§3. By ‘all things’ is
meant the redemptive attributes and power of Christ.
Thus, then, we may understand all things to have
been delivered to the Saviour, and, if it be necessary to follow up
understanding by explanation, that hath been delivered unto Him which
He did not previously possess. For He was not man previously, but
became man for the sake of saving man. And the Word was not in the
beginning flesh, but has been made flesh subsequently (cf. Joh. i. 1 sqq.), in which Flesh, as the Apostle
says, He reconciled the enmity which was against us (Col. i. 20, ii. 14, Eph. ii. 15, 16) and destroyed the law of the
commandments in ordinances, that He might make the two into one new
man, making peace, and reconcile both in one body to the Father. That,
however, which the Father has, belongs also to the Son, as also He says
in John, ‘All things whatsoever the Father hath are Mine’
(Joh. xvi. 15), expressions which could not be
improved. For when He became that which He was not, ‘all things
were delivered’ to Him. But when He desires to declare His unity
with the Father, He teaches it without any reserve, saying: ‘All
things whatsoever the Father hath are Mine.’ And one cannot but
admire the exactness of the language. For He has not said ‘all
things whatsoever the Father hath, He hath given to Me,’ lest He
should appear at one time not to have possessed these things; but
‘are Mine.’ For these things, being in the Father’s
power, are equally in that of the Son. But we must in turn examine what
things ‘the Father hath.’ For if Creation is meant, the
Father had nothing before creation, and proves to have received
something additional from Creation; but far be it to think this. For
just as He exists before creation, so before creation also He has what
He has, which we also believe to belong to the Son (Joh. xvi. 15). For if the Son is in the Father, then
all things that the Father has belong to the Son. So this expression is
subversive of the perversity of the heterodox in saying that ‘if
all things have been delivered to the Son, then the Father has ceased
to have power over what is delivered, having appointed the Son in His
place. For, in fact, the Father judgeth none, but hath given all
judgment to the Son’ (Joh. v. 22). But ‘let the mouth of them that
speak wickedness be stopped’ (Ps. lxiii. 11), (for although He has given all
judgment to the Son, He is not, therefore, stripped of lordship: nor,
because it is said that all things are delivered by the Father to the
Son, is He any the less over all), separating as they clearly do the
Only-begotten from God, Who is by nature inseparable from Him, even though in their
madness they separate Him by their words, not perceiving, the impious
men, that the Light can never be separated from the sun, in which it
resides by nature. For one must use a poor simile drawn from tangible
and familiar objects to put our idea into words, since it is over bold
to intrude upon the incomprehensible nature [of God].
E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH