how should he, who had heard in so
main, ways, 'I and the Father are one,' and 'He that hath seen Me, hath seen
the Father[4]?)' In which Man, after the resurrection also, when the doors were
shut, we know of His coming to the whole band[4a] of the Apostles, and
dispersing all that was hard to believe in it by His words, 'Handle Me and see, for a
spirit hath not flesh and bones, as ye see Me have[5].' And He did not say,
'This,' or 'this Man which I have taken to Me,' but 'Me.' Wherefore the Samosatene
will gain no allowance, being refuted by so many arguments for the union of God
the Word, nay by God the Word Himself, who now brings the news to all, and
assures them by eating, and permitting to them that handling of Him which then took
place. For certainly he who gives food to others, and they who give him, touch
hands. For 'they gave Him,' Scripture says, 'a piece of a broiled fish and of
an honey-comb, and' when He had 'eaten before them, He took the remains and
gave to them[6],' See now, though not as Thomas was allowed, yet by another way,
He afforded to them full assurance, in being touched by them; but if you would
now see the scars, learn from Thomas. 'Reach hither thy hand and thrust it into
My side, and reach hither thy finger and behold My hands[7];' so says God the
Word, speaking of His own[8] side and hands, and of Himself as whole man and God
to beget, first affording to the Saints even perception of the Word through
the body[9], as we may consider, by entering when the doors were shut; and next
standing near them in the body and affording full assurance. So much may be
conveniently said for confirmation of the faithful, and correction of the
unbelieving.
36. And so let Paul of Samosata also stand corrected on hearing the divine
voice of Him who said 'My body,' not 'Christ besides Me who am the Word,' but
'Him[1] with Me, and Me with Him.' For I the Word am the chrism, and that which
has the chrism from Me is the Man[2]; not then without Me could He be called
Christ, but being with Me and I in Him. Therefore the mention of the mission of
the Word shews the uniting which took place with Jesus, born of Mary, Whose
Name means Saviour, not by reason of anything else, but from the Man's being made
one with God the Word. This passage has the same meaning as 'the Father that
sent Me,' and 'I came not of Myself, but the Father sent Me[3].' For he has given
the name of mission[4] to the uniting with the Man, with Whom the Invisible
nature might be known to men, through the visible. For God changes not place,
like us who are hidden in places, when in the fashion of our littleness He
displays Himself in His existence in the flesh; for how should He, who fills the
heaven and the earth? but on account of the presence in the flesh the just have
spoken of His mission. Therefore God the Word Himself is Christ from Mary, God and
Man; not some other Christ but One and the Same; He before ages from the
Father, He too in the last times from the Virgin; invisible s before even to the holy
powers of heaven, visible now because of His being one with the Man who is
visible; seen, I say, not in His invisible Godhead but in the operation[6] of the
Godhead through the human body and whole Man, which He has renewed by its
appropriation to Himself. To Him be the adoration and the worship, who was before,
and now is, and ever shall be, even to all ages. Amen.