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| As God made man by a word, why not restore him by a word? But (1) creation out of nothing is different from reparation of what already exists. (2) Man was there with a definite need, calling for a definite remedy. Death was ingrained in man's nature: He then must wind life closely to human nature. Therefore the Word became Incarnate that He might meet and conquer death in His usurped territory. (Simile of straw and asbestos.) PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
§44. As God made man by a word, why
not restore him by a word? But (1) creation out of nothing is different
from reparation of what already exists. (2) Man was there with a
definite need, calling for a definite remedy. Death was ingrained in
man’s nature: He then must wind life closely to human nature.
Therefore the Word became Incarnate that He might meet and conquer
death in His usurped territory. (Simile of straw and asbestos.)
But perhaps, shamed into agreeing with this, they
will choose to say that God, if He wished to reform and to save
mankind, ought to have done so by a mere fiat321
321 With
this discussion compare that upon ‘repentance’ above 7.
(esp. 7. 4). | ,
without His word taking a body, in just the same way as He did
formerly, when He produced them out of nothing. 2. To this objection of
theirs a reasonable answer would be: that formerly, nothing being in
existence at all, what was needed to make everything was a fiat and the
bare will to do so. But when man had once been made, and necessity
demanded a cure, not for things that were not, but for things that had
come to be, it was naturally consequent that the Physician and Saviour
should appear in what had come to be, in order also to cure the things
that were. For this cause, then, He has become man, and used His body
as a human instrument. 3. For if this were not the right way, how was
the Word, choosing to use an instrument, to appear? or whence was He to
take it, save from those already in being, and in need of His Godhead
by means of one like themselves? For it was not things without being
that needed salvation, so that a bare command should suffice, but man,
already in existence, was going to corruption and ruin322 . It was then natural and right that the Word
should use a human instrument and reveal Himself everywhither. 4.
Secondly, you must know this also, that the corruption which had set in
was not external to the body, but had become attached to it; and it was
required that, instead of corruption, life should cleave to it; so
that, just as death has been engendered in the body, so life may be
engendered in it also. 5. Now if death were external to the body, it
would be proper for life also to have been engendered externally to it.
But if death was wound closely to the body and was ruling over it as
though united to it, it was required that life also should be wound
closely to the body, that so the body, by putting on life in its stead,
should cast off corruption. Besides, even supposing that the Word had
come outside the body, and not in it, death would indeed have been
defeated by Him, in perfect accordance with nature, inasmuch as death
has no power against the Life; but the corruption attached to the body
would have remained in it none the less323
323 Cf.
Orat. i. 56, note 5, 65, note 3. | . 6.
For this cause the Saviour reasonably put on Him a body, in order that
the body, becoming wound closely to the Life, should no longer, as
mortal, abide in death, but, as having put on immortality, should
thenceforth rise again and remain immortal. For, once it had put on
corruption, it could not have risen again unless it had put on life.
And death likewise could not, from its very nature, appear, save in the
body. Therefore He put on a body, that He might find death in the body,
and blot it out. For how could the Lord have been proved at all to be
the Life, had He not quickened what was mortal? 7. And just as, whereas stubble is
naturally destructible by fire, supposing (firstly) a man keeps fire
away from the stubble, though it is not burned, yet the stubble
remains, for all that, merely stubble, fearing the threat of the
fire—for fire has the natural property of consuming it; while if
a man (secondly) encloses it with a quantity of asbestos, the substance
said324
324 See
above 28. 3. He appears not to have seen the substance. | to be an antidote to fire, the stubble no
longer dreads the fire, being secured by its enclosure in incombustible
matter; 8. in this very way one may say, with regard to the body and
death, that if death had been kept from the body by a mere command on
His part, it would none the less have been mortal and corruptible,
according to the nature of bodies; but, that this should not be, it put
on the incorporeal Word of God, and thus no longer fears either death
or corruption, for it has life as a garment, and corruption is done
away in it.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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