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| The Same Conclusion Supported by the Transfiguration. Marcion Inconsistent in Associating with Christ in Glory Two Such Eminent Servants of the Creator as Moses and Elijah. St. Peter's Ignorance Accounted for on Montanist Principle. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XXII.—The Same Conclusion Supported by the Transfiguration.
Marcion Inconsistent in Associating with Christ in Glory Two Such
Eminent Servants of the Creator as Moses and Elijah. St. Peter’s
Ignorance Accounted for on Montanist Principle.
You ought to be very much ashamed of yourself on this account too, for
permitting him to appear on the retired mountain in the company of
Moses and Elias,4319 whom he had come to
destroy. This, to be sure,4320
4320 Scilicet, in ironical
allusion to a Marcionite opinion. | was what he wished
to be understood as the meaning of that voice from heaven: “This
is my beloved Son, hear Him”4321 —Him, that is, not Moses or
Elias any longer. The voice alone, therefore, was enough, without the
display of Moses and Elias; for, by expressly mentioning whom they were
to hear, he must have forbidden all4322 others from
being heard. Or else, did he mean that Isaiah and Jeremiah and the
others whom he did not exhibit were to be heard, since he prohibited
those whom he did display? Now, even if their presence was necessary,
they surely should not be represented as conversing together, which is
a sign of familiarity; nor as associated in glory with him, for this
indicates respect and graciousness; but they should be shown in some
slough4323
4323 In sordibus
aliquibus. | as a sure token of
their ruin, or even in that darkness of the Creator which Christ was
sent to disperse, far removed from the glory of Him who was about to
sever their words and writings from His gospel. This, then, is
the way4324 how he demonstrates
them to be aliens,4325 even by keeping
them in his own company! This is how he shows they ought to be
relinquished: he associates them with himself instead! This is how he
destroys them: he irradiates them with his glory! How would their own
Christ act? I suppose He would have imitated the frowardness (of
heresy),4326
4326 Secundum
perversitatem. | and revealed them
just as Marcion’s Christ was bound to do, or at least as having
with Him any others rather than His own prophets! But what could so
well befit the Creator’s Christ, as to manifest Him in the
company of His own foreannouncers?4327 —to let
Him be seen with those to whom He had appeared in revelations?—to
let Him be speaking with those who had spoken of Him?—to share
His glory with those by whom He used to be called the Lord of glory;
even with those chief servants of His, one of whom was once the
moulder4328
4328 Informator, Moses, as
having organized the nation. | of His people, the
other afterwards the reformer4329 thereof; one the
initiator of the Old Testament, the other the consummator4330
4330 It was a primitive
opinion in the Church that Elijah was to come, with Enoch, at the end
of the world. See De Anima, chap. xxxv. and l.; also
Irenæus, De Hæres. v. 5. [Vol. I. 530.] | of the New? Well therefore does Peter, when
recognizing the companions of his Christ in their indissoluble
connection with Him, suggest an expedient: “It is good for us to
be here” (good: that evidently means to be where Moses and Elias
are); “and let us make three tabernacles, one for Thee, and one
for Moses, and one for Elias. But he knew not what he
said.”4331 How knew not?
Was his ignorance the result of simple error? Or was it on the
principle which we maintain4332
4332 This Tertullian seems
to have done in his treatise De Ecstasi, which is mentioned by
St. Jerome—see his Catalogus Scriptt. Eccles. (in
Tertulliano); and by Nicephorus, Hist. Eccles. iv. 22, 34.
On this subject of ecstasy, Tertullian has some observations in De
Anima, chap. xxi. and xlv. (Rigalt. and Oehler.) | in the cause of the
new prophecy,4333 that to grace
ecstasy or rapture4334 is incident. For
when a man is rapt in the Spirit, especially when he beholds the glory
of God, or when God speaks through him, he necessarily loses his
sensation,4335 because he is
overshadowed with the power of God,—a point concerning which
there is a question between us and the carnally-minded.4336
4336 He calls those the
carnally-minded (“psychicos”) who thought that ecstatic
raptures and revelations had ceased in the church. The term
arises from a perverse application of 1 Cor. ii. 14: ψυχικὸς δὲ
ἄνθρωπος οὐ
δέχεται τὰ
τοῦ
Πνεύματος
τοῦ Θεοῦ. In opposition to
the wild fanaticism of Montanus, into which Tertullian strangely fell,
the Catholics believed that the true prophets, who were filled with the
Spirit of God, discharged their prophetic functions with a quiet and
tranquil mind. See the anonymous author, Contra Cataphrygas, in
Eusebius, Hist. Eccl. v. 17; Epiphanius, Hæres. 48.
See also Routh, Rell. Sacræ, i. p. 100; and Bp. Kaye,
On the Writings of Tertullian, edit. 3, pp. 27–36.
(Munter’s Primord. Eccles. Afric. p. 138, quoted by
Oehler.) | Now, it is no difficult matter to prove the
rapture4337 of Peter. For how
could he have known Moses and Elias, except (by being) in the Spirit?
People could not have had their images, or statues, or likenesses; for
that the law forbade. How, if it were not that he had seen them in the
Spirit? And therefore, because it was in the Spirit that he had now
spoken, and not in his natural senses, he could not know what he had
said. But if, on the other hand,4338 he was thus
ignorant, because he erroneously supposed that (Jesus) was their
Christ, it is then evident that Peter, when previously asked by Christ,
“Whom they thought Him to be,” meant the Creator’s
Christ, when he answered, “Thou art the Christ;” because if
he had been then aware that He belonged to the rival god, he would not
have made a mistake here. But if he was in error here because of his
previous erroneous opinion,4339
4339 According to the
hypothesis. | then you may be
sure that up to that very day no new divinity had been revealed by
Christ, and that Peter had so far made no mistake, because hitherto
Christ had revealed nothing of the kind; and that Christ accordingly
was not to be regarded as belonging to any other than the Creator, whose entire
dispensation4340
4340 Totum ordinem, in the
three periods represented by Moses, and Elijah, and Christ. | he, in fact, here
described. He selects from His disciples three witnesses of the
impending vision and voice. And this is just the way of the Creator.
“In the mouth of three witnesses,” says He, “shall
every word be established.”4341
4341 Compare Deut. xix. 15 with Luke ix. 28. | He withdraws
to a mountain. In the nature of the place I see much meaning. For the
Creator had originally formed His ancient people on a mountain both
with visible glory and His voice. It was only right that the New
Testament should be attested4342 on such an elevated
spot4343 as that whereon the Old Testament had been
composed;4344 under a like
covering of cloud also, which nobody will doubt, was condensed out of
the Creator’s air. Unless, indeed, he4345
had brought down his own clouds thither, because he had himself forced
his way through the Creator’s heaven;4346
4346 Compare above, book i.
chap. 15, and book iv. chap. 7. | or
else it was only a precarious cloud,4347
4347 Precario. This
word is used in book v. chap. xii. to describe the
transitoriness of the Creator’s paradise and
world. | as it were, of
the Creator which he used. On the present (as also on the
former)4348 occasion,
therefore, the cloud was not silent; but there was the accustomed voice
from heaven, and the Father’s testimony to the Son; precisely as
in the first Psalm He had said, “Thou art my Son, today have I
begotten thee.”4349 By the mouth of
Isaiah also He had asked concerning Him, “Who is there among you
that feareth God? Let him hear the voice of His Son.”4350 When therefore He here presents Him with the
words, “This is my (beloved) Son,” this clause is of course
understood, “whom I have promised.” For if He once
promised, and then afterwards says, “This is He,” it is
suitable conduct for one who accomplishes His purpose4351
4351 Ejus est
exhibentis. | that He should utter His voice in proof of
the promise which He had formerly made; but unsuitable in one who is
amenable to the retort, Can you, indeed, have a right to say,
“This is my son,” concerning whom you have given us no
previous information,4352
4352 Non præmisisti.
Oehler suggests promisisti, “have given us no
promise.” | any more than you
have favoured us with a revelation about your own prior existence?
“Hear ye Him,” therefore, whom from the beginning (the
Creator) had declared entitled to be heard in the name of a prophet,
since it was as a prophet that He had to be regarded by the people.
“A prophet,” says Moses, “shall the Lord your God
raise up unto you, of your sons” (that is, of course, after a
carnal descent4353
4353 Censum: Some read
sensum, “sense.” | ); “unto Him
shall ye hearken, as unto me.”4354 “Every
one who will not hearken unto Him, his soul4355
shall be cut off from amongst his people.”4356 So also Isaiah: “Who is there among
you that feareth God? Let him hear the voice of His
Son.”4357 This voice the
Father was going Himself to recommend. For, says he,4358
4358 Tertullian, by
introducing this statement with an “inquit,” seems
to make a quotation of it; but it is only a comment on the actual
quotations. Tertullian’s invariable object in this argument is to
match some event or word pertaining to the Christ of the New Testament
with some declaration of the Old Testament. In this instance the
approving words of God upon the mount are in Heb. i. 5 applied to the Son, while in
Ps. ii. 7 the Son applies them to Himself. Compare
the Adversus Praxean, chap. xix. (Fr. Junius and Oehler). It is,
however, more likely that Tertullian really means to quote Isa. xliv. 26, “that confirmeth the word of His
servant,” which Tertullian reads, “Sistens verba filii
sui,” the Septuagint being, Καὶ ἰστῶν
ῥῆμα παιδὸς
αὐτοῦ. | He establishes the words of His Son, when He
says, “This is my beloved Son, hear ye Him.” Therefore,
even if there be made a transfer of the obedient “hearing”
from Moses and Elias to4359
4359 In Christo.
In with an ablative is often used by our author for in
with an accusative. | Christ, it is still
not from another God, or to another Christ; but from4360
4360 Or perhaps “by
the Creator.” | the Creator to His Christ, in consequence of
the departure of the old covenant and the supervening of the new.
“Not an ambassador, nor an angel, but He Himself,” says
Isaiah, “shall save them;”4361
4361 Isa. lxiii. 9, according to the Septuagint; only he
reads faciet for aorist ἔσωσεν. |
for it is He Himself who is now declaring and fulfilling the law and
the prophets. The Father gave to the Son new disciples,4362
4362 A Marcionite
position. | after that Moses and Elias had been
exhibited along with Him in the honour of His glory, and had then been
dismissed as having fully discharged their duty and office, for the
express purpose of affirming for Marcion’s information the fact
that Moses and Elias had a share in even the glory of Christ. But we
have the entire structure4363 of this same vision
in Habakkuk also, where the Spirit in the person of some4364 of the apostles says, “O Lord, I have
heard Thy speech, and was afraid.” What speech was this, other
than the words of the voice from heaven, This is my beloved Son, hear
ye Him? “I considered thy works, and was astonished.” When
could this have better happened than when Peter, on seeing His glory,
knew not what he was saying? “In the midst of the two Thou shalt
be known”—even Moses and Elias.4365
4365 Hab. iii. 2, according to the Septuagint. St.
Augustine similarly applied this passage, De Civit. Dei, ii.
32. | These likewise
did Zechariah see under the figure of the two olive trees and olive
branches.4366 For these are they
of whom he says, “They are the two anointed ones, that stand by
the Lord of the whole earth.” And again Habakkuk says, “His
glory covered the heavens” (that is, with that cloud), “and
His splendour shall be like the light—even the light, wherewith
His very raiment glistened.” And if we would make mention
of4367
4367 Commemoremur: be
reminded, or call to mind. | the promise to Moses, we shall find it
accomplished here. For when Moses desired to see the Lord, saying,
“If therefore I have found grace in Thy sight, manifest Thyself
to me, that I may see Thee distinctly,”4368
4368 Cognoscenter:
γνωστῶς, “so as
to know Thee.” |
the sight which he desired to have was of that condition which he was
to assume as man, and which as a prophet he knew was to occur.
Respecting the face of God, however, he had already heard,
“No man shall see me, and live.” “This thing,”
said He, “which thou hast spoken, will I do unto
thee.” Then Moses said, “Show me Thy
glory.” And the Lord, with like reference to the future,
replied, “I will pass before thee in my glory,” etc. Then
at the last He says, “And then thou shalt see my
back.”4369 Not loins, or
calves of the legs, did he want to behold, but the glory which was to
be revealed in the latter days.4370
4370 Posterioribus
temporibus. [The awful ribaldry of Voltaire upon this glorious
revelation is based upon the Vulgate reading of Exod. xxxiii. 23, needlessly transferred to our Version,
but corrected by the late Revisers.] | He had
promised that He would make Himself thus face to face visible to him,
when He said to Aaron, “If there shall be a prophet among you, I
will make myself known to him by vision, and by vision will I speak
with him; but not so is my manner to Moses; with him will I
speak mouth to mouth, even apparently” (that is to say, in the
form of man which He was to assume), “and not in dark
speeches.”4371 Now, although
Marcion has denied4372 that he is here
represented as speaking with the Lord, but only as standing, yet,
inasmuch as he stood “mouth to mouth,” he must also have
stood “face to face” with him, to use his
words,4373
4373 It is difficult to see
what this inquit means. | not far from him,
in His very glory—not to say,4374 in His
presence. And with this glory he went away enlightened from Christ,
just as he used to do from the Creator; as then to dazzle the
eyes of the children of Israel, so now to smite those of the
blinded Marcion, who has failed to see how this argument also makes
against him.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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