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by St. John Damascene
Table of Contents
| Book 1 |
BOOK I CHAPTER I
That the Deity is incomprehensible, and that we ought not to pry into
and meddle with tire things which have not been delivered to us by
the holy Prophets, and Apostles, and Evangelists. BOOK
I CHAPTER II
Concerning things utterable and things unutterable, and things knowable
and thinks unknowable. BOOK I CHAPTER III
Proof that there is a God. BOOK I CHAPTER IV
Concerning the nature of Deity: that it is incomprehensible.
BOOK I CHAPTER V
Proof that God is one and not many. BOOK I CHAPTER
VI
Concerning the Word and the San of God: a reasoned proof. BOOK
I CHAPTER VII
Concerning the Holy Spirit, a reasoned proof. BOOK
I CHAPTER VIII
Concerning the Holy Trinity. BOOK I CHAPTER IX
Concerning what is affirmed about God. BOOK I CHAPTER
X
Concerning divine union and separation. BOOK I
CHAPTER XI
Concerning what is affirmed about God as though He had body.
BOOK I CHAPTER XII
Concerning the Same. BOOK I CHAPTER XIII
Concerning the place of God: and that the Deity alone is uncircumscribed.
BOOK I CHAPTER XIV
The properties of the divine nature. |
| Book 2 |
BOOK II CHAPTER I
Concerning aeon or age.
BOOK II CHAPTER II
Concerning the creation.
BOOK II CHAPTER IlI
Concerning angels.
BOOK II CHAPTER IV
Concerning the devil and demons.
BOOK II CHAPTER V
Concerning the visible creation.
BOOK II CHAPTER VI
Concerning the Heaven.
BOOK II CHAPTER VII
Concerning light, fire, the luminaries, sun, moon and stars.
BOOK II CHAPTER VIII
Concerning air and winds.
BOOK II CHAPTER IX
Concerning the waters.
BOOK II CHAPTER X
Concerning earth and its products.
BOOK II CHAPTER XI
Concerning Paradise.
BOOK II CHAPTER XII
Concerning Man.
BOOK II CHAPTER XIII
Concerning Pleasures.
BOOK II CHAPTER XIV
Concerning Pain.
BOOK II CHAPTER XV
Concerning Fear.
BOOK II CHAPTER XVI
Concerning Anger.
BOOK II CHAPTER XVII
Concerning Imagination.
BOOK II CHAPTER XVIII
Concerning Sensation.
BOOK II CHAPTER XIX
Concerning Thought.
BOOK II CHAPTER XX
Concerning Memory.
BOOK II CHAPTER XXI
Concerning Conception and Articulation.
BOOK II CHAPTER XXII
Concerning Passion and Energy.
BOOK II CHAPTER XXIII
Concerning Energy.
BOOK II CHAPTER XXIV
Concerning what is Voluntary anal what is Involuntary.
BOOK II CHAPTER XXV
Concerning what is in our own power, that is, concerning Free-will(9).
BOOK II CHAPTER XXVI
Of events(5), some are in our hands, others are not.
BOOK II CHAPTER XXVII
Concerning the reason of our endowment with Free-will.
BOOK II CHAPTER XXVIII
Concerning what is not in our hands.
BOOK II CHAPTER XXIX
Concerning Providence.
BOOK II CHAPTER XXX
Concerning Prescience and Predestination. |
| Book 3 |
BOOK III CHAPTER I
Concerning the Divine OEconomy and God's care over us, and concerning
our salvation.
BOOK III CHAPTER II
Concerning the manner in which the Word(9) was conceived, and concerning
His divine incarnation.
BOOK III CHAPTER III
Concerning Christ's two natures, in apposition to those who hold that
He has only one(2).
BOOK III CHAPTER IV
Concerning the manner of the Mutual Communication(8).
BOOK III CHAPTER V
Concerning the number of the Natures.
BOOK III CHAPTER VI
That in one of its subsistences the divine nature is united in its
entirety to the human nature, in its entirety and not only part to
part.
BOOK III CHAPTER VII
Concerning the one compound subsistence of God the Word.
BOOK III CHAPTER VIII
In reply to those who ask whether(7) the natures of the Lord are brought
under a continuous or a discontinuous quantity(8).
BOOK III CHAPTER IX
In reply to the question whether there is Nature that has no Subsistence.
BOOK III CHAPTER X
Concerning the Trisagium ("the Thrice Holy").
BOOK III CHAPTER XI
Concerning the Nature as viewed in Species and in Individual, and
concerning the difference between Union and Incarnation: and how this
is to be understood, "The one Nature of God the Word Incarnate.
BOOK III CHAPTER XII
That the holy Virgin is the Mother of God: an argument directed against
the Nestorians.
BOOK III CHAPTER XIII
Concerning the properties of the two Natures.
BOOK III CHAPTER XIV
Concerning the volitions and free-will of our Lord Jesus Christ.
BOOK III CHAPTER XV
Concerning the energies in our Lord Jesus Christ.
BOOK III CHAPTER XVI
In reply to those who say(7) "If man has two natures and two
energies, Christ must be held to have three natures and as many energies.
BOOK III CHAPTER XVII
Concerning the deification of the nature of our Lord's flesh and of
Hi's will.
BOOK III CHAPTER XVIII
Further concerning volitions and free-wills: minds, too, and knowledges
and wisdoms.
BOOK III CHAPTER XIX
Concerning the theandric energy.
BOOK III CHAPTER XX
Concerning the natural and innocent passions(2a).
BOOK III CHAPTER XXI
Concerning ignorance and servitude.
BOOK III CHAPTER XXII
Concerning His growth.
BOOK III CHAPTER XXIII
Concerning His Fear.
BOOK III CHAPTER XXIV
Concerning our Lord's Praying.
BOOK III CHAPTER XXV
Concerning the Appropriation.
BOOK III CHAPTER XXVI
Concerning the Passion of our Lord's body, and the Impassibility of
His divinity.
BOOK III CHAPTER XXVII
Concerning the fact that the divinity of the Word remained inseparable
from the soul and the body, even at our Lord's death, and that His
subsistence continued one.
BOOK III CHAPTER XXVIII
Concerning Corruption and Destruction.
BOOK III CHAPTER XXIX
Concerning the Descent to Hades. |
| Book 4 |
BOOK IV CHAPTER I
Concerning what followed the Resurrection.
BOOK IV CHAPTER II
Concerning the sitting at the right hand of the Father.
BOOK IV CHAPTER III
In reply to those who say(5) "If Christ has two natures, either
ye do service to the creature in worshipping created nature, or ye
say that there is one nature to be worshipped, and another not to
be worshipped.
BOOK IV CHAPTER IV
Why it was the Son of God, and not the Father or the Spirit, that
became man: and what having became man He achieved.
BOOK IV CHAPTER V
In reply to those who ask if Christ's subsistence is create or uncreate.
BOOK IV CHAPTER VI
Concerning the question, when Christ was called.
BOOK IV CHAPTER VII
In answer to those who enquire whether the holy Mother of God bore
two natures, and whether two natures hung upon the Crass.
BOOK IV CHAPTER VIII
How the Only-begotten Son of God is called first-born.
BOOK IV CHAPTER IX
Concerning Faith and Baptism.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XII
Concerning Worship towards the East.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XIII
Concerning the holy and immaculate Mysteries of the Lord.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XIV
Concerning our Lord's genealogy and concerning the holy Mother of
God(4).
BOOK IV CHAPTER XV
Concerning the honour due to the Saints and their remains.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XVI
Concerning Images(8).
BOOK IV CHAPTER XVII
Concerning Scripture(8).
BOOK IV CHAPTER XVIII
Regarding the things said concerning Christ.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XIX
That God(7) is not the cause of evils.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XX
That there are not two Kingdoms.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XXI
The purpose(2) for which God in His foreknowledge created persons
who would sin and not repent.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XXII
Concerning the law of God and the law of sin.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XXIII
Against the Jews on the question Sabbath.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XXIV
Concerning Virginity.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XXV
Concerning the Circumcision.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XXVI
It should be known that the Antichrist is hound to come.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XXVII
Concerning the Resurrection. |
Book 1
BOOK I CHAPTER I
That the Deity is incomprehensible, and that we ought not to pry into
and meddle with tire things which have not been delivered to us by the
holy Prophets, and Apostles, and Evangelists.
No one hath seen God at any time; the Only-begotten Son, which is in the
bosom of the Father, He hath declared Him(1). The Deity, therefore, is
ineffable and incomprehensible. For no one knoweth the Father, save the
Son, nor the Son, save the Father(2). And the Holy Spirit, too, so knows
the things of God as the spirit of the man knows the things that are in
him(3). Moreover, after the first and blessed nature no one, not of men
only, but even of supramundane powers, and the Cherubim, I say, and Seraphim
themselves, has ever known God, save he to whom He revealed Himself.
God, however, did not leave us in absolute ignorance. For the knowledge
of God's existence has been implanted by Him in all by nature. This creation,
too, and its maintenance, and its government, proclaim the majesty of
the Divine nature(4). Moreover, by the Law and the Prophets(5) in former
times and afterwards by His Only-begotten Son, our Lord and God and Saviour
Jesus Christ, He disclosed to us the knowledge of Himself as that was
possible for us. All things, therefore, that have been delivered to us
by Law and Prophets and Apostles and Evangelists we receive, and know,
and honour(6), seeking for nothing beyond these. For God, being good,
is the cause of all good, subject neither to envy nor to any passion(7).
For envy is far removed from the Divine nature, which is both passionless
and only good. As knowing all things, therefore, and providing for what
is profitable for each, He revealed that which it was to our profit to
know; but what we were unable(8) to bear He kept secret. With these things
let us be satisfied, and let us abide by them, not removing everlasting
boundaries, nor overpassing the divine tradition(9).
BOOK I CHAPTER II
Concerning things utterable and things unutterable, and things knowable
and thinks unknowable.
It is necessary, therefore, that one who wishes to speak or to hear of
God should understand clearly that alike in the doctrine of Deity and
in that of the Incarnation(1), neither are all things unutterable nor
all utterable; neither all unknowable nor all knowable(2). But the knowable
belongs to one order, and the utterable to another; just as it is one
thing to speak and another thing to know. Many of the things relating
to God, therefore, that are dimly understood cannot be put into fitting
terms, but on things above us we cannot do else than express ourselves
according to our limited capacity; as, for instance, when we speak of
God we use the terms sleep, and wrath, and regardlessness, hands, too,
and feet, land such like expressions.
We, therefore, both know and confess that God is without beginning, without
end, eternal and everlasting, uncreate, unchangeable, invariable, simple,
uncompound, incorporeal, invisible, impalpable, uncircumscribed, infinite,
incognisable, indefinable, incomprehensible, good, just, maker of all
things created, almighty, all-ruling, all-surveying, of all overseer,
sovereign, judge; and that God is One, that is to say, one essences; and
that He is known(4), and has His being in three subsistences, in Father,
I say, and Son and Holy Spirit; and that the Father and the Son and the
Holy Spirit are one in all respects, except in that of not being begotten,
that of being begotten, and that of procession; and that the Only-begotten
Son and Word of God and God, in His bowels of mercy, for our salvation,
by the good pleasure of God and the co-operation of the Holy Spirit, being
conceived without seed, was born uncorruptedly of the Holy Virgin and
Mother of God, Mary, by the Holy Spirit, and became of her perfect Man;
and that the Same is at once perfect God and perfect Man, of two natures,
Godhead and Manhood, and in two natures possessing intelligence, will
and energy, and freedom, and, in a word, perfect according to the measure
and proportion proper to each, at once to the divinity, I say, and to
the humanity, yet to one composite persons(5); and that He suffered hunger
and thirst and weariness, and was crucified, and for three days submitted
to the experience of death and burial, and ascended to heaven, from which
also He came to us, and shall come again. And the Holy Scripture is witness
to this and the whole choir of the Saints.
But neither do we know, nor can we tell, what the essence(6) of God is,
or how it is in all, or how the Only-begotten Son and God, having emptied
Himself, became Man of virgin blood, made by another law contrary to nature,
or how He walked with dry feet upon the waters(7). It is not within our
capacity, therefore, to say anything about God or even to think of Him,
beyond the things which have been divinely revealed to us, whether by
word or by manifestation, by the divine oracles at once of the Old Testament
and of the New(8).
BOOK I CHAPTER III
Proof that there is a God.
That there is a God, then, is no matter of doubt to those who receive
the Holy Scriptures, the Old Testament, I mean, and the New; nor indeed
to most of the Greeks. For, as we said(9), the knowledge of the existence
of God is implanted in us by nature. But since the wickedness of the Evil
One has prevailed so mightily against man's nature as even to drive some
into denying the existence of God, that most foolish and woe-fulest pit
of destruction (whose folly David, revealer of the Divine meaning, exposed
when he said(9), The fool said in his heart, There is no God), so the
disciples of the Lord and His Apostles, made wise by the Holy Spirit and
working wonders in His power and grace, took them captive in the net of
miracles and drew them up out of the depths of ignorance(1) to the light
of the knowledge of God. In like manner also their successors in grace
and worth, both pastors and teachers, having received the enlightening
grace of the Spirit, were wont, alike by the power of miracles and the
word of grace, to enlighten those walking in darkness and to bring back
the wanderers into the way. But as for us who(2) are not recipients either
of the gift of miracles or the gift of teaching (for indeed we have rendered
ourselves unworthy of these by our passion for pleasure), come, let us
in connection with this theme discuss a few of those things which have
been delivered to us on this subject by the expounders of grace, calling
on the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
All things, that exist, are either created or uncreated. If, then, things
are created, it follows that they are also wholly mutable. For things,
whose existence originated in change, must also be subject to change,
whether it be that they perish or that they become other than they are
by act of wills. But if things are uncreated they must in all consistency
be also wholly immutable. For things which are opposed in the nature of
their existence must also be opposed in the mode of their existence, that
is to say, must have opposite properties: who, then, will refuse to grant
that all existing things, not only such as come within the province of
the senses, but even the very angels, are subject to change and transformation
and movement of various kinds? For the things appertaining to the rational
world, I mean angels and spirits and demons, are subject to changes of
will, whether it is a progression or a retrogression in goodness, whether
a struggle or a surrender; while the others suffer changes of generation
and destruction, of increase and decrease, of quality and of movement
in space. Things then that are mutable are also wholly created. But things
that are created must be the work of some maker, and the maker cannot
have been created. For if he had been created, he also must surely have
been created by some one, and so on till we arrive at something uncreated.
The Creator, then, being uncreated, is also wholly immutable. And what
could this be other than Deity?
And even the very continuity of the creation, and its preservation and
government, teach us that there does exist a Deity, who supports and maintains
and preserves and ever provides for this universe. For how(4) could opposite
natures, such as fire and water, air and earth, have combined with each
other so as to form one complete world, and continue to abide in indissoluble
union, were there not some omnipotent power which bound them together
and always is preserving them from dissolution?
What is it that gave order to things of heaven and things of earth, and
all those things that move in the air and in the water, or rather to what
was in existence before these, viz., to heaven and earth and air and the
elements of fire and water? What(5) was it that mingled and distributed
these? What was it that set these in motion and keeps them in their unceasing
and unhindered course(6)? Was it not the Artificer of these things, and
He Who hath implanted in everything the law whereby the universe is carried
on and directed? Who then is the Artificer of these things? Is it not
He Who created them and brought them into existence. For we shall not
attribute such a power to the spontaneous(7). For, supposing their coming
into existence was due to the spontaneous; what of the power that put
all in orders(8) ? And let us grant this, if you please. What of that
which has preserved and kept them in harmony with the original laws of
their existence(9) ? Clearly it is something quite distinct from the spontaneous(1).And
what could this be other than Deity(2) ?
BOOK I CHAPTER IV
Concerning the nature of Deity: that it is incomprehensible.
It is plain, then, that there is a God. But what He is in His essence
anti nature is absolutely incomprehensible and unknowable. For it is evident
that He is incorporeal(3). For how could that possess body which is infinite,
and boundless, and formless, and intangible and invisible, in short, simple
and not compound? How could that be immutable(4) which is circumscribed
and subject to passion? And how could that be passionless which is composed
of elements and is resolved again into them? For combination(5) is the
beginning of conflict, and conflict of separation, and separation of dissolution,
and dissolution is altogether foreign to God(6).
Again, how will it also be maintained(7) that God permeates and fills
the universe? as the Scriptures say, Do not I fill heaven and earth, saith
the Lords(8)? For it is an impossibility(9) that one body should permeate
other bodies without dividing and being divided, and without being enveloped
and contrasted, in the same way as all fluids mix and commingle.
But if some say that the body is immaterial, in thee same way as the fifth
body(1) of which the Greek philosophers speak (which body is an impossibility),
it will be wholly subject to motion like the heaven. For that is what
they mean by the fifth body. Who then is it that moves it? For everything
that is moved is moved by another thing. And who again is it that moves
that? and so on to infinity till we at length arrive at something motionless.
For the first mover is motionless, and that is the Deity. And must not
that which is moved be circumscribed in space? The Deity, then, alone
is motionless, moving the universe by immobility(2). So then it must be
assumed that the Deity is incorporeal.
But even this gives no true idea of His essence, to say that He is unbegotten,
and without beginning, changeless and imperishable, and possessed of such
other qualities as we are wont to ascribe to God and His environments.
For these do not indicate what He is, but what He is not(4). But when
we would explain what the essence of anything is, we must not speak only
negatively. In the case of God, however, it is impossible to explain what
He is in His essence, and it befits us the rather to hold discourse about
His absolute separation from all things(5). For He does not belong to
the class of existing things: not that He has no existence(6), but that
He is above all existing things, nay even above existence itself. For
if all forms of knowledge have to do with what exists, assuredly that
which is above knowledge must certainly be also above essence(7): and,
conversely, that which is above essence(7) will also be above knowledge.
God then is infinite and incomprehensible and all that is comprehensible
about Him is His infinity and incomprehensibility. But all that we can
affirm concerning God does not shew forth God's nature, but only the qualities
of His nature(8). For when you speak of Him as good, and just, and wise,
and so forth, you do not tell God's nature but only the qualities of His
nature(9). Further there are some affirmations which we make concerning
God which have the force of absolute negation: for example, when we use
the term darkness, in reference to God, we do not mean darkness itself,
but that He is not light but above light: and when we speak of Him as
light, we mean that He is not darkness.
BOOK I CHAPTER V
Proof that God is one and not many.
We have, then, adequately demonstrated that there is a God, and that His
essence is incomprehensible. But that God is one(1) and not many is no
matter of doubt to those who believe in the Holy Scriptures. For the Lord
says in the beginning of the Law: I am the Lord thy God, which have brought
thee out of the land of Egypt. Thou shall have no other Gods before Me(2).
And again He says, Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God is one Lord(3). And
in Isaiah the prophet we read For I am the first God and I am the last
and beside Me there is no God. Before Me there was not any God, nor after
Me will there be any God, and beside Me there is no God(4). And the Lord,
too, in the holy gospels speaketh these words to His Father, And this
is life eternal, that they may know Thee the only true God(5). But with
those that do not believe in the Holy Scriptures we will reason thus.
The Deity is perfect(6), and without blemish in goodness, and wisdom,
and power, without beginning, without end, everlasting, uncircumscribed(7),
and in short, perfect in all things. Should we say, then, that there are
many Gods, we must recognise difference among the many. For if there is
no difference among them, they are one rather than many. But if there
is difference among them, what becomes of the perfectness? For that which
comes short of perfection, whether it be in goodness, or power, or wisdom,
or time, or place, could not be God. But it is this very identity in all
respects that shews that the Deity is one and not many(8).
Again, if there are many Gods, how can one maintain that God is uncircumscribed?
For where the one would be, the other could not be(9).
Further, how could the world be governed by many and saved from dissolution
and destruction, while strife is seen to rage between the rulers? For
difference introduces strife(1). And if any one should say that each rules
over a part, what of that which established this order and gave to each
his particular realm? For this would the rather be God. Therefore, God
is one, perfect, uncircumscribed, maker of the universe, and its preserver
and governor, exceeding and preceding all perfection.
Moreover, it is a natural necessity that duality should originate in unity(2).
BOOK I CHAPTER VI
Concerning the Word and the San of God: a reasoned proof.
So then this one and only God is not Wordless(3). And possessing the Word,
He will have it not as without a subsistence, nor as having had a beginning,
nor as destined to cease to be. For there never was a time when God was
not Word: but He ever possesses His own Word, begotten of Himself, not,
as our word is, without a subsistence and dissolving into air, but having
a subsistence in Him and life and perfection, not proceeding out of Himself
but ever existing within Himself(4). For where could it be, if it were
to go outside Him? For inasmuch as our nature is perishable and easily
dissolved, our word is also without subsistence. But since God is everlasting
and perfect, He will have His Word subsistent in Him, and everlasting
trod living, and possessed of all the attributes of the Begetter. For
just as our word, proceeding as it floes out of the mind, is neither wholly
identical with the mind nor utterly diverse from it (for so far as it
proceeds out of the mind it is different from it, while so far as it reveals
the mind, it is no longer absolutely diverse from the mind, but being
one in nature with the mind, it is yet to the subject diverse from it),
so in the same manner also the Word of Gods in its independent subsistence
is differentiated(6) froth Him from Whom it derives its subsistence(7):
but inasmuch as it displays in itself the same attributes as are seen
in God, it is of the same nature as God. For just as absolute perfection
is contemplated in the Father, so also is it contemplated in the Word
that is begotten of Him.
BOOK I CHAPTER VII
Concerning the Holy Spirit, a reasoned proof.
Moreover the Word must also possess Spirit(8). For in fact even our word
is not destitute of spirit; but in our case the spirit is something different
from our essence(9). For there is an attraction and movement of the air
which is drawn in and poured forth that the body may be sustained. And
it is this which in the moment of utterance becomes the articulate word,
revealing in itself the force of the word(1).(2) But in the case of the
divine nature, which is simple and uncompound, we must confess in all
piety that there exists a Spirit of God, for the Word is not more imperfect
than our own word. Now we cannot, in piety, consider the Spirit to be
something foreign that gains admission into God from without, as is the
case with compound natures like us. Nay, just as, when we heard(3) of
the Word of God, we considered it to be not without subsistence, nor the
product of learning, nor the mere utterance of voice, nor as passing into
the air and perishing, but as being essentially subsisting, endowed with
free volition, and energy, and omnipotence: so also, when we have learnt
about the Spirit of God, we contemplate it as the companion of the Word
and the revealer of His energy, and not as mere breath without subsistence.
For to conceive of the Spirit that dwells in God as after the likeness
of our own spirit, would be to drag down the greatness of the divine nature
to the lowest depths of degradation. But we must contemplate it as an
essential power, existing in its own proper and peculiar subsistence,
proceeding from the Father anti resting in the Word(4), and shewing forth
the Word, neither capable of disjunction from God in Whom it exists, and
the Word Whose companion it is, nor poured forth to vanish into nothingness(5),
but being in subsistence in the likeness of the Word, endowed with life,
free volition, independent movement, energy, ever willing that which is
good, and having power to keep pace with the will in all its decrees(6),
having no beginning and no end. For never was the Father at any time lacking
in the Word, nor the Word in the Spirit.
Thus because of the unity in nature, the error of the Greeks in holding
that God is many, is utterly destroyed: and again by our acceptance of
the Word and the Spirit, the dogma of the Jews is overthrown: and there
remains of each party(7) only what is profitable(8). On the one hand of
the Jewish idea we have the unity of God's nature, anti on the other,
of the Greek, we have the distinction in subsistences and that only(9).
But should the Jew refuse to accept the Word and the Spirit, let the divine
Scripture confute him and curb his tongue. For concerning the Word, the
divine David says, For ever, O Lord, Thy Word is settled in heaven(1).
And again , He sent His Word and healed them(2). But the word that is
uttered is not sent, nor is it for ever settled(3). And concerning the
Spirit, the same David says, Thou sendest forth Thy Spirit, they are created(4).
And again, By the word of the Lord were the heavens made: and all the
host of them by the breath of His mouth(5). Job, too, says, The Spirit
of God hath made me, and the breath of the Almighty hath given me life(6).
Now the Spirit which is sent and makes and stablishes and conserves, is
not mere breath that dissolves, any more than the mouth of God is a bodily
member. For the conception of both must be such as harmonizes with the
Divine nature(7).
BOOK I CHAPTER VIII
Concerning the Holy Trinity.
We believe, then, in One God, one beginning(8), having no beginning, uncreate,
unbegotten, imperishable and immortal, everlasting, infinite, uncircumscribed,
boundless, of infinite power, simple, uncompound, incorporeal, without
flux, passionless, unchangeable, unalterable, unseen, the fountain of
goodness and justice, the light of the mind, inaccessible; a power known
by no measure, measurable only by His own will alone (for all things that
He wills He can(9)), creator of all created things, seen or unseen, of
all the maintainer and preserver, for all the provider, master and lord
and king over all, with an endless and immortal kingdom: having no contrary,
filling all, by nothing encompassed, but rather Himself the encompasser
and maintainer and original possessor of the universe, occupying(1) all
essences intact(2) and extending beyond all things, and being separate
from all essence as being super-essential(3) and above all things and
absolute God, absolute goodness, and absolute fulness(4): determining
all sovereignties and ranks, being placed above all sovereignty and rank,
above essence and life and word and thought: being Himself very light
and goodness and life and essence, inasmuch as He does not derive His
being from another, that is to say, of those things that exist: but being
Himself the fountain of being to all that is, of life to the living, of
reason to those that have reason; to all the cause of all good: perceiving
all things even before they have become: one essence, one divinity, one
power, one will, one energy, one beginning, one authority, one dominion,
one sovereignty, made known in three perfect subsistences anti adored
with one adoration, believed in and ministered to by all rational creation(5),
united without confusion and divided without separation (which indeed
transcends thought). (We believe) in Father and Son and Holy Spirit whereinto
also we have been baptized(6). For so our Lord commanded the Apostles
to baptize, saying, Baptizing them in the name of the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit(7).
(We believe) in one Father, the beginning(8), and cause of all: begotten
of no one: without cause or generation, alone subsisting: creator of all:
but Father of one only by nature, His Only-begotten Son and our Lord and
God and Saviour Jesus Christ, and Producer(9) of the most Holy Spirit.
And in one Son of God, the Only-begotten, our Lord, Jesus Christ: begotten
of the Father, before all the ages: Light of Light, true God of true God:
begotten, not made, consubstantial with the Father, through Whom all things
are made: and when we say He was before all the ages we shew that His
birth is without time or beginning: for the Son of God was not brought
into being out of nothing(1), He that is the effulgence of the glory,
the impress of the Father's subsistence(2), the living wisdom and power(3),
the Word possessing interior subsistence(4), the essential and perfect
and living image s of the unseen God. But always He was with the Father
and in Him(6), everlastingly and without beginning begotten of Him. For
there never was a time when the Father was and the Son was not, but always
the Father and always the Son, Who was begotten of Him, existed together.
For He could not have received the name Father apart from the Son: for
if He were without the Son(7), He could not be the Father: and if He thereafter
had the Son, thereafter He became the Father, not having been the Father
prior to this, and He was changed from that which was not the Father and
became the Father. This is the worst form of blasphemy(8). For we may
not speak of God as destitute of natural generative power: and generative
power means, the power of producing from one's self, that is to say, from
one's own proper essence, that which is like in nature to one's self(9).
In treating, then, of the generation of the Son, it is an act of impiety(1)
to say that time comes into play and that the existence of the Son is
of later origin than the Father. For we hold that it is from Him, that
is, from the Father's nature, that the Son is generated. And unless we
grant that the Son co-existed from the beginning with the Father, by Whom
He was begotten, we introduce change into the Father's subsistence, because,
not being the Father, He subsequently became the Father(2). For the creation,
even though it originated later, is nevertheless not derived from the
essence of God, but is brought into existence out of nothing by His will
and power, and change does not touch God's nature. For generation means
that the begetter produces out of his essence offspring similar in essence.
But creation and making mean that the creator and maker produces from
that which is external, and not out of his own essence, a creation of
an absolutely dissimilar nature(3).
Wherefore in God, Who alone is passionless and unalterable, and immutable,
and ever so continueth, both begetting and creating are passionless(4).
For being by nature passionless and not liable to flux, since He is simple
and uncompound, He is not subject to passion or flux either in begetting
or in creating, nor has He need of any co-operation. But generation in
Him is without beginning and everlasting, being the work of nature and
producing out of His own essence, that the Begetter may not undergo change,
and that He may not be God first and God last, nor receive any accession:
while creation in the case of God(5), being the work of will, is not co-eternal
with God. For it is not natural that that which is brought into existence
out of nothing should be co-eternal with what is without beginning and
everlasting. There is this difference in fact between man's making and
God's. Man can bring nothing into existence out of nothing(6), but all
that he makes requires pre-existing matter for its basis(7), and he does
not create it by will only, but thinks out first what it is to be and
pictures it in his mind, and only then fashions it with his hands, undergoing
labour and troubles(8), and often missing the mark and failing to produce
to his satisfaction that after which he strives. But God, through the
exercise of will alone, has brought all things into existence out of nothing.
Now there is the same difference between God and man in begetting and
generating. For in God, Who is without time and beginning, passionless,
not liable to flux, incorporeal, alone and without end(1), generation
is without time and beginning, passionless and not liable to flux, nor
dependent on the union of two(2): nor has His own incomprehensible generation
beginning or end. And it is without beginning because He is immutable:
without flux because He is passionless and incorporeal: independent of
the union of two again because He is incorporeal but also because He is
the one and only God, and stands in need of no co-operation: and without
end or cessation because He is without beginning, or time, or end, and
ever continues the same. For that which has no beginning has no end: but
that which through grace is endless is assuredly not without beginning,
as, witness, the angels(3).
Accordingly the everlasting God generates His own Word which is perfect,
without beginning and without end, that God, Whose nature and existence
are above time, may not engender in time. But with man clearly it is otherwise,
for generation is with him a matter of sex, and destruction and flux and
increase and body clothe him round about(4), and he possesses a nature
which is male or female. For the male requires the assistance of the female.
But may He Who surpasses all, and transcends all thought and comprehension,
be gracious to us.
The holy catholic and apostolic Church,
then, teaches the existence at once of a Father: and of His Only-begotten
Son, born of Him without time and flux and passion, in a manner incomprehensible
and perceived by the God of the universe alone: just as we recognise the
existence at once of fire and the light which proceeds from it: for there
is not first fire and thereafter light, but they exist together. And just
as light is ever the product of fire, and ever is in it and at no time
is separate from it, so in like manner also the Son is begotten of the
Father and is never in any ways separate from Him, but ever is in Him(6).
But whereas the light which is produced from fire without separation,
and abideth ever in it, has no proper subsistence of its own distinct
from that of fire (for it is a natural quality of fire), the Only-begotten
Son of God, begotten of the Father without separation and difference and
ever abiding in Him, has a proper subsistence of its own distinct froth
that of the Father.
The terms, 'Word' and 'effulgence,' then, are used because He is begotten
of the Father without the union of two, or passion, or time, or flux,
or separation(7): and the terms 'Son' and 'impress of the Father's subsistence,'
because He is perfect and has subsistence s and is in all respects similar
to the Father, save that the Father is not begotten(9): and the term 'Only-begotten'(1)
because He alone was begotten alone of the Father alone. For no other
generation is like to the generation of the Son of God, since no other
is Son of God. For though the Holy Spirit proceedeth from the Father,
yet this is not generative in character but processional. This is a different
mode of existence, alike incomprehensible and unknown, just as is the
generation of the Son. Wherefore all the qualities the Father has are
the Son's, save that the Father is unbegotten(2), and this exception involves
no difference in essence nor dignity(3), but only a different mode of
coming into existence(4). We have an analogy in Adam, who was not begotten
(for God Himself moulded him), and Seth, who was begotten (for he is Adam's
son), and Eve, who proceeded out of Adam's rib (for she was not begotten).
These do not differ from each other in nature, for they are human beings:
but they differ in the mode of coming into existence(5).
For one must recognise that the word agenhGon with only one ' n ' signifies
"uncreate" or "not having been made," while agennhGon
written with double ' n ' means "unbegotten." According to the
first significance essence differs from essence: for one essence is uncreate,
or agenhGon with one ' n ,' and another is create or genhGh . But in the
second significance there is no difference between essence and essence.
For the first subsistence of all kinds of living creatures is agennhGos
but not agenhGos . For they were created by the Creator, being brought
into being by His Word, but they were not begotten, for there was no pre-existing
form like themselves from which they might have been born.
So then in the first sense of the word the three absolutely divine subsistences
of the Holy Godhead agree(6): for they exist as one in essence and uncreate(7).
But with the second signification it is quite otherwise. For the Father
alone is ingenerate(8), no other subsistence having given Him being. And
the Son alone is generate, for He was begotten of the Father's essence
without beginning and without time. And only the Holy Spirit proceedeth
from the Father's essence, not having been generated but simply proceeding(9).
For this is the doctrine of Holy Scripture. But the nature of the generation
and the procession is quite beyond comprehension.
And this also it behoves(1) us to know, that the names Fatherhood, Sonship
and Procession, were not applied to the Holy Godhead by us: on the contrary,
they were communicated to us by the Godhead, as the divine apostle says,
Wherefore I bow the knee to the Father, from Whom is every family in heaven
and on earth(2). But if we say(3) that the Father is the origin of the
Son and greater than the
Son, we do not suggest any precedence in time or superiority in nature
of the Father over the Son(4) (for through His agency He made the ages(5)),
or superiority in any other respect save causation. And we mean by this,
that the Son is begotten of the Father and not the Father of the Son,
and that the Father naturally is the cause of the Son: just as we say
in the same way not that fire proceedeth from light, but rather light
from fire. So then, whenever we hear it said that the Father is the origin
of the Son and greater than the Son, let us understand it to mean in respect
of causation. And just as we do not say that fire is of one essence and
light of another, so we cannot say that the Father is of one essence and
the Son of another: but both are of one and the same essence(6). And just
as we say that fire has brightness(7) through the light proceeding from
it, and do not consider the light of the fire as an instrument ministering
to the fire, but rather as its natural force: so we say that the Father
creates all that He creates through His Only-begotten Son, not as though
the Son were a mere instrument serving(8) the Father's ends, but as His
natural and subsistential force(9). And just as we say both that the fire
shines and again that the light of the fire shines, So all things whatsoever
the Father doeth, these also doeth the Son likewise(9a). But whereas light
possesses no proper subsistence of its own, distinct from that of the
fire, the Son is a perfect subsistence(1), inseparable from the Father's
subsistence, as we have shewn above. For it is quite impossible to find
in creation an image that will illustrate in itself exactly in all details
the nature of the Holy Trinity. For how could that which is create and
compound, subject to flux and change, circumscribed, formed and corruptible,
clearly shew forth the super-essential divine essence, unaffected as it
is in any of these ways? Now it is evident that all creation is liable
to most of these affections, and all from its very nature is subject to
corruption.
Likewise we believe also in one Holy Spirit, the Lord and Giver of Life:
Who proceedeth from the Father and resteth in the Son: the object of equal
adoration and glorification with the Father and Son, since He is co-essential
and co-eternal(2): the Spirit of God, direct, authoritative(3), the fountain
of wisdom, and life, and holiness: God existing and addressed along with
Father and Son: uncreate, full, creative, all-ruling, all-effecting, all-powerful,
of infinite power, Lord of all creation and not under any lord(4): deifying,
not deified(5): filling, not filled: shared in, not sharing in: sanctifying,
not sanctified: the intercessor, receiving the supplications of all: in
all things like to the Father and Son: proceeding from the Father and
communicated through the Son, and participated in by all creation, through
Himself creating, and investing with essence and sanctifying, and maintaining
the universe: having subsistence, existing in its own proper and peculiar
subsistence, inseparable and indivisible from Father and Son, and possessing
all the qualities that the Father and Son possess, save that of not being
begotten or born. For the Father is without canst and unborn: for He is
derived from nothing, but derives from Himself His being, nor does He
derive a single quality from another(6). Rather He is Himself the beginning
and cause of the existence of all things in a definite and natural manner.
But the Son is derived from the Father after the manner of generation,
and the Holy Spirit likewise is derived from the Father, yet not after
the manner of generation, but after that of procession. And we have learned
that there is a difference(7) between generation and procession, but the
nature of that difference we in no wise understand. Further, the generation
of the Son from the Father and the procession of the Holy Spirit are simultaneous.
All then that the Son and the Spirit have is from the Father, even their
very being(8): and unless the Father is, neither the Son nor the Spirit
is. And unless the Father possesses a certain attribute, neither the Son
nor the Spirit possesses it: and through the Father(9), that is, because
of the Father's existence(1), the Son and the Spirit exist(2), and through
the Father, that is, because of the Father having the qualities, the Son
and the Spirit have all their qualities, those of being unbegotten, and
of birth and of procession being excepted(3). For in these hypo-
static or personal properties alone do the three holy subsistences(3)
differ from each other, being indivisibly divided not by essence but by
the distinguishing mark of their proper and peculiar subsistence.
Further we say that each of(4) the three has a perfect subsistence, that
we may understand not one compound perfect nature made up of three imperfect
elements, but one simple essence, surpassing and preceding perfection,
existing in three perfect subsistences(5). For all that is composed of
imperfect elements must necessarily be compound. But from perfect subsistences
no compound can arise. Wherefore we do not speak of the form as from subsistences,
but as in subsistences(6). But we speak of those things as imperfect which
do not preserve the form of that which is completed out of them. For stone
and wood and iron are each perfect in its own nature, but with reference
to the building that is completed out of them each is imperfect: for none
of them is in itself a house.
The subsistences then we say are perfect, that we may not conceive of
the divine nature as compound. For compoundness is the beginning of separation.
And again we speak of the three subsistences as being in each other(7),
that we may not introduce a crowd and multitude of Gods(8). Owing to the
three subsistences, there is no compoundness or confusion: while, owing
to their having the same essence and dwelling in one another, and being
the same in will, and energy, and power, and authority, and movement,
so to speak, we recognise the indivisibility and the unity of God. For
verily there is one God, and His word and Spirit.
Marg. MS. Concerning the distinction of the three subsistences: and concerning
the thing itself and our reason and thought in relation to it.
One ought, moreover, to recognise that it is one thing to look at a matter
as it is, and another thing to look at it in the light of reason and thought.
In the case of all created things, the distinction of the subsistences
is observed in actual fact. For in actual fact Peter is seen to be separate
from Paul. But the community and connection and unity are apprehended
by reason and thought. For it is by the mind that we perceive that Peter
and Paul are of the same nature and have one common nature(9). For both
are living creatures, rational and mortal: and both are flesh, endowed
with the spirit of reason and understanding(1). It is, then, by reason
that this community of nature is observed. For here indeed the subsistences
do not exist one within the other. But each privately and individually,
that is to say, in itself, stands quite separate, having very many points
that divide it from the other. For they are both separated in space and
differ in time, and are divided in thought, and power, and shape, or form,
and habit, and temperament and dignity, and pursuits, and all differentiating
properties, but above all, in the fact that they do not dwell in one another
but are separated. Hence it comes that we can speak of two, three, or
many men.
And this may be perceived throughout the whole of creation, but in the
case of the holy and superessential and incomprehensible Trinity, far
removed from everything, it is quite the reverse. For there the community
and unity are observed in fact, through the co-eternity of the subsistences,
and through their having the same essence and energy and will and concord
of mind(2), and then being identical in authority and power and goodness--I
do not say similar but identical--and then movement by one impulse(3).
For there is one essence, one goodness, one power, one will, one energy,
one authority, one and the same, I repeat, not three resembling each other.
But the three subsistences have one and the same movement. For each one
of them is related as closely to the other as to itself: that is to say
that the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit are one in all respects,
save those of not being begotten, of birth and of procession. But it is
by thought that the difference is perceived(4). For we recognise one God:
but only in the attributes of Fatherhood, Sonship, and Procession, both
in respect of cause and effect and perfection of subsistence, that is,
manner of existence, do we perceive difference(5). For with reference
to the uncircumscribed Deity we cannot speak of separation in space, as
we can in our own case. For the subsistences dwell in one another, in
no wise confused but cleaving together, according to the word of the Lord,
I am in the father, and the father in Me(6): nor can one admit difference
in will or judgment or energy or power or anything else whatsoever which
may produce actual and absolute separation in our case. Wherefore we do
not speak of three Gods, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, but
rather of one God, the holy Trinity, the Son and Spirit being referred
to one cause(7), and not compounded or coalesced according to the synaeresis
of Sabellius. For, as we said, they are made one not so as to commingle,
but so as to cleave to each other, and they have their being in each other(8)
without any coalescence or commingling. Nor do the Son and the Spirit
stand apart, nor are they sundered in essence according to the diaeresis
of Arias(9). For the Deity is undivided amongst things divided, to put
it concisely: and it is just like three suns cleaving to each other without
separation and giving out light mingled and conjoined into one. When,
then, we turn our eyes to the Divinity, and the first cause and the sovereignty
and the oneness anti sameness, so to speak, of the movement and will of
the Divinity, and the identity in essence and power and energy and lordship,
what is seen by us is unity(1). But when we look to those things in which
the Divinity is, or, to put it more accurately, which are the Divinity,
and those things which are in it through the first cause without time
or distinction in glory or separation, that is to say, the subsistences
of the Son and the Spirit, it seems to us a Trinity that we adore(2).
The Father is one Father, and without beginning, that is, without cause:
for He is not derived from anything. The Son is one Son, but not without
beginning, that is, not without cause: for He is derived from the Father.
But if you eliminate the idea of a beginning from time, He is also without
beginning: for the creator of times cannot be subject to time. The Holy
Spirit is one Spirit, going forth from the Father, not in the manner of
Sonship but of procession; so that neither has the Father lost His property
of being unbegotten because He hath begotten, nor has the Son lost His
property of being begotten because He was begotten of that which was unbegotten
(for how could that be so?), nor does the Spirit change either into the
Father or into the Son because He hath proceeded and is God. For a property
is quite constant. For how could a property persist if it were variable,
moveable, and could change into something else? For if the Father is the
Son, He is not strictly the Father: for there is strictly one Father.
And if the Son is the Father, He is not strictly the Son: for there is
strictly one Son and one Holy Spirit.
Further, it should be understood that we do not speak of the Father as
derived from any one, but we speak of Him as the Father of the Son. And
we do not speak of the Son as Cause(3) or Father, but we speak of Him
both as from the Father, and as the Son of the Father. And we speak likewise
of the Holy Spirit as from the Father, and call Him the Spirit of the
Father. And we do not speak of the Spirit as from the Son(4): s but yet
we call Him the Spirit of the Son. For if any one hath not the Spirit
of Christ, he is none of His(6), saith the divine apostle. And we confess
that He is manifested and imparted to us through the Son. For He breathed
upon His Disciples, says he, and said, Receive ye the Holy Spirit(7).
It is just the same as in the case of the sun from which come both the
ray and the radiance (for the sun itself is the source of both the ray
and the radiance), and it is through the ray that the radiance is imparted
to us, and it is the radiance itself by which we are lightened and in
which we participate. Further we do not speak of the Son of the Spirit,
or of the Son as derived from the Spirit(8).
BOOK I CHAPTER IX
Concerning what is affirmed about God.
The Deity is simple and uncompound. But that which is composed of many
and different elements is compound. If, then, we should speak of the qualities
of being uncreate and without beginning and incorporeal and immortal and
everlasting and good and creative and so forth as essential differences
in the case of God, that which is composed of so many qualities will not
be simple but must be compound. But this is impious in the extreme. Each
then of the affirmations about God should be thought of as signifying
not what He is in essence, but either something that it is impossible
to make plain, or some relation to some of those things which are contrasts
or some of those things that follow the nature, or an energy(9).
It appears then(9a) that the most proper of all the names given to God
is "He that is," as He Himself said in answer to Moses on the
mountain, Say to the sons of Israel, He that is hath sent Me(1). For He
keeps all being in His own embrace(2), like a sea of essence infinite
and unseen. Or as the holy Dionysius says, "He that is good(3)."
For one cannot say of God that He has being in the first place and goodness
in the second.
The second name of God is o qeos , derived from qeein (4), to run, because
He courses through all things, or from aiqein , to burn: For God is a
fire consuming all evils(5): or from qeasqai , because He is all-seeing(6):
for nothing can escape Him, and over all He keepeth watch. For He saw
all things before they were, holding them timelessly in His thoughts;
and each one conformably to His voluntary anti timeless thought(7), which
constitutes predetermination and image and pattern, comes into existence
at the predetermined time(8).
The first name then conveys the notion of His existence and of the nature
of His existence: while the second contains the idea of energy. Further,
the terms 'without beginning,' ' incorruptible,' 'unbegotten,' as also
'uncreate,' 'incorporeal,' 'unseen,' and so forth, explain what He is
not: that is to say, they tell us that His being had no beginning, that
He is not corruptible, nor created, nor corporeaI, nor visible(9). Again,
goodness and justice and piety and such like names belong to the nature(1),
but do not explain His actual essence. Finally, Lord and King and names
of that class indicate a relationship with their contrasts: for the name
Lord has reference to those over whom the lord rules, and the name King
to those under kingly authority, and the name Creator to the creatures,
and the name Shepherd to the sheep he tends.
BOOK I CHAPTER X
Concerning divine union and separation.
Therefore all these names must be understood as common to deity as a whole,
and as containing the notions of sameness and simplicity and indivisibility
and union: while the names Father, Son and Spirit, and cause, less and
caused, and unbegotten and begotten, and procession contain the idea of
separation: for these terms do not explain His essence, but the mutual
relationship(2) and manner of existence(3).
When, then, we have perceived these things and are conducted from these
to the divine essence, we do not apprehend the essence itself but only
the attributes of the essence: just as we have not apprehended the essence
of the soul even when we have learnt that it is incorporeal and without
magnitude and form: nor again, the essence of the body when we know that
it is white or black, but only the attributes of the essence. Further,
the true doctrine(4) teacheth that the Deity is simple and has one simple
energy, good and energising in all things, just as the sun's ray, which
warms all things and energises in each in harmony with its natural aptitude
and receptive power, having obtained this form of energy from God, its
Maker.
But quite distinct is all that pertains to the divine and benignant incarnation
of the divine Word. For in that neither the Father nor the Spirit have
any part at all, unless so far as regards approval and the working of
inexplicable miracles which the God-Word,
having become man(5) like us, worked, as unchangeable God and son of God(6).
BOOK I CHAPTER XI
Concerning what is affirmed about God as though He had body.
Since we find many terms used symbolically in the Scriptures concerning
God which are more applicable to that which has body, we should recognise
that it is quite impossible for us men clothed about with this dense covering
of flesh to understand or speak of the divine and lofty and immaterial
energies of the Godhead, except by the use of images and types and symbols
derived from our own life(7). So then all the statements concerning God,
that imply body, are symbols, but have a higher meaning: for the Deity
is simple and formless. Hence by God's eyes and eyelids and sight we are
to understand His power of overseeing all things and His knowledge, that
nothing can escape: for in the case of us this sense makes our knowledge
more complete and more full of certainty. By God's ears and hearing is
meant His readiness to be propitiated and to receive our petitions: for
it is this sense that renders us also kind to suppliants, inclining our
ear to them more graciously. God's mouth and speech are His means of indicating
His will; for it is by the mouth and speech that we make clear the thoughts
that are in the heart: God's food and drink are our concurrence to His
will, for we, too, satisfy the necessities of our natural appetite through
the sense of taste. And God's sense of smell is His appreciation of our
thoughts of and good will towards Him, for it is through this sense that
we appreciate sweet fragrance. And God's countenance is the demonstration
and manifestation of Himself through His works, for our manifestation
is through the countenance. And God's hands mean the effectual nature
of His energy, for it is with our own hands that we accomplish our most
useful and valuable work. And His right hand is His aid in prosperity,
for it is the right hand that we also use when making anything of beautiful
shape or of great value, or where much strength is required. His handling
is His power of accurate discrimination and exaction, even in the minutest
and most secret details, for those whom we have handled cannot conceal
from us aught within themselves. His feet and walk are His advent and
presence, either for the purpose of bringing succour to the needy, or
vengeance against enemies, or to perform any other action, for it is by
using our feet that we come to arrive at any place. His oath is the unchangeableness
of His counsel, for it is by oath that we confirm our compacts with one
another. His anger and fury are His hatred of and aversion to all wickedness,
for we, too, hate that which is contrary to our mind and become enraged
thereat(8). His forgetfulness and sleep and slumbering are His delay in
taking vengeance on His enemies and the postponement of the accustomed
help to His own. And to put it shortly, all the statements made about
God that imply body have some hidden meaning and teach us what is above
us by means of something familiar to ourselves, with the exception of
any statement concerning the bodily sojourn of the God-Word. For He for
our safety took upon Himself the whole nature of man(9), the thinking
spirit, the body, and all the properties of human nature, even the natural
and blameless passions.
BOOK I CHAPTER XII
Concerning the Same.
The following, then, are the mysteries which we have learned from the
holy oracles, as the divine Dionysius the Areopagite said(1): that God
is the cause and beginning of all: the essence of all that have essence:
the life of the living: the reason of all rational beings: the intellect
of all intelligent beings: the recalling and restoring of those who fall
away from Him: the renovation and transformation of those that corrupt
that which is natural: the holy foundation of those who are tossed in
unholiness: the steadfastness of those who have stood firm: the way of
those whose course is directed to Him and the hand stretched forth to
guide them upwards. And I shall add He is also the Father of all His creatures
(for God, Who brought us into being out of nothing, is in a stricter sense
our Father than are our parents who have derived both being and begetting
from Him(2)): the shepherd of those who follow and are tended by Him:
the radiance of those who are enlightened: the initiation of the initiated:
the deification of the deified: the peace of those at discord: the simplicity
of those who love simplicity: the unity of those who worship unity: of
all beginning the beginning, super-essential be-
cause above all beginnings: and the good revelation of what is hidden,
that is, of the knowledge of Him so far as that is lawful for and attainable
by each.
Further and more accurately concerning divine names(4).
The Deity being incomprehensible is also assuredly nameless. Therefore
since we know not His essence, let us not seek for a name for His essence.
For names are explanations of actual things(5). But God, Who is good and
brought us out of nothing into being that we might share in His goodness,
and Who gave us the faculty of knowledge, not only did not impart to us
His essence, but did not even grant us the knowledge of His essence. For
it is impossible for nature to understand fully the supernatural(6). Moreover,
if knowledge is of things that are(7), how can there be knowledge of the
super-essential? Through His unspeakable goodness, then, it pleased Him
to be called by names that we could understand, that we might not be altogether
cut off from the knowlege of Him but should have some notion of Him, however
vague. Inasmuch, then, as He is incomprehensible, He is also unnameable.
But inasmuch as He is the cause of all and contains in Himself the reasons
and causes of all that is, He receives names drawn from all that is, even
from opposites: for example, He is called light and darkness, water and
fire: in order that we may know that these are not of His essence but
that He is super-essential and unnameable: but inasmuch as He is the cause
of all, He receives names from all His effects.
Wherefore, of the divine names, some have a negative signification, and
indicate that He is super-essential(8): such are "non-essential(9),"
"timeless," "without beginning," "invisible":
not that God is inferior to anything or lacking in anything (for all things
are His and have become from Him and through Him and endure in Him(9)),
but that He is pre-eminently separated from all that is. For He is not
one of the things that are, but over all things. Some again have an affirmative
signification, as indicating that He is the cause of all things. For as
the cause of all that is and of all essence, He is called both Ens and
Essence. And as the cause of all reason and wisdom, of the rational and
the wise, He is called both reason and rational, and wisdom and wise.
Similarly He is spoken of as Intellect and Intellectual, Life and Living,
Power and Powerful, and so on with all the rest. Or rather those names
are most appropriate to Him which are derived from what is most precious
and most akin to Himself. That which is immaterial is more precious and
more akin to Himself than that which is material, and the pure than the
impure, and the holy than the unholy: for they have greater part in Him.
So then, sun and light will be more apt names for Him than darkness, and
day than night, and life than death, and fire and spirit and water, as
having life, than earth, and above all, goodness than wickedness: which
is just to say, being more than not being. For goodness is existence and
the cause of existence, but wickedness is the negation of goodness, that
is, of existence. These, then, are the affirmations and the negations,
but the sweetest names are a combination of both: for example, the super-essential
essence, the Godhead that is more than God, the beginning that is above
beginning and such like. Further there are some affirmations about God
which have in a pre-eminent degree the force of denial: for example, darkness:
for this does not imply that God is darkness but that He is not light,
but above light.
God then is called Mind and Reason and Spirit and Wisdom and Power, as
the cause of these, and as immaterial, and maker of all, and omnipotent(9b).
And these names are common to the whole Godhead, whether affirmative or
negative. And they are also used of each of the subsistences of the Holy
Trinity in the very same and identical way and with their full significance(1).
For when I think of one of the subsistences, I recognise it to be perfect
God and perfect essence: but when I combine and reckon the three together,
I know one perfect God. For the Godhead is not compound but in three perfect
subsistences, one perfect indivisible and uncompound God. And when I think
of the relation of the three subsistences to each other, I perceive that
the Father is super-essential Sun, source of goodness, fathomless sea
of essence, reason, wisdom, power, light, divinity: the generating and
productive source
of good hidden in it. He Himself then is mind, the depth of reason, begetter
of the Word, and through the Word the Producer(2) of the revealing Spirit.
And to put it shortly, the Father has no reason(3), wisdom, power, will(4),
save the Son Who is the only power of the Father the immediate(5) cause
of the creation of the universe: as perfect subsistence begotten of perfect
subsistence in a manner known to Himself, Who is and is named the Son.
And the Holy Spirit is the power of the Father revealing the hidden mysteries
of His Divinity, proceeding from the Father through the Son in a manner
known to Himself, but different from that of generation. Wherefore the
Holy Spirit is the perfecter of the creation of the universe. All the
terms, then, that are appropriate to the Father, as cause, source, begetter,
are to be ascribed to the Father alone: while those that are appropriate
to the caused, begotten Son, Word, immediate power, will, wisdom, are
to be ascribed to the Son: and those that are appropriate to the caused,
processional, manifesting, perfecting power, are to be ascribed to the
Holy Spirit. The Father is the source and cause of the Son and the Holy
Spirit: Father of the Son alone and producer of the Holy Spirit. The Son
is Son, Word, Wisdom, Power, Image, Effulgence, Impress of the Father
and derived from the Father. But the Holy Spirit is not the Son of the
Father but the Spirit of the Father as proceeding from the Father. For
there is no impulse without Spirit. And we speak also of the Spirit of
the Son, not as through proceeding from Him, but as proceeding through
Him from the Father. For the Father alone is cause.
BOOK I CHAPTER XIII
Concerning the place of God: and that the Deity alone is uncircumscribed.
Bodily place is the limit of that which contains, by which that which
is contained is contained(6): for example, the air contains but the body
is contained(7). But it is not the whole of the containing air which is
the place of the contained body, but the limit of the containing air,
where it comes into contact with the contained body: and the reason is
clearly because that which contains is not within that which it contains.
But there is also mental place where mind is active, and mental and incorporeal
nature exists: where mind dwells and energises and is contained not in
a bodily but in a mental fashion. For it is without form, and so cannot
be contained as a body is. God, then, being immaterial(8) and uncircumscribed,
has not place. For He is His own place, filling all things and being above
all things, and Himself maintaining all things(9). Yet we speak of God
having place and the place of God where His energy becomes manifest. For
He penetrates everything without mixing with it, and imparts to all His
energy in proportion to the fitness and receptive power of each: and by
this I mean, a purity both natural and voluntary. For the immaterial is
purer than the material, and that which is virtuous than that which is
linked with vice. Wherefore by the place of God is meant that which has
a greater share in His energy and grace. For this reason the Heaven is
His throne. For in it are the angels who do His will and are always glorifying
Him(1). For this is His rest and the earth is His footstool(2). For in
it He dwelt in the flesh among men(3). And His sacred flesh has been named
the foot of God. The Church, too, is spoken of as the place of God: for
we have set this apart for the glorifying of God as a sort of consecrated
place wherein we also hold converse with Him. Likewise also the places
in which His energy becomes manifest to us, whether through the flesh
or apart from flesh, are spoken of as the places of God.
But it must be understood that the Deity is indivisible, being everywhere
wholly in His entirety and not divided up part by part like that which
has body, but wholly in everything and wholly above everything. Marg.
MS. Concerning the place of angel and spirit, and concerning the uncircumscribed.
The angel, although not contained in place with figured form as is body,
yet is spoken of as being in place because he has a mental presence and
energises in accordance with his nature, and is not elsewhere but has
his mental limitations there where he energises. For it is impossible
to energise at the same time in different places. For to God alone belongs
the power of energising everywhere
at the same time. The angel energises in different places by the quickness
of his nature and the promptness and speed by which he can change his
place: but the Deity, Who is everywhere and above all, energises at the
same time in diverse ways with one simple energy.
Further the soul is bound up with the body. whole with whole and not part
with part: and it is not contained by the body but contains it as fire
does iron, and being in it energises with its own proper energies.
That which is comprehended in place or time or apprehension is circumscribed:
while that which is contained by none of these is uncircumscribed. Wherefore
the Deity alone is uncircumscribed, being without beginning and without
end, and containing all things, and in no wise apprehended(4). For He
alone is incomprehensible and unbounded, within no one's knowledge and
contemplated by Himself alone. But the angel is circumscribed alike in
time (for His being had commencement) and in place (but mental space,
as we said above) and in apprehension. For they know somehow the nature
of each other and have their bounds perfectly defined by the Creator.
Bodies in short are circumscribed both in beginning and end, and bodily
place and apprehension.
Marg. MS. From various sources concerning
God and the father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. And concerning the
Word and the Spirit.
The Deity, then, is quite unchangeable and invariable. For all things
which are not in our hands He hath predetermined by His foreknowledge,
each in its own proper and peculiar time and place. And accordingly the
Father judgeth no one, but hath given all judgment to the Son(5). For
clearly the Father and the Son and also the Holy Spirit judged as God.
But the Son Himself will descend in the body as man, and will sit on the
throne of Glory (for descending and sitting require circumscribed body),
and will judge all the world in justice.
All things are far apart from God, not in place but in nature. In our
case, thoughtfulness, and wisdom, and counsel come to pass and go away
as states of being. Not so in the case of God: for with Him there is no
happening or ceasing to be: for He is invariable and unchangeable: and
it would not be right to speak of contingency in connection with Him.
For goodness is concomitant with essence. He who longs alway after God,
he seeth Him: for God is in all things. Existing things are dependent
on that which is, and nothing can be unless it is in that which is. God
then is mingled with everything, maintaining their nature: and in His
holy flesh the God-Word is made one in subsistence and is mixed with our
nature, yet without confusion.
No one seeth the Father, save the Son and the Spirit(6).
The Son is the counsel and wisdom and power of the Father. For one may
not speak of quality in connection with God, from fear of implying that
He was a compound of essence and quality.
The Son is from the Father, and derives from Him all His properties: hence
He cannot do ought of Himself(7). For He has not energy peculiar to Himself
and distinct from the Father(8).
That God Who is invisible by nature is made visible by His energies, we
perceive from the organisation and government of the world(9).
The Son is the Father's image, and the Spirit the Son's, through which
Christ dwelling in man makes him after his own image(1).
The Holy Spirit is God, being between the unbegotten and the begotten,
and united to the Father through the Son(2). We speak of the Spirit of
God, the Spirit of Christ, the mind of Christ, the Spirit of the Lord,
the very Lord(3), the Spirit of adoption, of truth, of liberty, of wisdom
(for He is the creator of all these): filling all things with essence,
maintaining all things, filling the universe with essence, while yet the
universe is not the measure of His power.
God is everlasting and unchangeable essence, creator of all that is, adored
with pious consideration.
God is also Father, being ever unbegotten, for He was born of no one,
but hath begotten His co-eternal Son: God is likewise Son, being always
with the Father, born of the Father timelessly, everlastingly, without
flux or passion, or separation from Him. God is also Holy Spirit, being
sanctifying power, subsistential, proceeding from the Father without separation,
and resting in the Son, identical in essence with Father and Son.
Word is that which is ever essentially present with the Father. Again,
word is also the natural movement of the mind, according to which it is
moved and thinks and considers, being as it were its own light and radiance.
Again, word is the thought that is spoken only within the heart. And again,
word is the utterance(4) that is the messenger of thought. God therefore
is Word(5) essential and enhypostatic: and the other three kinds of word
are faculties of the soul, and are not contemplated as having a proper
subsistence of their own. The first of these is the natural offspring
of the mind, ever welling(6) up naturally out of it: the second is the
thought: and the third is the utterance.
The Spirit has various meanings. There is the Holy Spirit: but the powers
of the Holy Spirit are also spoken of as spirits: the good messenger is
also spirit: the demon also is spirit: the soul too is spirit: and sometimes
mind also is spoken of as spirit. Finally the wind is spirit and the air
is spirit.
BOOK I CHAPTER XIV
The properties of the divine nature.
Uncreate, without beginning, immortal, infinite, eternal, immaterial(7),
good, creative, just, enlightening, immutable, passionless, uncircumscribed,
immeasurable, unlimited, undefined, unseen, unthinkable, wanting in nothing,
being His own rule and authority, all-ruling, life-giving, omnipotent,
of infinite power, con-raining and maintaining the universe and making
provision for all: all these and such like attributes the Deity possesses
by nature, not having received them from elsewhere, but Himself imparting
all good to His own creations according to the capacity of each.
The subsistences dwell and are established firmly in one another. For
they are inseparable and cannot part from one another, but keep to their
separate courses within one another, without coalescing or mingling, but
cleaving to each other. For the Son is in the Father and the Spirit: and
the Spirit in the Father and the Son: and the Father in the Son and the
Spirit, but there is no coalescence or commingling or confusion(8)¡E And
there is one and the same motion: for there is one impulse and one motion
of the three subsistences, which is not to be observed in any created
nature.
Further the divine effulgence and energy, being one anti simple and indivisible,
assuming many varied forms in its goodness among what is divisible and
allotting to each the component parts of its own nature, still remains
simple and is multiplied without division among the divided, and gathers
and converts the divided into its own simplicity(9). For all things long
after it and have their existence in it. It gives also to all things being
according to their several natures(1), and it is itself the being of existing
things, the life of living things, the reason of rational beings, the
thought of thinking beings. But it is itself above mind and reason and
life and essence.
Further the divine nature has the property of penetrating all things without
mixing with them and of being itself impenetrable by anything else. Moreover,
there is the property of knowing all things with a simple knowledge and
of seeing all things, simply with His divine, all-surveying, immaterial
eye, both the things of the present, and the things of the past, and the
things of the future, before they come into being(2). It is also sinless,
and can cast sin out, and bring salvation: and all that it wills, it can
accomplish, but does not will all it could accomplish. For it could destroy
the universe but it does not will so to do(3).
Book 2
BOOK II CHAPTER I
Concerning aeon or age.
HE created the ages Who Himself was. before the ages, Whom the divine
David thus addresses, From age to age Than art(1). The divine apostle
also says, Through Whom He created the ages(2).
It must then be understood that the word age has various meanings, for
it denotes many things. The life of each man is called an age. Again,
a period of a thousand years is called an age(3). Again, the whole course
of the present life is called an age: also the future life, the immortal
life after the resurrection(4), is spoken of as an age. Again, the word
age is used to denote, not time nor yet a part of time as measured by
the movement and course of the sun, that is to say, composed of days and
nights, but the sort of temporal motion and interval that is co-extensive
with eternity(5). For age is to things eternal just what time is to things
temporal.
Seven ages(6) of this world are spoken of, that is, from the creation
of the heaven and earth till the general consummation and resurrection
of men. For there is a partial consummation, viz., the death of each man:
but there is also a general and complete consummation, when the general
resurrection of men will come to pass. And the eighth age is the age to
come.
Before the world was formed, when there was as yet no sun dividing day
from night, there was not an age such as could be measured(7), but there
was the sort of temporal motion and interval that is co-extensive with
eternity. And in this sense there is but one age, and God is spoken of
as aiwnios (8) and proaiwnios , for the age or aeon itself is His creation.
For God, Who alone is without beginning, is Himself the Creator of all
things, whether age or any other existing thing. And when I say God, it
is evident that I mean the Father and His Only. begotten Son, our Lord,
Jesus Christ, and His all-holy Spirit, our one God.
But we speak also of ages of ages, inasmuch as the seven ages of the present
world include many ages in the sense of lives of men, and the one age
embraces all the ages, and the present and the future are spoken of as
age of age. Further, everlasting (i.e. aiwnios ) life and everlasting
punishment prove that the age or neon to come is unending(9). For time
will not be counted by days and nights even after the resurrection, but
there will rather be one day with no evening, wherein the Sun of Justice
will shine brightly on the just, but for the sinful there will be night
profound and limitless. In what way then will the period of one thousand
years be counted which, according to Origen(1), is required for the complete
restoration? Of all the ages, therefore, the sole creator is God Who hath
also created the universe and Who was before the ages.
BOOK II CHAPTER II
Concerning the creation.
Since, then, God, Who is good and more than good, did not find satisfaction
in self-contemplation, but in fits exceeding goodness wished certain things
to come into existence which would enjoy His benefits and share in His
goodness, He brought all things out of nothing into being and created
them, both what is invisible and what is visible. Yea, even man, who is
a compound of the visible and the invisible. And it is by thought that
He creates, and thought is the basis of the work, the Word filling it
and the Spirit perfecting it(2).
BOOK II CHAPTER IlI
Concerning angels.
He is Himself the Maker and Creator of the angels: for He brought them
out of nothing into being and created them after His own image, an incorporeal
race, a sort of spirit or immaterial fire: in the words of the divine
David, He maketh His angels spirits, and His ministers a flame of fire(3):
and He has described their lightness and the ardour, and
heat, and keenness and sharpness with which they hunger for God and serve
Him, and how they are borne to the regions above and are quite delivered
from all material thought(4).
An angel, then, is an intelligent essence, in perpetual motion, with free-will,
incorporeal, ministering to God, having obtained by grace an immortal
nature: and the Creator alone knows the form and limitation of its essence.
But all that we can understand is, that it is incorporeal and immaterial.
For all that is compared with God Who alone is incomparable, we find to
be dense and material. For in reality only the Deity is immaterial and
incorporeal.
The angel's nature then is rational, and intelligent, and endowed with
free-will, change. able in will, or fickle. For all that is created is
changeable, and only that which is un-created is unchangeable. Also all
that is rational is endowed with free-will. As it is, then, rational and
intelligent, it is endowed with free-will: and as it is created, it is
changeable, having power either to abide or progress in goodness, or to
turn towards evil.
It is not susceptible of repentance because it is incorporeal. For it
is owing to the weakness of his body that man comes to have repentance.
It is immortal, not by natures but by grace(6). For all that has had beginning
comes also to its natural end. But God alone is eternal, or rather, He
is above the Eternal: for He, the Creator of times, is not under the dominion
of time, but above time.
They are secondary intelligent lights derived from that first light which
is without beginning, for they have the power of illumination; they have
no need of tongue or hearing, but without uttering words(7) they communicate
to each other their own thoughts and counsels(8).
Through the Word, therefore, all the angels were created, and through
the sanctification by the Holy Spirit were they brought to perfection,
sharing each in proportion to his worth and rank in brightness and grace(9).
They are circumscribed: for when they are in the Heaven they are not on
the earth: and when they are sent by God down to the earth they do not
remain in the Heaven. They are not hemmed in by walls and doors, and bars
and seals, for they are quite unlimited. Unlimited, I repeat, for it is
not as they really are that they reveal themselves to the worthy men(1)
to whom God wishes them to appear, but in a changed form which the beholders
are capable of seeing. For that alone is naturally and strictly unlimited
which is un-created. For every created tiring is limited by God Who created
it.
Further, apart from their essence they receive the sanctification from
the Spirit: through the divine grace they prophesy(2): they have no need
of marriage for they are immortal.
Seeing that they are minds they are in mental places(3), and are not circumscribed
after the fashion of a body. For they have not a bodily form by nature,
nor are they tended in three dimensions. But to whatever post they may
be assigned, there they are present after the manner of a mind and energise,
and cannot be present and energise in various places at the same time.
Whether they are equals in essence or differ from one another we know
not. God, their Creator, Who knoweth all things, alone knoweth. But they
differ(4) from each other in brightness and position, whether it is that
their position is dependent on their brightness, or their brightness on
their position: and they impart brightness to one another, because they
excel one another in rank and nature(5). And clearly the higher share
their brightness and knowledge with the lower.
They are mighty and prompt to fulfil the will of the Deity, and their
nature is endowed with such celerity that wherever the Divine glance bids
them there they are straightway found. They are the guardians of the divisions
of the earth: they are set over nations and regions, allotted to them
by their Creator: they govern all our affairs and bring us succour. And
the reason surely is because they are set over us by the divine will and
command and are ever in the vicinity of God(6).
With difficulty they are moved to evil, yet they are not absolutely immoveable:
but now they are altogether immoveable, not by nature but by grace and
by their nearness to the Only Good(7).
They behold God according to their capacity, and this is their food(8).
They are above us for they are incorporeal, and are free of all bodily
passion, yet are not passionless: for the Deity alone is passionless.
They take different forms at the bidding of their Master, God, and thus
reveal themselves to men and unveil the divine mysteries to them.
They have Heaven for their dwelling-place, and have one duty, to sing
God's praise and carry out His divine will.
Moreover, as that most holy, and sacred, and gifted theologian, Dionysius
the Areopagite(9), says, All theology, that is to say, the holy Scripture,
has nine different names for the heavenly essences(1). These essences
that divine master in sacred things divides into three groups, each containing
three. And the first group, he says, consists of those who are in God's
presence and are said to be directly and immediately one with Him, viz.,
the Seraphim with their six wings, the many-eyed Cherubim and those that
sit in the holiest thrones. The second group is that of the Dominions,
and the Powers, and the Authorities; and the third, and last, is that
of the Rulers and Archangels and Angels
Some, indeed(2), like Gregory the Theologian, say that these were before
the creation of other things. He thinks that the angelic and heavenly
powers were first and that thought was their function(3). Others, again,
hold that they were created after the first heaven was made. But all are
agreed that it was before the foundation of man. For myself, I am in harmony
with the theologian. For it was fitting that the mental essence should
be the first created, and then that which can be perceived, and finally
man himself, in whose being both parts are united.
But those who say that the angels are creators of any kind of essence
whatever are the mouth of their father, the devil. For since they are
created things they are not creators. But He Who creates and provides
for and maintains all things is God, Who alone is uncreate and is praised
and glorified in the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
BOOK II CHAPTER IV
Concerning the devil and demons.
He who from among these angelic powers was set over(4) the earthly realm,
and into whose hands God committed the guardianship of the earth, was
not made wicked in nature but was good, and made for good ends, and received
from his Creator no trace whatever of evil in himself. But he did not
sustain the brightness and the honour which the Creator had bestowed(5)
on him, and of his free choice was changed from what was in harmony to
what was at variance with his nature, and became roused against God Who
created him, and determined to rise in rebellion against Him(6): and he
was the first to depart from good and become evil(7). For evil is nothing
else than absence of goodness, just as darkness also is absence of light.
For goodness is the light of the mind, and, similarly, evil is the darkness
of the mind. Light, therefore, being the work of the Creator and being
made good (for God saw all that He made, and behold they were exceeding
good(8)) produced darkness at His free-will. But along with him an innumerable
host of angels subject to him were torn away and followed him and shared
in his fall. Wherefore, being of the same nature(9) as the angels, they
became wicked, turning away at their own free choice from good to evil(1)
Hence they have no power or strength against any one except what God in
His dispensation hath conceded to them, as for instance, against Job(2)
and those swine that are mentioned in the Gospels(3). But when God has
made the concession they do prevail, and are changed and transformed into
any form whatever in which they wish to appear.
Of the future both the angels of God and the demons are alike ignorant:
yet they make predictions. God reveals the future to the angels and commands
them to prophesy, and so what they say comes to pass. But the demons also
make predictions, sometimes because they see what is happening at a distance,
and sometimes merely making guesses: hence much that they say is false
and they should not be believed, even although they do often, in the way
we have said, tell what is true. Besides they know the Scriptures.
All wickedness, then, and all impure passions are the work of their mind.
But while the liberty to attack man has been granted to them, they have
not the strength to over master any one: for we have it in our power to
receive or not to receive the attack(4). Wherefore there has been prepared
for the devil and his demons, and those who follow him, fire unquenchable
and everlasting punishment(5).
Note, further, that what in the case of man is death is a fall in the
case of angels. For after the fall there is no possibility of repentance
for them, just as after death there is for men no repentance(6).
BOOK II CHAPTER V
Concerning the visible creation.
Our God Himself, Whom we glorify as Three in One, created the heaven and
the earth and all that they contain(7), and brought all things out of
nothing into being: some He made out of no pre-existing basis of matter,
such as heaven, earth, air, fire, water: and the rest out of these elements
that He had created, such as living creatures, plants, seeds. For these
are made up of earth, and water, and air, and fire, at the bidding of
the Creator.
BOOK II CHAPTER VI
Concerning the Heaven.
The heaven is the circumference of things created, both visible and invisible.
For within its boundary are included and marked off both the mental faculties
of the angels and all the world of sense. But the Deity alone is uncircumscribed,
filling all things, and surrounding all things, and hounding all things,
for He is above all things, and has created all things.
Since(8), therefore, the Scripture speaks of heaven, and heaven of heaven(9),
and heavens of heavens(1), and the blessed Paul says that he was snatched
away to the third heaven(2), we say that in the cosmogony of the universe
we accept the creation of a heaven which the foreign philosophers, appropriating
the views of Moses, call a starless sphere. But further, God called the
firmament also heaven(3), which He commanded to be in the midst of the
waters, setting it to divide the waters that are above the firmament from
the waters that are below the firmament. And its nature, according to
the divine Basilius(4), who is versed in the mysteries of divine Scripture,
is delicate as smoke. Others, however, hold that it is watery in nature,
since it is set in the midst of the waters: others say it is composed
of the four elements: and lastly, others speak of it as a filth body,
distinct from the four elements(5).
Further, some have thought that the heaven encircles the universe and
has the form of a sphere, and that everywhere it is the highest point,
and that the centre of the space enclosed by it is the lowest part: and,
further, that those bodies that are light and airy are allotted by the
Creator the upper region: while those that are heavy and tend to descend
occupy the lower region, which is the middle. The element, then, that
is lightest and most inclined to soar upwards is fire, and hence they
hold that its position is immediately after the heaven, and they call
it ether, and after it comes the lower air. But earth and water, which
are heavier and have more of a downward tendency, are suspended in the
centre. Therefore, taking them in the reverse order, we have in the lowest
situation earth and water: but water is lighter than earth, and hence
is more easily set in motion: above these on all hands, like a covering;
is the circle of air, and all round the air is the circle of ether, and
outside air is the circle of the heaven.
Further, they say that the heaven moves in a circle and so compresses
all that is within it, that they remain firm and not liable to fall asunder.
They say also that there are seven zones of the heaven(6), one higher
than the other. And its nature, they say, is of extreme fineness, like
that of smoke, and each zone contains one of the planets. For there are
said to be seven planets: Sol, Luna, Jupiter, Mercury, Mars, Venus and
Saturn. But sometimes Venus is called Lucifer and sometimes Vesper. These
are called planets because their movements are the reverse of those of
the heaven. For while the heaven and all other stars move from east to
west, these alone move from west to east. And this can easily be seen
in the case of the moon, which moves each evening a little backwards.
All, therefore, who hold that the heaven is in the form of a sphere, say
that it is equally removed and distant from the earth at all points, whether
above, or sideways, or below. And by 'below' and ' sideways' I mean all
that comes within the range of our senses. For it follows from what has
been said, that the heaven occupies the whole of the upper region and
the earth the whole of the lower. They say, besides, that the heaven encircles
the earth in the manner of a sphere, and bears along with it in its most
rapid revolutions sun, moon and stars, and that when the sun is over the
earth it becomes day there, and when it is under the earth it is
night. And, again, when the sun goes under the earth it is night here,
but day yonder.
Others have pictured the heaven as a hemisphere. This idea is suggested
by these words of David, the singer of God, Who stretchest out the heavens
like a curtain(7), by which word he clearly means a tent: and by these
from the blessed Isaiah, Who hath established the heavens like a vault(8):
and also because when the sun, moon, and stars set they make a circuit
round the earth from west to north, and so reach once more the east(9).
Still, whether it is this way or that, all things have been made and established
by the divine command, and have the divine will and counsel for a foundation
that cannot be moved. For He Himself spoke and they were made: He Himself
commanded and they were created. He hath also established them for ever
and ever: He hath made a decree which will not pass(1).
The heaven of heaven, then, is the first heaven which is above the firmament(2).
So here we have two heavens, for God called the firmament also Heaven(3).
And it is customary in the divine Scripture to speak of the air also as
heavens, because we see it above us. Bless Him, it says, all ye birds
of the heaven, meaning of the air. For it is the air and not the heaven
that is the region in which birds fly. So here we have three heavens,
as the divine Apostle said(4). But if you should wish to look upon the
seven zones as seven heavens there is no injury done to the word of truth.
For it is usual in the Hebrew tongue to speak of heaven in the plural,
that is, as heavens, and when a Hebrew wishes to say heaven of heaven,
he usually says heavens of heavens, and this clearly means heaven of heaven(5),
which is above the firmament, and the waters which are above the heavens,
whether it is the air and the firmament, or the seven zones of the firmament,
or the firmament itself which are spoken of in the plural as heavens according
to the Hebrew custom.
All things, then, which are brought into existence are subject to corruption
according to the law of their nature(6), and so even the heavens themselves
are corruptible. But by the grace of God they are maintained and preserved(7).
Only the Deity, however, is by nature without beginning and without end(8).
Wherefore it has been said, They will perish, but Thou dost endure(1):
nevertheless, the heavens will not be utterly destroyed. For they will
wax old and be wound round as a covering, and will be changed, and there
will be a new heaven and a new earth(2).
For the great part the heaven is greater than the earth, but we need not
investigate the essence of the heaven, for it is quite beyond our knowledge.
It must not be supposed that the heavens or the luminaries are endowed
with life(3). For they are inanimate and insensible(4). So that when the
divine Scripture saith, Let the heavens rejoice and the earth be glad(5),
it is the angels in heaven and the men on earth that are invited to rejoice.
For the Scripture is familiar with the figure of personification, and
is wont to speak of inanimate things as though they were animate: for
example(6), The sea saw it and fled: Jordan was driven back(7). And again,
What ailed thee, O thou sea, that thou fleddest? thou, O Jordan, that
thou was driven back(8)? Mountains, too, and hills are asked the reason
of their leaping in the same way as we are wont to say, the city was gathered
together, when we do not mean the buildings, but the inhabitants of the
city: again, the heavens declare the glory of God(9), does not mean that
they send forth a voice that can be heard by bodily ears, but that from
their own greatness they bring before our minds the power of the Creator:
and when we contemplate their beauty we praise the Maker as the Master-Craftsman(1).
BOOK II CHAPTER VII
Concerning light, fire, the luminaries, sun, moon and stars.
Fire is one of the four elements, light and with a greater tendency to
ascend than the others. It has the power of burning and also of giving
light, and it was made by the Creator on the first day. For the divine
Scripture says, And God said, Let there be light, and there was light(2).
Fire is not a different thing from what light is, as some maintain. Others
again hold that this fire of the universe is above the air(3) and call
it ether. In the beginning, then, that is to say on the first day, God
created light, the ornament and glory of the whole visible creation. For
take away light and all things remain in undistinguishable darkness, incapable
of displaying their native beauty. And God called the light day, but the
darkness
He called night(4). Further, darkness is not any essence, but an accident:
for it is simply absence of light. The air, indeed, has not light in its
essence(5). It was, then, this very absence of light from the air that
God called darkness: and it is not the essence of air that is darkness,
but the absence of light which clearly is rather an accident than an essence.
And, indeed, it was not night, but day, that was first named, so that
day is first and after that comes night. Night, therefore, follows day.
And from the beginning of day till the next day is one complete period
of day and night. For the Scripture says, And the evening and the morning
were one day(6).
When, therefore, in the first three days the light was poured forth and
reduced at the divine command, both day and night came to pass(7). But
on the fourth day God created the great luminary, that is, the sun, to
have rule and authority(8) over the day: for it is by it that day is made:
for it is day when the sun is above the earth, and the duration of a day
is the course of the sun over the earth from its rising till its setting.
And He also created the lesser luminaries, that is, the moon and the stars,
to have rule and authority(1) over the night, and to give light by night.
For it is night when the sun is under the earth, and the duration of night
is the course of the sun under the earth from its rising till its setting.
The moon, then, and the stars were set to lighten the night: not that
they are in the daytime under the earth, for even by day stars are in
the heaven over the earth but the sun conceals both the stars and the
moon by the greater brilliance of its light and prevents them from being
seen.
On these luminaries the Creator bestowed the first-created light: not
because He was in need of other light, but that that light might not remain
idle. For a luminary is not merely light, but a vessel for containing
light(2).
There are, we are told, seven planets amongst these luminaries, and these
move in a direction opposite to that of the heaven: hence the name planets.
For, while they say that the heaven moves from east to west, the planets
move from west to east; but the heaven bears the seven planets along with
it by its swifter motion. Now these are the names of the seven planets:
Luna, Mercury, Venus, Sol, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, and in each zone of
heaven is, we are told, one of these seven planets:
In the first and highest Saturn
In the second Jupiter
In the third Mars
In the fourth Sol ]
In the fifth Venus
In the sixth Mercury
In the seventh and lowest Luna
The course which the Creator(3) appointed for them to run is unceasing
and remaineth fixed as He established them. For the divine David says,
The moan and the stars which Thou establishedst(4), and by the word 'establishedst,'
he referred to the fixity and unchangeableness of the order and series
granted to them by God. For He appointed them for seasons, and signs,
and days and years. It is through the Sun that the four seasons are brought
about. And the first of these is spring: for in it God created all things(5),
and even down to the present time its presence is evidenced by the bursting
of the flowers into bud, and this is the equinoctial period, since day
and night each consist of twelve hours. It is caused by the sun rising
in the middle, and is mild and increases the blood, and is warm and moist,
and holds a position midway between winter and summer, being warmer and
drier than winter, but colder and moister than summer. This season lasts
from March 21st till June 24th. Next, when the rising of the sun moves
towards more northerly parts, the season of summer succeeds, which has
a place midway between spring and autumn, combining the warmth of spring
with the dryness of autumn: for it is dry and warm, and increases the
yellow bile. In it falls the longest day, which has fifteen hours, and
the shortest night of all, having only nine hours. This season lasts from
June 24th till September 25th. Then when the sun again returns to the
middle, autumn takes the place of summer. It has a medium amount of cold
and heat, dryness and moisture, and holds a place midway between summer
and winter, combining the dryness of summer with the cold of winter. For
it is cold and dry, and increases the black bile. This season, again,
is equinoctial, both day and night consisting of twelve hours, and it
lasts from September 25th till December 25th. And when the rising of the
sun sinks to its smallest and lowest point, i.e. the south, winter is
reached, with its cold and moisture. It occupies a place midway between
autumn and spring, combining the cold of autumn and the moisture of spring.
In it falls the shortest day, which has only nine hours, and the longest
night, which has fifteen: and it lasts from December 25th till March 21st.
For the Creator made this wise provision that we should not pass from
the extreme of cold, or heat, or dryness, or moisture, to the opposite
extreme, and thus incur grievous maladies. For reason itself teaches us
the danger of sudden changes.
So, then, it is the sun that makes the seasons, and through them the year:
it likewise makes the days and nights, the days when it rises and is above
the earth, and the nights when it sets below the earth: and it bestows
on the other luminaries, both moon and stars, their power of giving forth
light.
Further, they say that there are in the heaven twelve signs made by the
stars, and that these move in an opposite direction to the sun and moon,
and the other five planets, and that the seven planets pass across these
twelve signs. Further, the sun makes a complete month in each sign and
traverses the twelve signs in the same number of months. These, then,
are the names of the twelve signs and their respective months:--
The Ram, which receives the sun on the 21st of March.
The Bull, on the 23rd of April.
The Twins, on the 24th of May.
The Crab, on the 24th of June.
The Virgin, on the 25th of July.
The Scales, on the 25th of September.
The Scorpion,on the 25th of October.
The Archer, on the 25th of November.
Capricorn, on the 25th of December.
Aquarius, on the 25th of January.
The Fish, on the 24th of February.
But the moon traverses the twelve signs each month, since it occupies
a lower position and travels through the signs at a quicker rate. For
if you draw one circle within another, the inner one will be found to
be the lesser: and so it is that owing to the moon occupying a lower position
its course is shorter and is sooner completed
Now the Greeks declare that all our affairs are controlled by the rising
and setting and collision(6) of these stars, viz., the sun and moon: for
it is with these matters that astrology has to do. But we hold that we
get from them signs of rain and drought, cold and heat, moisture and dryness,
and of the various winds, and so forth(7), but no sign whatever as to
our actions. For we have been created with free wills by our Creator and
are masters over our own actions. Indeed, if all our actions depend on
the courses of the stars, all we do is done of necessity(8): and necessity
precludes either virtue or vice. But if we possess neither virtue nor
vice, we do not deserve praise or punishment, and God, too, will turn
out to be unjust, since He gives good things to some and afflicts others.
Nay, He will no longer continue to guide or provide for His own creatures,
if all things are carried and swept along in the grip of necessity. And
the faculty of reason will be superfluous to us: for if we are not masters
of any of our actions, deliberation is quite superfluous. Reason, indeed,
is granted to us solely that we might take counsel, and hence all reason
implies freedom of will.
And, therefore, we hold that the stars are not the causes of the things
that occur, nor of the origin of things that come to pass, nor of the
destruction of those things that perish. They are rather signs of showers
and changes of air. But, perhaps, some one may say that though they are
not the causes of wars, yet they are signs of them. And, in truth, the
quality of the air which is produced(1) by sun, and moon, and stars, produces
in various ways different temperaments, and habits, and dispositions(2).
But the habits are amongst the things that we have in our own hands, for
it is reason that rules, and directs, and changes them.
It often happens, also, that comets arise. These are signs of the death
of kings(3), and they are not any of the stars that were made in the beginning,
but are formed at the same tithe by divine command and again dissolved(4).
And so not even that star which the Magi saw at the birth of the Friend
and Saviour of man, our Lord, Who became flesh for our sake, is of the
number of those that were made in the beginning. And this is evidently
the case because sometimes its course was from east to west, and sometimes
from north to south; at one moment it was hidden, and at the next it was
revealed: which is quite out of harmony with the order and nature of the
stars.
It must be understood, then, that the moon derives its light from the
sun; not that God was unable to grant it light of its own, but in order
that rhythm and order may be unimpressed upon nature, one part ruling,
the other being ruled, and that we might thus be taught to live in community
and to share our possessions with one another, and to be under subjection,
first to our Maker and Creator, our God and Master, and then also to the
rulers set in authority over us by Him: and not to question why this man
is ruler and not I myself, but to welcome all that comes from God in a
gracious and reasonable spirit.
The sun and the moon, moreover, suffer eclipse, and this demonstrates
the folly of those who worship the creature in place of the Creator(5),
and teaches us how changeable and alterable all things are For all things
are changeable save God, and whatever is changeable is liable to corruption
in accordance with the laws of its own nature.
Now the cause of the eclipse of the sun is that the body of the moon is
interposed like a partition-wall and casts a shadow, and prevents the
light from being shed down on us(6): and the extent of the eclipse is
proportional to the size of the moon's body that is found to conceal the
sun. But do not marvel that the moon's body is the smaller. For many declare
that the sun is many times larger even than the earth, and the holy Fathers
say that it is equal to the earth: yet often a small cloud, or even a
small hill or a wall quite conceals it.
The eclipse of the moon, on the other hand, is due to the shadow the earth
casts on it when it is a fifteen days' moon and the sun and moon happen
to be at the opposite poles of the highest circle, the sun being under
the earth and the moon above the earth. For the earth casts a shadow and
the sun's light is prevented from illuminating the moon, and therefore
it is then eclipsed.
It should be understood that the moon was made full by the Creator, that
is, a fifteen days' moon: for it was fitting that it should be made complete(7).
But on the fourth day, as we said, the sun was created. Therefore the
moon was eleven days in advance of the sun, because from the fourth to
the fifteenth day there are eleven days. Hence it happens that in each
year the twelve months of the moon contain eleven days fewer than the
twelve months of the sun. For the twelve months of the sun contain three
hundred and sixty-five and a quarter days, and so because the quarter
becomes a whole, in four years an extra day is completed, which is called
bis-sextile. And that year has three hundred and sixty-six days. The years
of the moon, on the other hand, have three hundred and fifty-four days.
For the moon wanes from the time of its origin, or renewal, till it is
fourteen and three-quarter days' old, and proceeds to wane till the twenty-ninth
and a half day, when it is completely void of light And then when it is
once more connected with the sun it is reproduced and renewed, a memorial
of our resurrection. Thus in each year the moon gives away eleven days
to the sun, and so in three years the intercalary month of the Hebrews
arises, and that year comes to consist of thirteen months, owing to the
addition of these eleven days(8).
It is evident that both sun and moon and stars are compound and liable
to corruption according to the laws of their various natures. But of their
nature we are ignorant. Some, indeed, say that fire when deprived of matter
is invisible, and thus, that when it is quenched it vanishes altogether.
Others, again, say that when it is quenched it is transformed into air(9).
The circle of the zodiac has an oblique motion and is divided into twelve
sections called zodia, or signs: each sign has three divisions of ten
each, i.e. thirty divisions, and each division has sixty very minute subdivisions.
The heaven, therefore, has three hundred and sixty-five degrees: the hemisphere
above the earth and that below the earth each having one hundred and eighty
degrees.
The abodes of the planets.
The Ram and the Scorpion are the abode of Mars: the Bull and the Scales,
of Venus(1): the Twins and the Virgin, of Mercury: the Crab, of the Moon:
the Lion, of the Sun: the Archer and the Fish, of Jupiter: Capricorn and
Aquarius, of Saturn.
Their altitudes.
The Ram has the altitude of the Sun: the Bull, of the Moon: the Crab,
of Jupiter: the Virgin, of Mars: the Scales, of Saturn: Capricorn, of
Mercury: the Fish, of Venus.
The phases of the moon.
It is in conjunction whenever it is in the same degree as the sun: it
is born when it is fifteen degrees distant from the sun: it rises when
it is crescent-shaped, and this occurs twice(2), at which times it is
sixty degrees distant from the sun: it is half-full twice, when it is
ninety degrees from the sun: twice it is gibbous, when it is one hundred
and twenty degrees from the sun: it is twice a full moon, giving full
light, when it is a hundred and fifty degrees from the sun: it is a complete
moon when it is a hundred and eighty degrees distant from the sun. We
say twice, because these phases occur both when the moon waxes and when
it wanes. In two and a half days the moon traverses each sign.
BOOK II CHAPTER VIII
Concerning air and winds.
Air is the most subtle element, and is moist and warm: heavier, indeed,
than fire: but lighter than earth and water: it is the cause of respiration
and voice: it is colourless, that is, it has no colour by nature: it is
clear and transparent, for it is capable of receiving light: it ministers
to three of our senses, for it is by its aid that we see, hear and smell:
it has the power likewise of receiving heat and cold, dryness and moisture,
and its movements in space are up, down, within, without, to the right
and to the left, and the cyclical movement.
It does not derive its light from itself, but is illuminated by sun, and
moon, and stars, and fire. And this is just what the Scripture means when
it says, And darkeness was upon the deep(3); for its object is to shew
that the air has not derived its light from itself, but that it is quite
a different essence from light.
And wind is a movement of air: or wind is a rush of air which changes
its name as it changes the place whence it rushes(4).
Its place is in the air. For place is the circumference of a body. But
what is it that surrounds bodies but air? There are, moreover, different
places in which the movement of air originates, and from these the winds
get their names. There are in all twelve winds. It is said that air is
just fire after it has been extinguished, or the vapour of heated water.
At all events, in its own special nature the air is warm, but it becomes
cold owing to the proximity of water and earth, so that the lower parts
of it are cold, and the higher
warm(5).
These then are the winds(6): Caecias, or Meses, arises in the region where
the sun rises in summer. Subsolanus, where the sun rises at the equinoxes.
Eurus, where it rises in winter. Africus, where it sets in winter. Favonius,
where it sets at the equinoxes, and Corns, or Olympias, or Iapyx, where
it sets in summer. Then come Auster and Aquilo, whose blasts oppose one
another. Between Aquilo and Caecias comes Boreas: and tween Eurus and
Auster, Phoenix or Euronotus; between Auster and Africus, Libonotus or
Leucouotus: and lastly, between Aquilo and Corus, Thrascias, or Cercius,
as it is called by the inhabitants of that region.
[These(7), then, are the races which dwell at the ends of the world: beside
Subsolanus are the Bactriani: beside Eurus, the Indians: beside Phoenix,
the Red Sea and Ethiopia: beside Libonotus, the Garamantes, who are beyond
Systis: beside Africus, the Ethiopians and the Western Mauri: beside Favonius,
the columns of Hercules and the beginnings of Libya and Europe: beside
Corus, Iberia, which is now called Spain: beside Thrascia, the Gauls and
the neighbouring nations: beside Aquilo, the Scythians who are beyond
Thrace: beside Boreas, Pontus, Maeotis and the Sarmatae: beside Caecias,
the Caspian Sea and the Sacai.]
BOOK II CHAPTER IX
Concerning the waters.
Water also is one of the four elements, the most beautiful of God's creations.
It is both wet and cold, heavy, and with a tendency to descend, and flows
with great readiness. It is this the Holy Scripture has in view when it
says, And darkness was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God
moved upon the face of the waters(8). For the deep is nothing else than
a huge quantity of water whose limit man cannot comprehend. In the beginning,
indeed, the water lay all over the surface of the earth. And first God
created the firmament to divide the water above the firmament from the
water below the firmament. For in the midst of the sea of waters the firmament
was established at the Master's decree. And out of it God bade the firmament
arise, and it arose. Now for what reason was it that God placed water
above the firmament? It was because of the intense burning heat of the
sun and ether(1). For immediately under the firmament is spread out the
ether(2), and the sun and moon and stars are in the firmament, and so
if water had not been put above it the firmament would have been consumed
by the heat(3).
Next, God bade the waters be gathered together into one mass(4). But when
the Scrip
ture speaks of one mass it evidently does not mean that they were gathered
together into one place: for immediately it goes on to say, And the gatherings
of the waters He called seas(5): but the words signify that the waters
were separated off in a body from the earth into distinct groups. Thus
the waters were gathered together into their special collections and the
dry land was brought to view. And hence arose the two seas that surround
Egypt, for it lies between two seas. These collections contain(6) various
seas and mountains, and islands, and promontories, and harbours, and surround
various bays and beaches, and coastlands. For the word beach is used when
the nature of the tract is sandy, while coastland signifies that it is
rocky and deep close into shore, getting deep all on a sudden In like
manner arose also the sea that lies where the sun rises, the name of which
is the Indian Sea: also the northern sea called the Caspian. The lakes
also were formed in the same manner.
The ocean, then, is like a river encircling the whole earth, and I think
it is concerning it that the divine Scripture says, A river went ant of
Paradise(7). The water of the ocean is sweet and potable(8). It is it
that furnishes the seas with water which, because it stays a long time
in the seas and stands unmoved, becomes bitter: for the sun and the waterspouts
draw up always the finer parts. Thus it is that clouds are formed and
showers take place, because the filtration makes the water sweet.
This is parted into four first divisions, that is to say, into four rivers.
The name of the first is Pheison, which is the Indian Ganges; the name
of the second is Geon, which is the Nile flowing from Ethiopia down to
Egypt: the name of the third is Tigris, and the name of the fourth is
Euphrates. There are also very many other mighty rivers of which some
empty themselves into the sea and others are used up in the earth. Thus
the whole earth is bored through and mined, and has, so to speak, certain
veins through which it sends up in springs the water it has received from
the sea. The water of the spring thus depends for its character on the
quality of the earth. For the sea water is filtered and strained through
the earth and thus becomes sweet. But if the place from which the spring
arises is bitter or briny, so also is the water that is sent up(9). Moreover,
it often happens that water which has been closely pent up bursts through
with violence, and thus it becomes warm. And this is why they send forth
waters that are naturally warm.
By the divine decree hollow places are made in the earth, and so into
these the waters are gathered. And this is how mountains are formed. God,
then, bade the first water produce living breath, since it was to be by
water and the Holy Spirit that moved upon the waters in the beginning(1),
that man was to be renewed. For this is what the divine Basilius said:
Therefore it produced living creatures, small and big; whales and dragons,
fish that swim in the waters, and feathered fowl. The birds form a link
between water and earth and air: for they have their origin in the water,
they live on the earth and they fly in the air. Water, then, is the most
beautiful element and rich in usefulness, and purifies from all filth,
and not only from the filth of the body but from that of the soul, if
it should have received the grace of the Spirit(2).
Concerning the seas(3).
The AEgean Sea is received by the Hellespont, which ends at Abydos and
Sestus: next, the Propontis, which ends at Chalcedon and Byzantium: here
are the straits where the Pontus arises. Next, the lake of Maeotis.
Again, from the beginning of Europe and Libya it is the Iberian Sea, which
extends from the pillars of Hercules to the Pyrenees mountain. Then the
Ligurian Sea as far as the borders of Etruria. Next, the Sardinian Sea,
which is above Sardinia and inclines downwards to Libya. Then the Etrurian
Sea, which begins at the extreme limits of Liguria and ends at Sicily.
Then the Libyan Sea. Then the Cretan, and Sicilian, and Ionian, and Adriatic
Seas, the last of which is poured out of the Sicilian Sea, which is called
the Corinthian Gulf, or the Alcyonian Sea. The Saronic Sea is surrounded
by the Sunian and Scylaean Seas. Next is the Myrtoan Sea and the Icarian
Sea, in which are also the Cyclades. Then the Carpathian, and Pamphylian,
and Egyptian Seas: and, thereafter, above the Icarian Sea, the AEgean
Sea pours itself out. There is also the coast of Europe from the mouth
of the Tanais River to the Pillars of Hercules, 609,709 stadia: and that
of Libya from the Tigris, as far as the mouth of the Canobus, 209,252
stadia: and lastly, that of Asia from the Canobus to the Tanais, which,
including the Gulf, is 4,111 stadia. And so the full extent of the seaboard
of the world that we inhabit with the gulfs is 1,309,072 stadia(4).
BOOK II CHAPTER X
Concerning earth and its products.
The earth is one of the four elements, dry, cold, heavy, motionless, brought
into being by God, out of nothing on the first day. For in the beginning,
he said, God created the heaven and the earths(5): but the seat and foundation
of the earth no man has been able to declare. Some, indeed, hold that
its seat is the waters: thus the divine David says, To Him Who established
the earth on the waters(6). Others place it in the air. Again some other
says, fare Who hangeth the earth on nothing(7). And, again, David, the
singer of God, says, as though the representative of God, I bear up the
pillars of it(8), meaning by "pillars" the force that sustains
it. Further, the expression, He hath rounded it upon the seas(9), shews
clearly that the earth is on all hands surrounded with water. But whether
we grant that it is established on itself, or on air or on water, or on
nothing, we must not turn aside from reverent thought, but must admit
that all things are sustained and preserved by the power of the Creator.
In the beginning, then, as the Holy Scripture says(1), it was hidden beneath
the waters, and was unwrought, that is to say, not beautified. But at
God's bidding, places to hold the waters appeared, and then the mountains
came into existence, and at the divine command the earth received its
own proper adornment, and was dressed in all manner of herbs and plants,
and on these, by the divine decree, was bestowed the power of growth and
nourishment, and of producing seed to generate their like. Moreover, at
the bidding of the Creator it produced also all manner of kinds of living
creatures, creeping things, and wild beasts, and cattle. All, indeed,
are for the seasonable use of man: but of them some are for food, such
as stags, sheep, deer, and such like: others for service such as camels,
oxen, horses, asses, and such like: and others for enjoyment, such as
apes, and among birds, jays and parrots, and such like. Again, amongst
plants and herbs some are fruit bearing, others edible, others fragrant
and flowery, given to us for our enjoyment, for example, the rose and
such like, and others for the healing of disease. For there is not a single
animal or plant in which the Creator has not implanted some form of energy
capable of being used to satisfy man's needs. For He Who knew all things
before they were, saw that in the future man would go forward in the strength
of his own will, and would be subject to corruption, and, therefore, He
created all things for his seasonable use, alike those in the firmament,
and those on the earth, and those in the waters.
Indeed, before the transgression all things were under his power. For
God set him as ruler over all things on the earth and in the waters. Even
the serpent(2) was accustomed to man, and approached him more readily
than it did other living creatures, and held intercourse with him with
delightful motions(3). And hence it was through it that the devil, the
prince of evil, made his most wicked suggestion to our first parents(4).
Moreover, the earth of its own accord used to yield fruits, for the benefit
of the animals that were obedient to man, and there was neither rain nor
tempest on the earth. But after the transgression, when he was compared
with the unintelligent cattle and became like to them(5), after he had
contrived that in him irrational desire should have rule over reasoning
mind and had become disobedient to the Master's command, the subject creation
rose up against him whom the Creator had appointed to be ruler: and it
was appointed for him that he should till with sweat the earth from which
he had been taken.
But even now wild beasts are not without their uses, for, by the terror
they cause, they bring man to the knowledge of his Creator and lead him
to call upon His name. And, further, at the transgression the thorn sprung
out of the earth in accordance with the Lord's express declaration and
was conjoined with the pleasures of the rose, that it might lead us to
remember the transgression on account of which the earth was condemned
to bring forth for us thorns and prickles(6).
That this is the case is made worthy of belief from the fact that their
endurance is secured by the word of the Lord, saying, Be fruitful and
multiply, and replenish the earth(7).
Further, some hold that the earth is in the form of a sphere, others that
it is in that of a cone. At all events it is much smaller
than the heaven, and suspended almost like a point in its midst. And it
will pass away and be changed. But blessed is the man who inherits the
earth promised to the meek(8).
For the earth that is to be the possession of the holy is immortal. Who,
then, can fitly marvel at the boundless and incomprehensible wisdom of
the Creator? Or who can render sufficient thanks to the Giver of so many
blessings(9) ?
[There are also provinces, or prefectures, of the earth which we recognise:
Europe embraces thirty four, and the huge continent of Asia has forty-eight
of these provinces, and twelve canons as they are called(1).]
BOOK II CHAPTER XI
Concerning Paradise.
Now when God was about to fashion man oat of the visible and invisible
creation in His own image and likeness to reign as king and ruler over
all the earth and all that it contains, He first made for him, so to speak,
a kingdom in which he should live a life of happiness and prosperity(2).
And this is the divine paradise(3), planted in Eden by the hands of God,
a very storehouse of joy and gladness of heart (for "Eden"(4)
means luxuriousness(5)). Its site is higher in the East than all the earth:
it is temperate and the air that surrounds it is the rarest and purest:
evergreen plants are its pride, sweet fragrances abound, it is flooded
with light, and in sensuous freshness and beauty it transcends imagination:
in truth the place is divine, a meet home for him who was created in God's
image: no creature lacking reason made its dwelling there but man alone,
the work of God's own hands.
In its midst(6) God planted the tree of life and the tree of knowledge(7).
The tree of knowledge was for trial, and proof, and exercise of man's
obedience and disobedience: and hence it was named the tree of the knowledge
of good and evil, or else it was because to those who partook of it was
given power to know their own nature. Now this is a good thing for those
who are mature, but an evil thing for the immature and those whose appetites
are too strong(8), being like solid food to tender babes still in need
of milk(9). For our Creator, God, did not intend us to be burdened with
care and troubled about many things, nor to take thought about, or make
provision for, our own life. But this at length was Adam's fate: for he
tasted and knew that he was naked and made a girdle round about him: for
he took fig-leaves and girded himself about. But before they took of the
fruit, They were both naked. Adam and Eve, and were not ashamed(1). For
God meant that we should be thus free from passion, and this is indeed
the mark of a mind absolutely void of passion. Yea, He meant us further
to be free from care and to have but one work to perform, to sing as do
the angels, without ceasing or intermission, the praises of the Creator,
and to delight in contemplation of Him and to cast all our care on Him.
This is what the Prophet David proclaimed to us when He said, Cast thy
burden on the Lord, and He will sustain thee(2). And, again, in the Gospels,
Christ taught His disciples saying, Take no thought for your life what
ye shall eat, nor for your body what ye shall put on(3). And further,
Seek ye first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness and all these things
shall be added unto you(4). And to Martha He said, Martha, Martha, thou
art careful and troubled about many things: but one thing is needful:
and Mary hath chosen that good part, which shall not be taken away from
her(5), meaning, clearly, sitting at His feet and listening to His words.
The tree of life, on the other hand, was a tree having the energy that
is the cause of life, or to be eaten only by those who deserve to live
and are not subject to death. Some, indeed, have pictured Paradise as
a realm of sense(6), and others as a realm of mind. But it seems to me,
that, just as man is a creature, in whom we find both sense and mind blended
together, in like manner also man's most holy temple combines the properties
of sense and mind, and has this twofold expression: for, as we said, the
life in the body is spent in the most divine and lovely region, while
the life in the soul is passed in a place far more sublime and of more
surpassing beauty, where God makes His home, and where He wraps man about
as with a glorious garment, and robes him in His grace, and delights and
sustains him like an angel with the sweetest of all fruits, the contemplation
of Himself. Verily it has been filly named the tree of life. For since
the
life is not cut short by death, the sweetness of the divine participation
is imparted to those who share it. And this is, in truth, what God meant
by every tree, saying, Of every tree in Paradise thou mayest freely eat(7).
For the 'every' is just Himself in Whom and through Whom the universe
is maintained. But the tree of the knowledge of good and evil was for
the distinguishing between the many divisions of contemplation, and this
is just the knowledge of one's own nature, which, indeed, is a good thing
for those who are mature and advanced in divine contemplation (being of
itself a proclamation of the magnificence of God), and have no fear of
falling(8), because they have through time come to have the habit of such
contemplation, but it is an evil tiring to those still young and with
stronger appetites, who by reason of their insecure bold on the better
part, and because as yet they are not firmly established in the seat of
the one and only good, are apt to be torn and dragged away from this to
the care of their own body.
Thus, to my thinking, the divine Paradise is twofold, and the God-inspired
Fathers handed down a true message, whether they taught this doctrine
or that. Indeed, it is possible to understand by every tree the knowledge
of the divine power derived from created things. In the words of the divine
Apostle, For the invisible things of Him from the creation of the world
are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made(9). But
of all these thoughts and speculations the sublimest is that dealing with
ourselves, that is, with our own composition. As the divine David says,
The knowledge of Thee from me(1), that is from my constitution, was made
a wonder(2). But for the reasons we have already mentioned, such knowledge
was dangerous for Adam who had been so lately created(3).
The tree of life too may be understood as that more divine thought that
has its origin in the world of sense, and the ascent through that to the
originating and constructive cause of all. And this was the name He gave
to every tree, implying fulness and indivisibility, and conveying only
participation in what is good. But by the tree of the knowledge of good
and evil, we are to understand that sensible and pleasurable food which,
sweet though it seems, in reality brings him who partakes of it into communion
with evil. For God says, Of every tree in Paradise thou mayest freely
eat(4). It is, me-thinks, as if God said, Through all My creations thou
art to ascend to Me thy creator, and of all the fruits titan mayest pluck
one, that is, Myself who ant the true life: let every thing bear for thee
the fruit of life, and let participation in Me be the support of your
own being. For in this way than wilt be immortal. But of the tree of the
knowledge of good and evil, thou shall not eat of it: for in the day that
thou eatest thereof thou shall surely die s. For sensible food is by nature
for the replenishing of that which gradually wastes away and it passes
into the drought and perisheth: and he cannot remain incorruptible who
partakes of sensible food.
BOOK II CHAPTER XII
Concerning Man.
IN this way, then, God brought into existence mental essence(6), by which
I mean, angels and all the heavenly orders. For these clearly have a mental
and incorporeal nature: "incorporeal" I mean in comparison with
the denseness of matter. For the Deity alone in reality is immaterial
and incorporeal. But further He created in the same way sensible essence(7),
that is heaven and earth and the intermediate region; and so He created
both the kind of being that is of His own nature (for the nature that
has to do with reason is related to God, and apprehensible by mind alone),
and the kind which, inasmuch as it clearly falls under the province of
the senses, is separated from Him by the greatest interval. And it was
also fit that there should be a mixture of both kinds of being, as a token
of still greater wisdom and of the opulence of the Divine expenditure
as regards natures, as Gregorius, the expounder of God's being and ways,
puts it, and to be a sort of connecting link between the visible and invisible
natures(8). And by the word "fit" I mean, simply that it was
an evidence of the Creator's will, for that will is the law and ordinance
most meet, and no one will say to his Maker, "Why hast Thou so fashioned
me?" For the potter is able at his will to make vessels of various
patterns out of his clay(9), as a proof of his own wisdom.
Now this being the case, He creates with His own hands man of a visible
nature and an invisible, after His own image and likeness: on the one
hand man's body He formed of earth, and on the other his reasoning and
thinking soul(1) He bestowed upon him by His own inbreathing, and this
is what we mean by "after His image." For the phrase "after
His image" clearly refers(2) to the side of his nature which consists
of mind and free will, whereas "after His likeness "means likeness
in virtue so far as that is possible.
Further, body and soul were formed at one and the same time(3), not first
the one and then the other, as Origen so senselessly supposes.
God then made man without evil, upright, virtuous, free from pain and
care, glorified with every virtue, adorned with all that is good, like
a sort of second microcosm within the great world(4). another angel capable
of worship, compound, surveying the visible creation and initiated into
the mysteries of the realm of thought, king over the things of earth,
but subject to a higher king, of the earth and of the heaven, temporal
and eternal, belonging to the realm of sight and to the realm of thought,
midway between greatness and lowliness, spirit and flesh: for he is spirit
by grace, but flesh by overweening pride: spirit that he may abide and
glorify his Benefactor, and flesh that he may suffer, and suffering may
be admonished and disciplined when he prides himself in his greatness(5):
here, that is, in the present life, his life is ordered as an animal's,
but elsewhere, that is, in the age to come, he is changed and--to complete
the mystery--becomes deified by merely inclining himself towards God;
becoming deified, in the way of participating in the divine glory and
not in that of a change into the divine being(6).
But God made him by nature sinless, and endowed him with free will. By
sinless, I mean not that sin could find no place in him (for that is the
case with Deity alone), bat that sin is the result of the free volition
he enjoys rather than an integral part of his nature(7); that is to say,
he has the power to continue and go forward in the path of goodness, by
co-operating with the divine grace, and likewise to turn from good and
take to wickedness, for God has conceded this by conferring freedom of
will upon him. For there is no virtue in what is the result of mere force(8).
The soul, accordingly(9), is a living essence, simple, incorporeal, invisible
in its proper nature to bodily eyes, immortal, reasoning and intelligent,
formless, making use of an organised body, and being the source of its
powers of life, and growth, and sensation, and generation(1), mind being
but its purest part and not in any wise alien to it; (for as the eye to
the body, so is the mind to the soul); further it enjoys freedom and volition
and energy, and is mutable, that is, it is given to change, because it
is created. All these qualities according to nature it has received of
the grace of the Creator, of which grace it has received both its being
and this particular kind of nature.
Marg. The different applications of "incorporeal." We understand
two kinds of what is incorporeal and invisible and formless: the one is
such in essence, the other by free gift: and likewise the one is such
in nature, and the other only in comparison with the denseness of matter.
God then is incorporeal by nature, but the angels and demons and souls
are said to be so by free gift, and in comparison with the denseness of
matter.
Further, body is that which has three dimensions, that is to say, it has
length and breadth and depth, or thickness. And every body is composed
of the four elements; the bodies of living creatures, moreover, are composed
of the four humours.
Now there are, it should be known, four elements: earth which is dry and
cold: water which is cold and wet: air which is wet and warm: fire which
is warm and dry. In like manner there are also four humours, analogous
to the four elements: black bile, which bears an analogy to earth, for
it is dry and cold: phlegm, analogous to water, for it is cold and wet:
blood, analogous to air(2), for it is wet and warm: yellow bile, the analogue
to fire, for it is warm and city. Now, fruits are composed of the elements,
and the humours are composed of the fruits, and the bodies of living creatures
consist of the humours and dissolve back into them. For every thing that
is compound dissolves back into its elements.
Marg. That man has community alike with inanimate things and animate creatures,
whe-
ther they are devoid of or possess the faculty of reason.
Man, it is to be noted, has community with things inanimate, and participates
in the life of unreasoning creatures, and shares in the mental processes
of those endowed with reason. For the bond of union between man and inanimate
things is the body and its composition out of the font elements: and the
bond between man and plants consists, in addition to these things, of
their powers of nourishment and growth and seeding, that is, generation:
and finally, over and above these links man is connected with unreasoning
animals by appetite, that is anger and desire, and sense and impulsive
movement.
There are then five senses, sight, hearing, smell, taste, touch. Further,
impulsive movement consists in change from place to place, and in the
movements of the body as a whole and in the emission of voice and the
drawing of breath. For we have it in our power to perform or refrain from
performing these actions.
Lastly, man's reason unites him to incorporeal and intelligent natures,
for he applies his reason and mind and judgment to everything, and pursues
after virtues, and eagerly follows after piety, which is the crown of
the virtues. And so man is a microcosm.
Moreover, it should be known that division and flux and change(3) are
peculiar to the body alone. By change, I mean change in quality, that
is in heat and cold and so forth: by flux, I mean change in the way of
depletion(4), for dry things and wet things and spirit s suffer depletion,
and require repletion: so that hunger and thirst are natural affections.
Again, division is the separation of the humours, one from another, and
the partition into form and matter(6).
But piety and thought are the peculiar properties of the soul. And the
virtues are common to soul and body, although they are referred to the
soul as if the soul were making use of the body.
The reasoning part, it should be understood, naturally bears rule over
that which is void of reason. For the faculties of the soul are divided
into that which has reason, and that which is without reason. Again, of
that which is without reason there are two divisions: that which does
not listen to reason, that is to say, is disobedient to reason, and that
which listens and obeys reason. That which does not listen or obey reason
is the vital or pulsating faculty, and the spermatic or generative faculty,
and the vegetative or nutritive faculty: to this belong also the faculties
of growth and bodily formation. For these are not under the dominion of
reason but under that of nature. That which listens to and obeys reason,
on the other hand is divided into anger anti desire. And the unreasoning
part of the soul is called in common the pathetic and the appetitive(7).
Further, it is to be understood, that impulsive movement s likewise belongs
to the part that is obedient to reason.
The part(9) which does not pay heed to reason includes the nutritive and
generative and pulsating faculties: and the name "vegetative(9a)"
is applied to the faculties of increase and nutriment and generation,
and the name "vital" to the faculty of pulsation.
Of the faculty of nutrition, then, there are four forces: an attractive
force which attracts nourishment: a retentive force by which nourishment
is retained and not suffered to be immediately excreted: an alterative
force by which the food is resolved into the humours: and an excretive
force, by which the excess of food is excreted into the draught and cast
forth.
The forces again(1), inherent in a living creature are, it should be noted,
partly psychical, partly vegetative, partly vital. The psychical forces
are concerned with free volition, that is to say, impulsive movement and
sensation. Impulsive movement includes change of place and movement of
the body as a whole, and phonation and respiration. For it is in our power
to perform or refrain from performing these acts. The vegetative and vital
forces, however, are quite outside the province of will. The vegetative,
moreover, include the faculties of nourishment and growth, and generation,
and the vital power is the faculty of pulsation. For these go on energising
whether we will it or not.
Lastly, we must observe that of actual things, some are good, and some
are bad. A good thing in anticipation constitutes desire: while a good
thing in realisation constitutes pleasure. Similarly an evil thing in
anticipation begets fear, and in realisation it begets pain. And when
we speak of good in this connection we are to be understood to mean both
real and apparent good: and, similarly, we mean real and apparent evil.
BOOK II CHAPTER XIII
Concerning Pleasures.
There are pleasures of the soul and pleasures of the body. The pleasures
of the soul are those which are the exclusive possession of the soul,
such as the pleasures of learning and contemplation. The pleasures of
the body, however, are those which are enjoyed by soul and body in fellowship,
and hence are called bodily pleasures: and such are the pleasures of food
and intercourse and the like. But one could not find any class of pleasures(2)
belonging solely to the body(3).
Again, some pleasures are true, others false. And the exclusively intellectual
pleasures consist in knowledge and contemplation, while the pleasures
of the body depend upon sensation. Further, of bodily pleasures(4), some
are both natural and necessary, in the absence of which life is impossible,
for example the pleasures of food which replenishes waste, and the pleasures
of necessary clothing. Others are natural but not necessary, as the pleasures
of natural and lawful intercourse. For though the function that these
perform is to secure the permanence of the race as a whole, it is still
possible to live a virgin life apart from them. Others, however, are neither
natural nor necessary, such as drunkenness, lust, and surfeiting to excess.
For these contribute neither to the maintenance of our own lives nor to
the succession of the race, but on the contrary, are rather even a hindrance.
He therefore that would live a life acceptable to God must follow after
those pleasures which are both natural and necessary: and must give a
secondary place to those which are natural but not necessary, and enjoy
them only in fitting season, and manner, and measure; while the others
must be altogether renounced.
Those then are to be considered moral(5) pleasures which are not bound
up with pain, and bring no cause for repentance, and result in no other
harm and keep(6) within the bounds of moderation, and do not draw us far
away from serious occupations, nor make slaves of us.
BOOK II CHAPTER XIV
Concerning Pain.
There are four varieties of pain, viz., anguish(7), griefs(8), envy, pity.
Anguish is pain without utterance: grief is pain that is heavy to bear
like a burden: envy is pain over the good fortune of others: pity is pain
over the evil fortune of others.
BOOK II CHAPTER XV
Concerning Fear.
Fear is divided into six varieties: viz., shrinking(9), shame, disgrace,
consternation, panic, anxiety(9a). Shrinking(9b) is fear of some act about
to take place. Shame is fear arising from the anticipation of blame: and
this is the highest form of the affection. Disgrace is fear springing
from some base act already done, and even for this form there is some
hope of salvation. Consternation is fear originating in some huge prOduct
of the imagination. Panic is fear caused by some unusual product of the
imagination. Anxiety is fear of failure, that is, of misfortune: for when
we fear that our efforts will not meet with success, we suffer anxiety.
BOOK II CHAPTER XVI
Concerning Anger.
Anger is the ebullition(1) of the heart's blood(2) produced by bilious
exhalation or turbidity. Hence it is that the words colh and cols (3)
are both used in the sense of anger. Anger is sometimes lust for vengeance.
For when we are wronged or think that we are wronged, we are distressed,
and there arises this mixture of desire and anger.
There are three forms of anger: rage, which the Greeks also call colh
or cols , mhnis and kotos . When anger arises and begins to be roused,
it is called rage or colh or cols . Wrath again implies that the bile
endures, that is to say, that the memory of the wrong abides: and indeed
the Greek word for it, mhnis is derived from menein , and means what abides
and is transferred to memory. Rancour, on the other hand, implies watching
for a suitable moment for revenge, and the Greek word for it is kotos
from keisqai .
Anger further is the satellite of reason, the vindicator of desire. For
when we long after anything and are opposed in our desire by some one,
we are angered at that person, as though we had been wronged: and reason
evidently deems that there are just grounds for displeasure in what has
happened, in the
case of those who, like us, have in the natural course of things to guard
their own position.
BOOK II CHAPTER XVII
Concerning Imagination.
Imagination(4) is a faculty of the unreasoning part of the soul. It is
through the organs of sense that it is brought into action, and it is
spoken of as sensation. And further, what is imagined(5) and perceived
is that which comes within the scope of the faculty of imagination and
sensation. For example, the sense of sight is the visual faculty itself,
but the object of sight is that which comes within the scope of the sense
of sight, such as a stone or any other such object. Further, an imagination
is an affection of the unreasoning part of the soul which is occasioned
by some object acting upon the sensation. But an appearance(6) is an empty
affection of the unreasoning part of the soul, not occasioned by any object
acting upon the sensation. Moreover the organ of imagination is the anterior
ventricle of the brain.
BOOK II CHAPTER XVIII
Concerning Sensation.
Sensation is that faculty of the soul whereby material objects can be
apprehended or discriminated. And the sensoria are the organs or members
through which sensations are conveyed. And the objects of sense are the
things that come within the province of sensation. And lastly, the subject
of sense is the living animal which possesses the faculty of sensation.
Now there are five senses, and likewise five organs of sense.
The first sense is sight: and the sensoria or organs of sight are the
nerves of the brain and the eyes. Now sight is primarily perception of
colour, but along with the colour it discriminates the body that has colour,
and its size and form, and locality, and the intervening space and the
number(7): also whether it is in motion or at rest, rough or smooth, even
or uneven, sharp or blunt, and finally whether its composition is watery
or earthy, that is, wet or dry.
The second sense is hearing, whereby voices and sounds are perceived.
And it distinguishes these as sharp or deep, or smooth or loud. Its organs
are the soft nerves of the brain, and the structure of the ears. Further,
man and the ape are the only animals that do not move their ears.
The third sense is smell, which is caused by the nostrils transmitting
the vapours to the brain: and it is bounded by the extreme limits of the
anterior ventricle of the brain. It is the faculty by which vapours are
perceived and apprehended. Now, the most generic distinction between vapours
is whether they have a good or an evil odour, or form an intermediate
class with neither a good nor an evil odour. A good odour is produced
by the thorough digestion in the body of the humours. When they are only
moderately digested the intermediate class is formed, and when the digestion
is very imperfect or utterly wanting, an evil odour results.
The fourth sense is taste: it is the faculty whereby the humours are apprehended
or perceived, and its organs of sense are the tongue, and more especially
the lips, and the palate (which the Greeks call ouraniskou ), and in these
are nerves that come from the brain and are spread out, and convey to
the dominant part of the soul the perception or sensation they have encountered(8).
The so-called gustatory qualities of the humours are these:--sweetness,
pungency, bitterness, astringency, acerbity, sourness, saltness, fattiness,
stickiness; for taste is capable of discriminating all these. But water
has none of these qualities, and is therefore devoid of taste. Moreover,
astringency is only a more intense and exaggerated form of acerbity.
The fifth sense is touch, which is common to all living things(9). Its
organs are nerves which come from the brain and ramify all through the
body. Hence the body as a whole, including even the other organs of sense,
possesses the sense of touch. Within its scope come heat and cold, softness
and hardness, viscosity and brittleness(1), heaviness and lightness: for
it is by touch alone that these qualities are discriminated. On the other
hand, roughness and smoothness, dryness and wetness, thickness and thinness,
up and down, place and size, whenever that is such as to be embraced in
a single application of the sense of touch, are all common to touch and
sight, as well as denseness and rareness, that is porosity, and rotundity
if it is small, and some other shapes. In like manner also by the aid
of memory and thought perception of the nearness of a body is possible,
and similarly perception of number up to two or three, and such small
and easily reckoned figures. But it is by sight rather than touch that
these things are perceived.
The Creator, it is to be noted, fashioned all the other organs of sense
in pairs, so that if one were destroyed, the other might fill its place.
For there are two eyes, two ears, two orifices of the nose, and two tongues,
which in some animals, such as snakes, are separate, but in others, like
man, are united. But touch is spread over the whole body with the exception
of bones, nerves, nails, horns, hairs, ligaments, and other such structures.
Further, it is to be observed that sight is possible only in straight
lines, whereas smell and hearing are not limited to straight lines only,
but act in all directions. Touch, again, and taste act neither in straight
lines, nor in every direction, but only when each comes near to the sensible
objects that are proper to it.
BOOK II CHAPTER XIX
Concerning Thought.
The faculty of thought deals with judgments and assents, and impulse to
action and disinclinations, and escapes from action: and more especially
with thoughts connected with what is thinkable, and the virtues and the
different branches of learning, and the theories of the arts and matters
of counsel and choice(2). Further, it is this faculty which prophesies
the future to us in dreams, and this is what the Pythagoreans, adopting
the Hebrew view, hold to be the one true form of prophecy. The organ of
thought then is the mid-ventricle of the brain, and the vital spirit it
contains(3).
BOOK II CHAPTER XX
Concerning Memory.
The faculty of memory is the cause(4) and storehouse of remembrance and
recollection. For memory is a fantasy s that is left behind of some sensation
and thought(6) manifesting itself in action; or the preservation(7) of
a sensation and thought(8). For the soul comprehends objects of sense
through the organs of sense, that is to say, it perceives, and thence
arises a notion: and similarly it comprehends the objects of thought through
the mind, and thence arises a thought. It is then the preservation of
the types of these notions and thoughts that is spoken of as memory.
Further, it is worthy of remark that the apprehension of matters of thought
depends on learning, or natural process of thought, and not on sensation.
For though objects of sense are retained in the memory by themselves,
only such objects of thought are remembered as we have learned, and we
have no memory of their essence.
Recollection is the name given to the recovery of some memory lost by
forgetfulness. For forgetfulness is just loss of memory. The faculty of
imagination(9) then, having apprehended material objects through the senses,
transmits this to the faculty of thought or reason (for they are both
the same), and this after it has received and passed judgment on it, passes
it on to the faculty of memory. Now the organ of memory is the posterior
ventricle of the brain, which the Greeks call the paregkefalis , and the
vital spirit it contains.
BOOK II CHAPTER XXI
Concerning Conception and Articulation.
Again the reasoning part of the soul is divided into conception and articulation.
Conception is an activity of the soul originating in the reason without
resulting in utterance. Accordingly, often, even when we are silent we
run through a whole speech in our minds, and hold discussions in our dreams.
And it is this faculty chiefly which constitutes us all reasoning beings.
For those who are dumb by birth or have lost their voice through some
disease or injury, are just as much reasoning beings. But articulation
by voice or in the different dialects requires energy: that is to say,
the word is articulated by the
tongue and mouth, and this is why it is named articulation. It is, indeed,
the messenger of thought, and it is because of it that we are called speaking
beings.
BOOK II CHAPTER XXII
Concerning Passion and Energy.
Passion is a word with various meanings. It is used in regard to the body,
anti refers to diseases and wounds, and again, it is used in reference
to the soul, and means desire anti anger. But to speak broadly and generally,
passion is an animal affection which is succeeded by pleasure anti pain.
For pain succeeds passion, but is not the same thing as passion. For passion
is an affection of things without sense, but not so pain. Pain then is
not passion, but the sensation of passion: and it must be considerable,
that is to say,
it must be great enough to come within the scope of sense.
Again, the definition of passions of the soul is this: Passion is a sensible
activity of the appetitive faculty, depending on the presentation to the
mind of something good or bad. Or in other words, passion is an irrational
activity of the soul, resulting from the notion of something good or bad.
For the notion of something good results in desire, and the notion of
something bad results in anger. But passion considered as a class, that
is, passion in general, is defined as a movement in one thing caused by
another. Energy, on the other hand, is a drastic movement, and by "drastic"
is meant that which is moved of itself. Thus, anger is the energy manifested
by the part of the soul where anger resides, whereas passion involves
the two divisions of the soul, and in addition the whole body when it
is forcibly impelled to action by anger. For there has been caused movement
in one thing caused by another, and this is called passion.
But in another sense energy is spoken of as passion. For energy is a movement
in harmony with nature, whereas passion is a movement at variance with
nature. According, then, to this view, energy may be spoken of as passion
when it does not act in accord with nature, whether its movement is due
to itself or to some other thing. Thus, in connection with the heart,
its natural pulsation is energy, whereas its palpitation, which is an
excessive and unnatural movement, is passion and not energy.
But it is not every activity of the passionate part of the soul that is
called passion, but only the more violent ones, and such as are capable
of causing sensation: for the minor and unperceived movements are certainly
not passions. For to constitute passion there is necessary a considerable
degree of force, and thus it is on this account that we add to the definition
of passion that it is a sensible activity. For the lesser activities escape
the notice of the senses, and do not cause passion.
Observe also that our soul possesses twofold faculties, those of knowledge,
and those of life. The faculties of knowledge are mind, thought, notion,
presentation, sensation: and the vital or appetitive faculties are will
and choice. Now, to make what has been said clearer, let us consider these
things more closely, and first let us take the faculties of knowledge.
Presentation and sensation then have already been sufficiently discussed
above. It is sensation that causes a passion, which is called presentation,
to arise in the soul, and from presentation comes notion. Thereafter thought,
weighing the truth or falseness of the notion, determines what is true:
and this explains the Greek word for thought, dianoia , which is derived
from dianoeia , meaning to think and discriminate. That, however, which
is judged(1) and determined to be true, is spoken of as mind.
Or to put it otherwise: The primary activity of the mind, observe, is
intelligence, but intelligence applied to any object is called a thought,
and when this persists and makes on the mind an impression of the object
of thought, it is named reflection, and when reflection dwells on the
same object and puts itself to the test, and closely examines the relation
of the thought to the soul, it gets the name prudence. Further, prudence,
when it extends its area forms the power of reasoning, and is called conception,
and this is defined as the fullest activity of the soul, arising in that
part where reason resides, and being devoid of outward expression: and
from it proceeds the uttered word spoken by the tongue. And now that we
have discussed the faculties of knowledge, let us turn to the vital or
appetitive faculties.
It should be understood that there is implanted in the soul by nature
a faculty of desiring that which is in harmony with its nature, and of
maintaining in close union all that belongs essentially to its nature:
and this power is called will or qelhsis . For the essence both of existence
and of living yearns after activity both as regards mind and sense, and
in this it merely longs to realise its own natural and perfect being.
And so this definition also is given of this natural will: will is an
appetite, both rational and vital, depending only on what is natural.
So that will(2) is nothing else than the natural and vital and rational
appetite of all things that go to constitute nature, that is, just the
simple faculty. For the appetite of creatures without reason, since it
is irrational, is not called will.
Again boulhsis or wish is a sort of natural will, that is to say, a natural
and rational appetite for some definite thing. For there is seated in
the soul of man a faculty of rational desire. When, then, this rational
desire directs itself naturally to some definite object it is called wish.
For wish is rational desire and longing for some definite thing.
Wish, however, is used both in connection with what is within our power,
and in connection with what is outside our power, that is, both with regard
to the possible and the impossible. For we wish often to indulge lust
or to be temperate, or to sleep and the like, and these are within our
power to accomplish, and possible. But we wish also to be kings, and this
is not within our power, or we wish perchance never to die, and this is
an impossibility.
The wish(3), then, has reference to the end alone, and not to the means
by which the end is attained. The end is the object of our wish, for instance,
to be a king or to enjoy good health: but the means by which the end is
attained, that is to say, the manner in which we ought to enjoy good health,
or reach the rank of king, are the objects of deliberation(4). Then after
wish follow inquiry and speculation ( zhthsis and skiYis ), and after
these, if the object is anything within our power, comes counsel or deliberation
( boulh or bouleusis ): counsel is an appetite for investigating lines
of action lying within our own power. For one deliberates, whether one
ought to prosecute any matter or not, and next, one decides which is the
better, and this is called judgment ( krisis ). Thereafter, one becomes
disposed to and forms a liking for that in favour of which deliberation
gave judgment, and this is called inclination ( gnwmh ). For should one
form a judgment and not be disposed to or form a liking for the object
of that judgment, it is not called inclination. Then, again, after one
has become so disposed, choice or selection ( proairesis and epilogh )
comes into play. For choice consists in the choosing and selecting of
one of two possibilities in preference to the other. Then one is impelled
to action, and this is called impulse ( ormh ): and thereafter it is brought
into employment, and this is called use ( crhsis ). The last stage after
we have enjoyed the use is cessation from desire.
In the case, however, of creatures without reason, as soon as appetite
is roused for any-tiring, straightway arises impulse to action. For the
appetite of creatures without reason is irrational, and they are ruled
by their natural appetite. Hence, neither the names of will or wish are
applicable to the appetite of creatures without reason. For will is rational,
free and natural desire, and in the case of man, endowed with reason as
he is, the natural appetite is ruled rather than rules For his actions
are free, and depend upon reason, since the faculties of knowledge and
life are bound up together in man. He is free in desire, free in wish,
free in examination and investigation, free in deliberation, free in judgment,
free in inclination, free in choice, free in impulse, and free in action
where thai is in accordance with nature.
But in the case of God(5), it is to be remembered, we speak of wish, but
it is not correct to speak of choice. For God does not deliberate, since
that is a mark of ignorance, and no one deliberates about what he knows.
But if counsel is a mark of ignorance, surely choice(6) must also be so.
God, then, since He has absolute knowledge of everything, does not deliberate(7).
Nor in the case of the soul of the Lord do we speak of counsel or choice,
seeing that He had no part in ignorance. For, although He was of a nature
that is not cognisant of the future, yet because of His oneness in subsistence
with God the Word, He had knowledge of all things, and that not by grace,
but, as we have said, because He was one in subsistence(8). For He Himself
was both God and Man, and hence He did not possess the will that acts
by opinion(9) or disposition. While He did possess the natural and simple
will which is to be observed equally in all the personalities of men,
His holy soul had not opinion(1) (or, disposition) that is to say, no
inclination opposed to His divine will, nor aught else contrary to His
divine will. For opinion (or, disposition) differs as persons differ,
except m the case of the holy and simple and uncompound and indivisible
Godhead(2). There, indeed, since the subsistences are in nowise divided
or separated, neither is the object of will divided. And there, since
there is but one nature, there is also but one natural will. And again,
since the subsistences are unseparated, the three subsistences have also
one object of will, and one activity. In the case of men, however, seeing
that their nature is one, their natural will is also one, but since their
subsistences(3) are separated and divided from each other, alike in place
and time, and disposition to things, and in many other respects, for this
reason their acts of will and their opinions are different. But in the
case of our Lord Jesus Christ, since He possesses different natures, His
natural wills, that is, His volitional faculties belonging to Him as God
and as Man are also different. But since the subsistence is one, and He
Who exercises the will is one, the object of the will the gnomic will(5),
is also one, His human will evidently following His divine will, and willing
that which the divine will willed it to will.
Further note, that will ( qelhsis ) and wish ( boulhsis ) are two different
things: also the object of will ( to qelhton ) and the capacity for will
( qelhtikon ), and the subject that exercises will ( o qelwn ), are all
different. For will is just the simple faculty of willing, whereas wish
is will directed to some definite object. Again, the object of will is
the matter underlying the will, that is to say, the thing that we will:
for instance, when appetite is roused for food. The appetite pure and
simple, however, is a rational will. The capacity for will, moreover,
means that which possesses the volitional faculty, for example, man. Further,
the subject that exercises will is the actual person who makes use of
will.
The word to qelhma , it is well to note, sometimes denotes the will, that
is, the volitional faculty, and in this sense we speak of natural will:
and sometimes it denotes the object of will, and we speak of will ( qelhma
gnwmikon ) depending on inclination(6).
BOOK II CHAPTER XXIII
Concerning Energy.
All the faculties(7) we have already discussed, both those of knowledge
and those of life, both the natural and the artificial, are, it is to
be noted, called energies. For energy s is the natural force and activity
of each essence: or again, natural energy is the activity innate in every
essence: and so, clearly, things that have the same essence have also
the same energy, and things that have different natures have also different
energies. For no essence can be devoid of natural energy.
Natural energy again is the force in each essence by which its nature
is made manifest. And again: natural energy is the primal, eternally-moving
force of the intelligent soul: that is, the eternally-moving word of the
soul, which ever springs naturally from it. And yet again: natural energy(9)
is the force and activity of each essence which only that which is not
lacks.
But actions(9a) are also called energies: for instance, speaking, eating,
drinking, and such like. The natural affections(9b) also are often called
energies, for instance, hunger, thirst, and so forth(1). And yet again,
the result of the force is also often called energy.
Things are spoken of in a twofold way as being potential and actual. For
we say that the child at the breast is a potential scholar, for he is
so equipped that, if taught, he will become a scholar. Further, we speak
of a potential and an actual scholar, meaning that the latter is versed
in letters, while the former has the power of interpreting letters, but
does not put it into actual use: again, when we speak of an actual scholar,
we mean that he puts his power into actual use, that is to say, that he
really interprets writings.
It is, therefore, to be observed that in the second sense potentiality
and actuality go together; for the scholar is in the one case potential,
and in the other actual.
The primal and only true energy of nature is the voluntary or rational
and independent life which constitutes our humanity. I know not how those
who rob the Lord of this can say that He became man(2).
Energy is drastic activity of nature: and by drastic is meant that which
is moved of itself.
BOOK II CHAPTER XXIV
Concerning what is Voluntary anal what is Involuntary.
The voluntary(3) implies a certain definite action, and so-called involuntariness
also implies a certain definite action. Further, many attribute true involuntariness
not only to suffering, but even to action. We must then understand action
to be rational energy. Actions are followed by praise or blame, and some
of them are accompanied with pleasure and others with pain; some are to
be desired by the actor, others are to be shunned: further, of those that
are desirable, some are always so, others only at some particular time.
And so it is also with those that are to be shunned. Again, some actions
enlist pity and are pardonable, others are hateful and deserve punishment.
Voluntariness, then, is assuredly followed by praise or blame, and renders
the action pleasurable and desirable to the actor, either for all time
or for the moment of its performance. Involuntariness, on the other hand,
brings merited pity or pardon in its train, and renders the act painful
and unde-
sirable to the doer, and makes him leave it in a state of incompleteness
even though force is brought to bear upon him.
Further, what is involuntary, depends in part on force and in part on
ignorance. It depends on force when the creative beginning in cause is
from without, that is to say, when one is forced by another without being
at all persuaded, or when one does not contribute to the act on one's
own impulse, or does not co-operate at all, or do on one's own account
that which is exacted by force(4). Thus we may give this definition: "An
involuntary act is one in which the beginning is from without, and where
one does not contribute at all on one's own impulse to that which one
is force" And by beginning we mean the creative cause. All involuntary
act depends, on the other hand, on ignorance, when one is not the cause
of the ignorance one's self, but events just so happen. For, if one commits
murder while drunk, it is an act of ignorance, but yet not involuntary(5):
for one was one's self responsible for the cause of the ignorance, that
is to say, the drunkenness. But if while shooting at the customary range
one slew one's father who happened to be passing by, this would be termed
an ignorant and involuntary act.
As, then, that which is involuntary is in two parts, one depending on
force, the other on ignorance, that which is voluntary is the opposite
of both. For that which is voluntary is the result neither of force nor
of ignorance(6). A voluntary act, then, is one of which the beginning
or cause originates in an actor, who knows each individual circumstance
through which and in which the action takes place. By "individual"
is meant what the rhetoricians call circumstantial elements: for instance,
the actor, the sufferer, the action (perchance a murder), the instrument,
the place, the time, the manner, the reason of the action.
Notice that there are certain things that occupy a place intermediate
between what is voluntary and what is involuntary. Although they are unpleasant
and painful we welcome them as the escape from a still greater trouble;
for instance, to escape shipwreck we cast the cargo overboard(7).
Notice also that children and irrational creatures perform voluntary actions,
but these do not involve the exercise of choice: further, all our actions
that are done in anger and without previous deliberation are voluntary
actions, but do not in the least involve free choice(8). Also, if a friend
suddenly appears on the scene, or if one unexpectedly lights on a treasure,
so far as we are concerned it is quite voluntary, but there is no question
of choice in the matter. For all these things are voluntary, because we
desire pleasure from them, but they do not by any means imply choice,
because they are not the result of deliberation. And deliberation must
assuredly precede choice, as we have said above.
BOOK II CHAPTER XXV
Concerning what is in our own power, that is, concerning Free-will(9).
The first enquiry involved in the consideration of free-will, that is,
of what is in our own power, is whether anything is in our power(1): for
there are many who deny this. The second is, what are the things that
are in our power, and over what things do we have authority? The third
is, what is the reason for which God Who created us endued us with free-will?
So then we shall take up the first question, and firstly we shall prove
that of those things which even our opponents grant, some are within our
power. And let us proceed thus.
Of all the things that happen, the cause is said to be either God, or
necessity, or fate, or nature, or chance, or accident. But God's function
has to do with essence and providence: necessity deals with the movement
of things that ever keep to the same course: fate with the necessary accomplishment
of the things it brings to pass (for fate itself implies necessity): nature
with birth, growth, destruction, plants and animals; chance with what
is rare and unexpected. For chance is defined as the meeting and concurrence
of two causes, originating in choice but bringing to pass something other
than what is natural: for example, if a man finds a treasure while digging
a ditch(2): for the man who hid the treasure did not do so that the other
might find it, nor did the finder dig with the purpose of finding the
treasure: but the former hid it that he might take it away when he wished,
and the other's aim was to dig the ditch: whereas something happened quite
different from what both had in view. Accident again deals with casual
occurrences that take place among lifeless or irrational things, apart
from nature and art. This then is their doctrine. Under which, then, of
these categories are we to bring what happens through the agency of
man, if indeed man is not the cause and beginning of action(3)? for it
would not be right to ascribe to God actions that are sometimes base and
unjust: nor may we ascribe these to necessity, for they are not such as
ever continue the same: nor to fate, for fate implies not possibility
only but necessity: nor to nature, for nature's province is animals and
plants: nor to chance, for the actions of men are not rare and unexpected:
nor to accident, for that is used in reference to the casual occurrences
that take place in the world of lifeless and irrational things. We are
left then with this fact, that the man who acts and makes is himself the
author of his own works, and is a creature endowed with free-will.
Further, if man is the author of no action, the faculty of deliberation
is quite superfluous for to what purpose could deliberation be put if
man is the master of none of his actions? for all deliberation is for
the sake of action. But to prove that the fairest and most precious of
man's endowments is quite superfluous would be the height of absurdity.
If then man deliberates, he deliberates with a view to action. For all
deliberation is with a view to and on account of action.
BOOK II CHAPTER XXVI
Of events(5), some are in our hands, others are not.
Note, however, that while the choice of what is to be done is ever in
our power, the action itself often is prevented by some dispensation of
the divine Providence(7).
BOOK II CHAPTER XXVII
Concerning the reason of our endowment with Free-will.
We hold, therefore, that free-will(8) comes on the scene at the same moment
as reason, and that change and alteration are congenital to all that is
produced. For all that is produced is also subject to change(9). For those
things must be subject to change whose production has its origin in change.
And change consists in being brought into being out of nothing, and in
transforming a substratum of matter into something different. Inanimate
things, then, and things without reason undergo the aforementioned bodily
changes, while the changes of things endowed with reason depend on choice.
For reason consists of a speculative and a practical part. The speculative
part is the contemplation of the nature of things, and the practical consists
in deliberation and defines the true reason for what is to be done. The
speculative side is called mind or wisdom, and the practical side is called
reason or prudence. Every one, then, who deliberates does so in the belief
that the choice of what is to be done lies in his hands, that he may choose
what seems best as the result of his deliberation, and having chosen may
act upon it. And if this is so, free-will must necessarily be very closely
related to reason. For either man is an irrational being, or, if he is
rational, he is master of his acts and endowed with free-will. Hence also
creatures without reason do not enjoy free-will: for nature leads them
rather than they nature, and so they do not oppose the natural appetite,
but as soon as their appetite longs after anything they rush headlong
after it. But man, being rational, leads nature rather than nature him,
and so when he desires aught he has the power to curb his appetite or
to indulge it as he pleases. Hence also creatures devoid of reason are
the subjects neither of praise nor blame, while man is the subject of
both praise and blame(1).
Note also that the angels, being rational, are endowed with free-will,
and, inasmuch as they are created, are liable to change. This in fact
is made plain by the devil who, although made good by the Creator, became
of his own free-will the inventor of evil, and by the powers who revolted
with him(2), that is the demons, and by the other troops of angels who
abode in goodness.
BOOK II CHAPTER XXVIII
Concerning what is not in our hands.
Of things that are not in our hands some have their beginning or cause
in those that are in our power, that is to say, the recompenses of our
actions both in the present and in the age to come, but all the rest are
dependent on the divine will. For the origin of all things is from God,
but their destruction has been introduced by our wickedness for our punishment
or benefit. For God did not create death, neither does He take delight
in the destruction of living things(3). But death is the work rather of
man, that is, its origin is in Adam's transgression, in like manner as
all other punishments. But all other things must be referred to God. For
our birth is to be referred to His creative power; and our continuance
to His conservative power; and our government and safety to His providential
power; and the eternal enjoyment of good things by those who preserve
the laws of nature in which we are formed is to be ascribed to His goodness.
But since some deny the existence of Providence, let us further devote
a few words to the discussion of Providence.
BOOK II CHAPTER XXIX
Concerning Providence.
Providence, then, is the care that God takes over existing things. And
again: Providence is the will of God through which all existing things
receive their fitting issue(4). But if Providence is God's will, according
to true reasoning all things that come into being through Providence must
necessarily be both most fair and most excellent, and such that they cannot
be surpassed. For the same person must of necessity be creator of and
provider for what exists: for it is not meet nor fitting that the creator
of what exists and the provider should be separate persons. For in that
case they would both assuredly be deficient, the one in creating, the
other in providing(5). God therefore is both Creator and Provider, and
His creative and preserving and providing power is simply His good-will.
For whatsoever the Lard pleased that did He in heaven and in earth(6),
and no one resisted His will(7). He willed that all things should be and
they were. He wills the universe to be framed and it is framed, and all
that He wills comes to pass.
That He provides, and that He provides excellently(8), one can most readily
perceive thus. God alone is good and wise by nature. Since then He is
good, He provides: for he who does not provide is not good. For even men
and creatures without reason provide for their own offspring according
to their nature, and he who does not provide is blamed. Again, since He
is wise, He takes the best care over what exists.
When, therefore, we give heed to these things we ought to be filled with
wonder at all the works of Providence, and praise them all(9), and accept
them all without enquiry, even though they are in the eyes of many unjust,
because the Providence of God is beyond our ken and comprehension, while
our reasonings and actions and the future are revealed to His eyes alone.
And by "all" I mean those that are not in our hands: for those
that are in our power are outside the sphere of Providence and within
that of our Free-will.
Now the works of Providence are partly according to the good-will(2)(of
God) and partly according to permission(3). Works of good-will include
alL those that are undeniably good, while works of permission are ......(4).
For Providence often permits the just man to encounter misfortune in order
that he may reveal to otHers the virtue that lies concealed within him(5),
as was the case with Job(6). At other times it allows something strange
to be done in order that something great and marvellous might be accomplished
through the seemingly-strange act, as when the salvation of men was brought
about through the Cross. In another way it allows the pious man to suffer
sore trials in order that he may not depart from a right conscience nor
lapse into pride on account of the power and grace granted to him, as
was the case with Paul(7).
One man is forsaken for a season with a view to another's restoration,
in order that others when they see his state may be taught a lesson(8),
as in the case of Lazarus and the rich man(9). For it belongs to our nature
to be east down when we see persons in distress. Another is deserted by
Providence in order that another may be glorified, and not for his own
sin or that of his parents, just as the man who was blind from his birth
ministered to the glory of the Son of Man(1). Again another is permitted
to suffer in order to stir up emulation in the breasts of others, so that
others by magnifying the glory of the sufferer may resolutely welcome
suffering in the hope of future glory and the desire for future blessings,
as in the case of the martyrs. Another is allowed to fall at times into
some act of baseness in order that another worse fault may be thus corrected,
as for instance when God allows a man who takes pride in his virtue and
righteousness to fall away into fornication in order that he may be brought
through this fall into the perception of his own weakness and be humbled
and approach and make confession to the Lord.
Moreover, it is to be observed(2) that the choice of what is to be done
is in our own hands(3): but the final issue depends, in the one case when
our actions are good, on the cooperation of God, Who in His justice brings
help according to His foreknowledge to such as choose the good with a
right conscience, and, in the other case when our actions are to evil,
on the desertion by God, Who again in His justice stands aloof in accordance
with His foreknowledge(4).
Now there are two forms of desertion: for there is desertion in the matters
of guidance and training, and there is complete and hopeless desertion.
The former has in view the restoration and safety and glory of the sufferer,
or the rousing of feelings of emulation and imitation in others, or the
glory of God: but the latter is when man, after God has done all that
was possible to save him, remains of his own set purpose blind and uncured,
or rather incurable, and then he is handed over to utter destruction,
as was Judas(5). May God be gracious to us, and deliver us from such desertion.
Observe further that the ways of God's providence are many, and they cannot
be explained in words nor conceived by the mind.
And remember that all the assaults of dark and evil fortune contribute
to the salvation of those who receive them with thankfulness, and are
assuredly ambassadors of help.
Also one must bear in mind(6) that God's original wish was that all should
be saved and come to His Kingdom(7). For it was not for punishment that
He formed us but to share in His goodness, inasmuch as He is a good God.
But inasmuch as He is a just God, His will is that sinners should suffer
punishment.
The first then is called God's antecedent will and pleasure, and springs
from Himself, while the second is called God's consequent will and permission,
and has its origin in us. And the latter is two-fold; one part dealing
with matters of guidance and training, and having in view our salvation,
and the other being hopeless and leading to our utter punishment, as we
said above. And this is the case with actions that are not left in our
hands(8).
But of actions that are in our hands the good ones depend on His antecedent
goodwill and pleasure, while the wicked ones depend neither on His antecedent
nor on His consequent will, but are a concession to free-will For that
which is the result of compulsion has neither reason nor virtue in it.
God(9) makes provision for all creation and makes all creation the instrument
of His help and training, yea often even the demons themselves, as for
example in the cases of Job and the swine(1).
BOOK II CHAPTER XXX
Concerning Prescience and Predestination.
We ought to understand(2) that while God knows all things beforehand,
yet He does not predetermine all things(3). For He knows beforehand those
things that are in our power, but He does not predetermine them. For it
is not His will that there should be wickedness nor does He choose to
compel virtue. So that predetermination is the work of the divine command
based on fore-knowledge(4). But on the other hand God predetermines those
things which are not within our power in accordance with His prescience.
For already God in His prescience has prejudged all things in accordance
with His goodness and justice.
Bear in mind, too(5), that virtue is a gift from God implanted in our
nature, and that He Himself is the source and cause of all good, and without
His co-operation(6) and help we cannot will or do any good thing, But
we have it in our power either to abide in virtue and follow God, Who
calls us into ways of virtue, or to stray from paths of virtue, which
is to dwell in wickedness, and to follow the devil who summons but cannot
compel us. For wickedness is nothing else than the withdrawal of goodness,
just as darkness is nothing else than the withdrawal of light While then
we abide in the natural state we abide in virtue, but when we deviate
from the natural state, that is from virtue, we come into an unnatural
state and dwell in wickedness(7).
Repentance is the returning from the unnatural into the natural state,
from the devil to God, through discipline and effort.
Man then the Creator made male, giving him to share in His own divine
grace, and bringing him thus into communion with Himself: and thus it
was that he gave in the manner of a prophet the names to living flyings,
with authority as though they were given to be his slaves. For having
been endowed with reason and mind, and free-will after the image of God,
he was filly entrusted with dominion over earthly things by the common
Creator and Master of all.
But since God in His prescience(8) knew that man would transgress and
become liable to destruction, He made from him a female to be a help to
him like himself; a help, indeed, for the conservation of the race after
the transgression from age to age by generation. For the earliest formation
is called 'making' and not 'generation.' For 'making ' is the original
formation at God's hands, while 'generation' is the succession from each
Other made necessary by the sentence of death imposed on us 'on account
of the transgression.
This man He(9) placed in Paradise, a home that was alike spiritual and
sensible. For he lived in the body on the earth in the realm of sense,
while he dwelt in the spirit among the angels, cultivating divine thoughts,
and being supported by them: living in naked simplicity a life free from
artificiality, and being led up through His creations to the one and only
Creator, in Whose contemplation he found joy and gladness(1).
When therefore He had furnished his nature with free-will, He imposed
a law on him, not to taste of the tree of knowledge. Concerning this tree,
we have said as much as is necessary in the chapter about Paradise, at
least as much as it was in our power to say. And with this command He
gave the promise that, if he should preserve the dignity of the soul by
giving the victory to reason, and acknowledging his Creator and observing
His command, he should share eternal blessedness and live to all eternity,
proving mightier than death: but if forsooth he should subject the soul
to the body, and prefer the delights of the body, comparing himself in
ignorance of his true dignity to the senseless beasts(2), and shaking
off Iris Creator's yoke, and neglecting His divine injunction, he will
be liable to death and corruption, and will be compelled to labour throughout
a miserable life. For it was no profit to man to obtain incorruption while
still untried and unproved, lest he should fall into pride and under the
judgment of the devil. For through his incorruption the devil, when he
had fallen as the result of his own free choice, was firmly established
in wickedness, so that there was no room for repentance and no hope of
change: just as, moreover, the angels also, when they had made free choice
of virtue became through grace immoveably rooted in goodness.
It was necessary, therefore, that man should first be put to the test
(for man untried and unproved(3) would be worth nothing(4)), and being
made perfect by the trial through the observance of the command should
thus receive incorruption as the prize of his virtue. For being intermediate
between God and matter he was destined, if he kept the command, to be
delivered from his natural relation to existing things and to be made
one with God's estate, and to be immoveably established in goodness, but,
if he transgressed and inclined the rather to what was material, and tore
his mind from the Author of his being, I mean God, his fate was to be
corruption, and he was to become subject to passion instead of passionless,
and mortal instead of immortal, and dependent on connection and unsettled
generation. And in his desire for life he would cling to pleasures as
though they were necessary to maintain it, and would fearlessly abhor
those who sought to deprive him of these, and transfer his desire from
God to matter, and his anger from the real enemy of his salvation to his
own brethren. The envy of the(5) devil then was the reason of man's fall.
For that same demon, so full of envy and with such a hatred of good, would
not suffer us to enjoy the pleasures of heaven, when he himself was kept
below on account of his arrogance, and hence the false one tempts miserable
man with the hope of Godhead, and leading him up to as great a height
of arrogance as himself, he hurls him down into a pit of destruction just
as deep.
Book 3
BOOK III CHAPTER I
Concerning the Divine OEconomy and God's care over us, and concerning
our salvation.
MAN, then, was thus snared by the assault of the arch-fiend, and broke
his Creator's command, and was stripped of grace and put off his confidence
with God, and covered himself with the asperities of a toilsome life (for
this is the meaning of the fig-leaves(1)); and was clothed about with
death, that is, mortality and the grossness of flesh (for this is what
the garment of skins signifies); and was banished from Paradise by God's
just judgment, and condemned to death, and made subject to corruption.
Yet, notwithstanding all this, in His pity, God, Who gave him his being,
and Who in His graciousness bestowed on him a life of happiness, did not
disregard man(2). But He first trained him in many ways and called him
back, by groans and trembling, by the deluge of water, and the utter destruction
of almost the whole race(3), by confusion and diversity of tongues(4),
by the rule(5) of angels(6), by the burning of cities(7), by figurative
manifestations of God, by wars and victories and defeats, by signs and
wonders, by manifold faculties, by the law and the prophets: for by all
these means God earnestly strove to emancipate man from the wide-spread
and enslaving bonds of sin, which had made life such a mass of iniquity,
and to effect man's return to a life of happiness. For it was sin that
brought death like a wild and savage beast into the world s to the ruin
of the human life. But it behoved the Redeemer to be without sin, and
not made liable through sin to death, and further, that His nature should
be strengthened and renewed, and trained by labour and taught the way
of virtue which leads away from corruption to the life eternal and, in
the end, is revealed the mighty ocean of love to man that is about Him(9).
For the very Creator and Lord Himself undertakes a struggle(1) in behalf
of the work of His own hands, and learns by toil to become Master. And
since the enemy snares man by the hope of Godhead, he himself is snared
in turn by the screen of flesh, and so are shown at once the goodness
and wisdom, the justice and might of God. God's goodness is revealed in
that He did not disregard(2) the frailty of His own handiwork, but was
moved with compassion for him in his fall, and stretched forth His hand
to him: and His justice in that when man was overcome He did not make
another victorious over the tyrant, nor did He snatch man by might from
death, but in His goodness and justice He made him, who had become through
his sins the slave of death, himself once more conqueror and rescued like
by like, most difficult though it seemed: and His wisdom is seen in His
devising the most fitting solution of the difficulty(3). For by the good
pleasure of our God and Father, the Only-begotten Son and Word of God
and God, Who is in the bosom of the God and Father(4), of like essence
with the Father and the Holy Spirit, Who was before the ages, Who is without
beginning and was in the beginning, Who is in the presence of the God
and Father, and is God and made in the form of God(5), bent the heavens
and descended to earth: that is to say, He humbled without humiliation
His lofty station which yet could not be humbled, and condescends to His
servants(6), with a condescension ineffable and incomprehensible: (for
that is what the descent signifies). And God being perfect becomes perfect
man, and brings to perfection the newest of all new things(7), the only
new thing under the Sun, through which the boundless might of God is manifested.
For what greater thing is there, than that God should become Man? And
the Word became flesh without being changed, of the Holy Spirit, and Mary
the holy and ever-virgin one, the mother of God. And He acts as mediator
between God and man, He the only lover of man conceived in the Virgin's
chaste womb without will(8) or desire, or any connection with man or pleasurable
generation, but through the
Holy Spirit and the first offspring of Adam. And He becomes obedient to
the Father Who is like unto us, and finds a remedy for our disobedience
in what He had assumed from us, and became a pattern of obedience to us
without which it is not possible to obtain salvation(8).
BOOK III CHAPTER II
Concerning the manner in which the Word(9) was conceived, and concerning
His divine incarnation.
The angel of the Lord was sent to the holy Virgin, who was descended from
David's line(1). Far it is evident that our Lord sprang out of Judah,
of which tribe no one turned his attention to the altar(2), as the divine
apostle said: but about this we will speak more accurately later. And
bearing glad tidings to her, he said, Hail thou highly favoured one, the
Lord is with thee(3). And she was troubled at his word, and the angel
said to her, Fear not, Mary, for thou hast found favour with God, and
shalt bring forth a Son and shalt call His name Jesus(4); for He shall
save His people from their sins(5). Hence it comes that Jesus has the
interpretation Saviour. And when she asked in her perplexity, How can
this be, seeing I know not a man(6)? the angel again answered her, The
Holy Spirit shall came upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall overshadow
thee. Therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee(7) shall
be called the Son of God(8). And she said to him, Behold the handmaid
of the Lord: be it unto me according to Thy word(9).
So then, after the assent of the holy Virgin, the Holy Spirit descended
on her, according to the word of the Lord which the angel spoke, purifying
her(1), and granting her power to receive the divinity of the Word, and
likewise power to bring forth(2). And then was she overshadowed(3) by
the enhypostatic Wisdom and Power of the most high God, the Son of God
Who is of like essence with the Father as of Divine seed, and from her
holy and most pure blood He formed flesh animated with the spirit of reason
and thought, the first-fruits of our compound nature(4): not by procreation
but by creation through the Holy Spirit: not developing the fashion of
the body by gradual additions but perfecting it at once, He Himself, the
very Word of God, standing to the flesh in the relation of subsistence.
For the divine Word was not made one with flesh that had an independent
pre-existence(5), but taking up His abode in the womb of the holy Virgin,
He unreservedly in His own subsistence took upon Himself through the pure
blood of the eternal Virgin a body of flesh animated with the spirit of
reason and thought, thus assuming to Himself the first-fruits of man's
compound nature, Himself, the Word, having become a subsistence in the
flesh. So that(6) He is at once flesh, and at the same time flesh of God
the Word, and likewise flesh animated, possessing both reason and thought(7).
Wherefore we speak not of man as having become God, but of God as having
become Man(8). For being by nature perfect God, He naturally became likewise
perfect Man: and did not change His nature nor make the dispensation(9)
an empty show, but became, without confusion or change or division, one
in subsistence with the flesh, which was conceived of the holy Virgin,
and animated with reason and thought, and had found existence in Him,
while He did not change the nature of His divinity into the essence of
flesh, nor the essence of flesh into the nature of His divinity, and did
not make one compound nature out of His divine nature and the human nature
He had assumed(1).
BOOK III CHAPTER III
Concerning Christ's two natures, in apposition to those who hold that
He has only one(2).
For the two natures were united with each other without change or alteration,
neither the divine nature departing from its native simplicity, nor yet
the human being either changed into the nature of God or reduced to non-existence,
nor one compound nature being produced out of the two. For the compound
nature(3) cannot be of the same essence as either of the natures out of
which it is compounded, as made one thing out of others: for example,
the body is composed of the four elements, but is not of the same essence
as fire or air, or water or earth, nor does it keep these names. If, therefore,
after the union, Christ's nature was, as the heretics hold, a compound
unity, He had changed from a simple into a compound nature(4), and is
not of the same essence as the Father Whose nature is simple, nor as the
mother, who is not a compound of divinity and humanity. Nor will He then
be in divinity and humanity: nor will He be called either God or Man,
but simply Christ: and the word Christ will be the name not of the subsistence,
but of what in their view is the one nature.
We, however, do not give it as our view that Christ's nature is compound,
nor yet that He is one thing made of other things and differing from them
as man is made of sold and body, or as the body is made of the four elements,
but hold(5) that, though He is constituted of these different parts He
is yet the same(6). For we confess that He alike in His divinity and in
His humanity both is and is said to be perfect God, the same Being, and
that He consists of two natures, and exists in two natures(7). Further,
by the word "Christ" we understand the name of the subsistence,
not in the sense of one kind, but as signifying the existence of two natures.
For in His own person He anointed Himself; as God anointing His body with
His own divinity, and as Man being anointed. For He is Himself both God
and Man. And the anointing is the divinity of His humanity. For if Christ,
being of one compound nature, is of like essence to the Father, then the
Father also must be compound and of like essence with the flesh, which
is absurd and extremely blasphemous(8).
How, indeed, could one and the same nature come to embrace opposing and
essential differences? For how is it possible that the same nature should
be at once created and uncreated, mortal and immortal, circumscribed and
uncircumscribed?
But if those who declare that Christ has only one nature should say also
that that nature is a simple one, they must admit either that He is God
pure and simple, and thus reduce the incarnation to a mere pretence, or
that He is only man, according to Nestorius. And how then about His being
"perfect in divinity and perfect in humanity"? And when can
Christ be said to be of two natures, if they hold that He is of one composite
nature after the union? For it is surely clear to every one that before
the union Christ's nature was one.
But this is what leads the heretics(9) astray, viz., that they look upon
nature and subsistence as the same thing(1). For when we speak of the
nature of men as one(2), observe that in saying this we are not looking
to the question of soul and body. For when we compare together the soul
and the body it cannot be said that they are of one nature. But since
there are very many subsistences of men, and yet all have the same kind
of nature(3): for all are composed of soul and body, and all have part
in the nature of the soul, and possess the essence of the body, and the
common form: we speak of the one nature of these very many and different
subsistences; while each subsistence, to wit, has two natures, and fulfils
itself in two natures, namely, soul and body.
But(4) a common form cannot be admitted in the case of our Lord Jesus
Christ. For neither was there ever, nor is there, nor will there ever
be another Christ constituted of deity and humanity, and existing in deity
and humanity at once perfect God and perfect man. And thus in the case
of our Lord Jesus Christ we cannot speak of one nature made up of divinity
and humanity, as we do in the case of the individual made up of soul and
body(5). For in the latter case we have to do with an individual, but
Christ is not an individual. For there is no predicable form of Christlihood,
so to speak, that He possesses. And therefore we hold that there has been
a union of two perfect natures, one divine and one human; not with disorder
or confusion, or intermixture(6), or commingling, as is said by the God-accursed
Dioscorus and by Eutyches(7) and Severus, and all that impious company:
and not in a personal or relative manner, or as a matter of dignity or
agreement in will, or equality in honour, or identity in name, or good
pleasure, as Nestorius, hated of God, said, and Diodorus and Theodorus
of Mopsuestia, and their diabolical tribe: but by synthesis; that is,
in subsistence, without change or confusion or alteration or difference
or separation, and we confess that in two perfect natures there is but
one subsistence of the Son of God incarnate(8); holding that there is
one and the same subsistence belonging to His divinity and His humanity,
and granting that the two natures are preserved in Him after the union,
but we do not hold that each is separate and by itself, but that they
are united to each other in one compound subsistence. For we look upon
the union as essential, that is, as true and not imaginary. We say that
it is essential(9), moreover, not in the sense of two natures resulting
in one compound nature, but in the sense of a true union of them in one
compound subsistence of the Son of God, and we hold that their essential
difference is preserved. For the created remaineth created, and the uncreated,
uncreated: the mortal remaineth mortal; the immortal, immortal: the circumscribed,
circumscribed: the uncircumscribed, uncircumscribed: the visible, visible:
the invisible, invisible. "The one part is all glorious with wonders:
while the other is the victim of insults(1)."
Moreover, the Word appropriates to Himself the attributes of humanity:
for all that pertains to His holy flesh is His: and He imparts to the
flesh His own attributes by way of communication(2) in virtue of the interpenetration
of the parts(3) one with another, and the oneness according to subsistence,
and inasmuch as He Who lived and acted both as God and as man, taking
to Himself either form and holding intercourse with the other form, was
one and the same(4). Hence it is that the Lord of Glory is said to have
been crucified(5), although His divine nature never endured the Cross,
and that the Son of Man is allowed to have been in heaven before the Passion,
as the Lord Himself said(6). For the Lord of Glory is one and the same
with Him Who is in nature and in truth the Son of Man, that is, Who became
man, and both His wonders and His sufferings are known to us, although
His wonders were worked in His divine capacity, and His sufferings endured
as man. For we know that, just as is His one subsistence, so is the essential
difference of the nature preserved. For how could difference be preserved
if the very things that differ from one another are not preserved? For
difference is the difference between things that differ. In so far as
Christ's natures differ from one another, that is, in the matter of essence,
we hold that Christ unites in Himself two extremes: in respect of His
divinity He is connected with the Father and the Spirit, while in respect
of His humanity He is connected with His mother and all mankind. And in
so far as His natures are united, we hold that He differs from the Father
and the Spirit on the one hand, and from the mother and the rest of mankind
on the other. For the natures are united in His subsistence, having one
compound subsistence, in which He differs from the Father and the Spirit,
and also from the mother and us.
BOOK III CHAPTER IV
Concerning the manner of the Mutual Communication(8).
Now we have often said already that essence is one thing and subsistence
another, and that essence signifies the common and general form(9) of
subsistences of the same kind, such as God, man, while subsistence marks
the individual, that is to say, Father, Son, Holy Spirit, or Peter, Paul.
Observe, then, that the names, divinity and humanity, denote essences
or natures: while the names, God and man, are applied both in connection
with natures, as when we say that God is incomprehensible essence, and
that God is one, and with reference to subsistences, that which is more
specific having the name of the more general applied to it, as when the
Scripture says, Therefore God, thy God, hath anointed thee(1), or again,
There was a certain man in the land of Uz(2), for it was only to Job that
reference was made.
Therefore, in the case of our Lord Jesus Christ, seeing that we recognise
that He has two natures but only one subsistence compounded of both, when
we contemplate His natures we speak of His divinity and His humanity,
but when we contemplate the subsistence compounded of the natures we sometimes
use terms that have reference to His double nature, as "Christ,"
and "at once God and man," and "God Incarnate;" and
sometimes those that imply only one of His natures, as "God"
alone, or "Son of God," and "man" alone, or "Son
of Man;" sometimes using names that imply His loftiness and sometimes
those that imply His lowliness. For He Who is alike God and man is one,
being the former from the Father ever without(3) cause, but having become
the latter afterwards for His love towards man(4).
When, then, we speak of His divinity we do not ascribe to it the properties
of humanity. For we do not say that His divinity is subject to passion
or created. Nor, again, do we predicate of His flesh or of His humanity
the properties of divinity: for we do not say that His flesh or His humanity
is uncreated. But when we speak of His subsistence, whether we give it
a name implying both natures, or one that refers to only one of them,
we still attribute to it the properties of both natures. For Christ, which
name implies both natures, is spoken of as at once God and man, created
and uncreated, subject to suffering anti incapable of suffering: and when
He is named Son of God and God, in reference to only one of His natures,
He still keeps the properties of the co-existing nature, that is, the
flesh, being spoken of as God who suffers, and as the Lord of Glory crucified(5),
not in respect of His being God but in respect of His being at the same
time man. Likewise also when He is called Man and Son of Man, He still
keeps the properties and glories of the divine nature, a child before
the ages, and man who knew no beginning; it is not, however, as child
or man but as God that He is before the ages, and became a child in the
end. And Ibis is the manner of the mutual communication, either nature
giving in exchange to the other its own properties through the identity
of the subsistence and the interpenetration of the parts with one another.
Accordingly we can say of Christ: This our God was seen upon the earth
and lived amongst men(6), and This man is uncreated and impossible and
uncircumscribed.
BOOK III CHAPTER V
Concerning the number of the Natures.
In the case, therefore, of the Godhead(7) we confess that there is but
one nature, but hold that there are three subsistences actually existing,
anti hold that all things that are of nature and essence are simple, and
recognise the difference of the subsistences only in the three properties
of independence of cause and Fatherhood, of dependence on cause and Sonship,
of dependence on cause and procession(8). And we know further that these
are indivisible and inseparable from each other and united into one, and
interpenetrating one another without confusion. Yea, I repeat, united
without confusion, for they are three although united, and they are distinct,
although inseparable. For although each has an independent existence,
that is to say, is a perfect subsistence and has an individuality of its
own, that is, has a special mode of existence, yet they are one in essence
and in the natural properties. and in being inseparable and indivisible
from the Father's subsistence, and they both are and are said to be one
God. In the very same way, then, in the case of the divine and ineffable
dispensation(9), exceeding all thought and comprehension, I mean the Incarnation
of the One God the Word of the Holy Trinity, and our Lord Jesus Christ,
we confess that there are two natures, one divine and one human, joined
together with one another and united in subsistence(1), so that one compound
subsistence is formed out of the two natures: but we hold that the two
natures are still preserved, even after the union, in the one compound
subsistence, that is, in the one Christ, and that these exist in reality
and have their natural properties; for they are united without confusion,
and are distinguished and enumerated without being separable. And just
as the three subsistences of the Holy Trinity are united without confusion,
and are distinguished and enumerated without being separable(2), the enumeration
not entailing division or separation or alienation or cleavage among them
(for we recognise one God the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit), so
in the same way the natures of Christ also, although they are united,
yet are united without confusion; and although they interpenetrate one
another, yet they do not permit of change or transmutation of one into
the other(3). For each keeps its own natural individuality strictly unchanged.
And thus it is that they can be enumerated without the enumeration introducing
division. For Christ, indeed, is one, perfect both in divinity and in
humanity. For it is not the nature of number to cause separation or unity,
but its nature is to indicate the quantity of what is enumerated, whether
these are united or separated: for we have unity, for instance, when fifty
stones compose a wall, but we have separation when the fifty stones lie
on the ground; and again, we have unity when we speak of coal having two
natures, namely, fire and wood, but we have separation in that the nature
of fire is one thing, and the nature of wood another thing; for these
things are united and separated not by number, but in another way. So,
then, just as even though the three subsistences of the Godhead are united
with each other, we cannot speak of them as one subsistence because we
should confuse and do away with the difference between the subsistences,
so also we cannot speak of the two natures of Christ as one nature, united
though they are in subsistence, because we should then confuse and do
away with and reduce to nothing the difference between the two natures.
BOOK III CHAPTER VI
That in one of its subsistences the divine nature is united in its entirety
to the human nature, in its entirety and not only part to part.
What is common and general is predicated of the included particulars.
Essence, then, is common as being a form(4), while subsistence is particular.
It is particular not as though it had part of the nature and had not the
rest, but particular in a numerical sense, as being individual. For it
is in number and not in nature that the difference between subsistences
is said to lie. Essence, therefore, is predicated of subsistence, because
in each subsistence of the same form the essence is perfect. Wherefore
subsistences do not differ from each other in essence but in the accidents
which indeed are the characteristic properties, but characteristic of
subsistence and not of nature. For indeed they define subsistence as essence
along with accidents. So that the subsistence contains both the general
and the particular, and has an independent existence(5), while essence
has not an independent existence but is contemplated in the subsistences.
Accordingly when one of the subsistences suffers, the whole essence, being
capable of suffering(6), is held to have suffered in one of its subsistences
as much as the subsistence suffered, but it does not necessarily follow,
however, that all the subsistences of the same class should suffer along
with the suffering subsistence.
Thus, therefore, we confess that the nature of the Godhead is wholly and
perfectly in each of its subsistences, wholly in the Father, wholly in
the Son, and wholly in the Holy Spirit. Wherefore also the Father is perfect
God, the Son is perfect God, and the Holy Spirit is perfect God. In like
manner, too, in the Incarnation of the Trinity of the One God the Word
of the Holy Trinity, we hold that in one of its subsistences the nature
of the Godhead is wholly and perfectly united with the whole nature of
humanity, and not part united to part(7). The divine Apostle in truth
says that in Him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily(8), that
is to say in His flesh. And His divinely-inspired disciple, Dionysius,
who had so deep a knowledge of things divine, said that the Godhead as
a whole had fellowship with us in one of its own subsistences(9). But
we shall not be driven to hold that all the subsistences of the Holy Godhead,
to wit the three, are made one in subsistence with all the subsistences
of humanity. For in no other respect did the Father and the Holy Spirit
take part in the incarnation of God the Word than according to good will
and pleasure But we hold that to the whole of human nature the whole essence
of the Godhead was united. For God the Word omitted none of the things
which He implanted in our nature when He formed us in the beginning, but
took them all upon Himself, body and soul both intelligent and rational,
and all their properties. For the creature that is devoid of one of these
is not man. But He in His fulness took upon Himself me in my fulness,
and was united whole to whole that He might in His grace bestow salvation
on the whole man. For what has not been taken cannot be healed(1).
The Word of God(2), then, was united to flesh through the medium of mind
which is intermediate between the purity of God and the grossness of flesh(3).
For the mind holds sway over soul and body, but while the mind is the
purest part of the soul God is that of the mind. And when it is allowed(4)
by that which is more excellent, the mind of Christ gives proof of its
own authority(5), but it is under the dominion of and obedient to that
which is more excellent, and does those things which the divine will purposes.
Further the mind has become the seat of the divinity united with it in
subsistence, just as is evidently the case with the body too, not as an
inmate(6), which is the impious error into which the heretics fall when
they say that one bushel cannot contain two bushels, for they are judging
what is immaterial by material standards. How indeed could Christ be called
perfect God and perfect man, and be said to be of like essence with the
Father and with us, if only part of the divine nature is joined in Him
to part of the human nature(7)?
We hold, moreover, that our nature has been raised from the dead and has
ascended to the heavens and taken its seat at the right hand of the Father:
not that all the persons of men have risen from the dead and taken their
seat at the right hand of the Father, but that this has happened to the
whole of our nature in the subsistence of Christ(8). Verily the divine
Apostle says, God hath raised us up together and made us sit together
in Christ(9).
And this further we hold, that the union took place through common essences.
For every essence is common to the subsistences contained in it, and there
cannot be found a partial and particular nature, that is to say, essence:
for otherwise we would have to hold that the same subsistences are at
once the same and different in essence, and that the Holy Trinity in respect
of the divinity is at once the same and different in essence. So then
the same nature is to be observed in each of the subsistences, and when
we said that the nature of the word became flesh, as did the blessed Athanasius
and Cyrillus, we mean that the divinity was joined to the flesh. Hence
we cannot say "The nature of the Word suffered;" for the divinity
in it did not suffer, but we say that the human nature, not by any means,
however, meaning(1) all the subsistences of men, suffered in Christ, and
we confess further that Christ suffered in His human nature. So that when
we speak of the nature of the Word we mean the Word Himself. And the Word
has both the general element of essence and the particular element of
subsistence.
BOOK III CHAPTER VII
Concerning the one compound subsistence of God the Word.
We hold then that the divine subsistence of God the Word existed before
all else and is without time and eternal, simple and uncompound, uncreated,
incorporeal, invisible, intangible, uncircumscribed, possessing all the
Father possesses, since He is of the same essence with Him, differing
from the Father's subsistence in the manner of His generation and the
relation of the Father's subsistence, being perfect also and at no time
separated from the Father's subsistence: and in these last. days, without
leaving the Father's bosom, took up His abode in an uncircumscribed manner
in the womb of the holy Virgin, without the instrumentality of seed, and
in an incomprehensible manner known only to Himself, and causing the flesh
derived from the holy Virgin to subsist in the very subsistence that was
before all the ages.
So then He was both in all things and above all things and also dwelt
in the womb of the holy Mother of God, but in it by the energy of the
incarnation. He therefore became flesh and He took upon Himself thereby
the first-fruits of our compound nature(2), viz., the flesh animated with
the intelligent and national soul, so that the very subsistence of God
the Word was changed into the subsistence of the flesh, and the subsistence
of the Word, which was formerly simple, became compound(3), yea compounded
of two perfect natures, divinity and humanity, and bearing the characteristic
and distinctive property of the divine Sonship of God the Word in virtue
of which it is distinguished from the Father and the Spirit, and also
the characteristic and distinctive properties of the flesh, in virtue
of which it differs from the Mother and the rest of mankind, bearing further
the properties of the divine nature in virtue of which it is united to
the Father and the Spirit, and the marks of the human nature in virtue
of which it is united to the Mother and to us. And further it differs
from the Father and the Spirit and the Mother and us in being at once
God and man. For this we know to be the most special property of the subsistence
of Christ.
Wherefore we confess Him, even after the incarnation, the one Son of God,
and likewise Son of Man, one Christ, one Lord, the only-begotten Son and
Word of God, one Lord Jesus. We reverence His two generations, one from
the Father before time and beyond cause and reason and time and nature,
and one in the end for our sake, and like to us and above us; for our
sake because it was for our salvation, like to us in that He was man born
of woman(4) at full tithe(5), and above us because it was not by seed,
but by the Holy Spirit and the Holy Virgin Mary(6), transcending the laws
of parturition. We proclaim Him not as God only, devoid of our humanity,
nor yet as man only, stripping Him of His divinity, nor as two distinct
persons, but as one and the same, at once God and man, perfect God and
perfect man, wholly God anti wholly man, the same being wholly God, even
though He was also
flesh and wholly man, even though He was also most high God. And by "perfect
God" and "perfect man" we mean to emphasize the fulness
and unfailingness of the natures: while by "wholly God" and
"wholly man" we mean to lay stress on the singularity and individuality
of the subsistence.
And we confess also that there is one incarnate nature of God the Word,
expressing by the word "incarnate(7)" the essence of the flesh,
according to the blessed Cyril(8). And so the Word was made flesh and
yet did not abandon His own proper immateriality: He became wholly flesh
and yet remained wholly uncircumscribed. So far as He is body He is diminished
and contracted into narrow limits, but inasmuch as He is God He is uncircumscribed,
His flesh not being coextensive with His uncircumscribed divinity.
He is then wholly perfect God, but yet is not simply(9) God: for He is
not only God but also man. And He is also wholly(1) perfect man but not
simply(2) man, for He is not only man but also God. For "simply(2)"
here has reference to His nature, and "wholly(1)" to His subsistence,
just as "another thing" would refer to nature, while "another(3)"
would refer to subsistence(4).
But observe(5) that although we hold that the natures of the Lord permeate
one another, yet we know that the permeation springs from the divine nature.
For it is that that penetrates and permeates all things, as it wills,
while nothing penetrates it: and it is it, too, that imparts to the flesh
its own peculiar glories, while abiding itself impossible and without
participation in the affections of the flesh. For if the sun imparts to
us his energies and yet does not participate in ours, how much the rather
must this be true of the Creator anti Lord of the Sun(6).
BOOK III CHAPTER VIII
In reply to those who ask whether(7) the natures of the Lord are brought
under a continuous or a discontinuous quantity(8).
If any one asks concerning the natures of the Lord if they are brought
under a continuous or discontinuous quantity(9), we will say that the
natures of the Lord are neither one body nor one superficies(1), nor one
line, nor time, nor place, so as to be reduced to a continuous quantity.
For these are the things that are reckoned continuously.
Further note that number deals with things that differ, and it is quite
impossible to enumerate things that differ from one another in no respect:
and just so far as they differ are they enumerated: for instance, Peter
and Paul are not counted separately in so far as they are one. For since
they are one in respect of their essence they cannot be spoken of as two
natures, but as they differ in respect of subsistence they are spoken
of as two subsistences. So that number deals with differences, and just
as the differing objects differ from one another so far they are enumerated.
The natures of the Lord, then, are united without confusion so far as
regards subsistence, and they are divided without separation according
to the method and manner of difference. And it is not according to the
manner in which they are united that they are enumerated, for it is not
in respect of subsistence that we hold that there are two natures of Christ:
but according to the manner in which they are divided without separation
they are enumerated, for it is in respect of the method and manner of
difference that there are two natures of Christ. For being united in subsistence
and permeating one another, they are united without confusion, each preserving
throughout its own peculiar and natural difference. Hence, since they
are enumerated according to the manner of difference, and that alone,
they must be brought under a discontinuous quantity.
Christ, therefore(2), is one, perfect God and perfect man: and Him we
worship along with the Father and the Spirit, with one obeisance, adoring
even His immaculate flesh and not holding that the flesh is not meet for
worship: for in fact it is worshipped in the one subsistence of the Word,
which indeed became subsistence for it. But in this we do not do homage
to that which is created. For we worship Him, not as mere flesh, but as
flesh united with divinity, and because His two natures are brought under
the one person and one subsistence of God the Word. I fear to touch coal
because of the fire bound up with the wood. I worship the twofold nature
of Christ because of the divinity that is in Him bound up with flesh.
For I do not
introduce a fourth person(3) into the Trinity. God forbid! but I confess
one person of God the Word and of His flesh, and the Trinity remains Trinity,
even after the incarnation of the Word.
In reply(4) to those who ask whether the two natures are brought under
a continuous or a discontinuous quantity.
The natures of the Lord are neither one body nor one superficies, nor
one line, nor place, nor time, so as to be brought under a continuous
quantity: for these are the things that are reckoned continuously. But
the natures of the Lord are united without confusion in respect of subsistence,
and are divided without separation according to the method and manner
of difference. And according to the manner in which they are united they
are not enumerated. For we do not say that the natures of Christ are two
subsistences or two in respect of subsistence. But according to the manner
in which they are divided without division, are they enumerated. For there
are two natures according to the method and manner of difference. For
being united in subsistence and permeating one another they are united
without confusion, neither having been changed into the other, but each
preserving its own natural difference even after the union. For that which
is created remained created, and that which is uncreated, uncreated. By
the manner of difference, then, and in that alone, they are enumerated,
and thus are brought under discontinuous quantity. For things which differ
from each other in no respect cannot be enumerated, but just so far as
they differ are they enumerated; for instance, Peter and Paul are not
enumerated in those respects in which they are one: for being one in respect
of their essence they are not two natures nor are they so spoken of. But
inasmuch as they differ in subsistence they are spoken of as two subsistences.So
that difference is the cause of number.
BOOK III CHAPTER IX
In reply to the question whether there is Nature that has no Subsistence.
For although(5) there is no nature without subsistence, nor essence apart
from person (since in truth it is in persons and subsistences that essence
and nature are to be contemplated), yet it does not necessarily follow
that the natures that are united to one another in subsistence should
have each its own proper subsistence. For after they have come together
into one subsistence, it is possible that neither should they be without
subsistence, nor should each have its own peculiar subsistence, but that
both should have one and the same subsistence(6). For since one and the
same subsistence of the Word has become the subsistence of the natures,
neither of them is permitted to be without subsistence, nor are they allowed
to have subsistences that differ from each other, or to have sometimes
the subsistence of this nature and sometimes of that, but always without
division or separation they both have the same subsistence--a subsistence
which is not broken up into parts or divided, so that one part should
belong to this, and one to that, but which belongs wholly to this and
wholly to that in its absolute entirety. For the flesh of God the Word
did not subsist as an independent subsistence, nor did there arise another
subsistence besides that of God the Word, but as it existed in that it
became rather a subsistence which subsisted in another, than one which
was an independent subsistence. Wherefore, neither does it lack subsistence
altogether, nor yet is there thus introduced into the Trinity another
subsistence.
BOOK III CHAPTER X
Concerning the Trisagium ("the Thrice Holy").
This being so(7), we declare that the addition which the vain-minded Peter
the Fuller made to the Trisagium or "Thrice Holy" Hymn is blasphemous(8);
for it introduces a fourth person into the Trinity, giving a separate
place to the Son of God, Who is the truly subsisting power of the Father,
and a separate place to Him Who was crucified as though He were different
from the "Mighty One," or as though the Holy Trinity was considered
possible, and the Father and the Holy Spirit suffered on the Cross along
with the Son. Have done with this blasphemous(9) and nonsensical interpolation!
For we hold the words "Holy God" to refer to the Father, without
limiting the title of divinity to Him alone, but acknowledging also as
God the Son and the Holy Spirit: and the words "Holy and Mighty"
we ascribe to the Son, without stripping the Father and the Holy Spirit
of might: and the words "Holy and Immortal" we attribute to
the Holy Spirit, without depriving the Father and the Son of immortality.
For, indeed, we apply all the divine names simply and unconditionally
to each of the subsistences in imitation of the divine Apostle's words.
But to us there is but one God, the Father, of Whom are all things, and
we in Him: and one Lord Jesus Christ by Whom are all things, and we by
Him(1)(2) And, nevertheless, we follow Gregory the Theologian(3) when
he says, "But to us there is but one God, the Father, of Whom are
all things, and one Lord Jesus Christ, through Whom are all things, and
one Holy Spirit, in Whom are all things:" for the words "of
Whom" and "through Whom" and "in Whom" do not
divide the natures (for neither the prepositions nor the order of the
names could ever be changed), but they characterise the properties of
one unconfused nature. And this becomes clear from the fact that they
are once more gathered into one, if only one reads with care these words
of the same Apostle, Of Him and through Him and in Him are all things:
to Him be the glory for ever and ever. Amen(4).
For that the "Trisagium" refers not to the Son alone(5), but
to the Holy Trinity, the divine and saintly Athanasius and Basil and Gregory,
and all the band of the divinely-inspired Fathers bear witness: because,
as a matter of fact, by the threefold holiness the Holy Seraphim suggest
to us the three subsistences of the superessential Godhead. But by the
one Lordship they denote the one essence and dominion of the supremely-divine
Trinity. Gregory the Theologian of a truth says(6), "Thus, then,
the Holy of Holies, which is completely veiled by the Seraphim, and is
glorified with three consecrations, meet together in one lordship and
one divinity." This was the most beautiful and sublime philosophy
of still another of our predecessors.
Ecclesiastical historians(7), then, say that once when the people of Constantinople
were offering prayers to God to avert a threatened calamity(8), during
Proclus' tenure of the office of Archbishop, it happened that a boy was
snatched up from among the people, and was taught by angelic teachers
the "Thrice Holy" Hymn, "Thou Holy God, Holy and Mighty
One, Holy and Immortal One, have mercy upon us:" and when once more
he was restored to earth, he told what he had learned, and all the people
sang the Hymn, and so the threatened calamity was averted. And in the
fourth holy and great (Ecumenical Council, I mean the one at Chalcedon,
we are told that it was in this form that the Hymn was sung; for the minutes
of this holy assembly so record it(9). It is, therefore, a matter for
laughter and ridicule that this "Thrice Holy" Hymn, taught us
by the angels, and confirmed by the averting of calamity(1), ratified
and established by so great an assembly of the holy Fathers, and sung
first by the Seraphim as a declaration of the three subsistences of the
Godhead, should be mangled and forsooth emended to suit the view of the
stupid Fuller as though he were higher than the Seraphim. But oh! the
arrogance! not to say folly! But we say it thus, though demons should
rend us in pieces, "Do Thou, Holy God, Holy and Mighty One, Holy
and Immortal One, have mercy upon us."
BOOK III CHAPTER XI
Concerning the Nature as viewed in Species and in Individual, and concerning
the difference between Union and Incarnation: and how this is to be understood,
"The one Nature of God the Word Incarnate.
Nature(2) is regarded either abstractly as a matter of pure thought(3)
(for it has no independent existence): or commonly in all subsistences
of the same species as their bond of union, and is then spoken of as nature
viewed in species: or universally as the same, but with the addition of
accidents, in one subsistence, and is spoken of as nature viewed in the
individual, this being identical with nature viewed in species(4). God
the Word Incarnate, therefore, did not assume the nature that is regarded
as an abstraction in pure thought (for tiffs is not incarnation, but only
an imposture and a figment of incarnation), nor the nature viewed in species
(for He did not assume all the subsistences): but the nature viewed in
the individual, which is identical with that viewed in species. For He
took on Himself the elements of our compound nature, and these not as
having an independent existence or as being originally an individual,
and in this way assumed by Him, but as existing in His own subsistence.
For the subsistence of God the Word in itself became the subsistence of
the flesh, and accordingly "the Word became flesh(5)" clearly
without any change, and likewise the flesh became Word without alteration,
and God became man. For the Word is God, and man is God, through having
one and the same subsistence. And so it is possible to speak of tile same
thing as being the nature of the Word and the nature in the individual.
For it signifies strictly and exclusively neither the individual, that
is, the subsistence, nor the common nature of the subsistences, but the
common nature as viewed and presented in one of the subsistences.
Union, then, is one thing, and incarnation is something quite different.
For union signifies only the conjunction, but not at all that with which
union is effected. But incarnation (which is just the same as if one said
"the putting on of man's nature") signifies that tile conjunction
is with flesh, that is to say, with man, just as the heating of iron(6)
implies its union with fire. Indeed, the blessed Cyril himself, when he
is interpreting the phrase, "one nature of God the Word Incarnate,"
says in the second epistle to Sucensus, "For if we simply said 'the
one nature of the Word' and then were silent, and did not add the word
'incarnate.' but, so to speak, quite excluded the dispensation(7), there
would be some plausibility in the question they feign to ask, 'If one
nature is the whole, what becomes of the perfection in humanity, or how
has the essence(8) like us come to exist?' But inasmuch as the perfection
in humanity and the disclosure of the essence like us are conveyed in
the word 'incarnate,' they must cease from relying on a mere straw"
Here, then, he placed the nature of the Word over nature itself. For if
He had received nature instead of subsistence, it would not have been
absurd to have omitted the "incarnate." For when we say simply
one subsistence of God the Word, we do not err(9). In like manner, also,
Leontius the Byzantine(1) considered this phrase to refer to nature, and
not to subsistence. But in the Defence which he wrote in reply to the
attacks that Theodoret made on the second anathema, the blessed Cyril(2)
says this: "The nature of the Word, that is, the subsistence, which
is the Word itself." So that "the nature of the Word" means
neither the subsistence alone, nor "the common nature of the subsistence,"
but "the common nature viewed as a whole in the subsistence of the
Word."
It has been said, then, that the nature of the Word became flesh, that
is, was united to flesh: but that the nature of the Word suffered in the
flesh we have never heard up till now, though we have been taught that
Christ suffered in the flesh. So that "the nature of the Word"
does not mean "the subsistence." It remains, therefore, to say
that to become flesh is to be united with the flesh, while the Word having
become flesh means that the very subsistence of the Word became without
change the subsistence of the flesh. It has also been said that God became
man, and man God. For the Word which is God became without alteration
man. But that the Godhead became man, or became flesh, or put on the nature
of man, this we have never heard. This, indeed, we have learned, that
the Godhead was united to humanity in one of its subsistences, and it
has been stated that God took on a different form or essence(3), to wit
our own. For the name God is applicable to each of the subsistences, but
we cannot use the term Godhead in reference to subsistence. For we are
never told that the Godhead is the Father alone, or the Son alone, or
the Holy Spirit alone. For "Godhead" implies "nature,"
while "Father" implies subsistence just as "Humanity"
implies nature, and "Peter" subsistence. But "God"
indicates the common element of the nature, and is applicable derivatively
to each of the subsistences, just as "man" is. For He Who has
divine nature is God, and he who has human nature is man.
Besides all this, notice(4) that the Father and the Holy Spirit take no
part at all in the incarnation of the Word except in connection with the
miracles, and in respect of good will and purpose.
BOOK III CHAPTER XII
That the holy Virgin is the Mother of God: an argument directed against
the Nestorians.
Moreover we proclaim the holy Virgin to be in strict truth(5) the Mother
of God(6). For inasmuch as He who was born of her was true God, she who
bare the true God incarnate is the true mother of God. For we hold that
God was born of her, not implying that the divinity of the Word received
from her the beginning of its being, but meaning that God the Word Himself,
Who was begotten of the Father timelessly before the ages, and was with
the Father and the Spirit without beginning anti through eternity, took
up His abode in these last days for the sake of our salvation in the Virgin's
womb, and was without change made flesh and born of her. For the holy
Virgin did not bare mere man but true God: and not mere God but God incarnate,
Who did not bring down His body from Heaven, nor simply passed through
the Virgin as channel, but received from her flesh of like essence to
our own and subsisting in Himself(7). For if the body had come down from
heaven and had not partaken of our nature, what would have been the use
of His becoming man? For the purpose of God the Word becoming man(8) was
that the very same nature, which had sinned and fallen and become corrupted,
should triumph over the deceiving tyrant and so be freed from corruption,
just as the divine apostle puts it, For since by man came death, by man
came also the resurrection of the dead(9). If the first is true the second
must also be true.
Although(1), however, he says, The first Adam is of the earth earthy;
the second Adam is Lord from Heaven(2), he does not say that His body
is from heaven, but emphasises the fact that He is not mere man. For,
mark, he called Him both Adam and Lord, thus indicating His double nature.
For Adam is, being interpreted, earth-born: and it is clear that man's
nature is earth-born since he is formed from earth, but the title Lord
signifies His divine essence.
And again the Apostle says: God sent forth His only-begotten Son, made
of a woman(3). He did not say "made by a woman." Wherefore the
divine apostle meant that the only-begotten Son of God and God is the
same as He who was made man of the Virgin, and that He who was born of
the Virgin is the same as the Son of God and God.
But He was born after the bodily fashion inasmuch as He became man, and
did not take up His abode in a man formed beforehand, as in a prophet,
but became Himself in essence and truth man, that is He caused flesh animated
with the intelligent and reasonable to subsist in His own subsistence,
and Himself became subsistence for it. For this is the meaning of "made
of a woman." For how could the very Word of God itself have been
made under the law, if He did not become man of like essence with ourselves?
Hence it is with justice and truth that we call the holy Mary the Mother
of God. For this name embraces the whole mystery of the dispensation.
For if she who bore Him is the Mother of God, assuredly He Who was born
of her is God and likewise also man. For how could God, Who was before
the ages, have been born of a woman unless He had become man ? For the
son of man must clearly be man himself. But if He Who was born of a woman
is Himself God, manifestly He Who was born of God the Father in accordance
with the laws of an essence that is divine and knows no beginning, and
He Who was in the last days born of the Virgin in accordance with the
laws of an essence that has beginning and is subject to time, that is,
an essence which is human, must be one and the same. The name in truth
signifies the one subsistence and the two natures and the two generations
Of our Lord Jesus Christ.
But we never say that the holy Virgin is the Mother of Christ(4) because
it was in order to do away with the title Mother of God, and to bring
dishonour on the Mother of God, who alone is in truth worthy of honour
above all creation, that the impure and abominable Judaizing Nestorius(5),
that vessel of dishonour, invented this name for an insult(6). For David
the king, and Aaron, the high priest, are also called Christ(7), for it
is customary to make kings and priests by anointing: and besides every
God-inspired man may be called Christ. but yet be is not by nature God:
yea, the accursed Nestorius insulted Him Who was born of the Virgin by
calling Him God-bearer(8). May it be far from us to speak of or think
of Him as God-bearer only(9), Who is in truth God incarnate. For the Word
Himself became flesh, having been in truth conceived of the Virgin, but
coming forth as God with the assumed nature which, as soon as He was brought
forth into being, was deified by Him, so that these three things took
place simultaneously, the assumption of our nature, the coming into being,
and the
deification of the assumed nature by the Word. And thus it is that the
holy Virgin is thought of and spoken of as the Mother of God, not only
because of the nature of the Word, but also because of the deification
of man's nature, the miracles of conception and of existence being wrought
together, to wit, the conception the Word, and the existence of the flesh
in the Word Himself. For the very Mother of God in some marvellous manner
was the means of fashioning the Framer of all things and of bestowing
manhood on the God and Creator of all, Who deified the nature that He
assumed, while the union preserved those things that were united just
as they were united, that is to say, not only the divine nature of Christ
but also His human nature, not only that which is above us but that which
is of us. For He was not first made like us and only later became higher
than us, but ever(1) from His first coating into being He existed with
the double nature, because He existed in the Word Himself from the beginning
of the conception. Wherefore He is human in His own nature, but also,
in some marvellous manner, of God and divine. Moreover He has the properties
of the living flesh: for by reason of the dispensation(2) the Word received
these which are, according to the order of natural motion, truly natural(3).
BOOK III CHAPTER XIII
Concerning the properties of the two Natures.
Confessing, then, the same Jesus Christ, our Lord, to be perfect God and
perfect man, we hold that the same has all the attributes of the Father
save that of being ingenerate, and all the attributes of the first Adam,
save only his sin, these attributes being body and the intelligent and
rational soul; and further that He has, corresponding to the two natures,
the two sets of natural qualities belonging to the two natures: two natural
volitions, one divine and one human, two natural, energies, one divine
and one human, two natural free-wills, one divine and one human, and two
kinds of wisdom and knowledge, one divine and one human. For being of
like essence with God and the Father, He wills and energises freely as
God, and being also of like essence with us He likewise wills and energises
freely as man. For His are the miracles and His also are the passive states.
BOOK III CHAPTER XIV
Concerning the volitions and free-will of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Since, then, Christ has two natures, we hold that He has also two natural
wills and two natural energies. But since His two natures have one subsistence,
we hold that it is one and the same person who wills and energises naturally
in both natures, of which, and in which, and also which is Christ our
Lord: and moreover that He wills and energises without separation but
as a united whole. For He wills and energises in either form in close
communion with the other(4). For things that have the same essence have
also the same will and energy, while things that are different in essence
are different in will and energy(5); and vice versa, things that have
the same will anti energy have the same essence, while things that are
different in will and energy are different in essence.
Wherefore(6) in the case of the Father and Son and Holy Spirit we recognise,
from their sameness in will and energy, their sameness in nature. But
in the case of the divine dispensation(7) we recognise from their difference
in will and energy the difference of the two natures, and as we perceive
the difference of the two natures we confess that the wills and energies
also are different. For just as the number of the natures of one and the
same Christ, when considered and spoken of with piety, do not cause a
division of the one Christ but merely bring out the fact that the difference
between the natures is maintained even in the union, so it is with the
number of wills and energies that belong essentially to His natures. (For
He was endowed with the powers of willing and energising in both natures,
for the sake of our salvation) It does not introduce division: God forbid!
but merely brings out the fact that the differences between them are safeguarded
and preserved even in the union. For we hold that wills and energies are
faculties belonging to nature, not to subsistence; I mean those faculties
of will and energy by which He Who wills and energises does so. For if
we allow that they belong to subsistence, we will be forced to say that
the three subsistences of the Holy Trinity have different wills and different
energies.
For it is to be noted s that willing and the manner of willing are not
the same thing. For to will is a faculty of nature, just as
seeing is, for all men possess it; but the manner of willing does not
depend on nature but on our judgment, just as does also the manner of
seeing, whether well or ill. For all men do not will in the same way,
nor do they all see in the same way. And this also we will grant in connection
with energies. For the manner of willing, or seeing, or energising, is
the mode of using the faculties of will and sight and energy, belonging
only to him who uses them, and marking him off from others by the generally
accepted difference.
Simple willing then is spoken of as volition or the faculty of will(9),
being a rational propension(1) and natural will; but in a particular way
willing, or that which underlies volition, is the object of will(2), and
will dependent on judgment(3). Further that which has innate in it the
faculty of volition is spoken of as capable of willing(4): as for instance
the divine is capable of willing, and the human in like manner. But he
who exercises volition, that is to say the subsistence, for instance Peter,
is spoken of as willing.
Since, then(5), Christ is one and His subsistence is one, He also Who
wills both as God and as man is one and the same. And since He has two
natures endowed with volition, inasmuch as they are rational (for whatever
is rational is endowed with volition and free-will), we shall postulate
two volitions or natural wills in Him. For He in His own person is capable
of volition in accordance with both His natures. For He assumed that faculty
of volition which belongs naturally to us. And since Christ, Who in His
own person wills according to either nature, is one, we shall postulate
the same object of will in His case, not as though He wills only those
things which He willed naturally as God (for it is no part of Godhead
to will to eat or drink and so forth), but as willing also those things
which human nature requires for its support(6), and this without involving
any opposition in judgment, but simply as the result of the individuality
of the natures. For then it was that He thus willed naturally, when His
divine volition so willed and permitted the flesh to suffer and do that
which was proper to it.
But that volition is implanted in man by nature(7) is manifest from this.
Excluding the divine life, there are three forms of life: the vegetative,
the sentient, and the intellectual. The properties of the vegetative life
are the functions of nourishment, and growth, and production: that of
the sentient life is impulse: and that of the rational and intellectual
life is freedom of will. If, then, nourishment belongs by nature to the
vegetative life and impulse to the sentient, freedom of will by nature
belongs to the rational and intellectual life. But freedom of will is
nothing else than volition. The Word, therefore, having become flesh,
endowed with life and mind and free-will, became also endowed with volition.
Further, that which is natural is not the result of training: for no one
learns how to think, or live, or hunger, or thirst, or sleep. Nor do we
learn how to will: so that willing is natural.
And again: if in the case of creatures devoid of reason nature rules,
while nature is ruled in man who is moved of his own free-will and volition,
it follows, then, that man is by nature endowed with volition.
And again: if man has been made after the image of the blessed and super-essential
Godhead, and if the divine nature is by nature endowed with free-will
and volition, it follows that man, as its image, is free by nature and
volitive(8). For the fathers defined freedom as volition(9).
And further: if to will is a part of the nature of every man and not present
in some and absent in others, and if that which is seen to be common to
all is a characteristic feature of the nature that belongs to the individuals
of the class, surely, then, man is by nature endowed with volition(1).
And once more: if the nature receives neither more nor less, but all are
equally endowed with volition and not some more than others, then by nature
man is endowed with volition(10). So that since man is by nature endowed
with volition, the Lord also must be by nature endowed with volition,
not only because He is God, but also because He became man. For just as
He assumed our nature, so also He has assumed naturally our will. And
in this way the Fathers said that He formed our will in Himself(11).
If the will is not natural, it must be either hypostatic or unnatural.
But if it is hypostatic, the Son must thus, forsooth, have a different
will from what the Father has: for that which is hypostatic is characteristic
of subsistence only. And if it is unnatural, will must be a defection
from nature: for what is unnatural is destructive of what is natural.
The God and Father of all things wills either as Father or as God. Now
if as Father, His will will be different from that of the Son, for the
Son is not the Father. But if as God, the Son is God and likewise the
Holy Spirit is God, and so volition is part of His nature, that is, it
is natural.
Besides(12), if according to the view of the Fathers, those who have one
and the same will have also one and the same essence, and if the divinity
and humanity of Christ have one and the same will, then assuredly these
have also one and the same essence.
And again: if according to the view of the Fathers the distinction between
the natures is not seen in the single will, we mast either, when we speak
of the one will, cease to speak of the different natures in Christ or,
when we speak of the different natures of Christ, cease to speak of the
one will.
And further(1), the divine Gospel says, The Lord came into the borders
of Tyre and Sidon and entered into a house, and would have no man know
it; but He could not be hid(2). If, then, His divine will is omnipotent,
but yet, though He would, He could not be hid, surely it was as man that
He would and could not, and so as man He must be endowed with volition.
And once again(3), the Gospel tells us that, He, having come into the
place, said 'I thirst': and they gave Him same vinegar mixed with gall,
and when He had tasted it fare would not drink(4). If, then, on the one
hand it was as God that tie suffered thirst and when He had tasted would
not drink, surely He must be subject to passion s also as God, for thirst
and taste are passions(6). But if it was not as God but altogether as
man that He was athirst, likewise as man He must be endowed with volition(7).
Moreover, the blessed Paul the Apostle says, He became obedient unto death,
even the death of the cross(8). But obedience is subjection of the real
will, not of the unreal will. For that which is irrational is not said
to be obedient or disobedient(9). But the Lord having become obedient
to the Father, became so not as God but as man. For as God He is not said
to be obedient or disobedient. For these things are of the things that
are trader one's band(1), as the inspired Gregorius said(2). Wherefore,
then, Christ is endowed with volition as man.
While, however, we assert that will is natural, we hold not that it is
dominated by necessity, but that it is free. For if it is rational, it
must be absolutely free. For it is not only the divine and uncreated nature
that is free from the bonds of necessity, but also the intellectual and
created nature. And this is manifest: for God, being by nature good and
being by nature the Creator and by nature God, is not all this of necessity.
For who is there to introduce this necessity?
It is to be observed further(3), that freedom of will is used in several
senses, one in connection with God, another in connection with angels,
and a third in connection with men. For used in reference to God it is
to be understood in a superessential manner, and in reference to angels
it is to be taken in the sense that the election is concomitant with the
state(4), and admits of the interposition of no interval of time at all:
for while the angel possesses free-will by nature, he uses it without
let or hindrance, having neither antipathy on the part of the body to
overcome nor any assailant. Again, used in reference to men, it is to
be taken in the sense that the state is considered to be anterior in time
to the election. For than is free and has free-will by nature, but he
has also the assault of the devil to impede him and the motion of the
body: and thus through the assault and the weight of the batty, election
comes to be later than the state.
If, then, Adam(5) obeyed of his own will and ate of his own will, surely
in us the will is the first part to suffer. And if the will is the first
to suffer, and the Word Incarnate did not assume this with the rest of
our nature, it follows that we have not been freed from sin.
Moreover, if the faculty of free-will which is in nature is His work and
yet He did not assume it, He either condemned His own workmanship as not
good, or grudged us the comfort it brought, and so deprived us of the
full benefit, and shewed that He was Himself subject to passion since
He was not willing or not able to work out our perfect salvation.
Moreover, one cannot speak of one compound thing made of two wills in
the same way as a subsistence is a composition of two natures. Firstly
because the compositions are of things in subsistence (hypotasis), not
of things viewed in a different category, not in one proper to them(6):
and secondly, because if we speak of composition of wills and energies,
we will be obliged to speak of composition of the other natural properties,
such as the uncreated and the created, the invisible and the visible,
and so on. And what will be the name of the will that is compounded out
of two wills? For the compound cannot be called by the name of the elements
that make it up. For otherwise we should call that which is compounded
of natures nature and not subsistence. And further, if we say that there
is one compound will in Christ, we separate Him in will from the Father,
for the Father's will is not compound. It remains, therefore, to say that
the subsistence of Christ atone is compound and common, as in the case
of the natures so also in that of the natural properties.
And we cannot(7), if we wish to be accurate, speak of Christ as having
judgment ( gnwmh ) and preference(8). For judgment is a disposition with
reference to the decision arrived at after investigation and deliberation
concerning something unknown, that is to say, after counsel and decision.
And after judgment comes preference(9), which chooses out and selects
the one rather than the other. But the Lord being not mere man but also
God, and knowing all things, had no need of inquiry. and investigation,
and counsel, and decision, and by nature made whatever is good His own
and whatever is bad foreign to Him(1). For thus says Isaiah the prophet,
Before the child shall know to prefer the evil, he shall choose the good;
because before the child knows good or evil, he refuses wickedness by
choosing the good(2). For the word "before" proves that it is
not with investigation and deliberation, as is the way with us, but as
God and as subsisting in a divine manner in the flesh, that is to say,
being united in subsistence to the flesh, and because of His very existence
and all-embracing knowledge, that He is possessed of good in His own nature.
For the virtues are natural qualities(3), and are implanted in all by
nature and in equal measure, even if we do not all in equal measure employ
our natural energies. By the transgression we were driven from the natural
to the unnatural(4). But the Lord led us back from the unnatural into
the natural(5). For this is what is the meaning of in our image, after
our likeness(6). And the discipline and trouble of this life were not
designed as a means for our attaining virtue which was foreign to our
nature, but to enable us to cast aside the evil that was foreign and contrary
to our nature: just as on laboriously removing from steel the rust which
is not natural to it but acquired through neglect, we reveal the natural
brightness of the steel.
Observe further that the word judgment ( gnwmh ) is used in many ways
and in many senses. Sometimes it signifies exhortation: as when the divine
apostle says, Now concerning virgins I have no commandment of the Lord;
yet I give my judgment(7): sometimes it means counsel, as when the prophet
David says, They have taken crafty counsel against Thy people(8): sometimes
it means a decree, as when we read in Daniel, Concerning whom (or, what)
went this shameless decree forth(9)? At other times it is used in the
sense of belief, or opinion, or purpose, and, to put it shortly, the word
judgment has twenty-eight(1) different meanings.
BOOK III CHAPTER XV
Concerning the energies in our Lord Jesus Christ.
We hold, further, that there are two energies(2) in our Lord Jesus Christ.
For He possesses on the one hand, as God and being of like essence with
the Father, the divine energy, and, likewise, since He became man and
of like essence to us, the energy proper to human nature(3).
But observe that energy and capacity for energy, and the product of energy,
and the agent of energy, are all different. Energy is the efficient (
drastikh ) and essential activity of nature: the capacity for energy is
the nature from which proceeds energy: the product of energy is that which
is effected by energy: and the agent of energy is the person or subsistence
which uses the energy. Further, sometimes energy is used in the sense
of the product of energy, and the product of energy in that of energy,
just as the terms creation and creature are sometimes transposed. For
we say "all creation," meaning creatures.
Note also that energy is an activity and is energised rather than energises;
as Gregory the Theologian says m his thesis concerning the Holy Spirit(4):
"If energy exists, it must manifestly be energised and will not energise:
and as soon as it has been energised, it will cease."
Life itself, it should be observed, is energy, yea, the primal energy
of the living creature and so is the whole economy of the living creature,
its functions of nutrition and growth, that is, the vegetative side of
its nature, and the movement stirred By impulse, that is, the sentient
side, and its activity of intellect and free-will. Energy, moreover, is
the perfect realisation of power. If, then, we contemplate all these in
Christ, surely we must also hold that He possesses human energy.
The first thought(5) that arises in us is called energy: and it is simple
energy not involving any relationship, the mind sending forth the thoughts
peculiar to it in an independent and invisible way, for if it did not
do so it could not justly be called mind. Again, the revelation and unfolding
of thought by means of articulate speech is said to be energy. But this
is no longer simple energy that revolves no relationship, but it is considered
in relation as being composed of thought and speech. Further, the very
relation which be who does anything bears to that which is brought about
is energy; and the very thing that is effected is called energy(6). The
first belongs to the soul alone, the second to the soul making use of
the body, the third to the body animated by mind, and the last is the
effect(7). For the mind sees beforehand what is to be and then performs
it thus by means of the body. And so the hegemony belongs to the soul,
for it uses the body as an instrument, leading and restraining it. But
the energy of the body is quite different, for the booty is led and moved
by the soul. And with regard to the effect, the touching and handling
and, so to speak, the embrace of what is effected, belong to the body,
while the figuration and formation belong to the soul. And so in connection
with our Lord Jesus Christ, the power of miracles is the energy of His
divinity, while the work of His hands and the willing and the saying,
I will, be thou clean(8), are the energy of His humanity. And as to the
effect, the breaking of the loaves(9), and the fact that the leper heard
the "I will," belong to His humanity, while the multiplication
of the loaves and the purification of the leper belong to His divinity.
For through both, that is through the energy of the booty anti the energy
of the soul. He displayed one and the same, cognate and equal divine energy.
For just as we saw that His natures were united and permeate one another,
and yet do not deny that they are different but even enumerate them, although
we know they are inseparable, so also in connection with the wills and
the energies we know their union, and we recognise their difference and
enumerate them without introducing separation. For just as the flesh was
deified without undergoing change in its own nature, in the same way also
will and energy are deified without transgressing their own proper limits.
For whether He is the one or the other, He is one and the same, and whether
He wills and energises in one way or the other, that is as God or as man,
He is one and the same.
We must, then, maintain that Christ has two energies in virtue of His
double nature. For things that have diverse natures, have also different
energies, and things that have diverse energies, have also different natures.
And so conversely, things that have the same nature have also the same
energy, and things that have one and the same energy have also one and
the same essence(1), which is the view of the Fathers, who declare the
divine meaning(2). One of these alternatives, then, must be true: either,
if we hold that Christ has one energy. we must also hold that He has but
one essence, or, if we are solicitous about truth. and confess that He
has according to the doctrine of the Gospels and the Fathers two essences,
we must also confess that He has two energies corresponding to and accompanying
them. For as He is of like essence with God and the Father in divinity,
He will be His equal also in energy. And as He likewise is of like essence
with us in humanity He will be our equal also in energy. For the blessed
Gregory, bishop of Nyssa, says(3), "Things that have one and the
same energy, have also absolutely the same power." For all energy
is the effect of power. But it cannot be that uncreated and created nature
have one and the same nature or power or energy. But if we should hold
that Christ has but one energy, we should attribute to the divinity of
the Word the passions of the intelligentspirit, viz. tear and grief and
anguish.
If they should say(4), indeed, that the holy Fathers said in their disputation
concerning the Holy Trinity, "Things that have one and the same essence
have also one and the same energy, and things which have different essences
have also different energies," and that it is not right to transfer
to the dispensation what has reference to matters of theology, we shall
answer that if it has been said by the Fathers solely with reference to
theology. and if the Son has not even after the incarnation the same energy
as the Father s, assuredly He cannot have the same essence. But to whom
shall we attribute this, My Father worketh hitherto and I work(6): and
this, What things soever He seeth the Father doing, these also doeth the
Son likewise(7): and this, If ye believe not Me, believe My works(8):
and this, The work which I do bear witness concerning Me(9): and this.
As the Father raised up the dead and quickeneth them, even so the Son
quickeneth whom He will(1). For all these shew not only that He is of
like essence to the Father even after the incarnation, but that He has
also the same energy.
And again: if the providence that embraces all creation is not only of
the Father and the Holy Spirit, but also of the Son even after the incarnation,
assuredly since that is energy, He must have even after the incarnation
the same energy as the Father.
But if we have learnt from the miracles that Christ has the same essence
as the Father, and since the miracles happen to be the energy of God,
assuredly He must have even after the incarnation the same energy as the
Father.
But, if there is one energy belonging to both His divinity and His humanity,
it will be compound, and will be either a different energy from that of
the Father, or the Father, too, will have a compound energy. But if the
Father has a compound energy, manifestly He must also have a compound
nature.
But if they should say that together with energy is also introduced personality(2),
we shall reply that if personality is introduced along with energy, then
the true converse must hold good that energy is also introduced along
with personality; and there will be also three energies of the Holy Trinity
just as there are three persons or subsistences, or there will be one
person and one subsistence just as there is only one energy. Indeed, the
holy Fathers have maintained with one voice that things that have the
same essence have also the same energy.
But further, if personality is introduced along with energy, those who
divine that neither one nor two energies of Christ are to be spoken of,
do not maintain that either one or two persons of Christ are to be spoken
of.
Take the case of the flaming sword; just as in it the natures of the fire
and the steel are preserved distinct(3), so also are their two energies
and their effects. For the energy of the steel is its cutting power, and
that of the fire is its burning power, and the cut is the effect of the
energy of the steel, and the burn is the effect of the energy of the fire:
and these are kept quite distinct in the burnt cut, and in the cut burn,
although neither does the burning take place apart from the cut after
the union of the two, nor the cut apart from the burning: and we do not
maintain on account of the twofold natural energy that there are two flaming
swords, nor do we confuse the essential difference of the energies on
account of the unity of the flaming sword. In like manner also, in the
case of Christ, His divinity possesses an energy that is divine and omnipotent
while His humanity has an energy such as is our own. And the effect of
His human energy was His taking the child by the hand and drawing her
to Himself, while that of His divine energy was the restoring of her to
life(4). For the one is quite distinct from the other, although they are
inseparable from one another in theandric energy. But if, because Christ
has one subsistence, He must also have one energy, then, because He has
one subsistence, He must also have one essence.
And again: if we should hold that Christ has but one energy, this must
be either divine or human, or neither. But if we hold that it is divine(5)
we must maintain that He is God alone, stripped of our humanity. And if
we hold that it is human, we shall be guilty of the impiety of saying
that He is mere man. And if we hold that it is neither divine nor human,
we must also hold that He is neither God nor man, of like essence neither
to the Father nor to us. For it is as a result of the union that the identity
in hypostasis arises, but yet the difference between the natures is not
done away with. But since the difference between the natures is preserved,
manifestly also the energies of the natures will be preserved. For no
nature exists that is lacking in energy.
If Christ our Master(6) has one energy, it must be either created or uncreated;
for between these there is no energy, just as there is no nature. If,
then, it is created, it will point to created nature alone, but if it
is uncreated, it will betoken uncreated essence alone. For that which
is natural must completely correspond with its nature: for there cannot
exist a nature that is defective. But the energy(7) that harmonises with
nature does not belong to that which is external: and this is manifest
because, apart from the energy that haromonises with nature, no nature
can either exist or be known. For through that in which each thing manifests
its energy, the absence of change confirms its own proper nature.
If Christ has one energy, it must be one and the same energy that performs
both divine anti human actions. But there is no existing thing which abiding
in its natural state can act in opposite ways: for fire does not freeze
and boil, nor does water dry up and make wet. How then could He Who is
by nature God, and Who became by nature man, have both performed miracles,
and endured passions with one and the same energy?
If, then, Christ assumed the human mind, that is to say, the intelligent
and reasonable soul, undoubtedly He has + thought, and will think for
ever. But thought is the energy of the mind: and so Christ. as man, is
endowed with energy, and will be so for ever.
Indeed, the most wise and great and holy John Chrysostom says in his interpretation
of the Acts, in the second discourse(8), "One would not err if he
should call even His passion action: for in that He suffered all things,
tie accomplished that great and marvellous work, the overthrow of death,
and all His other works."
It all energy is defined as essential movement of some nature, as those
who are versed in these matters say, where does one perceive any nature
that has no movement, and is completely devoid of energy, or where does
one find energy that is not movement of natural power? But, as the blessed
Cyril says(9), no one in his senses could admit that there was but one
natural energy of God and His creation(1). It is not His human nature
that raises up Lazarus from the dead, nor is it His divine power that
sheds tears: for the shedding of tears is peculiar to human nature while
the life is peculiar to the enhypostatic life. But yet they are common
the one to the other, because of the identity in subsistence. For Christ
is one, and one also is His person or subsistence, but yet He has two
natures, one belonging to His humanity, and another belonging to His divinity.
And the glory. indeed, which proceeded naturally from His divinity became
common to both through the identity in subsistence. and again on account
of His flesh that which was lowly became common to both. For He Who is
the one or the other, that is God or man, is one and the same, and both
what is divine and what is human belong to Himself. For while His divinity
performed the miracles, they were not done apart from the flesh, and while
His flesh performed its lowly offices, they were not done apart from the
divinity. For His divinity was joined to the suffering flesh, yet remaining
without passion, and endured the saving passions, and the holy mind was
joined to the energising divinity of the Word, perceiving and knowing
what was being accomplished.
And thus His divinity communicates its own glories to the body while it
remains itself without part in the sufferings of the flesh. For His flesh
did not suffer through His divinity in the same way that His divinity
energised tbrough the flesh. For the flesh acted as the instrument of
His divinity. Although, therefore, from the first conception there was
no division at all between the two forms(2), but the actions of either
form through all the time became those of one person, nevertheless we
do not in any way confuse those things that took place without separation,
but recognise from the quality of its works what sort of form anything
has.
Christ, then, energises according to both His natures(3) and either nature
energises in Him in communion with the other, the Word performing through
tile authority and power of its divinity all the actions proper to the
Word, i.e. all acts of supremacy and sovereignty, and the body performing
all the actions proper to the body, in obedience to the will of the Word
that is united to it, and of whom it has become a distinct part. For He
was not moved of Himself to the natural passions(4), nor again did He
in that way recoil from the things of pain, and pray for release from
them, or suffer what befel from without, but He was moved in conformity
with His nature, the Word willing and allowing Him oeconomically *(5)
to suffer that, and to do the
things proper to Him, that the truth might be confirmed by the works of
nature.
Moreover, just as(6) He received in His birth of a virgin superessential
essence, so also He revealed His human energy in a superhuman way, walking
with earthly feet on unstable water, not by turning the water into earth,
but by causing it in the superabundant power of His divinity not to flow
away nor yield beneath the weight of material feet. For not in a merely
human way did He do human things: for He was not only man, but also God,
and so even His sufferings brought life anti salvation: nor yet did He
energise as God, strictly after the manner of God, for He was not only
God, but also man, and so it was by touch and word and such like that
He worked miracles.
But if any one(7) should say, "We do not say that Christ has but
one nature, in order to do away with His human energy, but we do so because(8)
human energy, in opposition to divine energy, is called passion paGdod
." we shall answer that, according to this reasoning, those also
who hold that He has but one nature do not maintain this with a view to
doing away with His human nature, but because human nature in opposition
to divine nature is spoken of as passible padhtikh . But God forbid that
we should call the human activity passion, when we are distinguishing
it from divine energy. For, to speak generally, of nothing is the existence
recognised or defined by comparison or collation. If it were so, indeed,
existing things would turn out to be mutually the one the cause of the
other. For if the human activity is passion because the divine activity
is energy, assuredly also the human nature must be wicked because the
divine nature is good, and, by conversion and opposition, if the divine
activity is called energy because the human activity is called passion,
then also the divine nature must be good because the human nature is bad.
And so all created things must be bad, and he must have spoken falsely
who said, And God saw every thing that He had made, and, behold, it was
very good(9).
We, therefore, maintain(1) that the holy Fathers gave various names to
the human activity according to the underlying notion. For the called
it power, and energy, and difference, and activity, and property, and
quality, and passion, not in distinction from the divine activity, but
power, because it is a conservative and invariable force; and energy,
because it is a distinguishing mark, and reveals the absolute similarity
between all things of the same class; and difference, because it distinguishes;
and activity, because it makes manifest; and property, because it is constituent
and belongs to that alone, and not to any other; and quality, because
it gives form; and passion, because it is moved, For all things that are
of God and after God suffer in respect of being moved, forasmuch as they
have not in themselves motion or power. Therefore, as has been said, it
is not in order to distinguish the one from the other that it has been
named, but it is in accordance with the plan implanted in it in a creative
manner by the Cause that framed the universe. Wherefore, also, when they
spoke of it along with the divine nature they called it energy. For he
who said, "For either form energises close communion with the other(2),"
did something quite different froth him who said, And when He had fasted
forty days, He was afterwards an hungered(3) :(for He allowed His nature
to energise when it so willed, in the way proper to itself(4),) or from
those who hold there is a different energy in Him or that He has a twofold
energy, or now one energy and now another(5). For these statements with
the change in terms(5a) signify the two energies. Indeed, often the number
is indi-cated both by change of terms and by speaking of them as divine
and human(6). For the difference is difference in differing things, but
how do things that do not exist differ?
BOOK III CHAPTER XVI
In reply to those who say(7) "If man has two natures and two energies,
Christ must be held to have three natures and as many energies.
Each individual man, since he is composed of two natures, soul and body,
and since these natures are unchangeable in him, could appropriately be
spoken of as two natures: for he preserves even after their union thee
natural properties of either. For the body is not immortal, but corruptible;
neither is the soul mortal, but immortal: and the body is not invisible
pot the soul visible to bodily eyes: but the soul is rational and intellectual,
and incorporeal, while the body is dense and visible, and irrational.
But things that are opposed to one another in essence have not one nature,
and, therefore, soul and body cannot have one essence.
And again: if man is a rational and mortal animal, and every definition
is explanatory of the underlying natures, and the rational is not the
same as the mortal according to the plan of nature, man then certainly
cannot have one nature, according to the rule of his own definition.
But if man should at any time be said to have one nature, the word "nature"
is here used instead of "species," as when we say that man does
not differ from man in any difference of nature. But since all men are
fashioned in the same way, and are composed of soul and body, and each
has two distinct natures, they are all brought under one definition. And
this is not unreasonable, for the holy Athanasius spake of all created
things as having one nature forasmuch as they were all produced, expressing
himself thus in his Oration against those who blasphemed the Holy Spirit:
"That the Holy Spirit is above all creation, and different from the
nature of things produced and peculiar to divinity, we may again perceive.
For whatever is seen to be common to many things, and not more in one
and less in another, is called essence(3). since, then, every man is composed
of soul and body, accordingly we speak of man as having one nature. But
we cannot speak of our Lord's subsistence as one nature: for each nature
preserves, even after the union, its natural properties, nor can we find
a class of Christs. For no other Christ was born both of divinity and
of humanity to be at once God and man."
And again: man's unity in species is not the same thing as the unity of
soul and body in essence. For man's unity in species makes clear the absolute
similarity between all men, while the unity of soul and body in essence
is an insult to their very existence, and reduces them to nothingness:
for either the one must change into the essence of the other, or from
different things something different must be produced, and so both would
be changed, or if they keep to their own proper limits there must be two
natures. For, as regards the nature of essence the corporeal is not the
same as the incorporeal. Therefore, although holding that man has one
nature, not because the essential quality of his soul and that of his
body are the same, but because the individuals included under the species
are exactly the same, it is not necessary for us to maintain that Christ
also has one nature, for in this case there is no species embracing many
subsistences.
Moreover, every compound(9) is said to be composed of what immediately
composes it. For we do not say that a house is composed of earth and water,
but of bricks and timber. Otherwise, it would be necessary to speak of
man as composed of at least five things, viz., the four elements and soul.
And so also, in the case of our Lord Jesus Christ we do not look at the
parts of the parts, but at those divisions of which He is immediately
composed, viz., divinity and humanity.
And further, if by saying that man has two natures we are obliged to hold
that Christ has three, you, too, by saying that man is composed of two
natures must hold that Christ is composed of three natures: and it is
just the same with the energies. For energy must correspond with nature:
and Gregory the Theologian bears witness that man is said to have and
has two natures, saying, "God and man are two natures, since, indeed,
soul and body also are two natures(1)." And in his discourse "Concerning
Baptism" he says, "Since we consist of two parts, soul and body.
the visible and the invisible nature, the purification is likewise twofold,
that is, by water and Spirit(2)."
BOOK III CHAPTER XVII
Concerning the deification of the nature of our Lord's flesh and of Hi's
will.
It is worthy of note(3) that the flesh of the Lord is not said to have
been deified and made equal to God and God in respect of any change or
alteration, or transformation, or confusion of nature: as Gregory the
Theologian(4) says, "Whereof the one deified, and the other was deified,
and, to speak boldly, made equal to God: and that which anointed became
man, and that which was anointed became God(5)." For these words
do not mean any change in nature, but rather the oeconomical union(I mean
the union in subsistence by virtue of which it was united inseparably
with God the Word), and the permeation of the natures through one another,
just as we saw that burning permeated the steel. For, just as we confess
that God became man without change or alteration, so we consider that
the flesh became God without change. For because the Word became flesh,
He did not overstep the limits of His own divinity nor abandon the divine
glories that belong to Him: nor, on the other hand, was the flesh, when
deified, changed in its own nature or in its natural properties. For even
after the union, boil the natures abode unconfused and their properties
unimpaired. But the flesh of the Lord received the riches of the divine
energies through the purest union with the Word, that is to say, the union
in subsistence, without entailing the loss of any of its natural attributes.
For it is not in virtue of any energy of its own but through the Word
united to it, that it manifests divine energy: for the flaming steel burns,
not because it has been endowed in a physical way with burning energy,
but because it has obtained this energy by its union with fire(6). Wherefore
the same flesh was mortal by reason of its own nature and life-giving
through its union with the Word in subsistence. And we hold that it is
just the same with the deification of the will(7); for its natural activity
was not changed but united with His divine and omnipotent will, and became
the will of God, made man(8). And so it was that, though He wished, He
could not of Himself escape(9), because it pleased God the Word that the
weakness of the human will, which was in truth in Him, should be made
manifest. But He was able to cause at His will the cleansing of the leper(1),
because of the union with the divine will. Observe further, that the deification
of the nature and the will points most expressly and most directly both
to two natures and two wills. For just as the burning does not change
into fire the nature of the thing that is burnt, but makes distinct both
what is burnt, and what burned it, and is indicative not of one but of
two natures, so also the deification does not bring about one compound
nature but two, and their union in subsistence. Gregory the Theologian,
indeed, says, "Whereof the one deified, the other was deified(2),"
and by the words "whereof," "the one," "the other,"
he assuredly indicates two natures.
BOOK III CHAPTER XVIII
Further concerning volitions and free-wills: minds, too, and knowledges
and wisdoms.
When we say that Christ is perfect Gods and perfect man, we assuredly
attribute to Him all the properties natural to both the Father and mother.
For He became man in order that that which was overcome might overcome.
For He Who was omnipotent did not in His omnipotent authority and might
lack the power to rescue man out of the hands of the tyrant. But the tyrant
would have had a ground of complaint if, after He had overcome man, God
should have used force against him. Wherefore God in His pity and love
for man wished to reveal fallen man himself as conqueror, and became man
to restore like with like.
But that man is a rational and intelligent animal, no one will deny. How,
then, could He have become man if He took on Himself flesh without soul,
or soul without mind? For that is not man. Again, what benefit would His
becoming man have been to us if He Who suffered first was not saved, nor
renewed and strengthened by the union with divinity? For that which is
not assumed is not remedied. He, therefore, assumed the whole man, even
the fairest part of him, which had become diseased, in order that He might
bestow salvation on the whole. And, indeed, there could never exist a
mind that had not wisdom and was destitute of knowledge. For if it has
not energy or motion, it is utterly reduced to nothingness.
Therefore, God the Word(4), wishing to restore that which was in His own
image, became man. But what is that which was in His own image, unless
mind? So He gave up the better and assumed the worse. For mind s is in
the border-land between God and flesh, for it dwells indeed in fellowship
with the flesh, and is, moreover, the image of God. Mind, then, mingles
with mind, and mind holds a place midway between the pureness of God and
the denseness of flesh. For if the Lord assumed a soul without mind, He
assumed the soul of an irrational animal.
But if the Evangelist said that the Word was made flesh(6), note that
in the Holy Scripture sometimes a man is spoken of as a soul, as, for
example, with seventy-five souls came Jacob into Egypt(7): and sometimes
a man is spoken of as flesh, as, for example, All flesh shall see the
salvation of God(8). And accordingly the Lord did not become flesh without
soul or mind, but man. He says, indeed, Himself, Why seek ye to kill Me,
a Man that hath told you the truth(9)? He, therefore, assumed flesh animated
with the spirit of reason and mind, a spirit that holds sway over the
flesh but is itself under the dominion of the divinity of the Word.
So, then, He had by nature, both as God and as man, the power of will.
But His human will was obedient anti subordinate to His divine will, not
being guided by its own inclination, but willing those things which the
divine will willed. For it was with the permission of the divine will
that He suffered by nature what was proper to Him(1). For when He prayed
that He might escape the death, it was with His divine will naturally
willing and permitting it that He did so pray and agonize and fear, and
again when His divine will willed that His human will should choose tire
death, the passion became voluntary to Him(2). For it was not as God only,
but also as man, that He voluntarily surrendered Himself to the death.
And thus He bestowed on us also courage in the face of death. So, indeed,
He said before His saving passion, Father, if it be possible, let this
cup pass from Me(3)," manifestly as though He were to drink the cup
as man and not as God. It was as man, then, that He wished the cup to
pass from Him: but these are the words of natural timidity. Nevertheless,
He said, not My will, that is to say, not in so far as I am of a different
essence from Thee, but Thy will be done(4), the is to say, My will and
Thy will, in so far as I am of the same essence as Thou. Now these are
the words of a brave heart. For the Spirit of the Lord, since He truly
became man in His good pleasure, on first testing its natural weakness
was sensible of the natural fellow-suffering involved in its separation
from the body, but being strengthened by the divine will it again grew
bold in the face of death. For since He was Himself wholly God although
also man, and wholly man although also God, He Himself as man subjected
in Himself and by Himself His human nature to God and the Father, and
became obedient to the Father, thus making Himself the most excellent
type and example for us.
Of His own free-will, moreover, He exercised His divine and human will.
For free-will is assuredly implanted in every rational nature. For to
what end would it possess reason, if it could not reason at its own free-will?
For the Creator hath implanted even in the unreasoning brutes natural
appetite to compel them to sustain their own nature. For devoid of reason,
as they are, they cannot guide their natural appetite but are guided by
it. And so, as soon as the appetite for anything has sprung up, straightway
arises also the impulse for action. And thus they do not win praise or
happiness for pursuing virtue, nor punishment for doing evil. But the
rational nature, although it does possess a natural appetite, can guide
and train it by reason wherever the laws of nature are observed. For the
advantage of reason consists in this, tire free-will, by which we mean
natural activity in a rational subject. Wherefore in pursuing virtue it
wins praise and happiness, and in pursuing vice it wins punishment.
So that the soul s of the Lord being moved of its own free-will willed,
but willed of its free-will those things which His divine will willed
it to will. For the flesh was not moved at a sign from the Word, as Moses
and all the holy men were moved at a sign from heaven. But He Himself,
Who was one and yet both God and man, willed according to both His divine
and His human will. Wherefore it was not in inclination but rather in
natural power that the two wills of the Lord differed from one another.
For His divine will was without beginning and all-effecting, as having
power that kept pace with it, and free from passion; while His human will
had a beginning in time, and itself endured the natural and innocent passions,
and was not naturally omnipotent. But yet it was omni-potent because it
truly and naturally had its origin in the God-Word.
BOOK III CHAPTER XIX
Concerning the theandric energy.
When the blessed Dionysius(6) says that Christ exhibited to us some sort
of novel theandric energy(7), he does not do away with the natural energies
by saying that one energy resulted from the union of the divine with the
human energy: for in the same way we could speak of one new nature resulting
from the union of the divine with the human nature. For, according to
the holy Fathers, things that have one energy have also one essence. But
Ire wished to indicate the novel and ineffable manner in which the natural
energies of Christ manifest themselves, a manner befitting the ineffable
manner in which the natures of Christ mutually, permeate one another,
and further how strange and wonder-rid and, in the nature of things, unknown
was His life as man(8), and lastly the manner of the mutual interchange
arising from the ineffable union. For we hold that the energies are not
divided and that the natures do not energies separately, but that each
conjointly in complete community with the other energises with its own
proper energy(9). For the human part did not energise merely in a human
manner, for He was not mere man; nor did the divine part energise only
after the manner of God, for He was not simply God, but He was at once
God and man. For just as in the case of natures we recognise both their
union and their natural difference, so is it also with the natural wills
and energies.
Note, therefore, that in the case of our Lord Jesus Christ, we speak sometimes
of His two natures and sometimes of His one person: anti the one or the
other is referred to one conception. For the two natures are one Christ,
and the one Christ is two natures. Wherefore it is all the same whether
we say "Christ energises according to either of His natures,"
or "either nature energises in Christ in communion with the other."
The divine nature, then, has communion with the flesh in its energising,
because it is by the good pleasure of the divine will that the flesh is
permitted to suffer and do the things proper to itself, and because the
energy of the flesh is altogether saving, and this is an attribute not
of human but of divine energy. On the other hand the flesh has communion
with the divinity of the Word in its energising, because the divine energies
are performed, so to speak, through the organ of the body, and because
He Who energises at once as God and man is one and the same.
Further observe(1) that His holy mind also performs its natural energies,
thinking and knowing that it is God's mind and that it is worshipped by
all creation, and remembering the times He spent on earth and all He suffered,
but it has communion with the divinity of the Word in its energising and
orders and governs the universe, thinking and knowing and ordering not
as the mere mind of man, but as united in subsistence with God and acting
as the mind of God.
This, then, the theandric energy makes plain that when God became man,
that is when He became incarnate, both His human energy was divine, that
is deified, and not without part in His divine energy, and His divine
energy was not without part in His human energy, but either was observed
in conjunction with the other. Now this manner of speaking is called a
periphrasis, viz., when one embraces two things in one statement(2). For
just as in the case of the flaming sword we speak of the cut burn as one,
and the burnt cut as one, but still hold that the cut and the burn have
different energies and different natures, the burn having the nature of
fire and the cut the nature of steel, in the same way also when we speak
of one theandric energy of Christ, we understand two distinct energies
of His two natures, a divine energy belonging to His divinity, and a human
energy belonging to His humanity.
BOOK III CHAPTER XX
Concerning the natural and innocent passions(2a).
We confess(3), then, that He assumed all the natural and innocent passions
of man. For He assumed the whole man and all man's attributes save sin.
For that is not natural, nor is it implanted in us by the Creator, but
arises voluntarily in our mode of life as the result of a further implantation
by the devil, though it cannot prevail over us by force. For the natural
and innocent passions are those which are not in our power, but which
have entered into the life of man owing to the condemnation by reason
of the transgression; such as hunger, thirst, weariness, labour, the tears,
the corruption, the shrinking from death, the fear, the agony with the
bloody sweat, the succour at the hands of angels because of the weakness
of the nature, and other such like passions which belong by nature to
every man.
All, then, He assumed that He might sanctify all. He was tried and overcame
in order that He might prepare victory for us and give to nature power
to overcome its antagonist, in order that nature which was overcome of
old might overcome its former conqueror by the very weapons wherewith
it had itself been overcome.
The wicked one(4), then, made his assault from without, not by thoughts
prompted inwardly, just as it was with Adam. For it was not by inward
thoughts, but by the serpent that Adam was assailed. But the Lord repulsed
the assault and dispelled it like vapour, in order that the passions which
assailed him and were overcome might be easily subdued by us, and that
the new Adam should save the old.
Of a truth our natural passions were in harmony with nature and above
nature in Christ. For they were stirred in Him after a natural manner
when He permitted the flesh to suffer what was proper to it: but they
were above nature because that which was natural did not in the Lord assume
command over the will. For no compulsion is contemplated in Him but all
is voluntary. For it was with His will that He hungered and thirsted and
feared and died.
BOOK III CHAPTER XXI
Concerning ignorance and servitude.
It is just as we said, then, in connection with ignorance, that if you
separate with subtle thoughts, that is, with fine imaginings, the created
from the uncreated, the flesh is a servant, unless it has been united
with God the Word(8). But how can it be a servant when t is once united
in subsistence? For since Christ is one, He cannot be His own servant
and Lord. For these are not simple predications but relative. Whose servant,
then could He be? His Father's? The Son, then, would not have all the
Father's attributes, if He is the Father's servant and yet in no respect
His own. Besides, how could the apostle say concerning us who were adopted
by Him, So that you are no longer a servant but a son(9), if indeed He
is Himself a servant? The word servant, then, is used merely as a title,
though not in the strict meaning: but for our sakes He assumed the form
of a servant and is called a servant among us. For although He is without
passion, yet for our sake He was the servant of passion and became the
minister of our salvation. Those, then, who say that He is a servant divide
the one Christ into two, just as Nestorius did. But we declare Him to
be Master and Lord of all creation, the one Christ, at once God and man,
and all-knowing. For in Him are all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge,
the hidden treasures(1).
BOOK III CHAPTER XXII
Concerning His growth.
He is, moreover, said to grow in wisdom and age and grace(2), increasing
in age indeed and through the increase in age manifesting the wisdom that
is in Him(3); yea, further, making men's progress in wisdom and grace,
and the fulfilment of the Father's goodwill, that is to say, men's knowledge
of God and men's salvation, His own increase, and everywhere taking as
His own that which is ours. But those who hold that He progressed in wisdom
and grace in the sense of receiving some addition to these attributes,
do not say that the union took place at the first origin of the flesh,
nor yet do they give precedence to the union in subsistence, but giving
heed(4) to the foolish Nestorius they imagine some strange relative union
and mere indwelling, understanding neither what they say nor whereof they
affirm(5). For if in truth the flesh was united with God the Word from
its first origin, or rather if it existed in Him and was identical in
subsistence with Him, how was it that it was not endowed completely with
all wisdom and grace? not that it might itself participate in the grace,
nor share by grace in what belonged to the Word, but rather by reason
of the union in subsistence, since both what is human and what is divine
belong to the one Christ, and that He Who was Himself at once God and
man should pour forth like a fountain over the universe His grace and
wisdom and plenitude of every blessing.
BOOK III CHAPTER XXIII
Concerning His Fear.
The word fear has a double meaning. For fear is natural when the soul
is unwilling to be separated from the body, on account of the natural
sympathy and close relationship planted in it in the beginning by the
Creator, which makes it fear and struggle against death and pray for an
escape from it. It may be defined thus: natural fear is the force whereby
we cling to being with shrinking(6). For if all things were brought by
the Creator out of nothing into being, they all have by nature a longing
after being and not after non-being. Moreover the inclination towards
those things that support existence is a natural property of them. Hence
God the Word when He became man had this longing, manifesting, on the
one hand, in those things that support existence, the inclination of His
nature in desiring food and drink and sleep, and having in a natural manner
made proof of these things, while on the other hand displaying in those
things that bring corruption His natural disinclination in voluntarily
shrinking in the hour of His passion before the flee of death. For although
what happened did so according to the laws of nature, yet it was not,
as in our case, a matter of necessity. For He willingly and spontaneously
accepted that which was natural. So that fear itself and terror and agony
belong to the natural and innocent passions and are not under the dominion
of sin.
Again, there is a fear which arises from treachery of reasoning and want
of faith, and ignorance of the hour of death, as when we are at night
affected by fear at some chance noise. This is unnatural fear, and may
be thus defined: unnatural fear is an unexpected shrinking. This our Lord
did not assume. Hence He never felt fear except in the hour of His passion,
although He often experienced a feeling of shrinking in accordance with
the dispensation. For He was not ignorant of the appointed time.
But the holy Athanasius in his discourse against Apollinarius says that
He did actually feel fear. "Wherefore the Lord said: Now is My soul
troubled(7). The 'now' indeed means just 'when He willed,' but yet points
to what actually was. For He did not speak of what was not, as though
it were present, as if the things that were said only apparently happened.
For all things happened naturally and actually." And again, after
some other matters, he says," In nowise does His divinity admit passion
apart from a suffering body, nor yet does it manifest trouble and pain
apart froth a pained and troubled soul, nor does it suffer anguish and
offer up prayer apart from a mind that suffered anguish and offered up
prayer. For, although these occurrences were not due to any overthrow
of nature, yet they took place to shew forth His real being(8)."
The words "these occurrences were not due to any overthrow of His
nature," prove that it was not involuntarily that He endured these
things.
BOOK III CHAPTER XXIV
Concerning our Lord's Praying.
Again, when he said, Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from
Me: yet, not as I will but as Thou wilt(4), is it not clear to all(5)
that He said this as a lesson to us to ask help in our trials only from
God, and to prefer God's will to oar own, and as a proof that He did actually
appropriate to Himself the attributes of our nature, and that He did in
truth possess two wills, natural, indeed, and corresponding with His natures
but yet in no wise opposed to one another? "Father" implies
that He is of the same essence, but "if it be possible" does
not mean that He was in ignorance (for what is impossible to God?), but
serves to teach us to prefer God's will to our own. For that alone is
impossible which is against God's will and permission(6). "But not
as I will but as Thou wilt," for inasmuch as He is God, He is identical
with the Father, while inasmuch as He is man, He manifests the natural
will of mankind. For it is this that naturally seeks escape from death.
Further, these words, My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me(7)? He
said as making our personality His own(8). For neither would God be regarded
with us as His Father, unless one were to discriminate with subtle imaginings
of the mind between that which is seen and that which is thought, nor
was He ever forsaken by His divinity: nay, it was we who were forsaken
and disregarded. So that it was as appropriating our personality that
He offered these prayers(9).
BOOK III CHAPTER XXV
Concerning the Appropriation.
It is to be observed(1) that there are two appropriations(2): one that
is natural and essential, and one that is personal and relative. The natural
and essential one is that by which our Lord in His love for man took on
Himself our nature and all our natural attributes, becoming in nature
and truth man, and making trial of that which is natural: but the personal
and relative appropriation is when any one assumes the person of another
relatively, for instance, out of pity or love, and in his place utters
words concerning him that have no connection with himself. And it was
in this way that our Lord appropriated both our curse and our desertion,
and such other things as are not natural: not that He Himself was or became
such, but that He took upon Himself our personality and ranked Himself
as one of us. Such is the meaning in which this phrase is to be taken:
Being made a curse for our sakes(3).
BOOK III CHAPTER XXVI
Concerning the Passion of our Lord's body, and the Impassibility of His
divinity.
The Word of God then itself endured all in the flesh, while His divine
nature which alone was passionless remained void of passion. For since
the one Christ, Who is a compound of divinity and humanity, and exists
in divinity and humanity, truly suffered, that part which is capable of
passion suffered as it was natural it should, but that part which was
void of passion did not share in the suffering. For the soul, indeed,
since it is capable of passion shares in the pain and suffering of a bodily
cut, though it is not cut itself but only the body: but the divine part
which is void of passion does not share in the suffering of the body.
Observe, further(4), that we say that God suffered in the flesh, bat never
that His divinity suffered in the flesh, or that God suffered through
the flesh. For if, when the sun is shining upon a tree, the axe should
cleave the tree, and, nevertheless, the sun remains uncleft and void of
passion, much more will the passionless divinity of the Word, united in
subsistence to the flesh, remain void of passion when the body undergoes
passion(5). And should any one pour water over flaming steel, it is that
which naturally suffers by the water, I mean, the fire, that is quenched,
but the steel remains untouched (for it is not the nature of steel to
be destroyed by water): much more, then, when the flesh suffered did His
only passionless divinity escape all passion although abiding inseparable
from it. For one must not take the examples too absolutely and strictly:
indeed, in the examples, one must consider both what is like and what
is unlike, otherwise it would not be an example. For, if they were like
in all respects they would be identities, and not examples, and all the
more so in dealing with divine matters. For one cannot find an example
that is like in all respects whether we are dealing with theology or the
dispensation.
BOOK III CHAPTER XXVII
Concerning the fact that the divinity of the Word remained inseparable
from the soul and the body, even at our Lord's death, and that His subsistence
continued one.
Since our Lord Jesus Christ was without sin (for He committed no sin,
He Who took away the sin of the world, nor was there any deceit found
in His mouth(6)) He was not subject to death, since death came into the
world through sin(7). He dies, therefore, because He took on Himself death
on our behalf, and He makes Himself an offering to the Father for our
sakes. For we had sinned against Him, and it was meet that He should receive
the ransom for us, and that we should thus he delivered from the condemnation.
God forbid that the blood of the Lord should have been offered to the
tyrant(8). Wherefore death approaches, and swallowing up the body as a
bait is transfixed on the hook of divinity, and after tasting of a sinless
and life-giving body, perishes, and brings up again all whom of old he
swallowed up. For just as darkness disappears on the introduction of light,
so is death repulsed before the assault of life, and brings life to all,
but death to the destroyer.
Wherefore, although(9) He died as man and His Holy Spirit was severed
from His immaculate body, yet His divinity remained inseparable from both,
I mean, from His soul and His body, and so even thus His one hypostasis
was not divided into two hypostases. For body and soul received simultaneously
in the beginning their being in the subsistence(9a) of the Word, and although
they were severed from one another by death, yet they continued, each
of them, having the one subsistence of the Word. So that the one subsistence
of the Word is alike the subsistence of the Word, and of soul and body.
For at no time had either soul or body a separate subsistence of their
own, different from that of the Word, and the subsistence of the Word
is for ever one, and at no time two. So that the subsistence of Christ
is always one. For, although the soul was separated from the body topically,
yet hypostatically they were united through the Word.
BOOK III CHAPTER XXVIII
Concerning Corruption and Destruction.
The word corruption(1) has two meanings(2). For it signifies all the human
sufferings, such as hunger, thirst, weariness, the piercing with nails,
death, that is, the separation of soul and body, and so forth. In this
sense we say that our Lord's body was subject to corruption. For He voluntarily
accepted all these things. But corruption means also the complete resolution
of the body into its constituent elements, and its utter disappearance,
which is spoken of by many preferably as destruction. The body of our
Lord did not experience this form of corruption, as the prophet David
says, For Thou will not leave my soul in hell, neither wilt Thou suffer
Thine holy one to see corruption(3).
Wherefore to say, with that foolish Julianus and Gaianus, that our Lord's
body was incorruptible, in the first sense of the word, before His resurrection
is impious. For if it were incorruptible it was not really, but only apparently,
of the same essence as ours, and what the Gospel tells us happened, viz.
the hunger, the thirst, the nails, the wound in His side, the death, did
not actually occur. But if they only apparently happened, then the mystery
of the dispensation is an imposture and a sham, and He became man only
in appearance, and not in actual fact, and we are saved only in appearance,
and not in actual fact. But God forbid, and may those who so say have
no part in the salvation(4). But we have obtained and shall obtain the
true salvation. But in the second meaning of the word "corruption,"
we confess that our Lord's body is incorruptible, that is, indestructible,
for such is the tradition of the inspired Fathers. Indeed, after the resurrection
of our Saviour from the dead, we say that our Lord's body is incorruptible
even in the first sense of the word. For our Lord by His own body bestowed
the gifts both of resurrection and of subsequent incorruption even on
our own body, He Himself having become to us the firstfruits both of resurrection
and incorruption, and of passionlessness(5). For as the divine Apostle
says, This corruptible must put an incorruption(6).
BOOK III CHAPTER XXIX
Concerning the Descent to Hades.
The soul(7) when it was deified descended into Hades, in order that, just
as the Sun of Righteousness(8) rose for those upon the earth, so likewise
He might bring light to those who sit under the earth in darkness and
shadow of death(9): in order that just as He brought the message of peace
to those upon the earth, and of release to the prisoners, and of sight
to the blind(1), and became to those who believed the Author of everlasting
salvation and to those who did not believe a reproach of their unbelief(2),
so He might become the same to those in Hades(3): That every knee should
bow to Him, of things in heaven, and things in earth and things under
the earth(4). And thus after He had freed those who had been bound for
ages, straightway He rose again from the dead, shewing us the way of resurrection.
Book 4
BOOK IV CHAPTER I
Concerning what followed the Resurrection.
After Christ was risen from the dead He laid aside all His passions, I
mean His corruption or hunger or thirst or sleep or weariness or such
like. For, although He did taste food after the resurrection(1), yet He
did not do so because it was a law of His nature (for He felt no hunger),
but in the way of economy, in order that He might convince us of the reality
of the resurrection, and that it was one and the same flesh which suffered
and rose again(2). But He laid aside none of the divisions of His nature,
neither body nor spirit, but possesses both the body and the soul intelligent
and reasonable, volitional and energetic, and in this wise He sits at
the right hand of the Father, using His will both as God and as man in
behalf of our salvation, energising in His divine capacity to provide
for and maintain and govern all things, and remembering in His human capacity
the time He spent on earth, while all the time He both sees and knows
that He is adored by all rational creation. For His Holy Spirit knows
that He is one in substance with God the Word, and shares as Spirit of
God and not simply as Spirit the worship accorded to Him. Moreover, His
ascent from earth to heaven, and again, His descent from heaven to earth,
are manifestations of the energies of His circumscribed body. For He shall
so come again to you, saith he, in like manner as ye have seen Him go
into Heaven(3).
BOOK IV CHAPTER II
Concerning the sitting at the right hand of the Father.
We hold, moreover, that Christ sits in the body at the right hand of God
the Father, but we do not hold that the right hand of the Father is actual
place. For how could He that is uncircumscribed have a right hand limited
by place? Right hands and left hands belong to what is circumscribed.
But we understand the right hand of the Father to be the glory and honour
of the Godhead in which the Son of God, who existed as God before the
ages, and is of like essence to the Father, and in the end became flesh,
has a seat in the body, His flesh sharing in the glory. For He along with
His flesh is adored with one adoration by all creation(4).
BOOK IV CHAPTER III
In reply to those who say(5) "If Christ has two natures, either ye
do service to the creature in worshipping created nature, or ye say that
there is one nature to be worshipped, and another not to be worshipped.
Along with the Father and the Holy Spirit we worship the Son of God, Who
was incorporeal before He took on humanity, and now in His own person
is incarnate and has become man though still being also God. His flesh,
then, in its own nature(6), if one were to make subtle mental distinctions
between what is seen and what is thought, is not deserving of worship
since it is created. But as it is united with God the Word, it is worshipped
on account of Him and in Him. For just as the king deserves homage alike
when un-robed and when robed, and just as the purple robe, considered
simply as a purple robe, is trampled upon and tossed about, but after
becoming the royal dress receives all honour and glory, and whoever dishonours
it is generally condemned to death: and again, just as wood in itself(7)
is not of such a nature that it cannot be touched, but becomes so when
fire is applied to it, and it becomes charcoal, and yet this is not because
of its own nature, but because of the fire united to it, and the nature
of the wood is not such as cannot be touched, but rather the charcoal
or burning wood: so also the flesh, in its own nature, is not to be worshipped,
but is worshipped in the incarnate God Word, not because of itself, but
because of its union in subsistence with God the Word. And we do not say
that
we worship mere flesh, but God's flesh, that is, God incarnate.
BOOK IV CHAPTER IV
Why it was the Son of God, and not the Father or the Spirit, that became
man: and what having became man He achieved.
The Father is Father(8) and not Son(9): the Son is Son and not Father:
the Holy Spirit is Spirit and not Father or Son. For the individuality(9a)
is unchangeable. How, indeed, could individuality continue to exist at
all if it were ever changing and altering? Wherefore the Son of God became
Son of Man in order that His individuality might endure. For since He
was the Son of God, He became Son of Man, being made flesh of the holy
Virgin and not losing the individuality of Sonship(1).
Further, the Son of God became man, in order that He might again bestow
on man that favour for the sake of which He created him. For He created
him after His own image, endowed with intellect and free-will, and after
His own likeness, that is to say, perfect in all virtue so far as it is
possible for man's nature to attain perfection. For the following properties
are, so to speak, marks of the divine nature: viz. absence of care and
distraction and guile, goodness, wisdom, justice, freedom from all vice.
So then, after He had placed man in communion with Himself (for having
made him for incorruption(2), He led him up through communion wills Himself
to incorruption), and when moreover, through the transgression of the
command we had confused and obliterated the marks of the divine image,
and had become evil, we were stripped of our communion with God (for what
communion hath light with darkness(3)?): and having been shut out from
life we became subject to the corruption of death: yea, since He gave
us to share in the better part, and we did not keep it secure, He shares
in the inferior part, I mean our own nature, in order that through Himself
and in Himself He might renew that which was made after His image and
likeness, and might teach us, too, the conduct of a virtuous life, making
through Himself the way thither easy for us, and might by the communication
of life deliver us from corruption, becoming Himself the firstfruits of
our resurrection, and might renovate the useless and worn vessel calling
us to the knowledge of God that He might redeem us from the tyranny of
the devil, and might strengthen and teach us how to overthrow the tyrant
through patience and humility(4).
The worship of demons then has ceased: creation has been sanctified by
the divine blood: altars and temples of idols have been overthrown, the
knowledge of God has been implanted in men's minds, the co-essential Trinity,
the uncreate divinity, one true God, Creator and Lord of all receives
men's service: virtues are cultivated, the hope of resurrection has been
granted through the resurrection of Christ, the demons shudder at those
men who of old were under their subjection. And the marvel, indeed, is
that all this has been successfully brought about through His cross and
passion and death. Throughout all the earth the Gospel of the knowledge
of God has been preached; no wars or weapons or armies being used to rout
the enemy, but only a few, naked, poor, illiterate, persecuted and tormented
men, who with their lives in their hands, preached Him Who was crucified
in the flesh and died, and who became victors over the wise and powerful.
For the omnipotent power of the Cross accompanied them. Death itself,
which once was maws chiefest terror, has been overthrown, and now that
which was once the object of hate and loathing is preferred to life. These
are the achievements of Christ's presence: these are the tokens of His
power. For it was not one people that He saved, as when through Moses
He divided the sea and delivered Israel out of Egypt and the bondage of
Pharaoh(5); nay, rather He rescued all mankind from the corruption of
death and the bitter tyranny of sin: not leading them by force to virtue,
not overwhelming them with earth or burning them with fire, or ordering
the sinners to be stoned, but persuading men by gentleness and long-suffering
to choose virtue and vie with one another, and find pleasure in the struggle
to attain it. For, formerly, it was sinners who were persecuted, and yet
they clung all the closer to sin, and sin was looked upon by them as their
God: but now for the sake of piety and virtue men choose persecutions
and crucifixions and death.
Hail! O Christ, the Word and Wisdom and Power of God, and God omnipotent!
What can we helpless ones give Thee in return for all these good gifts?
For all are Thine, and Thou askest naught from us save our salvation,
Thou Who Thyself art the Giver of this, and yet art grateful to those
who receive it, through Thy unspeakable goodness. Thanks be to Thee Who
gave us life, and granted us the grace of a happy life, and restored us
to that, when we had gone astray, through Thy unspeakable condescension.
BOOK IV CHAPTER V
In reply to those who ask if Christ's subsistence is create or uncreate.
The subsistence(6) of God the Word before the Incarnation was simple and
uncompound, and incorporeal and uncreate: but after it became flesh, it
became also the subsistence of the flesh, and became compounded of divinity
which it always possessed, and of flesh which it had assumed: and it bears
the properties of the two natures, being made known in two natures: so
that the one same subsistence is both uncreate in divinity and create
in humanity, visible and invisible. For otherwise we are compelled either
to divide the one Christ and speak of two subsistences, or to deny the
distinction between the natures and thus introduce change and confusion.
BOOK IV CHAPTER VI
Concerning the question, when Christ was called.
The mind was not united with God the Word, as some falsely assert(7),
before the Incarnation by the Virgin and from that time called Christ.
That is the absurd nonsense of Origen(8) who lays down the doctrine of
the priority of the existence of souls. But we hold that the Son and Word
of God became Christ after He had dwelt in the womb of His holy ever-virgin
Mother, and became flesh without change, and that the flesh was anointed
with divinity. For this is the anointing of humanity, as Gregory the Theologian
says(9). And here are the words of the most holy Cyril of Alexandria which
he wrote to the Emperor Theodosius(1): "For I indeed hold that one
ought to give the name Jesus Christ neither to the Word that is of God
if He is without humanity, nor yet to the temple born of woman if it is
not united with the Word. For the Word that is of God is understood to
be Christ when united with humanity in ineffable manner in the union of
the oeconomy(2)." And again, he writes to the Empresses thus(3):
"Some hold that the name 'Christ' is rightly given to the Word that
is begotten of God the Father, to Him alone, and regarded separately by
Himself. But we have not been taught so to think and speak. For when the
Word became flesh, then it was, we say, that He was called Christ Jesus.
For since He was anointed with the oil of gladness, that is the Spirit,
by Him Who is God and Father, He is for this reason(4) called Christ.
But that the anointing was an act that concerned Him as man could be doubted
by no one who is accustomed to think rightly." Moreover, the celebrated
Athanasius says this in his discourse "Concerning the Saving Manifestation:"
"The God Who was before the sojourn in the flesh was not man, but
God in God, being invisible and without passion, but when He became man,
He received in addition the name of Christ because of the flesh, since,
indeed, passion and death follow in the train of this name."
And although the holy Scripture(4) says, Therefore God, thy God, hath
anointed thee with the oil of gladness(5), it is to be observed that the
holy Scripture often uses the past tense instead of the future, as for
example here: Thereafter He was seen upon the earth and dwelt among men(6).
For as yet God was not seen nor did He dwell among men when this was said.
And here again: By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat down; yea wept(7).
For as yet these things had not come to pass.
BOOK IV CHAPTER VII
In answer to those who enquire whether the holy Mother of God bore two
natures, and whether two natures hung upon the Crass.
agenhton and genhton , written with one ' n '(8) and meaning uncreated
and created, refer to nature: but agennhton and gennhton , that is to
say, unbegotten and begotten, as the double ' n ' indicates, refer not
to nature but to subsistence. The divine nature then is agenhtos , that
is to say, uncreate, but all things that come after the divine nature
are genhhta , that is, created. In the divine and uncreated nature, therefore,
the property of being agennhton or unbegotten is contemplated in the Father
(for He was not begotten), that of being gennhton or begotten in the Son
(for He has been eternally begotten of the Father),
and that of procession in the Holy Spirit. Moreover of each species of
living creatures, the first members were agennhta but not agenhta : for
they were brought into being by their Maker, but were not the offspring
of creatures like themselves. For genesis is creation, while gennhsis
or begetting is in the case of God the origin of a co-essential Son arising
from the Father alone, and in the case of bodies, the origin of a co-essential
subsistence arising from the contact of male and female. And thus we perceive
that begetting refers not to nature but to subsistence(9). For if it did
refer to nature, to agennhton and to gennhton , i.e. the properties of
being begotten and unbegotten, could not be contemplated in one and the
same nature. Accordingly the holy Mother of God bore a subsistence revealed
in two natures; being begotten on the one hand, by reason of its divinity,
of the Father timelessly, and, at last, on the other hand, being incarnated
of her in time and born in the flesh.
But if our interrogators should hint that He Who is begotten of the holy
Mother of God is two natures, we reply, "Yea! He is two natures:
for He is in His own person God and man. And the same is to be said concerning
the crucifixion and resurrection and ascension. For these refer not to
nature but to subsistence. Christ then, since He is in two natures, suffered
and was crucified in the nature that was subject to passion. For it was
in the flesh and not in His divinity that He hung upon the Cross. Otherwise,
let them answer us, when we ask if two natures died. No, we shall say.
And so two natures Were not crucified but Christ was begotten, that is
to say, the divine Word having become man was begotten in the flesh, was
crucified in the flesh, suffered in the flesh, while His divinity continued
to be impossible."
BOOK IV CHAPTER VIII
How the Only-begotten Son of God is called first-born.
He who is first begotten is called first-born(1), whether he is only-begotten
or the first of a number of brothers. If then the Son of God was called
first-born, but was not called Only-begotten, we could imagine that He
was the first-born of creatures, as being a creature(2). But since He
is called both first-born and Only-begotten, both senses must be preserved
in His case. We say that He is first-born of all creation(3) since both
He Himself is of God and creation is of God, but as He Himself is born
alone and timelessly of the essence of God the Father, He may with reason
be called Only-begotten Son, first-born and not first-created. For the
creation was not brought into being out of the essence of the Father,
but by His will out of nothing(4). And He is called First-born among many
brethren(5), for although being Only-begotten, He was also born of a mother.
Since, indeed, He participated just as we ourselves do in blood and flesh
and became man, while we too through Him became sons of God, being adopted
through the baptism, He Who is by nature Son of God became first-born
amongst us who were made by adoption and grace sons of God, and stand
to Him in the relation of brothers. Wherefore He said, I ascend unto My
Father and your Father(6). He did not say "our Father," but
"My Father," clearly in the sense of Father by nature, and "your
Father," in the sense of Father by grace. And "My God and your
God(7)." He did not say "our God," but "My God:"
and if you distinguish with subtle thought that which is seen from that
which is thought, also "your God," as Maker and Lord.
BOOK IV CHAPTER IX
Concerning Faith and Baptism.
We confess one baptism for the remission of sins and for life eternal.
For baptism declares the Lord's death. We are indeed "buried with
the Lord through baptism(8)," as saith the divine Apostle. So then,
as our Lord died once for all, we also must be baptized once for all,
and baptized according to the Word of the Lord, In the Name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit(9), being taught the confession
in Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Those(1), then, who, after having been
baptized into Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, and having been taught that
there is one divine nature in three subsistences, are rebaptized, these,
as the divine Apostle says, crucify the Christ afresh. For it is impossible,
he saith, for those who were once enlightened, &c., to renew them
again unto repentance: seeing they crucify to themselves the Christ afresh,
and put Him to an open shame(2). But those who were not baptized into
the Holy Trinity, these must be baptized again. For although the divine
ApoStle says: Into Christ and into His death were we baptized(3), he does
not mean that the invocation of baptism must be in these words, but that
baptism is an image of the death of Christ. For by the three immersions(4),
baptism signifies the three days of our Lord's entombment(5). The baptism
then into Christ means that believers are baptized into Him. We could
not believe in Christ if we were not taught confession in Father, Son,
and Holy Spirit(6). For Christ is the Son of the Living God(7), Whom the
Father anointed with the Holy Spirit(8): in the words of the divine David,
Therefore God, thy God, hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above
thy fellows(9). And Isaiah also speaking in the person of the Lord says,
The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because He hath anointed me(1). Christ,
however, taught His own disciples the invocation and said, Baptizing them
in the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit(2).
For since Christ made us for incorruption(3)(4), and we transgressed His
saving command. He condemned us to the corruption of death in order that
that which is evil should not be immortal, and when in His compassion
He stooped to His servants and became like us, He redeemed us from corruption
through His own passion. He caused the fountain of remission to well forth
for us out of His holy and immaculate side(5), water for our regeneration,
and the washing away of sin and corruption; and blood to drink as the
hostage of life eternal. And He laid on us the command to be born again
of water and of the Spirit(6), through prayer and invocation, the Holy
Spirit drawing nigh unto the water(7). For since man's nature is twofold,
consisting of soul and body, He bestowed on us a twofold purification,
of water and of the Spirit the Spirit renewing that part in us which is
after His image and likeness, and the water by the grace of the Spirit
cleansing the body from sin and delivering it from corruption, the water
indeed expressing the image of death, but the Spirit affording the earnest
of life.
For from the beginning the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters(8),
and anew the Scripture witnesseth that water has the power of purification(9).
In the time of Noah God washed away the sin of the world by water(1).
By water every impure person is purified(2), according to the law, even
the very garments being washed with water. Elias shewed forth the grace
of the Spirit mingled with the water when he burned the holocaust by pouring
on water(3). And almost everything is purified by water according to the
law: for the things of sight are symbols of the things of thought. The
regeneration, however, takes place in the spirit: for faith has the power
of making us sons (of God(4)), creatures as we are, by the Spirit, and
of leading us into our original blessedness.
The remission of sins, therefore, is granted alike to all through baptism:
but the grace of the Spirit is proportional to the faith and previous
purification. Now, indeed, we receive the firstfruits of the Holy Spirit
through baptism, and the second birth is for us the beginning and seal
and security and illumination s of another life.
It behoves as, then, with all our strength to steadfastly keep ourselves
pure from filthy works, that we may not, like the dog returning to his
vomit(6), make ourselves again the slaves of sin. For faith apart from
works is dead, and so likewise are works apart from faith(7). For the
true faith is attested by works.
Now we are baptized(8) into the Holy Trinity because those things which
are baptized have need of the Holy Trinity for their maintenance and continuance,
and the three subsistences cannot be otherwise than present, the one with
the other. For the Holy Trinity is indivisible.
The first baptism(9) was that of the flood for the eradication of sin.
The second(1) was through the sea and the cloud: for the cloud is the
symbol of the Spirit and the sea of the water(2). The third baptism was
that of the Law: for every impure person washed himself with water, and
even washed his garments, and so entered into the camp(3). The fourth(4)
was that of John(5), being preliminary and leading those who were baptized
to repent-once, that they might believe in Christ: I,
certainly return unto thee at this time hereafter, and Sarah thy wife
shall have a son(6) ; and afterwards the Lord said to Him, I will not
conceal from Abraham My servant the things that I will do(7) ; and again,
Moreover the Lord said, The cry of Sodom and Gomorrah is filled up, and
their sins are exceeding great(8). Then after long discourse, which for
the sake of brevity shall be omitted, Abraham, distressed at the destruction
which awaited the innocent as well as the guilty, said, In no wise wilt
Thou, Who judgest the earth, execute this judgment. And the Lord said,
If I find in Sodom fifty righteous within the city, then I will spare
all the place for their sakes(9). Afterwards when the warning to Lot,
Abraham's brother, was ended, the Scripture says, And the Lord rained
upon Sodom and upon Gomorrah brimstone and fire f rom the Lord out of
heaven(1) ; and, after a while, And the Lord visited Sarah as He had said,
and did unto Sarah as He had spoken, and Sarah conceived and bare Abraham
a son in his old age, at the set time of which God had spoken to him(2).
And afterwards, when the handmaid with her son had been driven from Abraham's
house, and was dreading lest her child should die in the wilderness for
want of water, the same Scripture says, And the Lord God heard the voice
of the lad, where he was, and the Angel of God child to Hagar out of heaven,
and said unto her, What is it, Hagar? Fear not, for God hath heard the
voice of the lad from the place where he is. Arise, and take the lad,
and hold his hand, for I will make him a great nation(3).
26. What blind faithlessness it is, what dulness of an unbelieving heart,
what headstrong impiety, to abide in ignorance of all this, or else to
know and yet neglect it! Assuredly it is written for the very purpose
that error or oblivion may not hinder the recognition of the truth. If,
as we shall prove, it is impossible to escape knowledge of the facts,
then it must be nothing less than blasphemy to deny them. This record
begins with the speech of the Angel to Hagar, His promise to multiply
Ishmael into a great nation and to give him a countless offspring. She
listens, and by her confession reveals that He is Lord and God. The story
begins with His appearance as the Angel of God; at its termination He
stands confessed as God Himself. Thus He Who, while He executes the ministry
of declaring the great counsel is God's Angel, is Himself in name and
nature God. The name corresponds to the nature; the nature is not falsified
to make it conform to the name. Again, God speaks to Abraham of this same
matter; he is told that Ishmael has already received a blessing, and shall
be increased into a nation; I have blessed him, God says. This is no change
from the Person indicated before; He shews that it was He Who had already
given the blessing. The Scripture has obviously been consistent throughout
in its progress from mystery to clear revelation; it began with the Angel
of God, and proceeds to reveal that it was God Himself Who had spoken
in this same matter.
27. The course of the Divine narrative is accompanied by a progressive
development of doctrine. In the passage which we have discussed God speaks
to Abraham, and promises that Sarah shall bear a son. Afterwards three
men stand by him; he worships One and acknowledges Him as Lord. After
this worship and acknowledgment by Abraham, the One promises that He will
return hereafter at the same season, and that then Sarah shall have her
son. This One again is seen by Abraham in the guise of a man, and salutes
him with the same promise. The change is one of name only; Abraham's acknowledgment
in each ease is the same. It was a Man whom he saw, yet Abraham worshipped
Him as Lord; he beheld, no doubt, in a mystery the coming Incarnation.
Faith so strong has not missed its recognition; the Lord says in the Gospel,
Your father Abraham rejoiced to see My day; and he saw it, and was glad(4).
To continue the history; the Man Whom he saw promised that He would return
at the same season. Mark the fulfilment of the promise, remembering meanwhile
that it was a Man Who made it. What says the Scripture? And the Lord visited
Sarah. So this Man is the Lord, fulfilling His own promise. What follows
next? And God did unto Sarah as He had said. The narrative calls His words
those of a Man, relates that Sarah was visited by the Lord, proclaims
that the result was the work of God. You are sure that it was a Man who
spoke, for Abraham not only heard, but saw Him. Can you be less certain
that He was God, when the same Scripture, which had called Him Man, confesses
Him God? For its words are, And Sarah conceived, and bare Abraham a son
in his old age, and at the set time of which God had spoken to him. But
it was the Man who had promised that He would come. Believe that He was
nothing more than man; unless, in fact, He Who came was God and Lord.
Connect the incidents. It was, confessedly, the Man who promised that
He would come that Sarah might con and omnipotence and truth and wisdom
and justice, he will find all things smooth and even, and the way straight.
But without faith it is impossible to be saved(2). For it is by faith
that all things, both human and spiritual, are sustained. For without
faith neither does the farmer(3) cut his furrow, nor does the merchant
commit his life to the raging waves of the sea on a small piece of wood,
nor are marriages contracted nor any other step in life taken. By faith
we consider that all things were brought out of nothing into being by
God's power. And we direct all things, both divine and human, by faith.
Further, faith is assent free from all meddlesome inquisitiveness(4).
Every action, therefore, and performance of miracles by Christ are most
great and divine and marvellous: but the most marvellous of all is His
precious Cross. For no other thing has subdued death, expiated the sin
of the first parent(5), despoiled Hades, bestowed the resurrection, granted
the power to us of contemning the present and even death itself, prepared
the return to our former blessedness, opened the gates of Paradise(6),
given our nature a seat at the right hand of God, and made us the children
and heirs of God(7), save the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ. For by the
Cross s all things have been made right. So many of us, the apostle says,
as were baptized into Christ, were baptized into His death(9), and as
many of you as have been baptized into Christ, have put on Christ(1).
Further Christ is the power of God and the wisdom of God(2). Lo! the death
of Christ, that is, the Cross, clothed us with the enhypostatic wisdom
and power of God. And the power of God is the Word of the Cross, either
because God's might, that is, the victory over death, has been revealed
to us by it, or because, just as the four extremities of the Cross are
held fast and bound together by the bolt in the middle, so also by God's
power the height and the depth, the length and the breadth, that is, every
creature visible and invisible, is maintained(3).
This was given to us as a sign on our forehead, just as the circumcision
was given to Israel: for by it we believers are separated and distinguished
from unbelievers. This is the shield and weapon against, and trophy over,
the devil. This is the seal that the destroyer may not touch you(4), as
saith the Scripture. This is the resurrection of those lying in death,
the support of the standing, the staff of the weak, the rod of the flock,
the safe conduct of the earnest, the perfection of those that press forwards,
the salvation of soul and body, the aversion of all things evil, the patron
of all things good, the taking away of sin, the plant of resurrection,
the tree of eternal life.
So, then, this same truly precious and august tree(5), on which Christ
hath offered Himself as a sacrifice for our sakes, is to be worshipped
as sanctified by contact with His holy body and blood; likewise the nails,
the spear, the clothes, His sacred tabernacles which are the manger, the
cave, Golgotha, which bringeth salvation(6), the tomb which giveth life,
Sion, the chief stronghold of the churches and the like, are to be worshipped.
In the words of David, the father of God(7), We shall go into His tabernacles,
we shall worship at the place where His feet stood(8). And that it is
the Cross that is meant is made clear by what follows, Arise, O Lord,
into Thy Rest (9). For the resurrection comes after the Cross. For if
of those things which we love, house and couch and garment, are to be
longed after, how much the rather should we long after that which belonged
to God, our Saviour(1), by means of which we are in truth saved.
Moreover we worship even the image of the precious and life-giving Cross,
although made of another tree, not honouring the tree (God forbid) but
the image as a symbol of Christ. For He said to His disciples, admonishing
them, Then shall appear the sign of the Son of Man in Heaven(2), meaning
the Cross. And so also the angel of the resurrection said to the woman,
Ye seek Jesus of Nazareth which was crucified(3). And the Apostle said,
We preach Christ crucified(4). For there are many Christs and many Jesuses,
but one crucified. He does not say speared but crucified. It behoves us,
then, to worship the sign of Christ(5). For wherever the sign may be,
there also will He be. But it does not behove us to worship the material
of which the image of the Cross is composed, even though it be gold or
precious stones, after it is destroyed, if that should happen. Everything,
therefore, that is dedicated to God we worship, conferring the adoration
on Him.
The tree of life which was planted by God in Paradise pre-figured this
precious Cross.
For since death was by a tree, it was fitting that life and resurrection
should be bestowed by a tree(6). Jacob, when He worshipped the top of
Joseph's staff, was the first to image the Cross, and when he blessed
his sons with crossed hands(7) he made most clearly the sign of the cross.
Likewise(8) also did Moses' rod, when it smote the sea in the figure of
the cross and saved Israel, while it overwhelmed Pharaoh in the depths;
likewise also the hands stretched out crosswise and routing Amalek; and
the bitter water made sweet by a tree, and the rock rent and pouring forth
streams of water(9), and the rod that meant for Aaron the dignity of the
high priesthood(1): and the serpent lifted in triumph on a tree as though
it were dead(2), the tree bringing salvation to those who in faith saw
their enemy dead, just as Christ was nailed to the tree in the flesh of
sin which yet knew no sin(3). The mighty Moses cried(4), You will see
your life hanging on the tree before your eyes, and Isaiah likewise, I
have spread out my hands all the day unto a faithless and rebellious people(5).
But may we who worship this(6) obtain a part in Christ the crucified.
Amen.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XII
Concerning Worship towards the East.
It is not without reason or by chance that we worship towards the East.
But seeing that we are composed of a visible and an invisible nature,
that is to say, of a nature partly of spirit and partly of sense, we render
also a twofold worship to the Creator; just as we sing both with our spirit
and our bodily lips, and are baptized with both water and Spirit, and
are united with the Lord in a twofold manner, being sharers in the mysteries
and in the grace of the Spirit.
Since, therefore, God(7) is spiritual light(8), and Christ is called in
the Scriptures Sun of Righteousness(1) and Dayspring(2), the East is the
direction that must be assigned to His worship. For everything good must
be assigned to Him from Whom every good thing arises. Indeed the divine
David also says, Sing unto God, ye kingdoms of the earth: O sing praises
unto the Lord: to Him that rideth upon the Heavens of heavens towards
the East(3). Moreover the Scripture also says, And God planted a garden
eastward in Eden; and there He put the man whom He had formed(4): and
when he had transgressed His command He expelled him and made him to dwell
over against the delights of Paradises(5), which clearly is the West.
So, then, we worship God seeking and striving after our old fatherland.
Moreover the tent of Moses(6) had its veil and mercy seat(7) towards the
East. Also the tribe of Judah as the most precious pitched their camp
on the East(8). Also in the celebrated temple of Solomon the Gate of the
Lord was placed eastward. Moreover Christ, when He hung on the Cross,
had His face turned towards the West, and so we worship, striving after
Him. And when He was received again into Heaven He was borne towards the
East, and thus His apostles worship Him, and thus He will come again in
the way in which they beheld Him going towards Heaven(9); as the Lord
Himself said, As the lightning cometh out of the East and shineth(1) even
unto the West, so also shall the coming of the Son of Man b e (2).
So, then, in expectation of His coming we worship towards the East. But
this tradition of the apostles is unwritten. For much that has been handed
down to us by tradition is unwritten(3).
BOOK IV CHAPTER XIII
Concerning the holy and immaculate Mysteries of the Lord.
God(4) Who is good and altogether good and more than good, Who is goodness
throughout, by reason of the exceeding riches of His goodness did not
suffer Himself, that is His nature, only to be good, with no other to
participate therein, but because of this He made first the spiritual and
heavenly powers: next the visible and sensible universe: next man with
his spiritual and sentient nature. All things, therefore, which he made,
share in His goodness in respect of their existence. For He Himself is
existence to all, since all things that are, are in Him(5), not only because
it was He that brought them out of nothing into being, but because His
energy preserves and maintains all that He made: and in especial the living
creatures. For both in that they exist and in that they enjoy life they
share in His goodness. But in truth those of them that have reason have
a still greater share in that, both because of what has been already said
and also because of the very reason which they possess. For they are somehow
more dearly akin to Him, even though He is incomparably higher than they.
Man, however, being endowed with reason and free will, received the power
of continuous union with God through his own choice, if indeed he should
abide in goodness, that is in obedience to his Maker. Since, however,
he transgressed the command of his Creator and became liable to death
and corruption, the Creator and Maker of our race, because of His bowels
of compassion, took on our likeness, becoming man in all things but without
sin, and was united to our nature(6). For since He bestowed on us His
own image and His own spirit and we did not keep them safe, He took Himself
a share in our poor and weak nature, in order that He might cleanse us
and make us incorruptible, and establish us once more as partakers of
His divinity.
For it was fitting that not only the first-fruits of our nature should
partake in the higher good but every man who wished it, and that a second
birth should take place and that the nourishment should be new and suitable
to the birth and thus the measure of perfection be attained. Through His
birth, that is, His incarnation, and baptism and passion and resurrection,
He delivered our nature from the sin of our first parent and death and
corruption, and became the first-fruits of the resurrection, and made
Himself the way and image and pattern, in order that we, too, following
in His footsteps, may become by adoption what He is Himself by nature(7),
sons and heirs of God and joint heirs with Him(8). He gave us therefore,
as I said, a second birth in order that, just as we who are born of Adam
are in his image and are the heirs of the curse and corruption, so also
being born of Him we may be in His likeness and heirs(9) of His incorruption
and blessing and glory.
Now seeing that this Adam is spiritual, it was meet that both the birth
and likewise the food should be spiritual too, but since we are of a double
and compound nature, it is meet that both the birth should be double and
likewise the food compound. We were therefore given a birth by water and
Spirit: I mean, by the holy baptism(1): and the food is the very bread
of life, our Lord Jesus Christ, Who came down from heaven(2). For when
He was about to take on Himself a voluntary death for our sakes, on the
night on which He gave Himself up, He laid a new covenant on His holy
disciples and apostles, and through them on all who believe on Him. In
the upper chamber, then, of holy and illustrious Sion, after He had eaten
the ancient Passover with His disciples and had fulfilled the ancient
covenant, He washed His disciples' feet(3) in token of the holy baptism.
Then having broken bread He gave it to them saying, Take, eat, this is
My body broken for you for the remission of sins(4). Likewise also He
took the cup of wine and water and gave it to them saying, Drink ye all
of it:
for this is My blood, the blood of the New Testament which is shed for
you for the remission of sins. This do ye in remembrance of Me. For as
often as ye eat this bread and drink this cup, ye do shew the death of
the Son of man and confess His resurrection until He come(5).
If then the Word of God is quick and energising(6), and the Lord did all
that He willed(7); if He said, Let there be light and there was light,
let there be a firmament and there was a firmament(8); if the heavens
were established by the Word of the Lord and all the host of them by the
breath of His mouth(9); if the heaven and the earth, water and fire and
air and the whole glory of these, and, in sooth, this most noble creature,
man, were perfected by the Word of the Lord; if God the Word of His own
will became man and the pure and undefiled blood of the holy and ever-virginal
One made His flesh without the aid of seed(1), can He not then make the
bread His body and the wine and water His blood? He said in the beginning,
Let the earth bring forth grass(2), and even until this present day, when
the rain comes it brings forth its proper fruits, urged on and strengthened
by the divine command. God said, This is My body, and This is My blood,
and this do ye in remembrance of Me. And so it is at His omnipotent command
until He come: for it was in this sense that He said until He come: and
the overshadowing power of the Holy Spirit becomes through the invocation
the rain to this new tillage(3). For just as God made all that He made
by the energy of the Holy Spirit, so also now the energy of the Spirit
performs those things that are supernatural and which it is not possible
to comprehend unless by faith alone. How shall this be, said the holy
Virgin, seeing I know not a man? And the archangel Gabriel answered her:
The Holy Spirit shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall
overshadow thee(4). And now you ask, how the bread became Christ's body
and the wine and water Christ's blood. And I say unto thee, "The
Holy Spirit is present and does those things which surpass reason and
thought."
Further, bread and wine s are employed: for God knoweth man's infirmity:
for in general man turns away discontentedly from what is not well-worn
by custom: and so with His usual indulgence H e performs His supernatural
works through familiar objects: and just as, in the case of baptism, since
it is man's custom to wash himself with water and anoint himself with
oil, He connected the grace of the Spirit with the oil and the water and
made it the water of regeneration, in like manner since it is man's custom
to eat and to drink water and wine(6), He connected His divinity with
these and made them His body and blood in order that we may rise to what
is supernatural through what is familiar and natural.
The body which is born of the holy Virgin is in truth body united with
divinity, not that the body which was received up into the heavens descends,
but that the bread itself and the wine are changed into God's body and
blood(7). But if you enquire how this happens, it is enough for you to
learn that it was through the Holy Spirit, just as the Lord took on Himself
flesh that subsisted in Him and was born of the holy Mother of God through
the Spirit. And we know nothing further save that the Word of God is true
and energises and is omnipotent, but the manner of this cannot be searched
out(8). But one can put it well thus, that just as in nature the bread
by the eating and the wine and the water by the drinking are changed into
the body and blood of the eater and drinker, and do not(9) become a different
body from the former one, so the bread of the table(1) and the wine and
water are supernaturally changed by the invocation and presence of the
Holy Spirit into the body and blood of Christ, and are not two but one(2)
and the same.
Wherefore to those who partake worthily with faith, it is for the remission
of sins and for life everlasting and for the safeguarding of soul and
body; but to those who partake unworthily without faith, it is for chastisement
and punishment, just as also the death of the Lord became to those who
believe life and incorruption for the enjoyment of eternal blessedness,
while to those who do not believe and to the murderers of the Lord it
is for everlasting chastisement and punishment.
The bread and the wine are not merely figures of the body and blood of
Christ (God forbid!) but the deified body of the Lord itself: for the
Lord has said, "This is My body," not, this is a figure of My
body: and "My blood," not, a figure of My blood. And on a previous
occasion He had said to the Jews, Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of
Man and drink His blood, ye have no life in you. For My flesh is meat
indeed and My blood is drink indeed. And again, He that eateth Me, shall
live(3)(4).
Wherefore with all fear and a pure conscience and certain faith let us
draw near and it will assuredly be to us as we believe, doubting nothing.
Let us pay homage to it in all purity both of soul and body: for it is
twofold. Let us draw near to it with an ardent desire, and with our hands
held in the form of the cross s let us receive the body of the Crucified
One: and let us apply our eyes and lips and brows and partake of the divine
coal, in order that the fire of the longing, that is in us, with the additional
heat derived from the coal may utterly consume our sins and illumine our
hearts, and that we may be inflamed and deified by the participation in
the divine fire. Isaiah saw the coal(6). But coal is not plain wood but
wood united with fire: in like manner also the bread of the communion(7)
is not plain bread but bread united with divinity. But a body s which
is united with divinity is not one nature, but has one nature belonging
to the body and another belonging to the divinity that is united to it,
so that the compound is not one nature but two.
With bread and wine Melchisedek, the priest of the most high God, received
Abraham on his return from the slaughter of the Gentiles(9). That table
pre-imaged this mystical table, just as that priest was a type and image
of Christ, the true high-priest(1). For thou art a priest for ever after
the order of Melchisedek(2). Of this bread the show-bread was an image(3).
This surely is that pure and bloodless sacrifice which the Lord through
the prophet said is offered to Him from the rising to the setting of the
sun(4).
The body and blood of Christ are making for the support of our soul and
body, without being consumed or suffering corruption, not making for the
draught (God forbid!) but for our being and preservation, a protection
against all kinds of injury, a purging from all uncleanness: should one
receive base gold, they purify it by the critical burning lest in the
future we be condemned with this world. They purify from diseases and
all kinds of calamities; according to the words of the divine Apostles(5),
For if we would judge ourselves, we should not be judged. But when we
are judged, we are chastened of the Lord, that we should not be condemned
with the world. This too is what he says, So that he that partaketh of
the body and blood of Christ unworthily, eateth and drinketh damnation
to himself(6). Being purified by this, we are united to the body of Christ
and to His Spirit and become the body of Christ.
This bread is the first-fruits(7) of the future bread which is epio?sios
, i.e. necessary for existence. For the word epio?sion signifies either
the future, that is Him Who is for a future age, or else Him of Whom we
partake for the preservation of our essence. Whether then it is in this
sense or that, it is fitting to speak so of the Lord's body. For the Lord's
flesh is life-giving spirit because it was conceived of the life-giving
Spirit. For what is born of the Spirit is spirit. But I do not say this
to take away the nature of the body, but I wish to make clear its life-giving
and divine power(8).
But if some persons called the bread and the wine antitypes(9) of the
body and blood of the Lord, as did the divinely inspired Basil, they said
so not after the consecration but before the consecration, so calling
the offering itself.
Participation is spoken of; for through it we partake of the divinity
of Jesus. Communion, too, is spoken of, and it is an actual communion,
because through it we have communion with Christ and share in His flesh
and His divinity: yea, we have communion and are united with one another
through it. For since we partake of one bread, we all become one body
of Christ and one blood, and members one of another, being of one body
with Christ.
With all our strength, therefore, let us beware lest we receive communion
from or grant it to heretics; Give not that which is holy unto the dogs,
saith the Lord, neither cast ye your pearls before swine(1), lest we become
partakers in their dishonour and condemnation. For if trojan is in truth
with Christ and with one another, we are assuredly voluntarily united
also with all those who partake with us. For this union is effected voluntarily
and not against our inclination. For we are all one body because we partake
of the one bread, as the divine Apostle says(2).
Further, antitypes of future things are spoken of, not as though they
were not in reality Christ's body and blood, but that now through them
we partake of Christ's divinity, while then we shall partake mentally(3)
through the vision alone.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XIV
Concerning our Lord's genealogy and concerning the holy Mother of God(4).
Concerning the holy and much-lauded ever-virgin one, Mary, the Mother
of God, we have said something in the preceding chapters, bringing forward
what was most opportune, viz., that strictly and truly she is and is called
the Mother of God. Now let us fill up the blanks. For she being pre-ordained
by the eternal prescient counsel of God and imaged forth and proclaimed
in diverse images and discourses of the prophets through the Holy Spirit,
sprang at the pre-determined time from the root of David, according to
the promises that were made to him. For the lord hath sworn, He saith
in truth to David, He will not turn from it: of the fruit of Thy body
will I set upon Thy throne(5). And again, Once have I sworn by My holiness,
that I will not lie unto David. His seed shall endure for ever, and His
throne as the sun before Me. It shall be established for ever as the moon,
and as a faithful witness in heaven(6). And Isaiah says: And there shall
come out a rod out of the stem of Jesse and a branch shall grow out of
his roots(7).
But that Joseph is descended from the tribe of David is expressly demonstrated
by Matthew and Luke, the most holy evangelists. But Matthew derives Joseph
from David through Solomon, while Luke does so through Nathan; while over
the holy Virgin's origin both pass in silence.
One ought to remember that it was not the custom of the Hebrews nor of
the divine Scripture to give genealogies of women; and the law was to
prevent one tribe seeking wives from another(8). And so since Joseph was
descended from the tribe of David and was a just man (for this the divine
Gospel testifies), he would not have espoused the holy Virgin contrary
to the law; he would not have taken her unless she had been of the same
tribe(8a). It was sufficient, therefore, to demonstrate the descent of
Joseph.
One ought also to observe(9) this, that the law was that when a man died
without seed, this maws brother should take to wife the wife of the dead
man and raise up seed to his brother(1). The offspring, therefore, belonged
by nature to the second, that is, to him that begat it, but by law to
the dead.
Born then of the line of Nathan, the son of David, Levi begat Melchi(2)
and Panther: Panther begat Barpanther, so called. This Barpanther begat
Joachim: Joachim begat the holy Mother of God(3)(4). And of the line of
Solomon, the son of David, Mathan had a wife(5) of whom he begat Jacob.
Now on the death of Mathan, Melchi, of the tribe of Nathan, the son of
Levi and brother of Panther, married the wife of Mathan, Jacob's mother,
of whom he begat Heli. Therefore Jacob and Hell became brothers on tile
mother's side, Jacob being of the tribe of Solomon and Heli of the tribe
of Nathan. Then Heli of the tribe of Nathan died childless, and Jacob
his brother, of the tribe of Solomon, took his wife and raised up seed
to his brother and begat Joseph. Joseph, therefore, is by nature the son
of Jacob, of the line of Solomon, but by law he is the son of Hell of
the line of Nathan.
Joachim then(6) took to wife that revered and praiseworthy woman, Anna.
But just as the earlier Anna(7), who was barren, bore Samuel by prayer
and by promise, so also this Anna by supplication and promise from God
bare the Mother of God in order that she might not even in this be behind
the matrons of fame(8). Accordingly it was grace (for this is the interpretation
of Anna) that bore the lady: (for she became truly the Lady of all created
things in becoming the Mother of the Creator). Further, Joachim(9) was
born in the house of the Probatica(1), and was brought up to the temple.
Then planted in the House of God and increased by the Spirit, like a fruitful
olive tree, she became the home of every virtue, turning her mind away
from every secular and carnal desire, and thus keeping her soul as well
as her hotly virginal, as was meet for her who was to receive God into
her bosom: for as He is holy, He finds rest among the holy(2). Thus, therefore,
she strove after holiness, and was declared a holy and wonderful temple
fit for the most high God.
Moreover, since the enemy of our salvation was keeping a watchful eye
on virgins, according to the prophecy of Isaiah, who said, Behold a virgin
shall conceive and bare a Son and shall call His name Emmanuel, which
is, being interpreted, 'God with us(3),' in order that he who taketh the
wise in their own craftiness(4) may deceive him who always glorieth in
his wisdom, the maiden is given in marriage to Joseph by the priests,
a new book to him who is versed in letters(5): but the marriage was both
the protection of the virgin and the delusion of him who was keeping a
watchful eye on virgins. But when the fulness of time was come, the messenger
of the Lord was sent to her, with the good news of our Lord's conception.
And thus she conceived the Son of God, the hypostatic power of the Father,
not of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man(6), that is to say,
by connection and seed, but by the good pleasure of the Father and co-operation
of the Holy Spirit. She ministered to the Creator in that He was created,
to the Fashioner in that He was fashioned, and to the Son of God and God
in that He was made flesh and became man from her pure and immaculate
flesh and blood, satisfying the debt of the first mother. For just as
the latter was formed from Adam without connection, so also did the former
bring forth the new Adam, who was brought forth in accordance with the
laws of parturition and above the nature of generation.
For He who was of the Father, yet without mother, was born of woman without
a father's co-operation. And so far as He was born of woman, His birth
was in accordance with the laws of parturition, while so far as He had
no father, His birth was above the nature of generation: and in that it
was at the usual time (for He was born on the completion of the ninth
month when the tenth was just beginning), His birth was in accordance
with the laws of parturition, while in that it was painless it was above
the laws of generation. For, as pleasure did not precede it, pain did
not follow it, according to the prophet who says, Before she travailed,
she brought forth, and again, before her pain came she was delivered of
a man-child(7). The Son of God incarnate, therefore, was born of her,
not a divinely-inspired(8) man but God incarnate not a prophet anointed
with energy but by the presence of the anointing One in His completeness,
so that the Anointer became man and the Anointed God, not by a change
of nature but by union in subsistence. For the Anointer and the Anointed
were one and the same, anointing in the capacity of God Himself as man.
Must there not therefore be a Mother of God who bore God incarnate? Assuredly
she who played the part of the Creator's servant and mother is in all
strictness and truth in reality God's Mother and Lady and Queen over all
created things. But just as He who was conceived kept her who conceived
still virgin, in like manner also He who was born preserved her virginity
intact, only passing through her and keeping her closed(9). The conception,
indeed, was through the sense of hearing, but the birth through the usual
path by which children come, although some tell tales of His birth through
the side of the Mother of God. For it was not impossible for Him to have
come by this gate, without injuring her seal in any way.
The ever-virgin One thus remains even after the birth still virgin, having
never at any time up till death consorted with a man. For although it
is written, And knew her not till she had brought forth her first-born
Son(1), yet note that he who is first-begotten is first-born even if he
is only-begotten. For the word "first-born" means that he was
born first but does not at all suggest the birth of others. And the word
"till" signifies the limit of the appointed time but does not
exclude the time thereafter. For the Lord says, And lo, I am with you
always, even unto the end of the world(2), not meaning thereby that He
will be separated from us after the completion of the age. The divine
apostle, indeed, says, And so shall we ever be with the Lord(3), meaning
after the general resurrection.
For could it be possible that she, who had borne God and from experience
of the subsequent events had come to know the miracle, should receive
the embrace of a man. God forbid! It is not the part of a chaste mind
to think such thoughts, far less to commit such acts But this blessed
woman, who was deemed worthy of gifts that are supernatural, suffered
those pains, which she escaped at the birth, in the hour of the passion,
enduring from motherly sympathy the rending of the bowels, and when she
beheld Him, Whom she knew to be God by the manner of His generation, killed
as a malefactor, her thoughts pierced her as a sword, and this is the
meaning of this verse: Yea, a sword shall pierce through thy own saul
also(4)(5). But the joy of the resurrection transforms the pain, proclaiming
Him, Who died in the flesh, to be God.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XV
Concerning the honour due to the Saints and their remains.
To the saints honour must be paid as friends of Christ, as sons and heirs
of God: in the words of John the theologian and evangelist, As many as
received Him, to them gave He power to became sons of God(6). So that
they are no longer servants, but sons: and if sons, also heirs, heirs
of God and joint heirs with Christ(7): and the Lord in the holy Gospels
says to His apostles, Ye are My friends(8). Henceforth I call you not
servants, for the servant knoweth not what his lord doeth(9). And further,
if the Creator and Lord of all things is called also King of Kings and
Lord of Lords(1) and God of Gods, surely also the saints are gods and
lords and kings. For of these God is and is called God and Lord and King.
For I am the God of Abraham, He said to Moses, the God of Isaac and the
God of Jacob(2). And God made Moses a god to Pharaoh(3). Now I mean gods
and kings and lords not in nature, but as rulers and masters of their
passions, and as preserving a truthful likeness to the divine image according
to which they were made (for the image of a king is also called king),
and as being united to God of their own free-will and receiving Him as
an indweller and becoming by grace through participation with Him what
He is Himself by nature. Surely, then, the worshippers and friends and
sons of God are to be held in honour? For the honour shewn to the most
thoughtful of fellow-servants is a proof of good feeling towards the common
Master(4).
These are made treasuries and pure habitations of God: For I will dwell
in them, said God, and walk in them, and I will be their God(5). The divine
Scripture likewise saith that the souls of the just are in God's hand(6)
and death cannot lay hold of them. For death is rather the sleep of the
saints than their death. For they travailed in this life and shall to
the end(7), and Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of His
saints(8). What then, is more precious than to be in the hand of God?
For God is Life and Light, and those who are in God's hand are in life
and light.
Further, that God dwelt even in their bodies in spiritual wise(8a), the
Apostle tells us, saying, Know ye not that your bodies are the temples
of the Holy Spirit dwelling in you?(9), and The Lord is that Spirit(1),
and If any one destroy the temple of God, him will God destroy(2). Surely,
then, we must ascribe honour to the living temples of God, the living
tabernacles of God. These while they lived stood with confidence before
God.
The Master Christ made the remains of the saints to be fountains of salvation
to us, pouring forth manifold blessings and abounding in oil of sweet
fragrance: and let no one disbelieve this(3). For if water burst in the
desert from the steep and solid rock at God's will(4) and from the jaw-bone
of an ass to quench Samson's thirst(5), is it incredible that fragrant
oil should burst forth from the martyrs' remains? By no means, at least
to those who know the power of God and the honour which He accords His
saints.
In the law every one who toucheth a dead body was considered impure(6),
but these are not dead. For from the time when He that is Himself life
and the Author of life was reckoned among the dead, we do not call those
dead who have fallen asleep in the hope of the resurrection and in faith
on Him. For how could a dead body work miracles? How, therefore, are demons
driven off by them, diseases dispelled, sick persons made well, the blind
restored to sight, lepers purified, temptations and troubles overcome,
and how does every good gift from the Father of lights(7) come down through
them to those who pray with sure faith? How much labour would you not
undergo to find a patron to introduce you to a mortal king and speak to
him on your behalf? Are not those, then, worthy of honour who are the
patrons of the whole race, and make intercession to God for us? Yea, verily,
we ought to give honour to them by raising temples to God in their name,
bringing them fruit-offerings, honouring their memories and taking spiritual
delight in them, in order that the joy of those who call on us may be
ours, that in our attempts at worship we may not on the contrary cause
them offence. For those who worship God will take pleasure in those things
whereby God is worshipped, while His shield-bearers will be wrath at those
things wherewith God is wroth. In psalms and hymns and spiritual songs(8),
in contrition and in pity for the needy, let us believers(9) worship the
saints, as God also is most worshipped in such wise. Let us raise monuments
to them and visible images, and let us ourselves become, through imitation
of their virtues, living monuments and images of them. Let us give honour
to her who bore God as being strictly and truly the Mother of God. Let
us honour also the prophet John as forerunner and baptist(1), as apostle
and martyr, For among them that are born of women there hath not risen
a greater than John the Baptist(2), as saith the Lord, and he became the
first to proclaim the Kingdom. Let us honour the apostles as the Lord's
brothers, who saw Him face to face and ministered to His passion, for
whom God the Father did foreknow He also did predestinate to be conformed
to the image of His Son(3), first apostles, second prophets(4), third
pastors end teachers(5). Let us also honour the martyrs of the Lord chosen
out of every class, as soldiers of Christ who have drunk His cup and were
then baptized with the baptism of His life-bringing death, to be partakers
of His passion and glory: of whom the leader is Stephen, the first deacon
of Christ and apostle and first martyr. Also let us honour our holy fathers,
the God-possessed ascetics, whose struggle was the longer and more toilsome
one of the conscience: who wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins,
being destitute, afflicted, tormented; they wandered in deserts and in
mountains and in dens and caves of the earth, of whom the world was not
worthy(6). Let us honour those who were prophets before grace, the patriarchs
anti just men who foretold the Lord's coming. Let us carefully review
the life of these men, and let us emulate their faith(7) and love and
hope and zeal and way of life, and endurance of sufferings and patience
even to blood, in order that we may be sharers with them in their crowns
of glory.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XVI
Concerning Images(8).
But since some(9) find fault with us for worshipping and honouring the
image of our Saviour and that of our Lady, and those, too, of the rest
of the saints and servants of Christ, let them remember that in the beginning
God created man after His own image(1). On what grounds, then, do we shew
reverence to each other unless because we are made after God's image?
For as Basil, that much-versed expounder of divine things, says, the honour
given to the image passes over to the prototype(2). Now a prototype is
that which is imaged, from which the derivative is obtained. Why was it
that the Mosaic people honoured on all hands the tabernacle(3) which bore
an image and type of heavenly things, or rather of the whole creation?
God indeed said to Moses, Look that thou make them after their pattern
which was shewed thee in the mount(4). The Cherubim, too, which o'ershadow
the mercy seat, are they not the work of men's hands(5)? What, further,
is the celebrated temple at Jerusalem? Is it not hand-made and fashioned
by the skill of men(6)?
Moreover the divine Scripture blames those who worship graven images,
but also those who sacrifice to demons. The Greeks sacrificed and the
Jews also sacrificed: but the Greeks to demons and the Jews to God. And
the sacrifice of the Greeks was rejected and condemned, but the sacrifice
of the just was very acceptable to God. For Noah sacrificed, and God smelled
a sweet savour(7), receiving the fragrance of the right choice and good-will
towards Him. And so the graven images of the Greeks, since they were images
of deities, were rejected and forbidden.
But besides this who can make an imitation of the invisible, incorporeal,
uncircumscribed, formless God? Therefore to give form to the Deity is
the height of folly and impiety. And hence it is that in the Old Testament
the use of images was not common. But after God(8) in His bowels of pity
became in truth man for our salvation, not as He was seen by Abraham in
the semblance of a man, nor as He was seen by the prophets, but in being
truly man, and after He lived upon the earth and dwelt among men(9), worked
miracles, suffered, was crucified, rose again and was taken back to Heaven,
since all these things actually took place and were seen by men, they
were written for the remembrance and instruction of us who were not alive
at that time in order that though we saw not, we may still, hearing and
believing, obtain the blessing of the Lord. But seeing that not every
one has a knowledge of letters nor time for reading, the Fathers gave
their sanction to depicting these events on images as being acts of great
heroism, in order that they should form a concise memorial of them. Often,
doubtless, when we have not the Lord's passion in mind and see the image
of Christ's crucifixion, His saving passion is brought back to remembrance,
and we fall down and worship not the material but that which is imaged:
just as we do not worship the material of which the Gospels are made,
nor the material of the Cross, but that which these typify. For wherein
does the cross, that typifies the Lord, differ from a cross that does
not do so? It is just the same also in the case of the Mother of the Lord.
For the honour which we give to her is referred to Him Who was made of
her incarnate. And similarly also the brave acts of holy men stir us up
to be brave and to emulate and imitate their valour and to glorify God.
For as we said, the honour that is given to the best of fellow-servants
is a proof of good-will towards our common Lady, and the honour rendered
to the image passes over to the prototype(1). But this is an unwritten
tradition(2), just as is also the worshipping towards the East and the
worship of the Cross, and very many other similar things.
A certain tale(3), too, is told(4), how that when Augarus(5) was king
over the city of the Edessenes, he sent a portrait painter to paint a
likeness of the Lord, and when the painter could not paint because of
the brightness that shone from His countenance, the Lord Himself put a
garment over His own divine and life-giving face and impressed on it an
image of Himself and sent this to Augarus, to satisfy thus his desire.
Moreover that the Apostles handed down much that was unwritten, Paul,
the Apostle of the Gentiles, tells us in these words: Therefore, brethren,
stand fast and hold the traditions which ye have been taught of us, whether
by word or by epistle(6). And to the Corinthians he writes, Now I praise
you, brethren, that ye remember me in all things, and keep the traditions
as I have delivered them to you(7)."
BOOK IV CHAPTER XVII
Concerning Scripture(8).
It is one and the same God Whom both the Old and the New Testament proclaim,
Who is praised and glorified in the Trinity: I am come, saith the Lord,
not to destroy life law but to fulfil it(9). For He Himself worked out
our salvation for which all Scripture and all mystery exists. And again,
Search the Scriptures for they are they that testify of Me(1). And the
Apostle says, God, Who at sundry times and in diverse manners spake in
time past unto the fathers by the prophets, hath in these last days
spoken unto us by His Son(2). Through the Holy Spirit, therefore, both
the law and the prophets, the evangelists and apostles and pastors and
teachers, spake.
All Scripture, then, is given by inspiration of God and is also assuredly
profitable(3). Wherefore to search the Scriptures is a work most fair
and most profitable for souls. For just as the tree planted by the channels
of waters, so also the soul watered by the divine Scripture is enriched
and gives fruit in its season(4), viz. orthodox belief, and is adorned
with evergreen leafage, I mean, actions pleasing to God. For through the
Holy Scriptures we are trained to action that is pleasing to God, and
untroubled contemplation. For in these we find both exhortation to every
virtue and dissuasion from every vice. If, therefore, we are lovers of
learning, we shall also be learned in many things. For by care and toil
and the grace of God the Giver, all things are accomplished. For every
one that asketh receiveth, and he that seeketh findeth, and to hint that
knocketh it shall be opened(5). Wherefore let us knock at that very fair
garden of the Scriptures, so fragrant and sweet and blooming, with its
varied sounds of spiritual and divinely-inspired birds ringing all round
our ears, laying hold of our hearts, comforting the mourner, pacifying
the angry and filling him with joy everlasting: which sets our mind on
the gold-gleaming, brilliant back of the divine dove(6), whose bright
pinions bear up to the only-begotten Son and Heir of the Husbandman(7)
of that spiritual Vineyard and bring us through Him to the Father of Lights(8).
But let us not knock carelessly but rather zealously and constantly: lest
knocking we grow weary. For thus it will be opened to us. If we read once
or twice and do not understand what we read, let us not grow weary, but
let us persist, let us talk much, let us enquire. For ask thy Father,
he saith, and He will shew thee: thy elders and they will tell thee(9).
For there is not in every man that knowledge(1). Let us draw of the fountain
of the garden perennial and purest waters springing into life eternal(2).
Here let us luxuriate, let us revel insatiate: for the Scriptures possess
inexhaustible grace. But if we are able to pluck anything profitable from
outside sources, there is nothing to forbid that. Let us become tried
money-dealers, heaping up the true and pure gold and discarding the spurious.
Let us keep the fairest sayings but let us throw to the dogs absurd gods
and strange myths: for we might prevail most mightily against them through
themselves.
Observe, further(3), that there are two and twenty books of the Old Testament,
one for each letter of the Hebrew tongue. For there are twenty-two letters
of which five are double, and so they come to be twenty-seven. For the
letters Caph, Mere, Nun, Pe(4), Sade are double. And thus the number of
the books in this way is twenty-two, but is found to be twenty-seven because
of the double character of five. For Ruth is joined on to Judges, and
the Hebrews count them one book: the first and second books of Kings are
counted one: and so are the third and fourth books of Kings: and also
the first and second of Paraleipomena: and the first and second of Esdra.
In this way, then, the books are collected together in four Pentateuchs
and two others remain over, to form thus the canonical books. Five of
them are of the Law, viz. Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy.
This which is the code of the Law, constitutes the first Pentateuch. Then
comes another Pentateuch, the so-called Grapheia(5), or as they are called
by some, the Hagiographa, which are the following: Jesus the Son of Nave(6),
Judges along with Ruth, first and second Kings, which are one book, third
and fourth Kings, which are one book, and the two books of the Paraleipomena(7)
which are one book. This is the second Pentateuch. The third Pentateuch
is the books in verse, viz. Job, Psalms, Proverbs of Solomon, Ecclesiastes
of Solomon and the Song of Songs of Solomon. The fourth Pentateuch is
the Prophetical books, viz the twelve prophets constituting one book,
Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Daniel. Then come the two books of Esdra made
into one, and Esther(8). There are also the Panaretus, that is the Wisdom
of Solomon, and the Wisdom of Jesus, which was published in Hebrew by
the father of Sirach, and afterwards translated into Greek by his grandson,
Jesus, the Son of Sirach. These are virtuous and noble, but are not counted
nor were they placed in the ark.
The New Testament contains four gospels, that according to Matthew, that
according to Mark, that according to Luke, that according to John: the
Acts of the Holy Apostles by Luke the Evangelist: seven catholic epistles,
viz. one of James, two of Peter, three of John, one of Jude: fourteen
letters of the Apostle Paul: the Revelation of John the Evangelist: the
Canons(9) of the holy apostles(1), by Clement.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XVIII
Regarding the things said concerning Christ.
The things said concerning Christ fall into four generic modes. For some
fit Him even before the incarnation, others in the union, others after
the union, and others after the resurrection. Also of those that refer
to the period before the incarnation there are six modes: for some of
them declare the union of nature and the identity in essence with the
Father, as this, I and My Father are one(2): also this, He that hath seen
Me hath seen the Father(3): and this, Who being in the form of God(4),
and so forth. Others declare the perfection of subsistence, as these,
Son of God, and the Express Image of His person(5), and Messenger of great
counsel, Wonderful Counsellor(6), and the like.
Again, others declare the indwelling(7) of the subsistences in one another,
as, I am in the Father and the Father in Me(8); and the inseparable foundation(9),
as, for instance, the Word, Wisdom, Power, Effulgence. For the word is
inseparably established in the mind (and it is the essential mind that
I mean), and so also is wisdom, and power in him that is powerful, and
effulgence in the light, all springing forth from these(1).
And others make known the fact of His origin from the Father as cause,
for instance My Father is greater than I(2). For from Him He derives both
His being and all that He has(3): His being was by generative and not
by creative means, as, I came forth from the Father and am come(4), and
I live by the Father(3). But all that He hath is not His by free gift
or by teaching, but in a causal sense, as, The Son can do nothing of Himself
but what He seeth the Father do(6). For if the Father is not, neither
is the Son. For the Son is of the Father and in the Father and with the
Father, and not after(7) the Father. In like manner also what He doeth
is of Him and with Him. For there is one and the same, not similar but
the same, will and energy and power in the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
Moreover, other things are said as though the Father's good-will was fulfilled(8)
through His energy, and not as through an instrument or a servant, but
as through His essential and hypostatic Word and Wisdom and Power, because
but one action(9) is observed in Father and Son, as for example, All things
were made by Him(9a), and He sent His Word and healed them(1), and That
they may believe that Than hast sent Me(2).
Some, again, have a prophetic sense, and of these some are in the future
tense: for instance, He shall come openly(3), and this from Zechariah,
Behold, thy King cometh unto thee(4), and this from Micah, Behold, the
Lord cometh out of His place and will came down and tread upon the high
places of the earth(5). But others, though future, are put in the past
tense, as, for instance, This is our God: Therefore He was seen upon the
earth and dwell among men(6), and The Lord created me in the beginning
of His ways for His works(7), and Wherefore God, thy God, anointed thee
with the oil of gladness above thy fellows(8), and such like.
The things said, then, that refer to the period before the union will
be applicable to Him even after the union: but those that refer to the
period after the union will not be applicable at all before the union,
unless indeed in a prophetic sense, as we said. Those that refer to the
time of the union have three modes. For when our discourse dears with
the higher aspect, we speak of the deification of the flesh, and His assumption
of the Word and exceeding exaltation, and so forth, making manifest the
riches that are added to the flesh tram the union and natural conjunction
with the most high God the Word. And when our discourse deals with the
lower aspect, we speak of the incarnation of God the Word, His becoming
man, His emptying of Himself, His poverty, His humility. For these and
such like are imposed upon the Word and God through His admixture with
humanity. When again we keep both sides in view at the same time, we speak
of union, community, anointing, natural conjunction, conformation and
the like. The former two modes, then, have their reason in this third
mode. For through the union it is made clear what either has obtained
from the intimate junction with and permeation through the other. For
through the union(9) in subsistence the flesh is said to be deified and
to become God and to be equally God with the Word; and God the Word is
said to be made flesh, and to become man, and is called creature and last(1):
not in the sense that the two natures are converted into one compound
nature (for it is not possible for the opposite natural qualities to exist
at the same time in one nature)(2), but in the sense that the two natures
are united in subsistence and permeate one another without confusion or
transmutation The permeation(3) moreover did not come of the flesh but
of the divinity: for it is impossible that the flesh should permeate through
the divinity: but the divine nature once permeating through the flesh
gave also to the flesh the same ineffable power of permeation(4); and
this indeed is what we call union.
Note, too, that in the case of the first and second modes of those that
belong to the period of the union, reciprocation is observed. For when
we speak about the flesh, we use the terms deification and assumption
of the Word and exceeding exaltation and anointing. For these are derived
from divinity, but are observed in connection with the flesh. And when
we speak about the Word, we use the terms emptying, incarnation, becoming
man, humility and the like: and these, as we said, are imposed on the
Word and God through the flesh. For He endured these things in person
of His own free-will.
Of the things that refer to the period after the union there are three
modes. The first declares His divine nature, as, I am in the Father and
the Father in Me(5), and I and the Father are one(6): and all those things
which are affirmed of Him before His assumption of humanity, these will
be affirmed of Him even after His assumption of humanity, with this exception,
that He did not assume the flesh and its natural properties.
The second declares His human nature, as, Now ye seek to kill Me, a man
that hath told you the truth(7), and Even so must the Son of Man be lifted
up(8), and the like.
Further, of the statements made and written about Christ the Saviour after
the manner of men, whether they deal with sayings or actions, there are
six modes. For some of them were done or said naturally in accordance
with the incarnation; for instance, His birth from a virgin, His growth
and progress with age, His hunger, thirst, weariness, fear, sleep, piercing
with nails, death and all such like natural and innocent passions(9).
For in all these there is a mixture of the divine and human, although
they are held to belong in reality to the body, the divine suffering none
of these, but procuring through them our salvation.
Others are of the nature of ascription(9a), as Christ's question, Where
have ye laid Lazarus(1)? His running to the fig-tree, His shrinking, that
is, His drawing back, His praying, and His making as though He would have
gone He in need of these or similar things, but only because His form
was that of a man as necessity and expediency demanded(3). For example,
the praying was to shew that He is not opposed to God, for He gives honour
to the Father as the cause of Himself(4): and the question was not put
in ignorance but to shew that He is in truth man as well as God(5); and
the drawing back is to teach us not to be impetuous nor to give ourselves
up.
Others again are said in the manner of association and relation(5a), as,
My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me(6)? and He hath made Him to
be sin for us, Who knew no sin(7), and being made a curse for us(8); also,
Then shall the Son also Himself be subject unto Him that put all things
under Him(9). For neither as God nor as man(1) was He ever forsaken by
the Father, nor did He become sin or a curse, nor did He require to be
made subject to the Father. For as God He is equal to the Father and not
opposed to Him nor subjected to Him; and as God, He was never at any time
disobedient to His Begetter to make it necessary for Him to make Him subject(2).
Appropriating, then, our person and ranking Himself with us, He used these
words. For we are bound in the fetters of sin and the curse as faithless
and disobedient, and therefore forsaken.
Others are said by reason of distinction in thought. For if you divide
in thought things that are inseparable in actual truth, to cut the flesh
from the Word, the terms 'servant' and 'ignorant' are used of Him, for
indeed He was of a subject and ignorant nature, and except that it was
united with God the Word, His flesh was servile and ignorant(3). But because
of the union in subsistence with God the Word it was neither servile nor
ignorant. In this way, too, He called the Father His God.
Others again are for the purpose of revealing Him to us and strengthening
our faith, as, And now, O Father, glorify Thou Me with the glory which
I had with Thee, before the world was(4). For He Himself was glorified
and is glorified, but His glory was not manifested nor confirmed to us.
Also that which the apostle said, Declared to be the Son of God with power,
according to the spirit of holiness, by the resurrection from the dead(5).
For by the miracles and the resurrection and the coming of the Holy Spirit
it was manifested and confirmed to the world that He is the Son of God(6).
And this too(7), The Child grew in wisdom and grace(8).
Others again have reference to His appropriation of the personal life
of the Jews, in numbering Himself among the Jews, as He saith to the Samaritan
woman, Ye worship ye know not what: we know what we worship, far salvation
is of the Jews(9).
The third mode is one which declares the one subsistence and brings out
the dual nature: for instance, And I live by the Father: so he that eateth
Me, even he shall live by Me(1). And this: I go to My Father and ye see
Me no more(2). And this: They would not have crucified the Lord of Glory(3).
And this: And no man hath ascended up to heaven but He that came down
from heaven, even the Son of Man which is in heaven(4), and such like.
Again of the affirmations that refer to the period after the resurrection
some are suitable to God, as, Baptizing them in the name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost(5), for here 'Son' is clearly used
as God; also this, And lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the
world(6), and other similar ones. For He is with us as God. Others are
suitable to man, as, They held Him by the feet(7), and There they will
see Me(8), and so forth.
Further, of those referring to the period after the Resurrection that
are suitable to man there are different modes. For some did actually take
place, yet not according to nature(9), but according to dispensation,
in order to confirm the fact that the very body, which suffered, rose
again; such are the weals, the eating and the drinking after the resurrection.
Others took place actually and naturally, as changing from place to place
without trouble and passing in through closed gates. Others have the character
of simulation(1), as, He made as though He would have gone further(2).
Others are appropriate to the double nature, as, I ascend unto My Father
and your Father, and My God and our God(3), and The King of Glory shall
carte in(4), and He sat down on the right hand of the majesty on High(5).
Finally others are to be understood as though He were ranking Himself
with us, in the manner of separation in pure thought, as, My God and your
God(3).
Those then that are sublime must be assigned to the divine nature, which
is superior to passion and body: and those that are humble must be ascribed
to the human nature; and those that are common must be attributed to the
compound, that is, the one Christ, Who is God and man. And it should be
understood that both belong to one and the same Jesus Christ, our Lord.
For if we know what is proper to each, and perceive that both are performed
by one and the same, we shall have the true faith and shall not go astray.
And from all these the difference between the united natures is recognised,
and the fact(6) that, as the most godly Cyril says, they are not identical
in the natural quality of their divinity and humanity. But yet there is
but one Son and Christ and Lord: and as He is one, He has also but one
person, the unity in subsistence being in nowise broken up into parts
by the recognition of the difference of the natures.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XIX
That God(7) is not the cause of evils.
It is to be observed(8) that it is the custom in the Holy Scripture to
speak of God's permission as His energy, as when the apostle says in the
Epistle to the Romans, Hath not the potter power over the clay, of the
same lump to make one vessel unto honour and another unto dishonour(9)?
And for this reason, that He Himself makes this or that. For He is Himself
alone the Maker of all things; yet it is not He Himself that fashions
noble or ignoble things, but the personal choice of
each one(1). And this is manifest from what the same Apostle says in the
Second Epistle to Timothy, In a great house there are not only vessels
of gold and of silver, but also of wood and of earth: and some to honour
and some to dishonour. If a man therefore purge himself from these, he
shall be a vessel unto honour sanctified, and meet for the master's use,
and prepared unto every good work(2). And it is evident that the purification
must be voluntary: for if a man, he saith, purge himself. And the consequent
antistrophe responds, "If a man purge not himself he will be a vessel
to dishonour, unmeet for the master's use and fit only to be broken in
pieces." Wherefore this passage that we have quoted and this, God
hath concluded them all in unbelief(3), and this, God hath given them
the spirit of slumber, eyes that they should not see, and ears that they
should not hear(4), all these must be understood not as though God Himself
were energising, but as though God were permitting, both because of free-will
and because goodness knows no compulsion.
His permission, therefore, is usually spoken of in the Holy Scripture
as His energy and work. Nay, even when He says that God creates evil things,
and that there is no evil in a city that the Lord hath not done, he does
not mean by these words(5) that the Lord is the cause of evil, but the
word 'evil(6)' is used in two ways, with two meanings. For sometimes it
means what is evil by nature, and this is the opposite of virtue and the
will of God: and sometimes it means that which is evil and oppressive
to our sensation, that is to say, afflictions and calamities. Now these
are seemingly evil because they are painful, but in reality are good.
For to those who understand they became ambassadors of conversion and
salvation. The Scripture says that of these God is the Author.
It is, moreover, to be observed that of these, too, we are the cause:
for involuntary evils are the offspring of voluntary ones(7).
This also should be recognised, that it is usual in the Scriptures for
some things that ought to be considered as effects to be stated in a causal
sense(8), as, Against Thee, Thee only, have I sinned and done this evil
in Thy sight, that Than mightest be justified when Thou speakest, and
prevail when Thou judgest(9). For the sinner did not sin in order that
God might prevail, nor again did God require our sin in order that He
might by it be revealed as victor(1). For above comparison He wins the
victor's prize against all, even against those who are sinless, being
Maker, incomprehensible, uncreated, and possessing natural and not adventitious
glory. But it is because when we sin God is not unjust in His anger against
us; and when He pardons the penitent He is shewn victor over our wickedness.
But it is not for this that we sin, but because the thing so turns out.
It is just as if one were sitting at work and a friend stood near by,
and one said, My friend came in order that I might do no work that day.
The friend, however, was not present in order that the man should do no
work, but such was the result. For being occupied with receiving his friend
he did not work. These things, too, are spoken of as effects because affairs
so turned out. Moreover, God does not wish that He alone should be just,
but that all should, so far as possible, be made like unto Him.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XX
That there are not two Kingdoms.
That there are not two kingdoms(2), one good and one bad, we shall see
from this. For good and evil are opposed to one another and mutually destructive,
and cannot exist in one another or with one another. Each of them, therefore,
in its own division will belong to the whole, and first(3) they will he
circumscribed, not by the whole alone but also each of them by part of
the whole.
Next I ask(4), who it is that assigns(4) to each its place. For they will
not affirm that they have come to a friendly agreement with, or been reconciled
to, one another. For evil is not evil when it is at peace with, and reconciled
to, goodness, nor is goodness good when it is on amicable terms with evil.
But if He Who has marked off to each of these its own sphere of action
is something different from them, He must the rather be God.
One of two things indeed is necessary, either that they come in contact
with and destroy one another, or that there exists some intermediate place
where neither goodness nor evil exists, separating both from one another,
like a partition. And so there will be no longer two but three kingdoms.
Again, one of these alternatives is necessary, either that they are at
peace, which is quite incompatible with evil (for that which is at peace
is not evil), or they are at strife, which is incompatible with goodness
(for that which is at strife is not perfectly good), or the evil is at
strife and the good does not retaliate, but is destroyed by the evil,
or they are ever in trouble and distress(6), which is not a mark of goodness.
There is, therefore, but one kingdom, delivered from all evil.
But if this is so, they say, whence comes evil(7)? For it is quite impossible
that evil should originate from goodness. We answer then, that evil is
nothing else than absence of goodness and a lapsing(8) from what is natural
into what is unnatural: for nothing evil is natural. For all things, whatsoever
God made, are very good(9), so far as they were made: if, therefore, they
remain just as they were created, they are very good, but when they voluntarily
depart from what is natural and turn to what is unnatural, they slip into
evil.
By nature, therefore, all things are servants of the Creator and obey
Him. Whenever, then, any of His creatures voluntarily rebels and becomes
disobedient to his Maker, he introduces evil into himself. For evil is
not any essence nor a property of essence, but an accident, that is, a
voluntary deviation from what is natural into what is unnatural, which
is sin.
Whence, then, comes sin(1)? It is an invention of the free-will of the
devil. Is the devil, then, evil? In so far as he was brought into existence
he is not evil but good. For he was created by his Maker a bright and
very brilliant angel, endowed with free-will as being rational. But he
voluntarily departed from the virtue that is natural and came into the
darkness of evil, being far removed from God, Who alone is good and can
give life and light. For from Him every good thing derives its goodness,
and so far as it is separated from Him in will (for it is not in place),
it falls into evil.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XXI
The purpose(2) for which God in His foreknowledge created persons who
would sin and not repent.
God in His goodness(3) brought what exists into being out of nothing,
and has foreknowledge of what will exist in the future. If, therefore,
they were not to exist in the future, they would neither be evil in the
future nor would they be foreknown. For knowledge is of what exists and
foreknowledge is of what will surely exist in the future. For simple being
comes first and then good or evil being. But if the very existence of
those, who through the goodness of God are in the future to exist, were
to be prevented by the fact that they were to become evil of their own
choice, evil would have prevailed over the goodness of God. Wherefore
God makes all His works good, but each becomes of its own choice good
or evil. Although, then, the Lord said, Goad were it for that man that
he had never been barn(4), He said it in condemnation not of His own creation
but of the evil which His own creation had acquired by his own choice
and through his own heedlessness. For the heedlessness that marks man's
judgment made His Creator's beneficence of no profit to him. It is just
as if any one, when he had obtained riches and dominion from a king, were
to lord it over his benefactor, who, when he has worsted him, will punish
him as he deserves, if he should see him keeping hold of the sovereignty
to the end.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XXII
Concerning the law of God and the law of sin.
The Deity is good and more than good, and so is His will. For that which
God wishes is good. Moreover the precept, which teaches this, is law,
that we, holding by it, may walk in light(5): and the transgression of
this precept is sin, and this continues to exist on account of the assault
of the devil and our unconstrained and voluntary reception of it(6). And
this, too, is called law(7).
And so the law of God, settling in our mind, draws it towards itself and
pricks our conscience. And our conscience, too, is called a law of our
mind. Further, the assault of the wicked one, that is the law of sin,
settling in the members of our flesh, makes its assault upon us through
it. For by once voluntarily transgressing the law of God and receiving
the assault of the wicked one, we gave entrance to it, being sold by ourselves
to sin. Wherefore our body is readily impelled to it. And so the savour
and perception of sin that is stored up in our body, that is to say, lust
and pleasure of the body, is law in the members of our flesh.
Therefore the law of my mind, that is, the conscience, sympathises with
the law of God, that is, the precept, and makes that its will. But the
law of sin(8), that is to say, the assault made through the law that is
in our members, or through the lust and inclination and movement of the
body and of the irrational part of the soul, is in opposition to the law
of my mind, that is to conscience, and takes me captive (even though I
make the law of God my will and set my love on it, and make not sin my
will), by reason of commixture(9): and through the softness of pleasure
and the lust of the body and of the irrational part of the soul, as I
said, it leads me astray and induces me to become the servant of sin.
But what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh,
God, sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh (for He assumed
flesh but not sin) condemned sin in the flesh, that the righteousness
of the law might be fulfilled in us who walk not after the flesh but in
the Spirit(1). For the Spirit helpeth our infirmities(2) and affordeth
power to the law of our mind, against the law that is in our members.
For the verse, we know not what we should pray for as we ought, but the
Spirit itself maketh intercession with groanings that cannot be uttered(3),
itself teacheth us what to pray for. Hence it is impossible to carry out
the precepts of the Lord except by patience and prayer.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XXIII
Against the Jews on the question Sabbath.
The seventh day is called the Sabbath and signifies rest. For in it God
rested from all His works(4), as the divine Scripture says: and so the
number of the days goes up to seven and then circles back again and begins
at the first. This is the precious number with the Jews. God having ordained
that it should be held in honour, and that in no chance fashion but with
the imposition of most heavy penalties for the transgression(5). And it
was not in a simple fashion that He ordained this, but for certain reasons
understood mystically by the spiritual and clear-sighted(6).
So far, indeed, as I in my ignorance know, to begin with inferior and
more dense things, God, knowing the denseness of the Israelites and their
carnal love and propensity towards matter in everything, made this law:
first, in order that the servant and the cattle should rest(7) as it is
written, for the righteous man regardeth the life of his beast(8): next,
in order that when they take their ease from the distraction of material
things, they may gather together unto God, spending the whole of the seventh
day in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs and the study of the divine
Scriptures and resting in God. For when(9) the law did not exist and there
was no divinely-inspired Scripture, the Sabbath was not consecrated to
God. But when the divinely-inspired Scripture was given by Moses, the
Sabbath was consecrated to God in order that on it they, who do not dedicate
their whole life to God, and who do not make their desire subservient
to the as though to a Father, but are like foolish servants, may on that
day talk much concerning the exercise of it, and may abstract a small,
truly a most insignificant, portion of their life for the service of God,
and this from fear of the chastisements and punishments which threaten
transgressors. For the law is not made for a righteous man but for the
unrighteous(1). Moses, of a truth, was the first to abide fasting with
God for forty days and again for another forty(2), and thus doubtless
to afflict himself with hunger on the Sabbaths although the law forbade
self-affliction on the Sabbath. But if they should object that this took
place before the law, what will they say about Elias the Thesbite who
accomplished a journey of forty days on one meal(3)? For he, by thus afflicting
himself on the Sabbaths not only with hunger but with the forty days'
journeying, broke the Sabbath: and yet God, Who gave the law, was not
wroth with him but shewed Himself to him on Choreb as a reward for his
virtue. And what will they say about Daniel? Did he not spend three weeks
without food(4)? And again, did not all Israel circumcise the child on
the Sabbath, if it happened to be the eighth day after birth(5)? And do
they not hold the great fast which the law enjoins if it falls on the
Sabbath(6)? And further, do not the priests and the Levites profane the
Sabbath in the works of the tabernacle(7) and yet are held blameless?
Yea, if an ox should fall into a pit on the Sabbath, he who draws it forth
is blameless, while he who neglects to do so is condemned(8). And did
not all the Israelites compass the walls of Jericho bearing the Ark of
God for seven days, in which assuredly the Sabbath was included(9). As
I said(1), therefore, for the purpose of securing leisure to worship God
in order that they might, both servant and beast of burden, devote a very
small share to Him and be at rest, the observance of the Sabbath was devised
for the carnal that were still childish and in the bonds of the elements
of the world(2), and unable to conceive of anything beyond the body and
the letter. But when the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth
His Only-begotten Son, made of a woman, made under the law, to redeem
them that were under the law that we might receive the adoption of sons(3).
For to as many of us as received Him, He gave power to become sons of
God, even to them that believe on Him(4). So that we are no longer servants
but sons(5): no longer under the law but under grace: no longer do we
serve God in part from fear, but we are bound to dedicate to Him the whole
span of our life, and cause that servant, I mean wrath and desire, to
cease from sin and bid it devote itself to the service of God, always
directing our whole desire towards God and arming our wrath against the
enemies of God: and likewise we hinder that beast of burden, that is the
body, from the servitude of sin, and urge it forwards to assist to the
uttermost the divine precepts.
These are the things which the spiritual law of Christ enjoins on us and
those who observe that become superior to the law of Moses. For when that
which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done away(6):
and when the covering of the law, that is, the veil, is rent asunder through
the crucifixion of the Saviour, and the Spirit shines forth with tongues
of fire, the letter shall be done away with, bodily things shall come
to an end, the law of servitude shall be fulfilled, and the law of liberty
be bestowed on us. Yea(7) we shall celebrate the perfect rest of bureau
nature, I mean the day after the resurrection, on which the Lord Jesus,
the Author of Life and our Saviour, shall lead us into the heritage promised
to those who serve God in the spirit, a heritage into which He entered
Himself as our forerunner after He rose from the dead, and whereon, the
gates of Heaven being opened to Him, He took His seat in bodily form at
the right hand of the Father, where those who keep the spiritual law shall
also come.
What belongs to us(8), therefore, who walk by the spirit and not by the
letter, is the complete abandonment of carnal things, the spiritual service
and communion with God. For circumcision is the abandonment of carnal
pleasure and of whatever is superfluous and unnecessary. For the foreskin
is nothing else than the skin which it superfluous to the organ of lust.
And, indeed, every pleasure which does not arise from God nor is in God
is superfluous to pleasure: and of that the foreskin is the type. The
Sabbath, moreover, is the cessation from sin; so that both things happen
to be one, and so both together, when observed by those who are spiritual,
do not bring about any breach of the law at all.
Further, observe(9) that the number seven denotes all the present time,
as the most wise Solomon says, to give a portion to seven and also to
eight(1). And David(2), the divine singer when he composed the eighth
psalm, sang of the future restoration after the resurrection from the
dead. Since the Law, therefore, enjoined that the seventh day should be
spent in rest from carnal things and devoted to spiritual things, it was
a mystic indication to the true Israelite who had a mind to see God, that
he should through all time offer himself to God and rise higher than carnal
things.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XXIV
Concerning Virginity.
Carnal men abuse virginity(3), and the pleasure-loving bring forward the
following verse in proof, Cursed be every one that raiseth not up seed
in Israel(4). But we, made confident by God the Word that was made flesh
of the Virgin, answer that virginity was implanted in man's nature from
above and in the beginning. For man was formed of virgin soil. From Adam
alone was Eve created. In Paradise virginity held sway. Indeed, Divine
Scripture tells that both Adam and Eve were naked and were not ashamed(5).
But after their transgression they knew that they were naked, and in their
shame they sewed aprons for themselves(6). And when, after the transgression,
Adam heard, dust thou art and unto dust shalt thou return(7), when death
entered into the world by reason of the transgression, then Adam knew
Eve his wife, and she conceived and bare seed(8). So that to prevent the
wearing out and destruction of the race by death, marriage was devised
that the race of men may be preserved through the procreation of children(9).
But they will perhaps ask, what then is the meaning of "male and
female(1)," and "Be fruitful and multiply?" In answer we
shall say that "Be fruitful and multiply(2)" does not altogether
refer to the multiplying by the marriage connection. For God had power
to multiply the race also in different ways, if they kept the precept
unbroken(3) to the end(4). But God, Who knoweth all things before they
have existence, knowing in His foreknowledge that they would fall into
transgression in the future and be condemned to death, anticipated this
and made "male and female," and bade them "be fruitful
and multiply." Let us, then, proceed on our way and see the glories(5)
of virginity: and this also includes chastity.
Noah when he was commanded to enter the ark and was entrusted with the
preservation of the seed of the world received this command, Go in, saith
the Lord, thou and thy sons, and thy wife, and thy sons' wives(6). He
separated them from their wives(7) in order that with purity they might
escape the flood and that shipwreck of the whole world. After the cessation
of the flood, however, He said, Go forth of the ark, thou and thy sons,
and thy wife, and thy sons' wives(8). Lo, again, marriage is granted for
the sake of the multiplication of the race. Next, Elias, the fire-breathing
charioteer and sojourner in heaven did not embrace celibacy, and yet was
not his virtue attested by his super-human ascension(1)? Who closed the
heavens? Who raised the dead(2)? Who divided Jordan(3)? Was it not the
virginal Elias? And did not Elisha, his disciple, after he had given proof
of equal virtue, ask and obtain as an inheritance a double portion of
the grace of the Spirit(4)? What of the three youths? Did they not by
practising virginity become mightier than fire, their bodies through virginity
being made proof against the fire(5)? And was it not Daniel's body that
was so hardened by virginity that the wild beasts' teeth could not fasten
in it(6). Did not God, when He wished the Israelites to see Him, bid them
purify the body(7)? Did not the priests purify themselves and so approach
the temple's shrine and offer victims? And did not the law call chastity
the great vow?
The precept of the law, therefore, is to be taken in a more spiritual
sense. For there is spiritual seed which is conceived through the love
and fear of God in the spiritual womb, travailing and bringing forth the
spirit of salvation. And in this sense must be understood this verse:
Blessed is he who hath seed in Zion and posterity in Jerusalem. For does
it mean that, although he be a whoremonger and a drunkard and an idolater,
he is still blessed if only he hath seed in Sion and posterity in Jerusalem?
No one in his senses will say this.
Virginity is the rule of life among the angels, the property of all incorporeal
nature. This we say without speaking ill of marriage: God forbid! (for
we know that the Lord blessed marriage by His presence(8), and we know
him who said, Marriage is and the bed undefiled(1)), but knowing that
virginity is better than marriage, however good. For among the virtues,
equally as among the vices, there are higher and lower grades. We know
that all mortals after the first parents of the race are the offspring
of marriage. For the first parents were the work of virginity and not
of marriage. But celibacy is, as we said, an imitation of the angels.
Wherefore virginity is as much more honourable than marriage, as the angel
is higher than man. But why do I say angel? Christ Himself is the glory
of virginity, who was not only-begotten of the Father without beginning
or emission or connection, but also became man in our image, being made
flesh for our sakes of the Virgin without connection, and manifesting
in Himself the true and perfect virginity. Wherefore, although He did
not enjoin that on us by law (for as He said, all men cannot receive this
saying(2)), yet in actual fact He taught us that and gave us strength
for it. For it is surely clear to every one that virginity now is flourishing
among men.
Good indeed is the procreation of children enjoined by the law, and good
is marriage on account of fornications, for it does away with these(4),
and by lawful intercourse does not permit the madness of desire to he
caromed into unlawful acts. Good is marriage for those who have no continence:
but that virginity is better which increases the fruitfulness of the soul
and offers to God the seasonable fruit of prayer. Marriage is honourable
and the bed undefiled, but whoremongers and adulterers God will judge(5).
BOOK IV CHAPTER XXV
Concerning the Circumcision.
The Circumcision(6) was given to Abraham before the law, after the blessings,
after the promise, as a sign separating him and his offspring and his
household from the Gentiles with whom he lived(7). And this is evident(8),
for when the Israelites passed forty years alone by themselves in the
desert, having no intercourse with any other race, all that were horn
in the desert were uncircumcised: but when Joshua(9) led them across Jordan,
they were circumcised, and a second law of circumcision was instituted.
For in Abraham's time the law of circumcision was given, and for the forty
years in the desert it fell into abeyance. And again for the second time
God gave the law of Circumcision to Joshua, after the crossing of Jordan,
according as it is written in the book of Joshua, the son of Nun: At that
time the Lord said unto Joshua, Make thee knives of stone from the sharp
rock, and assemble and circumcise the sons of Israel a second time(1);
and a little later: For the children of Israel walked forty and two(2)
years in the wilderness of Battaris(3), till all the people that were
men of war, which came out of Egypt, were uncircumcised, because they
obeyed not the voice of the Lord: unto whom the Lord sware that He would
not shew them the goad land, which the Lord swore unto their fathers that
He would give them, a land that floweth with milk and honey. And their
children, whom He raised up in their stead, them Joshua circumcised: for
they were uncircumcised, because they had not circumcised them by the
way(4). So that the circumcision was a sign, dividing Israel from the
Gentiles with whom they dwelt.
It was, moreover, a figure of baptism(5). For just as the circumcision
does not cut off a useful member of the body but only a useless superfluity,
so by the holy baptism we are circumcised from sin, and sin clearly is,
so to speak, the superfluous part of desire and not useful desire. For
it is quite impossible that any one should have no desire at all nor ever
experience the taste of pleasure. But the useless part of pleasure, that
is to say, useless desire and pleasure, it is this that is sin from which
holy baptism circumcises us, giving us as a token the precious cross on
the brow, not to divide us from the Gentiles (for all the nations received
baptism and were sealed with the sign of the Cross), but to distinguish
in each nation the faithful from the Faithless. Wherefore, when the truth
is revealed, circumcision is a senseless figure and shade. So circumcision
is now superfluous and contrary to holy baptism. For he who is circumcised
is a debtor to do the whale law(6). Further, the Lord was circumcised
that He might fulfil the law: and He fulfilled the whole law and observed
the Sabbath that He might fulfil and establish the law(7). Moreover after
He was baptized and the Holy Spirit had appeared to men, descending on
Him in the form of a dove, from that time the spiritual service and conduct
of life and the Kingdom of Heaven was preached.
BOOK IV CHAPTER XXVI
It should be known that the Antichrist is hound to come.
First, therefore, it is necessary that the Gospel should be preached among
all nations(1): And then shall that wicked one be
revealed, even him whose coming is after the working of Satan with all
power and signs and lying wonders(2), with all deceivableness of unrighteousness
in them that perish, whom the Lord shall consume with the word of His
mouth and shall destroy with the brightness of His coming(3). The devil
himself(4), therefore does not become man in the way that the Lord was
made man. God forbid! but he becomes man as the offspring of fornication
and receiveth all the energy of Satan. For God, foreknowing the strangeness
of the choice that he would make, allows the devil to take up his abode
in him(5).
He is, therefore, as we said, the offspring of fornication and is nurtured
in secret, and on a sudden he rises up and rebels and assumes rule. And
in the beginning of his rule, or rather tyranny, he assumes the role of
sanctity(6). But when he becomes master he persecutes the Church of God
and displays all his wickedness. But he will come with signs and lying
wonders(7), fictitious and not real, and he will deceive and lead away
from the living God those whose mind rests on an unsound and unstable
foundation, so that even the elect shall, if it be possible, be made to
stumble(8).
But Enoch and Elias the Thesbite shall be sent and shall turn the hearts
of the fathers to the children(9), that is, the synagogue to our Lord
Jesus Christ and the preaching of the apostles: and they will be destroyed
by him. And the Lord shall come out of heaven, just as the holy apostles
beheld Him going into heaven perfect God and perfect man, with glory and
power, and will destroy the man of lawlessness, the son of destruction,
with the breath of His mouth(1). Let no one, therefore, look for the Lord
to come from earth, but out of Heaven, as He himself has made sure(2).
BOOK IV CHAPTER XXVII
Concerning the Resurrection.
We believe also in the resurrection of the dead. For there will be in
truth, there will be, a resurrection of the dead, and by resurrection
we mean resurrection of bodies(3). For resurrection is the second state
of that which has fallen. For the souls are immortal, and hence how can
they rise again? For if they define death as the separation of soul and
body, resurrection surely is the re-union of soul and body, and the second
state of the living creature that has suffered dissolution and downfall(4).
It is, then, this very body, which is corruptible and liable to dissolution,
that will rise again incorruptible. For He, who made it in the beginning
of the sand of the earth, does not lack the power to raise it up again
after it has been dissolved again and returned to the earth from which
it was taken, in accordance with the reversal of the Creator's judgment.
For if there is no resurrection, let us eat and drink(5): let us pursue
a life of pleasure and enjoyment. If there is no resurrection, wherein
do we differ from the irrational brutes? If there is no resurrection,
let us hold the wild beasts of the field happy who have a life free from
sorrow. If there is no resurrection, neither is there any God nor Providence,
but all things are driven and borne along of themselves. For observe how
we see most righteous men suffering hunger and injustice and receiving
no help in the present life, while sinners and unrighteous men abound
in riches and every delight. And who in his senses would take this for
the work of a righteous judgment or a wise providence? There must be,
therefore, there must be, a resurrection. For God is just and is the rewarder
of those who submit patiently to Him. Wherefore if it is the soul alone
that engages in the contests of virtue, it is also the soul alone that
will receive the crown. And if it were the soul alone that revels in pleasures,
it would also be the soul alone that would be justly punished. But since
the soul does not pursue either virtue or vice separate from the body,
both together will obtain that which is their just due.
Nay, the divine Scripture bears witness that there will be a resurrection
of the body. God in truth says to Moses after the flood, Even as the green
herb have I given you all things. But flesh with the life thereof, which
is the blood thereof, shall ye not eat. And surely your blood of your
lives will I require; at the hand of every beast will I require it, and
at the hand of every man's brother will I require the life of man. Whoso
sheddeth man's blood, for his blood his own shall be shed, for in the
image of God made I man(6). How will He require the blood of man at the
hand of every beast, unless because the bodies of dead men will rise again?
For not for man will the beasts die.
And again to Moses, I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac and the
God of Jacob: God is not the God of the dead (that is, those who are dead
and will be no more), but of the living(7), whose souls indeed live in
His hand(8), but whose bodies will again come to life through the resurrection.
And David, sire of the Divine, says to God, Thou takest away their breath,
they die and return to their dust(9). See how he speaks about bodies.
Then he subjoins this, Thou sendest forth Thy Spirit, they are created:
and Thou renewest the face of the earth(1).
Further Isaiah says: The dead shall rise again, and they that are in the
graves shall awake(2). And it is clear that the souls do not lie in the
graves, but the bodies.
And again, the blessed Ezekiel says: And it was as I prophesied, and behold
a shaking and the bones came together, bone to his bone, each to its own
joint: and when I beheld, lo, the sinews came up upon them and the flesh
grew and rose up on them and the skin covered them above(3). And later
he teaches how the spirits came back when they were bidden.
And divine Daniel also says: And at that time shall Michael stand up,
the great prince which standeth for the children of thy people: and there
shall be a time of trouble, such trouble as never was since there was
a nation on the earth even to that same time. And at that time thy people
shall be delivered, every one that shall be found written in the book.
And many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake: some
to everlasting life and some to shame and everlasting contempt. And they
that be wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament, and out of
the multitude of the just shall shine like stars into the ages and beyond(4).
The words, many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake,
clearly shew that there will be a resurrection of bodies. For no one surely
would say that the souls sleep in the dust of the earth.
Moreover, even the Lord in the holy Gospels clearly allows that there
is a resurrection of the bodies. For they that are in the graves, He says,
shall hear His voice and shall come forth: they that have done good unto
the resurrection of life, and they that have done evil unto the resurrection
of damnation(5). Now no one in his senses would ever say that the souls
are in the graves.
But it was not only by word, but also by deed, that the Lord revealed
the resurrection of the bodies. First He raised up Lazarus, even after
he had been dead four days, and was stinking(6). For He did not raise
the soul without the body, but the body along with the soul: and not another
body but the very one that was corrupt. For how could the resurrection
of the dead man have been known or believed if it had not been established
by his characteristic properties? But it was in fact to make the divinity
of His own nature manifest and to confirm the belief in His own and our
resurrection, that He raised up Lazarus who was destined once more to
die. And the Lord became Himself the first-fruits of the perfect resurrection
that is no longer subject to death Wherefore also the divine Apostle Paul
said: If the dead rise not, then is not Christ raised. And if Christ be
not raised, our faith is vain: we are jet in our sins(7). And, Now, is
Christ risen from the dead and become the first-fruits of them that slept(8),
and the first-born pyre the dead(9); and again, For if we believe that
Jesus died and rose again, even so them also which sleep in Jesus will
God bring with Him(1). Even so, he said, as Christ rose again. Moreover,
that the resurrection of the Lord was the union of uncorrupted body and
soul (for it was these that had been divided) is manifest: for He said,
Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up(2). And the
holy Gospel is a trustworthy witness that He spoke of His own body. Handle
Me and see, the Lord said to His own disciples when they were thinking
that they saw a spirit, that it is I Myself, and that I am not changed(3):
for a spirit hath not flesh or bones, as ye see Me have(4). And when He
had said this He shewed them His hands and His side, and stretched them
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