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| Heracleon's View of This Utterance of John the Baptist, and Interpretation of the Shoe of Jesus. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
23. Heracleon’s View of This Utterance of John the
Baptist, and Interpretation of the Shoe of Jesus.
But Heracleon declares the words, “There standeth
one among you,” to be equivalent to “He is already here,
and He is in the world and in men, and He is already manifest to you
all.” By this He does away with the meaning which is also
present in the words, that the Word had permeated the whole
world. For we must say to him, When is He not present, and when
is He not in the world? Does not this Gospel say, “He was
in the world, and the world was made by Him, and the world knew Him
not.” And this is why those to whom the Logos is He
“whom you know not,” do not know Him: they have never
gone out of the world, but the world does not know Him. But at
what time did He cease to be among men? Was He not in Isaiah,
when He said,4916 “The Spirit
of the Lord is upon me, because He hath anointed me,”
and4917 “I became manifest to those who sought
me not.” Let them say, too, if He was not in David when he
said, not from himself,4918 “But I was
established by Him a king in Zion
His holy hill,” and the other words spoken in the Psalms in the
person of Christ. And why should I go over the details of this
proof, truly they are hard to be numbered, when I can show quite
clearly that He was always in men? And that is enough to show
Heracleon’s interpretation of “There standeth in the midst
of you,” to be unsound, when he says it is equivalent to
“He is already here, and He is in the world and in
men.” We are disposed to agree with him when he says that
the words, “Who cometh after me,” show John to be the
forerunner of Christ, for he is in fact a kind of servant running
before his master. The words, however, “Whose shoe-latchet
I am not worthy to unloose,” receive much too simple an
interpretation when it is said that “in these words the Baptist
confesses that he is not worthy even of the least honourable
ministration to Christ.” After this interpretation he adds,
not without sense, “I am not worthy that for my sake He should
come down from His greatness and should take flesh as His footgear,
concerning which I am not able to give any explanation or description,
nor to unloose the arrangement of it.” In understanding the
world by his shoe, Heracleon shows some largeness of mind, but
immediately after he verges on impiety in declaring that all this is to
be understood of that person whom John here has in his mind. For
he considers that it is the demiurge of the world who confesses by
these words that he is a lesser person than the Christ; and this is the
height of impiety. For the Father who sent Him, He who is the God
of the living as Jesus Himself testifies, of Abraham and of Isaac and
of Jacob, and He who is greater than heaven and earth for the reason
that He is the Maker of them, He also alone is good and is greater than
He who was sent by Him. And even if, as we said,
Heracleon’s idea was a lofty one, that the whole world was the
shoe of Jesus, yet I think we ought not to agree with him. For
how can it be harmonized with such a view, that “Heaven is My
throne and the earth My footstool,” a testimony which Jesus
accepts as said of the Father?4919 “Swear
not by heaven,” He says, “for it is God’s throne, nor
by the earth, for it is the footstool of His feet.” How, if
he takes the whole world to be the shoe of Jesus, can he also accept
the text,4920 “Do not I
fill heaven and earth?” saith the Lord. It is also worth
while to enquire, whether as the Word and wisdom permeated the whole
world, and as the Father was in the Son, the words are to be understood
as above or in this way, that He who first of all was girded about with
the whole creation, in addition to the Son’s being in Him,
granted to the Saviour, as being second after Him and being God the
Word, to pervade the whole creation. To those who have it in them
to take note of the uninterrupted movement of the great heaven, how it
carries with it from East to West so great a multitude of stars, to
them most of all it will seem needful to enquire what that force is,
how great and of what nature, which is present in the whole
world. For to pronounce that force to be other than the Father
and the Son, that perhaps might be inconsistent with piety.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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