Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| The Word, then, visited that earth in which He was yet always present ; and saw all these evils. He takes a body of our Nature, and that of a spotless Virgin, in whose womb He makes it His own, wherein to reveal Himself, conquer death, and restore life. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
§8. The Word, then, visited that
earth in which He was yet always present ; and saw all these evils. He
takes a body of our Nature, and that of a spotless Virgin, in whose
womb He makes it His own, wherein to reveal Himself, conquer death, and
restore life.
For this purpose, then, the incorporeal and
incorruptible and immaterial Word of God comes to our realm, howbeit he
was not far from us218 before. For no part
of Creation is left void of Him: He has filled all things everywhere,
remaining present with His own Father. But He comes in condescension to
shew loving-kindness upon us, and to visit us. 2. And seeing the race
of rational creatures in the way to perish, and death reigning over
them by corruption; seeing, too, that the threat against transgression
gave a firm hold to the corruption which was upon us, and that it was
monstrous that219 before the law was fulfilled it should
fall through: seeing, once more, the unseemliness of what was come to
pass: that the things whereof He Himself was Artificer were passing
away: seeing, further, the exceeding wickedness of men, and how by
little and little they had increased it to an intolerable pitch against
themselves: and seeing, lastly, how all men were under penalty of
death: He took pity on our race, and had mercy on our infirmity, and
condescended to our corruption, and, unable to bear that death should
have the mastery—lest the creature should perish, and His
Father’s handiwork in men be spent for nought—He takes unto
Himself a body, and that of no different sort from ours. 3. For He did
not simply will to become embodied, or will merely to appear220 . For if He willed merely to appear, He was
able to effect His divine appearance by some other and higher means as
well. But He takes a body of our kind, and not merely so, but from a
spotless and stainless virgin, knowing not a man, a body clean and in
very truth pure from intercourse of men. For being Himself mighty, and
Artificer of everything, He prepares the body in the Virgin as a temple
unto Himself, and makes it His very own221
221 Cf.
Orat. iii. 33, note 5, also ib. 31, note 10. | as an
instrument, in it manifested, and in it dwelling. 4. And thus taking
from our bodies one of like nature, because all were under penalty of
the corruption of death He gave it over to death in the stead of all,
and offered it to the Father—doing this, moreover, of His
loving-kindness, to the end that, firstly, all being held to have died
in Him, the law involving the ruin of men might be undone (inasmuch as
its power was fully spent in the Lord’s body, and had no longer
holding-ground against men, his peers), and that, secondly, whereas men
had turned toward corruption, He might turn them again toward
incorruption, and quicken them from death by the appropriation222
222 Cf.
Orat. iii. 33, note 5, also ib. 31, note 10. | of His body and by the grace of the
Resurrection, banishing death from them like straw from the fire223
223 The
simile is inverted. Men are the ‘straw,’ death the
‘fire.’ cf. xliv. 7. | .E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|