SELECT LETTERS OF SAINT GREGORY NAZIANZEN, ARCHBISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE,
DIVISION I
A SELECTION FROM THE LETTERS OF SAINT GREGORY NAZIANZEN, SOMETIME ARCHBISHOP
OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
DIVISION I.
LETTERS ON THE APOLLINARIAN CONTROVERSY.
INTRODUCTION.
The circumstances which called forth the two letters to Cledonius have
already been described in the first section of the General Prolegomena, and it will
not be necessary here to add much to what was there said. In the letter to
Nectarius, his own successor on the throne of Constantinople, written about A.D.
383, and sometimes reckoned as Orat. XLVI., S. Gregory gives extracts from a work
of Apollinarius himself, but without mentioning the rifle of the book. In this
treatise the fundamental errors of the heresy (see Proleg. c. 1, p. 172) are
laid down. Apollinarius, according to S. Gregory, declares that the Son of God
was from all eternity clothed with a human body, and not from the time of His
conception only by the Blessed Virgin; but that this humanity of God is without
human mind, the place of which was supplied by the Godhead of the Only-begotten.
And he goes even further and ascribes passibility and mortality to the very
Godhead of Christ. Therefore S. Gregory earnestly protests against any toleration
being granted to these heretics, or even permission to hold their assemblies;
for, he says, toleration or permission would certainly be regarded by them as a
condonation of their doctrinal position, and a condemnation of that of the
Church. Dr. Ullman, however, thinks that while S. Gregory was certainly speaking
the truth in saying that he had in his hands a pamphlet by Apollinarius, yet
that he, perhaps unconsciously, exaggerated the heretical character of its
contents, pushing its statements to consequences which Apollinarius would have
repudiated. The one purpose of the latter was, in Dr. Ullman's view, to safeguard the
doctrine of the Unity of Christ; and he thought that the orthodox expression of
Two Whole and Perfect Natures tended to a Nestorian division of the Person of
Christ; and so he used language which certainly seemed to confound the natures,
or at any rate to make the Incarnation imperfect, inasmuch as a Christ in Whom
the human mind is absent, and its place filled up by the Godhead of the Son,
cannot be said to be perfect Man. But while Epiphanius mentions these
extravagances of the heresy, and does so with a lingering feeling of regret for the lapse
of so good a man whose services in the past had been of so much value to the
Church, yet, in the spirit common to Ecclesiastical authorities of the time, he
would rather ascribe them to an expansion of Apollinarius' teaching by his
younger disciples who did not really understand what Apollinarius himself meant.
Olympius, to whom the last of this series is addressed, was Governor of
Cappadocia Secunda in A.D. 382. He was a man for whom S. Gregory had a very high
esteem, and with whom he was upon terms of close friendship, as will be seen from
other letters of Gregory to him in another division of this Selection. The
occasion of the present letter was the necessity to appeal to the secular power
for aid to punish a sect of Apollinarians at Nazianzus, who had ventured to take
advantage of S. Gregory's absence at the Baths of Xanxaris to procure the
consecration of a Bishop of their own way of thinking. Technically the See was
vacant, but the administration had been committed to Gregory by the Bishops of the
Province, and though he, foreseeing some such attempt on the part of the
heretics, had been very earnest in pressing upon the Metropolitan and his
Com-provincials the necessity of filling this throne by a canonical election, yet he was by
no means prepared to hand over the authority, with which he had been invested,
to an irregularly elected and uncanonically consecrated heretic.
TO NECTARIUS, BISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE. (EP. CCII.)
The Care of God, which throughout the time before us guarded the Churches,
seems to have utterly forsaken this present life. And my soul is immersed to
such a degree by calamities that the private sufferings of my own life hardly seem
to be worth reckoning among evils (though they are so numerous and great, that
if they befel anyone else I should think them unbearable); but I can only look
at the common sufferings of the Churches; for if at the present crisis some
pains be not taken to find a remedy for them, things will gradually get into an
altogether desperate condition. Those who follow the heresy of Arius or Eudoxius
(I cannot say who stirred them up to this folly) are making a display of their
disease, as if they had attained some degree of confidence by collecting
congregations as if by permission. And they of the Macedonian party have reached
such a pitch of folly that they are arrogating to themselves the name of Bishops,
and are wandering about our districts babbling of Eleusius(<greek>a</greek>) as
to their ordinations. Our bosom evil, Eunomius, is no longer content with
merely existing; but unless he can draw away everyone with him to his ruinous
heresy, he thinks himself an injured man. All this, however, is endurable. The most
grievous item of all in the woes of the Church is the boldness of the
Apollinarians, whom your Holiness has overlooked, I know not how, when providing
themselves with authority to hold meetings on an equality with myself. However, you
being, as you are, thoroughly instructed by the grace of God in the Divine
Mysteries on all points, are well informed, not only as to the advocacy of the true
faith, but also as to all those arguments which have been devised by the
heretics against the sound faith; and yet perhaps it will not be unseasonable that
your Excellency should hear from my littleness that a pamphlet by Apollinarius has
come into my hands, the contents of which surpass all heretical pravity. For
he asserts that the Flesh which the Only-begotten Son assumed in the Incarnation
for the remodelling of our nature was no new acquisition, but that that carnal
nature was in the Son from the beginning. And he puts forward as a witness to
this monstrous assertion a garbled quotation from the Gospels, namely, No man
hath Ascended up into Heaven save He which came down from Heaven, even the Son
of Man which is in Heaven.(<greek>a</greek>) As though even before He came down
He was the Son of Man, and when He came down He brought with Him that Flesh,
which it appears He had in Heaven, as though it had existed before the ages, and
been joined with His Essence. For he alleges another saying of an Apostle,
which he cuts off from the whole body of its context, that The Second Man is the
Lord from Heaven.(<greek>b</greek>) Then he assumes that that Man who came down
from above is without a mind, but that the Godhead of the Only-begotten fulfils
the function of mind, and is the third part of this human composite, inasmuch
as soul and body are in it on its human side, but not mind, the place of which
is taken by God the Word. This is not yet the most serious part of it; that
which is most terrible of all is that he declares that the Only-begotten God, the
Judge of all, the Prince of Life, the Destroyer of Death, is mortal, and
underwent the Passion in His proper Godhead; and that in the three days' death of His
body, His Godhead also was put to death with His body, and thus was raised
again from the dead by the Father. It would be tedious to go through all the other
propositions which he adds to these monstrous absurdities. Now, if they who
hold such views have authority to meet, your Wisdom approved in Christ must see
that, inasmuch as we do not approve their views, any permission of assembly
granted to them is nothing less than a declaration that their view is thought more
true than ours. For if they are permitted to teach their view as godly men, and
with all confidence to preach their doctrine, it is manifest that the doctrine
of the Church has been condemned, as though the truth were on their side. For
nature does not admit of two contrary doctrines on the same subject being both
true. How then could your noble and lofty mind submit to suspend your usual
courage in regard to the correction of so great an evil? But even though there is
no precedent for such a course, let your inimitable perfection in virtue stand
up at a crisis like the present, and teach our most pious Emperor, that no gain
will come from his zeal for the Church on other points if he allows such an
evil to gain strength from freedom of speech for the subversion of sound faith.
TO CLEDONIUS THE PRIEST AGAINST APOLLINARIUS. (EP. CI.)
TO OUR MOST REVEREND AND GOD-BELOVED BROTHER AND FELLOW-PRIEST CLEDONIUS,
GREGORY, GREETING IN THE LORD.
I desire to learn what is this fashion of innovation in things Concerning
the Church, which allows anyone who likes, or the passerby,(<greek>a</greek>) as
the Bible says, to tear asunder the flock that has been well led, and to
plunder it by larcenous attacks, or rather by piratical and fallacious teachings. For
if our present assailants had any ground for condemning us in regard of the
faith, it would not have been right for them, even in that case, to have ventured
on such a course without giving us notice. They ought rather to have first
persuaded us, or to have been willing to be persuaded by us (if at least any
account is to be taken of us as fearing God, labouring for the faith, and helping
the Church), and then, if at all, to innovate; but then perhaps there would be an
excuse for their outrageous conduct. But since our faith has been proclaimed,
both in writing and without writing, here and in distant parts, in times of
danger and of safety, how comes it that some make such attempts, and that others
keep silence?
The most grievous part of it is not (though this too is shocking) that the
men instil their own heresy into simpler souls by means of those who are worse;
but that they also tell lies about us and say that we share their opinions and
sentiments; thus baiting their hooks, and by this cloak villainously fulfilling
their will, and making our simplicity, which looked upon them as brothers and
not as foes, into a support of their wickedness. And not only so, but they also
assert, as I am told, that they have been received by the Western Synod, by
which they were formerly condemned, as is well known to everyone. If, however,
those who hold the views of Apollinarius have either now or formerly been
received, let them prove it and we will be content. For it is evident that they can
only have been so received as assenting to the Orthodox Faith, for this were an
impossibility on any other terms. And they can surely prove it, either by the
minutes of the Synod, or by Letters of Communion, for this is the regular custom
of Synods. But if it is mere words, and an invention of their own, devised for
the sake of appearances and to give them weight with the multitude through the
credit of the persons, teach them to hold their tongues, and confute them; for
we believe that such a task is well suited to your manner of life and
orthodoxy. Do not let the men deceive themselves and others with the assertion that the
"Man of the Lord," as they call Him, Who is rather our Lord and God, is without
human mind. For we do not sever the Man from the Godhead, but we lay down as a
dogma the Unity and Identity of Person, Who of old was not Man but God, and
the Only Son before all ages, unmingled with body or anything corporeal; but Who
in these last days has assumed Manhood also for our salvation; passible in His
Flesh, impassible in His Godhead; circumscript in the body, uncircumscript in
the Spirit; at once earthly and heavenly, tangible and intangible,
comprehensible and incomprehensible; that by One and the Same Person, Who was perfect Man
and also God, the entire humanity fallen through sin might be created anew.
If anyone does not believe that Holy Mary is the Mother of God, he is
severed from the Godhead. If anyone should assert that He passed through the Virgin
as through a channel, and was not at once divinely and humanly formed in her
(divinely, because without the intervention of a man; humanly, because in
accordance with the laws of gestation), he is in like manner godless. If any assert
that the Manhood was formed and afterward was clothed with the Godhead, he too is
to be condemned. For this were not a Generation of God, but a shirking of
generation. If any introduce the notion of Two Sons, one of God the Father, the
other of the Mother, and discredits the Unity and Identity, may he lose his part in
the adoption promised to those who believe aright. For God and Man are two
natures, as also soul and body are; but there are not two Sons or two Gods. For
neither in this life are there two manhoods; though Paul speaks in some such
language of the inner and outer man. And (if I am to speak concisely) the Saviour
is made of elements which are distinct from one another (for the invisible is
not the same with the visible, nor the timeless with that which is subject to
time), yet He is not two Persons. God forbid! For both natures are one by the
combination, the Deity being made Man, and the Manhood deified or however one
should express it. And I say different Elements, because it is the reverse of what
is the case in the Trinity; for There we acknowledge different Persons so as not
to confound the persons; but not different Elements, for the Three are One and
the same in Godhead.
If any should say that it wrought in Him by grace as in a Prophet, but was
not and is not united with Him in Essence--let him be empty of the Higher
Energy, or rather full of the opposite. If any worship not the Crucified, let him be
Anathema and be numbered among the Deicides. If any assert that He was made
perfect by works, or that after His Baptism, or after His Resurrection from the
dead, He was counted worthy of an adoptive Sonship, like those whom the Greeks
interpolate as added to the ranks of the gods, let him be anathema. For that
which has a beginning or a progress or is made perfect, is not God, although the
expressions may be used of His gradual manifestation. If any assert that He has
now put off His holy flesh, and that His Godhead is stripped of the body, and
deny that He is now with His body and will come again with it, let him not see
the glory of His Coming. For where is His body now, if not with Him Who assumed
it? For it is not laid by in the sun, according to the babble of the
Manichaeans, that it should be honoured by a dishonour; nor was it poured forth into the
air and dissolved, us is the nature of a voice or the flow of an odour, or the
course of a lightning flash that never stands. Where in that case were His being
handled after the Resurrection, or His being seen hereafter by them that
pierced Him, for Godhead is in its nature invisible. Nay; He will come with His
body--so I have learnt--such as He was seen by His Disciples in the Mount, or as he
shewed Himself for a moment, when his Godhead overpowered the carnality. And
as we say this to disarm suspicion, so we write the other to correct the novel
teaching. If anyone assert that His flesh came down from heaven, and is not from
hence, nor of us though above us, let him be anathema. For the words, The
Second Man is the Lord from Heaven;(<greek>a</greek>) and, As is the Heavenly, such
are they that are Heavenly; and, No man hath ascended up into Heaven save He
which came down from Heaven, even the Son of Man which is in
Heaven;(<greek>b</greek>) and the like, are to be understood as said on account of the Union with
the heavenly; just as that All Things were made by Christ,(<greek>g</greek>)
and that Christ dwelleth in your hearts(<greek>a</greek>) is said, not of the
visible nature which belongs to God, but of what is perceived by the mind, the
names being mingled like the natures, and flowing into one another, according to
the law of their intimate union.
If anyone has put his trust in Him as a Man without a human mind, he is
really bereft of mind, and quite unworthy of salvation. For that which He has not
assumed He has not healed; but that which is united to His Godhead is also
saved. If only half Adam fell, then that which Christ assumes and saves may be half
also; but if the whole of his nature fell, it must be united to the whole
nature of Him that was begotten, and so be saved as a whole. Let them not, then,
begrudge us our complete salvation, or clothe the Saviour only with bones and
nerves and the portraiture of humanity. For if His Manhood is without soul, even
the Arians admit this, that they may attribute His Passion to the Godhead, as
that which gives motion to the body is also that which suffers. But if He has a
soul, and yet is without a mind, how is He man, for man is not a mindless animal?
And this would necessarily involve that while His form and tabernacle was
human, His soul should be that of a horse or an ox, or some other of the brute
creation. This, then, would be what He saves; and I have been deceived by the
Truth, and led to boast of an honour which had been bestowed upon another. But if
His Manhood is intellectual and nor without mind, let them cease to be thus
really mindless. But, says such an one, the Godhead took the place of the human
intellect. How does this touch me? For Godhead joined to flesh alone is not man,
nor to soul alone, nor to both apart from intellect, which is the most essential
part of man. Keep then the whole man, and mingle Godhead therewith, that you
may benefit me in my completeness. But, he asserts, He could not contain Two
perfect Natures. Not if you only look at Him in a bodily fashion. For a bushel
measure will not hold two bushels, nor will the space of one body hold two or more
bodies. But if you will look at what is mental and incorporeal, remember that I
in my one personality can contain soul and reason and mind and the Holy
Spirit; and before me this world, by which I mean the system of things visible and
invisible, contained Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. For such is the nature of
intellectual Existences, that they can mingle with one another and with bodies,
incorporeally and invisibly. For many sounds are comprehended by one ear; and the
eyes of many are occupied by the same visible objects, and the smell by odours;
nor are the senses narrowed by each other, or crowded out, nor the objects of
sense diminished by the multitude of the perceptions. But where is there mind of
man or angel so perfect in comparison of the Godhead that the presence of the
greater must crowd out the other? The light is nothing compared with the sun,
nor a little damp compared with a river, that we must first do away with the
lesser, and take the light from a house, or the moisture from the earth, to enable
it to contain the greater and more perfect. For how shall one thing contain
two completenesses, either the house, the sunbeam and the sun, or the earth, the
moisture and the river? Here is matter for inquiry; for indeed the question is
worthy of much consideration. Do they not know, then, that what is perfect by
comparison with one thing may be imperfect by comparison with another, as a hill
compared with a mountain, or a grain of mustard seed with a bean or any other
of the larger seeds, although it may be called larger than any of the same
kind? Or, if you like, an Angel compared with God, or a man with an Angel. So our
mind is perfect and commanding, but only in respect of soul and body; not
absolutely perfect; and a servant and a subject of God, not a sharer of His Princedom
and honour. So Moses was a God to Pharaoh,(<greek>a</greek>) but a servant of
God,(<greek>b</greek>) as it is written; and the stars which illumine the night
are hidden by the Sun, so much that you could not even know of their existence
by daylight; and a little torch brought near a great blaze is neither
destroyed, nor seen, nor extinguished; but is all one blaze, the bigger one prevailing
over the other.
But, it may be said, our mind is subject to condemnation. What then of our
flesh? Is that not subject to condemnation? You must therefore either set aside
the latter on account of sin, or admit the former on account of salvation. If
He assumed the worse that He might sanctify it by His incarnation, may He not
assume the better that it may be sanctified by His becoming Man? If the clay was
leavened and has become a new lump, O ye wise men, shall not the Image be
leavened and mingled with God, being deified by His Godhead? And I will add this
also: If the mind was utterly rejected, as prone to sin and subject to damnation,
and for this reason He assumed a body but left out the mind, then there is an
excuse for them who sin with the mind; for the witness of God-- according to
you--has shewn the impossibility of healing it. Let me state the greater results.
You, my good sir, dishonour my mind (you a Sarcolater, if I am an
Anthropolater(<greek>a</greek>) that you may tie God down to the Flesh, since He cannot be
otherwise tied; and therefore you take away the wall of partition. But what is
my theory, who am but an ignorant man, and no Philosopher. Mind is mingled with
mind, as nearer and more closely related, and through it with flesh, being a
Mediator between God and carnality.
Further let us see what is their account of the assumption of Manhood, or
the assumption of Flesh, as they call it. If it was in order that God, otherwise
incomprehensible, might be comprehended, and might converse with men through
His Flesh as through a veil, their mask and the drama which they represent is a
pretty one, not to say that it was open to Him to converse with us in other
ways, as of old, in the burning bush(<greek>b</greek>) and in the appearance of a
man.(<greek>g</greek>) But if it was that He might destroy the condemnation by
sanctifying like by like, then as He needed flesh for the sake of the flesh
which had incurred condemnation, and soul for the sake of our soul, so, too, He
needed mind for the sake of mind, which not only fell in Adam, but was the first
to be affected, as the doctors say of illnesses. For that which received the
command was that which failed to keep the command, and that which failed to keep
it was that also which dared to transgress; and that which transgressed was that
which stood most in need of salvation; and that which needed salvation was
that which also He took upon Him. Therefore, Mind was taken upon Him. This has now
been demonstrated, whether they like it or no, by, to use their own
expression, geometrical and necessary proofs. But you are acting as if, when a man's eye
had been injured and his foot had been injured in consequence, you were to
attend to the foot and leave the eye uncared for; or as if, when a painter had
drown something badly, you were to alter the picture, but to pass over the artist
as if he had succeeded. But if they, overwhelmed by these arguments, take refuge
in the proposition that it is possible for God to save man even apart from
mind, why, I suppose that it would be possible for Him to do so also apart from
flesh by a mere act of will, just as He works all other things, and has wrought
them without body. Take away, then, the flesh as well as the mind, that your
monstrous folly may be complete. But they are deceived by the latter, and,
therefore, they run to the flesh, because they do not know the custom of Scripture. We
will teach them this also. For what need is there even to mention to those who
know it, the fact that everywhere in Scripture he is called Man, and the Son
of Man?
If, however, they rely on the passage, The Word was made Flesh and dwelt
among us,(<greek>a</greek>)and because of this erase the noblest part of Man (as
cobblers do the thicker part of skins) that they may join together God and
Flesh, it is time for them to say that God is God only of flesh, and not of souls,
because it is written, "As Thou hast given Him power over all
Flesh,"(<greek>b</greek>) and "Unto Thee shall all Flesh come;"(<greek>g</greek>) and "Let all
Flesh bless His holy Name,"(<greek>d</greek>) meaning every Man. Or, again, they
must suppose that our fathers went down into Egypt without bodies and
invisible, and that only the Soul of Joseph was imprisoned by Pharaoh, because it is
written, '' They went down into Egypt with threescore and fifteen
Souls,"(<greek>e</greek>) and "The iron entered into his Soul,"(<greek>z</greek>) a thing which
could not be bound. They who argue thus do not know that such expressions are
used by Synecdoche, declaring the whole by the part, as when Scripture says
that the young ravens call upon God,(<greek>h</greek>) to indicate the whole
feathered race; or Pleiades, Hesperus, and Arcturus(<greek>q</greek>) are mentioned,
instead of all the Stars and His Providence over them.
Moreover, in no other way was it possible for the Love of God toward us to
be manifested than by making mention of our flesh, and that for our sake He
descended even to our lower part. For that flesh is less precious than soul,
everyone who has a spark of sense will acknowledge. And so the passage, The Word was
made Flesh, seems to me to be equivalent to that in which it is said that He
was made sin,(<greek>k</greek>) or a curse(<greek>l</greek>) for us; not that the
Lord was transformed into either of these, how could He be? But because by
taking them upon Him He took away our sins and bore our
iniquities.(<greek>m</greek>) This, then, is sufficient to say at the present time for the sake of
clearness and of being understood by the many. And I write it, not with any desire to
compose a treatise, but only to check the progress of deceit; and if it is
thought well, I will give a fuller account of these matters at greater length.
But there is a matter which is graver than these, a special point which it
is necessary that I should not pass over. I would they were even cut off that
trouble you,(<greek>a</greek>) and would reintroduce a second Judaism, and a
second circumcision, and a second system of sacrifices. For if this be done, what
hinders Christ also being born again to set them aside, and again being betrayed
by Judas, and crucified and buried, and rising again, that all may be
fulfilled in the same order, like the Greek system of cycles, in which the same
revolutions of the stars bring round the same events? For what the method of selection
is, in accordance with which some of the events are to occur and others to be
omitted, let these wise men who glory in the multitude of their books shew us.
But since, puffed up by their theory of the Trinity, they falsely accuse us
of being unsound in the Faith and entice the multitude, it is necessary that
people should know that Apollinarius, while granting the Name of Godhead to the
Holy Ghost, did not preserve the Power of the Godhead. For to make the Trinity
consist of Great, Greater, and Greatest, as of Light, Ray, and Sun, the Spirit
and the Son and the Father (as is clearly stated in his writings), is a ladder
of Godhead not leading to Heaven, but down from Heaven. But we recognize God the
Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost, and these not as bare titles, dividing
inequalities of ranks or of power, but as there is one and the same title, so
there is one nature and one substance in the Godhead.
But if anyone who thinks we have spoken rightly on this subject reproaches
us with holding communion with heretics, let him prove that we are open to this
charge, and we will either convince him or retire. But it is not safe to make
any innovation before judgment is given, especially in a matter of such
importance, and connected with so great issues. We have protested and continue to
protest this before God and men. And not even now, be well assured, should we have
written this, if we had not seen that the Church was being tom asunder and
divided, among their other tricks, by their present synagogue of
vanity.(<greek>b</greek>) But if anyone when we say and protest this, either from some advantage
they will thus gain, or through fear of men, or monstrous littleness of mind, or
through some neglect of pastors and governors, or through love of novelty and
proneness to innovations, rejects us as unworthy of credit, and attaches
himself to such men, and divides the noble body of the Church, he shall bear his
judgment, whoever he may be,(<greek>a</greek>) and shall give account to God in the
day of judgment.(<greek>b</greek>) But if their long books, and their new
Psalters, contrary to that of David, and the grace of their metres, are taken for a
third Testament, we too will compose Psalms, and will write much in metre. For
we also think we have the spirit of God,(<greek>g</greek>) if indeed this is a
gift of the Spirit, and not a human novelty. This I will that thou declare
publicly, that we may not be held responsible, as overlooking such an evil, and as
though this wicked doctrine received food and strength from our indifference.
AGAINST APOLLINARIUS; THE SECOND LETTER TO CLEDONIUS. (EP. CII.)
Forasmuch as many persons have come to your Reverence seeking confirmation
of their faith, and therefore you have affectionately asked me to put forth a
brief definition and rifle of my opinion, I therefore write to your Reverence,
what indeed you knew before, that I never have and never can honour anything
above the Nicene Faith, that of the Holy Fathers who met there to destroy the Arian
heresy; but am, and by God's help ever will be, of that faith; completing in
detail that which was incompletely said by them concerning the Holy Ghost; for
that question had not then been mooted, namely, that we are to believe that the
Father, Son, and Holy Ghost are of one Godhead, thus confessing the Spirit also
to be God. Receive then to communion those who think and teach thus, as I also
do; but those who are otherwise minded refuse, and hold them as strangers to
God and the Catholic Church. And since a question has also been mooted
concerning the Divine Assumption of humanity, or Incarnation, state this also clearly to
all concerning me, that I join in One the Son, who was begotten of the Father,
and afterward of the Virgin Mary, and that I do not call Him two Sons, but
worship Him as One and the same in undivided Godhead and honour. But if anyone
does not assent to this statement, either now or hereafter, he shall give account
to God at the day of judgment.
Now, what we object and oppose to their mindless opinion about His Mind is
this, to put it shortly; for they are almost alone in the condition which they
lay down, as it is through want of mind that they mutilate His mind. But, that
they may not accuse us of having once accepted but of now repudiating the faith
of their beloved Vitalius(<greek>?</greek>) which he handed in in writing at
the request of the blessed Bishop Damasus of Rome, I will give a short
explanation on this point also. For these men, when they are theologizing among their
genuine disciples, and those who are initiated into their secrets, like the
Manichaeans among those whom they call the "Elect," expose the full extent of their
disease, and scarcely allow flesh at all to the Saviour. But when they are
refuted and pressed with the common answers about the Incarnation which the
Scripture presents, they confess indeed the orthodox words, but they do violence to the
sense; for they acknowledge the Manhood to be neither without soul nor without
reason nor without mind, nor imperfect, but they bring in the Godhead to
supply the soul and reason and mind, as though It had mingled Itself only with His
flesh, and not with the other properties belonging to us men; although His
sinlessness was far above us, and was the cleansing of our passions.
Thus, then, they interpret wrongly the words, But we have the Mind of
Christ,(<greek>b</greek>) and very absurdly, when they say that His Godhead is the
mind of Christ, and not understanding the passage as we do, namely, that they who
have purified their mind by the imitation of the mind which the Saviour took
of us, and, as far as may be, have attained conformity with it, are said to have
the mind of Christ; just as they might be testified to have the flesh of
Christ who have trained their flesh, and in this respect have become of the same
body and partakers of Christ; and so he says "As we have borne the image of the
earth(<greek>g</greek>) we shall also bear the image of the heavenly." And so
they declare that the Perfect Man is not He who was in all points tempted like as
we are yet without sin;(<greek>a</greek>) but the mixture of God and Flesh. For
what, say they, can be more perfeet than this?
They play the same trick with the word that describes the Incarnation, viz.:
He was made Man, explaining it to mean, not, He was in the human nature with
which He surrounded Himself, according to the Scripture, He knew what was in
man;(<greek>b</greek>) but teaching that it means, He consorted and conversed with
men, and taking refuge in the expression which says that He was seen on Earth
and conversed with Men.(<greek>g</greek>) And what can anyone contend further?
They who take away the Humanity and the Interior Image cleanse by their newly
invented mask only our outside,(<greek>d</greek>) and that which is seen; so far
in conflict with themselves that at one time, for the sake of the flesh, they
explain all the rest in a gross and carnal manner (for it is from hence that
they have derived their second Judaism and their silly thousand years delight in
paradise, and almost the idea that we shall resume again the same conditions
after these same thousand years); and at another time they bring in His flesh as
a phantom rather than a reality, as not having been subjected to any of our
experiences, not even such as are free from sin; and use for this purpose the
apostolic expression, understood and spoken in a sense which is not apostolic, that
our Saviour was made in the likeness of Men and found in fashion as a
Man,(<greek>e</greek>) as though by these words was expressed, not the human form, but
some delusive phantom and appearance.
Since then these expressions, rightly understood, make for orthodoxy, but
wrongly interpreted are heretical, what is there to be surprised at if we
received the words of Vitalius in the more orthodox sense; our desire that they should
be so meant persuading us, though others are angry at the intention of his
writings? This is, I think, the reason why Damasus himself, having been
subsequently better informed, and at the same time learning that they hold by their
former explanations, excommunicated them and overturned their written confession of
faith with an Anathema; as well as because he was vexed at the deceit which he
had suffered from them through simplicity.
Since, then, they have been openly convicted of this, let them not be angry,
but let them be ashamed of themselves; and let them not slander us, but abase
themselves and wipe off from their portals that great and marvellous
proclamation and boast of their orthodoxy, meeting all who go in at once with the
question and distinction that we must worship, not a God-bearing Man, but a
flesh-bearing God. What could be more unreasonable than this, though these new heralds of
truth think a great deal of the title? For though it has a certain sophistical
grace through the quickness of its antithesis, and a sort of juggling quackery
grateful to the uninstructed, yet it is the most absurd of absurdities and the
most foolish of follies. For if one were to change the word Man or Flesh into
God (the first would please us, the second them), and then were to use this
wonderful antithesis, so divinely recognized, what conclusion should we arrive at?
That we must worship, not a God-bearing Flesh, but a Man-bearing God. O
monstrous absurdity! They proclaim to us to-day a wisdom hidden ever since the time
of Christ--a thing worthy of our tears. For if the faith began thirty years ago,
when nearly four hundred years had passed since Christ was manifested, vain
all that time will have been our Gospel, and vain our faith; in vain will the
Martyrs have borne their witness, and in vain have so many and so great Prelates
presided over the people; and Grace is a matter of metres and not of the faith.
And who will not marvel at their learning, in that on their own authority
they divide the things of Christ, and assign to His Manhood such sayings as He
was born, He was tempted, He was hungry, He was thirsty, He was wearied, He was
asleep; but reckon to His Divinity such as these: He was glorified by Angels, He
overcame the Tempter, He fed the people in the wilderness, and He fed them in
such a manner, and He walked upon the sea; and say on the one hand that the
"Where have ye laid Lazarus?"(<greek>a</greek>) belongs to us, but the loud voice
"Lazarus, Come Forth"(<greek>b</greek>) and the raising him that had been four
days dead, is above our nature; and that while the "He was in an Agony, He was
crucified, He was buried," belongs to the Veil, on the other hand, "He was
confident, He rose again, He ascended," belong to the Inner Treasure; and then they
accuse us of introducing two natures, separate or conflicting, and of dividing
the supernatural and wondrous Union. They ought, either not to do that of
which they accuse us, or not to accuse us of that which they do; so at least if
they are resolved to be consistent and not to propound at once their own and their
opponents' principles. Such is their want of reason; it conflicts both with
itself and with the truth to such an extent that they are neither conscious nor
ashamed of it when they fall out with themselves. Now, if anyone thinks that we
write all this willingly and not upon compulsion, and that we are dissuading
from unity, and not doing our utmost to promote it, let him know that he is very
much mistaken, and has not made at all a good guess at our desires, for nothing
is or ever has been more valuable in our eyes than peace, as the facts
themselves prove; though their actions and brawlings against us altogether exclude
unanimity.
EP. CXXV.
TO OLYMPIUS.
Even hoar hairs have something to learn; and old age, it would seem, cannot
in all respects be trusted for wisdom. I at any rate, knowing better than
anyone, as I did, the thoughts and the heresy of the Apollinarians, and seeing that
their folly was intolerable; yet thinking that I could tame them by patience
and soften them by degrees, I let my tropes make me eager to attain this object.
But, as it seems, I overlooked the fact that I was making them worse, and
injuring the Church by my untimely philosophy. For gentleness does not put bad men
out of countenance. And now if it had been possible for me to teach you this
myself, I should not have hesitated, you may be sure, even to undertake a journey
beyond my strength to throw myself at the feet of your Excellency. But since my
illness has brought me too far, and it has become necessary for me to try the
hot baths of Xanxaris at the advice of my medical men, I send a letter to
represent me. These wicked and utterly abandoned men have dared, in addition to all
their other misdeeds, either to summon, or to make a bad use of the passage (I
am not prepared to say precisely which) of certain Bishops, deprived by the
whole Synod of the Eastern and Western Church; and, in violation of all Imperial
Ordinances, and of your commands, to confer the name of Bishop on a certain
individual of their own misbelieving and deceitful crew; encouraged to do so, as I
believe, by nothing so much as my great infirmity; for I must mention this. If
this is to be tolerated, your Excellency will tolerate it, and I too will bear
it, as I have often before. But if it is serious, and not to be endured by our
most august Emperors, pray punish what has been done--though more mildly than
such madness merits.