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Chapter IX.
The Jew continues his discourse thus:
“How should we deem him to be a God, who not only in other
respects, as was currently reported, performed none of his promises,
but who also, after we had convicted him, and condemned him as
deserving of punishment, was found attempting to conceal himself, and
endeavouring to escape in a most disgraceful manner, and who was
betrayed by those whom he called disciples? And yet,” he
continues, “he who was a God could neither flee nor be led away a
prisoner; and least of all could he be deserted and delivered up by
those who had been his associates, and had shared all things in common,
and had had him for their teacher, who was deemed to be a Saviour, and
a son of the greatest God, and an angel.” To which we
reply, that even we do not suppose the body of Jesus, which was then an
object of sight and perception, to have been God. And why do I
say His body? Nay, not even His soul, of which it is related,
“My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death.”3235 But as, according to the Jewish manner
of speaking, “I am the Lord, the God of all flesh,” and,
“Before Me there was no God formed, neither shall there be after
Me,” God is believed to be He who employs the soul and body of
the prophet as an instrument; and as, according to the Greeks, he who
says,
“I know both the number of the sand, and the
measures of the sea,
And I understand a dumb man, and hear him who does
not speak,”3236
3236 Herodot., i. cap.
47. |
is considered to be a god when speaking, and making himself
heard through the Pythian priestess; so, according to our view, it was
the Logos God, and Son of the God of all things, who spake in Jesus
these words, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life;”
and these, “I am the door;” and these, “I am the
living bread that came down from heaven;” and other expressions
similar to these. We therefore charge the Jews with not
acknowledging Him to be God, to whom testimony was borne in many
passages by the prophets, to the effect that He was a mighty power, and
a God next to3237
3237 καὶ Θεὸν
κατὰ τὸν τῶν
ὅλων Θεὸν καὶ
πατέρα. “Ex mente
Origenis, inquit Boherellus, vertendum ‘Secundo post universi
Deum atque parentem loco;” non cum interprete Gelenio,
‘Ipsius rerum universarum Dei atque Parentis
testimonio.’ Nam si hic esset sensus, frustra post
ὑπὸ τῶν
προφητῶν, adderetur
κατὰ
τὸν Θεόν.
Præterea, hæc epitheta, τὸν τῶν ὅλων
Θεὸν καὶ
πατέρα, manifestam continent
antithesin ad ista, μεγάλην
ὄντα δύναμιν
καὶ Θεόν, ut Pater supra
Filium evehatur, quemadmodum evehitur, ab Origene infra libro octavo,
num. 15. Τοῦ,
κατά, inferiorem ordinem denotantis exempla
afferre supersedeo, cum obvia sint.”—Ruæus. [See also Liddon’s Bampton Lectures
on The Divinity of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, p. 414,
where he says, “Origen maintains Christ’s true divinity
against the contemptuous criticisms of Celsus” (book ii. 9, 16,
seq.; vii. 53, etc.). S.] | the God and Father
of all things. For we assert that it was to Him the Father gave
the command, when in the Mosaic account of the creation He uttered the
words, “Let there be light,” and “Let there be a
firmament,” and gave the injunctions with regard to those other
creative acts which were performed; and that to Him also were addressed
the words, “Let Us make man in Our own image and likeness;”
and that the Logos, when commanded, obeyed all the Father’s
will. And we make these statements not from our own conjectures,
but because we believe the prophecies circulated among the Jews, in
which it is said of God, and of the works of creation, in express
words, as follows: “He spake, and they were
made; He commanded, and they
were created.”3238 Now if God
gave the command, and the creatures were formed, who, according to the
view of the spirit of prophecy, could He be that was able to carry out
such commands of the Father, save Him who, so to speak, is the living
Logos and the Truth? And that the Gospels do not consider him who
in Jesus said these words, “I am the way, and the truth, and the
life,” to have been of so circumscribed a nature3239
3239 περιγεγραμμένον
τινά. | as to have an existence nowhere out of the
soul and body of Jesus, is evident both from many considerations, and
from a few instances of the following kind which we shall quote.
John the Baptist, when predicting that the Son of God was to appear
immediately, not in that body and soul, but as manifesting Himself
everywhere, says regarding Him: “There stands in the midst
of you One whom ye know not, who cometh after me.”3240 For if he had thought that the Son of
God was only there, where was the visible body of Jesus, how could he
have said, “There stands in the midst of you One whom ye know
not?” And Jesus Himself, in raising the minds of His
disciples to higher thoughts of the Son of God, says:
“Where two or three are gathered together in My name, there am I
in the midst of you.”3241 And of the
same nature is His promise to His disciples: “Lo, I am with
you alway, even to the end of the world.”3242 And we quote these passages, making no
distinction between the Son of God and Jesus. For the soul and
body of Jesus formed, after the οἰκονομία
, one being with the Logos of God. Now if, according to
Paul’s teaching, “he that is joined unto the Lord is one
spirit,”3243 every one who
understands what being joined to the Lord is, and who has been actually
joined to Him, is one spirit with the Lord; how should not that being
be one in a far greater and more divine degree, which was once united
with the Logos of God?3244
3244 εἰ γὰρ κατὰ
τὴν Παύλου
διδασκαλίαν,
λέγοντος·
“ὁ κολλώμενος
τῷ κυρίῳ, ἓν
πνεῦμά
ἐστι·”
πᾶς ὁ
νοησας τί τὸ
κολλᾶσθαι τῷ
κυρίῳ, καὶ
κολληθεὶς
αὐτῷ, ἕν ἐστι
πνεῦμα πρὸς
τὸν κύριον·
πῶς οὐ πολλῷ
μᾶλλον
θειοτέρως
καὶ μειζόνως
ἕν ἐστι τό
ποτε
σύνθετον
πρὸς τὸν
λόγον τοῦ
Θεοῦ; | He, indeed,
manifested Himself among the Jews as the power of God, by the miracles
which He performed, which Celsus suspected were accomplished by
sorcery, but which by the Jews of that time were attributed I know not
why, to Beelzebub, in the words: “He casteth out devils
through Beelzebub, the prince of the devils.”3245 But these our Saviour convicted of
uttering the greatest absurdities, from the fact that the kingdom of
evil was not yet come to an end. And this will be evident to all
intelligent readers of the Gospel narrative, which it is not now the
time to explain.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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