ON THE TRINITY, BOOK VII
BOOK VII
1. This is the seventh book of our treatise against the wild extravagance
of modern heresy. In order of place it must follow its predecessors; in order
of importance, as an exposition of the mysteries of the right faith, it
precedes. and excels them all. I am well aware how hard and steep is the path of
evangelical instruction up which we are mounting. The fears inspired by consciousness
of my own incapacity are plucking me back, but the warmth of faith urges me
on; the assaults of heresy heat my blood, and the dangers of the ignorant excite
my compassion. I fear to speak, and yet I cannot be silent. A double dread
subdues my spirit; it may be that speech, it may be that silence, will render me
guilty of a desertion of the truth. For this cunning heresy has hedged itself
round with marvellous devices of perverted ingenuity. First there is the semblance
of devotion; then the language carefully chosen to lull the suspicions of a
candid listener; and again, the accommodation of their views to secular
philosophy; and finally, their withdrawing of attention from manifest truth by a
pretended explanation of Divine methods. Their loud profession of the unity of God is
a fraudulent imitation of the faith; their assertion that Christ is the Son of
God a play upon words for the delusion of their hearers; their saying that He
did not exist before He was born a bid for the support of the world's
philosophers; their confession of God as incorporeal and immutable leads, by a display
of fallacious logic, up to a denial of the birth of God from God. They turn our
arguments against ourselves; the Church's faith is made the engine of its own
destruction. They have contrived to involve us in the perplexing position of an
equal danger, whether we reason with them or whether we refrain. For they use
the fact that we allow certain of their assumptions to pass unchallenged as an
argument on behalf of those which we do contradict.
2. We call to mind that in the preceding books the reader has been urged
to study the whole of that blasphemous manifesto[1], and mark how it is animated
throughout by the one aim of propagating the belief that our Lord Jesus Christ
is neither God, nor Son of God. Its authors argue that He is permitted to use
the names of God and of Son by virtue of a certain adoption, though neither
Godhead nor Sonship be His by nature. They use the fact, true in itself, that God
is immutable and incorporeal, as an argument against the birth of the Son from
Him. They value the truth, that God the Father is One, only as a weapon against
our faith in the Godhead of Christ; pleading that an incorporeal nature cannot
be rationally conceived as generating another, and that our faith in One God
is inconsistent with the confession of God from God. But our earlier books have
already refuted and foiled this argument of theirs by an appeal to the Law and
the Prophets. Our defence has followed, step by step, the course of their
attack. We have set forth God from God, and at the same time confessed One true God;
shewing that this presentation of the faith neither falls short of the truth
by ascribing singleness of Person to the One true God, nor adds to the faith by
asserting the existence of a second Deity. For we confess neither an isolated
God, nor yet two Gods. Thus, neither denying that God is One nor maintaining
that He is alone, we hold the straight road of truth. Each Divine Person is in the
Unity, yet no Person is the One God. Next, our purpose being to demonstrate
the irrefragable truth of this mystery by the evidence of the Evangelists and
Apostles, our first duty has been to make our readers acquainted with the nature,
truly subsisting and truly born, of the Son of God; to demonstrate that He has
no origin external to God, and was not created out of nothing, but is the Son,
born from God. This is a truth which the evidence adduced in the last book has
placed beyond all doubt. The assertion that He bears the name of Son by virtue
of adoption has been put to silence, and He stands forth as a true Son by a
true birth. Our present task is to prove from the Gospels that, because He is true
Son, He is true God also. For unless He be true Son He cannot be true God, nor
true God unless He be true Son.
3. Nothing is more harassing to human nature than the sense of impending
danger. If calamities unknown or unanticipated befall us, we may need pity, yet
we have been free from care; no load of anxiety has oppressed us. But he whose
mind is full of possibilities of trouble suffers already a torment in his fear.
I who now am venturing out to sea, am a mariner not unused to shipwreck, a
traveller who knows by experience holy brigands lurk in the forests, an explorer
of African deserts aware of the danger from scorpions and asps and basilisks[2].
I enjoy no instant of relief from the knowledge and fear of present danger.
Every heretic is on the watch, noting every word as it drops from my mouth. The
whole progress of my argument is infested with ambuscades and pitfalls and
snares. It is not of the road, of its hardness or steepness, that I complain; I am
following in the footsteps of the Apostles, not choosing my own path. My trouble
is the constant peril, the constant dread, of wandering into some ambush, of
stumbling into some pit, of being entangled in some net. My purpose is to
proclaim the unity of God, in the sense of the Law and Prophets and Apostles.
Sabellius is at hand, eager with cruel kindness to welcome me, on the strength of this
unity, and swallow me up in his own destruction. If I withstand him, and deny
that, in the Sabellian sense, God is One a fresh heresy is ready to receive me,
pointing out that I teach the existence of two Gods. Again, if I undertake to
tell holy the Son of God was born from Mary, Photinus, the Ebion of our day,
will be prompt to twist this assertion of the truth into a confirmation of his
lie. I need mention no other heresies save one; all the world knows that they are
alien from the Church. It is one that has been often denounced, often
rejected, yet it preys upon our vitals still. Galatia[3] has reared a large brood of
godless assertors of the unity of God. Alexandria[4] has sown broadcast, over
almost the whole world, her denial, which is an affirmation, of the doctrine of
two Gods. Pannonia[5] upholds her pestilent doctrine that the only birth of Jesus
Christ was from the Virgin. And the Church, distracted by these rival faiths,
is in danger of being led by means of truth into a rejection of truth.
Doctrines are being forced upon her for godless ends, which, according to the use that
is made of them, will either support or overthrow the faith. For instance, we
cannot, as true believers, assert that God is One, if we mean by it that He is
alone; for faith in a lonely God denies the Godhead of the Son. If, on the other
hand, we assert, as we truly can, that the Son is God, we are in danger, so
they fondly imagine, of deserting the truth that God is One. We are in peril on
either hand; we may deny the unity or we may maintain the isolation. But it is a
danger which has no terrors for the foolish things of the word[6]. Our
adversaries are blind to the fact that His assertion that He is not alone is
consistent with unity; that though He is One He is not solitary.
4. But I trust that the Church, by the light of her doctrine, will so
enlighten the world's vain wisdom, that, even though it accept not the mystery of
the faith, it will recognise that in our conflict with heretics we, and not
they, are the true representatives of that mystery. For great is the force of
truth; not only is it its own sufficient witness, but the more it is assailed the
more evident it becomes; the daily shocks which it receives only increase its
inherent stability. It is the peculiar property of the Church that when she is
buffeted she is triumphant, when she is assaulted with argument she proves herself
in the right, when she is deserted by her supporters she holds the field. It
is her wish that all men should remain at her side and in her bosom; if it lay
with her, none would become unworthy to abide under the shelter of that august
mother, none would be cast out or suffered to depart from her calm retreat. But
when heretics desert her or she expels them, the loss she endures, in that she
cannot save them, is compensated by an increased assurance that she alone can
offer bliss. This is a truth which the passionate zeal of rival heresies brings
into the clearest prominence. The Church, ordained by the Lord and established
by His Apostles, is one for all; but the frantic folly of discordant sects has
severed them from her. And it is obvious that these dissensions concerning the
faith result from a distorted mind, which twists the words of Scripture into
conformity with its opinion, instead of adjusting that opinion to the words of
Scripture. And thus, amid the clash of mutually destructive errors, the Church
stands revealed not only by her own teaching, but by that of her rivals. They are
ranged, all of them, against her; and the very fact that she stands single and
alone is her sufficient answer to their godless delusions. The hosts of heresy
assemble themselves against her; each of them can defeat all the others, but
not one can win a victory for itself. The only victory is the triumph which the
Church celebrates over them all. Each heresy wields against its adversary some
weapon already shattered, in another instance, by the Church's condemnation.
There is no point of union between them, and the outcome of their internecine
struggles is the confirmation of the faith.
5. Sabellius sweeps away the birth of the Son, and then preaches the unity
of God; but he does not doubt that the mighty Nature, which acted in the
human Christ, was God. He shuts his eyes to the revealed mystery of the Sonship;
the works done seem to him so marvellous that he cannot believe that He who
performed them could undergo a true generation. When he hears the words,,He that
hath, seen Me hath seen the Father also[7], he jumps to the blasphemous conclusion
of an inseparable and indistinguishable identity of nature in Father and Son,
because he fails to see that the revelation of the birth is the mode in which
Their unity of nature is manifested to. us. For the fact that the Father is seen
in the Son is a proof of the Son's Divinity, not a disproof of His birth. Thus
our knowledge of Each of Them is conditioned-by our knowledge of the Other,
for there is no difference of nature between them and, since in this respect they
are One, a reverent study of the character of Either will give us a true
insight into the nature of Both For, indeed, it is certain that He, Who was in the
form of God, must in His self-revelation present Himself to us in the exact
aspect of the form of God[8]. Again, this perverse and insane delusion derives a
further encouragement from the words, I and the Father are One[9]. From the fact
of unity in the same nature they have impiously deduced a confusion of Persons;
their interpretation, that the words signify a single Power, contradicts the
tenour of the passage. For I and the Father are One does not indicate a solitary
God. The use of the conjunction and shews clearly that more than one Person is
signified; and are requires a plurality of subject. Moreover, the One is not
incompatible with a birth. Its sense is, that the Two Persons have the one
nature in common. The One is inconsistent with difference; the are with identity.
6. Set our modern heresy in array against the delusion, equally wild, of
Sabellius; let them make the best of their case. The new heretics will advance
the passage. The Father is greater than I[1]. Neglecting the mystery of the
Divine birth, and the mystery of God's emptying Himself and taking flesh, they will
argue the inferiority of His nature from His assertion that the Father is the
greater. They will plead against Sabellius that Christ is a Son, in so far as
One can be a Son who is inferior to the Father and needs to ask for restoration
to His glory, and fears to die and indeed did die. In reply Sabellius will
adduce His deeds in evidence of His Divine nature; and while our novel heresy, to
escape the admission of Christ's true Sonship, will heartily agree with him that
God is One, Sabellius will emphatically assert the same article of the faith,
in the sense that no Son exists. The one side lays stress upon the action of
the Son; the other urges that in that action God is manifest. the one will
demonstrate the unity, the other disprove the identity. Sabellius will defend his
position thus:--"The works that were done could have been done by no other nature
than the Divine. Sins were remitted, the sick were healed, the lame ran, the
blind saw, the dead lived. God alone has power for this. The words I and the
Father are One could only have been spoken from self-knowledge; no nature, outside
the Father's, could have uttered them. Why then suggest a second substance, and
urge me to believe in a second God? These works are peculiar to God; the One
God wrought them." His adversaries, animated by a hatred, equally venomous, for
the faith, will argue that the Son is unlike in nature to God the Father:--"You
are ignorant of the mystery of your salvation. You must believe in a Son
through Whom the worlds were made, through Whom man was fashioned, Who gave the Law
through Angels, Who was born of Mary, Who was sent by the Father, was
crucified, dead and buried, Who rose again from the dead and is at the right hand of
God, Who is the Judge of quick and dead. Unto Him we must use again, we must
confess Him, we must earn our place in His kingdom." Each of the two enemies of the
Church is fighting the Church's battle. Sabellius displays Christ as God by the
witness of the Divine nature manifested in His works; Sabellius' antagonists
confess Christ, on the evidence of the revealed faith, to be the Son of God.
7. Again, how glorious a victory for our faith is that in which Ebionin
other words, Photinus--both wins the day and loses it! He castigates Sabellius
for denying that the Son of God is Man, and in his turn has to submit to the
reproaches of Arian fanatics for failing to see that this Man is the Son of God.
Against Sabellius he calls the Gospels to his aid, with their evidence concerning
the Son of Mary; Arius deprives him of this ally by proving that the Gospels
make Christ something more than the Son of Mary. Sabellius denies that there is
a Son of God; against him Photinus elevates man to the place of Son. Photinus
will hear nothing of a Son born before the worlds; against him, Arius denies
that the only birth of the Son of God was His human birth. Let them defeat one
another to their hearts' content, for every victory which each of them wins is
balanced by a defeat Our present adversaries are ranted in the matter of the
Divine nature of the Son; Sabellius in the matter of the Son's revealed existence;
Photinus is convicted of ignorance, or else of falsehood, in his denial of the
Son's birth before the worlds. Meanwhile the Church, whose faith is based upon
the teaching of Evangelists and Apostles, holds fast, against Sabellius, her
assertion that the Son exists; against Arius, that He is God by nature; against
Photinus, that He created the universe. And she is the more convinced of her
faith, in that they cannot combine to contradict it. For Sabellius points to the
works of Christ in proof of the Divinity of Him Who wrought them, though he knows
not that the Son was their Author. The Arians grant Him tile name of Son,
though they confess not that the true nature of God dwelt in Him. Photinus
maintains His manhood, though in maintaining it he forgets that Christ was born as God
before the worlds. Thus, in their several assertions and denials, there are
points in which each heresy is in the right in defence or attack; and the result
of their conflicts is that the truth of our confession is brought into clearer
light.
8. I felt that I must spare a little space to point this out. It has been
from no love for amplification, but that it might serve as a warning. First, I
wished to expose the vague and confused character of this crowd of heresies,
whose mutual feuds turn, as we have seen, to our advantage. Secondly, in my
warfare against the blasphemous doctrines of modern heresy; that is, in my task of
proclaiming that both God the Father and God the Son are God,--in other words,
that Father and Son are One in name, One in nature, One in the kind of Divinity
which they possess,--I wished to shield myself from any charge which might be
brought against me, either as an advocate of two Gods or of one lonely and
isolated Deity. For in God the Father and God the Son, as I have set them forth, no
confusion of Persons can be detected; nor in my exposition of Their common
nature can any difference between the Godhead of the One and of the Other be
discerned. In the preceding book I have sufficiently refuted, by the witness of the
Gospels, those who deny the subsistence of I God the Son by a true birth from
God; my present duty is to shew that He, Who in the truth of His nature is Son of
God, is also in the truth of His nature God. But this proof must not
degenerate into the fatal profession of a solitary God, or of a second God. It shall
manifest God as One yet not alone; but in its care to avoid the error of making
Him lonely it shall not fall into the error of denying His unity.
9. Thus we have all these different assurances of the Divinity of our Lord
Jesus Christ:--His name, His birth, His nature, His power, His own assertion.
As to the name, I conceive that no doubt is possible. It is written, In the
beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God(2). What
reason can there be for suspecting that He is not what His name indicates? And
does not this name clearly describe His nature? If a statement be contradicted,
it must be for some reason. What reason, I demand, is there in this instance
for denying that He is God? The name is given Him, plainly and distinctly, and
unqualified by any incongruous addition which might raise a doubt. The Word, we
read, which was made flesh, was none other than God. Here is no loophole for any
such conjecture as that He has received this name as a favour or taken it upon
Himself, so possessing a titular Godhead which is not His by nature.
10. Consider the other recorded instances in which this name was given by
favour or assumed. To Moses it was said, I have made thee a god to Pharaoh(3).
Does not this addition, to Pharaoh, account for the title? Did God impart to
Moses the Divine nature? Did He not rather make Moses a god in the sight of
Pharaoh, who was to be smitten with terror when Moses' serpent swallowed the magic
serpents and returned into a rod, when he drove back the venomous flies which he
had called forth, when he stayed the hail by the same power wherewith he had
summoned it, and made the locusts depart by the same might which had brought
them; when in the wonders that he wrought the magicians saw the finger of God?
That was the sense in which Moses was appointed to be god to Pharaoh; he was
feared and entreated, he chastised and healed. It is one thing to be appointed a
god; it is another thing to be God. He was made a god to Pharaoh; he had not that
nature and that name wherein God consists. I call to mind another instance of
the name being given as a title; that where it is written, I have said, Ye are
gods(4). But this is obviously the granting of a favour. I have said proves
that it is no definition, but only a description by One Who chooses to speak
thus, A definition gives us knowledge of the object defined; a description depends
on the arbitrary will of the speaker. When a speaker is manifestly conferring a
title, that title has its origin only in the speaker's words, not in the thing
itself. The title is not the name which expresses its nature and kind.
11. But in this case the Word in very truth is God; the essence of the
Godhead exists in the Word, and that essence is expressed in the Word's name. For
the name Word is inherent in the Son of God as a consequence of His mysterious
birth, as are also the names Wisdom and Power. These, together with the
substance which is His by a true birth, were called into existence to be the Son of
God(5); yet, since they are the elements of God's nature, they are still immanent
in Him in undiminished extent, although they were born from Him to be His Son.
For, as we have said so often, the mystery which we preach is that of a Son
Who owes His existence not to division but to birth. He is not a segment cut off,
and so incomplete, but an Offspring born, and therefore perfect; for birth
involves no diminution of the Begetter, and has the possibility of perfection for
the Begotten. And therefore the titles of those substantive properties(6) are
applied to God the Only-begotten, for when He came into existence by birth it
was they which constituted His perfection; and this although they did not thereby
desert the Father, in Whom, by the immutability of His nature, they are
eternally present. For instance, the Word is God the Only-begotten, and yet the
Unbegotten Father is never without His Word. Not that the nature of the Son is that
of a sound which is uttered. He is God from God, subsisting through a true
birth; God's own Son, born from the Father, indistinguishable from Him in nature,
and therefore inseparable. This is the lesson which His title of the Word is
meant to teach us. And in the same way Christ is the Wisdom and the Power of God;
not that He is, as He is often regarded(7), the inward activity of the Father's
might or thought, but that His nature, possessing through birth a true
substantial existence, is indicated by these names of inward forces. For an object,
which has by birth an existence of its own, cannot be regarded as a property; a
property is necessarily inherent in some being and can have no independent
existence. But it was to save us from concluding that the Son is alien from the
Divine nature of His Father that He, the Only-begotten from the eternal God His
Father, born as God into a substantial existence of His own, has had Himself
revealed to us under these names of properties, of which the Father, out of Whom He
came into existence, has suffered no diminution. Thus He, being God, is nothing
else than God. For when I hear the words, And the Word was God, they do not
merely tell me that the Son was called God; they reveal to my understanding that
He is God. In those previous instances, where Moses was called god and others
were styled gods, there was the mere addition of a name by way of title. Here a
solid essential truth is stated; The Word was God. That was indicates no
accidental title, but an eternal reality, a permanent element of His existence, an
inherent character of His nature.
12. And now let us See whether the confession of Thomas the Apostle, when
he cried, My Lord and My God, corresponds with this assertion of the
Evangelist. We see that he speaks of Him, Whom he confesses to be God, as My God. Now
Thomas was undoubtedly familiar with those words of the Lord, Hear, O Israel, the
Lord thy God is One. How then could the faith of an Apostle become so oblivious
of that primary command as to confess Christ as God, when life is conditional
upon the confession of the Divine unity? It was because, in the light of the
Resurrection, the whole mystery of the faith had become visible to the Apostle.
He had often heard such words as, I and the Father are One, and, All things that
the Father hath are Mine, and, I in the Father and the Father in Me(8); and
now he can confess that the name of God expresses the nature of Christ, without
peril to the faith. Without breach of loyalty to the One God, the Father, his
devotion could now regard the Son of God as God, since he believed that
everything contained in the nature of the Son was truly of the same nature with the
Father. No longer need he fear that such a confession as his was the proclamation
of a second God, a treason against the unity of the Divine nature; for it was
not a second God Whom that perfect birth of the Godhead had brought into being.
Thus it was with full knowledge of the mystery of the Gospel that Thomas
confessed his Lord and his God. It was not a title of honour; it was a confession of
nature. He believed that Christ was God in substance and in power. And the Lord,
in turn, shews that this act of worship was the expression not of mere
reverence, but of faith, when He says, Because than hast seen, thou hast believed;
blessed are they which have not seen, and have believed. For Thomas had seen
before he believed. But, you ask, What was it that Thomas believed? That, beyond a
doubt, which is expressed in his words, My Lord and my God. No nature but that
of God could have risen by its own might from death to life; and it is this
fact, that Christ is God, which was confessed by Thomas with the confidence of an
assured faith. Shall we, then, dream that His name of God is not a substantial
reality, when that name has been proclaimed by a faith based upon certain
evidence? Surely a Son devoted to His Father, One Who did not His own will but the
will of Him that sent Him, Who sought not His own glory but the glory of Him from
Whom He came, would have rejected the adoration involved in such a name as
destructive of that unity of God which had been the burden of His teaching. Yet,
in fact, He confirms this assertion of the mysterious truth, made by the
believing Apostle; He accepts as His own the name which belongs to the nature of the
Father. And He teaches that they are blessed who, though they have not seen Him
rise from the dead, yet have believed, on the assurance of the Resurrection,
that He is God.
13. Thus the name which expresses His nature proves the truth of our
confession of the faith. For the name, which indicates any single substance, points
out also any other substance of the same kind; and, in this instance, there are
not two substances but one substance, of the one kind. For the Son of God is
God; this is the truth expressed in His name. The one name does not embrace two
Gods; for the one name God is the name of one indivisible nature. For since the
Father is God and the Son is God, and that name which is peculiar to the
Divine nature is inherent in Each, therefore the Two are One. For the Son, though He
subsists through a birth from the Divine nature, yet preserves the unity in
His name; and this birth of the Son does not compel loyal believers to
acknowledge two Gods, since our confession declares that Father and Son are One, both in
nature and in name. Thus the Son of God has the Divine name as the result of
His birth. Now the second step in our demonstration was to be that of shewing
that it is by virtue of His birth that He is God. I have still to bring forward
the evidence of the Apostles that the Divine name is used of Him in an exact
sense; but for the present I purpose to continue our enquiry into the language of
the Gospels.
14. And first I ask what new element, destructive of His Godhead, can have
been imported by birth into the nature of the Son? Universal reason rejects
the supposition that a being can become different in nature, by the process of
birth, from the being to which its birth is due; although we recognise the
possibility that from parents, different in kind, an offspring sharing the nature of
both, yet diverse from either, may be propagated. The fact is familiar in the
case of beasts, both tame and wild. But even in this case there is no real
novelty; the new qualities already exist, concealed in the two different parental
natures, and are only developed by the connexion. The birth of their joint
offspring is not the cause of that offspring's difference from its parents. The
difference is a gift from them of various diversities, which are received and
combined in one frame. When this is the case as to the transmission and reception
even of bodily differences, is it not a form of madness to assert that the birth
of God the Only-begotten was the birth from God of a nature inferior to Himself?
For the giving of birth is a function of the true nature of the transmitter of
life; and without the presence and action of that true nature there can be no
birth. The object of all this heat and passion is to prove that there was no
birth, but a creation, of the Son of God; that the Divine nature is not His
origin and that He does not possess that nature in His personal sub-sistence, but
draws, from what was non-existent, a nature different in kind from the Divine.
They are angry because He says, That which is barn of the flesh is flesh, and
that which is barn of the Spirit is Spirit(9). For, since God is a Spirit, it is
clear that in One born from Him there can be nothing alien or different froth
that Spirit from which He was born. Thus the birth of God constitutes Him perfect
God. And hence also it is clear that we must not say that He began to exist,
but only that He was born. For there is a sense in which beginning is different
from birth. A thing which begins to exist either comes into existence out of
nothing, or developes out of one state into another, ceasing to be what it was
before; so, for instance, gold is formed out of earth, solids melt into liquids,
cold changes to warmth, white to red, water breeds moving creatures, lifeless
objects torn into living. In contrast to all this, the Son of God did not begin,
out of nothing, to be God, but was born as God; nor had He an existence of
another kind before the Divine. Thus He Who was born to be God had neither a
beginning of His Godhead, nor yet a development up to it. His birth retained for Him
that nature out of which He came into being; the Son of God, in His distinct
existence, is what God is, and is nothing else.
15. Again, any one who is in doubt concerning this matter may gain from
the Jews an accurate knowledge of Christ's nature; or rather learn that He was
truly born from the Gospel, where it is written, Therefore the Jews sought the
more to kill Him because He not only broke the Sabbath, but said also that God
was His own Father, making Himself equal with God(1). This passage is unlike most
others in not giving us the words spoken by the Jews, but the Apostle's
explanation of their motive in wishing to kill the Lord. We see that no plea of
misapprehension can excuse the wickedness of these blasphemers; for we have the
Apostle's evidence that the true nature of Christ was fully revealed to them. They
could speak of His birth:--He said that God was His Father, making Himself
equal with God. Was not His clearly a birth of nature from nature, when He
published the equality of His nature by speaking of God, by name, as His own Father?
Now it is manifest that equality consists in the absence of difference between
those who are equal. Is it not also manifest that the result of birth must be a
nature in which there is an absence of difference between Son and Father? And
this is the only possible origin of true equality; birth can only bring into
existence a nature equal to its origin. But again, we can no more hold that there
is equality where there is confusion, than we can where there is difference.
Thus equality, as of the image(2), is incompatible with isolation and with
diversity; for equality cannot dwell with difference, nor yet in solitude.
16. And now, although we have found the sense of Scripture, as we
understand it, in harmony with the conclusions of ordinary reason, the two agreeing
that equality is incompatible either with diversity or with isolation, yet we must
seek a fresh support for Our contention from actual words of our Lord. For
only so can we check that licence of arbitrary interpretation whereby these bold
traducers of the faith would even venture to cavil at the Lord's solemn
self-revelation. His answer to the Jews was this:--The Son can do nothing of Himself
but what He seeth the Father do; for what things soever He doeth, these also
doeth the Son likewise. For the Father loveth the Son, and sheweth Him all things
that Himself doeth; and He will shew Him greater works than these, that ye may
marvel. For as the Father raiseth up the dead and quickeneth them, even so the
Son quickeneth whom He will. For the Father judgeth no man, but hath given all
judgment to the Son, that all may honour the Son even as they honour the Father.
He that honoureth not the Son honoureth not the Father which hath sent Him(3).
The course of our argument, as I had shaped it in my mind, required that each
several point of the debate should be handled singly; that, since we had been
taught that our Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, is God in name, in birth, in
nature, in power, in self-revelation, our demonstration of the faith should
establish each successive point in that order. But His birth is a barrier to such
a treatment of the question; for a consideration of it includes a consideration
of His name and nature and power and self-revelation. For His birth involves
all these, and they are His by the fact that He is born. And thus our argument
concerning His birth has taken such a course that it is impossible for us to
keep these other matters back for separate discussion in their turn.
17. The chief reason why the Jews wished to kill the Lord was that, in
calling God His Father, He had made Himself equal with God; and therefore He put
His answer, in which He reproved their evil passion, into the form of an
exposition of the whole mystery of our faith. For just before this, when He had healed
the paralytic and they had passed their judgment upon Him that He was worthy
of death for breaking the Sabbath, He had said, My Father worketh hitherto, and
I work(4). Their jealousy had been inflamed to the utmost by the raising of
Himself to the level of God which was involved in this use of the name of Father.
And now He wishes to assert His birth and to reveal the powers of His nature,
and so He says, I say unto you, the Son can do nothing of Himself, but what He
seeth the Father do. These opening words of His reply are aimed at that wicked
zeal of the Jews, which hurried them on even to the desire of slaying Him. It is
in reference to the charge of breaking the Sabbath that He says, My Father
worketh hitherto, and I work. He wished them to understand that His practice was
justified by Divine authority; and He taught them by the same words that His
work must be regarded as the work of the Father, Who was working in Him all that
He wrought. And again, it was to subdue the jealousy awakened by His speaking of
God as His Father that He uttered those words, Verily, verily, I say unto
you, the Son can do nothing of Himself, but what He seeth the Father do. Lest this
making of Himself equal to God, as having the name and nature of God's Son,
should withdraw men's faith from the truth that He had been born, He says that
the Son can do nothing but what He sees the Father do. Next, in confirmation of
the saving harmony of truths in our confession of Father and of Son, He displays
this nature which is His by birth; a nature which derives its power of action
not from successive gifts of strength to do particular deeds, but from
knowledge. He shews that this knowledge is not imparted by the Father's performance of
any bodily work, as a pattern, that the Son may imitate what the Father has
previously done; but that, by the action of the Divine nature, He had come to
share the subsistence of the Divine nature, or, in other words, had been born as
Son from the Father. He told them that, because the power and the nature of God
dwelt consciously within Him, it was impossible for Him to do anything which He
had not seen the Father doing; that, since it is in the might of the Father
that God the Only-begotten performs His works His liberty of action coincides in
its range with His knowledge of the powers of the nature of God the Father; a
nature inseparable from Himself, and lawfully owned by Him in virtue of His
birth. For God sees not after a bodily fashion, but possesses, by His nature, the
vision of Omnipotence.
18. The next words are, For what things soever He--the Father--doeth,
these also doeth the Son likewise. This likewise is added to indicate His birth;
whatsoever and same to indicate the true Divinity of His nature. Whatsoever and
same make it impossible that there should be any actions of His that are
different from or outside, the actions of the Father. Thus He, Whose nature has power
to do all the same things as the Father, is included in the same nature with
the Father. But when, in contrast with this, we read that all these same things
are done by the Son likewise, the fact that the works are like those of Another
is fatal to the supposition that He Who does them works in isolation. Thus the
same things that the Father does are all done likewise by the Son. Here we have
clear proof of His true birth, and at the same time a convincing attestation
of the Mystery of our faith, which, with its foundation in the Unity of the
nature of God, confesses that there resides in Father and Son an indivisible
Divinity. For the Son does the same things as the Father, and does them likewise;
while acting in like manner He does the same things. Two truths are combined in
one proposition; that His works are done likewise proves His birth; that they are
the same works proves His nature.
19. Thus the progressive revelation contained in our Lord's reply is at
one with the progressive statement of truth in the Church's confession of faith.
Neither of them divides the nature, and both declare the birth. For the next
words of Christ are, For the Father loveth the Son, and sheweth Him all things
that Himself doeth; and He will skew Him greater works than these, that ye may
marvel. For as the Rather raiseth up the dead, and quickeneth them, even so the
Son quickeneth whom He will. Can there be any other purpose in this revelation
of the manner in which God works, except that of inculcating the true birth; the
faith in a subsisting Son born from the subsisting God, His Father? The only
other explanation is that God the Only-begotten was so ignorant that He needed
the instruction conveyed in this showing; but the reckless blasphemy of the
suggestion makes this alternative impossible. For He, knowing, as He does,
everything that He is taught, has no need of the teaching. And accordingly, after the
words, The Father loveth the Son, and sheweth Him all things that Himself doeth,
we are next informed that all this skewing is for our instruction in the
faith; that the Father and the Son may have their equal share in our confession, and
we be saved, by this statement that the Father shews all that He does to the
Son, from the delusion that the Son's knowledge is imperfect. With this object
He goes on to say, And He will skew Him greater works than these, that ye may
marvel. For as the Father raiseth up the dead and quickeneth them, even so the
Son quickeneth whom He will. We see that the Son has full knowledge of the future
works which the Father will shew Him hereafter. He knows that He will be shewn
how, after His Father's example, He is to give life to the dead. For He says
that the Father will shew to the Son things at which they shall marvel; and at
once proceeds to tell them what these things are;For as the Father raiseth up
the dead and quickeneth them, even so the Son quickeneth whom He will. The power
is equal because the nature is one and the same. The skewing of the works is an
aid, not to ignorance in Him, but to faith in us. It conveys to the Son no
knowledge of things unknown, but it imparts to us the confidence to proclaim His
birth, by assuring us that the Father has shewn to Him all the works that He
Himself can do. The terms used in this Divine discourse have been chosen with the
utmost deliberation, lest any vagueness of language should suggest a difference
of nature between the Two. Christ says that the Father's works were shewn Him,
instead of saying that, to enable Him to perform them, a mighty nature was
given Him. Hereby He wishes to reveal to us that this shewing was a substantive
part of the process of His birth, since, simultaneously with that birth, there
was imparted to Him by the Father's love a knowledge of the works which the
Father willed that He should do. And again, to save us from being led, by this
declaration of the shewing, to suppose that the Son's nature is ignorant and
therefore different from the Father's, He makes it clear that He already knows the
things that are to be shewn Him. So far, indeed, is He from needing the authority
of precedent to enable Him to act, that He is to give life to whom He will. To
will implies a free nature, subsisting with power to choose in the blissful
exercise of omnipotence.
20. And next, lest it should seem that to give life to whom He will is not
within the power of One Who has been truly born, but is only the prerogative
of ingenerate Omnipotence, He hastens to add, For the Father judgeth no man, but
hath given all judgment to the Son. The statement that all judgment is given
teaches both His birth and His Sonship; for only a nature which is altogether
one with the Father's could possess all things; and a Son can possess nothing,
except by gift. But all judgment has been given Him for He quickens whom He will.
Now we cannot suppose that judgment is taken away from the Father, although He
does not exercise it; for the Son's whole power of judgment proceeds from the
Father's, being a gift from Him. And there is no concealment of the reason why
judgment has been given to the Son, for the words which follow are, But He hath
given all judgment to the Son, that all men may honour the Son even as they
honour the Father. He that honoureth not the Son honoureth not the Father Which
hath sent Him. What possible excuse remains for doubt, or for the irreverence of
denial? The reason for the gift of judgment is that the Son may receive an
honour equal to that which is paid to the Father; and thus he who dishonours the
Son is guilty of dishonouring the Father also. How, after this proof, can we
imagine that the nature given Him by birth is different from the Father's, when He
is the Father's equal in work, in power, in honour, in the punishment awarded
to gainsayers? Thus this whole Divine reply is nothing else than an unfolding
of the mystery of His birth. And the only distinction that it is right or
possible to make between Father and Son is that the Latter was born; yet born in such
a sense as to be One with His Father.
21. Thus the Father works hitherto and the Son works. In Father and Son
you have the names which express Their nature in relation to Each other. Note
also that it is the Divine nature, that through which God works, that is working
here. And remember, lest you fall into the error of imagining that the operation
of two unlike natures is here described, how it was said concerning the blind
man, But that the works of God may be made manifest in him, I must work the
works of Him that sent Me(5). You see that in his case the work wrought by the Son
is the Father's work; and the Son's work is God's work. The remainder of the
discourse which we are considering also deals with works; but my defence is at
present only concerned with assigning the whole work to Both, and pointing out
that They are at one in Their method of working, since the Son is employed upon
that work which the Father does hitherto. The sanction contained in this fact
that, by virtue of His Divine birth, the Father is working with Him in all that
He does, will save us from supposing that the Lord of the Sabbath was doing
wrong in working on the Sabbath. His Sonship is not affected, for there is no
confusion of His Divinity with the Father's, and no negation of it; His Godhead is
not affected, for His Divine nature is untouched. Their unity is not affected,
for no difference is revealed to sever Them; and Their unity is not presented
in such a light as to contradict Their distinct existence. First recognise the
Sonship of the Son; The Son can do nothing of Himself, but what He seeth the
Father do Here His birth is manifest; because of i. He can do nothing of Himself
till He sees it bring done. He cannot be unbegotten, because He can do nothing
of Himself; He has no power of initiation, and therefore He must have been born.
But the fact that He can see the Father's works proves that He has the
comprehension which belongs to the conscious Possessor of Divinity. Next, mark that He
does possess this true Divine nature;--For what things soever He doeth, these
also doeth the Son likewise. And now that we have seen Him endowed with the
powers of that nature, note how this results in unity, how one nature dwells in
the Two;--That all men may honour the Son, even as they honour the Father. And
then, lest reflection on this unity entangle you in the delusion of a solitary
and self-contained God, take to heart the mystery of the faith manifested in
these words, He that honoureth not the Son honoureth not the Father Which hath sent
Him. The rage and cunning of heresy may do their worst; our position is
impregnable. He is the Son, because He can do nothing of Himself; He is God, because,
whatever the Father does, He does the same; They Two are One, because He is
equal in honour to the Father and does the very same works; He is not the Father,
because He is sent. So great is the wealth of mysterious truth contained in
this one doctrine of the birth! It embraces His name, His nature, His power, His
self-revelation; for everything conveyed to Him in His birth must be contained
in that nature from which His birth is derived. Into His nature no element of
any substance different in kind from that of His Author is introduced, for a
nature which springs from one nature only must be entirely one with that nature
which is its parent. An unity is that which, containing no discordant elements,
is one in kind with itself; an unity constituted through birth cannot be
solitary; for solitude can have but a single occupant, while an unity constituted
through birth implies the conjunction of Two.
22. And furthermore, let His own Divine words bear witness to Himself. He
says, They that are of My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and they follow
Me; and I give unto them eternal life, and they shall never perish, neither
shall any man pluck them of My hand. That which My Father hath given Me is
greater than all, and no man shall be able to pluck them out of My Father's hand. I
and the Father are one(6). What lethargy can blunt so utterly, the edge of our
understanding as to render so precise a statement for one moment obscure to us?
What proud sophistry can play such pranks with human docility as to persuade
those, who have learnt from these words the knowledge of what God is that they
must not recognise God in Him Whose Godhead was here revealed to them? Heresy
ought either to bring forward other Gospels in support of its doctrine; or else,
if our existing Gospels are the only documents which teach of God, why do they
not believe the lessons taught? If they are the only source of knowledge, why
not draw faith, as well as knowledge, from them? Yet now we find that their faith
is held in defiance of their knowledge; and hence it is a faith rooted not in
knowledge, but in sin; a faith of bold irreverence, instead of reverent
humility, towards the truth confessedly known. God the Only-begotten, as we have seen,
fully assured of His own nature, reveals with the utmost precision of language
the mystery of His birth. He reveals it, ineffable though it is, in such wise
that we can believe and confess it; that we can understand that He was born and
believe that He has the nature of God and is One with the Father, and One with
Him in such a sense that God is not alone nor Son another name for Father, but
that in very truth He is the Son. For, firstly, He assures us of the powers of
His Divine nature, saying of His sheep, and no man shall pluck them out of My
hand. It is the utterance of conscious power, this confession of free and
irresistible energy, that will allow no man to pluck His sheep from His hand. But
more than this; not only has He the nature of God, but He would have us know that
nature is His by birth from God, and hence He adds, That which the Father has
given Me is greater than all. He makes no secret of His birth from the Father,
for what He received from the Father He says is greater than all. And He Who
received it, received it at His birth, not after His birth, and yet it came to
Him from Another, for He received it(7). But He, Who received this gift from
Another, forbids us to suppose that He Himself is different in kind from That
Other, and does not eternally subsist with the same nature as that of Him Who gave
the gift, by saying, No man shall be able to pluck them out of My, Father's
hand. None can pluck them out of His hand, for He has received from His Father that
which is greater than all things. What, then, means this contradictory
assertion that none can pluck them from His Father's hand? It is the Son's hand which
received them from the Father, the Father's hand which gave them to the Son: in
what sense is it said that what cannot be plucked from the Son's hand cannot
be plucked from the Father's hand? Hear, if you wish to know:--I and the Father
are one. The Son's hand is the Father's hand. For the Divine nature does not
deteriorate or cease to be the same in passing through birth: nor yet is this
sameness a bar to our faith in the birth, for in that birth no alien element was
admitted into His nature. And here He speaks of the Son's hand, which is the
hand of the Father, that by a bodily similitude you may learn the power of the one
Divine nature which is in Both; for the nature and the power of the Father is
in the Son. And lastly, that in this mysterious truth of the birth you may
discern the true and indistinguishable unity of the nature of God, the words were
spoken, I and the Father are One. They were spoken that in this unity we might
see neither difference nor solitude; for They are Two, and yet no second nature
came into being through that true birth and generation.
23. There still remains, if I read them aright, the same desire in these
maddened souls, though their opportunity for fulfilling it is lost. Their bitter
hearts still cherish a longing for mischief which they can no longer hope to
satisfy. The Lord is on His throne in heaven, and the furious hatred of heresy
cannot drag Him, as the Jews did, to the Cross. But the spirit of unbelief is
the same, though now it takes the form of rejecting His Godhead. They bid
defiance to His words, though they cannot deny that He spoke them. They vent their
hatred in blasphemy; instead of stones they shower abuse. If they could they would
bring Him down from His throne to a second crucifixion. When the Jews were
moved to wrath by the novelty of Christ's teaching we read, The Jews therefore
took up stones to stone Him. He answered them, Many good works have I shewed you
from the Father; far which of those works do ye stone Me? The Jews answered Him,
For a good work we stone Thee not, but for blasphemy; and because Thou, being
a man, makest Thyself God(8). I bid you, heretic, to recognise herein your own
deeds, your own words. Be sure that you are their partner, for you have made
their unbelief your pattern. It was at the words, I and the Father are One, that
the Jews took up stones. Their godless irritation at the revelation of that
saving mystery hurried them on even to an attempt to slay. There is no one whom
you can stone; but is your guilt in denying Him less than theirs? The will is the
same, though it is frustrated by His throne in heaven. Nay, it is you that are
more impious than the Jew. He lifted his stone against the Body, you lift
yours against the Spirit; he as he thought, against man, you against God; he
against a sojourner on earth, you against Him that sits upon the throne of majesty;
he against One Whom he knew not, you against Him Whom you confess; he against
the mortal Christ, you against the Judge of the universe. The Jew says, Being
Man; you say, 'Being a creature.' You and he join in the cry, Makest Thyself God,
with the same insolence of blasphemy. You deny that He is God begotten of God;
you deny that He is the Son by a true birth; you deny that His words, I and the
Father are One, contain the assertion of one and the same nature in Both. You
foist upon us in His stead a modern, a strange, an alien god; you make Him God
of another kind from the Father, or else not God at all, as not subsisting by a
birth from God.
24. The mystery contained in those words, I and the Father are One, moves
you to wrath. The Jew answered, Thou, being a man makest Thyself God; your
blasphemy is a match for his:--'Thou, being a creature, makest Thyself God.' You
say, in effect, 'Thou art not a Son by birth, Thou art not God in truth; Thou art
a creature, excelling all other creatures. But Thou wast not born to be God,
for I refuse to believe that the incorporeal God gave birth to Thy nature. Thou
and the Father are not One. Nay more. Thou art not the Son, Thou art not like
God, Thou art not God.' The Lord had His answer for the Jews; an answer that
meets the case of your blasphemy even better than it met theirs:--Is it not
written in the Law, I said, Ye are gods? If, therefore, He called them gods, unto
whom the word of God came, and the Scripture cannot be broken, say ye of Me, Whom
the Father hath sanctified and sent into this world, that I have blasphemed,
because I said I am the Son of God? If I do not the works of the Father, believe
Me not; but if I do, and ye will not believe Me, believe the works, that ye may
know and be sure that the Father is in Me, and I in Him(9). The matter of this
reply was dictated by that of the blasphemous attack upon Him. The accusation
was that He, being a man, made Himself God. Their proof of this allegation was
His own statement, I and the Father are One. He therefore sets Himself to prove
that the Divine nature, which is His by birth, gives Him the right to assert
that He and the Father are One. He begins by exposing the absurdity, as well as
the insolence, of such a charge as that of making Himself God, though He was a
man. The Law had conferred the title upon holy men; the word of God, from which
there is no appeal, had given its sanction to the public use of the name. What
blasphemy, then, could there be in the assumption of the title of Son of God
by Him Whom the Father had sanctified and sent into the world? The unalterable
record of the Word of God has confirmed the title to those to whom the Law
assigned it. There is an end, therefore, of the charge that He, being a man, makes
Himself God, when the Law gives the name of gods to those who are confessedly
men. And further, if other men may use this name without blasphemy, there can
obviously be no blasphemy in its use by the Man Whom the Father has
sanctified,--and note here that throughout this argument He calls Himself Man, for the Son of
God is also Son of Man--since He excels the rest, who yet are guilty of no
irreverence in styling themselves gods. He excels them, in that He has been
hallowed to be the Son, as the blessed Paul says, who teaches us of this
sanctification:--Which He had promised afore by His prophets in the Holy Scriptures,
concerning His Son, Which was made of the seal of David according to the flesh, and
was appointed to be the Son of God with power, according to the spirit of
sanctification(1). Thus the accusation of blasphemy on His part, in making Himself
God, falls to the ground. For the Word of God has conferred this name upon many
men; and He, Who was sanctified and sent by the Father, did no more than
proclaim Himself the Son of God.
25. There remains, I conceive, no possibility of doubt but that the words,
I and the Father are One, were spoken with regard to the nature which is His
by birth. The Jews had rebuked Him because by these words He, being a man, made
Himself God. The coarse of His answer proves that, in this I and the Father are
One, He did profess Himself the Son of God, first in name, then in nature, and
lastly by birth. For I and Father are the names of substantive Beings; One is
a declaration of Their nature, namely, that it is essentially the same in Both;
are forbids us to confound Them together; are one, while forbidding confusion,
teaches that the unity of the Two is the result of a birth. Now all this truth
is drawn out from that name, the Son of God, which He being sanctified by the
Father, bestows upon Himself; a name, His right to which is confirmed by His
assertion, I and the Father are One. For birth cannot confer any nature upon the
offspring other than that of the parent from whom that offspring is born.
26. Once more, God the Only-begotten has summed up for us, in words of'
His own, the whole revealed mystery of the faith. When He had given His answer to
the charge that He, being a man, made Himself God, He determined to shew that
His words, I and the Father are One, are a clear and necessary conclusion; and
therefore He thus pursued His argument;--Ye say that I have blasphemed, because
I said, I am the Son of God. If I do not the works of the Father, believe Me
not; but if I do, and ye will not believe Me, believe the works, that ye may
know and be sure that the Father is in Me, and I in the Father. After this, heresy
that still persists in its course perpetrates a wilful outrage in conscious
despair; the assertion of unbelief is deliberate shamelessness. They who make it
take pride in folly and are dead to the faith. for it is not ignorance, but
madness, to contradict this saying. The Lord had said, I and the Father are One;
and the mystery of His birth, which He revealed, was the unity in nature of
Father and Son. Again, when He was accused for claiming the Divine nature, He
justified His claim by advancing a reason; --If I do not the works of the Father,
believe Me not. We are not to believe His assertion that He is the Son of God,
unless He does His Father's works. Hence we see that His birth has given Him no
new or alien nature, for His doing of the Father's works is to be the reason why
we mast believe that He is the Son. What room is there here for adoption, or
for leave to use the name, or for denial that He was born from the nature of
God, when the proof that He is God's Son is that He does the works which belong to
the Father's nature? No creature is equal or like to God, no nature external
to His is comparable in might to Him; it is only the Son, born from Himself,
Whom we can without blasphemy liken and equal to Him. Nothing outside Himself can
be compared to God without insult to His august majesty. If any being, not born
from God's sell, can be discovered that is like Him and equal to Him in power,
then God, in admitting a partner to share His throne, forfeits His
pre-eminence. No longer is God One, for a second, indistinguishable from Himself, has
arisen. On the other hand, there is no insult in making His own true Son His equal.
For then that which is like Him is His own; that which is compared with Him is
born from Himself; the Power that can do His own works is not external to Him.
Nay more, it is an actual heightening of His glory, that He has begotten
Omnipotence, and yet not severed that Omnipotent nature from Himself. The Son
performs the Father's works, and on that ground demands that we should believe that
He is God's Son. This is no claim of mere arrogance; for He bases it upon His
works, and bids us examine them. And He bears witness that these works are not
His own, but His Father's. He would not have our thoughts distracted by the
splendour of the deeds from the evidence for His birth. And because the Jews could
not penetrate the mystery of the Body which He had taken, the Humanity born of
Mary, and recognise the Son of God, He appeals to His deeds for confirmation of
His right to the name;--But if I do them, and ye will not believe Me, believe
the works. First, He would not have them believe that He is the Son of God,
except on the evidence of God's works which He does. Next, if He does the works,
yet seems unworthy, in His bodily humility, to bear the Divine name, He demands
that they shall believe the works. Why should the mystery of His human birth
hinder our recognition of His birth as God, when He that is Divinely born fulfils
every Divine task by the agency of that Manhood which He has assumed? If we
believe not the Man, for the works' sake, when He tells us that He is the Son of
God, let us believe the works when they, which are beyond a doubt the works of
God, are manifestly wrought by the Son of God. For the Son of God possesses, in
virtue of His birth, everything that is God's; and therefore the Son's work is
the Father's work because His birth has not excluded Him from that nature which
is His source and wherein He abides, and because He has in Himself that nature
to which He owes it that He exists eternally.
27. And so the Son, Who does the Father's works and demands of us that, if
we believe not Him, at least we believe His works, is bound to tell us what
the point is as to which we are to believe the works. And He does tell us in the
words which follow:--But if I do, and ye will not believe Me, believe the
works, that ye may know and be sure that the Father is in Me, and I in Him. It is
the same truth as is contained in I am the Son of God, and I and the Father are
One. This is the nature which is His by birth; this the mystery of the saving
faith, that we must not divide the unity, nor separate the nature from the birth,
but must confess that the living God was in truth born from the living God.
God, Who is Life, is not a Being built up of various and lifeless portions; He is
Power, and not compact of feeble elements, Light, intermingled with no shades
of darkness, Spirit, that can harmonise with no incongruities. All that is
within Him is One; what is Spirit is Light and Power and Life, and what is Life is
Light and Power and Spirit. He Who says, I am, and I change not(2), can suffer
neither change in detail nor transformation in kind. For these attributes,
which I have named, are not attached to different portions of Him, but meet and
unite, entirely and perfectly, in the whole being of the living God. He is the
living God, the eternal Power of the living Divine nature; and that which is born
from Him, according to the mysterious truth which He reveals, could not be
other than living. For when He said, As the living Father hath sent Me, and I live
through the Father(3), He taught that it is through the living Father that He
has life in Himself. And, moreover, when He said, For as the Father hath life in
Himself, so hath He given to the Son also to have life in Himself(4), He bore
witness that life, to the fullest extent, is His gift from the living God. Now
if the living Son was born from the living Father, that birth took place
without a new nature coming into existence. Nothing new comes into existence when the
Living is begotten by the Living; for life was not sought out from the
non-existent to receive birth; and Life, which receives its birth from Life, must
needs, because of that unity of nature and because of the mysterious event of that
perfect and ineffable birth, live always in Him that lives and have the life of
the Living in Himself.
28. I call to mind that, at the beginning of our treatises, I gave the
warning that human analogies correspond imperfectly to their Divine counterparts,
yet that our understanding receives a real, if incomplete, enlightenment by
comparing the latter with visible types. And now I appeal to human experience in
the matter of birth, whether the source of their children's being remain not
within the parents. For though the lifeless and ignoble matter, which sets in
motion the beginnings of life, pass from one parent into the other, yet these
retain their respective natural forces. They have brought into existence a nature
one with their own, and therefore the begetter is bound up with the existence of
the begotten; and the begotten, receiving birth through a force transmitted,
yet not lost, by the begetter, abides in that begetter. This may suf-fice as a
statement of what happens in a human birth. It is inadequate as a parallel to the
perfect birth of God the Only-begotten; for humanity is born in weakness and
from the union of two unlike natures, and maintained in life by a combination of
lifeless substances. Again, humanity does not enter at once into the exercise
of its appointed life, and never fully lives that life, being always encumbered
with a multitude of members which decay and are insensibly discarded. In God,
on the other hand, the Divine life is lived in the fullest sense, for God is
Life; and from Life nothing that is not truly living can be born. And His birth
is not by way of emanation but results from an act of power. Thus, since God's
life is perfect in its intensity, and since that which is born from Him is
perfect in power, God has the power of giving birth but not of suffering change. His
nature is capable of increase(6), not of diminution, for He continues in, and
shares the life of, that Son to Whom He gave in birth a nature like to, and
inseparable from, His own. And that Son, the Living born from the Living, is not
separated by the event of His birth from the nature that begat Him.
29. Another analogy which casts some light upon the meaning of the faith
is that of fire as containing fire in itself and as abiding in fire. Fire
contains the brightness of light, the heat which is its essential nature, the
property of destroying by combustion the flickering inconstancy of flame. Yet all the
while it is fire, and in all these manifestations there is but one nature. Its
weakness is that it is dependent for its existence upon inflammable matter, and
that it perishes with the matter on which it has lived. A comparison with fire
gives us, in some measure, an insight into the incomparable nature of God; it
helps us to believe in the properties of God that we find them, to a certain
extent, present in an earthly element. I ask, then, whether in fire derived from
fire there is any division or separation. When one flame is kindled from
another, is the original nature cut off from the derived, so as not to abide in it?
Does it not rather follow on, and dwell in the second flame by a kind of
increase, as it were by birth? For no portion has been cut off from the nature of the
first flame, and yet there is light from light. Does not the first flame live
on in the second, which owes its existence, though not by division, to the
first? Does not the second still dwell in the first, from which it was not cut off;
from which it went forth, retaining its unity with the substance to which its
nature belongs? Are not the two one, when it is physically impossible to derive
light from light by division, and logically impossible to distinguish between
them in nature.
30. These illustrations, I repeat, must only be used as aids to
apprehension of the faith, not as standards of comparison for the Divine majesty. Our
method is that of using bodily instances as a clue to the invisible. Reverence
land reason justify us in using such help, which we find used in God's witness to
Himself, while yet we do not aspire to find a parallel to the nature of God.
But the minds of simple believers have been distressed by the mad heretical
objection that it is wrong to accept a doctrine concerning God which needs, in order
to become intelligible, the help of bodily analogies. And therefore, in
accordance with that word of our Lord which we have already cited, That which is born
of the flesh is flesh, but that which is born of the Spirit is Spirit(7), we
have thought it expedient, since God is Spirit, to give to these comparisons a
certain place in our argument. By so doing we shall avert from God the charge
that He has deceived us in using these analogies; shewing, as we have done, that
such illustrations from the nature of His creatures enable us to grasp the
meaning of God's self-revelation to us.
31. We see how the living Son of the living Father, He Who is God from
God, reveals the unity of the Divine nature, indissolubly One and the same, and
the mystery of His birth in these words, I and the Father are One. Because the
seeming arrogance of them engendered a prejudice against Him, He made it more
clear that He had spoken in the conscious possession of Divinity by saying, Ye say
that I have blasphemed because I said, I am the Son of God; thus shewing that
the oneness of His nature with that of God was due to birth from God. And then,
to clench their faith in His birth by a positive assertion, and to guard them,
at the same time, from imagining that the birth involves a difference of
nature, He crowns His argument with the words, Believe the works, that the Father is
in Me, and I in the Father. Does His birth, as here revealed, display His
Divinity as not His by nature, as not His own by right? Each is in the Other; the
birth of the Son is from the Father only; no alien or unlike nature has been
raised to Godhead and subsists as God. God from God, eternally abiding, owes His
Godhead to none other than God. Import, if you see your opportunity, two gods
into the Church's faith; separate Son from Father as far as you can, consistently
with the birth which you admit; yet still the Father is in the Son, and the
Son is in the Father, and this by no interchange of emanations but by the perfect
birth of the living nature. Thus you cannot add together God the Father and
God the Son, and count Them as two Gods, for They Two are One God. You cannot
confuse Them together, for They Two are not One Person. And so the Apostolic faith
rejects two gods; for it knows nothing of two Fathers or two Sons. In
confessing the Father it confesses the Son; it believes in the Son in believing in the
Father. For the name of Father involves that of Son, since without having a son
none can be a father. Evidence of the existence of a son is proof that there
has been a father, for a son cannot exist except from a father. When we confess
that God is One we deny that He is single; for the Son is the complement of the
Father, and to the Father the Son's existence is due. But birth works no
change in the Divine nature; both in Father and in Son that nature is true to its
kind. And the right expression for us of this unity of nature is the confession
that They, being Two by birth and generation, are One God, not one Person.
32. We will leave it to him to preach two Gods, who can preach One God
without confessing the unity; he shall proclaim that God is solitary, who can deny
that there are two Persons, Each dwelling in the Other by the power of Their
nature and the mystery of birth given and received. And that man may assign a
different nature to Each of the Two, who is ignorant that the unity of Father and
of Son is a revealed truth. Let the heretics blot out this record of the Son's
self-revelation I in the Father and the Father in Me; then, and not till then,
shall they assert that there are two Gods, or one God in loneliness. There is
no hint of more natures than one in what we are told of Their possession of the
one Divine nature. The truth that God is from God does not multiply God by
two; the birth destroys the supposition of a lonely God. And again, because They
are interdependent They form an unity; and that They are interdependent is
proved by Their being One from One. For the One, in begetting the One, conferred
upon Him nothing that was not His own; and the One, in being begotten, received
from the One only what belongs to one. Thus the apostolic faith, in proclaiming
the Father, will proclaim Him as One God, and in confessing the Son will confess
Him as One God; since one and the same Divine nature exists in Both, and
because, the Father being God and the Son being God, and the one name of God
expressing the nature of Both, the term 'One God' signifies the Two. God from God, or
God in God, does not mean that there are two Gods, for God abides, One from
One, eternally with the one Divine nature and the one Divine name; nor does God
dwindle down to a single Person, for One and One can never be in solitude.
33. The Lord has not left in doubt or obscurity the teaching conveyed in
this great mystery; He has not abandoned us to lose our way in dim uncertainty.
Listen to Him as He reveals the full knowledge of this faith to His
Apostles;--I am the Way and the Truth and the Life; no man cometh unto the Father but
through Me. If ye know Me, ye know My Father also; and from henceforth ye shall
know Him, and have seen Him. Philip saith unto Him, Lord, shew us the Father, and
it sufficeth us. Jesus saith unto him, Have I been so long time with you, and
ye have not known Me, Philip? He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father also.
How sayest thou, Shew us the Rather? Dost than not believe Me, that I am in the
Father, and the Father is in Me? The words that I speak unto you I speak not of
Myself, but the Father that dwelleth in Me, He doeth His works. Believe Me,
that I am in the Father, and the Father in Me; or else believe for the very works'
sake(8). He Who is the Way leads us not into by-paths or trackless wastes: He
Who is the Truth mocks us not with lies; He Who is the Life betrays us not into
delusions which are death. He Himself has chosen these winning names to
indicate the methods which He has appointed for our salvation. As the Way, He will
guide us to the Truth; the Truth will establish us in the Life. And therefore it
is all-important for us to know what is the mysterious mode, which He reveals,
of attaining this life. No man cometh to the Rather but through Me. The way to
the Father is through the Son. And now we must enquire whether this is to be by
a course of obedience to His teaching, or by faith in His Godhead. For it is
conceivable that our way to the Father may be through adherence to the Son's
teaching, rather than through believing that the Godhead of the Father dwells in
the Son. And therefore let us, in the next place, seek out the true meaning of
the instruction given us here. For it is not by cleaving to a preconceived
opinion, but by studying the force of the words, that we shall enter into possession
of this faith.
34. The words which follow those last cited are, If ye know Me, ye know My
Father also. It is the Man, Jesus Christ, Whom they behold. How can a
knowledge of Him be a knowledge of the Father? For the Apostles see Him wearing the
aspect of that human nature which belongs to Him; but God is not encumbered with
body and flesh, and is incognisable by those who dwell in our weak and fleshly
body. The answer is given by the Lord, Who asserts that under the flesh, which,
in a mystery, He had taken, His Father's nature dwells within Him. He sets the
facts in their due order thus;--If ye know Me, ye know My Father also; and from
henceforth ye shall know Him, and have seen Him. He makes a distinction
between the time of sight, and the time of knowledge. He says that from henceforth
they shall know Him Whom they had already seen; and so shall possess. from the
time of this revelation on-war I. the knowledge of that nature, on which, in Him,
they long had gazed.
35. But the novel sound of these words disturbed the Apostle Philip. A Man
is before their eyes; this Man avows Himself the Son of God, and declares that
when they have known Him they will know the Father. He tells them that they
have seen the Father, and that, because they have seen Him, they shall know Him
hereafter. This truth is too broad for the grasp of weak humanity; their faith
fails in the presence of these paradoxes. Christ says that the Father has been
seen already and shall now be known; and this, although sight, is knowledge. He
says that if the Son has been known, the Father has been known also; and this
though the Son has imparted knowledge of Himself through the bodily senses of
sight and sound, while the Father's nature, different altogether from that(9) of
the visible Man, which they know, could not be learnt from their knowledge of
the nature of Him Whom they have seen. He has also often borne witness that no
man has seen the Father. And so Philip broke forth, with the loyalty and
confidence of an Apostle, with the request, Lord, shew us the Father, and it sufficeth
us. He was not tampering with the faith; it was but a mistake made in
ignorance. For the Lord had said that the Father had been seen already and henceforth
should be known · but the Apostle had not understood that He had been seen.
Accordingly he did not deny that the Father had been seen, but asked to see Him. He
did not ask that the Father should be unveiled to his bodily gaze, but that he
might have such an indication as should enlighten him concerning the Father
Who had been seen. For he had seen the Son under the aspect of Man, but cannot
understand how he could thereby have seen the Father. His adding, And it
sufficeth us, to the prayer, Lard, shew us the Father, reveals clearly that it was a
mental, not a bodily vision of the Father which he desired. He did not refuse
faith to the Lord's words, but asked for such enlightenment to his mind as should
enable him to believe; for the fact that the Lord had spoken was conclusive
evidence to the Apostle that faith was his duty. The consideration which moved him
to ask that the Father might be shewn, was that the Son had said that He had
been seen, and should be known because He had been seen. There was no
presumption in this prayer that He, Who had already been seen, should now be made
manifest.
36. And therefore the Lord answered Philip thus;--Have I been so long time
with you, and ye have not known Me, Philip? He rebukes the Apostle for
defective knowledge of Himself; for previously He had said that when He was known the
Father was known also. But what is the meaning of this complaint that for so
long they had not known Him? It means this; that if they had known Him, they must
have recognised in Him the Godhead which belongs to His Father's nature. For
His works were the peculiar works of God. He walked upon the waves, commanded
the winds, manifestly, though none could tell how, changed the water into wine
and multiplied the loaves, put devils to flight, healed diseases, restored
injured limbs and repaired the defects of nature, forgave sins and raised the dead to
life. And all this He did while wearing flesh; and He accompanied the works
with the assertion that He was the Son of God. Hence it is that He justly
complains that they did not recognise in His mysterious human birth and life the
action of the nature of God, performing these deeds through the Manhood which He had
assumed.
37. And therefore the Lord reproached them that they had not known Him,
though He had so long been doing these works, and answered their prayer that He
would shew them the Father by saying, He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father
also. He was not speaking of a bodily manifestation, of perception by the eye
of flesh, but by that eye of which He had once spoken;--Say not ye, There are
yet four months, and then cometh harvest? Behold, I say unto you, Lift up your
eyes and look an the fields; for they are white to harvest(1). The season of the
year, the fields white to harvest are allusions equally incompatible with an
earthly and visible prospect. He was bidding them lift the eyes of their
understanding to contemplate the bliss of the final harvest. And so it is with His
present words, He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father also. It was not the
carnal body, which He had received by birth from the Virgin, that could manifest to
them the image and likeness of God. The human aspect which He wore could be no
aid towards the mental vision of the incorporeal God. But God was recognised in
Christ, by such as recognised Christ as the Son on the evidence of the powers
of His Divine nature; and a recognition of God the Son produces a recognition
of God the Father. For the Son is in such a sense the Image, as to be One in
kind with the Father, and yet to indicate that the Father is His Origin. Other
images, made of metals or colours or other materials by various arts, reproduce
the appearance of the objects which they represent. Yet can lifeless copies be
put on a level with their living originals? Painted or carved or molten effigies
with the nature which they imitate? The Son is not the Image of the Father
after such a fashion as this; He is the living Image of the Living. The Son that is
born of the Father has a nature in no wise different from His; and, because
His nature is not different, He possesses the power of that nature which is the
same as His own. The fact that He is the Image proves that God the Father is the
Author of the birth of the Only-begotten, Who is Himself revealed as the
Likeness and Image of the invisible God. And hence the likeness, which is joined in
union with the Divine nature, is indelibly His, because the powers of that
nature are inalienably His own.
38. Such is the meaning of this passage, Have I been so long time with
you, and ye have not known Me, Philip? He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father
also. How sayest thou, Shew us the Father? Dost thou not believe Me, that I am
in the Father, and the Father is in Me? It is only the Word of God, of Whom we
men are enabled, in our discourse concerning Divine things, to reason. All else
that belongs to the Godhead is dark and difficult, dangerous and obscure. If
any man propose to express what is known in other words than those supplied by
God, he must inevitably either display his own ignorance, or else leave his
readers' minds in utter perplexity. The Lord, when He was asked to shew the Father,
said, He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father also. He that would alter this
is an antichrist, he that would deny it is a Jew, he that is ignorant a Pagan.
If we find ourselves in difficulty, let us lay the fault to our own reason; if
God's declaration seem involved in obscurity, let us assume that our want of
faith is the cause. These words state with precision that God is not
solitary, and yet that there are no differences within the Divine nature. For the
Father is seen in the Son, and this could be the case neither if He were a lonely
Being, nor yet if He were unlike the Son. it is through the Son that the Father
is seen: and this mystery which the Son reveals is that They are One God, but
not one Person. What other meaning can you attach to this saying of the Lord's,
He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father also? This is no case of identity; the
use of the conjunction also shews that the Father is named in addition to the
Son. These words, The Father also, are incompatible with the notion of an
isolated and single Person. No conclusion is possible but that the Father was made
visible through the Son, because They are One and are alike in nature. And, lest
our faith in this regard should be left in any doubt, the Lord proceeded, How
safest thou, Shew us the Father? The Father had been seen in the Son; how then
could men be ignorant of the Father? What need could there be for Him to be
shewn?
39. Again, the unity of Begetter and Begotten, manifested in sameness of
nature and true oneness of kind, proves that the Father was seen in His true
nature. And this is shewn by the Lord's next words, Believe not that I am in the
Father, and the Father in Me? In no other words than these, which the Son has
used, can the fact be state that Father and Son, being alike in nature, are
inseparable. The Son, Who is the Way and the Truth and the Life, is not deceiving us
by some theatrical transformation of names and aspects, when He, while wearing
Manhood, styles Himself the Son of God. He is not falsely concealing the fact
that He is God the Father(2); He is not a single Persons Who hides His features
under a mask, that we may imagine that Two are present. He is not a solitary
Being, now posing as His own Son, and again calling Himself the Father; tricking
out one unchanging nature with varying names. Far removed from this is the
plain honesty of the words. The Father is the Father, and the Son is the Son. But
these names, and the realities which they represent, contain no innovation
upon the Divine nature, nothing inconsistent, nothing alien. For the Divine
nature, being true to itself, persists in being itself; that which is from God is
God. The Divine birth imports neither diminution nor difference into the Godhead,
for the Son is born into, and subsists with, a nature that is within the Divine
nature and is like to it, and the Father sought out no alien element to be
mingled in the nature of His Only-begotten Son, but endowed Him with all things
that are His own, and this without loss to the Giver. And thus the Son is not
destitute of the Divine nature, for, being God, He is from God and from none
other; and He is not different from God, but is indeed nothing else than God, for
that which is begotten from God is the Son, and the Son only, and the Divine
nature, in receiving birth as a Son, has not forfeited its Divinity. Thus the
Father is in the Son, the Son is in the Father, God is in God. And this is not by
the combination of two harmonious, though different, kinds of being, nor by the
incorporating power of an ampler substance exercised upon a lesser; for the
properties of matter make it impossible that things which enclose others should
also be enclosed by them. It is by the birth of living nature from living nature.
The substance remains the same, birth causes no deterioration in the Divine
nature; God is not born from God to be ought else than God. Herein is no
innovation, no estrangement, no division. It is sin to believe that Father and Son are
two Gods, sacrilege to assert that Father and Son are one solitary God,
blasphemy to deny the unity, consisting in sameness of kind. of God from God.
40. Lest they, whose faith conforms to the Gospel, should regard this
mystery as something vague and obscure, the Lord has expounded it in this
order;--Dost thou not believe Me, that I am in the Father, and the Father is in Me? The
words that I speak unto you I speak not of Myself, but the Father that dwelleth
in Me, He doeth His works. In what other words than these could, or can, the
possession of the Divine nature by Father and Son be declared, consistently with
prominence for the Son's birth? When He says, The words that I speak unto you
I speak not of Myself, He neither suppresses His personality, nor denies His
Sonship, nor conceals the presence in Himself of His Father's Divine nature.
While speaking of Himself--and that He does so speak is proved by the pronoun I--He
speaks as abiding in the Divine substance; while speaking not of Himself, He
bears witness to the birth which took place in Him of God from God His Father.
And He is inseparable and indistinguishable in unity of nature from the Father;
for He speaks, though He speaks not of Himself. He Who speaks, though He speak
not of Himself, necessarily exists, inasmuch as He speaks; and, inasmuch as He
speaks not of Himself, He makes it manifest that His words are not His own. For
He has added, But the Father that dwelleth in Me, He doeth His works. That the
Father dwells in the Son proves that the Father is not isolated and alone;
that the Father works through the Son proves that the Son is not an alien or a
stranger. There cannot be one Person only, for He speaks not of Himself; and,
conversely, They cannot be separate and divided when the One speaks through the
voice of the Other. These words are the revelation of the mystery of Their unity.
And again, They Two are not different One from the Other, seeing that by Their
inherent nature Each is in the Other; and They are One, seeing that He, Who
speaks, speaks not of Himself, and He, Who speaks not of Himself, yet does speak.
And then, having taught that the Father both spoke and wrought in Him, the Son
establishes this perfect unity as the rule of our faith;--But the Father that
dwelleth in Me, He doeth His works. Believe Me, that I am in the Father, and the
Father in Me; or else believe far the very works' sake. The Father works in
the Son; but the Son also works the works of His Father.
41. And so, lest we should believe and say that the Father works in the
Son through His own omnipotent energy, and not through the Son's possession, as
His birthright, of the Divine nature, Christ says, Believe Me, that I am in the
Father, and the Father in Me. What means this, Believe Me? Clearly it refers
back to the previous, Shew us the Father. Their faith--that faith which had
demanded that the Father should be shewn--is confirmed by this command to believe.
He was not satisfied with saying, He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father
also. He goes further, and expands our knowledge, so that we can contemplate the
Father in the Son, remembering meanwhile that the Son is in the Father. Thus He
would save us from the error of imagining a reciprocal emanation of the One into
the Other, by teaching Their unity in the One nature through birth given and
received. The Lord would have us take Him at His word, lest our hold upon the
faith be shaken by His condescension in assuming Humanity. If His flesh, His
body, His passion seem to make His Godhead doubtful, let us at least believe, on
the evidence of the works, that God is in God and God is flora God, and that They
are One. For by the power of Their nature Each is in the Other. The Father
loses nothing that is His because it is in the Son, and the Son receives His whole
Sonship from the Father. Bodily natures are not created after such a fashion
that they mutually contain each other, or possess the perfect unity of one
abiding nature. In their case it would be impossible that an Only-begotten Son could
exist eternally, inseparable from the true Divine nature of His Father. Yet
this is the peculiar property of God the Only-begotten, this the faith revealed
in the mystery of His true birth, this the work of the Spirit's power, that to
be, and to be in God, is for Christ the same thing; and that this being in God
is not the presence of one thing within another, as a body inside another body,
but that the life and subsistence of Christ is such that He is within the
subsisting God, and within Him, yet having a subsistence of His own. For Each
subsists in such wise as not to exist apart from the Other, since They are Two
through birth given and received, and therefore only one Divine nature exists. This
is the meaning of the words, I and the Father are One, and He that hath seen Me
hath seen the Father also, and I in the Father and the Father in Me. They tell
us that the Son Who is born is not different or inferior to the Father; that
His possession, by right of birth, of the Divine nature as Son of God, and
therefore nothing else than God, is the supreme truth conveyed in the mysterious
revelation of the One Godhead in Father and Son. And therefore the doctrine of the
generation of the Only-begotten is guiltless of ditheism, for the Son of God,
in being born into the Godhead, manifested in Himself the nature of God His
Begetter.