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| Defence of the Divine Unity Against Objection. No Analogy Between Human Powers and God's Sovereignty. The Objection Otherwise Untenable, for Why Stop at Two Gods? PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
IV.—Defence of the Divine Unity Against Objection. No Analogy
Between Human Powers and God’s Sovereignty. The Objection
Otherwise Untenable, for Why Stop at Two Gods?
But some one may contend that two great Supremes
may exist, distinct and separate in their own departments; and may even
adduce, as an example, the kingdoms of the world, which, though they
are so many in number, are yet supreme in their several regions. Such a
man will suppose that human circumstances are always comparable with
divine ones. Now, if this mode of reasoning be at all tolerable, what
is to prevent our introducing, I will not say a third god or a fourth,
but as many as there are kings of the earth? Now it is God that is in
question, whose main property it is to admit of no comparison with
Himself. Nature itself, therefore, if not an Isaiah, or rather God
speaking by Isaiah, will deprecatingly ask, “To whom will ye
liken me?”2370 Human circumstances
may perhaps be compared with divine ones, but they may not be with
God. God is one thing, and what belongs to God is another thing.
Once more:2371 you who apply the
example of a king, as a great supreme, take care that you can use it
properly. For although a king is supreme on his throne next to God, he
is still inferior to God; and when he is compared with God, he will be
dislodged2372 from that great
supremacy which is transferred to God. Now, this being the case, how
will you employ in a comparison with God an object as your example,
which fails2373
2373 Amittitur.
“Tertullian” (who thinks lightly of the analogy of earthly
monarchs) “ought rather to have contended that the illustration
strengthened his argument. In each kingdom there is only one
supreme power; but the universe is God’s kingdom: there is
therefore only one supreme power in the universe.”—
Bp. Kaye, On the Writings of Tertullian,
Third edition, p. 453, note 2. | in all the purposes
which belong to a comparison? Why, when supreme power among kings
cannot evidently be multifarious, but only unique and singular, is an
exception made in the case of Him (of all others)2374 who is King of kings, and (from the
exceeding greatness of His power, and the subjection of all other
ranks2375 to Him) the very summit,2376 as it were, of dominion? But even in the
case of rulers of that other form of government, where they one by one
preside in a union of authority, if with their petty2377 prerogatives of royalty, so to say, they be
brought on all points2378 into such a
comparison with one another as shall make it clear which of them is
superior in the essential features2379 and powers of
royalty, it must needs follow that the supreme majesty will
redound2380 to one
alone,—all the others being gradually, by the issue of the
comparison, removed and excluded from the supreme authority. Thus,
although, when spread out in several hands, supreme authority seems to
be multifarious, yet in its own powers, nature, and condition, it is
unique. It follows, then, that if two gods are compared, as two kings
and two supreme authorities, the concentration of authority must
necessarily, according to the meaning of the comparison, be conceded to
one of the two; because it is clear from his own superiority that he is
the supreme, his rival being now vanquished, and proved to be not the
greater, however great. Now, from this failure of his rival, the other
is unique in power, possessing a certain solitude, as it were, in his
singular pre-eminence. The inevitable conclusion at which we arrive,
then, on this point is this: either we must deny that God is the great
Supreme, which no wise man will allow himself to do; or say that God
has no one else with whom to share His power.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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