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| And That, Although Scripture Often Changes the Divine Appearance into a Human Form, Yet the Measure of the Divine Majesty is Not Included Within These Lineaments of Our Bodily Nature. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter VI.
Argument.—And That, Although Scripture Often Changes the
Divine Appearance into a Human Form, Yet the Measure of the Divine
Majesty is Not Included Within These Lineaments of Our Bodily
Nature.
And although the heavenly Scripture often turns
the divine appearance into a human form,—as when it says,
“The eyes of the Lord are over the righteous;”5039 or when it
says, “The Lord God smelled the smell of a good
savour;”5040 or when
there are given to Moses the tables “written with the finger of
God;”5041 or when the
people of the children of Israel are set free from the land of Egypt
“with a mighty hand and with a stretched out arm;”5042 or when it
says, “The mouth of the Lord hath spoken these
things;”5043 or when the
earth is set forth as “God’s footstool;”5044
5044
Isa. lxvi. 1. [Capp. v. and vi. are specimens
of vigorous thought.] | or when it
says, “Incline thine ear, and hear,”5045 —we who say that the law is
spiritual do not include within these lineaments of our bodily nature
any mode or figure of the divine majesty, but diffuse that character of
unbounded magnitude (so to speak) over its plains without any
limit. For it is written, “If I shall ascend into heaven,
Thou art there; if I shall descend into hell, Thou art there also; and
if I shall take my wings, and go away across the sea, there Thy hand
shall lay hold of me, and Thy right hand shall hold me.”5046 For we
recognise the plan of the divine Scripture according to the proportion
of its arrangement. For the prophet then was still speaking about
God in parables according to the period of the faith, not as God was,
but as the people were able to receive Him. And thus, that such
things as these should be said about God, must be imputed not to God,
but rather to the people. Thus the people are permitted to erect
a tabernacle, and yet God is not contained within the enclosure of a
tabernacle. Thus a temple is reared, and yet God is not at all
bounded within the restraints of a temple. It is not therefore
God who is limited, but the perception of the people is limited; nor is
God straitened, but the understanding of the reason of the people is
held to be straitened. Finally, in the Gospel the Lord said,
“The hour shall come when neither in this mountain nor in
Jerusalem shall ye worship the Father;”5047 and gave the reasons, saying,
“God is a Spirit; and those therefore who worship, must worship
in spirit and in truth.”5048 Thus the divine agencies are
there5049
5049
sc. in the Old Testament. | exhibited by
means of members; it is not the appearance of God nor the bodily
lineaments that are described. For when the eyes are spoken of,
it is implied that He sees all things; and when the ear, it is set
forth that He hears all things; and when the finger, a certain energy
of His will is opened up; and when the nostrils, His recognition of
prayers is shown forth as of odours; and when the hand, it is proved
that He is the author of every creature; and when the arm, it is
announced that no nature can withstand the power of His arm; and when
the feet it is unfolded that He fills all things, and that there is not
any place where God is not. For neither members nor the offices
of members are needful to Him to whose sole judgment, even unexpressed,
all things serve and are present. For why should He require eyes
who is Himself the light? or why should He ask for feet who is
everywhere? or why should He wish to go when there is nowhere where He
can go beyond Himself? or why should He seek for hands whose will is,
even when silent, the architect for the foundation of all things?
He needs no ears who knows the wills that are even unexpressed; or for
what reason should He need a tongue whose thought is a command?
These members assuredly were necessary to men, but not to God, because
man’s design would be ineffectual if the body did not fulfil the
thought. Moreover, they are not needful to God, whose will the
works attend not so much without any effort, as that the works
themselves proceed simultaneously with the will. Moreover, He
Himself is all eye, because He all sees; and all ear, because He all
hears; and all hand, because He all works; and all foot, because He all
is everywhere. For He is the same, whatever it is. He is
all equal, and all everywhere. For He has not in Him any
diversity in Himself, being simple. For those are the things
which are reduced to diversity of members, which arise from birth and
go to dissolution. But things which are not concrete cannot be
conscious of these things.5050
5050
That is to say, “of Birth and dissolution.” [He is
the Now.] | And what is immortal, whatever it
is, that very thing is one and simple, and for ever. And thus
because it is one it cannot be dissolved; since whatever is that very
thing which is placed beyond the claim of dissolution, it is freed from
the laws of death.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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