THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF GREGORY OF NYSSA, BOOK XII
BOOK XII
- This twelfth book gives a notable interpretation of the words of the Lord to
Mary, "Touch Me not, for I am not yet ascended to My Father."
BUT let us see what is the next addition that follows upon this profanity,
an addition which is in fact the key of their defence of their doctrine. For
those who would degrade the majesty of the glory of the Only-begotten to slavish
and grovelling conceptions think that they find the strongest proof of their
assertions in the words of the Lord to Mary, which He uttered after His
resurrection, and before His ascension into heaven, saying, "Touch Me not, for I am not
yet ascended to My Father: but go to My brethren and say unto them, I ascend
unto My Father and your Father, and to My God and your God(1)." The orthodox
interpretation of these words, the sense in which we have been accustomed to
believe that they were spoken to Mary, is I think manifest to all who have received
the faith in truth. Still the dis-cussion of this point shall be given by us in
its proper place; but meantime it is worth while to inquire from those who
allege against us such phrases as "ascending," "being seen," "being recognized by
touch," and moreover "being associated with men by brotherhood," whether they
consider them to be proper to the Divine or to the Human Nature. For if they see
in the Godhead the capacity of being seen and touched, of being supported by
meat and drink, kinship and brotherhood with men, and all the attributes of
corporeal nature, then let them predicate of the Only-begotten God both these and
whatsoever else they will, as motive energy and local change, which are peculiar
to things circumscribed by a body. But if He by Mary is discoursing with His
brethren, and if the Only-begotten has no brethren, (for how, if He had
brethren, could the property of being Only-begotten be preserved?) and if the same
Person Who said, "God is a Spirit(2)," says to His disciples, "Handle Me(3)," that
He may show that while the Human Nature is capable of being handled the
Divinity is intangible, and if He Who says, "I go," indicates local change, while He
who contains all things, "in Whom," as the Apostle says, "all things were
created, and in Whom all things consist(4)," has nothing in existent things external
to Himself to which removal could take place by any kind of motion, (for motion
cannot otherwise be effected than by that which is removed leaving the place
in which it is, and occupying another place instead, while that which extends
through all, and is in all, and controls all, and is confined by no existent
thing, has no place to which to pass, inasmuch as nothing is void of the Divine
fulness,) how can these men abandon the belief that such expressions arise from
that which is apparent, and apply them to that Nature which is Divine and which
surpasseth all understanding, when the Apostle has in his speech to the
Athenians plainly forbidden us to imagine any such thing of God, inasmuch as the Divine
power is not discoverable by touch(5), but by intelligent contemplation and
faith? Or, again, whom does He Who did eat before the eyes of His disciples, and
promised to go before them into Galilee and there be seen of them,--whom does
He reveal Him to be Who should so appear to them? God, Whom no man hath seen or
can see(6)? or the bodily image, that is, the form of a servant in which God
was? If then what has been said plainly proves that the meaning of the phrases
alleged refers to that which is visible, expressing shape, and capable of motion,
akin to the nature of His disciples, and none of these properties is
discernible in Him Who is invisible, incorporeal, intangible, and formless, how do they
come to degrade the very Only-begotten God, Who was in the beginning, and is in
the Father, to a level with Peter, Andrew, John, and the rest of the Apostles,
by calling them the brethren and fellow-servants of the Only-begotten? And yet
all their exertions are directed to this aim, to show that in majesty of
nature there is as great a distance between the Father and the dignity, power, and
essence of the Only-begotten, as there is between the Only-begotten and
humanity. And they press this saying into the support of this meaning, treating the
name of the God and Father as being of common significance in respect of the Lord
and of His disciples, in the view that no difference in dignity of nature is
conceived while He is recognized as God and Father both of Him and of them in a
precisely similar manner.
And the mode in which they logically maintain their profanity is as
follows;--that either by the relative term employed there is expressed community of
essence also between the disciples and the Father, or else we must not by this
phrase bring even the Lord into communion in the Father's Nature, and that, even
as the fact(7) that the God over all is named as their God implies that the
disciples are His servants so by parity of reasoning, it is acknowledged, by the
words in question, that the Son also is the servant of God. Now that the words
addressed to Mary are not applicable to the Godhead of the Only-begotten, one
may learn from the intention with which they were uttered. For He Who humbled
Himself to a level with human littleness, He it is Who spake the words. And what
is the meaning of what He then uttered, they may know in all its fulness who by
the Spirit search out the depths of the sacred mystery. But as much as comes
within our compass we will set down in few words, following the guidance of the
Fathers. He Who is by nature Father of existent things, from Whom all things
have their birth, has been proclaimed as one, by the sublime utterance of the
Apostle. "For there is one God," he says, "and Father, of Whom are all things(8)."
Accordingly human nature did not enter into the creation from any other
source, nor grow spontaneously in the parents of the race, but it too had for the
author of its own constitution none other than the Father of all. And the name of
Godhead itself, whether it indicates the authority of oversight or of
foresight(9), imports a certain relation to humanity. For He Who bestowed on all things
that are, the power of being, is the God and overseer of what He has Himself
produced. But since, by the wiles of him that sowed in us the tares of
disobedience, our nature no longer preserved in itself the impress of the Father's image,
but was transformed into the foul likeness of sin, for this cause it was
engrafted by virtue of similarity of will into the evil family of the father of sin:
so that the good and true God and Father was no longer the God and Father of
him who had been thus outlawed by his own depravity, but instead of Him Who was
by Nature God, those were honoured who, as the Apostle says, "by nature were no
Gods(1)," and in the place of the Father, he was deemed father who is falsely
so called, as the prophet Jeremiah says in his dark saying, "The partridge
called, she gathered together what she hatched not(2)." Since, then, this was the
sum of our calamity, that humanity was exiled from the good Father, and was
banished from the Divine oversight and care, for this cause He Who is the Shepherd
of the whole rational creation, left in the heights of heaven His un-sinning
and supramundane flock, and, moved by love, went after the sheep which had gone
astray, even our human nature(3). For human nature, which alone, according to
the similitude in the parable, through vice roamed away from the hundred of
rational beings, is, if it be compared with the whole, but an insignificant and
infinitesimal part. Since then it was impossible that our life, which had been
estranged from God, should of itself return to the high and heavenly place, for
this cause, as saith the Apostle, He Who knew no sin is made sin for us(4), and
frees us from the curse by taking on Him our curse as His own(5), and having
taken up, and, in the language of the Apostle, "slain" in Himself "the enmity(6)"
which by means of sin had come between us and God,--(in fact sin was "the
enmity")--and having become what we were, He through Himself again united humanity to
God. For having by purity brought into closest relationship with the Father of
our nature that new man which is created after God(7), in Whom dwelt all the
fulness of the Godhead bodily(8), He drew with Him into the same grace all the
nature that partakes of His body and is akin to Him. And these glad tidings He
proclaims through the woman, not to those disciples only, but also to all who up
to the present day become disciples of the Word,--the tidings, namely, that
man is no longer outlawed, nor east out of the kingdom of God, but is once more a
son, once more in the station assigned to him by his God, inasmuch as along
with the first-fruits of humanity the lump also is hallowed(9). "For behold," He
says, "I and the children whom God hath given Me(1)." He Who for our sakes was
partaker of flesh and blood has recovered you, and brought you back to the
place whence ye strayed away, becoming mere flesh and blood by sin(2). And so He
from Whom we were formerly alienated by our revolt has become our Father and our
God. Accordingly in the passage cited above the Lord brings the glad tidings of
this benefit. And the words are not a proof of the degradation of the Son, but
the glad tidings of our reconciliation to God. For that which has taken place
in Christ's Humanity is a common boon bestowed on mankind generally. For as
when we see in Him the weight of the body, which naturally gravitates to earth,
ascending through the air into the heavens, we believe according to the words of
the Apostle, that we also "shall be caught up in the clouds to meet the Lord
in the air(3)," even so, when we hear that the true God and Father has become
the God and Father of our First-fruits, we no longer doubt that the same God has
become our God and Father too, inasmuch as we have learnt hat we shall come to
the same place whither Christ has entered for us as our forerunner(4). And the
fact too that this grace was revealed by means of a woman, itself agrees with
the interpretation which we have given For since, as the Apostle tells us, "the
woman, being deceived, was in the transgression(5)," and was by her
disobedience foremost in the revolt from God, for this cause she is the first witness of
the resurrection, that she might retrieve by her faith in the resurrection the
overthrow caused by her disobedience, and that as, by making herself at the
beginning a minister and advocate to her husband of the counsels of the serpent,
she brought into human life the beginning of evil, and its train of consequences,
so, by ministering(6) to His disciples the words of Him Who slew the rebel
dragon, she might become to men the guide to faith, whereby with good reason the
first proclamation of death is annulled. It is likely, indeed, that by more
diligent students a more profitable explanation of the text may be discovered. But
even though none such should be found, I think that every devout reader will
agree that the one advanced by our opponents is futile, after comparing it with
that which we have brought forward. For the one has been fabricated to destroy
the glory, of the Only-begotten, and nothing more: but the other includes in its
scope the aim of the dispensation concerning man. For it has been shown that
it was not the intangible, immutable, and invisible God, but the moving,
visible, and tangible nature which is proper to humanity, that gave command to Mary to
minister the word to His disciples.
- Then referring to the blasphemy of Eunomius, which had been refuted by the
great Basil, where he banished the Only-begotten God to the realm of darkness,
and the apology or explanation which Eunomius puts forth for his blasphemy, he
shows that his present blasphemy is rendered by his apology worse than his
previous one; and herein he very ably discourses of the "true" and the
"unapproachable" Light.
Let us also investigate this point as well,--what defence he has to offer
on those matters on which he was convicted of error by the great Basil, when he
banishes the Only-begotten God to the realm of darkness, saying, "As great as
is the difference between the generate and the ungenerate, so great is the
divergence between Light and Light." For as he has already shown that the
difference between the generate and the ungenerate is not merely one of greater or less
intensity, but that they are diametrically opposed as regards their meaning;
and since he has inferred by logical consequence from his premises that, as the
difference between the light of the Father and that of the Son corresponds to
ungeneracy and generation, we must necessarily suppose in the Son not a
diminution of light, but a complete alienation from light. For as we cannot say that
generation is a modified ungeneracy, but the signification of the terms
<greek>gennhsis</greek> and <greek>agennhsia</greek> are absolutely contradictory and
mutually exclusive, so, if the same distinction is to be preserved between the
Light of the Father and that conceived as existing in the Son, it will be
logically concluded that the Son is not henceforth to be conceived as Light, as he is
excluded alike from ungeneracy itself, and from the light which accompanies that
condition,--and He Who is something different from light will evidently, by
consequence, have affinity with its contrary,--since this absurdity, I say,
results from his principles, Eunomius endeavours to explain it away by dialectic
artifices, delivering himself as follows: "For we know, we know the true Light, we
know Him who created the light after the heavens and the earth, we have heard
the Life and Truth Himself, even Christ, saying to His disciples, 'Ye are the
light of the world(7),' we have learned from the blessed Paul, when he gives the
title of 'Light unapproachable(8)' to the God over all, and by the addition
defines and teaches us the transcendent superiority of His Light; and now that we
have learnt that there is so great a difference between the one Light and the
other, we shall not patiently endure so much as the mere mention of the notion
that the conception of light in either case is one and the same." Can he be
serious when he advances such arguments in his attempts against the truth, or is
he experimenting upon the dulness of those who follow his error to see whether
they can detect so childish and transparent a fallacy, or have no sense to
discern such a barefaced imposition? For I suppose that no one is so senseless as
not to perceive the juggling with equivocal terms by which Eunomius deludes both
himself and his admirers. The disciples, he says, were termed light, and that
which was produced in the course of creation is also called light. But who does
not know that in these only the name is common, and the thing meant in each
case is quite different? For the light of the sun gives discernment to the sight,
but the word of the disciples implants in men's souls the illumination of the
truth. If, then, he is aware of this difference even in the case of that light,
so that he thinks the light of the body is one thing, and the light of the soul
another, we need no longer discuss the point with him, since his defence
itself condemns him if we hold our peace. But if in that light he cannot discover
such a difference as regards the mode of operation, (for it is not, he may say,
the light of the eyes that illumines the flesh, and the spiritual light which
illumines the soul, but the operation and the potency of the one light and of the
other is the same, operating in the same sphere and on the same objects,) then
how is it that from the difference between the light of the beams of the sun
and that of the words of the Apostles, he infers a like difference between the
Only-begotten Light and the Light of the Father? "But the Son," he says, "is
called the 'true' Light, the Father 'Light unapproachable.'" Well, these
additional distinctions import a difference in degree only, and not in kind, between
the light of the Son and the light of the Father. He thinks that the "true" is
one thing, and the "unapproachable" another. I suppose there is no one so idiotic
as not to see the real identity of meaning in the two terms. For the "true"
and the "unapproachable" are each of them removed in an equally absolute degree
from their contraries. For as the "true" does not admit any intermixture of the
false, even so the "unapproachable" does not admit the access of its contrary.
For the "unapproachable" is surely unapproachable by evil. But the light of the
Son is not evil; for how can any one see in evil that which is true? Since,
then, the truth is not evil, no one can say that the light which is in the Father
is unapproachable by the truth. For if it were to reject the truth it would of
course be associated with falsehood. For the nature of contradictories is such
that the absence of the better involves the presence of its opposite. If,
then, any one were to say that the Light of the Father was contemplated as remote
from the presentation of its opposite, he would interpret the term
"unapproachable" in a manner agreeable to the intention of the Apostle. But if he were to
say that "unapproachable" signified alienation from good, he would suppose
nothing else than that God was alien from, and at enmity with, Himself, being at the
same time good and opposed to good. But this is impossible: for the good is
akin to good. Accordingly the one Light is not divergent from the other. For the
Son is the true Light, and the Father is Light unapproachable. In fact I would
make bold to say that the man who should interchange the two attributes would
not be wrong. For the true is unapproachable by the false, and on the other side,
the unapproachable is found to be in unsullied truth. Accordingly the
unapproachable is identical with the true, because that which is signified by each
expression is equally inaccessible to evil. What is the difference then, that is
imagined to exist in these by him who imposes on himself and his followers by the
equivocal use of the term "Light"? But let us not pass over this point either
without notice, that it is only after garbling the Apostle's words to suit his
own fancy that he cites the phrase as if it came from him. For Paul says,
"dwelling in light unapproachable(9)." But there is a great difference between being
oneself something and being in something. For he who said, "dwelling in light
unapproachable," did not, by the word "dwelling," indicate God Himself, but
that which surrounds Him, which in our view is equivalent to the Gospel phrase
which tells us that the Father is in the Son. For the Son is true Light, and the
truth is unapproachable by falsehood; so then the Son is Light unapproachable in
which the Father dwells, or in Whom the Father is.
- He further proceeds notably to interpret the language of the Gospel, "In the
beginning was the Word," and "Life" and "Light," and "The Word was made flesh,"
which had been misinterpreted by Eunomius; and overthrows his blasphemy, and
flows that the dispensation of the Lord took place by loving-kindness, not by
lack of power, and with the cooperation of the Father.
But he puts his strength into his idle contention and says, "From the
facts themselves, and from the oracles that are believed, I present the proof of my
statement." Such is his promise, but whether the arguments he advances bear
out his professions, the discerning reader will of course consider. "The blessed
John," he says, "after saying that the Word was in the beginning, and after
calling Him Life, and subsequently giving the Life the further title of 'Light,'
says, a little later, 'And the Word was made flesh(1).' If then the Light is
Life, and the Word is Life, and the Word was made flesh, it thence becomes plain
that the Light was incarnate." What then? because the Light and the Life, and
God and the Word, was manifested in flesh, does it follow that the true Light is
divergent in any degree from the Light which is in the Father? Nay, it is
attested by the Gospel that, even when it had place in darkness, the light remained
unapproachable by the contrary element: for "the Light," he says, "shined in
darkness, and the darkness comprehended it not(2)." If then the light when it
found place in darkness had been changed to its contrary, and overpowered by
gloom, this would have been a strong argument in support of the view of those who
wish to show how far inferior is this Light in comparison with that contemplated
in the Father. But if the Word, even though it be in the flesh, remains the
Word, and if the Light, even though it shines in darkness, is no less Light,
without admitting the fellowship of its contrary, and if the Life, even though it be
in death, remains secure in Itself, and if God, even though He submit to take
upon Him the form of a servant, does not Himself become a servant, but takes
away the slavish subordination and absorbs it into lordship and royalty, making
that which was human and lowly to become both Lord and Christ,--if all this be
so, how does he show by this argument variation of the Light to inferiority,
when each Light has in equal measure the property of being inconvertible to evil,
and unalterable? And how is it that he also fails to observe this, that he who
looked on the incarnate Word, Who was both Light and Life and God, recognized,
through the glory which he saw, the Father of glory, and says, "We beheld His
glory, the glory as of the Only-begotten of the Father(3)"?
But he has reached the irrefutable argument which we long ago detected
lurking in the sequel of his statements(4), but which is here proclaimed aloud
without disguise. For he wishes to show that the essence of the Son is subject to
passion, and to decay, and in no wise differs from material nature, which is in
a state of flux, that by this means he may demonstrate His difference from the
Father. For he says, "If he can show that the God Who is over all, Who is the
Light unapproachable, was incarnate or could be incarnate, came under
authority, obeyed commands, came under the laws of men, bore the Cross, let him say that
the Light is equal to the Light." If these words had been brought forward by
us as following by necessary consequence from premises laid down by Eunomius,
who would not have charged us with unfairness, in employing an over-subtle
dialectic to reduce our adversaries' statement to such an absurdity? But as things
stand, the fact that they themselves make no attempt to suppress the absurdity
that naturally follows from their assumption, helps to support our contention
that it was not without due reflection that, with the help of truth, we censured
life argument of heresy. For behold, how undisguised and outspoken is their
striving against the Only-begotten God! Nay, by His enemies His work of mercy is
reckoned a means of disparaging and maligning the Nature of the Son of God, as
though not of deliberate purpose, but by a compulsion of His Nature he had
slipped down to life in the flesh, and to the suffering of the Cross! And as it is
the nature of a stone to fall downward, and of fire to rise upward, and as these
material objects do not exchange their natures one with another, so that the
stone should have an upward tendency, and fire be depressed by its weight and
sink downwards, even so they make out that passion was part of the very Nature of
the Son, and that for this cause He came to that which was akin and familiar to
Him, but that the Nature of the Father, being free from such passions,
remained unapproachable by the contact of evil. For he says, that the God Who is over
all, Who is Light unapproachable, neither was incarnate nor could be incarnate.
The first of the two statements was quite enough, that the Father did not
become incarnate. But now by his addition a double absurdity arises; for he either
charges the Son with evil, or the Father with powerlessness. For if to partake
of our flesh is evil, then he predicates evil of the Only-begotten God; but if
the lovingkindness to man was good, then he makes out the Father to be
powerless for good, by saying that it would not have been in His power to have
effectually bestowed such grace by taking flesh. And yet who in the world does not know
that life-giving power proceeds to actual operation both in the Father and in
the Son? "For as the Father raiseth up the dead and quickeneth them," He says,
"even so the Son quickeneth whom He will(5),"--meaning obviously by "dead" us
who had fallen from the true life. If then it is even so as the Father
quickeneth, and not otherwise, that the Son brings to operation the same grace, how
comes it that the adversary of God moves his profane tongue against both, insulting
the Father by attributing to Him powerlessness for good, and the Son by
attributing to Him association with evil. But "Light," he says, "is not equal to
Light," because the one he calls "true," and the other "unapproachable." Is then
the true considered to be a diminution of the unapproachable? Why so? and yet
their argument is that the Godhead of the Father must be conceived to be greater
and more exalted than that of the Son, because the one is called in the Gospel
"true God(6)," the other "God(7)" without the addition of "true." How then does
the same term, as applied to the Godhead, indicate an enhancement of the
conception, and, as applied to Light, a diminution? For if they say that the Father
is greater than the Son because He is true God, by the same showing the Son
would be acknowledged to be greater than the Father, because the former is called
"true Light(8)," and the latter not so. "But this Light," says Eunomius,
"carried into effect the plan of mercy, while the other remained inoperative with
respect to that gracious action." A new and strange mode of determining priority in
dignity! They judge that which is ineffective for a benevolent purpose to be
superior to that which is operative. But such a notion as this neither exists
nor ever will be found amongst Christians,--a notion by which it is made out that
every good that is in existent things has not its origin from the Father. But
of goods that pertain to us men, the crowning blessing is held by all
right-minded men to be the return to life; and it is secured by the dispensation carried
out by the Lord in His human nature; not that the Father remained aloof, as
heresy will have it, ineffective and inoperative during the time of this
dispensation. For it is not this that He indicates Who said, "He that sent Me is with
Me(9)," and "The Father that dwelleth in Me, He doeth the works(1)." With what
right then does heresy attribute to the Son alone the gracious intervention on
our behalf, and thereby exclude the Father from having any part or lot in our
gratitude for its successful issue? For naturally the requital of thanks is due
to our benefactors alone, and He Who is incapable of benefiting us is outside
the pale of our gratitude. See you how the course of their profane attack upon
the Only-begotten Son has missed its mark, and is working round in natural
consequence so as to be directed against the majesty of the Father? And this seems to
me to be a necessary result of their method of proceeding. For if he that
honoureth the Son honoureth the Father(2), according to the Divine declaration, it
is plain on the other side that an assault upon the Son strikes at the Father.
But I say that to those who with simplicity of heart receive the preaching of
the Cross and the resurrection, the same grace should be a cause of equal
thankfulness to the Son and to the Father, and now that the Son has accomplished the
Father's will(and this, in the language of the Apostle, is "that all men should
be saved(3)"), they ought for this boon to honour the Father and the Son
alike, inasmuch as our salvation would not have been wrought, had not the good will
of the Father proceeded to actual operation for us through His own power. And
we have learnt from the Scripture that the Son is the of the Father(4).
- He then again charges Eunomius with having learnt his term
<greek>agennhsia</greek> from the hieroglyphic writings, and from the Egyptian mythology and
idolatry, and with bringing in Anubis, Osiris, and Isis to the creed of Christians,
and shows that, considered as admitting His sufferings of necessity and not
voluntarily, the Only-begotten is entitled to no gratitude from men: and that
fire has none far its warmth, nor water for its fluidity, as they do not refer
their results to self-determining power, but to necessity of nature(5).
Let us once more notice the passage cited. "If he can show," he says,
"that the God Who is over all, Who is the Light unapproachable, was incarnate, or
could be incarnate, .... then let him say that the Light is equal to the Light."
The purport of his words is plain from the very form of the sentence, namely,
that he does not think that it was by His almighty Godhead that the Son proved
strong for such a form of loving-kindness, but that it was by being of a nature
subject to passion that He stooped to the suffering of the Cross. Well, as I
pondered and inquired how Eunomius came to stumble into such notions about the
Deity, as to think that on the one side the ungenerate Light was unapproachable
by its contrary, and entirely unimpaired and free from every passion and
affection, but that on the other the generate was intermediate in its nature, so as
not to preserve the Divine unsullied and pure in impassibility, but to have an
essence mixed and compounded of contraries, which at once stretched out to
partake of good, and at the same time melted away into a condition subject to
passion, since it was impossible to obtain from Scripture premises to support so
absurd a theory, the thought struck me, whether it could be that he was an admirer
of the speculations of the Egyptians on the subject of the Divine, and had
mixed up their fancies with his views concerning the Only-begotten. For it is
reported that they say that their fantastic mode of compounding their idols, when
they adapt the forms of certain irrational animals to human limbs, is an
enigmatic symbol of that mixed nature which they call "daemon," and that this is more
subtle than that of men and far surpasses our nature in power, but has the
Divine element in it not unmingled or un-compounded, but is combined with the nature
of the soul and the perceptions of the body, and is receptive of pleasure and
pain, neither of which finds place with the "ungenerate God." For they too use
this name, ascribing to the supreme God, as they imagine Him, the attribute of
ungeneracy. Thus our sage theologian seems to us to be importing into the
Christian creed an Anubis, Isis, or Osiris from the Egyptian shrines, all but the
acknowledgment of their names: but there is no difference in profanity between
him who openly makes profession of the names of idols, and him who while holding
the belief about them in his heart, is yet chary of their names. If, then, it
is impossible to get out of Holy Scripture any support for this impiety, while
their theory draws all its strength from the riddles of the hieroglyphics,
assuredly there can be no doubt what right-minded persons ought to think of this.
But that this accusation which we bring is no insulting slander, Eunomius shall
testify for us by his own words, saying as he does that the ungenerate Light is
unapproachable, and has not the power of stooping to experience affections, but
affirming that such a condition is germane and akin to the generate: so that
man need feel no gratitude to the Only-begotten God for what He suffered, if, as
they say, it was by the spontaneous action of His nature that He slipped down
to the experience of affections, His essence, which was capable of being thus
affected, being naturally dragged down thereto, which demands no thanks. For who
would welcome as a boon that which takes place by necessity, even if it be
gainful and profitable? For we neither thank fire for its warmth nor water for its
fluidity, as we refer these qualities to the necessity of their several
natures, because fire cannot be deserted by its power of warming, nor can water
remain stationary upon an incline, inasmuch as the slope spontaneously draws its
motion onwards. If, then, they say that the benefit wrought by the Son through His
incarnation was by a necessity of His nature, they certainly render Him no
thanks, inasmuch as they, refer what He did, not to an authoritative power, but to
a natural compulsion. But if, while they experience the benefit of the gift,
they disparage the lovingkindness that brought it, I fear lest their impiety
should work round to the opposite error, and lest they should deem the condition
of the Son, that could be thus affected, worthy of more honour than the freedom
from such affections possessed by the Father, making their own advantage the
criterion of good. For if the case had been that the Son was incapable of being
thus affected, as they affirm of the Father, our nature would-still have
remained in its miserable plight, inasmuch as there would have been none to lift up
man's nature to incorruption by what He Himself experienced;--and so it escapes
notice that the cunning of these quibblers, by the very means which it employs
in its attempt to destroy the majesty of the Only-begotten God, does but raise
men's conceptions of Him to a grander and loftier height, seeing it is the case
that He Who has the power to act, is more to be honoured than one who is
powerless for good.
cx 5. Then, again discussing the true Light and unapproachable Light of the
Father and of the Son, special attributes, community and essence, and showing
the relation of "generate" and "ungenerate," as involving no opposition in
sense(6), but presenting an opposition and contradiction admitting of no middle term,
he ends the book.
But I feel that my argument is running away with me, for it does not
remain in the regular course, but, like some hot-blooded and spirited colt, is
carried away by the blasphemies of our opponents to range over the absurdities of
their system. Accordingly we must restrain it when it would run wild beyond the
bounds of moderation in demonstration of absurd consequences. But the kindly
reader will doubtless pardon what we have said, not imputing the absurdity that
emerges from our investigation to us, but to those who laid down such mischievous
premises. We must, however, now transfer our attention to another of his
statements. For he says that our God also is composite, in that while we suppose the
Light to be common, we yet separate the one Light from the other by certain
special attributes and various differences. For that is none the less composite
which, while united by one common nature, is yet separated by certain
differences and conjunctions of peculiarities(7). To this our answer is short and easily
dismissed. For what he brings as matter of accusation against our doctrines we
acknowledge against ourselves, if he is not found to establish the same
position by his own words. Let us just consider what he has written. He calls the
Lord "true" Light, and the Father Light "unapproachable." Accordingly, by thus
naming each, he also acknowledges their community in respect to light. But as
titles are applied to things because they fit them, as he has often insisted, we do
not conceive that the name of "light" is used of the Divine Nature barely,
apart from some meaning, but rather that it is predicated by virtue of some
underlying reality. Accordingly, by the use of a common name, they recognize the
identity of the objects signified, since they have already declared that the
natures of those things which have the same name cannot be different. Since, then,
the meaning of "Light" is one and the same, the addition of "unapproachable" and
"true," according to the language of heresy, separates the common nature by
specific differences, so that the Light of the Father is conceived as one thing,
and the Light of the Son as another, separated one from the other by special
properties. Let him, then, either overthrow his own positions to avoid making out
by his statements that the Deity is composite, or let him abstain from charging
against us what he may see contained in his own language. For our statement
does not hereby violate the simplicity of the Godhead, since community and
specific difference are not essence, so that the conjunction of these should render
the subject composite(8). But on the one side the essence by itself remains
whatever it is in nature, being what it is, while, on the other, every one
possessed of reason would say that these--community and specific difference--were among
the accompanying conceptions and attributes: since even in us men there may be
discerned some community with the Divine Nature, but Divinity is not the more
on that account humanity, or humanity Divinity. For while we believe that God
is good, we also find this character predicated of men in Scripture. But the
special signification in each case establishes a distinction in the community
arising from the use of the homonymous term. For He Who is the fountain of goodness
is named from it; but he who has some share of goodness also partakes in the
name, and God is not for this reason composite, that He shares with men the
title of "good." From these considerations it must obviously be allowed that the
idea of community is one thing, and that of essence another, and we are not on
that account any the more to maintain composition or multiplicity of parts in
that simple Nature which has nothing to do with quantity, because some of the
attributes we contemplate in It are either regarded as special, or have a sort of
common significance.
But let us pass on, if it seems good, to another of his statements, and
dismiss the nonsense that comes between. He who laboriously reiterates against
our argument the Aristotelian division of existent things, has elaborated
"genera," and "species," and "differentiae," and "individuals," and advanced all the
technical language of the categories for the injury of our doctrines. Let us
pass by all this, and turn our discourse to deal with his heavy and irresistible
argument. For having braced his argument with Demosthenic fervour, he has
started up to our view as a second Paeanian of Oltiseris(9), imitating that orator's
severity in his struggle with us. I will transcribe the language of our author
word for word. "Yes," he says, "but if, as the generate is contrary to the
ungenerate, the Generate Light be equally inferior to the Ungenerate Light, the one
will be found to be(1) light, the other darkness." Let him who has the leisure
learn from his words how pungent is his mode of dealing with this opposition,
and how exactly it hits the mark. But I would beg this imitator of our words
either to say what we have said, or to make his imitation of it as close as may
be, or else, if he deals with our argument according to his own education and
ability, to speak in his own person and not in ours. For I hope that no one will
so miss our meaning as to suppose that, while "generate" is contradictory in
sense to "ungenerate," one is a diminution of the other. For the difference
between contradictories is not one of greater or less intensity, but rests its
opposition upon their being mutually exclusive in their signification: as, for
example, we say that a man is asleep or not asleep, sitting or not sitting, that he
was or was not, and all the rest after the same model, where the denial of one
is the assertion of its contradictory. As, then, to live is not a diminution of
not living, but its complete opposite, even so we conceived having been
generated not as a diminution of not having been generated, but as an opposite and
contradictory not admitting of any middle term, so that which is expressed by the
one has nothing whatever to do with that which is expressed by the other in
the way of less or more. Let him therefore who says that one of two
contradictories is defective as compared with the other, speak in his own person, not in
ours. For our homely language says that things which correspond to contradictories
differ from one another even as their originals do. So that, even if Eunomius
discerns in the Light the same divergence as in the generate compared with the
Ungenerate, I will re-assert my statement, that as in the one case the one
member of the contradiction has nothing in common with its opposite, so if "light"
be placed on the same side as one of the two contradictories, the remaining
place in the figure must of course be assigned to "darkness," the necessity of the
antithesis arranging the term of light over against its opposite, in
accordance with the analogy of the previous contradictory terms "generate" and
"ungenerate." Such is the clumsy answer which we, who as our disparaging author say,
have attempted to write without logical training, deliver in our rustic dialect to
our new Paeanian. But to see how he contended with this contradiction,
advancing against us those hot and fire-breathing words of his with Demosthenic
intensity, let those who like to have a laugh study the treatise of our orator
itself. For our pen is not very hard to rouse to confute the notions of impiety, but
is quite unsuited to the task of ridiculing the ignorance of untutored minds.