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| And This is So Manifest, that Some Heretics Have Thought Him to Be God the Father, Others that He Was Only God Without the Flesh. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XXIII.5196
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According to Pamelius, ch. xviii. |
Argument.—And This is So Manifest, that Some Heretics Have
Thought Him to Be God the Father, Others that He Was Only God Without
the Flesh.
In this place I may be permitted also to collect
arguments from the side of other heretics. It is a substantial
kind of proof which is gathered even from an adversary, so as to prove
the truth even from the very enemies of truth. For it is so far
manifest that He is declared in the Scriptures to be God, that many
heretics, moved by the magnitude and truth of this divinity,
exaggerating His honours above measure, have dared to announce or to
think Him not the Son, but God the Father Himself.5197
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[The Noetians, Hippol., p. 148, supra.] | And this, although it is
contrary to the truth of the Scriptures, is still a great and excellent
argument for the divinity of Christ, who is so far God, except as Son
of God, born of God, that very many heretics—as we have
said—have so accepted Him as God, as to think that He must be
pronounced not the Son, but the Father. Therefore let it be
considered whether He is God or not, since His authority has so
affected some, that, as we have already said above, they have thought
Him God the Father Himself, and have confessed the divinity in Christ
with such impetuosity and effusion—compelled to it by the
manifest divinity in Christ—that they thought that He whom they
read of as the Son, because they perceived Him to be God, must be the
Father. Moreover, other heretics have so far embraced the
manifest divinity of Christ, as to say that He was without flesh, and
to withdraw from Him the whole humanity which He took upon Him, lest,
by associating with Him a human nativity, as they conceived it, they
should diminish in Him the power of the divine name.5198
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[Irenæus, vol. i. p. 527.] | This, however, we do not
approve; but we quote it as an argument to prove that Christ is God, to
this extent, that some, taking away the manhood, have thought Him God
only, and some have thought Him God the Father Himself; when reason and
the proportion of the heavenly Scriptures show Christ to be God, but as
the Son of God; and the Son of man, having been taken up, moreover by
God, that He must be believed to be man also. Because if He came
to man, that He might be Mediator of God and men, it behoved Him to be
with man, and the Word to be made flesh, that in His own self He might
link together the agreement of earthly things with heavenly things, by
associating in Himself pledges of both natures, and uniting God to man
and man to God; so that reasonably the Son of God might be made by the
assumption of flesh the Son of man, and the Son of man by the reception
of the Word of God the Son of God. This most profound and
recondite mystery, destined before the worlds for the salvation of the
human race, is found to be fulfilled in the Lord Jesus Christ, both God
and man, that the human race might be placed within the reach of the
enjoyment of eternal salvation.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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