ON THE TRINITY, BOOK IV
BOOK IV.
1. THE earlier books of this treatise, written some time ago, contain, I
think, an invincible proof that we hold and profess the faith in Father, Son,
and Holy Spirit, which is taught by the Evangelists and Apostles, and that no
commerce is possible between us and the heretics, inasmuch as they deny
unconditionally, irrationally, and recklessly, the Divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ. Yet
certain points remained which I have felt myself bound to include in this and
the following books, in order to make our assurance of the faith even more
certain by exposure of every one of their falsehoods and blasphemies. Accordingly,
we will enquire first What are the dangers of their teaching, the risks
involved by such irreverence; next, what principles they hold, and what arguments they
advance against the apostolic faith to which we adhere, and by what sleight of
language they impose upon the can dour of their hearers; and lastly, by what
method of comment they disarm the words of Scripture of their force and meaning.
2. We are well aware that neither the speech of men nor the analogy of
human nature can give us a full insight into the things of God. The ineffable
cannot submit to the bounds and limits of definition; that which is spiritual is
distinct from every class or instance of bodily things. Yet, since our subject is
that of heavenly natures, we must employ ordinary natures and ordinary speech
as our means of expressing what our mind apprehends; a means no doubt unworthy
of the majesty of God, but forced upon us by feebleness of our intellect, which
can use only our own circumstances and our own words to convey to others our
perceptions and our conclusions. This truth has been enforced already in the
first book(1), but is now repeated in order that, in any analogies from human
affairs which we adduce, we may not be supposed to think of God as resembling
embodied natures, or to compare spiritual Beings with our passible selves, but
rather be regarded as advancing the outward appearance of visible things as a clue
to the inward meaning of things invisible.
3. For the heretics say that Christ is not from God, that is, that the Son
is not born from the Father, and is God not by nature but by appointment; in
other words, that He has received an adoption which consists in the giving of a
name, being God's Son in the sense m which many are sons of God; again, that
Christ's majesty is an evidence of God's widespread bounty, He being God in the
sense in which there are gods many; although they admit that in His adoption and
naming as God a more liberal affection than in other cases was shewn, His
adoption being the first in order of time, and He greater than other adopted sons,
and first in rank among the creatures because of the greater splendour which
accompanied His creation. Some add, by way of confessing the omnipotence of God,
that He was created into God's likeness, and that it was out of nothing that
He, like other creatures, was raised up to be the Image of the eternal Creator,
bidden at a word to spring from non-existence into being by the power of God,
Who can frame out of nothing the likeness of Himself.
4. Moreover, they use their knowledge of the historical fact that bishops
of a former time have taught that Father and Son are of one substance, to
subvert the truth by the ingenious plea that this is a heretical notion. They say
that this term 'of one substance,' in the Greek homoousion, is used to mean and
express that the Father is the same as the Son; that is, that He extended
Himself out of infinity into the Virgin, and took a body from her, and gave to
Himself, in the body which He had taken, the name of Son. This is their first lie
concerning the homoousion. Their next lie is that this word homoousion implies
that Father and Son participate in something antecedent to Either and distinct
from Both, and that a certain imaginary substance, or ousia, anterior to all
matter whatsoever, has existed heretofore and been divided and wholly distributed
between the Two; which proves, they say, that Each of the Two is of a nature
pro-existent to Himself, and Each identical in matter with the Other. And so they
profess to condemn the confession of the homoousion on the ground that term does
not discriminate between Father and Son, and makes the Father subsequent in
time to that matter which He has in common with the Son. And they have devised
this third objection to the word homoousion, that its meaning, as they explain
it, is that the Son derives His origin from a partition of the Father's
substance, as though one object had been cut in two and He were the severed portion. The
meaning of 'one substance,' they say, is that the part cut off from the whole
continues to share the nature of that from which it has been severed; but God,
being impossible, cannot be divided, for, if He must submit to be lessened by
division. He is subject to change, and will be rendered imperfect if His perfect
substance leave Him to reside in the severed portion.
5. They think also that they have a compendious refutation of Prophets,
Evangelists and Apostles alike, in their assertion that the Son was born within
time. They pronounce us illogical for saying that the Son has existed from
everlasting; and, since they reject the possibility of His eternity, they are forced
to believe that He was born at a point in time. For if He has not always
existed, there was a time when He was not; and if there be a time when He was not,
time was anterior to Him. He who has not existed everlastingly began to exist
within time, while He Who is free from the limits of time is necessarily eternal.
The reason they give for their rejection of the eternity of the Son is that
His everlasting existence contradicts the faith in His birth; as though by
confessing that He has existed eternally, we made His birth impossible.
6. What foolish and godless fears! What impious anxiety on God's behalf!
The meaning which they profess to detect in the word homoousion, and in the
assertion of the eternity of the Son, is detested, rejected, denounced by the
Church. She confesses one God front Whom are all things; she confesses one Jesus
Christ our Lord, through whom are all things; One from Whom, One through Whom;
One the Source of all, One the Agent through Whom all were created. In the One
from Whom are all things she recognises the Majesty which has no beginning, and
in the One through Whom are all things she recognises a might coequal with His
Source; for Both are jointly supreme in the work of creation and in rule over
created things. In the Spirit she recognises God as Spirit, impossible and
indivisible, for she has learnt from the Lord that Spirit has neither flesh nor
bones(2); a warning to save her from supposing that God, being Spirit, could be
burdened with bodily suffering and loss. She recognises one God, unborn from
everlasting; she recognises also one Only-begotten Son of God. She confesses the
Father eternal and without beginning; she confesses also that the Son's beginning
is from eternity. Not that He has no beginning, but that He is Son of the Father
Who has none; not that He is self-originated, but that He is from Him Who is
unbegotten from everlasting; born from eternity, receiving, that is, His birth
from the eternity of the Father. Thus our faith is free from the guesswork of
heretical perversity; it is expressed in fixed and published terms, though as yet
no reasoned defence of our confession has been put forth. Still, lest any
suspicion should linger around the sense in which the Fathers have used the word
homoousion and round our confession of the eternity of the Son, I have set down
the proofs whereby we may be assured that the Son abides ever in that substance
wherein He was begotten from the Father, and that the birth of His Son has not
diminished ought of that Substance wherein the Father was abiding; that holy
men, inspired by the teaching of God, when they said that the Son is homoousios
with the Father pointed to no such flaws or defects as I have mentioned(3). My
purpose has been to counteract the impression that this ousia, this assertion
that He is homoousios with the Father, is a negation of the nativity of the
Only-begotten Son.
7. To assure ourselves of the needfulness of these two phrases, adopted
and employed as the best of safeguards against the heretical rabble of that day,
I think it best to reply to the obstinate misbelief of our present heretics,
and refute their vain and pestilent teaching by the witness of the evangelists
and apostles. They flatter themselves that they can furnish a proof for each of
their propositions; they have, in fact, appended to each some passages or other
from holy Writ; passages so grossly misinterpreted as to ensnare none but the
illiterate by the semblance of truth with which perverted ingenuity has masked
their explanation.
8. For they attempt, by praising the Godhead of the Father only, to
deprive the Son of His Divinity, pleading that it is written, Hear, 0 Israel, the
Lord thy God is One(4), and that the Lord repeats this in His answer to the doctor
of the Law who asked Him what was the greatest commandment in the Law;--Hear,
O Israel, the Lord thy God is One(5). Again, they say that Paul proclaims, For
there is One God, and One Mediator between God and men(6). And furthermore,
they insist that God alone is wise, in order to leave no wisdom for the Son,
relying upon the words of the Apostle, Now to Him that is able to stablish you
according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according, to the
revelation of the mystery which hath been kept in silence through age-long times, but
now is manifested through the scriptures of the prophets according to the
commandment of the eternal God Who is made known unto all nations unto obedience of
faith; to the only wise God, through Jesus Christ, to Whom be glory far ever and
every(7). They argue also that He alone is true(8), for Isaiah says, They
shall bless Thee, the true God(9), and the Lord Himself has borne witness in the
Gospel, saying, And this is life eternal that they should know Thee, the only
true God, and Jesus Christ Whom Thou hast sent(1) Again they reason that He alone
is good, to leave no goodness for the Son, because it has been said through
Him, There is none goad save One, even God(2); and that He alone has power,
because Paul has said, Which in His own times He shall skew to us, Who is the blessed
and only Potentate, the King of kings and Lord of lords(3). And further, they
profess themselves certain that in the Father there is no change nor turning,
because He has said through the prophet, I am the Lord your God, and I am not
changed(4), and the apostle James, With Whom there is no change(5); certain also
that He is the righteous Judge, for it is written, God is the righteous Judge,
strong and patient(6); that He cares for all, because the Lord has said,
speaking of the birds, And your heavenly. Father feedeth them(7), and, Are not two
sparrows sold for a farthing? And not one of them falleth upon the ground without
the will of your Father; but the very hairs of your head are numbered(8). They
say that the Father has prescience of all things, as the blessed Susanna says,
O eternal God, that knowest secrets, and knowest all things before they
be(9); that He is incomprehensible, as it is written, The heaven is My throne, and
the earth is the footstool of My feet. What house will ye build Me, or what is
the place of My rest? For these things hath My hand made, and all these things
are mine(1); that He contains all things, as Paul bears witness, For in Him we
live and move and have our being(2), and the psalmist, Whither shall I go from
Thy Spirit, and whither shall I fly from Thy face? If I climb up into heaven,
Thou art there; if I go down to hell, Thou art present. If I take my wings before
the light and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea, even thither Thy hand
shall lead me and Thy right hand shall hold me(3); that He is without body, for
it is written, For God is Spirit, and they that warship Him must worship in
spirit and in truth(4); that He is immortal and invisible, as Paul says, Who only
hath immortality, and dwelleth in light unapproachable, whom no man hath seen
nor can sees, and the Evangelist, No one hath seen God at any time, except the
Only-begotten Son, which is in the bosom of the Father(6); that He alone abides
eternally unborn, for it is written, I Am That I Am, and Thus shall thou say to
the children of Israel, I Am hath sent me unto you(7), and through Jeremiah, O
Lord, Who art Lord(8).
9. Who can fail to observe that these statements are full of fraud and
fallacy? Cleverly as issues have been confused and texts combined, malice and
folly is the character indelibly imprinted upon this laborious effort of cunning
and clumsiness. For instance, among their points of faith they have included
this, that they confess the Father only to be unborn; as though any one on our side
could suppose that He, Who begot Him through Whom are all things, derived His
being from any external source. The very fact that He bears the name of Father
reveals Him as the cause of His Son's existence. That name of lather gives no
hint that He who bears it is Himself descended from another, while it tells us
plainly from Whom it is that the Son is begotten. Let us therefore leave to the
Father His own special and incommunicable property, confessing that in Him
reside the eternal powers of an omnipotence without beginning. None, I am sure, can
doubt that the reason why, in their confession of God the Father, certain
attributes are dwelt upon as peculiarly and inalienably His own, is that He may be
left in isolated possession of them. For when they say that He alone is true,
alone is righteous, alone is wise, alone is invisible, alone is good, alone is
mighty, alone is immortal, they are raising up this word alone as a barrier to
cut off the Son from His share in these attributes. He Who is alone, they say,
has no partner in His properties. But if we suppose that these attributes reside
in the Father only, and not in the Son also, then we must believe that God the
Son has neither truth nor wisdom; that He is a bodily being compact of visible
and material elements, ill-disposed and feeble and void of immortality; for we
exclude Him from all these attributes of which we make the Father the solitary
Possessor.
10. We, however, who propose to discourse of that most perfect majesty and
fullest Divinity which appertains to the Only-begotten Son of God, have no
fear lest our readers should imagine that amplitude of phrase in speaking of the
Son is a detraction from the glory of God the Father, as though every praise
assigned to the Son had first been withdrawn from Him. For, on the contrary, the
majesty of the Son is glory to the Father; the Source must be glorious from
which He Who is worthy of such glory comes. The Son has nothing but by virtue of
His birth; the Father shares all veneration received by that birthright. Thus the
suggestion that we diminish the Father's honour is put to silence, for all the
glory which, as we shall teach, is inherent in the Son will be reflected back,
to the increased glory of Him who has begotten a Son so great.
11. Now that we have exposed their plan of belittling the Son under cover
of magnifying the Father, the next step is to listen to the exact terms in
which they express their own belief concerning the Son. For, since we have to
answer in succession each of their allegations and to display on the evidence of
Holy Scripture the impiety of their doctrines, we must append, to what they say of
the Father, the decisions which they bare put on record concerning the Son,
that by a comparison of their confession of the Father with their confession of
the Son we may follow a uniform order in our solution of the questions as they
arise. They state as their verdict that the Son is not derived from any
pre-existent matter, for through Him all things were created, nor yet begotten from
God, for nothing can be withdrawn from God; but that He was made out of what was
nonexistent, that is, that He is a perfect creature of God, though different
from His other creatures. They argue that He is a creature, because it is written,
The Lord hath created Me for a beginning of His ways(9); that He is the
perfect handiwork of God, though different from His other works, they prove, as to
the first point, by what Paul writes to the Hebrews, Being made so much belief
than the angels, as He possesseth a more excellent name than they(1), and again,
Wherefore, holy brethren, partakers of the heavenly calling, consider the
Apostle and High Priest of our confession, Jesus Christ, who is faithful to Him that
made Him(2). For their depreciation of the might and majesty and Godhead of
the Son they rely chiefly on His own words, The Father is greater than I(3). But
they admit that He is not one of the common herd of creatures on the evidence
of All things were made through Him(4). And so they sum up the whole of their
blasphemous teaching in these words which follow:--
12. "We confess One God, alone unmade, alone eternal, alone unoriginate,
alone true, alone possessing immortality, alone good, alone mighty, Creator,
Ordainer and Disposer of all things, unchangeable and unalterable, righteous and
good, of the Law and the Prophets and the New Testament. We believe that this
God gave birth to the Only-begotten Son before all worlds, through Whom He made
the world and all things; that He gave birth to Him not in semblance, but in
truth, following His own Will, so that He is unchangeable and unalterable, God's
perfect creature but not as one of His other creatures, His handiwork, but not
as His Other works; not, as Valentinus maintained, that the Son is a development
of the Father; nor, as Manichaeus has declared of the Son, a consubstantial
part of the Father; nor, as Sabellius, who makes two out of one, Son and Father
at once; nor, as Hieracas, a light from a light, or a lamp with two flames; nor
as if He was previously in being and afterwards born or created afresh to be a
Son, a notion often condemned by thyself, blessed Pope(5), publicly in the
Church and in the assembly of the brethren. But, as we have affirmed, we believe
that He was created by the will of God before times and worlds, and has His life
and existence from the Father, Who gave Him to share His own glorious
perfections. For, when the Father gave to Him the inheritance of all things, He did not
thereby deprive Himself of attributes which are His without origination, He
being the source of all things.
13. "So there are three Persons, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. God, for His
part, is the cause of all things, utterly unoriginate and separate from all;
while the Son, put forth by the Father outside time, and created and established
before the worlds, did not exist before He was born, but, being born outside
time before the worlds, came into being as the Only Son of the Only Father. For
He is neither eternal, nor co-eternal, nor co-uncreate with the Father, nor has
He an existence collateral with the Father, as some say, who(6) postulate two
unborn principles. But God is before all things, as being indivisible and the
beginning of all. Wherefore He is before the Son also, as indeed we have learnt
from thee in thy public preaching. Inasmuch then as He hath His being from God,
and His glorious perfections, and His life, and is entrusted with all things,
for this reason God is His source, and hath rule over Him, as being His God,
since He is before Him. As to such phrases as from Him, and from the womb, and I
went out from the Father and am came, if they be understood to denote that the
Father extends a part and, as it were, a development of that one substance,
then the Father will be of a compound nature and divisible and changeable and
corporeal, according to them; and thus, as far as their words go, the incorporeal
God will be subjected to the properties of matter(7)."
14. Such is their error, such their pestilent teaching; to support it they
borrow the words of Scripture, perverting its meaning and using the ignorance
of men as their opportunity of gaining credence for their lies. Yet it is
certainly by these same words of God that we must come to understand the things of
God. For human feebleness cannot by any strength of its own attain to the
knowledge of heavenly things; the faculties which deal with bodily matters can form
no notion of the unseen world. Neither our created bodily substance, nor the
reason given by God for the purposes of ordinary life, is capable of ascertaining
and pronouncing upon the nature and work of God. Our wits cannot rise to the
level of heavenly knowledge, our powers of perception lack the strength to
apprehend that limitless might. We must believe God's word concerning Himself, and
humbly accept such insight as He vouchsafes to give. We must make our choice
between rejecting His witness, as the heathen do, or else believing in Him as He
is, and this in the only possible way, by thinking of Him in the aspect in which
He presents Himself to us. Therefore let private judgment cease; let human
reason refrain from passing barriers divinely set. In this spirit we eschew all
blasphemous and reckless assertion concerning God, and cleave to the very letter
of revelation. Each point in our enquiry shall be considered in the light of His
instruction, Who is our theme; there shall be no stringing together of
isolated phrases whose context is suppressed, to trick and misinform the unpractised
listener. The meaning of words shall be ascertained by considering the
circumstances under which they were spoken words must be explained by circumstances not
circumstances forced into conformity will words. We, at any rate, will treat
our subject completely; we will state both the circumstances under which words
were spoken, and the true purport of the words. Each point shall be considered in
orderly sequence.
15. Their starting-point is this; We confess, they say, One only God,
because Moses says, Hear, O Israel, the Lord thy God is One(8). But is this a truth
which anyone has ever dared to doubt? Or was any believer ever known to
confess otherwise than that there is One God from Whom are all things, One Majesty
which has no birth, and that He is that unoriginated Power? Yet this fact of the
Unity of God offers no chance for denying the Divinity of His Son. For Moses,
or rather God through Moses, laid it down as His first commandment to that
people, devoted both in Egypt and in the Desert to idols and the worship of
imaginary gods, that they must believe in One God. There was truth and reason in the
commandment, for God, from Whom are all things, is One. But let us see whether
this Moses have not confessed that He, through Whom are all things, is also God.
God is not robbed, He is still God, if His Son share the Godhead. For the case
is that of God from God, of One from One, of God Who is One because God is from
Him. And conversely the Son is not less God because God the Father is One, for
He is the Only-begotten Son of God; not eternally unborn, so as to deprive the
Father of His Oneness, nor yet different from God, for He is born from Him. We
must not doubt that He is God by virtue of that birth from God which proves to
us who believe that God is One; yet let us see whether Moses, who announced to
Israel, The Lord thy God is One, has also proclaimed the Godhead of the Son.
To make good our confession of the Divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ we must
employ the evidence of that same witness on whom the heretics rely for the
confession of One Only God, which they imagine to involve the denial of the Godhead of
the Son.
16. Since, therefore, the words of the Apostle, One God the Father, from
Whom are all things, and one Jesus Christ, our Lord, through Whom are all
things(9), form an accurate and complete confession concerning God, let us see what
Moses has to say of the beginning of the world. His words are, And God said, Let
there be a firmament in the midst of the water, and let it divide the water
from the water. And it was so, and God made the firmament and God divided the
water through the midst(1). Here, then, you have the God from Whom, and the God
through Whom. If you deny it, you must tell us through whom it was that God's
work in creation was done, or else point for your explanation to an obedience in
things yet uncreated, which, when God said Let there be a firmament, impelled
the firmament to establish itself. Such suggestions are inconsistent with the
clear sense of Scripture. For all things, as the Prophet says(2), were made out of
nothing; it was no transformation of existing things, but the creation into a
perfect form of the non-existent. Through whom? Hear the Evangelist: things
were made through Him. If you ask Who this is, the same Evangelist will tell you:
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.
He was in the beginning with God. All things were made through Him(3). If you
are minded to combat the view that it was the Father Who said, Let there be a
firmament, the prophet will answer you: He spake, and they were made; He
commanded, and they were created[4]. The recorded words, Let there be a firmament,
reveal to us that the Father spoke. But in the words which follow, And it was so,
in the statement that God did this thing, we must recognise the Person of the
Agent. He spake, and they, were made; the Scripture does not say that He willed
it, and did it. He commanded, and they were created; you observe that it does
not say they came into existence, because it was His pleasure. In that case
there would be no office for a Mediator between God and the world which was
awaiting its creation. God, from Whom are all things, gives the order for creation
which God, through Whom are all things, executes. Under one and the same Name we
confess Him Who gave and Him Who fulfilled the command. If you dare to deny that
God made is spoken of the Son, how do you explain All things were made through
Him? Or the Apostle's words, One resets Christ, our Lord, through, Whom are
all things? Or, He spake, and they were made? If these inspired words succeed in
convincing your stubborn mind, you will cease to regard that text, Hear, O
Israel, the lord Hey God is One, as a refusal of Divinity to the Son of God, since
at the very foundation of the world He Who spoke it proclaimed that His Son
also is God. But let us see what increase of profit we may draw from this
distinction of God Who commands and God Who executes. For though it is repugnant even
to our natural reason to suppose that in the words, He commanded, and they were
made, one single and isolated Person is intended, yet, for the avoidance of
all doubts, we must expound the events which followed upon the creation of the
world.
17. When the world was complete and its inhabitant was to be created, the
words spoken concerning him were, Let Us make man after Our image and
likeness(5). I ask you, Do you suppose that God spoke those words to Himself? Is it not
obvious that He was addressing not Himself, but Another? If you reply that He
was alone, then out of His own mouth He confutes you, for He says, Let Us make
man after Our image and likeness. God has spoken to us through the Lawgiver in
the way which is intelligible to us; that is, He makes us acquainted with His
action by means of language, the faculty with which He has been pleased to endow
us. There is, indeed, an indication of the Son of God through Whom all things
were made, in the words, And God said, Let there be a firmament, and in, And God
maple the firmament, which follows: but lest we should think these words of
God were wasted and meaningless, supposing that He issued to Himself the command
of creation, and Himself obeyed it,--for what notion could be further from the
thought of a solitary God than that of giving a verbal order to Himself, when
nothing was necessary except an exertion of His will?--He determined to give us
a more perfect assurance that these words refer to Another beside Himself. When
He said, Let Us make man after Our image and likeness, His cation of a Partner
demolishes the theory of His isolation. For an isolated being cannot be
partner to himself; and again, the words, Let Us make, are inconsistent with
solitude, while Our cannot be used except to a companion. Both words, Us and Our are
inconsistent with the notion of a solitary God speaking to Himself, and equally
inconsistent with that of the address being made to a stranger who has nothing
in common with the Speaker. If you interpret the passage to mean that He is
isolated, I ask you whether you suppose that He was speaking with Himself? If you
do not understand that He was speaking with Himself, how can you assume that He
was isolated? If He were isolated, we should find Him described as isolated; if
He had a companion, then as not isolated. I and Mine would describe the former
state; the latter is indicated by Us and Our.
18. Thus, when we read, Let Us make man after Our image and likeness,
these two words Us and Our reveal that there is neither one isolated God, nor yet
one God in two dissimilar Persons; and our confession must be framed in harmony
with the second as well as with the first truth. For the words our image--not
our images--prove that there is one nature possessed by Both But an argument
from words is an insufficient proof; unless its result be confirmed by the
evidence of facts; and accordingly it is written, And God made man; after the image of
God made He him(7). If the words He spoke, I ask, were the soliloquy of an
isolated God, what meaning shall we assign to this last statement? For in it I see
a triple allusion, to the Maker, to the being made, and to the image. The
being made is man; God made him, and made him in the image of God. If Genesis were
speaking of an isolated God, it would certainly have been And made him after
His own image. But since the book was foreshowing the Mystery of the Gospel, it
spoke not of two Gods, but of God and God, for it speaks of man made through God
in the image of God. Thus we find that God wrought man after an image and
likeness common to Himself and to God; that the mention of an Agent forbids us to
assume that He was isolated; and that the work, done after an image and likeness
which was that of Both, proves that there is no difference in kind between the
Godhead of the One and of the Other.
19. It may seem waste of time to bring forward further arguments, for
truths concerning God gain no strength by repetition; a single statement suffices
to establish them. Yet it is well for us to know all that has been revealed upon
the subject, for though we are not responsible for the words of Scripture, yet
we shall have to render an account for the sense we have assigned to them. One
of the many commandments which God gave to Noah is, Whoso sheddeth man's blood
for his blood shall his life be shed, far after the image of God made 1
man(8). Here again is the distinction between likeness, creature, and Creator. God
bears wireless that He made man after the image of God. When He was about to make
man, because He was speaking of Himself, yet not to Himself, God said, After
our image; and again, after man was made, God made man after the image of God.
It would have been no inaccuracy of language, had He said, addressing Himself, I
have made man after My image, for He had shewn that the Persons are one in
nature by, Let us make man after Our image(9). But for the more perfect removal of
all doubt as to whether God be, or be not, a solitary Being, when He made man
He made him, we are told, After the image of God.
20. If you still wish to assert that God the Father in solitude said these
words to Him self, I can go with you as far as to admit the possibility that
He might in solitude nave spoken to Himself as if He were conversing with a
companion, and that it is credible that He wished the words I have made man after
the image of God to be equivalent to I have made man after My own image. But
your own confession of faith will refute you. For you have confessed that all
things are from the Father, but all through the Son; and the words, Let Us make
man, shew that the Source from Whom are all things is He Who spoke thus, while God
made him after the image of God clearly points to Him through Whom the work
was done.
21. And furthermore, to make all self-deception unlawful, that Wisdom,
which you have yourself confessed to be Christ, shall confront you with the words,
When tare was establishing the fountains under the heaven, when He was making
strong the foundations of the earth. I was with Him, setting them in order. It
was I, over Whom He rejoiced. Moreover, I was daily rejoicing in His sight, all
the while that He was rejoining in the world that He hart made, and in the
sans of men(1). Every difficulty is removed; error itself must recognise the
truth. There is with God Wisdom, begotten before the worlds; and not only present
with Him, but setting in order, for She was with Him, setting them in order. Mark
this work of setting in order, or arranging. The Father, by His commands, is
the Cause; the Son, by His execution of the things commanded, sets in order. The
distinction between the Persons is marked by the work assigned to Each. When
it says Let us make, creation is identified with the word of command; but when
it is written, I was with Him, setting them in order, God reveals that He did
not do the work in isolation. For He was rejoicing before Him, Who, He tells us,
rejoiced in return; Moreover, I was daily rejoicing in His sight, all the while
that He was rejoicing in the world that He had made, and in the sans of men.
Wisdom has taught us the reason of Her joy. She rejoiced because of the joy of
the Father, Who rejoices over the completion of the world and over the sons of
men. For it is written, And God saw that they were good. She rejoices that God
is well pleased with His work, which has been made through Her, at His command.
She avows that Her joy results from the Father's gladness over the finished
world and over the sons of men; over the sons of men, because in the one man Adam
the whole human race had begun its course. Thus in the creation of the world
there is no mere soliloquy of an isolated Father; His Wisdom is His partner in
the work, and rejoices with Him when their conjoint labour ends.
22. I am aware that the full explanation of these words involves the
discussion of many and weighty problems. I do not shirk them, but postpone them for
the present, reserving their consideration for later stages of the enquiry. For
the present I devote myself to that article of the blasphemers' faith, or
rather faithlessness, which asserts that Moses proclaims the solitude of God. We do
not forget that the assertion is true in the sense that there is One God, from
Whom are all things; but neither do we forget that this truth is no excuse for
denying the Godhead of the Son, since Moses throughout the course of his
writings clearly indicates the existence of God and God. We must examine bow the
history of God's choice, and of the giving of the Law, proclaims God co-ordinate
with God.
23. After God had often spoken with Abraham, Sarah was moved to wrath
against Hagar, being jealous that she, the mistress, was barren, while her handmaid
had conceived a son. Then, when Hagar had departed from her sight, the Spirit
speaks thus concerning her, And the angel of the Lord said unto Hagar, Return
to thy mistress, and submit thyself under her hands. And the angel of the Lord
said unto her, I will multiply thy seed exceedingly, and it shall not be
numbered for multitude, and again, And she called the Name of the Lord that spake with
her. Thou art God, Who hast seen me(2). It is the Angel of God Who speaks(3),
and speaks of things far beyond the powers which a messenger, for that is the
meaning of the word, could have. He says, I will multiply thy seed exceedingly,
and it shall not be numbered for multitude. The power of multiplying na tions
lies outside the ministry of an angel. Yet what says the Scripture of Him Who is
called the Angel of God, yet speaks words which belong to God alone? And she
calico the Name of the Lord that spake with her, Thou art God, Who hast seen me.
First He is the Angel of God; then He is the Lord, for She called the Name of
the Lord; then, thirdly, He is God, for Thou art God, Who hast seen me. He Who
is called the Angel of God is also Lord and God. The Son of God is also,
according to the prophet, the Angel of great counsel(4). To discriminate clearly
between the Persons, He is called the Angel of God; He Who is God from God is also
the Angel of God. but, that He may have the honour which is His due, He is
entitled also Lord and God.
24. In this passage the one Deity is first the Angel of God, anti then,
successively. Lord and God. But to Abraham He is God only. For when the
distinction of Persons had first been made, as a safeguard against the delusion that God
is a solitary Being, then His true and unqualified name could safely be
uttered. And so it is written. And God said to Abraham, Behold Sarah thy wife shall
bear thee a son, and thou shalt call his name Isaac; and I will establish My
covenant with him for an everlasting covenant, and with his seed after him. And as
far Ishmael, behold. I have heard thee and have blessed him, and will multiply
him exceedingly; twelve nations shall he beget, and I will make him a great
nation(5). Is it possible to doubt that He Who was previously called the Angel of
God is here, in the sequel, spoken of as God? In both instances He is speaking
of Ishmael; in both it is the same Person Who shall multiply him. To save us
from supposing that this was a different Speaker from Him who had addressed
Hagar, the Divine words expressly attest the identity, saying, And I have blessed
him, and will multiply him. The blessing is repeated from a former occasion, for
Hagar had already been addressed; the multiplication is promised for a future
day, for this is God's first word to Abraham concerning Ishmael. Now it is God
Who speaks to Abraham; to Hagar the Angel of God had spoken. Thus God and the
Angel of God are One; He Who is the Angel of God is also God the Son of God. He
is called the Angel because He is the Angel of great counsel; but afterwards He
is spoken of as Go I, lest we should suppose that He Who is God is only an
angel. Let us now repeat the facts in order. The Angel of the Lord spoke to Hagar;
He spoke also to Abraham as God. One Speaker addressed both. The blessing was
given to Ishmael, and the promise that he should grow into a great people.
25. In another instance the Scripture reveals through Abraham that it was
God Who spoke. He receives the further promise of a son, Isaac. Afterwards
there appear to him three men. Abraham, though he sees three, worships One, and
acknowledges Him as Lord. Three were standing before him, Scripture says, but he
knew well Which it was that he must worship and confess. There was nothing in
outward appearance to distinguish them, but by the eye of faith, the vision of
the soul, he knew his Lord. Then the Scripture goes on, And He said unto him, I
will certainly return unto thee at this time hereafter, and Sarah thy wife shall
have a son(5); and afterwards the Lord said to Him, I will not conceal from
Abraham My servant the things that I will do(7); and again, Moreover the Lord
said, The cry of Sodom and Gomorrah is filled up, and their sins are exceeding
great(8). Then after long discourse, which for the sake of brevity shall be
omitted, Abraham, distressed at the destruction which awaited the innocent as well as
the guilty, said, In no wise wilt Thou, Who judgest the earth, execute this
judgment. And the Lord said, If I find in Sodom fifty righteous within the city,
then I will spare all the place for their sakes(9). Afterwards, when the
warning to Lot, Abraham's brother, was ended, the Scripture says, And the Lord rained
upon Sodom and upon Gomorrah brimstone and fire from the Lord out of
heaven(1); and, after a while, And the Lord visited Sarah as He had said, and did unto
Sarah as He had spoken, and Sarah conceived and bare Abraham a son in his old
age, at the set time of which God had spoken to him(2). And afterwards, when the
handmaid with her son had been driven from Abraham's house, and was dreading
test her child should die in the wilderness for want of water, the same
Scripture says And the Lord God heard the voice of the lad, where he was, and the Angel
of God called to Hagar out of heaven, and said unto her, What is it, Hagar?
Fear not, for God hath heard the voice of the lad from the place where he is.
Arise, and take the lad and hold his hand, for I will make him a great nation(3).
26. What blind faithlessness it is, what dulness of an unbelieving heart,
what headstrong impiety, to abide in ignorance of all this, or else to know
and yet neglect it! Assuredly it is written for the very purpose that error or
oblivion may not hinder the recognition of the truth. If, as we shall prove, it
is impossible to escape knowledge of the facts, then it must be nothing less
than blasphemy to deny them. This record begins with the speech of the Angel to
Hagar, His promise to multiply Ishmael into a great nation and to give him a
countless offspring. She listens, and by her confession reveals that He is Lord and
God. The story begins with His appearance as the Angel of God; at its
termination He stands confessed as God Himself. Thus He Who, while He executes the
ministry of declaring the great counsel is God's Angel, is Himself in name and
nature God. The name corresponds to the nature; the nature is not falsified to make
it conform to the name. Again, God speaks to Abraham of this same matter; he
is told that Ishmael has already received a blessing, and shall be increased
into a nation; I have blessed him, God says. This is no change from the Person
indicated before; He shews that it was He Who had already given the blessing. The
Scripture has obviously been consistent throughout in its progress from mystery
to clear revelation; it began with the Angel of God, and proceeds to reveal
that it was God Himself Who had spoken in this same matter.
27. The course of the Divine narrative is accompanied by a progressive
development of doctrine. In the passage which we have discussed God speaks to
Abraham. and promises that Sarah shall bear a son. Afterwards three men stand by
him; he worships One and acknowledges Him as Lord. After this worship and
acknowledgment by Abraham, the One promises that He will return hereafter at the same
season, and that then Sarah shall have her son. This One again is seen by
Abraham in the guise of a man, and salutes him with the same promise. The change is
one of name only; Abraham's acknowledgment in each case is the same. It was a
Man whom he saw, yet Abraham worshipped Him as Lord; he beheld, no doubt, in a
mystery the coming Incarnation. Faith so strong has not missed its recognition;
the Lord says in the Gospel, Your father Abraham rejoined to see My day; and he
saw it, and was glade(4). To continue the history; the Man Whom he saw
promised that He would return at the same season. Mark the fulfilment of the promise,
remembering meanwhile that it was a Man Who made it. What says the Scripture?
And the Lord visited Sarah. So this Man is the Lord, fulfilling His own promise.
What follows next? And God did unto Sarah as He had said. The narrative calls
His words those of a Man, relates that Sarah was visited by the Lord, proclaims
that the result was the work of God. You are sure that it was a Man who spoke,
for Abraham not only heard, but saw Him. Can you be less certain that He was
God, when the same Scripture, which had called Him Man, confesses Him God? For
its words are, And Sarah conceived, and bare Abraham a son in his old age, and
at the set time of which God had spoken to him. But it was the Man who had
promised that He would come. Believe that He was nothing more than man; unless, in
fact, He Who came was God and Lord. Connect the incidents. It was, confessedly,
the Man who promised that He would come that Sarah might conceive and bear a
son. And now accept instruction, and confess the faith; it was the Lord God Who
came that she might conceive and bear. The Man made the promise in the power of
God; by the same power God fulfilled the promise. Thus God reveals Himself both
in word and deed. Next, two of the three men whom Abraham saw depart; He Who
remains behind is Lord and God. And not only Lord and God, but also Judge, for
Abraham stood before the Lord and said, In no wise shall Thou do this things, to
slay the righteous with the wicked, for then the righteous shall be as the
wicked. In no wise wilt Thou Who judgest the whole earth, execute this
judgment(5). Thus by all his words Abraham instructs us in that faith, for which he was
justified; he recognises the Lord from among the three, he worships Him only, and
confesses that He is Lord and Judge.
28. Lest you fall into the error of supposing that this acknowledgment of
the One was a payment of honor to all the three whom Abraham saw in company,
mark the words of Lot when he saw the two who had departed; And when Lot saw
them, he rose up to meet them, and he bowed himself with his face toward the
ground; and he said, Behold, my lords, turn in to your servant's house(6). Here the
plural lords shews that this was nothing more than a vision of angels; in the
other case the faithful patriarch pays the honour due to One only. Thus the
sacred narrative makes it clear that two of the three were mere angels; it had
previously proclaimed the One as Lord and God by the words, And the lord said unto
Abraham, Wherefore did Sarah laugh, saying, Shall I then bear a child? But I am
grown old. Is anything from God impossible? this season I will return to thee
hereafter, and Sarah shall have a son(7). The Scripture is accurate and
consistent; we detect no such confusion as the plural used of the One God and Lord, no
Divine honours paid to the two angels. Lot, no doubt, calls them lords, while
the Scripture calls them angels. The one is human reverence, the other literal
truth.
29. And now there fails on Sodom and Gomorrah the vengeance of a righteous
judgment. What can we learn from it for the purposes of our enquiry? The Lord
rained brimstone and fire from the Lord. It is The Lord from the Lord;
Scripture makes no distinction, by difference of name, between Their natures, but
discriminates between Themselves. For we read in the Gospel, The Father judgeth no
man, but hath given all judgment to the Son(8). Thus what the Lord gave, the
Lord had received from the Lord.
30. You have now had evidence of God the Judge as Lord and Lord; learn
next that there is the same joint ownership of name in the case of God and God.
Jacob, when he fled through fear of his brother, saw in his dream a ladder
resting upon the earth and reaching to heaven, and the angels of God ascending and
descending upon it, and the Lord resting above it, Who gave him all the blessings
which He had bestowed upon Abraham and Isaac. At a later time God spoke to him
thus: And God said unto Jacob, Arise, go up to the place Bethel, and dwell
there, and make there an altar unto God, that appeared unto thee when thou
fleddest from the face of thy brother(9). God demands honour for God, and makes it
clear that demand is on behalf of Another than Himself. He who appeared to thee
when than fleddest are His words: He guards carefully against any confusion of
the Persons. It is God Who speaks, and God of Whom He speaks. Their majesty is
asserted by the combination of Both under Their true Name of God, while the words
plainly declare Their several existence.
31. Here again there occur to me considerations which must be taken into
account in a complete treatment of the subject. But the order of defence must
adapt itself to the order of attack, and I reserve these outstanding questions
for discussion in the next book. For the present, in regard to God Who demanded
honour for God, it will suffice for me to point out that He Who was the Angel of
God, when He spoke with Hagar, was God and Lord when tie spoke of the same
matter with Abraham; that the Man Who spoke with Abraham was also God and Lord,
while the two angels, who were seen with the Lord and whom He sent to Lot, are
described by the prophet as angels, and nothing more. Nor was it to Abraham only
that God appeared in human guise; He appeared as Man to Jacob also. And not
only did He appear, but, so we are told, He wrestled; and not only did He wrestle,
but He was vanquished by His adversary. Neither the time at my disposal, nor
the subject, will allow me to discuss the typical meaning of this wrestling. It
was certainly God Who wrestled, for Jacob prevailed against God, and Israel saw
God.
32. And now let us enquire whether elsewhere than in the case of Hagar the
Angel of God has been discovered to be God Himself. He has been so discovered,
and found to be not only God, but the God of Abraham and of Isaac and of
Jacob. For the Angel of the Lord appeared to Moses from the bush; and Whose voice,
think you, are we to suppose was heard? The voice of Him Who was seen, or of
Another? There is no room for deception; the words of Scripture are clear: And the
Angel of the Lord appeared unto him in a flame of fire from a bush, and again,
The Lord called unto him from the bush, Moses, Moses, and he answered, What is
it? And the Lord said, Draw not nigh hither, put off thy shoes from off thy
feet, for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground. And He said unto him, I
am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob(1), He who
appeared in the bush speaks from the bush; the place of the vision and of the
voice is one; He Who speaks is none other than He Who was seen. He Who is the
Angel of God when the eye beholds Him is the Lord when the ear hears Him, and the
Lord Whose voice is heard is recognised as the God of Abraham, and of Isaac,
and of Jacob. When He is styled the Angel of God, the fact is revealed that He is
no self-contained and solitary Being: for He is the Angel of God. When He is
designated Lord and God, He receives the full title which is due to His nature
and His name. You have, then, in the Angel Who appeared from the bush, Him Who
is Lord and God.
33. Continue your study of the witness borne by Moses; mark how diligently
he seizes every opportunity of proclaiming the Lord and God. You take note of
the passage, Hear, O Israel, the Lord thy God is One(2). Note also the words of
that Divine song of his; See, See, that I am the Lord, and there is no God
beside Me(3). While God has been the Speaker throughout the poem, he ends with,
Rejoice, ye heavens, together with Him and let all the sans of God praise Him.
Rejoice, O ye nations, with His people, and let all the Angels of God do Him
honour(4). God is to be glorified by the Angels of God, and He says, For I am the
Lord, and there is no Gad beside Me. For He is God the Only-begotten, and the
title 'Only-begotten' excludes all partnership in that character, just as the
title 'Unoriginate' denies that there is, in that regard, any who shares the
character of the Unoriginate Father. The Son is One from One. There is none
unoriginate except God the Unoriginate, and so likewise there is none only-begotten
except God the Only-begotten. They stand Each single and alone, being
respectively the One Unoriginate and the One Only-begotten. And so They Two are One God,
for between the One, and the One Who is His offspring there lies no gulf of
difference of nature in the eternal Godhead. Therefore He must be worshipped by the
sons of God and glorified by the angels of God. Honour and reverence is
demanded for God from the sons and from the angels of God. Notice Who it is that
shall receive this honour, and by whom it is to lie paid. It is God, and they are
the sons and angels of God. And test you should imagine that honour is not
demanded for God Who shares our nature(5), but that Moses is thinking here of
reverence due to God the Father,--though, indeed, it is in the Son that the Father
must be honoured--examine the words of the blessing bestowed by God upon Joseph,
at the end of the same book. They are, And let the things that are
well-pleasing to Him that appeared in the bush came upon the head and crown of Joseph(6).
Thus God is to be worshipped by the sons of God; but God Who is Himself the Son
of God. And God is to be reverenced by the angels of God; but God Who is
Himself the Angel of God. For God appeared from the bush as the Angel of God, and the
prayer for Joseph is that he may receive such blessings as He shall please, He
is none the less God because He is the Angel of God; and none the less the
Angel of God because He is God. A clear indication is given of the Divine Persons;
the line is definitely drawn between the Unbegot-ten and the Begotten. A
revelation of the mysteries of heaven is granted, and we are taught not to dream of
God as dwelling in solitude, when angels and sons of God shall worship Him, Who
is God's Angel and Its Son.
34. Let this be taken as our answer from the books of Moses, or rather as
the answer of Moses himself. The heretics imagine that they can use his
assertion of the Unity of God in disproof of the Divinity of God the Son; a blasphemy
in defiance of the clear warning of their own witness, for whenever he
confesses that God is One he never fails to teach the Son's Divinity. Our next step
must be to adduce the manifold utterance of the prophets concerning the same Son.
35. You know the words, Hear, O Israel, the Lord thy God is One; would
that you knew them aright! As you interpret them, I seek in vain for their sense.
It is said in the Psalms, God, Thy God, hath anointed Thee (7). Impress upon
the reader's mind the distinction between the Anointer and the Anointed;
discriminate between the Thee and the Thy: make it clear to Whom and of Whom the words
are spoken. For this definite confession is the conclusion of the preceding
passage, which runs thus; Thy throne, O God, is for ever and ever; the sceptre of
Thy kingdom is a right sceptre. Thou hast loved righteousness and hated
iniquity. And then he continues, Therefore God, Thy God, hath anointed Thee. Thus the
God of the eternal kingdom, in reward for His love of righteousness and hatred
of iniquity, is anointed by His God. Surely some broad difference is drawn,
some gap too wide for our mental span, between these names? No; the distinction of
Persons is indicated by Thee and Thy, but nothing suggests a difference of
nature. Thy points to the Author, Thee to Him Who is the Author's offspring. For
He is God from God, as these same words of the prophet declare, God, Thy God,
hath anointed Thee. And His own words bear wireless that there is no God anterior
to God the Un-originate; Be ye My witnesses, and I am witness, saith the Lord
God, and My Servant Whom I have chosen, that ye may know and believe and
understand that I am, and before? Me there is no other God, nor shall be after Me(8).
Thus the majesty of Him that has no beginning is declared, and the glory of
Him that is from the Unoriginate is safeguarded; for God, Thy God, hath anointed
Thee. That word Thy declares His birth, yet does not contradict His nature(9);
Thy God means that the Son was born from Him to share the Godhead. But the fact
that the Father is God is no obstacle to the Son's being God also, for God,
Thy God, hath anointed Thee. Mention is made both of Father and of Son; the one
title of God conveys the assurance that in character and majesty They are One.
36. But lest these words, For I am, and before Me there is no other God,
nor shall be after Me, be made a handle for blasphemous presumption, as proving
that the Son is not God, since after the God, Whom no God precedes, there
follows no other God, the purpose of the passage must be considered. God is His own
best interpreter, but His chosen Servant joins with Him to assure us that there
is no God before Him, nor shall be after Him. His oxen witness concerning
Himself is, indeed, sufficient, but He has added the witness of the Servant Whom He
has chosen. Thus we have the united testimony of the Two, that there is no God
before Him; we accept the truth, because all things are from Him. We have
Their witness also that there shall be no God after Him; but They do not deny that
God has been born from Him in the past. Already there was the Servant speaking
thus, and bearing witness to the Father; the Servant born in that tribe from
which God's elect was to spring. He sets forth also the same truth in the
Gospels: Behold, My Servant Whom I have chosen, My Beloved in Whom My soul is well
pleased(1). This is the sense, then, in which God says, There is no other God
before Me, nor shall be after Me. He reveals the infinity of His eternal and
unchanging majesty by this assertion that there is no God before or after Himself.
But He gives His Servant a share both in the bearing of wireless and in the
possession of the Name of God.
37. The fact is obvious from His own words. For He says to Hosea the
prophet, I will no more have mercy upon the house of Israel, but will altogether be
their enemy. But I will have mercy upon the children Judah, and will save them
in the Lord their God(2). Here God the Father gives the name of God, without
any ambiguity, to the Son, in Whom also He chose us before countless ages. Their
God, He says, for while the Father, being Unoriginate, is independent of all,
He has given us for an inheritance to His Son. In like manner we read, Ask of
Me, and I will give Thee the Gentiles for Thine inheritance(3). None can be God
to Him from Whom are all things(4), for He is eternal and has no beginning; but
the Son has God, from Whom He was born, for His Father. Yet to us the Father is
God and the Son is God; the Father reveals to us that the Son is our God, and
the Son teaches that the Father is God over us. The point for us to remember is
that in this passage the Father gives to the Son the name of God, the title of
His own unoriginate majesty. But I have commented sufficiently on these words
of Hosea.
38. Again, how clear is the declaration made by God the Father through
Isaiah concerning our Lord! He says, For thus saith the Lord, the holy God of
Israel, Who made the things to came, Ask me concerning your sons and your
daughters, and concerning the works of My hands command ye Me. I have made the earth and
man upon it, I have commanded all the stars, I have raised up a King with
righteousness, and all His ways are straight. He shall build My city, and shall
turn back the captivity of My people, not for price nor reward, saith the Lord of
Sabaoth. Egypt shall labour, and the merchandise of the Ethiopians and Sabeans.
Men of stature shall come over unto Thee and shall be Thy servants, and shall
follow after Thee, bound in chains, and shall worship Thee and make
supplication unto Thee, for God is in Thee and there is no God beside Thee. For Thou art
God, and we knew it not, O God of Israel, the Saviour. All that resist Him shall
be ashamed and confounded, and shall walk in confusion(5). Is any opening left
for gainsaying, or excuse for ignorance? If blasphemy continue, is it not in
brazen defiance that it survives? God from Whom are all things, Who made all by
His command, asserts that He is the Author of the universe, for, unless He had
spoken, nothing had been created. He asserts that He has raised up a righteous
King, who builds for Himself, that is, for God, a city, and turns back the
captivity of His people, for no gift nor reward, for freely are we all saved. Next,
He tells how after the labours of Egypt, and after the traffic of Ethiopians
and Sabeans, men of stature shall come over to Him. How shall we understand
these labours in Egypt, this traffic of Ethiopians and Sabeans? Let us call to mind
how the Magi of the East worshipped and paid tribute to the Lord; let us
estimate the weariness of that long pilgrimage to Bethlehem of Judah. In the
toilsome journey of the Magian princes we see the labours of Egypt to which the
prophet alludes. For when the Magi executed, in their spurious, material way, the
duty ordained for them by the power of God, the whole heathen world was offering
in their person the deepest reverence of which its worship was capable. And
these same Magi presented gifts of gold and frankincense and myrrh from(6) the
merchandise of the Ethiopians and Sabeans; a thing foretold by another prophet, who
has said, The Ethiopians shall full down before His face, and is enemies shall
lick the dust. The Kings of Tharsis shall offer presents, the Kings of the
Arabians and Sabeans shall bring gifts, and there shall be given to Him of the
gold of Arabia? The Magi and their offerings stand for the labour of Egypt and for
the merchandise of Ethiopians and Sabeans; the adoring Magi represent the
heathen world, and offer the choicest gifts of the Gentiles to the Lord Whom they
adore.
39. As for the men of stature who shall come over to Him and follow Him in
chains, there is no doubt who they are. Turn to the Gospels; Peter, when he is
to follow his Lord, is girded up. Read the Apostles: Paul, the servant of
Christ, boasts of his bonds. Let us see whether this 'prisoner of Jesus Christ'
conforms in his teaching to the prophecies uttered by God concerning God His Son.
God hart said, They shall make supplication, for God is in Thee. Now mark and
digest these words of the Apostle:--God was in Christ, reconciling the world to
Himself(8). And then the prophecy continues, And there is no God beside Thee.
The Apostle promptly matches this with For there is one Jesus Christ our Lord,
through Whom are all things(9). Obviously there can be none other but He, for He
is One. The third prophetic statement is, Thou art God and we knew it not. But
Paul, once the persecutor of the Church, says, Whose are the fathers, from
Whom is Christ, Who is God over all(1). Such is to be the message of these men in
chains; men of stature, indeed, they will be, and shall sit on twelve thrones
to judge the tribes of Israel, and shall follow their Lord, witnesses to Him in
teaching and in martyrdom.
40. Thus God is in God, and it is God in Whom God dwells. But how is There
is no God beside Thee true, if God be within Him? Heretic! In support of your
confession of a solitary Father you employ the words, There is no God beside
Me; what sense can you assign to the solemn declaration of God the Father, There
is no God beside Thee, if your explanation of There is no God beside Me be a
denial of the Godhead of the Son? To whom, in that case, can God have said, There
is no God beside Thee? You cannot suggest that this solitary Being said it to
Himself. It was to the King Whom He summoned that the Lord said, by the mouth
of the men of stature who worshipped and made supplication, For God is in Thee.
The facts are inconsistent with solitude. In Thee implies that there was One
present within range, if I may say so, of the Speaker's voice. The complete
sentence, God is in Thee, reveals not only God present, but also God abiding in Him
Who is present. The words distinguish the Indweller from Him in Whom He dwells,
but it is a distinction of Person only, not of character. God is in Him, and
He, in Whom God is, is God. The residence of God cannot be within a nature
strange and alien to His own. He abides in One Who is His own, born from Himself.
God is in God, because God is from God. Far Than art God, and we knew it not, O
God of Israel, the Saviour
41. My next book is devoted to the refutation of your denial that God is
in God; for the prophet continues, All that resist Him shall be ashamed and
confounded and shall walk in confusion. This is God's sentence, passed upon your
unbelief. You set yourself in opposition to Christ, and it is on His account that
the Father's voice is raised in solemn reproof; for He, Whose Godhead you
deny, is God. And you deny it under cloak of reverence for God, because He says,
There is no other God beside Me. Submit to shame and confusion; the Unoriginate
God has no need of the dignity you offer; He has never asked for this majesty of
isolation which you attribute to Him. He repudiates your officious
interpretation which would twist His words, There is no other God beside Me, into a denial
of the Godhead of the Son Whom He begot from Himself. To frustrate your
purpose of demolishing the Divinity of the Son by assigning the Godhead in some
special sense to Himself, He rounds off the glories of the Only-begotten by the
attribution of absolute Divinity:--And there is no God beside Thee. Why make
distinctions between exact equivalents? Why separate what is perfectly matched? It is
the peculiar characteristic of the Son of God that there is no God beside Him;
the peculiar characteristic of God the Father that there is no God apart from
Him. Use His words concerning Himself; confess Him in His own terms, and
entreat Him as King; For God is in Thee, and there is no God beside Thee. For Thou
art God, and we knew it not, O God of Israel, the Saviour. A confession couched
in words so reverent is free from the taint of presumption: its terms can excite
no repugnance. Above all, we must remember that to refuse it means shame and
ignominy. Brood in thought over these words God; employ them in your confession
of Him, and so escape the threatened shame. For if you deny the Divinity of the
Son of God, you will not be augmenting the glory of God by adoring Him in
lonely majesty; you will be slighting the Father by refusing to reverence the Son.
In faith and veneration confess of the Unoriginate God that there is no God
beside Him; claim for God the Only-begotten that apart from Him there is no God.
42. As you have listened already to Moses and Isaiah, so listen now to
Jeremiah inculcating the same truth as they:--This is our God, and there shall be
none other likened unto Him, Who hath found out all the way of knowledge, and
hath given it unto Jacob His servant and to Israel His beloved. Afterward did He
shew Himself upon earth and dwelt among men(2). For previously he had said,
And He is Man, and Who shall know Him(3)? Thus you have God seen on earth and
dwelling among men. Now I ask you what sense you would assign to No one hath seen
Gad at any time, save the Only-begotten Son, which is in the bosom of the
Father(4), when Jeremiah proclaims God seen on earth and dwelling among men? The
Father confessedly cannot be seen except by the Son; Who then is This who was seen
and dwelt among men? He must be our God, for He is God visible in human form,
Whom men can handle. And take to heart the prophet's words, There shall be none
other likened to Him. If you ask how this can be, listen to the remainder of
the sentence, lest you be tempted to deny to the Father His share of the
confession. Hear, O Israel, the Lord thy God is One. The whole passage is, There shall
be none likened unto Him, Who hath found out all the way of knowledge, and
hath given it unto Jacob His servant and to Israel His beloved. Afterward did He
skew Himself upon earth and dwelt among men. For there is one Mediator between
God and Men, Who is both God and Man; Mediator both in giving of the Law and in
taking of our body. Therefore none other can be likened unto Him, for He is
One, born from God into God, and the it was through Whom all things were created
in heaven and earth, through Whom times and worlds were made. Everything, in
fine, that exists owes its existence to His action. He it is that instructs
Abraham, that speaks with Moses, that testifies to Israel, that abides in the
prophets, that was born through the Virgin from the Holy Ghost, that nails to the
cross of His passion the powers that are our foes, that slays death in hell, that
strengthens the assurance of our hope by His Resurrection, that destroys the
corruption of human flesh by the glory of His Body. Therefore none shall be
likened unto Him. For these are the peculiar powers of God the Only-begotten; He
alone was born from God, the blissful Possessor of such great prerogatives. No
second god can be likened unto Him, for He is God from God, not born from any alien
being. There is nothing new or strange or modern created in Him. When Israel
hears that its God is one, and that no second god is likened, that men may deem
him God, to God Who is God's Son, the revelation means that God the Father and
God the Son are One altogether, not by confusion of Person but by unity of
substance. For the prophet forbids us, because God the Son is God, to liken Him to
some second deity.