Gregorios of Nazianzos:
Five Theological Orations
The First Theological Oration.
A Preliminary Discourse Against the Eunomians.
I. I am to speak against persons
who pride themselves on their eloquence; so, to begin with a text of Scripture,
Behold, I am against you, O thou proud one, not only in your system of
teaching, but also in your hearing, and in your tone of mind. For there are
certain persons who have not only their ears and their tongues, but even, as I
now perceive, their hands too, itching for our words; who delight in profane
babblings, and oppositions of science falsely so called, and strifes about
words, which tend to no profit; for so Paul, the Preacher and Establisher of
the Word cut short, the disciple and teacher of the Fishermen, calls all that
is excessive or superfluous in discourse. But as to those to whom we refer,
would that they, whose tongue is so voluble and clever in applying itself to
noble and approved language, would likewise pay some attention to actions. For
then perhaps in a little while they would become less sophistical, and less
absurd and strange acrobats of words, if I may use a ridiculous expression
about a ridiculous subject.
II. But since they neglect every path
of righteousness, and look only to this one point, namely, which of the
propositions submitted to them they shall bind or loose, (like those persons
who in the theatres perform wrestling matches in public, but not that kind of
wrestling in which the victory is won according to the rules of the sport, but
a kind to deceive the eyes of those who are ignorant in such matters, and to
catch applause), and every marketplace must buzz with their talking; and every
dinner party be worried to death with silly talk and boredom; and every
festival be made unfestive and full of dejection, and every occasion of
mourning be consoled by a greater calamity — their questions— and all the
women's apartments accustomed to simplicity be thrown into confusion and be
robbed of its flower of modesty by the torrent of their words...since, I say
this is so, the evil is intolerable and not to be borne, and our Great Mystery
is in danger of being made a thing of little moment. Well then, let these spies
bear with us, moved as we are with fatherly compassion, and as holy Jeremiah
says, torn in our hearts; let them bear with us so far as not to give a savage
reception to our discourse upon this subject; and let them, if indeed they can,
restrain theirtongues for a short while and lend us their ears. However that
may be, you shall at any rate suffer no loss. For either we shall have spoken
in the ears of them that will hear, and our words will bear some fruit, namely
an advantage to you (since the Sower sows the Word upon every kind of mind; and
the good and fertile bears fruit), or else you will depart despising this
discourse of ours as you have despised others, and having drawn from it further
material for gainsaying and railing at us, upon which tofeast yourselves yet
more.
And you must not be astonished if
I speak a language which is strange to you and contrary to your custom, who
profess to know everything and to teach everything in a too impetuous and
generous manner...not to pain you by saying ignorant and rash.
III. Not to every one, my friends,
does it belong to philosophize about God; not to every one; the Subject is not
so cheap and low; and I will add, not before every audience, nor at all times,
nor on all points; but on certain occasions, and before certain persons, and within
certain limits.
Not to all men, because it is
permitted only to those who have been examined, and are passed masters in
meditation, and who have been previously purified in soul and body, or at the
very least are being purified. For the impure to touch the pure is, we may
safely say, not safe, just as it is unsafe to fix weak eyes upon the sun's
rays. And what is the permitted occasion? It is when we are free from all
external defilement or disturbance, and when that which rules within us is not
confused with vexatious orerring images; like persons mixing up good writing
with bad, or filth with the sweet odours of ointments. For it is necessary to
be truly at leisure to know God; and when we can get a convenient season, to
discern the straight road of the things divine. And who are the permitted
persons? They to whom the subject is of real concern, and not they who make it
a matter of pleasant gossip, like any other thing, after the races, or the
theatre, or a concert, or a dinner, or still lower employments. To such men as
these, idle jests and pretty contradictions about these subjects are a part of
their amusement.
IV. Next, on what subjects and to
what extent may we philosophize? On matters within our reach, and to such an
extent as the mental power and grasp of our audience may extend. No further,
lest, as excessively loud sounds injure the hearing, or excess of food the
body, or, if you will, as excessive burdens beyondthe strength injure those who
bear them, or excessive rains the earth; so these too, being pressed down and
overweighted by the stiffness, if I may use the expression, of the arguments
should suffer loss even in respect of the strength they originally possessed.
V. Now, I am not saying that it is
not needful to remember God at all times;...I must not be misunderstood, or I
shall be having these nimble and quick people down upon me again. For we ought
to think of God even more often than we draw our breath; and if the expression
is permissible, we ought to do nothing else. Yea, I am one of those who
entirely approve thatWord which bids us meditate day and night, and tell at
eventide and morning and noon day, and praise the Lord at every time; or, to
use Moses' words, whether a man lie down, or rise up, or walk by the way, or
whatever else he be doing — and by this recollection we are to be moulded to
purity. So that it is not the continual remembrance of God that I would hinder,
but only the talking about God; nor even that as in itself wrong, but only when
unseasonable; nor all teaching, but only want of moderation. As of even honey
repletion and satiety, though it be of honey, produce vomiting; and, as Solomon
says and I think, there is a time for every thing, and that which is good
ceases to be good if it be not done in a good way; just as a flower is quite
out of season in winter, and just as a man's dress does not become a woman, nor
a woman's a man; and as geometry is out of place in mourning, or tears at a
carousal; shall we in this instance alone disregard the proper time, in a matter
in which most of all due season should be respected? Surely not, my friends and
brethren (for I will still call you Brethren, though you do not behave like
brothers). Let us not think so nor yet, like hot tempered and hard mouthed
horses, throwing off our rider Reason, and casting away Reverence, that keeps
us within due limits, run far away from the turning point, but let us
philosophize within our proper bounds, and not be carried away into Egypt, nor
be swept down into Assyria, nor sing the Lord's song in a strange land, by
which I mean before any kind of audience, strangers or kindred, hostile or
friendly, kindly or the reverse, who watch what we do with over great care, and
would like the spark of what is wrong in us to become a flame, and secretly
kindle and fan it and raise it toheaven with their breath and make it higher
than the Babylonian flame which burnt up every thing around it. For since their
strength lies not in their own dogmas, they hunt for it in our weak points. And
therefore they apply themselves to our— shall I say misfortunes or failings?—
like flies to wounds. But let us at least be no longer ignorant of ourselves,
or pay too little attention to the due order in these matters. And if it be
impossible to put an end to the existing hostility, let us at least agree upon
this, that we will utter Mysteries under our breath, and holy things in a holy
manner, and we will not cast to ears profane that which may not be uttered, nor
give evidence that we possess less gravity than those whoworship demons, and
serve shameful fables and deeds; for they would sooner give their blood to the
uninitiated than certain words. But let us recognize that as in dress and diet
and laughter and demeanour there is a certain decorum, so there is also in speech
and silence; since among so many titles and powers of God, we pay the highest
honour to The Word. Let even our disputings then be kept within bounds.
VI. Why should a man who is a
hostile listener to such words be allowed to hear about the Generation of God,
or his creation, or how God was made out of things which had no existence, or
of section and analysis and division? Why do we make our accusers judges? Why
do we put swords into the hands of our enemies? How, do you think, or with what
temper, will the arguments about such subjects be received by one who approves
of adulteries, and corruption of children, and who worships the passions and
cannot conceive of anything higher than the body...who till very lately set up
gods for himself, and gods too who were noted for the vilest deeds? Will it not
first be from a material standpoint, shamefully and ignorantly, and in the
sense to which he has been accustomed? Will he not make your Theology a defence
for his own gods and passions? For if we ourselves wantonly misuse these words,
it will be a long time before we shall persuade them to accept our philosophy.
And if they are in their own persons inventors of evil things, how should they
refrain from grasping at such things when offered to them? Such results come to
us from mutual contest. Such results follow to those who fight for the Word
beyond what the Word approves; they are behaving like mad people, who set their
own house on fire, or tear their own children, or disavow their own parents,
taking them for strangers.
VII. But when we have put away
from the conversation those who are strangers to it, and sent the great legion
on its way to the abyss into the herd of swine, the next thing is to look to
ourselves, and polish our theological self to beauty like a statue. The first
point to be considered is— What is this great rivalry of speech and endless
talking? What is this new disease of insatiability? Why have we tied our hands
and armed our tongues? We do not praise either hospitality, or brotherly love,
or conjugal affection, or virginity; nor do we admire liberality to the poor,
or the chanting of Psalms, or nightlong vigils, or tears. We do not keep under
the body by fasting, or go forth to God by prayer; nor do we subject the worse
to the better— I mean the dust to the spirit— as they would do who form a just
judgment of our composite nature; we do not make our life a preparation for
death; nor do we make ourselves masters of our passions, mindful of our
heavenly nobility; nor tame our anger when it swells and rages, nor our pride
that brings to a fall, nor unreasonable grief, nor unchastened pleasure, nor
meretricious laughter, nor undisciplined eyes, nor insatiable ears, nor
excessive talk, nor absurd thoughts, nor anything of the occasions which the Evil
One gets against us from sources within ourselves; bringing upon us the death
that comes through the windows, as Holy Scripture says; that is, through the
senses. Nay we do the very opposite, and have given liberty to the passions of
others, as kings give releases from service in honour of a victory, only on
condition that they incline to our side, and make their assault upon God more
boldly, or more impiously. And we give them an evil reward for a thing which is
not good, license of tongue for their impiety.
VIII. And yet, O talkative
Dialectician, I will ask you one small question, and answer thou me, as He says
to Job, Who through whirlwind and cloud gives Divine admonitions. Are there
many mansions in God's House, as you have heard, or only one? Of course you
will admit that there are many, and not only one. Now, are they all to be
filled, or only some, and others not; so that some will be left empty, and will
have been prepared to no purpose? Of course all will be filled, for nothing can
be in vain which has been done by God. And can you tell me what you will
consider this Mansion to be? Is it the rest and glory which is in store There
for the Blessed, or something else?— No, not anything else. Since then we are
agreed upon this point, let us further examine another also. Is there any thing
that procures theseMansions , as I think there is; or is there nothing?—
Certainly there is— What is it? Is it not that there are various modes of
conduct, and various purposes, one leading one way, another another way,
according to the proportion of faith, and these we call Ways? Must we, then,
travel all, or some of these Ways...the same individual along them all, if that
be possible; or, if not, along as many as may be; or else along some of them?
And even if this may not be, it would still be a great thing, at least as it
appears to me, to travel excellently along even one.— You are right in your
conception.— What then when you hear there is but One way, and that a narrow
one, does the word seem to you to show? That there is but one on account of its
excellence. For it is but one, even though it be split into many parts. And
narrow because of its difficulties, and because it is trodden by few in
comparison with the multitude of the adversaries, and of those who travel along
the road of wickedness. So I think too. Well, then, my good friend, since this
is so, why do you, as though condemning our doctrine for a certain poverty,
rush headlong down that one which leads through what you call arguments and
speculations, but I frivolities and quackeries? Let Paul reprove you with those
bitter reproaches, in which, after his list of the Gifts of Grace, he says, Are
all Apostles? Are all Prophets? Etc.
IX. But, be it so. Lofty you are,
even beyond the lofty, even above the clouds, if you will, a spectator of
things invisible, a hearer of things unspeakable; one who hast ascended after
Elias, and who after Moses hast been deemed worthy of the Vision of God, and
after Paul hast been taken up into heaven; why do you mould the rest of your
fellows in one day into Saints, and ordain them Theologians, and as it were
breathe into them instruction, and make them many councils of ignorant oracles?
Why do you entangle those who are weaker in your spider's web, if it were
something great and wise? Why do you stir up wasps' nests against the Faith?
Why do you suddenly spring a flood of dialectics upon us, as the fables of old
did the Giants? Why have you collected all that is frivolous and unmanly among
men, like a rabble, into one torrent, and having made them more effeminate by
flattery, fashioned a new workshop, cleverly making a harvest for yourself out
of their want of understanding? Do you deny that this is so, and are the other
matters of no account to you? Must your tongue rule at any cost, and can you
not restrain thebirthpang of your speech? You may find many other honourable
subjects for discussion. To these turn this disease of yours with some
advantage. Attack the silence of Pythagoras, and the Orphic beans, and the
novel brag about The Master said. Attack the ideas of Plato, and the
transmigrations and courses of our souls, and the reminiscences, and the
unlovely loves of the soul for lovely bodies. Attack the atheism of Epicurus,
and his atoms, and his unphilosophic pleasure; or Aristotle's petty Providence,
and his artificial system, and his discourses about the mortality of the soul,
and the humanitarianism of his doctrine. Attack the superciliousness of the
Stoa, or the greed and vulgarity of the Cynic. Attack the Void and Full (what
nonsense), and all the details about the gods and the sacrifices and the idols
and demons, whether beneficent or malignant, and all the tricks that people
play with divination, evoking of gods, or of souls, and the power of the stars.
And if these things seem to you unworthy of discussion as petty and already
often confuted, and you will keep to your line, and seek thesatisfaction of
your ambition in it; then here too I will provide you with broad paths.
Philosophize about the world or worlds; about matter; about soul; about natures
endowed with reason, good or bad; about resurrection, about judgment, about
reward, or the Sufferings of Christ. For in these subjects to hit the mark is
not useless, and to miss it is not dangerous. But with God we shall have
converse, in this life only in a small degree; but a little later, it may be,
more perfectly, in the Same, our Lord Jesus Christ, to Whom be glory for ever.
Amen.
The Second Theological Oration.
I. In the former Discourse we laid
down clearly with respect to the Theologian, both what sort of character he
ought to bear, and on what kind of subject he may philosophize, and when, and
to what extent. We saw that he ought to be, as far as may be, pure, in order
that light may be apprehended by light; and that he ought to consort with
seriousmen , in order that his word be not fruitless through falling on an
unfruitful soil; and that the suitable season is when we have a calm within
from the whirl of outward things; so as not likemadmen to lose our breath; and
that the extent to which we may go is that to which we have ourselves advanced,
or to which we are advancing. Since then these things are so, and we have
broken up for ourselves thefallows of Divinity, so as not to sow upon thorns,
and have made plain the face of the ground, being moulded and moulding others
by Holy Scripture...let us now enter upon Theological questions, setting at the
head thereof the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, of Whom we are to treat;
that the Father may be well pleased, and the Son may help us, and the Holy
Ghost may inspire us; or rather that one illumination may come upon us from the
One God, One in diversity, diverse in Unity, wherein is a marvel.
II. Now when I go up eagerly into
the Mount — or, to use a truer expression, when I both eagerly long, and at the
same time am afraid (the one through my hope and the other through my weakness)
to enter within the Cloud, and hold converse with God, for so God commands; if
any be an Aaron, let him go up with me, and let him stand near, being ready, if
it must be so, to remain outside the Cloud. But if any be a Nadad or an Abihu,
or of the Order of the Elders, let him go up indeed, but let him stand afar
off, according to the value of his purification. But if any be of the multitude,
who are unworthy of this height of contemplation, if he be altogether impure
let him not approach at all, for it would be dangerous to him; but if he be at
least temporarily purified, let him remain below and listen to the Voice alone,
and the trumpet, the bare words of piety, and let him see the Mountain smoking
and lightening, a terror at once and a marvel to those who cannot get up. But
if any is an evil and savage beast, and altogether incapable of taking in the
subject matter of Contemplation and Theology, let him not hurtfully and
malignantly lurk in his den among the woods, to catch hold of some dogma or
saying by a sudden spring, and to tear sound doctrine to pieces by his
misrepresentations, but let him stand yet afar off and withdraw from the Mount,
or he shall be stoned and crushed, and shall perish miserably in his
wickedness. For to those who are like wild beasts true and sound discourses are
stones. If he be a leopard let him die with his spots. If a ravening and
roaring lion, seeking what he may devour of our souls or of our words; or a
wild boar, trampling under foot the precious and translucent pearls of the
Truth; or an Arabian and alien wolf, or one keener even than these in tricks of
argument; or a fox, that is a treacherous and faithless soul, changing its
shape according to circumstances or necessities, feeding on dead or putrid
bodies, or on little vineyards when the large ones have escaped them; or any
other carnivorous beast, rejected by the Law as unclean for food or enjoyment;
our discourse must withdraw from such and be engraved on solid tables of stone,
and that on both sides because theLaw is partly visible, and partly hidden; the
one part belonging to the mass who remain below, the other to the few who press
upward into the Mount.
III. What is this that has
happened to me, O friends, and initiates, and fellow-lovers of the truth? I was
running to lay hold on God, and thus I went up into the Mount, and drew aside
the curtain of the Cloud, and entered away from matter and material things, and
as far as I could I withdrew within myself. And then when I looked up, I scarce
saw the back parts of God; although I was sheltered by the Rock, the Word that
was made flesh for us. And when I looked a little closer, I saw, not the First and
unmingled Nature, known to Itself— to the Trinity, I mean; not That which
abides within the first veil, and is hidden by the Cherubim; but only that
Nature, which at last even reaches to us. And that is, as far as I can learn,
the Majesty, or as holy David calls it, the Glory which is manifested among the
creatures, which It has produced and governs. For these are the Back Parts of
God, which He leaves behind Him, as tokens of Himself like the shadows and
reflection of the sun in the water, which show the sun to our weak eyes,
because we cannot look at the sun himself, for by his unmixed light he is too
strong for our power of perception. In this way then shall you discourse of
God; even were thou a Moses and a god to Pharaoh; even were thou caught up like
Paul to the Third Heaven, and had heard unspeakable words; even were thou
raised above them both, and exalted to Angelic or Archangelic place and
dignity. For though a thing be all heavenly, or above heaven, and far higher in
nature and nearer to God than we, yet it is farther distant from God, and from
the complete comprehension of His Nature, than it is lifted above our complex
and lowly and earthward sinking composition.
IV. Therefore we must begin again thus.
It is difficult to conceive God but to define Him in words is an impossibility,
as one of the Greek teachers of Divinity taught, not unskilfully, as it appears
to me; with the intention that he might be thought to have apprehended Him; in
that he says it is a hard thing to do; and yet may escape being convicted of
ignorance because of the impossibility of giving expression to the
apprehension. But in my opinion it is impossible to express Him, and yet more
impossible to conceive Him. For that which may be conceived may perhaps be made
clear by language, if not fairly well, at any rate imperfectly, to any one who
is not quite deprived of his hearing, or slothful of understanding. But to
comprehend the whole of so great a Subject as this is quite impossible and
impracticable, not merely to the utterly careless and ignorant, but even to
those who are highly exalted, and who love God, and in like manner to every
created nature; seeing that the darkness of this world and the thick covering
of the flesh is an obstacle to the full understanding of the truth. I do not
know whether it is the same with the higher natures and purer Intelligences
which because of their nearness to God, and because they are illumined with all
His Light, may possibly see, if not the whole, at any rate more perfectly and
distinctly than we do; some perhaps more, some less than others, in proportion
to their rank.
V. But enough has been said on
this point. As to what concerns us, it is not only the Peace of God which
passes all understanding and knowledge, nor only the things which God has
stored up in promise for the righteous, which eye has not seen, nor ear heard,
nor mind conceived except in a very small degree, nor the accurate knowledge of
the Creation. For even of this I would have you know that you have only a
shadow when you hear the words, I will consider the heavens, the work of Your
fingers, the moon and the stars, and the settled order therein; not as if he
were considering them now, but as destined to do so hereafter. But far before
them is That nature Which is above them, and out of which they spring, the
Incomprehensible and Illimitable— not, I mean, as to the fact of His being, but
as to Its nature. For our preaching is not empty, nor our Faith vain, nor is
this the doctrine we proclaim; for we would not have you take our candid
statement as a starting point for a quibbling denial of God, or of arrogance on
account of our confession of ignorance. For it is one thing to be persuaded of
the existence of a thing, and quite another to know what it is.
VI. Now our very eyes and the Law
of Nature teach us that God exists and that He is the Efficient and Maintaining
Cause of all things: our eyes, because they fall on visible objects, and see
them in beautiful stability and progress, immovably moving and revolving if I
may so say;natural Law, because through these visible things and their order,
it reasons back to their Author. For how could this Universe have come into
being or been put together, unless God had called it into existence, and held
it together? For every one who sees a beautifully made lute, and considers the
skill with which it has been fitted together and arranged, or who hears its
melody, would think of none but thelutemaker, or the luteplayer, and would
recur to him in mind, though he might not know him by sight. And thus to us
also is manifested That which made and moves and preserves all created things,
even though He be not comprehended by the mind. And very wanting in sense is he
who will not willingly go thus far in following natural proofs; but not even
this which we have fancied or formed, or which reason has sketched for us,
proves the existence of a God. But if any one has got even to some extent a
comprehension of this, how is God's Being to be demonstrated? Who ever reached
this extremity of wisdom? Who was ever deemed worthy of so great a gift? Who
has opened the mouth of his mind and drawn in the Spirit, so as by Him that
searches all things, yea the deep thing of God, to take in God, and no longer
to need progress, since he already possesses the Extreme Object of desire, and
That to which all the social life and all the intelligence of the best men
press forward?
VII. For what will you conceive
the Deity to be, if you rely upon all the approximations of reason? Or to what
will reason carry you, O most philosophic of men and best of Theologians, who
boast of your familiarity with the Unlimited? Is He a body? How then is He the
Infinite and Limitless, and formless, and intangible, and invisible? Or are these
attributes of a body? What arrogance for such is not the nature of a body! Or
will you say that He has a body, but not these attributes? O stupidity, that a
Deity should possess nothing more than we do. For how is He an object of
worship if He be circumscribed? Or how shall He escape being made of elements,
and therefore subject to be resolved into them again, or even altogether
dissolved? For every compound is a starting point of strife, and strife of
separation, andseparation of dissolution. But dissolution is altogether foreign
to God and to the First Nature. Therefore there can be no separation, that
there may be no dissolution, and no strife that there may be no separation, and
no composition that there may be no strife. Thus also there must be no body,
that there may be no composition, and so the argument is established by going
back from last to first.
VIII. And how shall we preserve
the truth that God pervades all things and fills all, as it is written Do not I
fill heaven and earth? Says the Lord, and The Spirit of the Lord fills the
world, if God partly contains and partly is contained? For either He will
occupy an empty Universe, and so all things will have vanished for us, with
this result, that we shall have insulted God by making Him a body, and by
robbing Him of all things which He has made; or else He will be a body
contained in other bodies, which is impossible; or He will be enfolded in them,
or contrasted with them, as liquids are mixed, and one divides and is divided
by another—a view which is more absurd and anile than even the atoms of
Epicurus and so this argument concerning the body will fall through, and have
no body and no solid basis at all. But if we are to assert that He is
immaterial (as for example that FifthElement which some have imagined), and
that He is carried round in the circular movement...let us assume that He is
immaterial, and that He is the Fifth Element ; and, if they please, let Him be
also bodiless in accordance with the independent drift and arrangement of their
argument; for I will not at present differ with them on this point; in what
respect thenwill He be one of those things which are in movement and agitation,
to say nothing of the insult involved in making the Creator subject to the same
movement as the creatures, and Him That carries all (if they will allow even
this) one with those whom He carries. Again, what is the force that moves your
Fifth Element, and what is it that moves all things, and what moves that, and
what is the force that moves that? And so on ad infinitum. And how can He help
being altogether contained in space if He be subject to motion? But if they
assert that He is something other than this Fifth Element; suppose it is an
angelic nature that they attribute to Him, how will they show that Angels are
corporeal, or what sort of bodies they have? And how far in that case could
God, to Whom the Angels minister, be superior to the Angels? And if He is above
them, there is again brought in an irrational swarm of bodies, and a depth of
nonsense, that has no possible basis to stand upon.
IX. And thus we see that God is
not a body. For no inspired teacher has yet asserted or admitted such a notion,
nor has the sentence of our own Court allowed it. Nothing then remains but to
conceive of Him as incorporeal. But this term Incorporeal, though granted, does
not yet set before us— or contain within itself His Essence, any more than
Unbegotten, or Unoriginate, or Unchanging, or Incorruptible, or any other
predicate which is used concerning God or in reference to Him. For what effect
is produced upon His Being or Substance by His having no beginning, and being
incapable of change or limitation? Nay, the whole question of His Being is
still left for the further consideration and exposition of him who truly has
the mind of God and is advanced in contemplation. For just as to say It is a
body, or It was begotten, is not sufficient to present clearly to the mind the
various objects of which these predicates are used, but you must also express
the subject of which you use them, if you would present the object of your
thought clearly and adequately (for every one of these predicates, corporeal,
begotten, mortal, may be used of a man, or a cow, or a horse). Just so he who
is eagerly pursuing the nature of the Self-existent will not stop at saying
what He is not, but must go on beyond what He is not, and say what He is;
inasmuch as it is easier to take in some single point than to go on disowning
point after point in endless detail, in order, both by the elimination of negatives
and the assertion of positives to arrive at a comprehension of this subject.
But a man who states what God is
not without going on to say what He is, acts much in the same way as one would
who when asked how many twice five make, should answer, Not two, nor three, nor
four, nor five, nor twenty, nor thirty, nor in short any number below ten, nor
any multiple of ten; but would not answer ten, nor settle the mind of his
questioner upon the firm ground of the answer. For it is much easier, and more
concise to show what a thing is not from what itis, than to demonstrate what it
is by stripping it of what it is not. And this surely is evident to every one.
X. Now since we have ascertained
that God is incorporeal, let us proceed a little further with our examination.
Is He Nowhere or Somewhere. For if He is Nowhere, then some person of a very
inquiring turn of mind might ask, How is it then that He can even exist? For if
the non-existent is nowhere, then that which is nowhere is also perhaps
non-existent. But if He is Somewhere, He must be either in the Universe, or
above the Universe. And if He is in the Universe, then He must be either in
some part or in the whole. If in some part, then He will be circumscribed by
that part which is less than Himself; but if everywhere, then by one which is
further and greater— I mean the Universal, which contains the Particular; if
the Universe is to be contained by the Universe, and no place is to be free
from circumscription. This follows if He is contained in the Universe. And
besides, where was He before the Universe was created, for this is a point of
no little difficulty. But if He is above the Universe, is there nothing to
distinguish this from the Universe, and where is this above situated? And how
could this Transcendence and that which is transcended be distinguished in
thought, if there is not a limit to divide and define them? Is it not necessary
that there shall be some mean to mark off the Universe from that which is above
the Universe? And what could this be but Place, which we have already rejected?
For I have not yet brought forward the point that God would be altogether
circumscript, if He were even comprehensible in thought: for comprehension is
one form of circumscription.
XI. Now, why have I gone into all
this, perhaps too minutely for most people to listen to, and in accordance with
the present manner of discourse, whichdespises noble simplicity, and has
introduced a crooked and intricate style? That the tree may be known by its
fruits; I mean, that the darkness which is at work in such teaching may be
known by the obscurity of the arguments. For my purpose in doing so was, not to
get credit for myself for astonishing utterances, or excessive wisdom,
throughtying knots and solving difficulties (this was the great miraculous gift
of Daniel), but to make clear the point at which my argument has aimed from the
first. And what was this? That the Divine Nature cannot be apprehended by human
reason, and that we cannot even represent to ourselves all its greatness. And
this not out of envy, for envy is far from the Divine Nature, which is
passionless, and only good and Lord of all; especially envy of that which is
the most honourable of all His creatures. For what does the Word prefer to the
rational and speaking creatures? Why, even their very existence is a proof of
His supreme goodness. Nor yet is this incomprehensibility for the sake of His
own glory and honour, Who is full, as if His possession of His glory and
majesty depended upon the impossibility of approaching Him. For it is utterly
sophistical and foreign to the character, I will not say of God, but of any
moderately good man, who has any right ideas about himself, to seek his own
supremacy by throwing a hindrance in the way of another.
XII. But whether there be other
causes for it also, let them see who are nearer God, and are eye witnesses and
spectators of His unsearchable judgments; if there are any who are so eminent
in virtue, and who walk in the paths of the Infinite, as the saying is. As far,
however, as we have attained, who measure with our little measure things hard
to be understood, perhaps onereason is to prevent us from too readily throwing
away the possession because it was so easily come by. For people cling tightly
to that which they acquire with labour; but that which they acquire easily they
quickly throw away, because it can be easily recovered. And so it is turned
into ablessing, at least to all men who are sensible, that this blessing is not
too easy. Or perhaps it is in order that we may not share the fate of Lucifer,
who fell, and in consequence of receiving the full light make our necks stiff
against the Lord Almighty, and suffer a fall, of all things most pitiable, from
the height we had attained. Or perhaps it may be to give a greater reward
hereafter for their labour and glorious life to those who have here been
purified, and have exercised long patience in respect of that which they
desired.
Therefore this darkness of the
body has been placed between us and God, like the cloud of old between the
Egyptians and the Hebrews; and this is perhaps what is meant by He made
darkness His secret place, namely our dulness, through which few can see even a
little. But as to this point, let those discuss it whose business it is; and
let themascend as far as possible in the examination. To us who are (as
Jeremiah says), prisoners of the earth, and covered with the denseness of
carnal nature, this at all events is known, that as it is impossible for a man
to step over his own shadow, however fast he may move (for the shadow will
always move on as fast as it is being overtaken) or, as it is impossible for
the eye to draw near to visible objects apart from the intervening air and
light, or for a fish to glide about outside of the waters; so it is quite
impracticable for those who are in the body to be conversant with objects of
pure thought apart altogether from bodily objects. For something in our own
environment is ever creeping in, even when themind has most fully detached
itself from the visible, and collected itself, and is attempting to apply
itself to those invisible things which are akin to itself.
XIII. This will be made clear to
you as follows:— Are not Spirit, and Fire, and Light, Love, and Wisdom, and
Righteousness, and Mind and Reason, and the like, the names of the First
Nature? What then? Can you conceive of Spirit apart from motion and diffusion;
or of Fire without its fuel and its upward motion, and its proper colour and
form? Or of Light unmingled with air, and loosed from that which is as it were
its father and source? And how do you conceive of a mind? Is it not that which
is inherent in some person not itself, and are not its movements thoughts,
silent or uttered? And Reason...what else can you think it than that which is
either silent within ourselves, or else outpoured (for I shrink from saying
loosed)? And if you conceive of Wisdom, what is it but the habit of mind which
you know as such, and which is concerned with contemplations either divine or
human? And Justice and Love, are they not praiseworthy dispositions, the one
opposed to injustice, the other to hate, and at one time intensifying
themselves, at another relaxed, now taking possession of us, now leaving us
alone, and in a word, making us what we are, and changing us as colours do
bodies? Or are we rather to leave all these things, and to look at theDeity
absolutely, as best we can, collecting a fragmentary perception of It from Its
images? What then is this subtle thing, which is of these, and yet is not
these, or how can that Unity which is in its Nature uncomposite and
incomparable, still be all of these, and each one of them perfectly? Thus our
mind faints to transcend corporeal things, and to consort with the Incorporeal,
stripped of all clothing of corporeal ideas, as long as it has to look with its
inherent weakness at things above its strength. For every rational nature longs
for God and for the First Cause, but is unable to grasp Him, for the reasons I
have mentioned. Faint therefore with the desire, and as it were restive and
impatient of the disability, it tries a second course, either to look at
visible things, and out of some of them to make a god...(a poor contrivance,
for in what respect and to what extent can that which is seen be higher and
more godlike than that which sees, that this shouldworship that?) or else
through the beauty and order of visible things to attain to that which is above
sight; but not to suffer the loss ofGod through the magnificence of visible
things.
XIV. From this cause some have made
a god of the Sun, others of the Moon, others of the host of Stars, others of
heaven itself with all its hosts, to which they have attributed the guiding of
the Universe, according to the quality or quantity of their movement. Others
again of the Elements, earth, air, water, fire, because of their useful nature,
since without them human life cannot possibly exist. Others again have
worshipped any chance visible objects, setting up the most beautiful of what
they saw as their gods. And there are those who worship pictures and images, at
first indeed of their own ancestors— at least, this is the case with the more
affectionate and sensual— and honour the departed with memorials; and
afterwards even those of strangers are worshipped by men of a later generation
separated from them by a long interval; through ignorance of the First Nature,
and following the traditional honour as lawful and necessary; for usage when
confirmed by time was held to be Law. And I think that some who were courtiers
of arbitrary power and extolled bodily strength and admired beauty, made a god
in time out of him whom they honoured, perhaps getting hold of some fable to
help on their imposture.
XV. And those of them who were
most subject to passion deified their passions, or honoured them among their
gods; Anger and Blood-thirstiness, Lust and Drunkenness, and every similar
wickedness; and made out of this an ignoble and unjust excuse for their own
sins. And some they left on earth, and some they hid beneath the earth (this
being the only sign of wisdom about them), and some they raised to heaven. O
ridiculous distribution of inheritance! Then they gave to each of these
concepts the name of some god or demon, by the authority and private judgment
of their error, and set up statues whose costliness is a snare, and thought to
honour them with blood and the steam of sacrifices, and sometimes even by most
shameful actions, frenzies and manslaughter. For such honours were the fitting
due of such gods. And before now men have insulted themselves by worshipping
monsters, and fourfooted beasts, and creeping things, and of the very vilest
and most absurd, and have made an offering to them of the glory of God; so that
it is not easy to decide whether we ought most to despise the worshippers or the
objects of their worship. Probably the worshippers are far the most
contemptible, for though they are of a rational nature, and have received grace
from God, they have set up the worse as the better. And this was the trick of
the Evil One, who abused good to an evil purpose, as in most of his evil deeds.
For he laid hold of their desire in its wandering in search of God, in order to
distort to himself the power, and steal the desire, leading it by the hand,
like a blind man asking a road; and he hurled down and scattered some in one
direction and some in another, into one pit of death and destruction.
XVI. This was their course. But
reason receiving us in our desire for God, and in our sense of the
impossibility of being without a leader and guide, and then making us apply
ourselves to things visible and meeting with the things which have been since
the beginning, does not stay its course even here. For it was not the part of
Wisdom to grant the sovereignty to things which are, as observation tells us,
of equal rank. By these then it leads to that which is above these, and by
which being is given to these. For what is it which ordered things inheaven and
things in earth, and those which pass through air, and those which live in
water; or rather the things which were before these,heaven and earth, air and
water? Who mingled these, and who distributed them? What is it that each has in
common with the other, and their mutual dependence and agreement? For I commend
the man, though he was a heathen, who said, What gave movement to these, and
drives their ceaseless and unhindered motion? Is it not the Artificer of them
Who implanted reason in them all, in accordance with which the Universe is
moved and controlled? Is it not He who made them and brought them into being?
For we cannot attribute such a power to the Accidental. For, suppose that its
existence is accidental, to what will you let us ascribe its order? And if you
like we will grant you this: to what then will you ascribe its preservation and
protection in accordance with the terms of its first creation. Do these belong
to the Accidental, or to something else? Surely not to the Accidental. And what
can this Something Else be but God? Thus reason that proceeds from God, that is
implanted in all from the beginning and is the first law in us, and is bound up
in all, leads us up to God through visible things. Let us begin again, and
reason this out.
XVII. What God is in nature and
essence, no man ever yet has discovered or can discover. Whether it will ever be
discovered is a question which he who will may examine and decide. In my
opinion it will be discovered when that within us which is godlike and divine,
I mean our mind and reason, shall have mingled with its Like, and the image
shall have ascended to the Archetype, of which it has now the desire. And this
I think is the solution of that vexed problem as to We shall know even as we
are known. But in our present life all that comes to us is but a little
effluence, and as it were a small effulgence from a great Light. So that if
anyone has known God, or has had the testimony of Scripture to his knowledge of
God, we are to understand such an one to have possessed a degree of knowledge
which gave him the appearance of being more fully enlightened than another who
did not enjoy the same degree of illumination; and this relative superiority is
spoken of as if it wereabsolute knowledge, not because it is really such, but
by comparison with the power of that other.
XVIII. Thus Enos hoped to call
upon the Name of the Lord. Hope was that for which he is commended; and that,
not that he should know God, but that he should call upon him. And Enoch was
translated, but it is not yet clear whether it was because he already
comprehended the Divine Nature, or in order that he might comprehend it. And
Noah's glory was that he was pleasing to God; he who was entrusted with the
saving of the whole world from the waters, or rather of the Seeds of the world,
escaped the Deluge in a small Ark. And Abraham, great Patriarch though he was,
was justified by faith, and offered a strange victim, the type of the Great
Sacrifice. Yet he saw not God as God, but gave Him food as a man. He was
approved because he worshipped as far as he comprehended. And Jacob dreamed of
a lofty ladder and stair of Angels, and in a mystery anointed a pillar —
perhaps to signify the Rock that was anointed for our sake— and gave to a place
the name of The House of God in honour of Him whom he saw; and wrestled with
God in human form; whatever this wrestling of God with man may mean...possibly
it refers to the comparison of man's virtue with God's; and he bore on his body
the marks of the wrestling, setting forth the defeat of the created nature; and
for a reward of his reverence he received a change of his name; being named,
instead of Jacob, Israel— that great and honourable name. Yet neither he nor
any one on his behalf, unto this day, of all the Twelve Tribes who were his
children, could boast that he comprehended the whole nature or the pure sight
of God.
XIX. To Elias neither the strong
wind, nor the fire, nor the earthquake, as you learn from the story, but a
light breeze adumbrated the Presence of God, and not even this His Nature. And
who was this Elias? The man whom a chariot of fire took up to heaven, signifying
the superhuman excellency of the righteous man. And are you not amazed at
Manoah the Judge of yore, and at Peter the disciple in later days; the one
being unable to endure the sight even of one in whom was a representation of
God; and saying, We are undone, O wife, we have seen God; speaking as though
even a vision of God could not be grasped by human beings, let alone the Nature
of God; and the other unable to endure the Presence of Christ in his boat and
therefore bidding Him depart; and this though Peter was more zealous than the
others for the knowledge of Christ, and received a blessing for this, and was
entrusted with the greatest gifts. What would you say of Isaiah or Ezekiel, who
was an eyewitness of very great mysteries, and of the other Prophets; for one
of these saw the Lord of Sabaoth sitting on the Throne of glory, and encircled
and praised and hidden by the sixwinged Seraphim, and was himself purged by the
live coal, and equipped for his prophetic office. And the other describes the Cherubic
Chariot of God, and the Throne upon them, and the Firmament over it, and Him
that showed Himself in the Firmament, and Voices, and Forces, and Deeds. And
whether this was an appearance by day, only visible to Saints, or an unerring
vision of the night, or an impression on the mind holding converse with the
future as if it were the present; or some other ineffable form of prophecy, I
cannot say; the God of the Prophets knows, and they know who are thus inspired.
But neither these of whom I am speaking, nor any of their fellows ever stood
before the Council and Essence of God, as it is written, or saw, or proclaimed
the Nature of God.
XX. If it had been permitted to
Paul to utter what the Third Heaven contained, and his own advance, or
ascension, or assumption there, perhaps we should know something more about
God's Nature, if this was the mystery of the rapture. But since it was
ineffable, we too will honour it by silence. Thus much we will hear Paul say
about it, that we know in part and we prophesy in part. This and the like to
this are the confessions of one who is not rude in knowledge, who threatens to
give proof of Christ speaking in him, the great doctor and champion of the
truth. Wherefore he estimates all knowledge on earth only as through a glass
darkly, as taking its stand upon little images of the truth. Now, unless I
appear to anyone too careful, and over anxious about the examination of this
matter, perhaps it was of this and nothing else that the Word Himself intimated
that there were things which could not now be borne, but which should be borne
and cleared up hereafter, and which John the Forerunner of the Word and great
Voice of the Truth declared even the whole world could not contain.
XXI. The truth then, and the whole
Word is full of difficulty and obscurity; and as it were with a small
instrument we are undertaking a great work, when with merely human wisdom we
pursue the knowledge of the Self-existent, and in company with, or not apart
from, the senses, by which we are borne hither and there, and led into error,
we apply ourselves to the search after things which are only to be grasped by
the mind, and we are unable by meeting bare realities with bare intellect to
approximate somewhat more closely to the truth, and to mould the mind by its
concepts.
Now the subject of God is more
hard to come at, in proportion as it is more perfect than any other, and is
open to more objections, and the solutions of them are more laborious. For
every objection, however small, stops and hinders the course of our argument,
and cuts off its further advance,just like men who suddenly check with the rein
the horses in full career, and turn them right round by the unexpected shock.
Thus Solomon, who was the wisest of all men, whether before him or in his own
time, to whom God gave breadth of heart, and a flood of contemplation, more
abundant than the sand, even he, the more he entered into the depth, the more
dizzy he became, and declared the furthest point of wisdom to be the discovery
of how very far off she was from him. Paul also tries to arrive at, I will not
say the nature of God, for this he knew was utterly impossible, but only the
judgments of God; and since he finds no way out, and no halting place in the
ascent, and moreover, since the earnest searching of his mind after knowledge
does not end in any definite conclusion, because some fresh unattained point is
being continually disclosed to him (O marvel, that I have a like experience),
he closes his discourse with astonishment, and calls this theriches of God, and
the depth, and confesses the unsearchableness of the judgments of God, in
almost the very words of David, who at one time calls God's judgments the great
deep whose foundations cannot be reached by measure or sense; and at another
says that His knowledge of him and of his own constitution was marvellous, and
had attained greater strength than was in his own power or grasp.
XXII. For if, he says, I leave
everything else alone, and consider myself and the whole nature and
constitution of man, and how we are mingled, and what is our movement, and how
the mortal was compounded with the immortal, and how it is that I flow
downwards, and yet am borne upwards, and how the soul is circumscribed; and how
it gives life and shares in feelings; and how the mind is at once circumscribed
and unlimited, abiding in us and yet travelling over the Universe in swift
motion and flow; how it is both received and imparted by word, and passes
through air, and enters with all things; how it shares in sense, and enshrouds
itself away from sense. And even before these questions— what was our first
moulding and composition in the workshop ofnature , and what is our last
formation and completion? What is the desire for and imparting of nourishment,
and who brought us spontaneously to those first springs and sources of life?
How is the body nourished by food, and the soul by reason? What is the drawing
of nature, and the mutual relation between parents and children, that it should
be held together by a spell of love? How is it that species are permanent, and
are different in their characteristics, although there are so many that their
individual marks cannot be described? How is it that the same animal is both
mortal and immortal , the one by decease, the other by coming into being? For
one departs, and another takes its place, just like the flow of a river, which
is never still, yet ever constant. And you might discuss many more points
concerning men's members and parts, and their mutual adaptation both for use
and beauty, and how some are connected and others disjoined, some are more
excellent and others less comely, some are united and others divided, some
contain and others are contained, according to thelaw and reason of Nature .
Much too might be said about voices and ears. How is it that the voice is
carried by the vocal organs, and received by the ears, and both are joined by
the smiting and resounding of the medium of the air? Much too of the eyes,
which have an indescribablecommunion with visible objects, and which are moved
by the will alone, and that together, and are affected exactly as is the mind.
For with equal speed the mind is joined to the objects of thought, the eye to
those of sight. Much too concerning the other senses, not objects of the
research of reason. And much concerning our rest in sleep, and the figments of
dreams, and of memory and remembrance; of calculation, and anger, and desire;
and in a word, all by which this little world called Man is swayed.
XXIII. Shall I reckon up for you
the differences of the other animals, both from us and from each
other—differences of nature, and of production, and of nourishment, and of
region, and of temper, and as it were of social life? How is it that some are
gregarious and others solitary, someherbivorous and others carnivorous, some
fierce and others tame, some fond of man and domesticated, others untamable and
free? And some we might call bordering on reason and power of learning, while
others are altogether destitute of reason , and incapable of being taught. Some
with fuller senses, others with less; some immovable, and some with the power
of walking, and some very swift, and some very slow; some surpassing in size or
beauty, or in one or other of these respects; others very small or very ugly,
or both; some strong, others weak, some apt atself-defence, others timid and
crafty and others again are unguarded. Some are laborious and thrifty, others
altogether idle and improvident . And before we come to such points as these,
how is it that some are crawling things, and others upright; some attached to
one spot, some amphibious; some delight in beauty and others are unadorned;
some aremarried and some single; some temperate and others intemperate; some
have numerous offspring and others not; some are long-lived and others have but
short lives? It would be a weary discourse to go through all the details.
XXIV. Look also at the fishy tribe
gliding through the waters, and as it were flying through the liquid element,
and breathing its own air, but in danger when in contact with ours, as we are
in the waters; and mark theirhabits and dispositions, their intercourse and
their births, their size and their beauty, and their affection for places, and
their wanderings, and their assemblings and departings, and their properties
which so nearly resemble those of the animals that dwell on land; in some cases
community, in others contrast of properties, both in name and shape. And
consider the tribes of birds, and their varieties of form and colour, both of
those which are voiceless and of songbirds. What is the reason of their melody,
and from whom came it? Who gave to the grasshopper the lute in his breast, and
the songs and chirruping on the branches, when they are moved by the sun to
make their midday music, and sing among the groves, and escort the wayfarer
with their voices? Who wove the song for the swan when he spreads his wings to
the breezes, and makes melody of theirrustling? For I will not speak of the
forced voices, and all the rest that art contrives against the truth. Whence
does the peacock, that boastful bird of Media, get his love of beauty and of
praise (for he is fully conscious of his own beauty), so that when he sees any
one approaching, or when, as they say, he would make a show before his hens,
raising his neck and spreading his tail in circle around him, glittering like
gold and studded with stars, he makes a spectacle of his beauty to his lovers
with pompousstrides? Now Holy Scripture admires the cleverness in weaving even
of women, saying, Who gave to woman skill in weaving and cleverness in the art
of embroidery? This belongs to a living creature that has reason, and exceeds
in wisdom and makes way even as far as the things of heaven.
XXV. But I would have you marvel
at the natural knowledge even of irrational creatures, and if you can, explain
its cause. How is it that birds have for nests rocks and trees and roofs, and
adapt them both for safety and beauty, and suitably for the comfort of their
nurslings? Whence do bees andspiders get their love of work and art, by which
the former plan their honeycombs, and join them together by hexagonal and
co-ordinate tubes, and construct the foundation by means of a partition and an
alternation of the angles with straight lines; and this, as is the case, in
suchdusky hives and dark combs; and the latter weave their intricate webs by
such light and almost airy threads stretched in various ways, and this from
almost invisible beginnings, to be at once a precious dwelling, and a trap for
weaker creatures with a view to enjoyment of food? WhatEuclid ever imitated
these, while pursuing philosophical enquiries with lines that have no real
existence, and wearying himself with demonstrations? From what Palamedes came
the tactics, and, as the saying is, the movements and configurations of cranes,
and the systems of their movement in ranks and their complicated flight? Who
were their Phidiæ and Zeuxides, and who were the Parrhasii and Aglaophons who
knew how to draw and mould excessively beautiful things? What harmonious Gnossian
chorus of Dædalus, wrought for a girl to the highest pitch of beauty? What
Cretan Labyrinth, hard to get through, hard to unravel, as the poets say, and
continually crossing itself through the tricks of its construction? I will not
speak of theants' storehouses and storekeepers, and of their treasurings of
wood in quantities corresponding to the time for which it is wanted, and all
the other details which we know are told of their marches and leaders and their
good order in their works.
XXVI. If this knowledge has come
within your reach and you are familiar with these branches of science, look at
the differences of plants also, up to the artistic fashion of the leaves, which
is adapted both to give the utmost pleasure to the eye, and to be of the
greatest advantage to the fruit. Look too at the variety and lavish abundance
of fruits, and most of all at the wondrous beauty of such as are mostnecessary
. And consider the power of roots, and juices, and flowers, and odours, not
only so very sweet, but also serviceable as medicines; and thegraces and
qualities of colours; and again the costly value, and the brilliant
transparency of precious stones. Since nature has set before you all things as
in an abundant banquet free to all, both the necessaries and the luxuries of
life, in order that, if nothing else, you may at any rate know God by His
benefits, and by your own sense of want be made wiser than you were. Next, I
pray you, traverse the length and breadth of earth, the common mother of all,
and the gulfs of the sea bound together with one another and with the land, and
the beautiful forests, and the rivers and springs abundant and perennial, not
only of waters cold and fit for drinking, and on the surface of the earth; but
also such as running beneath the earth, and flowing under caverns, are then
forced out by a violent blast, and repelled, and then filled with heat by this
violence of strife and repulsion, burst out little by little wherever they get
a chance, and hence supply our need of hot baths in many parts of the earth,
and in conjunction with the cold give us a healing which is without cost and
spontaneous. Tell me how and whence are these things? What is this great web
unwrought by art? These things are no less worthy of admiration, in respect of
their mutual relations than when considered separately.
How is it that the earth stands
solid and unswerving? On what is it supported? What is it that props it up, and
on what does that rest? For indeed evenreason has nothing to lean upon, but
only the Will of God. And how is it that part of it is drawn up into mountain
summits, and part laid down in plains, and this in various and differing ways?
And because the variations areindividually small, it both supplies our needs
more liberally, and is more beautiful by its variety; part being distributed
into habitations, and part left uninhabited, namely all the great height of
Mountains, and the various clefts of its coast line cut off from it. Is not
this the clearest proof of the majestic working of God?
XXVII. And with respect to the Sea
even if I did not marvel at its greatness, yet I should have marvelled at its
gentleness, in that although loose it stands within its boundaries; and if not
at its gentleness, yet surely at its greatness; but since I marvel at both, I
will praise the Power that is in both. What collected it? What bounded it? How
is itraised and lulled to rest, as though respecting its neighbour earth? How,
moreover, does it receive all the rivers, and yet remain the same, through the
very superabundance of its immensity, if that term be permissible? How is the
boundary of it, though it be an element of such magnitude, only sand? Have
yournatural philosophers with their knowledge of useless details anything to
tell us, those men I mean who are really endeavouring to measure the sea with a
wineglass, and such mighty works by their own conceptions? Or shall I give the
really scientific explanation of it from Scripture concisely, and yet more
satisfactorily and truly than by the longest arguments? He has fenced the face
of the water with His command. This is the chain of fluid nature. And how does
He bring upon it the Nautilus that inhabits the dry land (i.e., man) in a
little vessel, and with a little breeze (do you not marvel at the sight of
this—is not your mind astonished?), that earth and sea may be bound together by
needs and commerce, and that things so widely separated by nature should be
thus brought together into one for man? What are the first fountains of
springs? Seek, O man, if you can trace out or find any of these things. And who
was it who cleft the plains and the mountains for the rivers, and gave them an
unhindered course? And how comes the marvel on the other side, that the Sea
never overflows, nor the Rivers cease to flow? And what is the nourishing
powerof water, and what the difference therein; for some things are irrigated
from above, and others drink from their roots, if I may luxuriate a little in
my language when speaking of the luxuriant gifts of God.
XXVIII. And now, leaving the earth
and the things of earth, soar into the air on the wings of thought, that our
argument may advance in due path; and thence I will take you up toheavenly
things, and to heaven itself, and things which are above heaven; for to that
which is beyond my discourse hesitates to ascend, but still it shall ascend as
far as may be. Who poured forth the air, that great and abundant wealth, not
measured to men by their rank or fortunes; not restrained by boundaries; not
divided out according to people's ages; but like the distribution of the Manna,
received in sufficiency, and valued for its equality of distribution; the
chariot of the winged creation; the seat of the winds; the moderator of the
seasons; the quickener of living things, or rather the preserver of natural
life in the body; in which bodies have their being, and by which we speak; in
which is the light and all that it shines upon, and the sight which flows
through it? And mark, if you please, what follows. I cannot give to the air the
whole empire of all that is thought to belong to the air. What are the
storehouses of the winds? What are the treasuries of the snow? Who, as
Scripture has said, has begotten the drops of dew? Out of Whose womb came the
ice? And Who binds the waters in the clouds, and, fixing part in the clouds (O
marvel!) held by HisWord though its nature is to flow, pours out the rest upon
the face of the whole earth, and scatters it abroad in due season, and in just
proportions, and neither suffers the whole substance of moisture to go out free
and uncontrolled (for sufficient was the cleansing in the days of Noah; and He
who cannot lie is not forgetful of His own covenant);...nor yet restrains it
entirely that we should not again stand in need of an Elias to bring the
drought to an end. If He shall shut up heaven, it says, who shall open it? If
He open the floodgates, who shall shut them up? Who can bring an excess or
withhold a sufficiency of rain, unless he govern the Universe by his own
measures and balances? What scientific laws, pray, can you lay down concerning
thunder and lightning, O you who thunder from the earth, and cannot shine with
even little sparks of truth? To what vapours from earth will you attribute the
creation of cloud, or is it due to some thickening of the air, or pressure or
crash of clouds of excessive rarity, so as to make you think the pressure the
cause of the lightning, and the crash that which makes the thunder? Or what
compression of wind having no outlet will account to you for the lightning by
its compression, and for the thunder by its bursting out?
Now if you have in your thought
passed through the air and all the things of air, reach with me to heaven and
the things of heaven. And let faith lead us rather than reason, if at least you
have learned the feebleness of the latter in matters nearer to you, and have
known reason by knowing the things that are beyond reason, so as not to be
altogether on the earth or of the earth, because you are ignorant even of your
ignorance.
XXIX. Who spread the sky around
us, and set the stars in order? Or rather, first, can you tell me, of your own
knowledge of the things in heaven, what are the sky and the stars; you who know
not what lies at your very feet, and cannot even take the measure of yourself,
and yet must busy yourself about what is above your nature, and gape at the
illimitable? For, granted that you understand orbits and periods, and waxings
and wanings, and settings and risings, and some degrees and minutes, and all
the other things which make you so proud of your wonderful knowledge; you have
not arrived at comprehension of the realities themselves, but only at an
observation of some movement, which, when confirmed by longer practice, and
drawing the observations of many individuals into one generalization, and thence
deducing a law, has acquired the name of Science (just as the lunar phenomena
have become generally known to our sight), being the basis of this knowledge.
But if you are very scientific on this subject, and have a just claim to
admiration, tell me what is the cause of this order and this movement. How came
the sun to be a beacon-fire to the whole world, and to all eyes like the leader
of some chorus, concealing all the rest of the stars by his brightness, more
completely than some of them conceal others. The proof of this is that they
shine against him, but he outshines them and does not even allow it to be
perceived that they rose simultaneously with him, fair as a bridegroom, swift
and great as a giant for I will not let his praises be sung from any other
source than my own Scriptures— so mighty in strength that from one end to the
other of the world he embraces all things in his heat, and there is nothing hid
from the feeling thereof, but it fills both every eye with light, and every
embodied creature with heat; warming, yet not burning, by the gentleness of its
temper, and the order of its movement, present to all, and equally embracing
all.
XXX. Have you considered the
importance of the fact that a heathen writer speaks of the sun as holding the same
position among material objects as God does among objects of thought? For the
one gives light to the eyes, as the Other does to the mind; and is the most
beautiful of the objects of sight, as God is of those of thought. But who gave
him motion at first? And what is it which ever moves him in his circuit, though
in his nature stable and immovable, truly unwearied, and the giver and
sustainer of life, and all the rest of the titles which the poets justly sing
of him, and never resting in his course or his benefits? How comes he to be the
creator of day when above the earth, and of night when below it? Or whatever
may be the right expression when one contemplates the sun? What are the
mutualaggressions and concessions of day and night, and their regular irregularities
— to use a somewhat strange expression? How comes he to be the maker and
divider of the seasons, that come and depart in regular order, and as in adance
interweave with each other, or stand apart by a law of love on the one hand,
and of order on the other, and mingle little by little, and steal on their
neighbour, just as nights and days do, so as not to give us pain by their
suddenness. This will be enough about the sun. Do you know the nature and
phenomena of the Moon, and the measures and courses of light, and how it is
that the sun bears rule over the day, and the moon presides over the night; and
while She gives confidence to wild beasts, He stirs Man up to work, raising or
lowering himself as may be most serviceable? Know you the bond of Pleiades, or
the fence of Orion as He who counts the number of the stars and calls them all
by their names? Know you the differences of the glory of each, and the order of
their movement, that I should trust you, when by them you weave the web of
human concerns, and arm the creature against the Creator?
XXXI. What say you? Shall we pause
here, after discussing nothing further than matter and visible things, or,
since the Word knows the Tabernacle of Moses to be a figure of the whole
creation— I mean the entire system of things visible and invisible— shall we
pass the first veil, and stepping beyond the realm of sense, shall we look into
the Holy Place, the Intellectual and Celestial creation? But not even this can
we see in an incorporeal way, though it is incorporeal, since it is called— or
is— Fire and Spirit. For He is said to make His Angels spirits, and His
Ministers a flame of fire. ..though perhaps this making means preserving by
that Word by which they came into existence. The Angel then is called spirit
and fire; Spirit, as being a creature of the intellectual sphere; Fire, as
being of a purifying nature; for I know that the same names belong to the First
Nature. But, relatively to us at least, we must reckon the Angelic Nature
incorporeal, or at any rate as nearly so as possible. Do you see how we get
dizzy over this subject, and cannot advance to any point, unless it be as far
as this, that we know there are Angels and Archangels, Thrones, Dominions,
Princedoms, Powers, Splendours, Ascents, Intelligent Powers or Intelligencies,
pure natures and unalloyed, immovable to evil, or scarcely movable; ever
circling in chorus round the First Cause (or how should we sing their praises?)
illuminated thence with the purest Illumination, or one in one degree and one
in another, proportionally to their nature and rank...so conformed to beauty
and moulded that they become secondary Lights, and can enlighten others by the
overflowings and largesses of the First Light? Ministrants of God's Will,
strong with both inborn and imparted strength, traversing all space, readily
present to all at any place through their zeal for ministry and the agility of
their nature...different individuals of them embracing different parts of the
world, or appointed over different districts of the Universe, as He knows who
ordered and distributed it all. Combining all things in one, solely with a view
to the consent of the Creator of all things; Hymners of the Majesty of the
Godhead, eternally contemplating the Eternal Glory, not that God may thereby
gain an increase of glory, for nothing can be added to that which is full— to
Him, who supplies good to all outside Himself but that there may never be a
cessation of blessings to these first natures after God. If we have told these
things as they deserve, it is by the grace of the Trinity, and of the one
Godhead in Three Persons; but if less perfectly than we have desired, yet even
so our discourse has gained its purpose. For this is what we were labouring to
show, that even the secondary natures surpass the power of our intellect; much
more then the First and (for I fear to say merely That which is above all), the
only Nature.
The Third Theological Oration.
On the Son.
I. This then is what might be said
to cut short our opponents' readiness to argue and their hastiness with its
consequent insecurity in all matters, but above all in those discussions which
relate to God. But since to rebuke others is a matter of no difficulty
whatever, but a very easy thing, which any one who likes can do; whereas to
substitute one's own belief for theirs is the part of a pious and intelligent
man; let us, relying on the Holy Ghost, Who among them is dishonoured, but
among us is adored, bring forth to the light our own conceptions about the
Godhead, whatever these may be, like some noble and timely birth. Not that I
have at other times been silent; for on this subject alone I am full of
youthful strength and daring; but the fact is that under present circumstances
I am even more bold to declare the truth, that I may not (to use the words of
Scripture) by drawing back fall into the condemnation of being displeasing to
God. And since every discourse is of a twofold nature, the one part
establishing one's own, and the other overthrowing one's opponents' position;
let us first of all state our own position, and then try to controvert that of
our opponents—and both as briefly as possible, so that our arguments may be
taken in at a glance (like those of the elementary treatises which they have
devised to deceive simple or foolish persons), and that our thoughts may not be
scattered by reason of the length of the discourse, like water which is not
contained in a channel, but flows to waste over the open land.
II. The three most ancient
opinions concerning God are Anarchia, Polyarchia, and Monarchia. The first two
are the sport of the children of Hellas, and may they continue to be so. For
Anarchy is a thing without order; and the Rule of Many is factious, and thus
anarchical, and thus disorderly. For both these tend to the same thing, namely
disorder; and this to dissolution, for disorder is the first step to
dissolution.
But Monarchy is that which we hold
in honour. It is, however, a Monarchy that is not limited to one Person, for it
is possible for Unity if at variance with itself to come into a condition of
plurality; but one which is made of an equality of Nature and a Union of mind,
and an identity of motion, and a convergence of its elements to unity— a thing
which is impossible to the created nature— so that though numerically distinct
there is no severance of Essence. Therefore Unity having from all eternity
arrived by motion at Duality, found its rest in Trinity. This is what we mean
by Father and Son and Holy Ghost. The Father is the Begetter and the Emitter;
without passion of course, and without reference to time, and not in a
corporeal manner. The Son is the Begotten, and the Holy Ghost the Emission; for
I know not how this could be expressed in terms altogether excluding visible
things. For we shall not venture to speak of an overflow of goodness, as one of
the Greek Philosophers dared to say, as if it were a bowl overflowing, and this
in plain words in his Discourse on the First and Second Causes. Let us not ever
look on this Generation as involuntary, like some natural overflow, hard to be
retained, and by no means befitting our conception of Deity. Therefore let us
confine ourselves within our limits, and speak of the Unbegotten and the
Begotten and That which proceeds from the Father, as somewhere God the Word
Himself says.
III. When did these come into
being? They are above all When. But, if I am to speak with something more of
boldness—when the Father did. And when did the Father come into being. There
never was a time when He was not. And the same thing is true of the Son and the
Holy Ghost. Ask me again, and again I will answer you, When was the Son
begotten? When the Father was not begotten. And when did the Holy Ghost
proceed? When the Son was, not proceeding but, begotten— beyond the sphere of
time, and above the grasp of reason; although we cannot set forth that which is
above time, if we avoid as we desire any expression which conveys the idea of
time. For such expressions as when and before and after and from the beginning
are not timeless, however much we may force them; unless indeed we were to take
the Æon, that interval which is coextensive with the eternal things, and is not
divided or measured by any motion, or by the revolution of the sun, as time is
measured.
How then are They not alike
unoriginate, if They are coeternal? Because They are from Him, though not after
Him. For that which is unoriginate is eternal, but that which is eternal is not
necessarily unoriginate, so long as it may be referred to the Father as its
origin. Therefore in respect of Cause They are not unoriginate; but it is
evident that the Cause is not necessarily prior to its effects, for the sun is
not prior to its light. And yet They are in some sense unoriginate, in respect
of time, even though you would scare simple minds with your quibbles, for the
Sources of Time are not subject to time.
IV. But how can this generation be
passionless? In that it is incorporeal. For if corporeal generation involves
passion, incorporeal generation excludes it. And I will ask of you in turn, How
is He God if He is created? For that which is created is not God. I refrain
from reminding you that here too is passion if we take the creation in a bodily
sense, as time, desire, imagination, thought, hope, pain, risk, failure,
success, all of which and more than all find a place in the creature, as is
evident to every one. Nay, I marvel that you do not venture so far as to
conceive ofmarriages and times of pregnancy, and dangers of miscarriage , as if
the Father could not have begotten at all if He had not begotten thus; or
again, that you did not count up the modes of generation of birds and beasts
and fishes, and bring under some one of them the Divine andIneffable
Generation, or even eliminate the Son out of your new hypothesis. And you
cannot even see this, that as His Generation according to the flesh differs
from all others (for where among men do you know of a Virgin Mother?), so does
He differ also in His spiritual Generation; or rather He, Whose Existence is
not the same as ours, differs from us also in His Generation.
V. Who then is that Father Who had
no beginning? One Whose very Existence had no beginning; for one whose
existence had a beginning must also have begun to be a Father. He did not then
become a Father after He began to be, for His being had no beginning. And He is
Father in theabsolute sense, for He is not also Son; just as the Son is Son in
the absolute sense, because He is not also Father. These names do not belong to
us in the absolute sense, because we are both, and not one more than the other;
and we are of both, and not of one only; and so we are divided, and by degrees
becomemen, and perhaps not even men, and such as we did not desire, leaving and
being left, so that only the relations remain, without the underlying facts.
But, the objector says, the very
form of the expression He begot and He was begotten, brings in the idea of a
beginning of generation. But what if you do not use this expression, but say,
He had been begotten from the beginning so as readily to evade your far-fetched
and time-loving objections? Will you bring Scripture against us, as if we were
forging something contrary to Scripture and to the truth? Why, every one knows
that in practice we very often find tenses interchanged when time is spoken of;
and especially is this the custom of Holy Scripture, not only in respect of the
past tense, and of the present; but even of the future, as for instance Why did
the heathen rage? when they had not yet raged and they shall cross over the
river on foot, where the meaning is they did cross over. It would be a long
task to reckon up all the expressions of this kind which students have noticed.
VI. So much for this point. What
is their next objection, how full of contentiousness and impudence? He, they
say, either voluntarily begot the Son, or else involuntarily. Next, as they
think, they bind us on both sides with cords; these however are not strong, but
very weak. For, they say, if it was involuntarily He was under the sway of some
one, and who exercised this sway? And how is He, over whom it is exercised,God?
But if voluntarily, the Son is a Son of Will; how then is He of the Father?—
and they thus invent a new sort of Mother for him—the Will,— in place of the
Father. There is one good point which they may allege about this argument of
theirs; namely, that they desert Passion, and take refuge in Will. For Will is
not Passion.
Secondly, let us look at the
strength of their argument. And it were best to wrestle with them at first at
close quarters. You yourself, who so recklessly assert whatever takes your
fancy; were you begottenvoluntarily or involuntarily by your father? If
involuntarily, then he was under some tyrant's sway (O terrible violence!) and
who was the tyrant? You will hardly say it was nature,— for nature is tolerant
of chastity. If it was voluntarily, then by a few syllables your father is done
away with, for you are shown to be the son of Will, and not of your father. But
I pass to the relation betweenGod and the creature, and I put your own question
to your own wisdom. Did God create all things voluntarily or under compulsion?
If under compulsion, here also is the tyranny, and one who played the tyrant;
if voluntarily, the creatures also are deprived of their God, and you before
the rest, who invent such arguments and tricks of logic. For a partition is set
up between the Creator and the creatures in the shape of Will. And yet I think
that the Person who wills is distinct from the Act of willing; He who begets
from the Act of begetting; the Speaker from the speech, or else we are all very
stupid. On the one side we have the mover, and on the other that which is, so
to speak, the motion. Thus the thing willed is not the child ofwill , for it
does not always result therefrom; nor is that which is begotten the child of
generation, nor that which is heard the child of speech, but of thePerson who
willed, or begot, or spoke. But the things of God are beyond all this, for with
Him perhaps the Will to beget is generation, and there is no intermediate
action (if we may accept this altogether, and not rather consider generation
superior to will).
VII. Will you then let me play a
little upon this word Father, for your example encourages me to be so bold? The
Father is God either willingly or unwillingly; and how will you escape from
your own excessive acuteness? If willingly, when did He begin to will? It could
not have been before He began to be, for there was nothing prior to Him. Or is
one part of Him Will and another the object of Will? If so, He is divisible. So
the question arises, as the result of your argument, whether He Himself is not
theChild of Will. And if unwillingly, what compelled Him to exist, and how is
He God if He was compelled— and that to nothing less than to be God? How then
was He begotten, says my opponent. How was He created, if as you say, He was
created? For this is a part of the same difficulty. Perhaps you would say, By
Will and Word. You have not yet solved the whole difficulty; for it yet remains
for you to show how Will and Word gained the power of action. For man was not
created in this way.
VIII. How then was He begotten?
This Generation would have been no great thing, if you could have comprehended
it who have no real knowledge even of your own generation, or at least who
comprehend very little of it, and of that little you are ashamed to speak; and
then do you think you know the whole? You will have to undergo much labour
before you discover the laws of composition, formation, manifestation, and the
bond whereby soul is united to body—mind to soul, and reason to mind; and
movement, increase, assimilation of food, sense, memory, recollection, and all
the rest of the parts of which you are compounded; and which of them belongs to
the soul and body together, and which to each independently of the other, and
which is received from each other. For those parts whose maturity comes later,
yet received their laws at the time of conception. Tell me what these laws are?
And do not even then venture to speculate on the Generation of God; for that
would be unsafe. For even if you knew all about your own, yet you do not by any
means know about God's. And if you do not understand your own, how can you know
about God's? For in proportion as God is harder to trace out than man, so is
the heavenly Generation harder to comprehend than your own. But if you assert
that because you cannot comprehend it, therefore He cannot have been begotten,
it will betime for you to strike out many existing things which you cannot comprehend;
and first of all God Himself. For you cannot say what He is, even if you are
very reckless, and excessively proud of your intelligence. First, cast away
your notions of flow and divisions and sections, and your conceptions of
immaterial as if it were material birth, and then you may perhaps worthily
conceive of the DivineGeneration. How was He begotten?— I repeat the question
in indignation. The Begetting of God must be honoured by silence. It is a great
thing for you to learn that He was begotten. But the manner of His generation
we will not admit that evenAngels can conceive, much less you. Shall I tell you
how it was? It was in a manner known to the Father Who begot, and to the Son
Who was begotten. Anything more than this is hidden by a cloud, and escapes
your dim sight.
IX. Well, but the Father begot a
Son who either was or was not in existence. What utter nonsense! This is a
question which applies to you or me, who on the one hand were in existence, as for
instance Levi in the loins of Abraham; and on the other hand came into
existence; and so in some sense we are partly of what existed, and partly of
what was nonexistent; whereas the contrary is the case with the original
matter, which was certainly created out of what was non-existent,
notwithstanding that some pretend that it is unbegotten. But in this case to be
begotten, even from the beginning, is concurrent with to be. On what then will
you base this captious question? For what is older than that which is from the
beginning, if we may place there the previous existence or non-existence of the
Son? In either case we destroy its claim to be the Beginning. Or perhaps you
will say, if we were to ask you whether the Father was of existent or
non-existentsubstance, that he is twofold, partly pre-existing, partly
existing; or that His case is the same with that of the Son; that is, that He
was created out of non-existing matter, because of your ridiculous questions
and your houses of sand, which cannot stand against the merest ripple.
I do not admit either solution,
and I declare that your question contains an absurdity, and not a difficulty to
answer. If however you think, in accordance with your dialecticassumptions,
that one or other of these alternatives must necessarily be true in every case,
let me ask you one little question: Is time in time, or is it not in time? If
it is contained in time, then in what time, and what is it but that time, and
how does it contain it? But if it is not contained in time, what is that
surpassing wisdom which can conceive of a time which is timeless? Now, in
regard to this expression, I am now telling a lie, admit one of these
alternatives, either that it is true, or that it is a falsehood, without
qualification (for we cannot admit that it is both). But this cannot be. For
necessarily he either is lying, and so is telling the truth, or else he is
telling the truth, and so is lying. What wonder is it then that, as in this
case contraries are true, so in that case they should both be untrue, and so
your clever puzzle prove mere foolishness? Solve me one more riddle. Were you
present at your own generation, and are you now present to yourself, or is
neither the case? If you were and are present, who were you, and with whom are
you present? And how did your single self become thus both subject and object?
But if neither of the above is the case, how did you get separated from
yourself, and what is the cause of this disjoining? But, you will say, it is
stupid to make a fuss about the question whether or no a single individual is
present to himself; for the expression is not used of oneself but of others.
Well, you may be certain that it is even more stupid to discuss the question
whether That which was begotten from the beginning existed before its
generation or not. For such a question arises only as to matter divisible by
time.
X. But they say, The Unbegotten
and the Begotten are not the same; and if this is so, neither is the Son the
same as the Father. It is clear, without saying so, that this line of argument
manifestly excludes either the Son or the Father from theGodhead. For if to be
Unbegotten is the Essence of God, to be begotten is not that Essence; if the
opposite is the case, the Unbegotten is excluded. What argument can contradict
this? Choose then whichever blasphemy you prefer, my good inventor of a new
theology, if indeed you are anxious at all costs to embrace a blasphemy. In the
next place, in what sense do you assert that the Unbegotten and the Begotten
are not the same? If you mean that the Uncreated and the created are not the
same, I agree with you; for certainly the Unoriginate and the created are not
of the same nature. But if you say that He That begot and That which is
begotten are not the same, the statement is inaccurate. For it is in fact
anecessary truth that they are the same. For the nature of the relation of
Father to Child is this, that the offspring is of the same nature with the
parent. Or we may argue thus again. What do you mean by Unbegotten and Begotten,
for if you mean the simple fact of being unbegotten or begotten, these are not
the same; but if you mean Those to Whom these terms apply, how are They not the
same? For example, Wisdom andUnwisdom are not the same in themselves, but yet
both are attributes of man, who is the same; and they mark not a difference of
essence, but one external to the essence. Are immortality and innocence and
immutability also the essence of God? If so God has many essences and not one;
or Deity is a compound of these. For He cannot be all these without
composition, if they be essences.
XI. They do not however assert
this, for these qualities are common also to other beings. But God's Essence is
that which belongs to God alone, and is proper to Him. But they, who consider
matter and form to be unbegotten, would not allow that to be unbegotten is the
property of God alone (for we must cast away even further the darkness of the
Manichæans). But suppose that it is the property of God alone. What of Adam?
Was he not alone the direct creature of God? Yes, you will say. Was he then the
only human being? By no means. And why, but because humanity does not consist
in direct creation? For that which is begotten is also human. Just so neither
is He Who is Unbegotten alone God, though He alone is Father. But grant that He
Who is Begotten is God; for He is of God, as you must allow, even though you
cling to your Unbegotten. Then how do you describe the Essence of God? Not by
declaring what it is, but by rejecting what it is not. For your word signifies
that He is not begotten; it does not present to you what is the real nature or
condition of that which has no generation. What then is the Essence of God? It
is for your infatuation to define this, since you are so anxious about His Generation
too; but to us it will be a very great thing, if ever, even in the future, we
learn this, when this darkness and dulness is done away for us, as He has
promised Who cannotlie. This then may be the thought and hope of those who are
purifying themselves with a view to this. Thus much we for our part will be
bold to say, that if it is a great thing for the Father to beUnoriginate, it is
no less a thing for the Son to have been Begotten of such a Father. For not
only would He share the glory of the Unoriginate, since he is of the
Unoriginate, but he has the added glory of His Generation, a thing so great and
august in the eyes of all those who are not altogether grovelling and material
in mind.
XII. But, they say, if the Son is
the Same as the Father in respect of Essence, then if the Father is unbegotten,
the Son must be so likewise. Quite so— if the Essence of God consists in being
unbegotten; and so He would be a strange mixture, begottenly unbegotten. If,
however, the difference is outside the Essence, how can you be so certain in
speaking of this? Are you also your father's father, so as in no respect to
fall short of your father, since you are the same with him in essence? Is it
not evident that our enquiry into the Nature of the Essence of God, if we make
it, will leave Personality absolutely unaffected? But that Unbegotten is not a
synonym of God is proved thus. If it were so, it would be necessary that since
God is a relative term, Unbegotten should be so likewise; or that since
Unbegotten is an absolute term, so must God be....God of no one. For words
which are absolutely identical are similarly applied. But the word Unbegotten
is not used relatively. For to what is it relative? And of what things is God
the God? Why, of all things. How then can God and Unbegotten be identical
terms? And again, since Begotten and Unbegotten are contradictories, like
possession and deprivation, it would follow that contradictory essences would
co-exist, which is impossible. Or again, since possessions are prior to deprivations,
and the latter are destructive of the former, not only must the Essence of the
Son be prior to that of the Father, but it must be destroyed by the Father, on
your hypothesis.
XIII. What now remains of their
invincible arguments? Perhaps the last they will take refuge in is this. If God
has never ceased to beget, the Generation is imperfect; and when will He cease?
But if He has ceased, then He must have begun. Thus again these carnal minds
bring forward carnal arguments. Whether He is eternally begotten or not, I do
not yet say, until I have looked into the statement, Before all the hills He
begets Me, more accurately. But I cannot see the necessity of their conclusion.
For if, as they say, everything that is to come to an end had also a beginning,
then surely that which has no end had no beginning. What thenwill they decide
concerning the soul, or the Angelic nature? If it had a beginning, it will also
have an end; and if it has no end, it is evident that according to them it had
no beginning. But the truth is that it had a beginning, and will never have an
end. Their assertion, then, that which will have an end had also a beginning,
is untrue. Our position, however, is, that as in the case of a horse, or an ox,
or a man, the same definition applies to all the individuals of the same
species, and whatever shares the definition has also a right to the Name; so in
the very same way there is One Essence of God, and One Nature, and One Name;
although in accordance with a distinction in our thoughts we use distinct Names
and that whatever is properly called by this Name really is God; and what He is
in Nature, That He is truly called— if at least we are to hold that Truth is a
matter not of names but of realities. But our opponents, as if they were afraid
of leaving any stone unturned to subvert the Truth, acknowledge indeed that the
Son is God when they are compelled to do so by arguments and evidences; but
they only mean that He is God in an ambiguous sense, and that He only shares
the Name.
XIV. And when we advance this
objection against them, What do you mean to say then? That the Son is not
properly God, just as a picture of an animal is not properly an animal? And if
not properly God, in what sense is He God at all? They reply, Why should not
these terms be ambiguous, and in both cases be used in a proper sense? And they
will give us such instances as theland-dog and the dogfish; where the word Dog
is ambiguous, and yet in both cases is properly used, for there is such a
species among the ambiguously named, or any other case in which the same
appellative is used for two things of different nature. But, my good friend, in
this case, when you include two natures under the same name, you do not assert
that either is better than the other, or that the one is prior and the other
posterior, or that one is in a greater degree and the other in a lesser that
which is predicated of them both, for there is no connecting link which forces
thisnecessity upon them. One is not a dog more than the other, and one less so;
either the dogfish more than the land-dog, or the land-dog than the dogfish .
Why should they be, or on what principle? But the community of name is here
between things of equal value, though of differentnature. But in the case of
which we are speaking, you couple the Name of God with adorable Majesty, and
make It surpass every essence and nature (an attribute of God alone), and then
you ascribe this Name to the Father, while you deprive the Son of it, and make
Him subject to the Father, and give Him only a secondary honour and worship;
and even if in words you bestow on Him one which is Equal, yet in practice you
cut off His Deity, and pass malignantly from a use of the same Name implying an
exact equality, to one which connects things which are not equal. And so the
pictured and the living man are in your mouth anapter illustration of the
relations of Deity than the dogs which I instanced. Or else you must concede to
both an equal dignity of nature as well as a common name — even though you
introduced these natures into your argument as different; and thus you destroy
the analogy of your dogs, which you invented as an instance of inequality. For
what is the force of your instance of ambiguity, if those whom you distinguish
are not equal in honour? For it was not to prove an equality but an inequality
that you took refuge in your dogs. How could anybody be more clearly convicted
of fighting both against his own arguments, and against theDeity?
XV. And if, when we admit that in
respect of being the Cause the Father is greater than the Son, they should
assume the premiss that He is the Cause by Nature, and then deduce the
conclusion that He is greater by Nature also, it is difficult to say whether
they mislead most themselves or those with whom they are arguing. For it does
not absolutely follow that all that is predicated of a class can also be
predicated of all theindividuals composing it; for the different particulars
may belong to different individuals. For what hinders me, if I assume the same
premiss, namely, that the Father is greater by Nature, and then add this other,
Yet not by nature in every respect greater nor yet Father— from concluding,
Therefore the Greater is not in every respect greater, nor the Father in every
respect Father? Or, if you prefer it, let us put it in this way:God is an
Essence: But an Essence is not in every case God; and draw the conclusion for
yourself— Therefore God is not in every case God. I think the fallacy here is
the arguing from a conditioned to an unconditioned use of a term, to use the
technical expression of the logicians. For while we assign this word Greater to
His Nature viewed as a Cause, they infer it of His Nature viewed in itself. It
is just as if when we said that such a one was a dead man they were to infer simply
that he was a Man.
XVI. How shall we pass over the
following point, which is no less amazing than the rest? Father, they say, is a
name either of an essence or of an Action, thinking to bind us down on both
sides. If we say that it is a name of an essence, they will say that we agree
with them that the Son is of another Essence, since there is but one Essence of
God, and this, according to them, is preoccupied by the Father. On the other
hand, if we say that it is the name of an Action, we shall be supposed to
acknowledge plainly that the Son is created and not begotten. For where there
is an Agent there must also be an Effect. And they will say they wonder how
that which is made can be identical with That which made it. I should myself
have been frightened with your distinction, if it had beennecessary to accept
one or other of the alternatives, and not rather put both aside, and state a
third and truer one, namely, that Father is not a name either of an essence or
of an action, most clever sirs. But it is the name of the Relation in which the
Father stands to the Son, and the Son to the Father. For as with us these names
make known a genuine and intimate relation, so, in the case before us too, they
denote an identity of nature between Him That is begotten and Him That begets.
But let us concede to you that Father is a name of essence, it will still bring
in the idea of Son, and will not make it of a different nature, according to
common ideas and the force of these names. Let it be, if it so please you, the
name of an action; you will not defeat us in this way either. The Homoousion
would be indeed the result of this action, or otherwise the conception of an
action in this matter would be absurd. You see then how, even though you try to
fight unfairly, we avoid your sophistries. But now, since we have ascertained
how invincible you are in your arguments and sophistries, let us look at your
strength in theOracles of God, if perchance you may choose to persuade us out
of them.
XVII. For we have learned to believe
in and to teach the Deity of the Son from their great and lofty utterances. And
what utterances are these? These: God— The Word— He That Was In The Beginning
and With The Beginning, and The Beginning. In the Beginning was The Word, and
the Word was with God, and the Word was God, and With You is the Beginning, and
He who calls her The Beginning from generations. Then the Son is Only-begotten:
The only begotten Son which is in the bosom of the Father, it says, He has
declared Him. The Way, the Truth, the Life, the Light. I am the Way, the Truth,
and the Life; and I am the Light of the World. Wisdom and Power, Christ, the
Wisdom of God, and the Power of God. The Effulgence, the Impress, the Image,
the Seal; Who being the Effulgence of His glory and the Impress of His Essence,
and the Image of His Goodness, and Him has God the Father sealed. Lord, King,
He That Is, The Almighty. The Lord rained down fire from the Lord; and A
sceptre of righteousness is the sceptre of Your Kingdom; and Which is and was and
is to come, the Almighty — all which are clearly spoken of the Son, with all
the other passages of the same force, none of which is an afterthought, or
added later to the Son or the Spirit, any more than to the Father Himself. For
Their Perfection is not affected by additions. There never was a time when He
was without the Word, or when He was not the Father, or when He was not true,
or not wise, or not powerful, or devoid of life, or of splendour, or of
goodness.
But in opposition to all these, do
you reckon up for me the expressions which make for your ignorant arrogance,
such as My God and your God, or greater, or created, or made, or sanctified;
Add, if you like, Servant and Obedient and Gave and Learnt, and was commanded,
was sent, can do nothing of Himself, either say, or judge, or give, or will.
And further these—His ignorance, subjection, prayer, asking, increase, being
made perfect. And if you like even more humble than these; such as speak of His
sleeping, hungering, being in an agony, and fearing; or perhaps you would make
even His Cross and Death a matter of reproach to Him. His Resurrection and
Ascension I fancy you will leave to me, for in these is found something to
support our position. A good many other things too you might pick up, if you desire
to put together that equivocal and intruded god of yours, Who to us is True
God, and equal to the Father. For every one of these points, taken separately,
may very easily, if we go through them one by one, be explained to you in the
most reverent sense, and thestumbling-block of the letter be cleaned away— that
is, if your stumbling at it be honest, and not wilfully malicious. To give you
the explanation in one sentence. What is lofty you are to apply to the Godhead,
and to that Nature in Him which is superior to sufferings and incorporeal; but
all that is lowly to the composite condition of Him who for your sakes made
Himself of no reputation and was Incarnate— yes, for it is no worse thing to
say, was made Man, and afterwards was also exalted. The result will be that you
will abandon these carnal and grovelling doctrines, and learn to be more
sublime, and to ascend with His Godhead, and you will not remain permanently
among the things of sight, but will rise up with Him into the world of thought,
and come to know which passages refer to His Nature, and which to His
assumption of Human Nature.
XIX. For He Whom you now treat
with contempt was once above you. He Who is now Man was once the Uncompounded.
What He was He continued to be; what He was not He took to Himself. In the
beginning He was, uncaused; for what is the Cause of God? But afterwards for a
cause He was born. And that cause was that you might be saved, who insult Him
and despise His Godhead, because of this, that He took upon Him your denser
nature, having converse with Flesh by means of Mind. While His inferior Nature,
the Humanity, became God, because it was united to God, and became One Person
because the Higher Nature prevailed in order that I too might be made God so
far as He is made Man. He was born— but He had been begotten: He was born of a
woman— but she was a Virgin. The first is human, the second Divine. In His
Human nature He had no Father, but also in His Divine Nature no Mother. Both
these belong to Godhead. He dwelt in the womb— but He was recognized by the
Prophet, himself still in the womb, leaping before the Word, for Whose sake He
came into being. He was wrapped in swaddling clothes— but He took off the
swathing bands of the grave by His rising again. He was laid in a manger— but
He was glorified by Angels, and proclaimed by a star, and worshipped by the
Magi. Why are you offended by that which is presented to your sight, because
you will not look at that which is presented to your mind? He was driven into
exile into Egypt— but He drove away the Egyptian idols. He had no form nor
comeliness in the eyes of the Jews — but to David He is fairer than the
children of men. And on the Mountain He was bright as the lightning, and became
more luminous than the sun, initiating us into the mystery of the future.
XX. He was baptized as Man— but He
remitted sins as God — not because He needed purificatory rites Himself, but
that He might sanctify the element of water. He was tempted as Man, but He
conquered as God; yea, He bids us be of good cheer, for He has overcome the
world. He hungered— but He fed thousands; yea, He is the Bread that gives life,
and That is of heaven. He thirsted— but He cried, If any man thirst, let him
come unto Me and drink. Yea, He promised that fountains should flow from them
that believe. He was wearied, but He is the Rest of them that are weary and
heavy laden. He was heavy with sleep, but He walked lightly over the sea. He
rebuked the winds, He made Peter light as he began to sink. He pays tribute,
but it is out of a fish; yea, He is the King of those who demanded it. He is
called a Samaritan and a demoniac; — but He saves him that came down from
Jerusalem and fell among thieves; the demons acknowledge Him, and He drives out
demons and sinks in the sea legions of foul spirits, and sees the Prince of the
demons falling like lightning. He is stoned, but is not taken. He prays, but He
hears prayer. He weeps, but He causes tears to cease. He asks where Lazarus was
laid, for He was Man; but He raises Lazarus, for He was God. He is sold, and
very cheap, for it is only for thirty pieces of silver; but He redeems the
world, and that at a great price, for the Price was His own blood. As a sheep
He is led to the slaughter, but He is the Shepherd of Israel, and now of the whole
world also. As a Lamb He is silent, yet He is the Word, and is proclaimed by
the Voice of one crying in the wilderness. He is bruised and wounded, but He
heals every disease and every infirmity. He is lifted up and nailed to the
Tree, but by the Tree of Life He restores us; yea, He saves even the Robber
crucified with Him; yea, He wrapped the visible world in darkness. He is given
vinegar to drink mingled with gall. Who? He who turned the water into wine, who
is the destroyer of the bitter taste, who is Sweetness and altogether desire.
He lays down His life, but He has power to take it again; and the veil is rent,
for the mysterious doors of Heaven are opened; the rocks are cleft, the dead
arise. He dies, but He gives life, and by His death destroys death. He is
buried, but He rises again; He goes down into Hell, but He brings up the souls;
He ascends to Heaven, and shall come again to judge the quick and the dead, and
to put to the test such words as yours. If the one give you a starting point
for your error, let the others put an end to it.
XXI. This, then, is our reply to
those who would puzzle us; not given willingly indeed (for light talk and
contradictions of words are not agreeable to thefaithful, and one Adversary is
enough for us), but of necessity, for the sake of our assailants (for medicines
exist because of diseases), that they may be led to see that they are not
all-wise nor invincible in those superfluous arguments which make void the
Gospel. For when we leave off believing, and protect ourselves by mere strength
of argument, and destroy the claim which the Spirit has upon our faith by
questionings, and then our argument is not strong enough for the importance of
the subject (and this must necessarily be the case, since it is put in motion
by an organ of so little power as is our mind), what is the result? The
weakness of the argument appears to belong to the mystery, and thus elegance of
language makes void the Cross, as Paul also thought. For faith is that which
completes our argument. But may He who proclaims unions and looses those that
are bound, and who puts into our minds to solve the knots of their unnatural
dogmas, if it may be, change these men and make them faithful instead of
rhetoricians, Christians instead of that which they now are called. This indeed
we entreat and beg for Christ's sake. Be reconciled to God, and quench not the
Spirit; or rather, may Christ be reconciled to you, and may the Spirit
enlighten you, though so late. But if you are too fond of your quarrel, we at
any rate will hold fast to the Trinity, and by the Trinity may we be saved,
remaining pure and without offense, until the more perfect showing forth of
that which we desire, in Him, Christ our Lord, to Whom be the glory for ever.
Amen.
The fourth theological oration.
The Second Concerning the Son.
I. Since I have by the power of
the Spirit sufficiently overthrown the subtleties and intricacies of the
arguments, and already solved in the mass the objections and oppositions drawn
from Holy Scripture, with which these sacrilegious robbers of the Bible and
thieves of the sense of its contents draw over the multitude to their side, and
confuse the way of truth; and that not without clearness, as I believe all
candid persons will say; attributing to the Deity the higher and diviner
expressions, and the lower and more human to Him Who for us men was the Second
Adam, and was God made capable of suffering to strive against sin; yet we have
not yet gone through the passages in detail, because of the haste of our
argument. But since you demand of us a brief explanation of each of them, that
you may not be carried away by the plausibilities of their arguments, we will
therefore state the explanations summarily, dividing them into numbers for the
sake of carrying them more easily in mind.
II. In their eyes the following is
only too ready to hand "The Lord created me at the beginning of His ways
with a view to His works." How shall we meet this? Shall we bring an
accusation against Solomon, or reject his former words because of his fall in
after-life? Shall we say that the words are those of Wisdom herself, as it were
of Knowledge and the Creator-word, in accordance with which all things were
made? For Scripture often personifies many even lifeless objects; as for
instance, "The Sea said" so and so; and, "The Depth says, It is
not in me;" and "The Heavens declare the glory of God ;" and
again a command is given to the Sword; and the Mountains and Hills are asked
the reason of their skipping. We do not allege any of these, though some of our
predecessors used them as powerful arguments. But let us grant that the
expression is used of our Saviour Himself, the true Wisdom. Let us consider one
small point together. What among all things that exist is unoriginate? The
Godhead. For no one can tell the origin of God, that otherwise would be older
than God. But what is the cause of the Manhood, which for our sake God assumed?
It was surely our Salvation. What else could it be? Since then we find here
clearly both the Created and the Begetteth Me, the argument is simple. Whatever
we find joined with a cause we are to refer to the Manhood, but all that is
absolute and unoriginate we are to reckon to the account of His Godhead. Well,
then, is not this "Created" said in connection with a cause? He
created Me, it so says, as the beginning of His ways, with a view to his works.
Now, the Works of His Hands are verity and judgment; for whose sake He was
anointed with Godhead;; for this anointing is of the Manhood; but the "He
begets Me" is not connected with a cause; or it is for you to show the
adjunct. What argument then will disprove that Wisdom is called a creature, in
connection with the lower generation, but Begotten in respect of the first and
more incomprehensible?
III. Next is the fact of His being
called Servant and serving many well, and that it is a great thing for Him to
be called the Child of God. For in truth He was in servitude to flesh and to
birth and to the conditions of our life with a view to our liberation, and to
that of all those whom He has saved, who were in bondage under sin. What
greater destiny can befall man's humility than that he should be intermingled
with God, and by this intermingling should be deified, and that we should be so
visited by the Dayspring from on high, that even that Holy Thing that should be
born should be called the Son of the Highest, and that there should be bestowed
upon Him a Name which is above every name? And what else can this be than
God?-and that every knee should bow to Him That was made of no reputation for
us, and That mingled the Form of God with the form of a servant, and that all
the House of Israel should know that God has made Him both Lord and Christ? For
all this was done by the action of the Begotten, and by the good pleasure of
Him That begot Him.
IV. Well, what is the second of
their great irresistible passages? "He must reign," till such and
such a time ... and "be received by heaven until the time of
restitution," and "have the seat at the Right Hand until the
overthrow of His enemies." But after this? Must He cease to be King, or be
removed from Heaven? Why, who shall make Him cease, or for what cause? What a
bold and very anarchical interpreter you are; and yet you have heard that Of
His Kingdom there shall be no end. Your mistake arises from not understanding
that Until is not always exclusive of that which comes after, but asserts up to
that time, without denying what comes after it. To take a single instance-how
else would you understand, "Lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of
the world?" Does it mean that He will no longer be so afterwards. And for
what reason? But this is not the only cause of your error; you also fail to
distinguish between the things that are signified. He is said to reign in one
sense as the Almighty King, both of the willing and the unwilling; but in
another as producing in us submission, and placing us under His Kingship as
willingly acknowledging His Sovereignty. Of His Kingdom, considered in the
former sense, there shall be no end. But in the second sense, what end will
there be? His taking us as His servants, on our entrance into a state of
salvation. For what need is there to Work Submission in us when we have already
submitted? After which He arises to judge the earth, and to separate the saved from
the lost. After that He is to stand as God in the midst of gods, that is, of
the saved, distinguishing and deciding of what honour and of what mansion each
is worthy.
V. Take, in the next place, the
subjection by which you subject the Son to the Father. What, you say, is He not
now subject, or must He, if He is God, be subject to God? You are fashioning
your argument as if it concerned some robber, or some hostile deity. But look
at it in this manner: that as for my sake He was called a curse, Who destroyed
my curse; and sin, who takes away the sin of the world; and became a new Adam
to take the place of the old, just so He makes my disobedience His own as Head
of the whole body. As long then as I am disobedient and rebellious, both by
denial of God and by my passions, so long Christ also is called disobedient on
my account. But when all things shall be subdued unto Him on the one hand by
acknowledgment of Him, and on the other by a reformation, then He Himself also
will have fulfilled His submission, bringing me whom He has saved to God. For
this, according to my view, is the subjection of Christ; namely, the fulfilling
of the Father's Will. But as the Son subjects all to the Father, so does the
Father to the Son; the One by His Work, the Other by His good pleasure, as we
have already said. And thus He Who subjects presents to God that which he has
subjected, making our condition His own. Of the same kind, it appears to me, is
the expression, "My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" It was not
He who was forsaken either by the Father, or by His own Godhead, as some have
thought, as if It were afraid of the Passion, and therefore withdrew Itself
from Him in His Sufferings (for who compelled Him either to be born on earth at
all, or to be lifted up on the Cross?) But as I said, He was in His own Person
representing us. For we were the forsaken and despised before, but now by the
Sufferings of Him Who could not suffer, we were taken up and saved. Similarly,
He makes His own our folly and our transgressions; and says what follows in the
Psalm, for it is very evident that the Twenty-first Psalm refers to Christ.
VI. The same consideration applies
to another passage, "He learnt obedience by the things which He
suffered," and to His "strong crying and tears," and His
"Entreaties," and His "being heard," and His"
Reverence," all of which He wonderfully wrought out, like a drama whose
plot was devised on our behalf. For in His character of the Word He was neither
obedient nor disobedient. For such expressions belong to servants, and
inferiors, and the one applies to the better sort of them, while the other
belongs to those who deserve punishment. But, in the character of the Form of a
Servant, He condescends to His fellow servants, nay, to His servants, and takes
upon Him a strange form, bearing all me and mine in Himself, that in Himself He
may exhaust the bad, as fire does wax, or as the sun does the mists of earth;
and that I may partake of His nature by the blending. Thus He honours obedience
by His action, and proves it experimentally by His Passion. For to possess the
disposition is not enough, just as it would not be enough for us, unless we
also proved it by our acts; for action is the proof of disposition.
And perhaps it would not be wrong
to assume this also, that by the art of His love for man He gauges our
obedience, and measures all by comparison with His own Sufferings, so that He
may know our condition by His own, and how much is demanded of us, and how much
we yield, taking into the account, along with our environment, our weakness
also. For if the Light shining through the veil upon the darkness, that is upon
this life, was persecuted by the other darkness (I mean, the Evil One and the
Tempter), how much more will the darkness be persecuted, as being weaker than
it? And what marvel is it, that though He entirely escaped, we have been, at
any rate in part, overtaken? For it is a more wonderful thing that He should
have been chased than that we should have been captured;-at least to the minds
of all who reason aright on the subject. I will add yet another passage to
those I have mentioned, because I think that it clearly tends to the same
sense. I mean "In that He has suffered being tempted, He is able to
succour them that are tempted." But God will be all in all in the time of
restitution; not in the sense that the Father alone will Be; and the Son be
wholly resolved into Him, like a torch into a great pyre, from which it was
reft away for a little space, and then put back (for I would not have even the
Sabellians injured by such an expression); but the entire Godheadwhen we shall
be no longer divided (as we now are by movements and passions), and containing
nothing at all of God, or very little, but shall be entirely like.
VII. As your third point you count
the Word Greater; and as your fourth, To My God and your God. And indeed, if He
had been called greater, and the word equal had not occurred, this might
perhaps have been a point in their favour. But if we find both words clearly
used what will these gentlemen have to say? How will it strengthen their
argument? How will they reconcile the irreconcilable? For that the same thing
should be at once greater than and equal to the same thing is an impossibility;
and the evident solution is that the Greater refers to origination, while the
Equal belongs to the Nature; and this we acknowledge with much good will. But
perhaps some one else will back up our attack on your argument, and assert,
that That which is from such a Cause is not inferior to that which has no Cause;
for it would share the glory of the Unoriginate, because it is from the
Unoriginate. And there is, besides, the Generation, which is to all men a
matter so marvellous and of such Majesty. For to say that he is greater than
the Son considered as man, is true indeed, but is no great thing. For what
marvel is it if God is greater than man? Surely that is enough to say in answer
to their talk about Greater.
VIII. As to the other passages, My
God would be used in respect, not of the Word, but of the Visible Word. For how
could there be a God of Him Who is properly God? In the same way He is Father,
not of the Visible, but of the Word; for our Lord was of two Natures; so that
one expression is used properly, the other improperly in each of the two cases;
but exactly the opposite way to their use in respect of us. For with respect to
us God is properly our God, but not properly our Father. And this is the cause
of the error of the Heretics, namely the joining of these two Names, which are
interchanged because of the Union of the Natures. And an indication of this is
found in the fact that wherever the Natures are distinguished in our thoughts
from one another, the Names are also distinguished; as you hear in Paul's
words, "The God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of Glory." The
God of Christ, but the Father of glory. For although these two terms express
but one Person, yet this is not by a Unity of Nature, but by a Union of the
two. What could be clearer?
IX. Fifthly, let it be alleged
that it is said of Him that He receives life, judgment, inheritance of the
Gentiles, or power over all flesh, or glory, or disciples, or whatever else is
mentioned. This also belongs to the Manhood; and yet if you were to ascribe it
to the Godhead, it would be no absurdity. For you would not so ascribe it as if
it were newly acquired, but as belonging to Him from the beginning by reason of
nature, and not as an act of favour.
X. Sixthly, let it be asserted that
it is written, The Son can do nothing of Himself, but what He sees the Father
do. The solution of this is as follows:-Can and Cannot are not words with only
one meaning, but have many meanings. On the one hand they are used sometimes in
respect of deficiency of strength, sometimes in respect of time, and sometimes
relatively to a certain object; as for instance, A Child cannot be an Athlete,
or, A Puppy cannot see, or fight with so and so. Perhaps some day the child
will be an athlete, the puppy will see, will fight with that other, though it
may still be unable to fight with Any other. Or again, they may be used of that
which is Generally true. For instance,-A city that is set on a hill cannot be
hid; while yet it might possibly be hidden by another higher hill being in a
line with it. Or in another sense they are used of a thing which is not
reasonable; as, Can the Children of the Bridechamber fast while the Bridegroom
is with them; whether He be considered as visible in bodily form (for the time
of His sojourning among us was not one of mourning, but of gladness), or, as
the Word. For why should they keep a bodily fast who are cleansed by the Word?
Or, again, they are used of that which is contrary to the will; as in, He could
do no mighty works there because of their unbelief, -i.e. of those who should
receive them. For since in order to healing there is need of both faith in the
patient and power in the Healer, when one of the two failed the other was
impossible. But probably this sense also is to be referred to the head of the
unreasonable. For healing is not reasonable in the case of those who would
afterwards be injured by unbelief. The sentence The world cannot hate you,
comes under the same head, as does also How can ye, being evil, speak good things?
For in what sense is either impossible, except that it is contrary to the will?
There is a somewhat similar meaning in the expressions which imply that a thing
impossible by nature is possible to God if He so wills; as that a man cannot be
born a second time, or that a needle will not let a camel through it. For what
could prevent either of these things happening, if God so willed?
XI. And besides all this, there is
the absolutely impossible and inadmissible, as that which we are now examining.
For as we assert that it is impossible for God to be evil, or not to exist-for
this would be indicative of weakness in God rather than of strength-or for the
non-existent to exist, or for two and two to make both four and ten, so it is
impossible and inconceivable that the Son should do anything that the Father
does not. For all things that the Father has are the Son's; and on the other
hand, all that belongs to the Son is the Father's. Nothing then is peculiar,
because all things are in common. For Their Being itself is common and equal,
even though the Son receive it from the Father. It is in respect of this that
it is said I live by the Father; not as though His Life and Being were kept
together by the Father, but because He has His Being from Him beyond all time,
and beyond all cause. But how does He see the Father doing, and do likewise? Is
it like those who copy pictures and letters, because they cannot attain the
truth unless by looking at the original, and being led by the hand by it? But
how shall Wisdom stand in need of a teacher, or be incapable of acting unless
taught? And in what sense does the Father "Do" in the present or in
the past? Did He make another world before this one, or is He going to make a
world to come? And did the Son look at that and make this? Or will He look at
the other, and make one like it? According to this argument there must be Four
worlds, two made by the Father, and two by the Son. What an absurdity! He
cleanses lepers, and delivers men from evil spirits, and diseases, and quickens
the dead, and walks upon the sea, and does all His other works; but in what
case, or when did the Father do these acts before Him? Is it not clear that the
Father impressed the ideas of these same actions, and the Word brings them to
pass, yet not in slavish or unskilful fashion, but with full knowledge and in a
masterly way, or, to speak more properly, like the Father? For in this sense I
understand the words that whatsoever is done by the Father, these things does
the Son likewise; not, that is, because of the likeness of the things done, but
in respect of the Authority. This might well also be the meaning of the passage
which says that the Father works hitherto and the Son also; and not only so but
it refers also to the government and preservation of the things which He has
made; as is shown by the passage which says that He makes His Angels Spirits,
and that the earth is founded upon its steadfastness (though once for all these
things were fixed and made) and that the thunder is made firm and the wind
created. Of all these things the Word was given once, but the Action is
continuous even now.
XII. Let them quote in the seventh
place that The Son came down from Heaven, not to do His own Will, but the Will
of Him That sent Him. Well, if this had not been said by Himself Who came down,
we should say that the phrase was modelled as issuing from the Human Nature,
not from Him who is conceived of in His character as the Saviour, for His Human
Will cannot be opposed to God, seeing it is altogether taken into God; but
conceived of simply as in our nature, inasmuch as the human will does not
completely follow the Divine, but for the most part struggles against and
resists it. For we understand in the same way the words, Father, if it be
possible, let this cup pass from Me; Nevertheless let not what I will but Your
Will prevail. For it is not likely that He did not know whether it was possible
or not, or that He would oppose will to will. But since, as this is the
language of Him Who assumed our Nature (for He it was Who came down), and not
of the Nature which He assumed, we must meet the objection in this way, that
the passage does not mean that the Son has a special will of His own, besides
that of the Father, but that He has not; so that the meaning would be, "not
to do Mine own Will, for there is none of Mine apart from, but that which is
common to, Me and You; for as We have one Godhead, so We have one Will."
For many such expressions are used in relation to this Community, and are
expressed not positively but negatively; as, e.g., God gives not the Spirit by
measure, for as a matter of fact He does not give the Spirit to the Son, nor
does He measure It, for God is not measured by God; or again, Not my
transgression nor my sin. The words are not used because He has these things,
but because He has them not. And again, Not for our righteousness which we have
done, for we have not done any. And this meaning is evident also in the clauses
which follow. For what, says He, is the Will of My Father? That everyone that believes
on the Son should be saved, and obtain the final Resurrection. Now is this the
Will of the Father, but not of the Son? Or does He preach the Gospel, and
receive men's faith against His will? Who could believe that? Moreover, that
passage, too, which says that the Word which is heard is not the Son's but the
Father's has the same force. For I cannot see how that which is common to two
can be said to belong to one alone, however much I consider it, and I do not
think any one else can. If then you hold this opinion concerning the Will, you
will be right and reverent in your opinion, as I think, and as every
right-minded person thinks.
XIII. The eighth passage is, That
they may know You, the only true God, and Jesus Christ Whom You have sent; and
There is none good save one, that is, God. The solution of this appears to me
very easy. For if you attribute this only to the Father, where will you place
the Very Truth? For if you conceive in this manner of the meaning of To the
only wise God, or Who only has Immortality, Dwelling in the light which no man
can approach unto, or of to the king of the Ages, immortal, invisible, and only
wise God, then the Son has vanished under sentence of death, or of darkness, or
at any rate condemned to be neither wise nor king, nor invisible, nor God at
all, which sums up all these points. And how will you prevent His Goodness,
which especially belongs to God alone, from perishing with the rest? I,
however, think that the passage That they may know You the only true God, was said
to overthrow those gods which are falsely so called, for He would not have
added and Jesus Christ Whom You have sent, if The Only True God were contrasted
with Him, and the sentence did not proceed upon the basis of a common Godhead.
The "None is Good" meets the tempting Lawyer, who was testifying to
His Goodness viewed as Man. For perfect goodness, He says, is God's alone, even
if a man is called perfectly good. As for instance, A good man out of the good
treasure of his heart brings forth good things. And, I will give the kingdom to
one who is good above You. ... Words of God, speaking to Saul about David. Or
again, Do good, O Lord, unto the good ... and all other like expressions
concerning those of us who are praised, upon whom it is a kind of effluence
from the Supreme Good, and has come to them in a secondary degree. It will be
best of all if we can persuade you of this. But if not, what will you say to
the suggestion on the other side, that on your hypothesis the Son has been
called the only God. In what passage? Why, in this:-This is your God; no other
shall be accounted of in comparison with Him, and a little further on, after
this did He show Himself upon earth, and conversed with men. This addition
proves clearly that the words are not used of the Father, but of the Son; for
it was He Who in bodily form companied with us, and was in this lower world.
Now, if we should determine to take these words as said in contrast with the
Father, and not with the imaginary gods, we lose the Father by the very terms
which we were pressing against the Son. And what could be more disastrous than
such a victory?
XIV. Ninthly, they allege, seeing
He ever lives to make intercession for us. O, how beautiful and mystical and
kind. For to intercede does not imply to seek for vengeance, as is most men's
way (for in that there would be something of humiliation), but it is to plead
for us by reason of His Mediatorship, just as the Spirit also is said to make
intercession for us. For there is One God, and One Mediator between God and
Man, the Man Christ Jesus. For He still pleads even now as Man for my
salvation; for He continues to wear the Body which He assumed, until He make me
God by the power of His Incarnation; although He is no longer known after the
flesh -I mean, the passions of the flesh, the same, except sin, as ours. Thus
too, we have an Advocate, Jesus Christ, not indeed prostrating Himself for us
before the Father, and falling down before Him in slavish fashion ... Away with
a suspicion so truly slavish and unworthy of the Spirit! For neither is it
seemly for the Father to require this, nor for the Son to submit to it; nor is
it just to think it of God. But by what He suffered as Man, He as the Word and
the Counsellor persuades Him to be patient. I think this is the meaning of His
Advocacy.
XV. Their tenth objection is the
ignorance, and the statement that Of the last day and hour knows no man, not
even the Son Himself, but the Father. And yet how can Wisdom be ignorant of
anything-that is, Wisdom Who made the worlds, Who perfects them, Who remodels
them, Who is the Limit of all things that were made, Who knows the things of
God as the spirit of a man knows the things that are in him? For what can be
more perfect than this knowledge? How then can you say that all things before
that hour He knows accurately, and all things that are to happen about the time
of the end, but of the hour itself He is ignorant? For such a thing would be
like a riddle; as if one were to say that he knew accurately all that was in
front of the wall, but did not know the wall itself; or that, knowing the end
of the day, he did not know the beginning of the night-where knowledge of the
one necessarily brings in the other. Thus everyone must see that He knows as
God, and knows not as Man;-if one may separate the visible from that which is
discerned by thought alone. For the absolute and unconditioned use of the Name
"The Son" in this passage, without the addition of whose Son, gives
us this thought, that we are to understand the ignorance in the most reverent
sense, by attributing it to the Manhood, and not to the Godhead.
XVI. If then this argument is
sufficient, let us stop here, and not enquire further. But if not, our second
argument is as follows:-Just as we do in all other instances, so let us refer
His knowledge of the greatest events, in honour of the Father, to The Cause.
And I think that anyone, even if he did not read it in the way that one of our
own Students did, would soon perceive that not even the Son knows the day or
hour otherwise than as the Father does. For what do we conclude from this? That
since the Father knows, therefore also does the Son, as it is evident that this
cannot be known or comprehended by any but the First Nature. There remains for
us to interpret the passage about His receiving commandment, and having kept
His Commandments, and done always those things that please Him; and further
concerning His being made perfect, and His exaltation, and His learning
obedience by the things which He suffered; and also His High Priesthood, and
His Oblation, and His Betrayal, and His prayer to Him That was able to save Him
from death, and His Agony and Bloody Sweat and Prayer, and such like things; if
it were not evident to every one that such words are concerned, not with That Nature
Which is unchangeable and above all capacity of suffering, but with the
passible Humanity. This, then, is the argument concerning these objections, so
far as to be a sort of foundation and memorandum for the use of those who are
better able to conduct the enquiry to a more complete working out. It may,
however, be worth while, and will be consistent with what has been already
said, instead of passing over without remark the actual Titles of the Son
(there are many of them, and they are concerned with many of His Attributes),
to set before you the meaning of each of them, and to point out the mystical
meaning of the names.
XVII. We will begin thus. The
Deity cannot be expressed in words. And this is proved to us, not only by
argument, but by the wisest and most ancient of the Hebrews, so far as they
have given us reason for conjecture. For they appropriated certain characters
to the honour of the Deity, and would not even allow the name of anything
inferior to God to be written with the same letters as that of God, because to
their minds it was improper that the Deity should even to that extent admit any
of His creatures to a share with Himself. How then could they have admitted
that the invisible and separate Nature can be explained by divisible words? For
neither has any one yet breathed the whole air, nor has any mind entirely
comprehended, or speech exhaustively contained the Being of God. But we sketch
Him by His Attributes, and so obtain a certain faint and feeble and partial
idea concerning Him, and our best Theologian is he who has, not indeed
discovered the whole, for our present chain does not allow of our seeing the
whole, but conceived of Him to a greater extent than another, and gathered in
himself more of the Likeness or adumbration of the Truth, or whatever we may
call it.
XVIII. As far then as we can
reach, He Who Is, and God, are the special names of His Essence; and of these
especially He Who Is, not only because when He spoke to Moses in the mount, and
Moses asked what His Name was, this was what He called Himself, bidding him say
to the people "I Am has sent me," but also because we find that this
Name is the more strictly appropriate. For the Name Qeo/j (God), even if, as
those who are skilful in these matters say, it were derived from Qe/ein (to
run) or from Ai!qein (to blaze), from continual motion, and because He consumes
evil conditions of things (from which fact He is also called A Consuming Fire),
would still be one of the Relative Names, and not an Absolute one; as again is
the case with Lord, which also is called a name of God. I am the Lord Your God,
He says, that is My name; and, The Lord is His name. But we are enquiring into
a Nature Whose Being is absolute and not into Being bound up with something
else. But Being is in its proper sense peculiar to God, and belongs to Him
entirely, and is not limited or cut short by any Before or After, for indeed in
him there is no past or future.
XIX. Of the other titles, some are
evidently names of His Authority, others of His Government of the world, and of
this viewed under a twofold aspect, the one before the other in the
Incarnation. For instance the Almighty, the King of Glory, or of The Ages, or
of The Powers, or of The Beloved, or of Kings. Or again the Lord of Sabaoth,
that is of Hosts, or of Powers, or of Lords; these are clearly titles belonging
to His Authority. But the God either of Salvation or of Vengeance, or of Peace,
or of Righteousness; or of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and of all the spiritual
Israel that sees God,-these belong to His Government. For since we are governed
by these three things, the fear of punishment, the hope of salvation and of
glory besides, and the practice of the virtues by which these are attained, the
Name of the God of Vengeance governs fear, and that of the God of Salvation our
hope, and that of the God of Virtues our practice; that whoever attains to any
of these may, as carrying God in himself, press on yet more unto perfection,
and to that affinity which arises out of virtues. Now these are Names common to
the Godhead, but the Proper Name of the Unoriginate is Father, and that of the
unoriginately Begotten is Son, and that of the unbegottenly Proceeding or going
forth is The Holy Ghost. Let us proceed then to the Names of the Son, which
were our starting point in this part of our argument.
XX. In my opinion He is called Son
because He is identical with the Father in Essence; and not only for this
reason, but also because He is Of Him. And He is called Only-Begotten, not
because He is the only Son and of the Father alone, and only a Son; but also
because the manner of His Sonship is peculiar to Himself and not shared by
bodies. And He is called the Word, because He is related to the Father as Word
to Mind; not only on account of His passionless Generation, but also because of
the Union, and of His declaratory function. Perhaps too this relation might be
compared to that between the Definition and the Thing defined since this also
is called Lo/goj. For, it says, he that has mental perception of the Son (for
this is the meaning of Hath Seen) has also perceived the Father; and the Son is
a concise demonstration and easy setting forth of the Father's Nature. For
every thing that is begotten is a silent word of him that begot it. And if any
one should say that this Name was given Him because
He exists in all things that are,
he would not be wrong. For what is there that consists but by the word? He is
also called Wisdom, as the Knowledge of things divine and human. For how is it
possible that He Who made all things should be ignorant of the reasons of what
He has made? And Power, as the Sustainer of all created things, and the
Furnisher to them of power to keep themselves together. And Truth, as being in
nature One and not many (for truth is one and falsehood is manifold), and as
the pure Seal of the Father and His most unerring Impress. And the Image as of
one substance with Him, and because He is of the Father, and not the Father of
Him. For this is of the Nature of an Image, to be the reproduction of its Archetype,
and of that whose name it bears; only that there is more here. For in ordinary
language an image is a motionless representation of that which has motion; but
in this case it is the living reproduction of the Living One, and is more
exactly like than was Seth to Adam, or any son to his father. For such is the
nature of simple Existences, that it is not correct to say of them that they
are Like in one particular and Unlike in another; but they are a complete
resemblance, and should rather be called Identical than Like. Moreover he is
called Light as being the Brightness of souls cleansed by word and life. For if
ignorance and sin be darkness, knowledge and a godly life will be Light. ...
And He is called Life, because He is Light, and is the constituting and
creating Power of every reasonable soul. For in Him we live and move and have
our being, according to the double power of that Breathing into us; for we were
all inspired by Him with breath, and as many of us as were capable of it, and
in so far as we open the mouth of our mind, with God the Holy Ghost. He is
Righteousness, because He distributes according to that which we deserve, and
is a righteous Arbiter both for those who are under the Law and for those who
are under Grace, for soul and body, so that the former should rule, and the
latter obey, and the higher have supremacy over the lower; that the worse may
not rise in rebellion against the better. He is Sanctification, as being
Purity, that the Pure may be contained by Purity. And Redemption, because He
sets us free, who were held captive under sin, giving Himself a Ransom for us,
the Sacrifice to make expiation for the world. And Resurrection, because He
raises up from hence, and brings to life again us, who were slain by sin.
XXI. These names however are still
common to Him Who is above us, and to Him Who came for our sake. But others are
peculiarly our own, and belong to that nature which He assumed. So He is called
Man, not only that through His Body He may be apprehended by embodied creatures,
whereas otherwise this would be impossible because of His incomprehensible
nature; but also that by Himself He may sanctify humanity, and be as it were a
leaven to the whole lump; and by uniting to Himself that which was condemned
may release it from all condemnation, becoming for all men all things that we
are, except sin;-body, soul, mind and all through which death reaches-and thus
He became Man, who is the combination of all these; God in visible form,
because He retained that which is perceived by mind alone. He is Son of Man,
both on account of Adam, and of the Virgin from Whom He came; from the one as a
forefather, from the other as His Mother, both in accordance with the law of
generation, and apart from it. He is Christ, because of His Godhead. For this
is the Anointing of His Manhood, and does not, as is the case with all other
Anointed Ones, sanctify by its action, but by the Presence in His Fulness of
the Anointing One; the effect of which is that That which anoints is called
Man, and makes that which is anointed God. He is The Way, because He leads us
through Himself; The Door, as letting us in; the Shepherd, as making us dwell
in a place of green pastures, and bringing us up by waters of rest, and leading
us there, and protecting us from wild beasts, converting the erring, bringing
back that which was lost, binding up that which was broken, guarding the
strong, and bringing them together in the Fold beyond, with words of pastoral
knowledge. The Sheep, as the Victim: The Lamb, as being perfect: the
Highpriest, as the Offerer; Melchisedec, as without Mother in that Nature which
is above us, and without Fathen in ours; and without genealogy above (for who,
it says, shall declare His generation?) and moreover, as King of Salem, which
means Peace, and King of Righteousness, and as receiving tithes from
Patriarchs, when they prevail over powers of evil. They are the titles of the
Son. Walk through them, those that are lofty in a godlike manner; those that
belong to the body in a manner suitable to them; or rather, altogether in a
godlike manner, that you may become a god, ascending from below, for His sake
Who came down from on high for ours. In all and above all keep to this, and you
shall never err, either in the loftier or the lowlier names; Jesus Christ is
the Same yesterday and today in the Incarnation, and in the Spirit for ever and
ever. Amen.
The Fifth Theological Oration. On
the Holy Spirit.
I. Such then is the account of the
Son, and in this manner He has escaped those who would stone Him, passing
through the midst of them. For the Word is not stoned, but casts stones when He
pleases; and uses a sling against wild beasts—that is, words—approaching the
Mount in an unholy way. But, they go on, what have you to say about the Holy
Ghost? From whence are you bringing in upon us this strange God, of Whom
Scripture is silent? And even they who keep within bounds as to the Son speak
thus. And just as we find in the case of roads and rivers, that they split off
from one another and join again, so it happens also in this case, through the
superabundance of impiety, that people who differ in all other respects have
here some points of agreement, so that you never can tell for certain either
where they are of one mind, or where they are in conflict.
II. Now the subject of the Holy
Spirit presents a special difficulty, not only because when these men have
become weary in their disputations concerning the Son, they struggle with
greater heat against the Spirit (for it seems to be absolutely necessary for
them to have some object on which to give expression to their impiety, or life
would appear to them no longer worth living), but further because we ourselves
also, being worn out by the multitude of their questions, are in something of
the same condition with men who have lost their appetite; who having taken a
dislike to some particular kind of food, shrink from all food; so we in like
manner have an aversion from all discussions. Yet may the Spirit grant it to
us, and then the discourse will proceed, and God will be glorified. Well then,
we will leave to others who have worked upon this subject for us as well as for
themselves, as we have worked upon it for them, the task of examining carefully
and distinguishing in how many senses the word Spirit or the word Holy is used
and understood in Holy Scripture, with the evidence suitable to such an
enquiry; and of showing how besides these the combination of the two words—I
mean, Holy Spirit—is used in a peculiar sense; but we will apply ourselves to
the remainder of the subject.
III. They then who are angry with
us on the ground that we are bringing in a strange or interpolated God,
viz.:—the Holy Ghost, and who fight so very hard for the letter, should know
that they are afraid where no fear is; and I would have them clearly understand
that their love for the letter is but a cloak for their impiety, as shall be
shown later on, when we refute their objections to the utmost of our power. But
we have so much confidence in the Deity of the Spirit Whom we adore, that we will
begin our teaching concerning His Godhead by fitting to Him the Names which
belong to the Trinity, even though some persons may think us too bold. The
Father was the True Light which lightens every man coming into the world. The
Son was the True Light which lightens every man coming into the world. The
Other Comforter was the True Light which lightens every man coming into the
world. Was and Was and Was, but Was One Thing. Light thrice repeated; but One
Light and One God. This was what David represented to himself long before when
he said, In Your Light shall we see Light. And now we have both seen and
proclaim concisely and simply the doctrine of God the Trinity, comprehending
out of Light (the Father), Light (the Son), in Light (the Holy Ghost). He that
rejects it, let him reject it; and he that does iniquity, let him do iniquity;
we proclaim that which we have understood. We will get us up into a high
mountain, and will shout, if we be not heard, below; we will exalt the Spirit;
we will not be afraid; or if we are afraid, it shall be of keeping silence, not
of proclaiming.
IV. If ever there was a time when
the Father was not, then there was a time when the Son was not. If ever there
was a time when the Son was not, then there was a time when the Spirit was not.
If the One was from the beginning, then the Three were so too. If you throw
down the One, I am bold to assert that you do not set up the other Two. For
what profit is there in an imperfect Godhead? Or rather, what Godhead can there
be if It is not perfect? And how can that be perfect which lacks something of
perfection? And surely there is something lacking if it has not the Holy, and
how would it have this if it were without the Spirit? For either holiness is
something different from Him, and if so let some one tell me what it is
conceived to be; or if it is the same, how is it not from the beginning, as if
it were better for God to be at one time imperfect and apart from the Spirit?
If He is not from the beginning, He is in the same rank with myself, even
though a little before me; for we are both parted from Godhead by time. If He
is in the same rank with myself, how can He make me God, or join me with
Godhead?
V. Or rather, let me reason with
you about Him from a somewhat earlier point, for we have already discussed the
Trinity. The Sadducees altogether denied the existence of the Holy Spirit, just
as they did that of Angels and the Resurrection; rejecting, I know not upon
what ground, the important testimonies concerning Him in the Old Testament. And
of the Greeks those who are more inclined to speak of God, and who approach
nearest to us, have formed some conception of Him, as it seems to me, though
they have differed as to His Name, and have addressed Him as the Mind of the
World, or the External Mind, and the like. But of the wise men amongst
ourselves, some have conceived of him as an Activity, some as a Creature, some
as God; and some have been uncertain which to call Him, out of reverence for
Scripture, they say, as though it did not make the matter clear either way. And
therefore they neither worship Him nor treat Him with dishonour, but take up a
neutral position, or rather a very miserable one, with respect to Him. And of
those who consider Him to be God, some are orthodox in mind only, while others
venture to be so with the lips also. And I have heard of some who are even more
clever, and measure Deity; and these agree with us that there are Three
Conceptions; but they have separated these from one another so completely as to
make one of them infinite both in essence and power, and the second in power
but not in essence, and the third circumscribed in both; thus imitating in
another way those who call them the Creator, the Co-operator, and the Minister,
and consider that the same order and dignity which belongs to these names is
also a sequence in the facts.
VI. But we cannot enter into any
discussion with those who do not even believe in His existence, nor with the
Greek babblers (for we would not be enriched in our argument with the oil of
sinners). With the others, however, we will argue thus. The Holy Ghost must
certainly be conceived of either as in the category of the Self-existent, or as
in that of the things which are contemplated in another; of which classes those
who are skilled in such matters call the one Substance and the other Accident.
Now if He were an Accident, He would be an Activity of God, for what else, or
of whom else, could He be, for surely this is what most avoids composition? And
if He is an Activity, He will be effected, but will not effect and will cease
to exist as soon as He has been effected, for this is the nature of an
Activity. How is it then that He acts and says such and such things, and
defines, and is grieved, and is angered, and has all the qualities which belong
clearly to one that moves, and not to movement? But if He is a Substance and
not an attribute of Substance, He will be conceived of either as a Creature of
God, or as God. For anything between these two, whether having nothing in
common with either, or a compound of both, not even they who invented the
goat-stag could imagine. Now, if He is a creature, how do we believe in Him,
how are we made perfect in Him? For it is not the same thing to believe IN a
thing and to believe About it. The one belongs to Deity, the other to—any
thing. But if He is God, then He is neither a creature, nor a thing made, nor a
fellow servant, nor any of these lowly appellations.
VII. There—the word is with you.
Let the slings be let go; let the syllogism be woven. Either He is altogether
Unbegotten, or else He is Begotten. If He is Unbegotten, there are two
Unoriginates. If he is Begotten, you must make a further subdivision. He is so
either by the Father or by the Son. And if by the Father, there are two Sons,
and they are Brothers. And you may make them twins if you like, or the one
older and the other younger, since you are so very fond of the bodily
conceptions. But if by the Son, then such a one will say, we get a glimpse of a
Grandson God, than which nothing could be more absurd. For my part however, if
I saw the necessity of the distinction, I should have acknowledged the facts
without fear of the names. For it does not follow that because the Son is the
Son in some higher relation (inasmuch as we could not in any other way than
this point out that He is of God and Consubstantial), it would also be
necessary to think that all the names of this lower world and of our kindred
should be transferred to the Godhead. Or may be you would consider our God to
be a male, according to the same arguments, because he is called God and
Father, and that Deity is feminine, from the gender of the word, and Spirit
neuter, because It has nothing to do with generation; But if you would be silly
enough to say, with the old myths and fables, that God begot the Son by a
marriage with His own Will, we should be introduced to the Hermaphrodite god of
Marcion and Valentinus who imagined these newfangled Æons.
VIII. But since we do not admit
your first division, which declares that there is no mean between Begotten and
Unbegotten, at once, along with your magnificent division, away go your
Brothers and your Grandsons, as when the first link of an intricate chain is
broken they are broken with it, and disappear from your system of divinity.
For, tell me, what position will you assign to that which Proceeds, which has
started up between the two terms of your division, and is introduced by a
better Theologian than you, our Saviour Himself? Or perhaps you have taken that
word out of your Gospels for the sake of your Third Testament, The Holy Ghost,
which proceeds from the Father; Who, inasmuch as He proceeds from That Source,
is no Creature; and inasmuch as He is not Begotten is no Son; and inasmuch as
He is between the Unbegotten and the Begotten is God. And thus escaping the
toils of your syllogisms, He has manifested himself as God, stronger than your
divisions. What then is Procession? Do you tell me what is the Unbegottenness
of the Father, and I will explain to you the physiology of the Generation of the
Son and the Procession of the Spirit, and we shall both of us be
frenzy-stricken for prying into the mystery of God. And who are we to do these
things, we who cannot even see what lies at our feet, or number the sand of the
sea, or the drops of rain, or the days of Eternity, much less enter into the
Depths of God, and supply an account of that Nature which is so unspeakable and
transcending all words?
IX. What then, say they, is there
lacking to the Spirit which prevents His being a Son, for if there were not
something lacking He would be a Son? We assert that there is nothing
lacking—for God has no deficiency. But the difference of manifestation, if I
may so express myself, or rather of their mutual relations one to another, has
caused the difference of their Names. For indeed it is not some deficiency in
the Son which prevents His being Father (for Sonship is not a deficiency), and
yet He is not Father. According to this line of argument there must be some
deficiency in the Father, in respect of His not being Son. For the Father is
not Son, and yet this is not due to either deficiency or subjection of Essence;
but the very fact of being Unbegotten or Begotten, or Proceeding has given the
name of Father to the First, of the Son to the Second, and of the Third, Him of
Whom we are speaking, of the Holy Ghost that the distinction of the Three
Persons may be preserved in the one nature and dignity of the Godhead. For
neither is the Son Father, for the Father is One, but He is what the Father is;
nor is the Spirit Son because He is of God, for the Only-begotten is One, but
He is what the Son is. The Three are One in Godhead, and the One Three in
properties; so that neither is the Unity a Sabellian one, nor does the Trinity
countenance the present evil distinction.
X. What then? Is the Spirit God?
Most certainly. Well then, is He Consubstantial? Yes, if He is God. Grant me,
says my opponent, that there spring from the same Source One who is a Son, and
One who is not a Son, and these of One Substance with the Source, and I admit a
God and a God. Nay, if you will grant me that there is another God and another
nature of God I will give you the same Trinity with the same name and facts.
But since God is One and the Supreme Nature is One, how can I present to you
the Likeness? Or will you seek it again in lower regions and in your own
surroundings? It is very shameful, and not only shameful, but very foolish, to
take from things below a guess at things above, and from a fluctuating nature
at the things that are unchanging, and as Isaiah says, to seek the Living among
the dead. But yet I will try, for your sake, to give you some assistance for
your argument, even from that source. I think I will pass over other points,
though I might bring forward many from animal history, some generally known,
others only known to a few, of what nature has contrived with wonderful art in
connection with the generation of animals. For not only are likes said to beget
likes, and things diverse to beget things diverse, but also likes to be begotten
by things diverse, and things diverse by likes. And if we may believe the
story, there is yet another mode of generation, when an animal is self-consumed
and self-begotten. There are also creatures which depart in some sort from
their true natures, and undergo change and transformation from one creature
into another, by a magnificence of nature. And indeed sometimes in the same
species part may be generated and part not; and yet all of one substance; which
is more like our present subject. I will just mention one fact of our own
nature which every one knows, and then I will pass on to another part of the
subject.
XI. What was Adam? A creature of
God. What then was Eve? A fragment of the creature. And what was Seth? The
begotten of both. Does it then seem to you that Creature and Fragment and
Begotten are the same thing? Of course it does not. But were not these persons
consubstantial? Of course they were. Well then, here it is an acknowledged fact
that different persons may have the same substance. I say this, not that I
would attribute creation or fraction or any property of body to the Godhead
(let none of your contenders for a word be down upon me again), but that I may
contemplate in these, as on a stage, things which are objects of thought alone.
For it is not possible to trace out any image exactly to the whole extent of
the truth. But, they say, what is the meaning of all this? For is not the one
an offspring, and the other a something else of the One? Did not both Eve and
Seth come from the one Adam? And were they both begotten by him? No; but the
one was a fragment of him, and the other was begotten by him. And yet the two
were one and the same thing; both were human beings; no one will deny that.
Will you then give up your contention against the Spirit, that He must be
either altogether begotten, or else cannot be consubstantial, or be God; and
admit from human examples the possibility of our position? I think it will be
well for you, unless you are determined to be very quarrelsome, and to fight against
what is proved to demonstration.
XII. But, he says, who in ancient
or modern times ever worshipped the Spirit? Who ever prayed to Him? Where is it
written that we ought to worship Him, or to pray to Him, and whence have you derived
this tenet of yours? We will give the more perfect reason hereafter, when we
discuss the question of the unwritten; for the present it will suffice to say
that it is the Spirit in Whom we worship, and in Whom we pray. For Scripture
says, God is a Spirit, and they that worship Him must worship Him in Spirit and
in truth. And again,—We know not what we should pray for as we ought; but the
Spirit Itself makes intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered;
and I will pray with the Spirit and I will pray with the understanding also;
—that is, in the mind and in the Spirit. Therefore to adore or to pray to the
Spirit seems to me to be simply Himself offering prayer or adoration to
Himself. And what godly or learned man would disapprove of this, because in
fact the adoration of One is the adoration of the Three, because of the
equality of honour and Deity between the Three? So I will not be frightened by
the argument that all things are said to have been made by the Son; as if the
Holy Spirit also were one of these things. For it says all things that were
made, and not simply all things. For the Father was not, nor were any of the
things that were not made. Prove that He was made, and then give Him to the
Son, and number Him among the creatures; but until you can prove this you will
gain nothing for your impiety from this comprehensive phrase. For if He was
made, it was certainly through Christ; I myself would not deny that. But if He
was not made, how can He be either one of the All, or through Christ? Cease
then to dishonour the Father in your opposition to the Only-begotten (for it is
no real honour, by presenting to Him a creature to rob Him of what is more
valuable, a Son), and to dishonour the Son in your opposition to the Spirit.
For He is not the Maker of a Fellow servant, but He is glorified with One of
co-equal honour. Rank no part of the Trinity with yourself, lest thou fall away
from the Trinity; cut not off from Either the One and equally august Nature;
because if you overthrow any of the Three you will have overthrown the whole.
Better to take a meagre view of the Unity than to venture on a complete
impiety.
XIII. Our argument has now come to
its principal point; and I am grieved that a problem that was long dead, and
that had given way to faith, is now stirred up afresh; yet it is necessary to
stand against these praters, and not to let judgment go by default, when we
have the Word on our side, and are pleading the cause of the Spirit. If, say
they, there is God and God and God, how is it that there are not Three Gods, or
how is it that what is glorified is not a plurality of Principles? Who is it
who say this? Those who have reached a more complete ungodliness, or even those
who have taken the secondary part; I mean who are moderate in a sense in
respect of the Son. For my argument is partly against both in common, partly
against these latter in particular. What I have to say in answer to these is as
follows:—What right have you who worship the Son, even though you have revolted
from the Spirit, to call us Tritheists? Are not you Ditheists? For if you deny
also the worship of the Only Begotten, you have clearly ranged yourself among
our adversaries. And why should we deal kindly with you as not quite dead? But
if you do worship Him, and are so far in the way of salvation, we will ask you
what reasons you have to give for your ditheism, if you are charged with it? If
there is in you a word of wisdom answer, and open to us also a way to an
answer. For the very same reason with which you will repel a charge of Ditheism
will prove sufficient for us against one of Tritheism. And thus we shall win
the day by making use of you our accusers as our Advocates, than which nothing
can be more generous.
XIV. What is our quarrel and
dispute with both? To us there is One God, for the Godhead is One, and all that
proceeds from Him is referred to One, though we believe in Three Persons. For
one is not more and another less God; nor is One before and another after; nor
are They divided in will or parted in power; nor can you find here any of the
qualities of divisible things; but the Godhead is, to speak concisely,
undivided in separate Persons; and there is one mingling of Light, as it were
of three suns joined to each other. When then we look at the Godhead, or the
First Cause, or the Monarchia, that which we conceive is One; but when we look
at the Persons in Whom the Godhead dwells, and at Those Who timelessly and with
equal glory have their Being from the First Cause—there are Three Whom we
worship.
XV. What of that, they will say
perhaps; do not the Greeks also believe in one Godhead, as their more advanced
philosophers declare? And with us Humanity is one, namely the entire race; but
yet they have many gods, not One, just as there are many men. But in this case
the common nature has a unity which is only conceivable in thought; and the
individuals are parted from one another very far indeed, both by time and by
dispositions and by power. For we are not only compound beings, but also
contrasted beings, both with one another and with ourselves; nor do we remain
entirely the same for a single day, to say nothing of a whole lifetime, but
both in body and in soul are in a perpetual state of flow and change. And
perhaps the same may be said of the Angels and the whole of that superior
nature which is second to the Trinity alone; although they are simple in some
measure and more fixed in good, owing to their nearness to the highest Good.
XVI. Nor do those whom the Greeks
worship as gods, and (to use their own expression) dæmons, need us in any
respect for their accusers, but are convicted upon the testimony of their own
theologians, some as subject to passion, some as given to faction, and full of
innumerable evils and changes, and in a state of opposition, not only to one
another, but even to their first causes, whom they call Oceani and Tethyes and
Phanetes, and by several other names; and last of all a certain god who hated
his children through his lust of rule, and swallowed up all the rest through
his greediness that he might become the father of all men and gods whom he
miserably devoured, and then vomited forth again. And if these are but myths
and fables, as they say in order to escape the shamefulness of the story, what
will they say in reference to the dictum that all things are divided into three
parts, and that each god presides over a different part of the Universe, having
a distinct province as well as a distinct rank? But our faith is not like this,
nor is this the portion of Jacob, says my Theologian. But each of these Persons
possesses Unity, not less with that which is United to it than with itself, by
reason of the identity of Essence and Power. And this is the account of the
Unity, so far as we have apprehended it. If then this account is the true one,
let us thank God for the glimpse He has granted us; if it is not let us seek
for a better.
XVII. As for the arguments with
which you would overthrow the Union which we support, I know not whether we
should say you are jesting or in earnest. For what is this argument? Things of
one essence, you say, are counted together, and by this counted together, you
mean that they are collected into one number. But things which are not of one
essence are not thus counted…so that you cannot avoid speaking of three gods,
according to this account, while we do not run any risk at all of it, inasmuch
as we assert that they are not consubstantial. And so by a single word you have
freed yourselves from trouble, and have gained a pernicious victory, for in
fact you have done something like what men do when they hang themselves for
fear of death. For to save yourselves trouble in your championship of the
Monarchia you have denied the Godhead, and abandoned the question to your
opponents. But for my part, even if labor should be necessary, I will not
abandon the Object of my adoration. And yet on this point I cannot see where
the difficulty is.
XVIII. You say, Things of one
essence are counted together, but those which are not consubstantial are
reckoned one by one. Where did you get this from? From what teachers of dogma
or mythology? Do you not know that every number expresses the quantity of what
is included under it, and not the nature of the things? But I am so old
fashioned, or perhaps I should say so unlearned, as to use the word Three of
that number of things, even if they are of a different nature, and to use One
and One and One in a different way of so many units, even if they are united in
essence, looking not so much at the things themselves as at the quantity of the
things in respect of which the enumeration is made. But since you hold so very
close to the letter (although you are contending against the letter), pray take
your demonstrations from this source. There are in the Book of Proverbs three
things which go well, a lion, a goat, and a cock; and to these is added a
fourth;—a King making a speech before the people, to pass over the other sets
of four which are there counted up, although things of various natures. And I
find in Moses two Cherubim counted singly. But now, in your technology, could
either the former things be called three, when they differ so greatly in their
nature, or the latter be treated as units when they are so closely connected
and of one nature? For if I were to speak of God and Mammon, as two masters,
reckoned under one head, when they are so very different from each other, I
should probably be still more laughed at for such a connumeration.
XIX. But to my mind, he says,
those things are said to be connumerated and of the same essence of which the
names also correspond, as Three Men, or Three gods, but not Three this and
that. What does this concession amount to? It is suitable to one laying down
the law as to names, not to one who is asserting the truth. For I also will
assert that Peter and James and John are not three or consubstantial, so long
as I cannot say Three Peters, or Three Jameses, or Three Johns; for what you
have reserved for common names we demand also for proper names, in accordance
with your arrangement; or else you will be unfair in not conceding to others
what you assume for yourself. What about John then, when in his Catholic
Epistle he says that there are Three that bear witness, the Spirit and the
Water and the Blood? Do you think he is talking nonsense? First, because he has
ventured to reckon under one numeral things which are not consubstantial,
though you say this ought to be done only in the case of things which are
consubstantial. For who would assert that these are consubstantial? Secondly,
because he has not been consistent in the way he has happened upon his terms;
for after using Three in the masculine gender he adds three words which are
neuter, contrary to the definitions and laws which you and your grammarians
have laid down. For what is the difference between putting a masculine Three
first, and then adding One and One and One in the neuter, or after a masculine
One and One and One to use the Three not in the masculine but in the neuter,
which you yourself disclaim in the case of Deity? What have you to say about the
Crab, which may mean either an animal, or an instrument, or a constellation?
And what about the Dog, now terrestrial, now aquatic, now celestial? Do you not
see that three crabs or dogs are spoken of? Why of course it is so. Well then,
are they therefore of one substance? None but a fool would say that. So you see
how completely your argument from connumeration has broken down, and is refuted
by all these instances. For if things that are of one substance are not always
counted under one numeral, and things not of one substance are thus counted,
and the pronunciation of the name once for all is used in both cases, what
advantage do you gain towards your doctrine?
XX. I will look also at this
further point, which is not without its bearing on the subject. One and One
added together make Two; and Two resolved again becomes One and One, as is
perfectly evident. If, however, elements which are added together must, as your
theory requires, be consubstantial, and those which are separate be
heterogeneous, then it will follow that the same things must be both
consubstantial and heterogeneous. No: I laugh at your Counting Before and your
Counting After, of which you are so proud, as if the facts themselves depended
upon the order of their names. If this were so, according to the same law,
since the same things are in consequence of the equality of their nature
counted in Holy Scripture, sometimes in an earlier, sometimes in a later place,
what prevents them from being at once more honourable and less honourable than
themselves? I say the same of the names God and Lord, and of the prepositions
Of Whom, and By Whom, and In Whom, by which you describe the Deity according to
the rules of art for us, attributing the first to the Father, the second to the
Son, and the third to the Holy Ghost. For what would you have done, if each of
these expressions were constantly allotted to Each Person, when, the fact being
that they are used of all the Persons, as is evident to those who have studied
the question, you even so make them the ground of such inequality both of
nature and dignity. This is sufficient for all who are not altogether wanting
in sense. But since it is a matter of difficulty for you after you have once
made an assault upon the Spirit, to check your rush, and not rather like a
furious boar to push your quarrel to the bitter end, and to thrust yourself
upon the knife until you have received the whole wound in your own breast; let
us go on to see what further argument remains to you.
XXI. Over and over again you turn
upon us the silence of Scripture. But that it is not a strange doctrine, nor an
afterthought, but acknowledged and plainly set forth both by the ancients and
many of our own day, is already demonstrated by many persons who have treated
of this subject, and who have handled the Holy Scriptures, not with
indifference or as a mere pastime, but have gone beneath the letter and looked
into the inner meaning, and have been deemed worthy to see the hidden beauty,
and have been irradiated by the light of knowledge. We, however in our turn
will briefly prove it as far as may be, in order not to seem to be over-curious
or improperly ambitious, building on another's foundation. But since the fact,
that Scripture does not very clearly or very often write Him God in express
words (as it does first the Father and afterwards the Son), becomes to you an
occasion of blasphemy and of this excessive wordiness and impiety, we will
release you from this inconvenience by a short discussion of things and names,
and especially of their use in Holy Scripture.
XXII. Some things have no
existence, but are spoken of; others which do exist are not spoken of; some
neither exist nor are spoken of, and some both exist and are spoken of. Do you
ask me for proof of this? I am ready to give it. According to Scripture God
sleeps and is awake, is angry, walks, has the Cherubim for His Throne. And yet
when did He become liable to passion, and have you ever heard that God has a
body? This then is, though not really fact, a figure of speech. For we have
given names according to our own comprehension from our own attributes to those
of God. His remaining silent apart from us, and as it were not caring for us,
for reasons known to Himself, is what we call His sleeping; for our own sleep
is such a state of inactivity. And again, His sudden turning to do us good is
the waking up; for waking is the dissolution of sleep, as visitation is of
turning away. And when He punishes, we say He is angry; for so it is with us,
punishment is the result of anger. And His working, now here now there, we call
walking; for walking is change from one place to another. His resting among the
Holy Hosts, and as it were loving to dwell among them, is His sitting and being
enthroned; this, too, from ourselves, for God rests nowhere as He does upon the
Saints. His swiftness of moving is called flying, and His watchful care is
called His Face, and his giving and bestowing is His hand; and, in a word,
every other of the powers or activities of God has depicted for us some other corporeal
one.
XXIII. Again, where do you get
your Unbegotten and Unoriginate, those two citadels of your position, or we our
Immortal? Show me these in so many words, or we shall either set them aside, or
erase them as not contained in Scripture; and you are slain by your own
principle, the names you rely on being overthrown, and therewith the wall of
refuge in which you trusted. Is it not evident that they are due to passages
which imply them, though the words do not actually occur? What are these
passages?—I am the first, and I am the last, and before Me there was no God,
neither shall there be after Me. For all that depends on that Am makes for my
side, for it has neither beginning nor ending. When you accept this, that
nothing is before Him, and that He has not an older Cause, you have implicitly
given Him the titles Unbegotten and Unoriginate. And to say that He has no end
of Being is to call Him Immortal and Indestructible. The first pairs, then,
that I referred to are accounted for thus. But what are the things which
neither exist in fact nor are said? That God is evil; that a sphere is square;
that the past is present; that man is not a compound being. Have you ever known
a man of such stupidity as to venture either to think or to assert any such
thing? It remains to show what are the things which exist, both in fact and in
language. God, Man, Angel, Judgment, Vanity (viz., such arguments as yours),
and the subversion of faith and emptying of the mystery.
XXIV. Since, then, there is so
much difference in terms and things, why are you such a slave to the letter,
and a partisan of the Jewish wisdom, and a follower of syllables at the expense
of facts? But if, when you said twice five or twice seven, I concluded from
your words that you meant Ten or Fourteen; or if, when you spoke of a rational
and mortal animal, that you meant Man, should you think me to be talking
nonsense? Surely not, because I should be merely repeating your own meaning;
for words do not belong more to the speaker of them than to him who called them
forth. As, then, in this case, I should have been looking, not so much at the
terms used, as at the thoughts they were meant to convey; so neither, if I
found something else either not at all or not clearly expressed in the Words of
Scripture to be included in the meaning, should I avoid giving it utterance,
out of fear of your sophistical trick about terms. In this way, then, we shall
hold our own against the semi-orthodox—among whom I may not count you. For
since you deny the Titles of the Son, which are so many and so clear, it is
quite evident that even if you learnt a great many more and clearer ones you
would not be moved to reverence. But now I will take up the argument again a
little way further back, and show you, though you are so clever, the reason for
this entire system of secresy.
XXV. There have been in the whole
period of the duration of the world two conspicuous changes of men's lives,
which are also called two Testaments, or, on account of the wide fame of the
matter, two Earthquakes; the one from idols to the Law, the other from the Law
to the Gospel. And we are taught in the Gospel of a third earthquake, namely,
from this Earth to that which cannot be shaken or moved. Now the two Testaments
are alike in this respect, that the change was not made on a sudden, nor at the
first movement of the endeavour. Why not (for this is a point on which we must
have information)? That no violence might be done to us, but that we might be
moved by persuasion. For nothing that is involuntary is durable; like streams
or trees which are kept back by force. But that which is voluntary is more
durable and safe. The former is due to one who uses force, the latter is ours;
the one is due to the gentleness of God, the other to a tyrannical authority.
Wherefore God did not think it behooved Him to benefit the unwilling, but to do
good to the willing. And therefore like a Tutor or Physician He partly removes
and partly condones ancestral habits, conceding some little of what tended to
pleasure, just as medical men do with their patients, that their medicine may
be taken, being artfully blended with what is nice. For it is no very easy
matter to change from those habits which custom and use have made honourable.
For instance, the first cut off the idol, but left the sacrifices; the second,
while it destroyed the sacrifices did not forbid circumcision. Then, when once
men had submitted to the curtailment, they also yielded that which had been
conceded to them; in the first instance the sacrifices, in the second circumcision;
and became instead of Gentiles, Jews, and instead of Jews, Christians, being
beguiled into the Gospel by gradual changes. Paul is a proof of this; for
having at one time administered circumcision, and submitted to legal
purification, he advanced till he could say, and I, brethren, if I yet preach
circumcision, why do I yet suffer persecution? His former conduct belonged to
the temporary dispensation, his latter to maturity.
XXVI. To this I may compare the
case of Theology except that it proceeds the reverse way. For in the case by
which I have illustrated it the change is made by successive subtractions;
whereas here perfection is reached by additions. For the matter stands thus.
The Old Testament proclaimed the Father openly, and the Son more obscurely. The
New manifested the Son, and suggested the Deity of the Spirit. Now the Spirit
Himself dwells among us, and supplies us with a clearer demonstration of
Himself. For it was not safe, when the Godhead of the Father was not yet
acknowledged, plainly to proclaim the Son; nor when that of the Son was not yet
received to burden us further (if I may use so bold an expression) with the
Holy Ghost; lest perhaps people might, like men loaded with food beyond their
strength, and presenting eyes as yet too weak to bear it to the sun's light,
risk the loss even of that which was within the reach of their powers; but that
by gradual additions, and, as David says, Goings up, and advances and progress
from glory to glory, the Light of the Trinity might shine upon the more
illuminated. For this reason it was, I think, that He gradually came to dwell
in the Disciples, measuring Himself out to them according to their capacity to
receive Him, at the beginning of the Gospel, after the Passion, after the
Ascension, making perfect their powers, being breathed upon them, and appearing
in fiery tongues. And indeed it is little by little that He is declared by
Jesus, as you will learn for yourself if you will read more carefully. I will
ask the Father, He says, and He will send you another Comforter, even the
spirit of Truth. This He said that He might not seem to be a rival God, or to
make His discourses to them by another authority. Again, He shall send Him, but
it is in My Name. He leaves out the I will ask, but He keeps the Shall send,
then again, I will send,—His own dignity. Then shall come, the authority of the
Spirit.
XXVII. You see lights breaking
upon us, gradually; and the order of Theology, which it is better for us to
keep, neither proclaiming things too suddenly, nor yet keeping them hidden to
the end. For the former course would be unscientific, the latter atheistical;
and the former would be calculated to startle outsiders, the latter to alienate
our own people. I will add another point to what I have said; one which may
readily have come into the mind of some others, but which I think a fruit of my
own thought. Our Saviour had some things which, He said, could not be borne at
that time by His disciples (though they were filled with many teachings),
perhaps for the reasons I have mentioned; and therefore they were hidden. And
again He said that all things should be taught us by the Spirit when He should
come to dwell amongst us. Of these things one, I take it, was the Deity of the
Spirit Himself, made clear later on when such knowledge should be seasonable
and capable of being received after our Saviour's restoration, when it would no
longer be received with incredulity because of its marvellous character. For
what greater thing than this did either He promise, or the Spirit teach. If
indeed anything is to be considered great and worthy of the Majesty of God,
which was either promised or taught.
XXVIII. This, then, is my position
with regard to these things, and I hope it may be always my position, and that
of whosoever is dear to me; to worship God the Father, God the Son, and God the
Holy Ghost, Three Persons, One Godhead, undivided in honour and glory and
substance and kingdom, as one of our own inspired philosophers not long
departed showed. Let him not see the rising of the Morning Star, as Scripture
says, nor the glory of its brightness, who is otherwise minded, or who follows
the temper of the times, at one time being of one mind and of another at
another time, and thinking unsoundly in the highest matters. For if He is not
to be worshipped, how can He deify me by Baptism? But if He is to be
worshipped, surely He is an Object of adoration, and if an Object of adoration
He must be God; the one is linked to the other, a truly golden and saving
chain. And indeed from the Spirit comes our New Birth, and from the New Birth
our new creation, and from the new creation our deeper knowledge of the dignity
of Him from Whom it is derived.
XXIX. This, then, is what may be
said by one who admits the silence of Scripture. But now the swarm of
testimonies shall burst upon you from which the Deity of the Holy Ghost shall
be shown to all who are not excessively stupid, or else altogether enemies to
the Spirit, to be most clearly recognized in Scripture. Look at these facts:—Christ
is born; the Spirit is His Forerunner. He is baptized; the Spirit bears
witness. He is tempted; the Spirit leads Him up. He works miracles; the Spirit
accompanies them. He ascends; the Spirit takes His place. What great things are
there in the idea of God which are not in His power? What titles which belong
to God are not applied to Him, except only Unbegotten and Begotten? For it was
needful that the distinctive properties of the Father and the Son should remain
peculiar to Them, lest there should be confusion in the Godhead Which brings
all things, even disorder itself, into due arrangement and good order. Indeed I
tremble when I think of the abundance of the titles, and how many Names they
outrage who fall foul of the Spirit. He is called the Spirit of God, the Spirit
of Christ, the Mind of Christ, the Spirit of The Lord, and Himself The Lord,
the Spirit of Adoption, of Truth, of Liberty; the Spirit of Wisdom, of
Understanding, of Counsel, of Might, of Knowledge, of Godliness, of the Fear of
God. For He is the Maker of all these, filling all with His Essence, containing
all things, filling the world in His Essence, yet incapable of being
comprehended in His power by the world; good, upright, princely, by nature not
by adoption; sanctifying, not sanctified; measuring, not measured; shared, not
sharing; filling, not filled; containing, not contained; inherited, glorified,
reckoned with the Father and the Son; held out as a threat; the Finger of God;
fire like God; to manifest, as I take it, His consubstantiality); the
Creator-Spirit, Who by Baptism and by Resurrection creates anew; the Spirit
That knows all things, That teaches, That blows where and to what extent He
lists; That guides, talks, sends forth, separates, is angry or tempted; That
reveals, illumines, quickens, or rather is the very Light and Life; That makes
Temples; That deifies; That perfects so as even to anticipate Baptism, yet
after Baptism to be sought as a separate gift; That does all things that God
does; divided into fiery tongues; dividing gifts; making Apostles, Prophets,
Evangelists, Pastors, and Teachers; understanding manifold, clear, piercing,
undefiled, unhindered, which is the same thing as Most wise and varied in His
actions; and making all things clear and plain; and of independent power,
unchangeable, Almighty, all-seeing, penetrating all spirits that are
intelligent, pure, most subtle (the Angel Hosts I think); and also all
prophetic spirits and apostolic in the same manner and not in the same places;
for they lived in different places; thus showing that He is uncircumscript.
XXX. They who say and teach these
things, and moreover call Him another Paraclete in the sense of another God,
who know that blasphemy against Him alone cannot be forgiven, and who branded
with such fearful infamy Ananias and Sapphira for having lied to the Holy
Ghost, what do you think of these men? Do they proclaim the Spirit God, or
something else? Now really, you must be extraordinarily dull and far from the
Spirit if you have any doubt about this and need some one to teach you. So
important then, and so vivid are His Names. Why is it necessary to lay before
you the testimony contained in the verywords? And whatever in this case also is
said in more lowly fashion, as that He is Given, Sent, Divided; that He is the
Gift, the Bounty, the Inspiration, the Promise, the Intercession for us, and,
not to go into any further detail, any other expressions of the sort, is to be
referred to the First Cause, that it may be shown from Whom He is, and that men
may not in heathen fashion admit Three Principles. For it is equally impious to
confuse the Persons with the Sabellians, or to divide the Natures with the
Arians.
XXXI. I have very carefully
considered this matter in my own mind, and have looked at it in every point of
view, in order to find some illustration of this most important subject, but I
have been unable to discover any thing on earth with which to compare the
nature of the Godhead. For even if I did happen upon some tiny likeness it
escaped me for the most part, and left me down below with my example. I picture
to myself an eye, a fountain, a river, as others have done before, to see if
the first might be analogous to the Father, the second to the Son, and the
third to the Holy Ghost. For in these there is no distinction in time, nor are
they torn away from their connection with each other, though they seem to be
parted by three personalities. But I was afraid in the first place that I
should present a flow in the Godhead, incapable of standing still; and secondly
that by this figure a numerical unity would be introduced. For the eye and the
spring and the river are numerically one, though in different forms.
XXXII. Again I thought of the sun
and a ray and light. But here again there was a fear lest people should get an
idea of composition in the Uncompounded Nature, such as there is in the Sun and
the things that are in the Sun. And in the second place lest we should give
Essence to the Father but deny Personality to the Others, and make Them only
Powers of God, existing in Him and not Personal. For neither the ray nor the
light is another sun, but they are only effulgences from the Sun, and qualities
of His essence. And lest we should thus, as far as the illustration goes,
attribute both Being and Not-being to God, which is even more monstrous. I have
also heard that some one has suggested an illustration of the following kind. A
ray of the Sun flashing upon a wall and trembling with the movement of the
moisture which the beam has taken up in mid air, and then, being checked by the
hard body, has set up a strange quivering. For it quivers with many rapid
movements, and is not one rather than it is many, nor yet many rather than one;
because by the swiftness of its union and separating it escapes before the eye
can see it.
XXXIII. But it is not possible for
me to make use of even this; because it is very evident what gives the ray its
motion; but there is nothing prior to God which could set Him in motion; for He
is Himself the Cause of all things, and He has no prior Cause. And secondly
because in this case also there is a suggestion of such things as composition,
diffusion, and an unsettled and unstable nature…none of which we can suppose in
the Godhead. In a word, there is nothing which presents a standing point to my
mind in these illustrations from which to consider the Object which I am trying
to represent to myself, unless one may indulgently accept one point of the
image while rejecting the rest. Finally, then, it seems best to me to let the
images and the shadows go, as being deceitful and very far short of the truth;
and clinging myself to the more reverent conception, and resting upon few
words, using the guidance of the Holy Ghost, keeping to the end as my genuine
comrade and companion the enlightenment which I have received from Him, and
passing through this world to persuade all others also to the best of my power
to worship Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, the One Godhead and Power. To Him
belongs all glory and honour and might for ever and ever. Amen.