Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| Chapter XXI.—Christ is the head of all things already mentioned. It was fitting that He should be sent by the Father, the Creator of all things, to assume human nature, and should be tempted by Satan, that He might fulfil the promises, and carry off a glorious and perfect victory. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XXI.—Christ is the head of
all things already mentioned. It was fitting that He should be sent by the
Father, the Creator of all things, to assume human nature, and should be
tempted by Satan, that He might fulfil the promises, and carry off a glorious
and perfect victory.
1. He
has therefore, in His work of recapitulation, summed up all things, both
waging war against our enemy, and crushing him who had at the beginning
led us away captives in Adam, and trampled upon his head, as thou canst
perceive in Genesis that God said to the serpent, “And I will put
enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; He
shall be on the watch for (observabit4627
4627 τηρήσει and τερέσει have
probably been confounded. | ) thy head, and thou on the watch
for His heel.”4628 For from that time, He who
should be born of a woman, [namely] from the Virgin, after the likeness
of Adam, was preached as keeping watch for the head of the serpent. This
is the seed of which the apostle says in the Epistle to the Galatians,
“that the law of works was established until the seed should come
to whom the promise was made.”4629 This fact
is exhibited in a still clearer light in the same Epistle, where he thus
speaks: “But when the fulness of time was come, God
sent forth His Son, made of a woman.”4630 For indeed the enemy would not have been fairly vanquished,
unless it had been a man [born] of a woman who conquered him. For it was
by means of a woman that he got the advantage over man at first, setting
himself up as man’s opponent. And therefore does the Lord profess
Himself to be the Son of man, comprising in Himself that original man out
of whom the woman was fashioned (ex quo ea quæ secundum mulierem est
plasmatio facta est), in order that, as our species went down to
death through a vanquished man, so we may ascend to life again through a
victorious one; and as through a man death received the palm [of victory]
against us, so again by a man we may receive the palm against death.
2. Now the Lord would not have recapitulated in Himself
that ancient and primary enmity against the serpent, fulfilling the
promise of the Creator (Demiurgi), and performing His command, if
He had come from another Father. But as He is one and the same, who
formed us at the beginning, and sent His Son at the end, the Lord did
perform His command, being made of a woman, by both destroying our
adversary, and perfecting man after the image and likeness of God. And
for this reason He did not draw the means of confounding him from any
other source than from the words of the law, and made use of the
Father’s commandment as a help towards the destruction and
confusion of the apostate angel. Fasting forty days, like Moses and
Elias, He afterwards hungered, first, in order that we may perceive that
He was a real and substantial man—for it belongs to a man to
suffer hunger when fasting; and secondly, that His opponent might have an
opportunity of attacking Him. For as at the beginning it was by means of
food that [the enemy] persuaded man, although not suffering hunger, to
transgress God’s commandments, so in the end he did not succeed in
persuading Him that was an hungered to take that food which proceeded
from God. For, when tempting Him, he said, “If thou be the Son of
God, command that these stones be made bread.”4631 But the Lord repulsed him by the commandment of the law, saying,
“It is written, Man doth not live by bread alone.”4632 As to those words [of His enemy,] “If
thou be the Son of God,” [the Lord] made no remark; but by thus
acknowledging His human nature He baffled His adversary, and exhausted
the force of his first attack by means of His Father’s word. The
corruption of man, therefore, which occurred in paradise by both [of our
first parents] eating, was done away with by [the Lord’s] want of
food in this world.4633
4633 The
Latin of this obscure sentence is: Quæ ergo fuit in Paradiso repletio
hominis per duplicem gustationem, dissoluta est per eam, quæ fuit in hoc
mundo, indigentiam. Harvey thinks that repletio is an error of the
translation reading ἀναπλήρωσις for
ἀναπήρωσις. This
conjecture is adopted above. | But he, being thus vanquished by
the law, endeavoured again to make an assault by himself quoting a
commandment of the law. For, bringing Him to the highest pinnacle of the
temple, he said to Him, “If thou art the Son of God, cast thyself
down. For it is written, That God shall give His angels charge concerning
thee, and in their hands they shall bear thee up, lest perchance thou
dash thy foot against a stone;”4634 thus
concealing a falsehood under the guise of Scripture, as is done by all
the heretics. For that was indeed written, [namely], “That He hath
given His angels charge concerning Him;” but “cast thyself
down from hence” no Scripture said in reference to Him: this kind
of persuasion the devil produced from himself. The Lord therefore
confuted him out of the law, when He said, “It is written again,
Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God;”4635 pointing out by the word contained in the law
that which is the duty of man, that he should not tempt God; and in
regard to Himself, since He appeared in human form, [declaring] that He
would not tempt the Lord
his God.4636
4636 This sentence
is one of great obscurity. | The pride of reason, therefore,
which was in the serpent, was put to nought by the humility found in the
man [Christ], and now twice was the devil conquered from Scripture, when
he was detected as advising things contrary to God’s commandment,
and was shown to be the enemy of God by [the expression of] his thoughts.
He then, having been thus signally defeated, and then, as it were,
concentrating his forces, drawing up in order all his available power for
falsehood, in the third place “showed Him all the kingdoms of the
world, and the glory of them,”4637 saying,
as Luke relates, “All these will I give thee,—for they are
delivered to me; and to whom I will, I give them,—if thou wilt
fall down and worship me.” The Lord then, exposing him in his true
character, says, “Depart, Satan; for it is written, Thou shalt
worship the Lord thy God, and Him only shalt thou serve.”4638 He both revealed him by this name, and showed
[at the same time] who He Himself was. For the
Hebrew word “Satan” signifies an apostate. And thus,
vanquishing him for the third time, He spurned him from Him finally as
being conquered out of the law; and there was done away with that
infringement of God’s commandment which had occurred in Adam, by
means of the precept of the law, which the Son of man observed,
who did not transgress the commandment of God.
3. Who, then, is this Lord God to whom Christ bears
witness, whom no man shall tempt, whom all should worship, and serve Him
alone? It is, beyond all manner of doubt, that God who also gave the law.
For these things had been predicted in the law, and by the words
(sententiam) of the law the Lord showed that the law does indeed
declare the Word of God from the Father; and the apostate angel of God is
destroyed by its voice, being exposed in his true colours, and vanquished
by the Son of man keeping the commandment of God. For as in the beginning
he enticed man to transgress his Maker’s law, and thereby got him
into his power; yet his power consists in transgression and apostasy, and
with these he bound man [to himself]; so again, on the other hand, it was
necessary that through man himself he should, when conquered, be bound
with the same chains with which he had bound man, in order that man,
being set free, might return to his Lord, leaving to him (Satan) those
bonds by which he himself had been fettered, that is, sin. For when Satan
is bound, man is set free; since “none can enter a strong
man’s house and spoil his goods, unless he first bind the strong
man himself.”4639 The Lord therefore exposes him as speaking
contrary to the word of that God who made all things, and subdues him by
means of the commandment. Now the law is the commandment of God. The Man
proves him to be a fugitive from and a transgressor of the law, an
apostate also from God. After [the Man had done this], the Word bound him
securely as a fugitive from Himself, and made spoil of his goods,—
namely, those men whom he held in bondage, and whom he unjustly used for
his own purposes. And justly indeed is he led captive, who had led men
unjustly into bondage; while man, who had been led captive in times past,
was rescued from the grasp of his possessor, according to the tender
mercy of God the Father, who had compassion on His own handiwork, and
gave to it salvation, restoring it by means of the Word—that is,
by Christ—in order that man might learn by actual proof that he
receives incorruptibility not of himself, but by the free gift of
God.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|