ON THE TRINITY, BOOK I
ON THE TRINITY
BOOK I.
1. When I was seeking an employment adequate to the powers of human life
and righteous in itself, whether prompted by nature or suggested by the
researches of the wise, whereby I might attain to some result worthy of that Divine
gift of understanding which has been given us, many things occurred to me which in
general esteem were thought to render life both useful and desirable. And
especially that which now, as always in the past, is regarded as most to be
desired, leisure combined with wealth, came before my mind. The one without the other
seemed rather a source of evil than an opportunity for good, for leisure in
poverty is felt to be almost an exile from life itself, while wealth possessed
amid anxiety is in itself an affliction, rendered the worse by the deeper
humiliation which he must suffer who loses, after possessing, the things that most are
wished and sought. And yet, though these two embrace the highest and best of
the luxuries of life, they seem not far removed from the normal pleasures of the
beasts which, as they roam through shady places rich in herbage, enjoy at once
their safety from toil and the abundance of their food. For if this be regarded
as the best and most perfect conduct of the life of man, it results that one
Object is common, though the range of feelings differ, to us and the whole
unreasoning animal world, Since all of them, in that bounteous provision and
absolute leisure which nature bestows, have full scope for enjoyment without anxiety
for possession.
2. I believe that the mass of mankind have spurned from themselves and
censured in others this acquiescence in a thoughtless, animal life, for no other
reason than that nature herself has taught them that it is unworthy of humanity
to hold themselves born only to gratify their greed and their sloth, and
ushered into life for no high aim of glorious deed or fair accomplishment, and that
this very life was granted without the power of progress towards immortality; a
life, indeed, which then we should confidently assert did not deserve to be
regarded as a gift of God, since, racked by pain and laden with trouble, it wastes
itself upon itself from the blank mind of infancy to the wanderings of age. I
believe that men, prompted by nature herself, have raised themselves through
teaching and practice to the virtues which we name patience and temperance and
forbearance, under the conviction that right living means right action and right
thought, and that Immortal God has not given life only to end in death; for
none can believe that the Giver of good has bestowed the pleasant sense of life in
order that it may be overcast by the gloomy fear of dying.
3. And yet, though I could not tax with folly and uselessness this counsel
of theirs to keep the soul free from blame, and evade by foresight or elude by
skill or endure with patience the troubles of life, still I could not regard
these men as guides competent to lead me to the good and happy Life. Their
precepts were platitudes, on the mere level of human impulse; animal instinct could
not fail to comprehend them, and he who understood but disobeyed would have
fallen into an insanity baser than animal unreason. Moreover, my soul was eager
not merely to do the things, neglect of which brings shame and suffering, but to
know the God and Father Who had given this great gift, to Whom, it felt, it
owed its whole self, Whose service was its true honour, on Whom all its hopes were
fixed, in Whose lovingkindness, as in a safe home and haven, it could rest
amid all the troubles of this anxious life. It was inflamed with a passionate
desire to apprehend Him or to know Him.
4. Some of these teachers brought forward large households of dubious
deities, and under the persuasion that there is a sexual activity in divine beings
narrated births and lineages from god to god. Others asserted that there were
gods greater and less, of distinction proportionate to their power. Some denied
the existence of any gods whatever, and confined their reverence to a nature
which, in their opinion owes its being to chance-led vibrations and collisions.
On the other hand, many followed the common belief in asserting the existence of
a God, but proclaimed Him heedless and indifferent to the affairs of men.
Again, some worshipped in the elements of earth and air the actual bodily and
visible forms of created things; and, finally, some made their gods dwell within
images of men or of beasts, tame or wild, of birds or of snakes, and confined the
Lord of the universe and Father of infinity within these narrow prisons of
metal or stone or wood. These I was sure, could be no exponents of truth, for
though they were at one in the absurdity, the foulness, the impiety of their
observances, they were at variance concerning the essential articles of their
senseless belief. My soul was distracted amid all these claims, yet still it pressed
along that profitable road which leads inevitably to the true knowledge of God.
It could not hold that neglect of a world created by Himself was worthily to be
attributed to God, or that deities endowed with sex, and lines of begetters and
begotten, were compatible with the pure and mighty nature of the Godhead. Nay,
rather, it was sure that that which is Divine and eternal must be one without
distinction of sex, for that which is self-existent cannot have left outside
itself anything superior to itself. Hence omnipotence and eternity are the
possession of One only, for omnipotence is incapable of degrees of strength or
weakness, and eternity of priority or succession. In God we must worship absolute
eternity and absolute power.
5. While my mind was dwelling on these and on many like thoughts, I
chauced upon the books which, according to the tradition of the Hebrew faith, were
written by Moses and the prophets, and found in these words spoken by God the
Creator testifying of Himself 'I AM THAT I AM, and again, He THAT IS hath sent me
unto you[1].' I confess that I was amazed to find in them an indication
concerning God so exact that it expressed in the terms best adapted to human
understanding an unattainable insight into the mystery of the Divine nature. For no
property of God which the mind can grasp is more characteristic of Him than
existence, since existence, in the absolute sense, cannot be predicated of that which
shall come to an end, or of that which has had a beginning, and He who now
joins continuity of being with the possession of perfect felicity could not in the
past, nor can in the future, be non-existent; for whatsoever is Divine can
neither be originated nor destroyed. Wherefore, since God's eternity is inseparable
from Himself, it was worthy of Him to reveal this one thing, that He is, as
the assurance of His absolute eternity.
6. For such an indication of God's infinity the words 'I AM THAT I AM'
were clearly adequate; but, in addition, we needed to apprehend the operation of
His majesty and power. For while absolute existence is peculiar to Him Who,
abiding eternally, had no beginning in a past however remote, we hear again an
utterance worthy of Himself issuing from the eternal and Holy God, Who says, Who
ho! deth the heaven in His palm and the earth in His hand[2], and again, The
heaven is My throne and the earth is the foolstool of My feet. What house will ye
build Me or what shall be the place of My rest[3]? The whole heaven is held in
the palm of God, the whole earth grasped, in His hand. Now the word of God,
profitable as it is to the cursory thought of a pious mind, reveals a deeper
meaning to the patient student than to the momentary hearer. For this heaven which is
held in the palm of God is also His throne, and the earth which is grasped in
His hand is also the footstool beneath His feet. This was not written that from
throne and footstool, metaphors drawn from the posture of one sitting. we
should conclude that He has extension in space, as of a body, for that which is His
throne and footstool is also held in hand and palm by that infinite
Omnipotence. It was written that in all born and created things God might be known within
them and without, overshadowing and indwelling, surrounding all and interfused
through all, since palm and hand, which hold, reveal the might of His external
control, while throne and footstool. by their support of a sitter, display the
subservience of outward things to One within Who, Himself outside them,
encloses all in His grasp, let dwells within the external world which is His own. In
this wise does God, from within and from without, control and correspond to the
universe; being infinite He is present in all things, in Him Who is infinite
all are included. In devout thoughts such as these my soul, engrossed in the
pursuit of truth, took its delight. For it seemed that the greatness of God so far
surpassed the mental powers of His handiwork, that however far the limited
mind of man might strain in the hazardous effort to define Him, the gap was not
lessened between the finite nature which struggled and the boundless infinity
that lay beyond its ken[4], I had come by reverent reflection on my own part to
understand this, but I found it confirmed by the words of the prophet, Whether
shall I go from Thy Spirit? Or whither shall I flee from Thy face? If I ascend up
into heaven, Thou art there; if I go down into hell, Thou art there also; if I
have taken my wings before dawn and made my dwelling in the uttermost parts of
the sea (Thou art there). For thither Thy hand shall guide me and Thy right
hand shall hold me[5]. There is no space where God is not; space does not exist
apart from Him. He is in heaven, in hell, beyond the seas; dwelling in all
things and enveloping all. Thus He embraces, and is embraced by, the universe,
confined to no part of it but pervading all.
7. Therefore, although my soul drew joy from the apprehension of this
august and unfathomable Mind, because it could worship as its own Father and
Creator so limitless an Infinity, yet with a still more eager desire it sought to
know the true aspect of its infinite and eternal Lord, that it might be able to
believe that that immeasurable Deity was apparelled in splendour befitting the
beauty of His wisdom. Then, while the devout soul was baffled and astray through
its own feebleness, it caught from the prophet's voice this scale of comparison
for God, admirably expressed, By the greatness of His works and the beauty of
the things that He hath made the Creator of worlds is rightly discerned[5a].
The Creator of great things is supreme in greatness, of beautiful things in
beauty. Since the work transcends our thoughts, all thought must be transcended by
the Maker. Thus heaven and air and earth and seas are fair: fair also the whole
universe, as the Greeks agree, who from its beautiful ordering call it
<greek>kosmos</greek>, that is, order. But if our thought can estimate this beauty of
the universe by a natural instinct--an instinct such as we see in certain birds
and beasts whose voice, though it fall below the level of our understanding,
yet has a sense clear to them though they cannot utter it, and in which, since
all speech is the expression of some thought, there lies a meaning patent to
themselves--must not the Lord of this universal beauty be recognised as Himself
most beautiful amid all the beauty that surrounds Him? For though the splendour of
His eternal glory overtax our mind's best powers, it cannot fail to see that
He is beautiful. We must in truth confess that God is most beautiful, and that
with a beauty which, though it transcend our comprehension, forces itself upon
our perception.
8. Thus my mind, full of these results which by its own reflection and the
teaching of Scripture it had attained, rested with assurance, as on some
peaceful watch-tower, upon that glorious conclusion, recognising that its true
nature made it capable of one homage to its Creator, and of none other, whether
greater or less; the homage namely of conviction that His is a greatness too vast
for our comprehension but not for our faith. For a reasonable faith is akin to
reason and accepts its aid, even though that same reason cannot cope with the
vastness of eternal Omnipotence.
9. Beneath all these thoughts lay an instinctive hope, which strengthened
my assertion of the faith, in some perfect blessedness hereafter to be earned
by devout thoughts concerning God and upright life; the reward, as it were, that
awaits the triumphant warrior. For true faith in God would pass unrewarded, if
the soul be destroyed by death, and quenched in the extinction of bodily life.
Even unaided reason pleaded that it was unworthy of God to usher man into an
existence which has some share of His thought and wisdom, only to await the
sentence of life withdrawn and of eternal death; to create him out of nothing to
take his place in the World, only that when he has taken it he may perish. For,
on the only rational theory of creation, its purpose was that things
non-existent should come into being, not that things existing should cease to be.
10. Yet my soul was weighed down with fear both for itself and for the
body. It retained a firm conviction, and a devout loyalty to the true faith
concerning God, but had come to harbour a deep anxiety concerning itself and the
bodily dwelling which must, it thought, share its destruction. While in this state,
in addition to its knowledge of the teaching of the Law and Prophets, it
learned the truths taught by the Apostle in the Gospel;--In the beginning was rite
Ward, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the
beginning with God. All things were made through Him, and without Him was not
anything made. That which was made in Him is life[6], and the life was the light of
men, and the light shineth in darkness, and the darkness apprehended it not.
There was a man sent from God, whose name was John. He came for wiiness, that he
might bear witness of the light. That was the true light, which lighteneth every
man that cometh into this world. He was in the world, and the world was made
through Him, and the world knew Him not. He came unto His own things, and they
that were His own received Him not. But to as many as received Him He gave power
to become sons of God, even to them that believe on His Name; which were born,
not of blood, nor of the will of man, nor of the will of the flesh, but of
God. And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we beheld His glory, glory
as of the Only-begotten from the Father, full of grace and truth(7). Here the
soul makes an advance beyond the attainment of its natural capacities, is taught
more than it had dreamed concerning God. For it learns that its Creator is God
of God; it hears that the Word is God and was with God in the beginning. It
comes to understand that the Light of the world was abiding in the world and that
the world knew Him not; that He came to His own possession and that they that
were His own received Him not; but that they who do receive Him by virtue of
their faith advance to be sons of God, being born not of the embrace of the flesh
nor of the conception of the blood nor of bodily desire, but of God; finally,
it learns that the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and that His glory was
seen, which, as of the Only-begotten from the Father, is perfect through grace
and truth.
11. Herein my soul, trembling and distressed, found a hope wider than it
had imagined. First came its introduction to the knowledge of God the Father.
Then it learnt that the eternity and infinity and beauty which, by the light of
natural reason, it had attributed to its Creator belonged also to God the
Only-begotten. It did not disperse its faith among a plurality of deities, for it
heard that He is God of God; nor did it fall into the error of attributing a
difference of nature to this God of God, for it learnt that He is full of grace and
truth. Nor yet did my soul perceive anything contrary to reason in God of God,
since He was revealed as having been in the beginning God with God. It saw that
there are very few who attain to the knowledge of this saving faith, though
its reward be great, for even His own received Him not though they who receive
Him are promoted to be sons of God by a birth, not of the flesh but of faith. It
learnt also that this sonship to God is not a compulsion but a possibility.
for, while the Divine gift is offered to all, it is no heredity inevitably
imprinted but a prize awarded to willing choice. And test this very truth that
whosoever will may become a son of God should stagger the weakness of our faith (for
most we desire, but least expect, that which from its very greatness we find it
hard to hope for), God the Word became flesh, that through His Incarnation our
flesh might attain to union with God the Word. And lest we should think that
this incarnate Word was some other than God the Word, or that His flesh was of a
body different from ours, He dwelt among us that by His dwelling He might be
known as the indwelling God, and, by His dwelling among us, known as God
incarnate in no other flesh than our own, and moreover, though He had condescended to
take our flesh, not destitute of His own attributes; for He, the Only-begotten
of the Father, full of grace and truth, is fully possessed of His own attributes
and truly endowed with ours.
12. This lesson in the Divine mysteries was gladly welcomed by my soul,
now drawing near through the flesh to God, called to new birth through faith,
entrusted with liberty and power to win the heavenly regeneration, conscious of
the love of its Father and Creator, sure that He would not annihilate a creature
whom He had summoned out of nothing into life. And it could estimate how high
are these truths above the mental vision of man; for the reason which deals with
the common objects of thought can conceive of nothing as existent beyond what
it perceives within itself or can create out of itself. My soul measured the
mighty workings of God, wrought on the scale of His eternal omnipotence, not by
its own powers of perception but by a boundless faith; and therefore refused to
disbelieve, because it could not understand, that God was in the beginning with
God, and that the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, but bore in mind the
truth that with the will to believe would come the power to understand.
13. And lest the soul should stray and linger in some delusion of heathen
philosophy, it receives this further lesson of perfect loyalty to the holy
faith, taught by the Apostle in words inspired:--Beware lest any man spoil you
through philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after the rudiments
of the word, and not after Christ; for in Him dwelleth all the fulness of the
Godhead bodily, and ye are made full in Him, Which is the Head of all
principality and power; in Whom ye were also circumcised with a circumcision not made
with hands, in putting off the body, of the flesh, but wash the circumcision of
Christ; buried with Him in Baptism, wherein also ye have risen again through
faith in the working of God, Who raised Him from the dead. And you, when ye were
dead in sins and in the uncircumcision of your flesh, He hath quickened with
Him, having forgiven you all your sins, blotting out the band which was against us
by its ordinances, which was contrary to us; and He hath taken it out of the
way, nailing it to the Cross; and having put off the flesh He made a show of
powers openly, triumphing over them through confidence in Himself(8). Steadfast
faith rejects the vain subtleties of philosophic enquiry; truth refuses to be
vanquished by these treacherous devices of human folly, and enslaved by falsehood.
It will not confine God within the limits which barred our common reason, nor
judge after the rudiments of the world concerning Christ, in Whom dwelleth all
the fulness of the Godhead bodily, and in such wise that the utmost efforts of
the earthly mind to comprehend Him are baffled by that immeasurable Eternity
and Omnipotence. My soul judged of Him as One Who, drawing us upward to partake
of His own Divine nature, has loosened henceforth the bond of bodily observances
Who, unlike the Symbolic Law, has initiated us into no rites of mutilating the
flesh, but Whose purpose is that our spirit, circumcised from vice, should
purify all the natural faculties of the body by abstinence from sin, that we being
buried with His Death in Baptism may return to the life of eternity (since
regeneration to life is death to the former life), and dying to our sins be born
again to immortality, that even as He abandoned His immortality to die for us,
so should we awaken from death to immortality with Him. For He took upon Him the
flesh in which we have sinned that by wearing our flesh He might forgive sins;
a flesh which He shares with us by wearing it, not by sinning in it. He
blotted out through death the sentence of death, that by a new creation of our race
in Himself He might sweep away the penalty appointed by the former Law. He let
them nail Him to the cross that He might nail to the curse of the cross and
abolish all the curses to which the world is condemned. He suffered as man to the
utmost that He might put powers to shame. For Scripture had foretold that He Who
is God should die; that the victory and triumph of them that trust in Him lay
in the fact that He, Who is immortal and cannot be overcome by death, was to
die that mortals might gain eternity. These deeds of God, wrought in a manner
beyond our comprehension, cannot, I repeat, be understood by our natural
faculties, for the work of the Infinite and Eternal can only be grasped by an infinite
intelligence. Hence, just as the truths that God became man, that the Immortal
died that the Eternal was buried, do not belong to the rational order but are an
unique work of power, so on the other hand it is an effect not of intellect
but of omnipotence that He Who is man is also God, that He Who died is immortal,
that He Who was buried is eternal. We, then, are raised together by God in
Christ through His death. But, since in Christ there is the fulness of the Godhead,
we have herein a revelation of God the Father joining to raise us in Him Who
died; and we must confess that Christ Jesus is none other than God in all the
fulness of the Deity.
14. In this calm assurance of safety did my soul gladly and hopefully take
its rest, and feared so little the interruption of death, that death seemed
only a name for eternal life. And the life of this present body was so far from
seeming a burden or affliction that it was regarded as children regard their
alphabet, sick men their draught, shipwrecked sailors their swim, young men the
training for their profession, future commanders their first campaign; that is,
as an endurable submission to present necessities, bearing the promise of a
blissful immortality. And further, I began to proclaim those truths in which my
soul had a personal faith, as a duty of the episcopate which had been laid upon
me, employing my office to promote the salvation of all men.
15. While I was thus engaged there came to light certain fallacies of rash
and wicked men, hopeless for themselves and merciless towards others, who made
their own feeble nature the measure of the might of God's nature. They
claimed, not that they had ascended to an infinite knowledge of infinite things, but
that they had reduced all knowledge, undefined before, within the scope of
ordinary reason, and fixed the limits of the faith. Whereas the true work of
religion is a service of obedience; and these were men heedless of their own weakness,
reckless of Divine realities, who undertook to improve upon the teaching of
God.
16. Not to touch upon the vain enquiries of other heretics--concerning
whom however, when the course of my argument gives occasion, I will not be
silent--there are those who tamper with the faith of the Gospel by denying, under the
cloak of loyalty to the One God, the birth of God the Only-begotten. They
assert that there was an extension of God into man, not a descent; that He, Who for
the season that He took our flesh was Son of Man, had not been previously, nor
was then, Son of God; that there was no Divine birth in His case, but an
identity of Begetter and Begotten; and (to maintain what they consider a perfect
loyalty to the unity of God) that there was an unbroken continuity in the
Incarnation, the Father extending Himself into the Virgin, and Himself being born as His
own Son. Others, on the contrary (heretics, because there is no salvation
apart from Christ, Who in the beginning was God the Word with God), deny that He
was born and declare that He was merely created. Birth, they hold, would confess
Him to be true God, while creation proves His Godhead unreal; and though this
explanation be a fraud against the faith in the unity of God, regarded as an
accurate definition, yet they think it may pass muster as figurative language.
They degrade, in name and in belief, His true birth to the level of a creation, to
cut Him off front the Divine unity, that, as a creature called into being, He
may not claim the fulness of the Godhead, which is not His by a true birth.
17. My soul has been burning to answer these insane attacks. I call to
mind that the very centre of a saving faith is the belief not merely in God, but
in God as a Father; not merely in Christ, but in Christ as the Son of God; in
Him, not as a creature, but as God the Creator, born of God. My prime object is
by the clear assertions of prophets and evangelists to refute the insanity and
ignorance of men who use the unity of God (in itself a pious and profitable
confession) as a cloak for their denial either that in Christ God was born, or else
that He is very God. Their purpose is to isolate a solitary God at the heart
of the faith by making Christ, though mighty, only a creature; because, so they
allege, a birth of God widens the believer's faith into a trust in more gods
than one. But we, divinely taught to confess neither two Gods nor yet a solitary
God, will adduce the evidence of the Gospels and the prophets for our
confession of God the Father and God the Son, united, not confounded, in our faith. We
will not admit Their identity nor allow, as a compromise, that Christ is God in
some imperfect sense; for God, born of God, cannot be the same as His Father,
since He is His Son, nor yet can He be different in nature.
18. And you, whose warmth of faith and passion for a truth unknown to the
world and its philosophers shall prompt to read me, must remember to eschew the
feeble and baseless conjectures of earthly minds, and in devout willingness to
learn must break down the barriers of prejudice and half-knowledge. The new
faculties of the regenerate intellect are needed; each must have his
understanding enlightened by the heavenly gift imparted to the soul. First he must take his
stand upon the sure ground [substantia = <greek>upostai</greek>] of God, as
holy Jeremiah says(9), that since he is to hear about that nature [substantial he
may expand his thoughts till they are worthy of the theme, not fixing some
arbitrary standard for himself, but judging as of infinity. And again, though he
be aware that he is partaker of the Divine nature, as the holy apostle Peter
says in his second Epistle(1), yet he must not measure the Divine nature by the
limitations of his own, but gauge God's assertions concerning Himself by the
scale of His own glorious self-revelation. For he is the best student who does not
read his thoughts into the book, but lets it reveal its own; who draws from it
its sense, and does not import his own into it, nor force upon its words a
meaning which he had determined was the right one before he opened its pages.
Since then we are to discourse of the things of God, let us assume that God has
full knowledge of Himself, and bow with humble reverence to His words. For He Whom
we can only know through His own utterances is the fitting witness concerning
Himself.
19. If in our discussion of the nature and birth of God we adduce certain
analogies, let no one suppose that such comparisons are perfect and complete.
There can be no comparison between God and earthly things, yet the weakness of
our understanding forces us to seek for illustrations from a lower sphere to
explain our meaning about loftier themes. The course of daily life shews how our
experience in ordinary matters enables us to form conclusions on unfamiliar
subjects. We must therefore regard any comparison as helpful to man rather than as
descriptive of God, since it suggests, rather than exhausts, the sense we seek.
Nor let such a comparison be thought too bold when it sets side by side carnal
anti spiritual natures, things invisible and things palpable, since it avows
itself a necessary aid to the weakness of the human mind, and deprecates the
condemnation due to an imperfect analogy. On this principle I proceed with my
task, intending to use the terms supplied by God, yet colouring my argument with
illustrations drawn from human life.
20. And first, I have so laid out the plan of the whole work as to consult
the advantage of the reader by the logical order in which its books are
arranged. It has been my resolve to publish no half-finished and ill-considered
treatise, lest its disorderly array should resemble the confused clamour of a mob of
peasants. And since no one can scale a precipice unless there be jutting
ledges to aid his progress to the summit, I have here set down in order the primary
outlines of our ascent leading our difficult course of argument up the easiest
path; not cutting steps in the face of the rock, but levelling it to a gentle
slope, that so the traveller, almost without a sense of effort may reach the
heights.
21. Thus, after the present first book, the second expounds the mystery of
the Divine birth, that those who shall be baptized in the Name of the Father
and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost may know the true Names, and not be
perplexed about their sense but accurately informed as to fact and meaning, and so
receive full assurance that in the words which are used they have the true Names,
and that those Names involve the truth.
22. After this short and simple discourse concerning the Trinity, the
third book makes further progress, sure though slow. Citing the greatest instances
of His power, it brings within the range of faith's understanding that saying,
in itself beyond our comprehension, I in the Father and the Father in Me(2),
which Christ utters concerning Himself. Thus truth beyond the dull wit of man is
the prize of faith equipped with reason and knowledge; for neither may we doubt
God's Word concerning Himself, nor can we suppose that the devout reason is
incapable of apprehending His might.
23. The fourth book starts With the doctrines of the heretics, and disowns
complicity in the fallacies whereby they are traducing the faith of the
Church. It publishes that infidel creed which a number of them have lately
promulgated(3), and exposes the dishonesty, and therefore the wickedness, of their
arguments from the Law for what they call the unity of God. It sets out the whole
evidence of Law and Prophets to demonstrate the impiety of asserting the unity of
God to the exclusion of the Godhead of Christ, and the treason of alleging that
if Christ be God the Only-begotten, then God is not one.
24. The fifth book follows in reply the sequence of heretical assertion.
They had falsely declared that they followed the law in the sense which they
assigned to the unity of God, and that they had proved from it that the true God
is of one Person; and this in order to rob the Lord Christ of His birth by their
conclusion concerning the One true God, for birth is the evidence of origin.
In answer I assert, step by step, what they deny; for from the Law and the
Prophets I demonstrate that there are not two gods, nor one isolated true God,
neither perverting the faith in the Divine unity nor denying the birth of Christ.
And since they say that the Lord Jesus Christ, created rather than born, bears
the Divine Name by gift and not by right, I have proved His true Divinity from
the Prophets in such a way that, He being acknowledged very God, the assurance of
His inherent Godhead shall hold us fast to the certainty that God is One.
25. The sixth book reveals the full deceitfulness of this heretical
teaching. To win credit for their assertions they denounce the impious doctrine of
heretics:--of Valentinus, to wit, and Sabellius and Manichaeus and Hieracas, and
appropriate the godly language of the Church as a cover for their blasphemy.
They reprove and alter the language of these heretics, correcting it into a vague
resemblance to orthodoxy, in order to suppress the holy faith while apparently
denouncing heresy. But we state clearly what is the language and what the
doctrine of each of these men, and acquit the Church of any complicity or
fellowship with condemned heretics. Their words which deserve condemnation we condemn,
and those which claim our humble acceptance we accept. Thus that Divine Sonship
of Jesus Christ, which is the object of their most strenuous denial, we prove
by the witness of the Father, by Christ's own assertion, by the preaching of
Apostles, by the faith of believers, by the cries of devils, by the contradiction
of Jews, in itself a confession, by the recognition of the heathen who had not
known God; and all this to rescue from dispute a truth of which Christ had left
us no excuse for ignorance.
26. Next the seventh book, starting from the basis of a true faith now
attained, delivers its verdict in the great debate. First, armed with its sound
and incontrovertible proof of the impregnable faith, it takes part in the
conflict raging between Sabellius and Hebion and these opponents of the true Godhead.
It joins issue with Sabellius on his denial of the pre-existence of Christ,
and with his assailants on their assertion that He is a creature. Sabellius
overlooked the eternity of the Son, but believed that true God worked in a human
body. Our present adversaries deny that He was born, assert that He was created,
and fail to see in His deeds the works of very God. What both sides dispute, we
believe. Sabellius denies that it was the Son who was working, and he is wrong;
but he proves his case triumphantly when he alleges that the work done was
that of true God. The Church shares his victory over those who deny that in Christ
was very God. But when Sabellius denies that Christ existed before the worlds,
his adversaries prove to conviction that Christ's activity is from
everlasting, and we are on their side in this confutation of Sabellius, who recognises
true God, but not God the Son, in this activity. And our two previous adversaries
join forces to refute Hebion, the second demonstrating the eternal existence of
Christ, while the first proves that His work is that of very God. Thus the
heretics overthrow one another, while the Church, as against Sabellius, against
those who call Christ a creature, against Hebion, bears witness that the Lord
Jesus Christ is very God of very God, born before the worlds and born in after
times as man.
27. No one can doubt that we have taken the course of true reverence and
of sound doctrine when, after proving from Law and Prophets first that Christ
is the Son of God, and next that He is true God, and flits without breach of the
mysterious unity, we proceed to support the Law and the Prophets by the
evidence of the Gospels, and prove from them also that He is the Son of God and
Himself very God. It is the easiest of tasks, after demonstrating His right to the
Name of Son, to shew that the Name truly describes His relation to the Father;
though indeed universal usage regards the granting of the name of son as
convincing evidence of sonship. But, to leave no loophole for the trickery and deceit
of these traducers of the true birth of God the Only-begotten, we have used His
true Godhead as evidence of His true Sonship; to shew that He Who (as is
confessed by all) bears the Name of Son of God is actually God, we have adduced His
Name, His birth, His nature, His power, His assertions. We have proved that His
Name is an accurate description of Himself, that the title of Son is an
evidence of birth, that in His birth He retained His Divine Nature, and with His
nature His power, and that that power manifested itself in conscious and deliberate
self-revelation. I have set down the Gospel proofs of each several point,
shewing how His self-revelation displays His power. how His power reveals His
nature, how His nature is His by birthright, and from His birth comes His title to
the name of Son. Thus every whisper of blasphemy is silenced, for the Lord Jesus
Christ Himself by the witness of His own mouth has taught us that He is, as
His Name, His birth, His nature, His power declare, in the true sense of Deity,
very God of very God.
28. While its two predecessors have been devoted to the confirmation of
the faith in Christ as Son of God and true God, the eighth book is taken up with
the proof of the unity of God, shewing that this unity is consistent with the
birth of the Son, and that the birth involves no duality in the Godhead. First
it exposes the sophistry with which these heretics have attempted to avoid,
though they could not deny, the confession of the real existence of God, Father and
Son; it demolishes their helpless and absurd plea that in such passages as,
And the multitude of them that believed were one soul and heart(4), and again, He
that planteth and He that watereth are one(5), and Neither far these only do I
pray, but for them also that shall believe on Me through their word, that they
may all be one, even as Thou, Father, art in Me, and I in Thee, that they also
may be in Us(6), a unity of will and mind, not of Divinity, is expressed. From
a consideration of the true sense of these texts we shew that they involve the
reality of the Divine birth; and then, displaying the whole series of our
Lord's self-revelations, we exhibit, in the language of Apostles and in the very
words of the Holy Spirit, the whole and perfect mystery of the glory of God as
Father and as Only-begotten Son. Because there is a Father we know that there is
a Son; in that Son the Father is manifested to us, and hence our certainty that
He is born the Only-begotten and that He is very God.
29. In matters essential to salvation it is not enough to advance the
proofs which faith supplies and finds sufficient. Arguments which we have not
tested may delude us into a misapprehension of the meaning of our own words, unless
we take the offensive by exposing the hollowness of the enemy's proofs, and so
establish our own faith upon the demonstrated absurdity of his. The ninth book,
therefore, is employed in refuting the arguments by which the heretics attempt
to invalidate the birth of God the Only-begotten;--heretics who ignore the
mystery of the revelation hidden from the beginning of the world, and forget that
the Gospel faith proclaims the union of God and man. For their denial that our
Lord Jesus Christ is God, like unto God and equal with God as Son with Father,
born of God and by right of His birth subsisting as very Spirit, they are
accustomed to appeal to such words of our Lord as, Why callest thou Me good? None is
good save One, even God(7). They argue that by His reproof of the man who
called Him good, and by His assertion of the goodness of God only, He excludes
Himself from the goodness of that God Who alone is good and from that true Divinity
which belongs only to One. With this text their blasphemous reasoning connects
another, And this is life eternal that they should know Thee the only true
God, and Him Whom Thou didst send, Jesus Christ(8). Here, they say, He confesses
that the Father is the only true God, and that He Himself is neither true nor
God, since this recognition of an only true God is limited to the Possessor of
the attributes assigned. And they profess to be quite clear about His meaning in
this passage, since He also says, The Son can do nothing of Himself, but what
He hath seen the Father doing(9). The fact that He can only copy is said to be
evidence of the limitation of His nature. There can be no comparison between
Omnipotence and One whose action is dependent upon the previous activity of
Another reason itself draws an absolute line between power and the want of power.
That line is so clear that He Himself has avowed concerning God the Father, The
Father is greater than I(1). So frank a confession silences all demur; it is
blasphemy and madness to assign the dignity and nature of Gaol to One who disclaims
them. So utterly devoid is He of the qualities of true God that He actually
bears witness concerning Himself, But of that day and hour knoweth no one,
neither the angels in heaven nor the Son, but God only L A son who knows not his
father's secret must, from his ignorance, be alien from the father who knows; a
nature limited in knowledge cannot partake of that majesty and might which alone
is exempt from the tyranny of ignorance.
30. We therefore expose the blasphemous misunderstanding at which they
have arrived by distortion and perversion of the meaning of Christ's words. We
account for those words by stating what manner of questions He was answering, at
what times He was speaking, what partial knowledge He was deigning to impart; we
make the circumstances explain the words, and do not force the former into
consistency with the latter. Thus each case of variance, that for instance between
The Father is greater than I(1), and I and the Father are One(3), or between
None is good save One, even God(4), and He that hath seen Me hath seen the
Father also(5), or a difference so wide as that between Father, all things that are
Mine are Thine, and Thine are Mine(6), and That they may know Thee, the only,
true God(7), or between I in the Father and the Father in Me(8), and But of the
day and hour knoweth no one, neither the angels in heaven nor the Son, but the
Father only(9), is explained by a discrimination between gradual revelation and
full expression of His nature and power. Both are utterances of the same
Speaker, and an exposition of the real force of each group will shew that Christ's
true Godhead is no whir impaired because, to form the mystery of the Gospel
faith, the birth and Name(1) of Christ were revealed gradually, and under
conditions which He chose of occasion and time.
31. The purpose of the tenth book is one in harmony with the faith. For
since, in the folly which passes with them for wisdom, the heretics have twisted
some Of the circumstances and utterances of the Passion into an insolent
contradiction of the Divine nature and power of the Lord Jesus Christ, I am compelled
to prove that this is a blasphemous misinterpretation, and that these things
were put on record by the Lord Himself as evidences of His true and absolute
majesty. In their parody of the faith they deceive themselves with words such as,
My saul is sorrowful even unto death(2). He, they think, must be far removed
from the blissful and passionless life of God, over Whose soul brooded this
crushing fear of an impending woe, Who under the pressure of suffering even humbled
Himself to pray, Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass away from Me(3),
and assuredly bore the appearance of fearing to endure the trials from which He
prayed for release; Whose whole nature was so overwhelmed by agony that in
those moments on the Cross He cried, My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me(4)?
forced by the bitterness of His pain to complain that He was forsaken: Who,
destitute of the Father's help, gave up the ghost with the words, Father; into
Thy hands I commend My Spirit(5). The fear, they say, which beset Him at the
moment of expiring made Him entrust His Spirit to the care of God the Father: the
very hopelessness of His own condition forced Him to commit His Soul to the
keeping of Another.
32. Their folly being as great as their blasphemy, they fail to mark that
Christ's words, spoken under similar circumstances, are always consistent; they
cleave to the letter and ign re the purpose of His words. There is the widest
difference between My soul is sorrowful even unto death(2), and Henceforth ye
shall see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of power(6)· so also between
Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass away, from Me(3), and The cup
which the Father hath given Me, shall I not drink it[7]? and further between My
God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me[8]? and Verily I say unto thee, Today shall
thou be with Me in Paradise[9], and between Father into Thy hands I commend My
Spirit[1], and Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do[2]; and
their narrow minds, unable to grasp the Divine meaning, plunge into blasphemy in
the attempt at explanation. There is a broad distinction between anxiety and a
mind at ease, between haste and the prayer for delay, between words of anguish
and words of encouragement, between despair for self and confident entreaty for
others; and the heretics display their impiety by ignoring the assertions of
Deity and the Divine nature of Christ, which account for the one class, of His
words, while they concentrate their attention upon the deeds and words which
refer only to His ministry on earth. I have therefore set out all the elements
contained in the mystery of the Soul and Body of the Lord Jesus Christ; all have
been sought out, none suppressed. Next, casting the calm light of reason upon
the question, I have referred each of His sayings to the class to which its
meaning attaches it, and so have shewn that He had also a confidence which never
wavered a will which never faltered, an assurance which never murmured, that, when
He commended His own soul to the Father, in this was involved a prayer for the
pardon of others[3]. Thus a complete presentment of the teaching of the Gospel
interprets and confirms all (and not some only) of the words of Christ.
33. And so--for not even the glory of the Resurrection has opened the eyes
of these lost men and kept them within the manifest bounds of the faith--they
have forged a weapon for their blasphemy out of a pretended reverence, and even
perverted the revelation of a mystery into an insult to God. From the words, I
ascend unto My Father and your Father, to My God and your God[4], they argue
that since that Father is ours as much as His, and that God also ours and His,
His own confession that He shares with us in that relation to the Father and to
God excludes Him from true Divinity, and subordinates Him to God the Creator
Whose creature and inferior He is, as we are, although He has received the
adoption of a Son. Nay more, we must not suppose that He possesses any of the
characters of the Divine nature, since the Apostle says, But when He saith, all things
are put in subjection, this is except Him Who did subject all things unto Him,
for when all things shall have been subjected unto Him, then shall also He
Himself be subjected to Him that did subject all things unto Him, that God may be
all in all[5]. For, so they say, subjection is evidence of want of power in the
subject and of its possession by the sovereign. The eleventh book is employed
in a reverent discussion of this argument; it proves from these very words of
the Apostle not only that subjection is no evidence of want of power in Christ
but that it actually is a sign of His true Divinity as God the Son; that the
fact that His Father and God is also our Father and God is an infinite advantage
to us and no degradation to Him, since He Who has been born as Man and suffered
all the afflictions of our flesh has gone up on high to our God and Father, to
receive His glory as Man our Representative.
34. In this treatise we have followed the course which we know is pursued
in every branch of education. First come easy lessons and a familiarity, slowly
attained by practice, with the groundwork of the subject; then the student may
make proof, in the business of life, of the training which he has received.
Thus the soldier, when he is perfect in his exercises, can go out to battle; the
advocate ventures into the conflicts of the courts when he is versed in the
pleadings of the school of rhetoric; the sailor who has learned to navigate his
ship in the land-locked harbour of his home may be trusted amid the storms of
open seas and distant climes. Such has been our proceeding in this most serious
and difficult science in which the whole faith is taught. First came simple
instruction for the untaught believer in the birth, the name, the Divinity, the true
Divinity of Christ; since then we have quietly and steadily advanced till our
readers can demolish every plea or the heretics; and now at last we have pitted
them against the adversary in the present great and glorious conflict. The
mind of men is powerless with the ordinary resources of unaided reason to grasp
the idea of an eternal birth, but they attain by study of things Divine to the
apprehension of mysteries which lie beyond the range of common thought. They can
explode that paradox concerning the Lord Jesus, which derives all its strength
and semblance of cogency from a purblind pagan philosophy: the paradox which
asserts, There was a time when He was not, and He was not before He was barn, and
He was made out of nothing; as though His birth were proof that He had
previously been non-existent and at a given moment came into being, and God the
Only-begotten could thus be subjected to the conception of time, as if the faith
itself [by conferring the title of 'Son'] and the very nature of birth proved that
there was a time when He was not. Accordingly they argue that He was born out
of nothing, on the ground that birth implies the grant of being to that which
previously had no being. We proclaim in answer, on the evidence of Apostles and
Evangelists, that the Father is eternal and the Son eternal, and demonstrate
that the Son is God of all with an absolute, not a limited, pre-existence; that
these bold assaults of their blasphemous logic--He was born out of nothing, and
He was not before He was barn--are powerless against Him; that His eternity is
consistent with sonship, and His sonship with eternity; that there was in Him no
unique exemption from birth but a birth from everlasting, for, while birth
implies a Father, Divinity is inseparable from eternity.
35. Ignorance of prophetic diction and unskilfulness in interpreting
Scripture has led them into a perversion of the point and meaning of the passage,
The Lord created Me far a beginning of His ways for His works[6]. They labour to
establish from it that Christ is created, rather than born, as God, and hence
partakes the nature of created beings, though He excel them in the manner of His
creation, and has no glory of Divine birth but only the powers of a
transcendent creature. We in reply, without importing any new considerations or
preconceived opinions, will make this very passage of Wisdom[7] display its own true
meaning and object. We will show that the fact that He was created for the
beginning of the ways of God and for His works, cannot be twisted into evidence
concerning the Divine and eternal birth, because creation for these purposes and
birth from everlasting are two entirely different things. Where birth is meant,
there birth, and nothing but birth, is spoken of; where creation is mentioned, the
cause of that creation is first named. There is a Wisdom born before all
things, and again there is a wisdom created for particular purposes; the Wisdom
which is from everlasting is one, the wisdom which has come into existence during
the lapse of time is another.
36. Having thus concluded that we must reject the word 'creation' from our
confession of faith in God the Only-begotten, we proceed to lay down the
teachings of reason and of piety concerning the Holy Spirit, that the reader, whose
convictions have been established by patient and earnest study of the preceding
books, may be provided with a complete presentation of the faith. This end
will be attained when the blasphemies of heretical teaching on this theme also
have been swept away, and the mystery, pure and undefiled, of the Trinity which
regenerates us has been fixed in terms of saving precision on the authority of
Apostles and Evangelists. Men will no longer dare, on the strength of mere human
reasoning, to rank among creatures that Divine Spirit, Whom we receive as the
pledge of immortality and source of fellowship with the sinless nature of God.
37. I know, O Lord God Almighty, that I owe Thee, as the chief duty of my
life, the devotion of all my words and thoughts to Thyself. The gift of speech
which Thou hast bestowed can bring me no higher reward than the opportunity of
service in preaching Thee and displaying Thee as Thou art, as Father and Father
of God the Only-begotten, to the world in its blindness and the heretic in his
rebellion. But this is the mere expression of my own desire; I must pray also
for the gift of Thy help and compassion, that the breath of Thy Spirit may fill
the sails of faith and confession which I have spread, and a favouring wind be
sent to forward me on my voyage of instruction. We can trust the promise of
Him Who said, Ask, and it shall be given you, seek, and ye shall find, knock, and
it shall be opened unto you[8]; and we in our want shall pray for the things
we need. We shall bring an untiring energy to the study of Thy Prophets and
Apostles, and we shall knock for entrance at every gate of hidden knowledge, but it
is Thine to answer the prayer, to grant the thing we seek, to open the door on
which we beat. Our minds are born with dull and clouded vision, our feeble
intellect is penned within the barriers of an impassable ignorance concerning
things Divine; but the study of Thy revelation elevates our soul to the
comprehension of sacred truth, and submission to the faith is the path to a certainty
beyond the reach of unassisted reason.
38. And therefore we look to Thy support for the first trembling steps of
this undertaking, to Thy aid that it may gain strength and prosper. We look to
Thee to give us the fellowship of that Spirit Who guided the Prophets and the
Apostles, that we may take their words in the sense in which they spoke and
assign its right shade of meaning to every utterance. For we shall speak of things
which they preached in a mystery; of Thee, O God Eternal, Father of the Eternal
and Only-begotten God, Who alone art without birth, and of the One Lord Jesus
Christ, born of Thee from everlasting. We may not sever Him from Thee, or make
Him one of a plurality of Gods, on any plea of difference of nature. We may not
say that He is not begotten of Thee, because Thou art One. We must not fail to
confess Him as true God, seeing that He is born of Thee, true God, His Father.
Grant us, therefore, precision of language, soundness of argument, grace of
style, loyalty to truth. Enable us to utter the things that we believe, that so
we may confess, as Prophets and Apostles have taught us, Thee, One God our
Father, and One Lord Jesus Christ, and put to silence the gainsaying of heretics,
proclaiming Thee as God, yet not solitary, and Him as God, in no unreal sense.