THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF GREGORY OF NYSSA, BOOK XI
BOOK XI
- The eleventh book shows that the title of "Good" is due, not to the Father
alone, as Eunomius, the imitator of Manichaeus and Bardesanes, alleges, but to
the Son also, Who formed man in goodness and loving-kindness, and reformed him by
His Cross and death.
LET US now go on to the next stage in his argument:--" .... the
Only-begotten Himself ascribing to the Father the title due of right to Him alone. For He
Who has taught us that the appellation 'good' belongs to Him alone Who is the
cause of His own(1) goodness and of all goodness, and is so at all times, and
Who refers to Him all good that has ever come into being, would be slow to
appropriate to Himself the authority over all things that have come into being, and
the title of 'the Existent.'" Well, so long as he concealed his blasphemy under
some kind of veil, and strove to entangle his deluded hearers unawares in the
mazes of his dialectic, I thought it necessary to watch his unfair and
clandestine dealings, and as far as possible to lay bare in my argument the lurking
mischief. But now that he has stripped his falsehood of every mask that could
disguise it, and publishes his profanity aloud in categorical terms, I think it
superfluous to undergo useless labour in bringing logical modes of confutation to
bear upon those who make no secret of their impiety. For what further means
could we discover to demonstrate their malignity so efficacious as that which they
themselves show us in their writings ready to our hand? He says that the
Father alone is worthy of the title of "good," that to Him alone such a name is due,
on the plea that even the Son Himself agrees that goodness belongs to Him
alone. Our accuser has pleaded our cause. for us: for perhaps in my former
statements I was thought by my readers to show a certain wanton insolence when I
endeavoured to demonstrate that the fighters against Christ made Him out to be alien
from the goodness of the Father. But I think it has now been proved by the
confession of our opponents that in bringing such a charge against them we were not
acting unfairly. For he who says that the title of "good" belongs of right to
the Father only, and that such an address befits Him alone, publishes abroad,
by thus disclosing his real meaning, the villainy which he had previously
wrapped up in disguise. He says that the title of "good" befits the Father only. Does
he mean the title with the signification which belongs to the expression, or
the title detached from its proper meaning? If on the one side he merely
ascribes to the Father the title of "good" in a special sense, he is to be pitied for
his irrationality in allowing to the Father merely the sound of an empty name.
But if he thinks that the conception expressed by the term "good" belongs to
God the Father only, he is to be abominated for his impiety, reviving as he does
the plague of the Manichaean heresy in his own opinions. For as health and
disease, even so goodness and badness exist on terms of mutual destruction, so that
the absence of the one is the presence of the other. If then he says that
goodness belongs to the Father only, he cuts off these from every conceivable
object in existence except the Father, so that, along with all, the Only-begotten
God is shut out from good. For as he who affirms that man alone is capable of
laughter implies thereby that no other animal shares this property, so he who
asserts that good is in the Father alone separates all things from that property.
If then, as Eunomius declares, the Father alone has by right the title of
"good," such a term will not be properly applied to anything else. But every impulse
of the will either operates in accordance with good, or tends to the contrary.
For to be inclined neither one way nor the other, but to remain in a state of
equipoise, is the property of creatures inanimate or insensible. If the Father
alone is good, having goodness not as a thing acquired, but in His nature, and
if the Son, as heresy will have it, does not share in the nature of the Father,
then he who does not share the good essence of the Father is of course at the
same time excluded also from part and lot in the title of "good." But he who has
no claim either to the nature or to the name of "good"--what he is assuredly
not unknown, even though I forbear the blasphemous expression. For it is plain
to all that the object for which Eunomius is so eager is to import into the
conception of the Son a suspicion of that which is evil and opposite to good. For
what kind of name belongs to him who is not good is manifest to every one who
has a share of reason. As he who is not brave is cowardly, as he who is not just
is unjust, and as he who is not wise is foolish, so he who is not good clearly
has as his own the opposite name, and it is to this that the enemy of Christ
wishes to press the conception of the Only-begotten, becoming thereby to the
Church another Manes or Bardesanes. These are the sayings in regard of which we say
that our utterance would be no more effective than silence. For were one to
say countless things, and to arouse all possible arguments, one could not say
anything so damaging of our opponents as what is openly and undisguisedly
proclaimed by themselves. For what more bitter charge could one invent against them for
malice than that of denying that He is good "Who, being in the form of God,
thought it not robbery to be equal with God(2)," but yet condescended to the low
estate of human nature, and did so solely for the love of man? In return for
what, tell me, "do ye thus requite the Lord(3)?" (for I will borrow the language
of Moses to the Israelites); is He not good, Who when thou wast soulless dust
invested thee with Godlike beauty, and raised thee up as an image of His own
power endowed with soul? Is He not good, Who for thy sake took on Him the form of
a servant, and for the joy set before Him(4) did not shrink from bearing the
sufferings due to thy sin, and gave Himself a ransom for thy death, and became
for our sakes a curse and sin?
- He also ingeniously shows from the passage of the Gospel which speaks of
"Good Master," from the parable of the Vineyard, from Isaiah and from Paul, that
there is not a dualism in the Godhead of good and evil, as Eunomius' ally
Marcion supposes, and declares that the Son does not refuse the title of "good" or
"Existent," or acknowledge His alienation from the Father, but that to Him also
belongs authority over all things that came into being.
Not even Marcion himself, the patron of your opinions, supports you in
this. It is true that in common with you he holds a dualism of gods, and thinks
that one is different in nature from the other, but it is the more courteous view
to attribute goodness to the God of the Gospel. You however actually separate
the Only begotten God from the nature of good, that you may surpass even
Marcion in the depravity of your doctrines. However, they claim the Scripture on
their side, and say that they are hardly treated when they are accused for using
the very words of Scripture. For they say that the Lord Himself has said, "There
is none good but one, that is, Gods." Accordingly, that misrepresentation may
not prevail against the Divine words, we will briefly examine the actual passage
in the Gospel. The history regards the rich man to whom the Lord spoke this
word as young--the kind of person, I suppose, inclined to enjoy the pleasures of
this life--and attached to his possessions; for it says that he was grieved at
the advice to part with what he had, and that he did not choose to exchange
his property for life eternal. This man, when he heard that a teacher of eternal
life was in the neighbourhood, came to him in the expectation of living in
perpetual luxury, with life indefinitely extended, flattering the Lord with the
title of "good,"--flattering, I should rather say, not the Lord as we conceive
Him, but as He then appeared in the form of a servant. For his character was not
such as to enable him to penetrate the outward veil of flesh, and see through
it into the inner shrine of Deity. The Lord, then, Who seeth the hearts,
discerned the motive with which the young man approached Him as a suppliant,--that he
did so, not with a soul intently fixed upon the Divine, but that it was the man
whom he besought, calling Him "Good Master," because he hoped to learn from
Him some lore by which the approach of death might be hindered. Accordingly, with
good reason did He Who was thus besought by him answer even as He was
addressed(6). For as the entreaty was not addressed to God the Word, so correspondingly
the answer was delivered to the applicant by the Humanity of Christ, thereby
impressing on the youth a double lesson. For He teaches him, by one and the same
answer, both the duty of reverencing and paying homage to the Divinity, not by
flattering speeches but by his life, by keeping the commandments and buying
life eternal at the cost of all possessions, and also the truth that humanity,
having been sunk in depravity by reason of sin, is debarred from the title of
"Good": and for this reason He says, "Why callest Thou Me good?" suggesting in His
answer by the word "Me" that human nature which encompassed Him, while by
attributing goodness to the Godhead He expressly declared Himself to be good,
seeing that He is proclaimed to be God by the Gospel. For had the Only-begotten Son
been excluded from the title of God, it would perhaps not have been absurd to
think Him alien also from the appellation of "good." But if, as is the case,
prophets, evangelists, and Apostles proclaim aloud the Godhead of the
Only-begotten, and if the name of goodness is attested by the Lord Himself to belong to
God, how is it possible that He Who is partaker of the Godhead should not be
partaker of the goodness too? For that both prophets, evangelists, disciples and
apostles acknowledge the Lord as God, there is none so uninitiated in Divine
mysteries as to need to be expressly told. For who knows not that in the
forty-fourth(7) Psalm the prophet in his word affirms the Christ to be God, anointed by
God? And again, who of all that are conversant with prophecy is unaware that
Isaiah, among other passages, thus openly proclaims the Godhead of the Son, where
he says: "The Sabeans, men of stature, shall come over unto thee, and shall be
servants unto thee: they shall come after thee bound in fetters, and in thee
shall they make supplication, because God is in thee, and there is no God beside
thee; for thou art God(8)." For what other God there is Who has God in Himself,
and is Himself God, except the Only-begotten, let them say who hearken not to
the prophecy; but of the interpretation of Emmanuel, and the confession of
Thomas after his recognition of the Lord, and the sublime diction of John, as being
manifest even to those who are outside the faith, I will say nothing. Nay, I do
not even think it necessary to bring forward in detail the utterances of Paul,
since they are, as one may say, in all men's mouths, who gives the Lord the
appellation not only of "God," but of "great God" and "God over all," saying to
the Romans, "Whose are the fathers, and of whom, as concerning the flesh, Christ
came, Who is over all, God blessed for ever(9)," and writing to his disciple
Titus, "According to the appearing of Jesus Christ the great God and our
Saviour(1)," and to Timothy, proclaims in plain terms, "God was manifest in the flesh,
justified in the spirit(2)." Since then the fact has been demonstrated on
every side that the Only-begotten God is God(3), how is it that he who says that
goodness belongs to God, strives to show that the Godhead of the Son is alien
from this ascription, and this though the Lord has actually claimed for Himself
the epithet "good" in the parable of those who were hired into the vineyard? For
there, when those who had laboured before the others were dissatisfied at all
receiving the same pay, and deemed the good fortune of the last to be their own
loss, the just judge says to one of the murmurers(4), "Friend, I do thee no
wrong: did I not agree with thee for a penny a day? Lo, there thou hast that is
thine(5): I will bestow upon this last even as upon thee. Have I not power to do
what I will with mine own? Is thine eye evil because I am good?" Of course no
one will contest the point that to distribute recompense according to desert is
the special function of the judge; and all the disciples of the Gospel agree
that the Only-begotten God is Judge; "for the Father," He saith, "judgeth no man,
but hath committed all judgment unto the Son(6)." But they do not set
themselves in opposition(7) to the Scriptures. For they say that the word "one"
absolutely points to the Father. For He saith, "There is none good but one, that is
God." Will truth then lack vigour to plead her own cause? Surely there are many
means easily to convict of deception this quibble also. For He Who said this
concerning the Father spake also to the Father that other word, "All Mine are
Thine, and Thine are Mine, and I am glorified in them(8)." Now if He says that all
that is the Father's is also the Son's, and goodness is one of the attributes
pertaining to the Father, either the Son has not all things if He has not this,
and they will be saying that the Truth lies, or if it is impious to suspect the
very Truth of being carried away into falsehood, then He Who claimed all that
is the Father's as His own, thereby asserted that He was not outside of
goodness. For He Who has the Father in Himself, and contains all things that belong to
the Father, manifestly has His goodness with "all things." Therefore the Son
is Good. But "there is none good," he says, "but one, that is God." This is what
is alleged by our adversaries: nor do I myself reject the statement. I do not,
however, for this cause deny the Godhead of the Son. But he who confesses that
the Lord is God, by that very confession assuredly also asserts of Him
goodness. For if goodness is a property of God, and if the Lord is God, then by our
premises the Son is shown to be God. "But," says our opponent, "the word 'one'
excludes the Son from participation in goodness." It is easy, however, to show
that not even the word "one" separates the Father from the Son. For in all other
cases, it is true, the term "one" carries with it the signification of not
being coupled with anything else, but in the case of the Father and the Son "one"
does not imply isolation. For He says, "I and the Father are one(9)." If, then,
the good is one, and a particular kind of unity is contemplated in the Father
and the Son, it follows that the Lord, in predicating goodness of "one,"
claimed under the term "one" the title of "good" also for Himself, Who is one with
the Father, and not severed from oneness of nature.
- He then exposes the ignorance of Eunomius, and the incoherence and absurdity
of his arguments, in speaking of the Son as "the Angel of the Existent," and as
being as much below the Divine Nature as the Son is superior to the things
created by Himself. And in this connection there is a noble and forcible
counter-statement and an indignant refutation, showing that He Who gave the oracles to
Moses is Himself the Existent, the Only-begotten Son, Who to the petition of
Moses, "If Thou Thyself goest not with us, carry me not up hence," said, "I will
do this also that thou hast said"; Who is also called "Angel" beth by Moses and
Isaiah: wherein is cited the text, "Unto us a Child is born."
But that the research and culture of our imposing author may be completely
disclosed, we will consider sentence by sentence his presentment of his
sentiments. "The Son," he says, "does not appropriate the dignity of the Existent,"
giving the name of "dignity" to the actual fact of being:--(with what propriety
he knows how to adapt words to things!)--and since He is "by reason of the
Father," he says that He is alienated from Himself on the ground that the essence
which is supreme over Him attracts to itself the conception of the Existent.
This is much the same as if one were to say that he who is bought for money, in so
far as he is in his own existence, is not the person bought, but the
purchaser, inasmuch as his essential personal existence is absorbed into the nature of
him who has acquired authority over him. Such are the lofty conceptions of our
divine: but what is the demonstration of his statements? .... "the
Only-begotten," he says, "Himself ascribing to the Father the title due of right to Him
alone," and then he introduces the point that the Father alone is good. Where in
this does the Son disclaim the title of "Existent"? Yet this is what Eunomius is
driving at when he goes on word for word as follows:--"For He Who has taught us
that the appellation 'good' belongs to Him alone Who is the cause of His own
goodness and of all goodness, and is so at all times, and Who refers to Him all
good that has ever come into being, would be slow to appropriate to Himself the
authority over all things that have come into being, and the title of 'the
Existent."' What has "authority" to do with the context? and how along with this
is the Son also alienated from the title of "Existent"? But really I do not know
what one ought rather to do at this,--to laugh at the want of education, or to
pity the pernicious folly which it displays. For the expression, "His own,"
not employed according to the natural meaning, and as those who know how to use
language are wont to use it, attests his extensive knowledge of the grammar of
pronouns, which even little boys get up with their masters without trouble, and
his ridiculous wandering from the subject to what has nothing to do either with
his argument or with the form of that argument, considered as syllogistic,
namely, that the Son has no share in the appellation of "Existent"--an assertion
adapted to his monstrous inventions(1),--this and similar absurdities seem
combined together for the purpose of provoking laughter; so that it may be that
readers of the more careless sort experience some such inclination, and are amused
by the disjointedness of his arguments. But that God the Word should not exist,
or that He at all events should not be good (and this is what Eunomius
maintains when he says that He does not "appropriate the title" of "Existent" and
"good"), and to make out that the authority over all things that come into being
does not belong to him,--this calls for our tears, and for a wail of mourning.
For it is not as if he had but let fall something of the kind just once
under some headlong and inconsiderate impulse, and in what followed had striven
to retrieve his error: no, he dailies lingeringly with the malignity, striving
in his later statements to surpass what had gone before. For as he proceeds, he
says that the Son is the same distance below the Divine Nature as the nature of
angels is subjected below His own, not indeed saying this in so many words,
but endeavouring by what he does say to produce such an impression. The reader
may judge for himself the meaning of his words: they run as follows,--"Who, by
being called 'Angel,' clearly showed by Whom He published His words, and Who is
the Existent, while by being addressed also as God, He showed His superiority
over all things. For He Who is the God of all things that were made by Him, is
the Angel of the God over all." Indignation rushes into my heart and interrupts
my discourse, and under this emotion arguments are lost in a turmoil of anger
roused by words like these. And perhaps I may be pardoned for feeling such
emotion. For whose resentment would not be stirred within him at such profanity, when
he remembers how the Apostle proclaims that every angelic nature is subject to
the Lord, and in witness of his doctrine invokes the sublime utterances of the
prophets:--"When He bringeth the first-begotten into the world, He saith, And
let all the angels of God worship Him," and, "Thy throne, O God, is for ever
and ever," and, "Thou art the same, and Thy years shall not fail(2)"? When the
Apostle has gone through all this argument to demonstrate the unapproachable
majesty of the Only-begotten God, what must I feel when I hear from the adversary
of Christ that the Lord of Angels is Himself only an Angel,--and when he does
not let such a statement fall by chance, but puts forth his strength to maintain
this monstrous invention, so that it may be established that his Lord has no
superiority over John and Moses? For the word says concerning them, "This is he
of whom it is written, 'Behold I send my angel before thy face(3).'" John
therefore is an angel. But the enemy of the Lord, even though he grants his. Lord the
name of God, yet makes Him out to be on a level with the deity of Moses, since
he too was a servant of the God over all, and was constituted a god to the
Egyptians(4). And yet this phrase, "over all," as has been previously observed, is
common to the Son with the Father, the Apostle having expressly ascribed such
a title to Him, when he says, "Of whom, as concerning the flesh, Christ came,
Who is God over all(5)." But this man degrades the Lord of angels to the rank of
an angel, as though he had not heard that the angels are "ministering
spirits," and "a flame of fire(6)." For by the use of these distinctive terms does the
Apostle make the difference between the several subjects clear and
unmistakable, defining the subordinate nature to be "spirits" and "fire," and
distinguishing the supreme power by the name of Godhead. And yet, though there are so many
that proclaim the glory of the Only-begotten God, against them all Eunomius
lifts up his single voice, calling the Christ "an angel of the God over all,"
defining Him, by thus contrasting Him with the "God over all," to be one of the "all
things," and, by giving Him the same name as the angels, trying to establish
that He no wise differs from them in nature: for he has often previously said
that all those things which share the same name cannot be different in nature.
Does the argument, then, still lack its censors, as it concerns a man who
proclaims in so many words that the "Angel" does not publish His own word, but that of
the Existent? For it is by this means that he tries to show that the Word Who
was in the beginning, the Word Who was God, is not Himself the Word, but is
the Word of some other Word, being its minister and "angel." And who knows not
that the only opposite to the "Existent" is the nonexistent? so that he who
contrasts the Son with the Existent, is clearly playing the Jew, robbing the
Christian doctrine of the Person of the Only-begotten. For in saying that He is
excluded from the title of the "Existent," he is assuredly trying to establish also
that He is outside the pale of existence: for surely if he grants Him existence,
he will not quarrel about the sound of the word.
But he strives to prop up his absurdity by the testimony of Scripture, and
puts forth Moses as his advocate against the truth. For as though that were
the source from which he drew his arguments, he freely sets forth to us his own
fables, saying, "He Who sent Moses was the Existent Himself, but He by Whom He
sent and spake was the Angel of the Existent, and the God of all else." That his
statement, however, is not drawn from Scripture, may be conclusively proved by
Scripture itself. But if he says that this is the sense of what is written, we
must examine the original language of Scripture. Moreover let us first notice
that Eunomius, after calling the Lord God of all things after Him, allows Him
no superiority in comparison with the angelic nature. For neither did Moses,
when he heard that he was made a god to Pharaoh(4), pass beyond the bounds of
humanity, but while in nature he was on an equality with his fellows, he was raised
above them by superiority of authority, and his being called a god did not
hinder him from being man. So too in this case Eunomius, while making out the Son
to be one of the angels, salves over such an error by the appellation of
Godhead, in the manner expressed, allowing Him the title of God in some equivocal
sense. Let us once more set down and examine the very words in which he delivers
his blasphemy. "He Who sent Moses was the Existent Himself, but He by Whom He
sent was the Angel of the Existent"--this, namely "Angel," being the title he
gives his Lord. Well, the absurdity of our author is refuted by the Scripture
itself, in the passage where Moses beseeches the Lord not to entrust an angel with
the leadership of the people, but Himself to conduct their march. The passage
runs thus: God is speaking, "Go, get thee down, guide this people unto the place
of which I have spoken unto thee: behold Mine Angel shall go before thee in
the day when I visit(7)." And a little while after He says again, "And I will
send Mine Angel before thee(8)." Then, a little after what immediately follows,
comes the supplication to God on the part of His servant, running on this wise,
"If I have found grace in Thy sight, let my Lord go among us(9)," and again, "If
Thou Thyself go not with us, carry me not up hence(1)"; and then the answer of
God to Moses, "I will do for thee this thing also that thou hast spoken for
thou hast found grace in My sight, and I know thee above all men(2)."
Accordingly, if Moses begs that the people may not be led by an angel, and if He Who was
discoursing with him consents to become his fellow-traveller and the guide of
the army, it is hereby manifestly shown that He Who made Himself known by the
title of "the Existent" is the Only-begotten God.
If any one gainsays this, he will show himself to be a supporter of the
Jewish persuasion in not associating the Son with the deliverance of the people.
For if, on the one hand, it was not an angel that went forth with the people,
and if, on the other, as Eunomius would have it, He Who was manifested by the
name of the Existent is not the Only-begotten, this amounts to nothing less than
transferring the doctrines of the synagogue to the Church of God. Accordingly,
of the two alternatives they must needs admit one, namely, either that the
Only-begotten God on no occasion appeared to Moses, or that the Son is Himself the
"Existent," from Whom the word came to His servant. But he contradicts what has
been said above, alleging the Scripture itself(3) which informs us that the
voice of an angel was interposed, and that it was thus that the discourse of the
Existent was conveyed. This, however, is no contradiction, but a confirmation
of our view. For we too say plainly, that the prophet, wishing to make manifest
to men the mystery concerning Christ, called the Self-Existent "Angel," that
the meaning of the words might not be referred to the Father, as it would have
been if the title of "Existent" alone had been found throughout the discourse.
But just as our word is the revealer and messenger (or "angel") of the movements
of the mind, even so we affirm that the true Word that was in the beginning,
when He announces the will of His own Father, is styled "Angel" (or "Messenger"),
a title given to Him on account of the operation of conveying the message. And
as the sublime John, having previously called Him "Word," so introduces the
further truth that the Word was God, that our thoughts might not at once turn to
the Father, as they would have done if the title of God had been put first, so
too does the mighty Moses, after first calling Him "Angel," teach us in the
words that follow that He is none other than the Self-Existent Himself, that the
mystery concerning the Christ might be fore-shown, by the Scripture assuring us
by the name "Angel," that the Word is the interpreter of the Father's will,
and, by the title of the "Self-Existent," of the closeness of relation subsisting
between the Son and the Father. And if he should bring forward Isaiah also as
calling Him "the Angel of mighty counsel(4)," not even so will be overthrow our
argument. For there, in dear and uncontrovertible terms, there is indicated by
the prophecy the dispensation of His Humanity; for "unto us," he says, "a Child
is born, unto us a Son is given, and the government shall be upon His
shoulder, and His name is called the Angel of mighty counsel." And it is with an eye to
this, I suppose, that David describes the establishment of His kingdom, not as
though He were not a King, but in the view that the humiliation to the estate
of a servant to which the Lord submitted by way of dispensation, was taken up
and absorbed into the majesty of His Kingdom. For he says, "I was established
King by Him on His holy hill of Sion, declaring the ordinance of the Lord.(5)
Accordingly, He Who through Himself reveals the goodness of the Father is called
"Angel" and "Word," "Seal" and "Image," and all similar titles with the same
intention. For as the "Angel" (or "Messenger") gives information from some one,
even so the Word reveals the thought within, the Seal shows by Its own stamp the
original mould, and the Image by Itself interprets the beauty of that whereof
It is the image, so that in their signification all these terms are equivalent
to one another. For this reason the title "Angel" is placed before that of the
"Self-Existent," the Son being termed "Angel" as the exponent of His Father's
will, and the "Existent" as having no name that could possibly give a knowledge
of His essence, but transcending all the power of names to express. Wherefore
also His name is testified by the writing of the Apostle to be "above every
name(6)," not as though it were some one name preferred above all others, though
still compar-able with them, but rather in the sense that He Who verily is above
every name.
- After this, fearing to extend his reply to great length, he passes by most of
his adversary's statements as already refuted. But the remainder, for the sake
of those who deem them of much force, he briefly summarizes, and refutes the
blasphemy of Eunomius, who says of the Lord also that He is what animals and
plants in all creation are, non-existent before their own generation; and so with
the production of frogs; alas for the blasphemy!
But I must hasten on, for I see that my treatise has already extended
beyond bounds and I fear that I may be thought garrulous and inordinate in my talk,
if I prolong my answer to excess, although I have intentionally passed by many
parts of my adversary's treatise, that my argument might not be spun out to
many myriads of words. For to the more studious even the want of conciseness
gives an occasion for disparagement; but as for those whose mind looks not to what
is of use, but to the fancy of those who are idle and not in earnest, their
wish and prayer is to get over as much of the journey as they can in a few steps.
What then ought we to do when Eunomius' profanity draws us on? Are we to track
his every turn? or is it perhaps superfluous and merely garrulous to spend our
energies over and over again on similar encounters? For all their argument that
follows is in accordance with what we have already investigated, and presents
no fresh point in addition to what has gone before. If then we have succeeded
in completely overthrowing his previous statements, the remainder fall along
with them. But in case the contentious and obstinate should think that the
strongest part of their case is in what I have omitted, for this reason it may perhaps
be necessary to touch briefly upon what remains.
He says that the Lord did not exist before His own generation--he who
cannot prove that He was in anything separated from the Father. And this he says,
not quoting any Scripture as a warrant for his assertion, but maintaining his
proposition by arguments of his own. But this characteristic has been shown to be
common to all parts of the creation. Not a frog, not a worm, not a beetle, not
a blade of grass, nor any other of the most insignificant objects, existed
before its own formation: so that what by aid of his dialectic skill he tries
with great labour and pains to establish to be the case with the Son, has
previously been acknowleged to be true of any chance portions of the creation, and our
author's mighty labour is to show that the Only-begotten God, by participation
of attributes, is on a level with the lowest of created things. Accordingly the
fact of the coincidence of their opinions concerning the Only-begotten God,
and their view of the mode in which frogs come into being, is a sufficient
indication of their doctrinal pravity. Next he urges that not to be before His
generation, is equivalent in fact and meaning to not being ungenerate. Once more the
same argument will fit my hand in dealing with this too,--that a man would not
be wrong in saying the same thing of a dog, or a flea, or a snake, or any one
you please of the meanest creatures, since for a dog not to exist before his
generation is equivalent in fact and meaning to his not being ungenerate. But if,
in accord with the definition they have so often laid down, all things that
share in attributes share also in nature, and if it is an attribute of the dog,
and of the rest severally, not to exist before generation, which is what
Eunomius thinks fit to maintain also of the Son, the reader will by logical process
see for himself the contusion of this demonstration.
- (7)Eunomius again speaks of the Son as Lord and God, and Maker of all
creation intelligible and sensible, having received from the Father the power and the
commission, for creation, being entrusted with the task of creation as if He
were an artizan commissioned by some one hiring Him, and receiving His power of
creation as a thing adventitious, ab extra, as a result of the power allotted to
Him in accordance with such and such combinations and positions of the stars,
as destiny decrees their lot in life to men at their nativity. Thus, passing by
most of what Eunomius had written, he confutes his blasphemy that the Maker
all things came into being in like manner with the earth and with angels, and
that the subsistence of the Only-begotten differs not at all front the genesis of
all things, and reproaches him with reverencing neither the Divine mystery nor
the custom of the Church, nor following in his attempt to discover godliness
any teacher of pious doctrine, but Manichaeus, Colluthus, Arius, Aetius, and
those like to them, supposing that Christianity in general is folly, and that the
customs of the Church and the venerable sacraments are a jest, wherein he
differs in nothing from the pagans, who borrowed from our doctrine the idea of a
great God supreme over all. So, too, this new idolater preaches in the same
fashion, and in particular that baptism is "into an artificer and creator," not
fearing the curse of those who cause addition or diminution to the Holy Scriptures.
And he closes his book with showing him to be Antichrist.
Afterwards, however, he gives his discourse a more moderate turn,
imparting to it even a touch of gentleness, and, though he had but a little earlier
partitioned off the Son from the title of Existent, he now says,--"We affirm that
the Son is not only existent, and above all existent things, but we also call
Him Lord and God, the Maker of every being(8), sensible and intelligible." What
does he suppose this "being" to be? created? or uncreated? For if he confesses
Jesus to be Lord, God, and Maker of all intelligible being, it necessarily
follows, if he says it is uncreated, that he speaks falsely, ascribing to the Son
the making of the uncreated Nature. But if he believes it to be created, he
makes Him His own Maker. For if the act of creation be not separated from
intelligible nature in favour of Him Who is independent and uncreated, there will no
longer remain any mark of distinction, as the sensible creation and the
intelligible being will be thought of under one head(9). But here he brings in the
assertion that "in the creation of existent things He has been entrusted by the
Father with the construction of all things visible and invisible, and with the
providential care over all that comes into being, inasmuch as the power allotted to
Him from above is sufficient for the production of those things which have been
constructed(1)." The vast length to which our treatise has run compels us to
pass over these assertions briefly but, in a sense, profanity surrounds the
argument, containing a vast swarm of notions like venomous wasps. "He was
entrusted," he says, "with the construction of things by the Father." But if he had been
talking about some artizan executing his work at the pleasure of his employer,
would he not have used the same language? For we are not wrong in saying just
the same of Bezaleel, that being entrusted by Moses with the building of the
tabernacle, he became the constructor of those things there(2) mentioned, and
would not have taken the work in hand had he not previously acquired his knowledge
by Divine inspiration, and ventured upon the undertaking on Moses' entrusting
him with its execution. Accordingly the term "entrusted" suggests that His
office and power in creation came to Him as something adventitious, in the sense
that before He was entrusted with that commission He had neither the will nor the
power to act, but when He received authority to execute the works, and power
sufficient for the works, then He became the artificer of things that are, the
power allotted to Him from on high being, as Eunomius says, sufficient for the
purpose. Does he then place even the generation of the Son, by some astrological
juggling(3), under some destiny, just as they who practise this vain deceit
affirm that the appointment of their lot in life comes to men at the time of
their birth, by such and such conjunctions or oppositions of the stars, as the
rotation above moves on in a kind of ordered train, assigning to those who are
coming into being their special faculties? It may be that something of this kind is
in the mind of our sage, and he says that to Him that is above all rule, and
authority, and dominion, and above every name that is named, not only in this
world, but also in that which is to come, there has been allotted, as though He
were pent in some hollow spaces, power from on high, measured out in accordance
with the quantity of things which come into being. I will pass over this part
of his treatise also summarily, letting fall from a slight commencement of
investigation, for the more intelligent sort of readers, seeds to enable them to
discern his profanity. Moreover, in what follows, there is ready written a kind of
apology for ourselves. For we cannot any longer be thought to be missing the
intention of his discourse, and misinterpreting his words to render them subject
to criticism, when his own voice acknowledges the absurdity of his doctrine.
His words stand as follows:--"What? did not earth and angel come into being,
when before they were not?" See how our lofty theologian is not ashamed to apply
the same description to earth and angels and to the Maker of all! Surely if he
thinks it fit to predicate the same of earth and its Lord, he must either make a
god of the one, or degrade the other to a level with it.
Then he adds to this something by which his profanity is yet more
completely stripped of all disguise, so that its absurdity is obvious even to a child.
For he says,--"It would be a long task to detail all the modes of generation of
intelligible objects, or the essences which do not all possess the nature of
the Existent in common, but display variations according to the operations of
Him Who constructed them." Without any words of ours, the blasphemy against the
Son which is here contained is glaring and conspicuous, when he acknowledges
that which is predicated of every mode of generation and essence in nowise differs
from the description of the Divine subsistence(4) of the Only-begotten. But it
seems to me best to pass over the intermediate passages in which he seeks to
maintain his profanity, and to hasten to the head and front of the accusation
which we have to bring against his doctrines. For he will be found to exhibit the
sacrament of regeneration as an idle thing, the mystic oblation as profitless,
and the participation in them as of no advantage to those who are partakers
therein. For after those high-wrought aeons(5) in which, by way of disparagement
of our doctrine, he names as its supporters a Valentinus, a Cerinthus, a
Basilides, a Montanus, and a Marcion, and after laying it down that those who affirm
that the Divine nature is unknowable, and the mode of His generation
unknowable, have no right or title whatever to the name of Christians, and after
reckoning us among those whom he thus disparages, he proceeds to develop his own view
in these terms:--"But we, in agreement with holy and blessed men; affirm that
the mystery of godliness does not consist in venerable names, nor in the
distinctive character of customs and sacramental tokens, but in exactness of doctrine."
That when he wrote this, he did so not under the guidance of evangelists,
apostles, or any of the authors of the Old Testament, is plain to every one who has
any acquaintance with the sacred and Divine Scripture. We should naturally be
led to suppose that by "holy and blessed men" he meant Manichaeus, Nicolaus,
Colluthus, Aetius, Arius, and the rest of the same band, with whom he is in
strict accord in laying down this principle, that neither the confession of sacred
names, nor the customs of the Church, nor her sacramental tokens, are a
ratification of godliness. But we, having learnt from the holy voice of Christ that
"except a man be born again of water and of the Spirit he shall not enter into the
kingdom of God 6," and that "He that eateth My flesh and drinketh My blood,
shall live for ever(7)," are persuaded that the mystery of godliness is ratified
by the confession of the Divine Names--the Names of the Father, the Son, and
the Holy Ghost, and that our salvation is confirmed by participation in the
sacramental customs and tokens. But doctrines have often been carefully investigated
by those who have had no part or lot in that mystery, and one may hear many
such putting forward the faith we hold as a subject for themselves in the rivalry
of debate, and some of them often even succeeding in hitting the truth, and
for all that none the less estranged from the faith. Since, then, he despises the
revered Names, by which the power of the more Divine birth distributes grace
to them who come for it in faith, and slights the fellowship of the sacramental
customs and tokens from which the Christian profession draws its vigour, let
us, with a slight variation, utter to those who listen to his deceit the word of
the prophet:--"How long will ye be slow of heart? Why do ye love destruction
and seek after leasing(8)?" How is it that ye do not see the persecutor of the
faith inviting those who consent unto him to violate their Christian profession?
For if the confession of the revered and precious Names of the Holy Trinity is
useless, and the customs of the Church unprofitable, and if among these customs
is the sign of the cross(9), prayer, baptism, confession of sins, a ready zeal
to keep the commandment, right ordering of character, sobriety of life, regard
to justice, the effort not to be excited by passion, or enslaved by pleasure,
or to fall short in moral excellence,--if he says that none of such habits as
these is cultivated to any good purpose, and that the sacramental tokens do not,
as we have believed, secure spiritual blessings, and avert from believers the
assaults directed against them by the wiles of the evil one, what else does he
do but openly proclaim aloud to men that he deems the mystery which Christians
cherish a fable, laughs at the majesty of the Divine Names, considers the
customs of the Church a jest, and all sacramental operations idle prattle and folly?
What beyond this do they who remain attached to paganism bring forward in
disparagement of our creed? Do not they too make the majesty of the sacred Names,
in which the faith is ratified, an occasion of laughter? Do not they deride the
sacramental tokens and the customs which are observed by the initiated? And of
whom is it so much a distinguishing peculiarity as of the pagans, to think that
piety should consist in doctrines only? since they also say that according to
their view, there is something more persuasive than the Gospel which we preach,
and some of them hold that there is some one great God pre-eminent above the
rest, and acknowledge some subject powers, differing among themselves in the way
of superiority or inferiority, in some regular order and sequence, but all
alike subject to the Supreme. This, then, is what the teachers of the new
idolatry preach, and they who follow them have no dread of the condemnation that
abideth on transgressors, as though they did not understand that actually to do some
improper thing is far more grievous than to err in word alone. They, then, who
in act deny the faith, and slight the confession of the sacred Names, and
judge the sanctification effected by the sacramental tokens to be worthless, and
have been persuaded to have regard to cunningly devised fables, and to fancy that
their salvation consists in quibbles about the generate and the
ungenerate,--what else are they than transgressors of the doctrines of salvation?
But if any one thinks that these charges are brought against them by us
ungenerously and unfairly, let him consider independently our author's writings,
both what we have previously alleged, and what is inferred in logical
connection with our citations. For in direct contravention of the law of the Lord--(for
the deliverance to us of the means of initiation constitutes a law),--he says
that baptism is not into the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, as Christ
commanded His disciples when He delivered to them the mystery, but into an
artificer and creator, and "not only Father," he says, "of the Only-begotten, but also
His God(1)." Woe unto him who gives his neighbour to drink turbid mischief(2)!
How does, he trouble and befoul the truth by flinging his mud into it! How is
it that he feels no fear of the curse that rests upon those who add aught to
the Divine utterance, or dare to take aught away? Let us read the declaration of
the Lord in His very words--"Go," He says, "teach all nations, baptizing them
in the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost." Where did He
call the Son a creature? Where did the Word teach that the Father is creator
and artificer of the Only-begotten? Where in the words cited is it taught that
the Son is a servant of God? Where in the delivery of the mystery is the God of
the Son proclaimed? Do ye not perceive and understand, ye who are dragged by
guile to perdition, what sort of guide ye have put in charge of your souls,--one
who interpolates the Holy Scriptures, who garbles the Divine utterances, who
with his own mud befouls the purity of the doctrines of godliness, who not only
arms his own tongue against us, but also attempts to tamper with the sacred
voices of truth, who is eager to invest his own perversion with more authority than
the teaching of the Lord? Do ye not perceive that he stirs himself up against
the Name at which all must bow, so that in time the Name of the Lord shall be
heard no more, and instead of Christ Eunomius shall be brought into the Churches?
Do ye not yet consider that this preaching of godlessness has been set on foot
by the devil as a rehearsal, preparation, and prelude of the coming of
Antichrist? For he who is ambitious of showing that his own words are more
authoritative than those of Christ, and of transforming the faith from the Divine Names
and the sacramental customs and tokens to his own deceit,--what else, I say,
could he properly be called, but only Antichrist?