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| He Proves Also that the Words Spoken to Philip Make Nothing for the Sabellians. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XXVIII.
Argument.—He Proves Also that the Words Spoken to Philip
Make Nothing for the Sabellians.
Hereto also I will add that view wherein the
heretic, while he rejoices as if at the loss of some power of seeing
special truth and light, acknowledges the total blindness of his
error. For again and again, and frequently, he objects that it
was said, “Have I been so long time with you, and do ye not know
me, Philip? He who hath seen me, hath seen the Father
also.”5234 But
let him learn what he does not understand. Philip is reproved,
and rightly, and deservedly indeed, because he has said, “Lord,
show us the Father, and it sufficeth us.”5235 For when had he either heard
from Christ, or learnt that Christ was the Father? although, on the
other hand, he had frequently heard, and had often learned, rather that
He was the Son, not that He was the Father. For what the Lord
said, “If ye have known me, ye have known my Father also:
and henceforth ye have known Him, and have seen Him,”5236 He said not
as wishing to be understood Himself to be the Father, but
implying that he who thoroughly, and fully, and with all faith
and all religiousness, drew near to the Son of God, by all means shall
attain, through the Son Himself, in whom he thus believes, to the
Father, and shall see Him. “For no one,” says He,
“can come to the Father, but by me.”5237 And therefore he shall not
only come to God the Father, and shall know the Father Himself; but,
moreover, he ought thus to hold, and so to presume in mind and heart, that he has
henceforth not only known, but seen the Father. For often the
divine Scripture announces things that are not yet done as being done,
because thus they shall be; and things which by all means have to
happen, it does not predict as if they were future, but narrates as if
they were done. And thus, although Christ had not been born as
yet in the times of Isaiah the prophet, he said, “For unto us a
child is born;”5238 and although Mary had not yet been
approached, he said, “And I approached unto the prophetess; and
she conceived, and bare a son.”5239 And when Christ had not yet
made known the mind of the Father, it is said, “And His
name shall be called the Angel of Great Counsel.”5240 And
when He had not yet suffered, he declared, “He is as a sheep led
to the slaughter.”5241 And although the cross had never
yet existed, He said, “All day long have I stretched out my hands
to an unbelieving people.”5242 And although not yet had He been
scornfully given to drink, the Scripture says, “In my thirst they
gave me vinegar to drink.”5243 And although He had not yet
been stripped, He said, “Upon my vesture they did cast lots, and
they numbered my bones: they pierced my hands and my
feet.”5244 For
the divine Scripture, foreseeing, speaks of things which it knows shall
be as being already done, and speaks of things as perfected which it
regards as future, but which shall come to pass without any
doubt. And thus the Lord in the present passage said,
“Henceforth ye have known and have seen Him.” Now He
said that the Father should be seen by whomsoever had followed the Son,
not as if the Son Himself should be the Father seen, but that whosoever
was willing to follow Him, and be His disciple, should obtain the
reward of being able to see the Father. For He also is the image
of God the Father; so that it is added, moreover, to these things, that
“as the Father worketh, so also the Son worketh.”5245 And
the Son is an imitator5246
5246
[Cap. xxi. note 5, 632, supra.] | of all the Father’s works, so
that every one may regard it just as if he saw the Father, when he sees
Him who always imitates the invisible Father in all His works.
But if Christ is the Father Himself, in what manner does He immediately
add, and say, “Whosoever believeth in me, the works that I do he
shall do also; and greater works than these shall he do; because I go
to my Father?”5247 And He further subjoins,
“If ye love me, keep my commandments; and I will ask the Father,
and He will give you another Comforter.”5248 After which also He adds
this: “If any one loveth me, he shall keep my word:
and my Father will love him; and we will come unto him, and will make
our abode with him.”5249 Moreover, also, He added this
too: “But the Advocate, that Holy Spirit whom the Father
will send, He will teach you, and bring all things to your remembrance,
whatsoever I have said unto you.”5250 He utters, further, that
passage when He shows Himself to be the Son, and reasonably subjoins,
and says, “If ye loved me, ye would rejoice because I go unto the
Father: for the Father is greater than I.”5251 But what
shall we say when He also continues in these words:
“I am the true vine, and my Father is the husbandman. Every
branch in me that beareth not fruit He taketh away; and every branch
that beareth fruit He purgeth, that it may bring forth more
fruit?”5252 Still He
persists, and adds: “As the Father hath loved me, so also
have I loved you: remain in my love. If ye have kept my
commandments, ye shall remain in my love; even as I have kept the
Father’s commandments, and remain in His love.”5253
Further, He says in addition: “But I have called you
friends; for all things which I have heard of my Father I have made
known unto you.”5254 Moreover, He adds to all
this: “But all these things will they do unto you for my
name’s sake, because they know not Him that sent
me.”5255 These
things then, after the former, evidently attesting Him to be not the
Father but the Son, the Lord would never have added, if He had had it
in mind, either that He was the Father, or wished Himself to be
understood as the Father, except that He might declare this, that every
man ought henceforth to consider, in seeing the image of God the Father
through the Son, that it was as if he saw the Father; since every one
believing on the Son may be exercised in the contemplation of the
likeness, so that, being accustomed to seeing the divinity in likeness,
he may go forward, and grow even to the perfect contemplation of God
the Father Almighty. And since he who has imbibed this truth into
his mind and soul, and has believed of all things that thus it shall
be, he shall even now see, as it were, in some measure the Father whom
he will see hereafter; and he may so regard it, as if he
actually held, what he knows for certain that he shall one day
hold. But if Christ Himself had been the Father, why did He
promise as future, a reward which He had already granted and
given? For that He says, “Blessed are they of
a pure heart, for they shall
see God,”5256 it is
understood to promise the contemplation and vision of the Father;
therefore He had not given this; for why should He promise if He had
already given? For He had given if He was the Father: for
He was seen, and He was touched. But since, when Christ Himself
is seen and touched, He still promises, and says that he who is of a
pure heart shall see God, He proves by this very saying that He who was
then present was not the Father, seeing that He was seen, and yet
promised that whoever should be of a pure heart should see the
Father. It was therefore not the Father, but the Son, who
promised this, because He who was the Son promised that which had yet
to be seen; and His promise would have been superfluous unless He had
been the Son. For why did He promise to the pure in heart that
they should see the Father, if already they who were then present saw
Christ as the Father? But because He was the Son, not the Father,
rightly also He was then seen as the Son, because He was the image of
God; and the Father, because He is invisible, is promised and pointed
out as to be seen by the pure in heart. Let it then be enough to
have suggested even these points against that heretic; a few words
about many things. For a field which is indeed both wide and
expansive would be laid open if we should desire to discuss that
heretic more fully; seeing that bereaved, in these two particulars, as
it were of his eyes plucked out, he is altogether overcome in the
blindness of his doctrine.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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