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| In Fine, Notwithstanding the Said Heretics Have Gathered the Origin of Their Error from Consideration of What is Written: Although We Call Christ God, and the Father God, Still Scripture Does Not Set Forth Two Gods, Any More Than Two Lords or Two Teachers. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XXX.
Argument.—In Fine, Notwithstanding the Said Heretics Have
Gathered the Origin of Their Error from Consideration of What is
Written:5279
Although We Call Christ God, and the Father God, Still Scripture Does
Not Set Forth Two Gods, Any More Than Two Lords or Two
Teachers.
And now, indeed, concerning the Father, and the Son, and
the Holy Spirit, let it be sufficient to have briefly said thus much,
and to have laid down these points concisely, without carrying them out
in a lengthened argument. For they could be presented more
diffusely and continued in a more expanded disputation, since the whole
of the Old and New Testaments
might be adduced in testimony that thus the true faith stands.
But because heretics, ever struggling against the truth, are accustomed
to prolong the controversy of pure tradition and Catholic faith, being
offended against Christ; because He is, moreover, asserted to be God by
the Scriptures also, and this is believed to be so by us; we must
rightly—that every heretical calumny may be removed from our
faith—contend, concerning the fact that Christ is God also, in
such a way as that it may not militate against the truth of Scripture;
nor yet against our faith, how there is declared to be one God by the
Scriptures, and how it is held and believed by us. For as
well they who say that Jesus Christ Himself is God the Father, as
moreover they who would have Him to be only man, have gathered
thence5280
5280
Scil. from Scripture. | the sources
and reasons of their error and perversity; because when they perceived
that it was written5281 that “God is one,” they
thought that they could not otherwise hold such an opinion than by
supposing that it must be believed either that Christ was man only, or
really God the Father. And they were accustomed in such a way to
connect their sophistries as to endeavour to justify their own
error. And thus they who say that Jesus Christ is the Father
argue as follows:—If God is one, and Christ is God, Christ is the
Father, since God is one. If Christ be not the Father, because
Christ is God the Son, there appear to be two Gods introduced, contrary
to the Scriptures. And they who contend that Christ is man only,
conclude on the other hand thus:—If the Father is one, and the
Son another, but the Father is God and Christ is God, then there is not
one God, but two Gods are at once introduced, the Father and the Son;
and if God is one, by consequence Christ must be a man, so that rightly
the Father may be one God. Thus indeed the Lord is, as it were,
crucified between two thieves,5282
5282
[“Non semper pendebit inter latrones Christus:
aliquando resurget Crucifixa Veritas.”—Sebastian Castalio.] | even as He was formerly placed; and
thus from either side He receives the sacrilegious reproaches of such
heretics as these. But neither the Holy Scriptures nor we suggest
to them the reasons of their perdition and blindness, if they either
will not, or cannot, see what is evidently written in the midst of the
divine documents. For we both know, and read, and believe, and
maintain that God is one, who made the heaven as well as the earth,
since we neither know any other, nor shall we at any time know such,
seeing that there is none. “I,” says He, “am
God, and there is none beside me, righteous and a
Saviour.”5283
And in another place: “I am the first and the last, and
beside me there is no God who is as I.”5284 And, “Who hath meted
out heaven with a span, and the earth with a handful? Who has
suspended the mountains in a balance, and the woods on
scales?”5285
And Hezekiah: “That all may know that Thou art God
alone.”5286
Moreover, the Lord Himself: “Why askest thou me concerning
that which is good? God alone is good.”5287 Moreover, the Apostle Paul
says: “Who only hath immortality, and dwelleth in the light
that no man can approach unto, whom no man hath seen, nor can
see.”5288 And
in another place: “But a mediator is not a mediator of one,
but God is one.”5289 But even as we hold, and
read, and believe this, thus we ought to pass over no portion of the
heavenly Scriptures, since indeed also we ought by no means to reject
those marks of Christ’s divinity which are laid down in the
Scriptures, that we may not, by corrupting the authority of the
Scriptures, be held to have corrupted the integrity of our holy
faith. And let us therefore believe this, since it is most
faithful that Jesus Christ the Son of God is our Lord and God; because
“in the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and
God was the Word. The same was in the beginning with
God.”5290 And,
“The Word was made flesh, and dwelt in us.”5291 And,
“My Lord and my God.”5292 And, “Whose are the
fathers, and of whom according to the flesh Christ came, who is over
all, God blessed for evermore.”5293 What, then, shall we say?
Does Scripture set before us two Gods? How, then, does it say
that “God is one?” Or is not Christ God also?
How, then, is it said to Christ, “My Lord and my
God?” Unless, therefore, we hold all this with fitting
veneration and lawful argument, we shall reasonably be thought to have
furnished a scandal to the heretics, not assuredly by the fault of the
heavenly Scriptures, which never deceive; but by the presumption of
human error, whereby they have chosen to be heretics. And in the
first place, we must turn the attack against them who undertake to make
against us the charge of saying that there are two Gods. It is
written, and they cannot deny it, that “there is one
Lord.”5294 What,
then, do they think of Christ?—that He is Lord, or that He is not
Lord at all? But they do not doubt absolutely that He is Lord;
therefore, if their reasoning be true, here are already two
Lords. How, then, is it true according to the Scriptures, there
is one Lord? And Christ is called the “one
Master.”5295
Nevertheless we read that the Apostle Paul also is a master.5296 Then,
according to this, our Master is not one, for from these things we
conclude that there are two masters. How, then, according to the
Scriptures, is “one our Master, even Christ?” In the
Scriptures there is one “called good, even God;” but in the
same Scriptures Christ is also asserted to be good. There is not,
then, if they rightly conclude, one good, but even two good. How,
then, according to the scriptural faith, is there said to be only one
good? But if they do not think that it can by any means interfere
with the truth that there is one Lord, that Christ also is Lord, nor
with the truth that one is our Master, that Paul also is our master, or
with the truth that one is good, that Christ also is called good; on
the same reasoning, let them understand that, from the fact that God is
one, no obstruction arises to the truth that Christ also is declared to
be God.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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