THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF GREGORY OF NYSSA, BOOK VIII
BOOK VIII
- The eighth book very notably overthrows the blasphemy of the heretics who say
that the Only-begotten came from nothing, and that there wits a time when He
was not, and shows the Son to be no new being, but from everlasting, from His
having said to Moses, "I am He that is," and to Manoah, "Why askest thou My name?
it also is wonderful";--moreover David also says to God, "Thou art the same,
and Thy years shall not fail;" and furthermore Isaiah says, "I am God, the
first, and hereafter am I:" and the Evangelist, "He was in the beginning, and was
with God, and was God:"--and that He has neither beginning nor end: and he
thrones that those who say that He is new and comes front nothing are idolaters. And
herein he very finely interprets "the brightness of the glory, and the express
image of the Person."
THESE, then, are the strong points of Eunomius' case; and I think that
when those which promised to be powerful are proved by argument to be so rotten
and unsubstantial, I may well keep silence concerning the rest, since the others
are practically refuted, concurrently with the refutation of the stronger ones;
just as it happens in warlike operations that when a force more powerful than
the rest has been beaten, the remainder of the army are no longer of any
account in the eyes of those by whom the strong portion of it has been overcome. But
the fact that the chief part of his blasphemy lies in the later part of his
discourse forbids me to be silent. For the transition of the Only-begotten from
nothing into being, that horrid and godless doctrine of Eunomius, which is more
to be shunned than all impiety, is next maintained in the order of his argument.
And since every one who has been bewitched by this deceit has the phrase, "If
He was, He has not been begotten, and if He has been begotten, He was not,"
ready upon his tongue for the maintenance of the doctrine that He Who made of
nothing us and all the creation is Himself from nothing, and since the deceit
obtains much support thereby, as men of feebler mind are pressed by this superficial
bit of plausibility, and led to acquiesce in the blasphemy, we must needs not
pass by this doctrinal "root of bitterness," lest, as the Apostle says, it
"spring up and trouble us(1)" Now I say that we must first of all consider the
actual argument itself, apart from our contest with our opponents, and thus
afterwards proceed to the examination and refutation of what they have set forth.
One mark of the true Godhead is indicated by the words of Holy Scripture,
which Moses learnt by the voice from heaven, when He heard Him Who said, "I am
He that is(2)." We think it right, then, to believe that to be alone truly
Divine which is represented as eternal and infinite in respect of being; and all
that is contemplated therein is always the same, neither growing nor being
consumed; so that if one should say of God, that formerly He was, but now is not, or
that He now is, but formerly was not, we should consider each of the savings
alike to be godless: for by both alike the idea of eternity is mutilated, being
cut short on one side or the other by non-existence, whether one contemplates
"nothing" as preceding "being(3)," or declares that "being" ends in "nothing";
and the frequent repetition of "first of all" or "last of all" concerning God's
non-existence does not make amends for the impious conception touching the
Divinity. For this reason we declare the maintenance of their doctrine as to the
non-existence at some time of Him Who truly is, to be a denial and rejection of
His true Godhead; and this on the ground that, on the one hand, He Who showed
Himself to Moses by the light speaks of Himself as being, when He says, "I am He
that is(2)," while on the other, Isaiah (being made, so to say, the instrument
of Him Who spoke in him) says in the person of Him that is, "I am the first, and
hereafter am I(4)," so that hereby, whichever way we consider it, we conceive
eternity in God. And so, too, the word that was spoken to Manoah shows the fact
that the Divinity is not comprehensible by the significance of His name,
because, when Manoah asks to know His name, that, when the promise has come actually
to pass, he may by name glorify his benefactor, He says to him, "Why askest
thou this? It also is wonderful(5)"; so that by this we learn that there is one
name significant of the Divine Nature--the wonder, namely, that arises
unspeakably in our hearts concerning It. So, too, great David, in his discourses with
himself, proclaims the same truth, in the sense that all the creation was brought
into being by God, while He alone exists always in the same manner, and abides
for ever, where he says, "But Thou art the same, and Thy years shall not
fail(6)." When we hear these sayings, and others like them, from men inspired by
God, let us leave all that is not from eternity to the worship of idolaters, as a
new thing alien from the true Godhead. For that which now is, and formerly was
not, is clearly new and not eternal, and to have regard to any new object of
worship is called by Moses the service of demons, when he says, "They sacrificed
to devils and not to God, to gods whom their fathers knew not; new gods were
they that came newly up(7)." If then everything that is new in worship is a
service of demons, and is alien from the true Godhead, and if what is now, but was
not always, is new and not eternal, we who have regard to that which is,
necessarily reckon those who contemplate non-existence as attaching to Him Who is, and
who say that "He once was not," among the worshippers of idols. For we may
also see that the great John, when declaring in his own preaching the
Only-begotten God, guards his own statement in every way, so that the conception of
non-existence shall find no access to Him Who is. For he says(8) that He "was in the
beginning," and "was with God," and "was God," and was light, and life, and
truth, and all good things at all times, and never at any time failed to be
anything that is excellent, Who is the fulness of all good, and is in the bosom of the
Father. If then Moses lays down as a law for us some such mark of true Godhead
as this, that we know nothing else of God but this one thing, that He is (for
to this point the words, "I am He that is(9)"); while Isaiah in his preaching
declares aloud the absolute infinity of Him Who is, defining the existence of
God as having no regard to beginning or to end (for He Who says "I am the first,
and hereafter am I," places no limit to His eternity in either direction, so
that neither, if we look to the beginning, do we find any point marked since
which He is, and beyond which He was not, nor, if 'we turn our thought to the
future, can we cut short by any boundary the eternal progress of Him Who is),--and
if the prophet David forbids us to worship any new and strange God(1) (both of
which are involved in the heretical doctrine; "newness" is clearly indicated in
that which is not eternal, and "strangeness" is alienation from the Nature of
the very God),--if, I say, these things are so, we declare all the sophistical
fabrication about the non-existence at some time of Him Who truly is, to be
nothing else than a departure from Christianity, and a turning to idolatry. For
when the Evangelist, in his discourse concerning the Nature of God, separates at
all points non-existence from Him Who is, and, by his constant repetition of the
word "was," carefully destroys the suspicion of non-existence, and calls Him
the Only-begotten God, the Word of God, the Son of God, equal with God, and all
such names, we have this judgment fixed and settled in us, that if the
Only-begotten Son is God, we must believe that He Who is believed to be God is eternal.
And indeed He is verily God, and assuredly is eternal, and is never at any
time found to be non-existent. For God, as we have often said, if He now is, also
assuredly always was, and if He once was not, neither does He now exist at all.
But since even the enemies of the truth confess that the Son is and
continually abides the Only-begotten God, we say this, that, being in the Father, He is
not in Him in one respect only, but He is in Him altogether, in respect of all
that the Father is conceived to be. As, then, being in the incorruptibility of
the Father, He is incorruptible, good in His goodness, powerful in His might,
and, as being in each of these attributes of special excellence which are
conceived of the Father, He is that particular thing, so, also, being in His eternity,
He is assuredly eternal. Now the eternity of the Father is marked by His never
having taken His being from nonexistence, and never terminating His being in
non-existence. He, therefore, Who hath all things that are the Father's(2), and
is contemplated in all the glory of the Father, even as, being in the
endlessness of the Father, He has no end, so, being in the unoriginateness of the
Father, has, as the Apostle says, "no beginning of days(3)," but at once is "of the
Father," and is regarded in the eternity of the Father:and in this respect, more
especially, is seen the complete absence of divergence in the Likeness, as
compared with Him Whose Likeness He is. And herein is His saying found true which
tells us, "He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father(4)." Moreover, it is in
this way that those words of the Apostle, that the Son is "the brightness of His
glory, and the express image of His Person(5)," are best understood to have an
excellent and close application. For the Apostle conveys to those hearers who
are unable, by the contemplation of purely intellectual objects, to elevate
their thought to the height of the knowledge of God, a sort of notion of the truth,
by means of things apparent to sense. For as the body of the sun is expressly
imaged by the whole disc that surrounds it, and he who looks on the sun argues,
by means of what he sees, the existence of the whole solid substratum, so, he
says, the majesty of the Father is expressly imaged in the greatness of the
power of the Son, that the one may be believed to be as great as the other is
known to be: and again, as the radiance of light sheds its brilliancy from the
whole of the sun's disc (for in the disc one part is not radiant, and the rest
dim), so all that glory which the Father is, sheds its brilliancy from its whole
extent by means of the brightness that comes from it, that is, by the true Light;
and as the ray is of the sun (for there would be no ray if the sun were not),
yet the sun is never conceived as existing by itself without the ray of
brightness that is shed from it, so the Apostle delivering to us the continuity and
eternity of that existence which the Only-begotten has of the Father, calls the
Son "the brightness of His glory."
- He then discusses the "willing" of the Father concerning the generation of
the Son, and shows that the object of that good will is from eternity, which is
the Son, existing in the father, and being closely related to the process of
willing, as the ray to the flame, or the act of seeing to the eye.
After these distinctions on our part no one can well be longer in doubt
how the Only-begotten at once is believed to be "of the Father," and is
eternally, even if the one phrase does not at first sight seem to agree with the
other,--that which declares Him to be "of the Father" with that which asserts His
eternity. But if we are to confirm our statement by further arguments, it may be
possible to apprehend the doctrine on this point by the aid of things cognizable
by our senses. And let no one deride our statement, if it cannot find among
existing things a likeness of the object of our enquiry such as may be in all
respects sufficient for the presentation of the matter in hand by way of analogy
and resemblance. For we should like to persuade those who say that the Father
first willed and so proceeded to become a Father, and on this ground assert
posteriority in existence as regards the Word, by whatever illustrations may make it
possible, to turn to the orthodox view. Neither does this immediate conjunction
exclude the "willing" of the Father, in the sense that He had a Son without
choice, by some necessity of His Nature, nor does the "willing" separate the Son
from the Father, coming in between them as a kind of interval: so that we
neither reject from our doctrine the "willing" of the Begetter directed to the Son,
as being, so to say, forced out by the conjunction of the Son's oneness with
the Father, nor do we by any means break that inseparable connection, when
"willing" is regarded as involved in the generation. For to our heavy and inert
nature it properly belongs that the wish and the possession of a thing are not often
present with us at the same moment; but now we wish for something we have not,
and at another time we obtain what we do not wish to obtain. But, in the case
of the simple and all-powerful Nature, all things are conceived together and at
once, the willing of good as well as the possession of what He wills. For the
good and the eternal will is contemplated as operating, indwelling, and
co-existing in the eternal Nature, not arising in it from any separate principle, nor
capable of being conceived apart from the object of will: for it is not
possible that with God either the good will should not be, or the object of will
should not accompany the act of will, since no cause can either bring it about that
which befits the Father should not always be, or be any hindrance to the
possession of the object of will. Since, then, the Only-begotten God is by nature the
good (or rather beyond all good), and since the good does not fail to be the
object of the Father's will, it is hereby clearly shown, both that the
conjunction of the Son with the Father is without any intermediary, and also that the
will, which is always present in the good Nature, is not forced out nor excluded
by reason of this inseparable conjunction. And if any one is listening to my
argument in no scoffing spirit, I should like to add to what I have already said
something of the following kind.
Just as, if one were to grant (I speak, of course, hypothetically) the
power of deliberate choice to belong to flame, it would be clear that the flame
will at once upon its existence will that its radiance should shine forth from
itself, and when it wills it will not be impotent (since, on the appearance of
the flame, its natural power at once fulfils its will in the matter of the
radiance), so that undoubtedly, if it be granted that the flame is moved by
deliberate choice, we conceive the concurrence of all these things simultaneously--of
the kindling of the fire, of its act of will concerning the radiance, and of the
radiance itself; so that the movement by way of choice is no hindrance to the
dignity of the existence of the radiance,--even so, according to the
illustration we have spoken of, you will not, by confessing the good act of will as
existing in the Father, separate by that act of will the Son from the Father. For it
is not reasonable to suppose that the act of willing that He should be, could
be a hindrance to His immediately coming into being; but just as, in the eye,
seeing and the will to see are, one an operation of nature, the other an impulse
of choice, yet no delay is caused to the act of sight by the movement of choice
in that particular direction(6),--(for each of these is regarded separately
and by itself, not as being at all a hindrance to the existence of the other, but
as both being somehow interexistent, the natural operation concurring with the
choice, and the choice in turn not failing to be accompanied by the natural
motion)--as, I say, perception naturally belongs to the eye, and the willing to
see produces no delay in respect to actual sight, but one wills that it should
have vision, and immediately what he wills is, so also in the case of that
Nature' which is unspeakable and above all thought, our apprehension of all comes
together simultaneously--of the eternal existence of the Father, and of an act of
will concerning the Son, and of the Son Himself, Who is, as John says, "in
the beginning," and is not conceived as coming after the beginning. Now the
beginning of all is the Father; but in this beginning the Son also is declared to
be, being in His Nature that very thing which the Beginning is. For the Beginning
is God, and the Word Who "was in the Beginning." is God. As then the phrase
"the beginning" points to eternity, John well conjoins "the Word in the
Beginning," saying that the Word was in It; asserting, I suppose, this fact to the end
that the first idea present to the mind of his hearer may not be "the Beginning"
alone by itself, but that, before this has been impressed upon him, there
should also be presented to his mind, together with the Beginning the Word Who was
in It, entering with It into the hearer's understanding, and being present to
his heating at the same time with the Beginning.
- Then, thus passing over what relates to the essence of the Son as having been
already discussed, he treats of the sense involved in "generation," saying
that there are diverse generations, those effected by matter and art, and of
buildings,--and that by succession of animals,--and those by efflux, as by the sun
and its beam. the lamp and its radiance, scents and ointments and the quality
diffused by them,--and the ward produced by the mind; and cleverly discusses
generation(7) from rotten wood; and from the condensation of fire, and countless
other causes.
Now that we have thus thoroughly scrutinized our doctrine, it may perhaps
be time to set forth and to consider the opposing statement, examining it side
by side in comparison with our own opinion. He states it thus:--" For while
there are," he says, "two statements which we have made, the one, that the essence
of the Only-begotten was not before its own generation, the other that, being
generated, it was before all things, he s does not prove either of these
statements to be untrue; for he did not venture to say that He was before that
supreme(9) generation and formation, seeing that he is opposed at once by the Nature
of the Father, and the judgment of sober-minded men. For what sober man could
admit the Son to be and to be begotten before that supreme generation? and He
Who is without generation needs not generation in order to His being what He is."
Well, whether he speaks truly, when he says that our master s opposed his
antitheses to no purpose, all may surely be aware who have been conversant with
that writer's works. But for my own part (for I think that the refutation of his
calumny on this matter is a small step towards the exposure of his malice), I
will leave the task of showing that this point was not passed over by our master
without discussion, and turn my argument to the discussion, as far as in me
lies, of the points now advanced. He says that he has in his own discourse spoken
of two matters,--one, that the essence of the Only-begotten was not before Its
own generation, the other, that, being generated, It was before all things. Now
I think that by what we have already said, the fact has been sufficiently
shown that no new essence was begotten by the Father besides that which is
contemplated in the Father Himself, and that there is no need for us to be entangled in
a contest with blasphemy of this kind, as if the argument were now propounded
to us for the first time; and further, that the real force of our argument must
be directed to one point, I mean to his horrible and blasphemous utterance,
which clearly states concerning God the Word that "He was not." Moreover, as our
argument in the foregoing discourse has already to some extent dealt with the
question of his blasphemy, it would perhaps be superfluous again to establish by
like considerations what we have proved already. For it was to this end that
we made those former statements, that by the earlier impression upon our hearers
of an orthodox mode of thought, the blasphemy of our adversaries, who assert
that non-existence preceded existence in the case of the Only-begotten God,
might be more manifest.
It seems at this point well to investigate in our argument, by a more
careful examination, the actual significance of "generation." That this name
presents to us the fact of being as the result of some cause is clear to every one,
and about this point there is, I suppose, no need to dispute. But since the
account to be given of things which exist as the result of cause is various, I
think it proper that this matter should be cleared up in our discourse by some sort
of scientific division. Of things, then, which are the result of something, we
understand the varieties to be as follows. Some are the result of matter and
art, as the structure of buildings and of other works, coming into being by
means of their respective matter, and these are directed by some art that
accomplishes the thing proposed, with a view to the proper aim of the results produced.
Others are the results of matter and nature; for the generations of animals
are the building(1) of nature, who carries on her own operation by means of their
material bodily subsistence. Others are the result of material efflux, in
which cases the antecedent remains in its natural condition, while that which flows
from it is conceived separately, as in the case of the sun and its beam, or
the lamp and its brightness, or of scents and ointments and the quality they
emit; for these, while they remain in themselves without diminution, have at the
same time, each concurrently with itself, that natural property which they emit:
as the sun its beam, the lamp its brightness, the scents the perfume produced
by them in the air. There is also another species of "generation" besides these,
in which the cause is immaterial and incorporeal, but the generation is an
object of sense and takes place by corporeal means;--I speak of the word which is
begotten by the hind: for the mind, being itself incorporeal, brings forth the
word by means of the organs of sense. All these varieties of generation we
mentally include, as it were, in one general view. For all the wonders that are
wrought by nature, which changes the bodies of some animals to something of a
different kind, or produces some animals from a change in liquids, or a corruption
of seed, or the rotting of wood, or out of the condensed mass of fire
transforms the cold vapour that issues from the firebrands, shut off in the heart of the
fire, to produce an animal' which they call the salamander,--these, even if
they seem to be outside the limits we have laid down, are none the less included
among the cases we have mentioned. For it is by means of bodies that nature
fashions these varied forms of animals; for it is such and such a change of body,
disposed by nature in this or that particular way, which produces this or that
particular animal; and this is not a distinct species of generation besides
that which is accomplished as the result of nature and matter.
- He further shows the operations of God to be expressed by human
illustrations; for what hands and fief and the other parts of the body with which men work
are, that, in the case of God, the will alone is, in place of these. And so also
arises the divergence of generation; wherefore He is called Only-begotten,
because He has no community with other generation such as is observed in
creation(2), but in that He is called the "brightness of glory," and the "savour of
ointment," He shows the close conjunction and co-eternity of His Nature with the
Father(3).
Now these modes of generation being well known to men, the loving
dispensation of the Holy Spirit, in delivering to us the Divine mysteries, conveys its
instruction on those matters which transcend language by means of what is
within our capacity, as it does also constantly elsewhere, when it portrays the
Divinity in bodily terms, making mention, in speaking concerning God, of His eye,
His eyelids, His ear, His fingers, His hand, His right hand, His arm, His feet,
His shoes(4), and the like,--none of which things is apprehended to belong in
its primary sense to the Divine Nature,--but turning its teaching to what we can
easily perceive, it describes by, terms well worn in human use, facts that are
beyond every name, while by each of the terms employed concerning God we are
led analogically to some more exalted conception. In this way, then, it employs
the numerous forms of generation to present to us, from the inspired teaching,
the unspeakable existence of the Only-begotten, taking just so much from each
as may be reverently admitted into our conceptions concerning God. For as its
mention of "fingers," "hand," and "arm," in speaking of God, does not by the
phrase portray the structure of the limb out of bones and sinews and flesh and
ligaments, but signifies by such an expression His effective and operative power,
and as it indicates by each of the other words of this kind those conceptions
concerning God which correspond to them, not admitting the corporeal senses of
the words, so also it speaks indeed of the forms of these modes of coming into
being as applied to the Divine Nature, yet does not speak in that sense which our
customary knowledge enables us to understand. For when it speaks of the
formative power, it calls that particular energy by the name of "generation," because
the word expressive of Divine power must needs descend to our lowliness, yet
it does not indicate all that is associated with formative generation among
ourselves,--neither place nor time nor preparation of material, nor the cooperation
of instruments, nor the purpose in the things produced, but it leaves these
out of sight, and greatly and loftily claims for God the generation of the things
that are, where it says, "He spake and they were begotten, He commanded and
they were created(5)." Again, when it expounds that unspeakable and transcendent
existence which the Only-begotten has from the Father, because human poverty
is incapable of the truths that are too high for speech or thought, it uses our
language here also, and calls Him by the name of "Son,"--a name which our
ordinary use applies to those who are produced by matter and nature. But just as the
word, which tells us in reference to God of the "generation" of the creation,
did not add the statement that it was generated by the aid of any material,
declaring that its material substance, its place, its time, and all the like, had
their existence in the power of His will, so here too, in speaking of the
"Son," it leaves out of sight both all other things which human nature sees in
earthly generation (passions, I mean, and dispositions, and the cooperation of time
and the need of place, and especially matter), without all which earthly
generation as a result of nature does not occur. Now every such conception of matter
and interval being excluded from the sense of the word "Son," nature alone
remains, and hereby in the word "Son "is declared concerning the Only-begotten the
close and true character of His manifestation from the Father. And since this
particular species of generation did not suffice to produce in us an adequate
idea of the unspeakable existence of the Only-begotten, it employs also another
species of generation, that which is the result of efflux, to express the Divine
Nature of the Son, and calls Him "the brightness of glory(6)," the "savour of
ointment(7)," the "breath of God(8)," which our accustomed use, in the
scientific discussion we have already made, calls material efflux. But just as in the
previous cases neither the making of creation nor the significance of the word
"Son" admitted time, or matter, or place, or passion, so here also the phrase,
purifying the sense of "brightness" and the other terms from every material
conception, and employing only that element in this particular species of
generation which is suitable to the Divinity, points by the force of this mode of
expression to the truth that He is conceived as being both from Him and with Him. For
neither does the word "breath" present to us dispersion into the air from the
underlying matter, nor "savour" the transference that takes place from the
quality of the ointment to the air, nor "brightness" the efflux by means of rays
from the body of the sun; but this only, as we have said, is manifested by this
particular mode of generation, that He is conceived to be of Him and also with
Him, no intermediate interval existing between the Father and that Son Who is of
Him. And since, in its abundant loving-kindness, the grace of the Holy Spirit
has ordered that our conceptions concerning the Only-begotten Son should arise
in us from many sources, it has added also the remaining species of things
contemplated in generation,--that, I mean, which is the result of mind and word.
But the lofty John uses especial foresight that the hearer may not by any means
by inattention or feebleness of thought fall into the common understanding of
"Word," so that the Son should be supposed to be the voice of the Father. For
this reason he prepares us at his first proclamation to regard the Word as in
essence, and not in any essence foreign to or dissevered from that essence whence
It has Its being, but in that first and blessed Nature. For this is what he
teaches us when he says the Word "was in the beginning(9)," and "was with God(9),"
being Himself also both God and all else that the "Beginning" is. For thus it
is that he makes his discourse on the Godhead, touching the eternity of the
Only-begotten. Seeing then that these modes of generation (those, I mean, which are
the result of cause) are ordinarily known among us, and are employed by Holy
Scripture for our instruction on the subjects before us, in such a way as it
might be expected that each of them would be applied to the presentation of Divine
conceptions, let the reader of our argument "judge righteous judgement(1),"
whether any of the assertions that heresy makes have any force against the truth.
- Then, after showing that the Person of the Only-begotten and Maker of things
has no beginning, as have the things that were made by Him, as Eunomius says,
but that the Only-begotten is without beginning and eternal, and has no
community, either of essence or of names, with the creation, but is co-existent with
the Father from everlasting, being, as the all-excellent Wisdom says, "the
beginning and end and midst of the times," and after making many observations on the
Godhead and eternity of the Only-begotten, and also concerning souls and
angels, and life and death, he concludes the book.
I will now once more subjoin the actual language of my opponent, word for
word. It runs thus:--"While there are," he says, "two statements which we have
made, the one, that the essence of the Only-begotten was not before its own
generation, the other, that, being generated, it was before all things--" What
kind of generation does our dogmatist propose to us? Is it one of which we may
fittingly think and speak in regard to God? And who is so godless as to
pre-suppose non-existence in God? But it is clear that he has in view this material
generation of ours, and is making the lower nature the teacher of his conceptions
concerning the Only-begotten God, and since an ox or an ass or a camel is not
before its own generation, he thinks it proper to say even of the Only-begotten
God that which the course of the lower nature presents to our view in the case of
the animals, without thinking, corporeal theologian that he is, of this fact,
that the predicate "Only-begotten", applied to God, signifies by the very word
itself that which is not in common with all begetting, and is peculiar to Him.
How could the term "Only-begotten" be used of this "generation," if it had
community and identity of meaning with other generation? That there is something
unique and exceptional to be understood in His case, which is not to be remarked
in other generation, is distinctly and suitably expressed by the appellation of
"Only-begotten"; as, were any element of the lower generation conceived in it,
He Who in respect of any of the attributes of His generation was placed on a
level with other things that are begotten would no longer be "Only-begotten."
For if the same things are to be said of Him which are said of the other things
that come into being by generation, the definition will transform the sense of
"Only-begotten" to signify a kind of relationship involving brotherhood. If then
the sense of "Only-begotten" points to absence of mixture and community with
the rest. of generated things, we shall not admit that anything which we behold
in the lower generation is also to be conceived in the case of that existence
which the Son has from the Father. But non-existence before generation is proper
to all things that exist by generation: therefore this is foreign to the
special character of the Only-begotten, to which the name "Only-begotten" bears
witness that there attaches nothing belonging to the mode of that form of common
generation which Eunomius misapprehends. Let this materialist and friend of the
senses be persuaded therefore to correct the error of his conception by the
other forms of generation. What will you say when you hear of the "brightness of
glory" or of the "savour of ointment(2)?" That the "brightness" was not before
its own generation? But if you answer thus, you will surely admit that neither
did the "glory" exist, nor the "ointment": for it is not possible that the
"glory" should be conceived as having existed by itself, dark and lustreless, or the
"ointment" without producing its sweet breath: so that if the "brightness" "was
not," the "glory" also surely "was not," and the "savour" being non-existent,
there is also proved the non-existence of the "ointment." But if these examples
taken from Scripture excite any man's fear, on the ground that they do not
accurately present to us the majesty of the Only-begotten, because neither is
essentially the same with its substratum--neither the exhalation with the ointment,
nor the beam with the sun--let the true Word correct his fear, Who was in the
Beginning and is all that the Beginning is, and existent before all; since John
so declares in his preaching, "And the Word was with God, and the Word was
God(3)." If then the Father is God and the Son is God, what doubt still remains
with regard to the perfect Divinity of the Only-begotten, when by the sense of
the word "Son" is acknowledged the close relationship of Nature, by "brightness"
the conjunction and inseparability, and by the appellation of "God," applied
alike to the Father and the Son, their absolute equality, while the "express
image," contemplated in reference to the whole Person(4) of the Father, marks the
absence of any defect in the Son's proper greatness, and the "form of God"
indicates His complete identity by showing in itself all those marks by which the
Godhead is betokened.
Let us now set forth Eunomius' statement once more. "He was not," he says,
"before His own generation." Who is it of Whom he says "He was not"? Let him
declare the Divine names by which He Who, according to Eunomius, "once was not,"
is called. He will say, I suppose, "light," and "blessedness," "life" and
"incorruptibility," and "righteousness" and "sanctification," and "no power," and
"truth," and the like. He who says, then, that "He was not before His
generation," absolutely proclaims this,--that when He "was not" there was no truth, no
life, no light, no power, no incorruptibility, no other of those pre-eminent
qualities which are conceived of Him: and, what is still more marvellous and still
more difficult for impiety to face, there was no "brightness," no "express
image." For in saying that there was no brightness, there is surely maintained also
the non-existence of the radiating power, as one may see in the illustration
afforded by the lamp. For he who speaks, of the ray of the lamp indicates also
that the lamp shines, and he who says that the ray "is not," signifies also the
extinction of that which gives light: so that when the Son is said not to be
thereby is also maintained as a necessary consequence the non-existence of the
Father. For if the one is related to the other by way of conjunction, according
to the Apostolic testimony--the "brightness" to the "glory," the "express image"
to the "Person," the "Wisdom" to God--he who says that one of the things so
conjoined "is not," surely by his abolition of the one abolishes also that which
remains; so that if the "brightness" "was not," it is acknowledged that neither
did the illuminating nature exist, and if the "express image" had no
existence, neither did the Person imaged exist, and if the wisdom and power of God "was
not," it is surely acknowledged that He also was not, Who is not conceived by
Himself without wisdom and power. If, then, the Only-begotten God, as Eunomius
says, "was not before His generation," and Christ is "the power of God and the
wisdom of God(5)," and the "express image"(6) and the "brightness(6)," neither
surely did the Father exist, Whose power and wisdom and express image and
brightness the Son is: for it is not possible to conceive by reason either a Person
without express image, or glory without radiance, or God without wisdom, or a
Maker without hands, or a Beginning without the Word(7), or a Father without a
Son; but all such things, alike by those who confess and by those who deny, are
manifestly declared to be in mutual union, and by the abolition of one the other
also disappears with it. Since then they maintain that the Son (that is, the
"brightness of the glory,") "was not" before He was begotten, and since logical
consequence involves also, together with the non-existence of the brightness,
the abolition of the glory, and the Father is the glory whence came the
brightness of the Only-begotten Light, let these men who are wise over-much consider
that they are manifestly supporters of the Epicurean doctrines, preaching
atheism under the guise of Christianity. Now since the logical consequence is shown
to be one of two absurdities, either that we should say that God does nor exist
at all, or that we should say that His being was not unoriginate, let them
choose which they like of the two courses before them,--either to be called
atheist, or to cease saying that the essence of the Father is un-originate. They
would avoid, I suppose. being reckoned atheists. It remains, therefore, that they
maintain that God is not eternal. And if the course of what has been proved
forces them to this, what becomes of their varied and irreversible conversions of
names? What becomes of that invincible compulsion of their syllogisms, which
sounded so fine to the ears of old women, with its opposition of "Generated" and
"Ungenerate"?
Enough, however, of these matters. But it might be well not to leave his
next point unanswered; yet let us pass over in silence the comic interlude,
where our clever orator shows his youthful conceit, whether in jest or in earnest,
under the impression that he will thereby have an advantage in his argument.
For certainly no one will force us to join either with those whose eyes are set
askance in distorting our sight, or with those who are stricken with strange
disease in being contorted, or in their bodily leaps and plunges. We shall pity
them, but we shall not depart from our settled state of mind. He says, then,
turning his discourse upon the subject to our master, as if he were really engaging
him face to face, "Thou shalt be taken in thine own snare." For as Basil had
said s that what is good is always present with God Who is over all, and that it
is good to be the Father of such a Son,--that so what is good was never absent
from Him, nor was it the Father's will to be without the Son, and when He
willed He did not lack the power, but having the power and the will to be in the
mode in which it seemed good to Him, He also always possessed the Son by reason
of His always willing that which is good (for this is the direction in which the
intention of our father's remarks tends), Eunomius pulls this in pieces
beforehand, and puts forward to overthrow what has been said some such argument as
this, introduced from his extraneous philosophy:--." What will become of you," he
says, "if one of those who have had experience of such arguments should
say,(4) If to create is good and agreeable to the Nature of God, how is it that what
is good and agreeable to His Nature was not present with Him unoriginately,
seeing that God is unoriginate? and that when there was no hindrance of ignorance
or impediment of weakness or of age in the matter of creation,"--and all the
rest that he collects together and pours out upon himself,--for I may not say,
upon God. Well, if it were possible for our master to answer the question in
person, he would have shown Eunomius what would have become of him, as he asked, by
setting forth the Divine mystery with that tongue that was taught of God, and
by scourging the champion of deceit with his refutations, so that it would have
been made clear to all men what a difference there is between a minister of
the mysteries of Christ and a ridiculous buffoon or a setter-forth of new and
absurd doctrines. But since he, as the Apostle says, "being dead, speaketh(9)" to
God, while the other puts forth such a challenge as though there were no one to
answer him, even though an answer from us may not have equal force when
compared with the words of the great Basil, we shall yet boldly say this in answer to
the questioner:--Your own argument, put forth to overthrow our statement, is a
testimony that in the charges we make against your impious doctrine we speak
truly. For there is no other point we blame so much as this, that you(1) think
there is no difference between the Lord of creation and the general body of
creation, and what you now allege is a maintaining of the very things which we find
fault with. For if you are bound to attach exactly what you see in creation
also to the Only-begotten God, our contention has gained its end: your own
statements proclaim the absurdity of the doctrine, and it is manifest to all, both
that we keep our argument in the straight way of truth, and that your conception
of the Only-begotten God is such as you have of the rest of the creation.
Concerning whom was the controversy? Was it not concerning the
Only-begotten God, the Maker of all the creation, whether He always was, or whether He
came into being afterwards as an addition to His Father? What then do our master's
words say on this matter? That it is irreverent to believe that what is
naturally good was not in God: for that he saw no cause by which it was probable that
the good was not always present with Him Who is good, either for lack of power
or for weakness of will. What does he who contends against these statements
say? "If you allow that God the Word is to be believed eternal, you must allow
the same of the things that have been created"--(How well he knows how to
distinguish in his argument the nature of the creatures and the majesty of God! How
well he knows about each, what befits it, what he may piously think concerning
God, what concerning the creation!)--"if the Maker," he says, "begins from the
time of His making: for there is nothing else by which we can mark the beginning
of things that have been made, if time does not define by its own interval the
beginnings and the endings of the things that come into being."
On this ground he says that the Maker of time must commence His existence
from a like beginning. Well, the creation has the ages for its beginning, but
what beginning can you conceive of the Maker of the ages? If any one should say,
"The 'beginning' which is mentioned in the Gospel"--it is the Father Who is
there signified, and the confession of the Son together with Him is there pointed
to, nor can it be that He Who is in the Father(2), as the Lord says, can begin
His being in Him from any particular point. And if any one speaks of another
beginning besides this, let him tell us the name by which he marks this
beginning, as none can be apprehended before the establishment of the ages. Such a
statement, therefore. will not move us a whit from the orthodox conception
concerning the Only-begotten, even if old women do applaud the proposition as a sound
one. For we abide by what has been determined from the beginning, having our
doctrine firmly based on truth, to wit, that all things which the orthodox
doctrine assumes that we assert concerning the Only-begotten God have no kindred with
the creation, but the marks which distinguish the Maker of all and His works
are separated by a wide interval. If indeed the Son had in any other respect
communion with the creation, we surely ought to say that He did not diverge from it
even in the manner of His existence. But if the creation has no share in such
things as are all those which we learn concerning the Son, we must surely of
necessity say that in this matter also He has no communion with it. For the
creation was not in the beginning, and was not with God, and was not, God, nor life,
nor light, nor resurrection, nor the rest of the Divine names, as truth,
righteousness, sanctification, Judge, just, Maker of all things, existing before the
ages, for ever and ever; the creation is not the brightness of the glory, nor
the express image of the Person, nor the likeness of goodness, nor grace, nor
power, nor truth, nor salvation, nor redemption; nor do we find any one at all
of those names which are employed by Scripture for the glory of the
Only-begotten, either belonging to the creation or employed concerning it,--not to speak of
those more exalted words, "I am in the Father, and the Father in Me(2)," and,
"He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father(3), and, "None hath seen the Son,
save the Father(4)." If indeed our doctrine allowed us to claim for the creation
things so many and so great as these, he might have been right in thinking that
we ought to attach what we observe-in it to our conceptions of the
Only-begotten also, since the transfer would be from kindred subjects to one nearly
allied. But if all these concepts and names involve communion with the Father, while
they transcend our notions of the creation, does not our clever and
sharp-witted friend slink away in shame at discussing the nature of the Lord of the
Creation by the aid of what he observes in creation, without being aware that the
marks which distinguish the creation are of a different sort? The ultimate
division of all that exists is made by the line between "created" and "uncreated," the
one being regarded as a cause of what has come into being, the other as coming
into being thereby. Now the created nature and the Divine essence being thus
divided, and admitting no intermixture in respect of their distinguishing
properties, we must by no means conceive both by means of similar terms, nor seek in
the idea of their nature for the same distinguishing marks in things that are
thus separated. Accordingly, as the nature that is in the creation, as the
phrase of the most excellent Wisdom somewhere tells us, exhibits "the beginning,
ending, and midst of the times(5)" in itself, and extends concurrently with all
temporal intervals, we take as a sort of characteristic of the subject this
property, that in it we see some beginning of its formation, look on its midst, and
extend our expectations to its end. For we have learnt that the heaven and the
earth were not from eternity, and will not last to eternity, and thus it is
hence clear that those things are both started from some beginning, and will
surely cease at some end. But the Divine Nature, being limited in no respect, but
passing all limitations on every side in its infinity, is far removed from those
marks which we find in creation. For that power which is without interval,
without quantity, without circumscription, having in itself all the ages and all
the creation that has taken place in them, and over-passing at all points, by
virtue of the infinity of its own nature, the unmeasured extent of the ages,
either has no mark which indicates its nature, or has one of an entirely different
sort, and not that which the creation has. Since, then, it belongs to the
creation to have a beginning, that will be alien from the uncreated nature which
belongs to the creation. For if any one should venture to suppose the existence of
the Only-begotten Son to be, like the creation, from any beginning
comprehensible by us, he must certainly append to his statement concerning the Son the rest
also of the sequence(6); for it is not possible to avoid acknowledging,
together with the beginning, that also which follows from it. For just as if one were
to admit some person to be a man in all(7) the properties of his nature, he
would observe that in this confession he declared him to be an animal and
rational, and whatever else is conceived of man, so by the same reasoning, if we
should understand any of the properties of creation to be present in the Divine
essence, it will no longer be open to us to refrain from attaching to that pure
Nature the rest of the list of the attributes contemplated therein. For the
"beginning" will demand by force and compulsion that which follows it; for the
"beginning," thus conceived, is a beginning of what comes after it, in such a sense,
that if they are, it is, and if the things connected with it are removed, the
antecedent also would not remain(8). Now as the book of Wisdom speaks of "midst"
and "end" as well as of "beginning," if we assume in the Nature of the
Only-begotten, according to the heretical dogma, some beginning of existence defined
by a certain mark of time, the book of Wisdom will by no means allow us to
refrain from subjoining to the "beginning "a "midst" and an "end" also. If this
should be done we shall find, as the result of our arguments, that the Divine word
shows us that the Deity is mortal. For if, according to the book of Wisdom, the
"end" is a necessary consequence of the "beginning," and the idea of "midst"
is involved in that of extremes, he who allows one of these also potentially
maintains the others, and lays down bounds of measure and limitation for the
infinite Nature. And if this is impious and absurd, the giving a beginning to that
argument which ends in impiety deserves equal, or even greater censure; and the
beginning of this absurd doctrine was seen to be the supposition that the life
of the Son was circumscribed by some beginning. Thus one of two courses is
before them: either they must revert to sound doctrine under the compulsion of the
foregoing arguments, and contemplate Him Who is of the Father in union with the
Father's eternity, or if they do not like this, they must limit the eternity
of the Son in both ways, and reduce the limitless character of His life to
non-existence by a beginning and an end. And, granted that the nature both of souls
and of the angels has no end, and is no way hindered from going on to eternity,
by the fact of its being created, and having the beginning of its existence
from some point of time, so that our adversaries can use this fact to assert a
parallel in the case of Christ, in the sense that He is not from eternity, and
yet endures everlastingly,--let any one who advances this argument also consider
the following point, how widely the Godhead differs from the creation in its
special attributes. For to the Godhead it properly belongs to lack no conceivable
thing which is regarded as good, while the creation attains excellence by
partaking in something better than itself; and further, not only had a beginning of
its being, but also is found to be constantly in a state of beginning to be in
excellence, by its continual advance in improvement, since it never halts at
what it has reached, but all that it has acquired(9) becomes by participation a
beginning of its ascent to something still greater, and it never ceases, in
Paul's phrase, "reaching forth to the things that are before," and "forgetting the
things that are behind(1)." Since, then, the Godhead is very life, and the
Only-begotten God is God, and life, and truth, and every conceivable thing that is
lofty and Divine, while the creation draws from Him its supply of good, it may
hence be evident that if it is in life by partaking of life, it will surely,
if it ceases from this participation, cease from life also. If they dare, then,
to say also of the Only-begotten God those things which it is true to say of
the creation, let them say this too, along with the rest, that He has a beginning
of His being like the creation, and abides in life after the likeness of
souls. But if He is the very life, and needs not to have life in Himself ab extra,
while all other things are not life, but are merely participants in life, what
constrains us to cancel, by reason of what we see in creation, the eternity of
the Son? For that which is always unchanged as regards its nature, admits of no
contrary, and is incapable of change to any other condition: while things whose
nature is on the boundary line have a tendency that shifts either way,
inclining at will to what they find attractive(2). If, then, that which is truly life
is contemplated in the Divine and transcendent nature, the decadence thereof
will surely, as it seems, end in the opposite state(3).
Now the meaning of "life" and "death" is manifold, and not always
understood in the same way. For as regards the flesh, the energy and motion of the
bodily senses is called "life," and their extinction and dissolution is named
"death." But in the case of the intellectual nature, approximation to the Divine is
the true life, and decadence therefrom is named "death": for which reason the
original evil, the devil, is called both "death," and the inventor of death: and
he is also said by the Apostle to have the power of death(4). As, then, we
obtain, as has been said, from the Scriptures, a twofold conception of death, He
Who is truly unchangeable and immutable "alone hath immortality," and dwells in
light that cannot be attained or approached by the darkness of wickedness(5):
but all things that participate in death, being far removed from immortality by
their contrary tendency, if they fall away from that which is good, would, by
the mutability of their nature, admit community with the worse condition, which
is nothing else than death, having a certain correspondence with the death of
the body. For as in that case the extinction of the activities of nature is
called death, so also, in the case of the intellectual being, the absence of motion
towards the good is death and departure from life; so that what we perceive in
the bodiless creation(6) does not clash with our argument, which refutes the
doctrine of heresy. For that form of death which corresponds to the intellectual
nature (that is, separation from God, Whom we call Life) is, potentially, not
separated even from their nature; for their emergence from non-existence shows
mutability of nature; and that to which change is in affinity is hindered from
participation in the contrary state by the grace of Him Who strengthens it: it
does not abide in the good by its own nature: and such a thing is not eternal.
If, then, one really speaks truth in saying that we ought not to estimate the
Divine essence and the created nature in the same way, nor to circumscribe the
being of the Son of God by any beginning, test, if this be granted, the other
attributes of creation should enter in together with our acknowledgment of this
one, the absurd character of the teaching of that man, who employs the
attributes of creation to separate the Only-begotten God from the eternity of the
Father, is clearly shown. For as none other of the marks which characterize the
creation appears in the Maker of the creation, so neither is the fact that the
creation has its existence from some beginning a proof that the Son was not always
in the Father,--that Son, Who is Wisdom, and Power, and Light, and Life, and
all that is conceived of in the bosom of the Father.