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| Defence of the Council's Phrases, “from the essence,” And “one in essence.” Objection that the phrases are not scriptural; we ought to look at the sense more than the wording; evasion of the Arians as to the phrase “of God” which is in Scripture; their evasion of all explanations but those which the Council selected, which were intended to negative the Arian formulæ; protest against their conveying any material sense. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter V.—Defence of the
Council’s Phrases, “from the essence,” And “one
in essence.” Objection that the phrases are not
scriptural; we ought to look at the sense more than the wording;
evasion of the Arians as to the phrase “of God” which is in
Scripture; their evasion of all explanations but those which the
Council selected, which were intended to negative the Arian
formulæ; protest against their conveying any material
sense.
18. Now Eusebius and his
fellows were at the former period examined at great length, and
convicted themselves, as I said before; on this they subscribed; and
after this change of mind they kept in quiet and retirement874
874 [Prolegg. ch. ii. §6 (2).] | ; but since the present party, in the fresh
arrogance of irreligion, and in dizziness about the truth, are full set
upon accusing the Council, let them tell us what are the sort of
Scriptures from which they have learned, or who is the Saint875 by whom they have been taught, that they have
heaped together the phrases, ‘out of nothing876 ,’ and ‘He was not before His
generation,’ and ‘once He was not,’ and
‘alterable,’ and ‘pre-existence,’ and ‘at
the will;’ which are their fables in mockery of the Lord. For the
blessed Paul in his Epistle to the Hebrews says, ‘By faith we
understand that the ages were framed by the Word of God, so that that
which is seen was not made of things which do appear877 .’ But nothing is common to the Word
with the ages878
878 By αἴων, age, seems to
be meant duration, or the measure of duration, before or independent of
the existence of motion, which is in measure of time. As motion, and
therefore time, are creatures, so are the ages. Considered as the
measure of duration, an age has a sort of positive existence, though
not an οὐσία or
substance, and means the same as ‘world,’ or an existing
system of things viewed apart from time and motion. Vid. Theodt. in
Hebr. i. 2. Our Lord then is the Maker of the ages thus
considered, as the Apostle also tells us, Hebr. xi. 3. and God is the
King of the ages, 1 Tim. i. 17. or is before all ages,
as being eternal, or προαιώνιος. However, sometimes the word is synonymous with eternity;
‘as time is to things which are under time, so ages to things
which are everlasting.’ Damasc. Fid. Orth. ii. 1, and
‘ages of ages’ stands for eternity; and then the
‘ages’ or measures of duration may be supposed to stand for
the ἴδεαι or ideas in
the Divine Mind, which seems to have been a Platonic or Gnostic notion.
Hence Synesius, Hymn iii. addresses the Almighty as αἰωνότοκε, parent of the ages. Hence sometimes God Himself is called
the Age, Clem. Alex. Hymn. Pæd. iii. fin. or, the Age of
ages, Pseudo-Dion. de Div. Nom. 5. p. 580. or again,
αἰ&
240·νιος. Theodoret
sums up what has been said thus: ‘Age is not any subsisting
substance, but is an interval indicative of time, now infinite, when
God is spoken of, now commensurate with creation, now with human
life.’ Hær. v. 6. If then, as Athan. says in the
text, the Word is Maker of the ages, He is independent of duration
altogether; He does not come to be in time, but is above and beyond it,
or eternal. Elsewhere he says, ‘The words addressed to the Son in
the 144th Psalm, ‘Thy kingdom is a kingdom of all ages,’
forbid any one to imagine any interval at all in which the Word did not
exist. For if every interval is measured by ages, and of all the ages
the Word is King and Maker, therefore, whereas no interval at all
exists prior to Him, it were madness to say, “There was once when
the Everlasting (αἰ&
240·νιος) was
not.” Orat. i. 12. And so Alexander; ‘Is it not
unreasonable that He who made times, and ages, and seasons, to all of
which belongs ‘was not,’ should be said not to be? for, if
so, that interval in which they say the Son was not yet begotten by the
Father, precedes that Wisdom of God which framed all
things.’ Theod. Hist. i. 4. vid. also Basil de Sp.
S. n. 14. Hilar. de Trin. xii. 34. | ; for He it is who is in existence
before the ages, by whom also the
ages came to be. And in the Shepherd879
879 Herm.
Mand. 1. vid. ad Afr. 5. | it is written
(since they allege this book also, though it is not of the Canon880
880 [Letter 39, and Prolegg. ch. iv. §4.] He calls it
elsewhere a most profitable book. Incarn. 3. | ), ‘First of all believe, that God is
one, who created all things, and arranged them, and brought all things
from nothing into being;’ but this again does not relate to the
Son, for it speaks concerning all things which came to be through Him,
from whom He is distinct; for it is not possible to reckon the Framer
of all with the things made by Him, unless a man is so beside himself
as to say that the architect also is the same as the buildings which he
rears.
Why then, when they have invented on their part
unscriptural phrases, for the purposes of irreligion, do they accuse
those who are religious in their use of them881
881 Athan.
here retorts, as it was obvious to do, the charge brought against the
Council which gave occasion for this Treatise. If the Council went
beyond Scripture in the use of the word ‘essence’ (which
however can hardly be granted), who made this necessary, but they who
had already introduced the phrases, ‘the Son was out of
nothing,’ &c., &c.? ‘Of the essence,’ and
‘one in essence,’ were directly intended to contradict and
supplant the Arian unscriptural innovations, as he says below,
§20. fin. 21. init. vid. also ad Afros. 6. de Synod.
§36, 37. He observes in like manner that the Arian ἀγένητος, though allowable as used by religious men, de Syn.
§40. was unscriptural, Orat. i. §30, 34. Also Epiph.
Hær. 76. p. 941. Basil. contr. Eunom. i. 5. Hilar.
contr. Const. 16. Ambros. Incarn. 80. | ? For
irreligiousness is utterly forbidden, though it be attempted to
disguise it with artful expressions and plausible sophisms; but
religiousness is confessed by all to be lawful, even though presented
in strange phrases882 , provided only they
are used with a religious view, and a wish to make them the expression
of religious thoughts. Now the aforesaid grovelling phrases of
Christ’s enemies have been shewn in these remarks to be both
formerly and now replete with irreligion; whereas the definition of the
Council against them, if accurately examined, will be found to be
altogether a representation of the truth, and especially if diligent
attention be paid to the occasion which gave rise to these expressions,
which was reasonable, and was as follows:—
19. The Council883 wishing to do
away with the irreligious phrases of the Arians, and to use instead the
acknowledged words of the Scriptures, that the Son is not from nothing
but ‘from God,’ and is ‘Word’ and
‘Wisdom,’ and not creature or work, but a proper offspring
from the Father, Eusebius and his fellows, led by their inveterate
heterodoxy, understood the phrase ‘from God’ as belonging
to us, as if in respect to it the Word of God differed nothing from us,
and that because it is written, ‘There is one God, from whom, all
things884 ;’ and again, ‘Old things are
passed away, behold, all things are become new, and all things are from
God885 .’ But the Fathers, perceiving their
craft and the cunning of their irreligion, were forced to express more
distinctly the sense of the words ‘from God.’ Accordingly,
they wrote ‘from the essence of God886
886 Hence
it stands in the Creed, ‘from the Father, that is, from
the essence of the Father.’ vid. Eusebius’s Letter,
infr. According to the received doctrine of the Church all
rational beings, and in one sense all beings whatever, are ‘from
God,’ over and above the fact of their creation; and of this
truth the Arians made use to deny our Lord’s proper divinity.
Athan. lays down elsewhere that nothing remains in consistence and
life, except from a participation of the Word, which is to be
considered a gift from Him, additional to that of creation, and
separable in idea from it; vid. above, §17, note 5. contr.
Gent. 42. de Incarn. 5. Man thus considered is, in his first
estate, a son of God and born of God, or, to use the term which occurs
so frequently in the Arian controversy, in the number, not only of the
creatures, but of things generate, γεννητά. This was the sense in which the Arians said that our Lord was
Son of God; whereas, as Athan. says, ‘things originate, being
works, cannot be called generate, except so far as, after their
making, they partake of the begotten Son, and are therefore said to
have been generated also; not at all in their own nature, but because
of their participation of the Son in the Spirit.’ Orat. i.
56. The question then was, as to the distinction of the
Son’s divine generation over that of holy men; and the Catholics
answered that He was ἐξ
οὐσίας, from
the essence of God; not by participation of grace, not by resemblance,
not in a limited sense, but really and simply, and therefore by an
internal divine act. vid. below, §22. and infr. §31.
[The above note has been modified so as to eliminate the erroneous
identification of γεννητὸς and γενητός.] | ,’ in order that ‘from God’
might not be considered common and equal in the Son and in things
originate, but that all others might be acknowledged as creatures, and
the Word alone as from the Father. For though all things be said to be
from God, yet this is not in the sense in which the Son is from Him;
for as to the creatures, ‘of God’ is said of them on this
account, in that they exist not at random or spontaneously, nor come to
be by chance887 , according to those philosophers who
refer them to the combination of atoms, and to elements of similar
structure,—nor as certain heretics speak of a distinct
Framer,—nor as others again say that the constitution of all things is from certain
Angels;—but in that (whereas God is), it was by Him that all
things were brought into being, not being before, through His Word; but
as to the Word, since He is not a creature, He alone is both called and
is ‘from the Father;’ and it is significant of this sense
to say that the Son is ‘from the essence of the Father,’
for to nothing originate does this attach. In truth, when Paul says
that ‘all things are from God,’ he immediately adds,
‘and one Lord Jesus Christ, through whom all things888 ,’ in order to shew all men, that the
Son is other than all these things which came to be from God (for the
things which came to be from God, came to be through His Son); and that
he had used his foregoing words with reference to the world as framed
by God889
889 When
characteristic attributes and prerogatives are ascribed to God, or to
the Father, this is done only to the exclusion of creatures, or of
false gods, not to the exclusion of His Son who is implied in the
mention of Himself. Thus when God is called only wise, or the Father
the only God, or God is said to be unoriginate, ἀγένητος, this is not in contrast to the Son, but to all things which are
distinct from God. vid. Orat. iii. 8. Naz. Orat. 30, 13.
Cyril. Thesaur. p 142. ‘The words “one” and
“only” ascribed to God in Scripture,’ says S. Basil,
‘are not used in contrast to the Son or the Holy Spirit, but with
reference to those who are not God, and falsely called so.’
Ep. 8. n. 3. On the other hand, when the Father is mentioned,
the other Divine Persons are implied in Him, ‘The Blessed and
Holy Trinity,’ says S. Athan. ‘is indivisible and one in
itself; and when the Father is mentioned, His Word is added, and the
Spirit in the Son; and if the Son is named, in the Son is the Father,
and the Spirit is not external to the Word.’ ad Serap. i.
14. | , and not as if all things were from the
Father as the Son is. For neither are other things as the Son, nor is
the Word one among others, for He is Lord and Framer of all; and on
this account did the Holy Council declare expressly that He was of the
essence890
890 Vid.
also ad Afros. 4. Again, ‘“I am,” τὸ ὂν, is really proper to God and is a whole, bounded or mutilated
neither by aught before Him, nor after Him, for He neither was, nor
shall be.’ Naz. Orat. 30. 18 fin. Also Cyril Dial.
i. p. 392. Damasc. Fid. Orth. i. 9. and the Semiarians at
Ancyra, Epiph. Hær. 73. 12 init. By the
‘essence,’ however, or, ‘substance’ of God, the
Council did not mean any thing distinct from God, vid. note 3
infr. but God Himself viewed in His self-existing nature (vid.
Tert. in Hermog, 3.), nay, it expressly meant to negative the
contrary notion of the Arians, that our Lord was from something
distinct from God, and in consequence of created substance. Moreover
the term expresses the idea of God positively, in
contradistinction to negative epithets, such as infinite, immense,
eternal, &c. Damasc. Fid. Orthod. i. 4. and as little
implies any thing distinct from God as those epithets do. | of the Father, that we might believe the Word
to be other than the nature of things originate, being alone truly from
God; and that no subterfuge should be left open to the irreligious.
This then was the reason why the Council wrote ‘of the
essence.’
20. Again, when the Bishops said that the Word
must be described as the True Power and Image of the Father, in all
things exact891 and like the Father, and as
unalterable, and as always, and as in Him without division (for never
was the Word not, but He was always, existing everlastingly with the
Father, as the radiance of light), Eusebius and his fellows endured
indeed, as not daring to contradict, being put to shame by the
arguments which were urged against them; but withal they were caught
whispering to each other and winking with their eyes, that
‘like,’ and ‘always,’ and ‘power,’
and ‘in Him,’ were, as before, common to us and the Son,
and that it was no difficulty to agree to these. As to
‘like,’ they said that it is written of us, ‘Man is
the image and glory of God892 :’
‘always,’ that it was written, ‘For we which live are
alway893 :’ ‘in Him,’ ‘In Him
we live and move and have our being894 :’
‘unalterable,’ that it is written, ‘Nothing shall
separate us from the love of Christ895 :’ as to
‘power,’ that the caterpillar and the locust are called
‘power’ and ‘great power896 ,’ and that it is often said of the
people, for instance, ‘All the power of the Lord came out of the
land of Egypt897 :’ and there are others also,
heavenly ones, for Scripture says, ‘The Lord of powers is with
us, the God of Jacob is our refuge898 .’ Indeed
Asterius, by title the sophist, had said the like in writing, having
learned it from them, and before him Arius899
899 vid.
supr. §8, note 3. |
having learned it also, as has been said. But the Bishops discerning in
this too their dissimulation, and whereas it is written, ‘Deceit
is in the heart of the irreligious that imagine evil900 ,’ were again compelled on their part to
collect the sense of the Scriptures, and to re-say and re-write what
they had said before, more distinctly still, namely, that the Son is
‘one in essence901
901 vid.
ad Afros. 5, 6. ad Serap. ii. 5. S. Ambrose tells us,
that a Letter written by Eusebius of Nicomedia, in which he said,
‘If we call Him true Son of the Father and uncreate, then are we
granting that He is one in essence, ὁμοούσιον,’ determined the Council on the adoption of the term.
de Fid. iii. n. 125. He had disclaimed ‘of the
essence,’ in his Letter to Paulinus. Theod. Hist. i. 4.
Arius, however, had disclaimed ὁμοούσιον already, Epiph. Hær. 69. 7. It was a word of old
usage in the Church, as Eusebius of Cæsarea confesses in his
Letter, infr. Tertullian in Prax. 13 fin. has the translation
‘unius substantiæ:’ (vid. Lucifer de non Parc.
p. 218.) as he has ‘de substantia Patris,’ in Prax.
4. and Origen perhaps used the word, vid. Pamph. Apol. 5. and
Theognostus and the two Dionysii, infr. §25, 26. And before
them Clement had spoken of the ἕνωσις τῆς
μοναδικῆς
οὐσίας,
‘the union of the single essence,’ vid. Le Quien in Damasc.
Fid. Orth. i. 8. Novatian too has ‘per substantiæ
communionem,’ de Trinit. 31. | ’ with the
Father: by way of signifying, that the Son was from the Father, and not
merely like, but the same in likeness902
902 The
Arians allowed that our Lord was like and the image of the Father, but
in the sense in which a picture is like the original, differing from it
in substance and in fact. In this sense they even allowed the strong
word ἀπαράλλακτος
unvarying [or rather
exact] image, vid. beginning of §20. which had been used by
the Catholics (vid. Alexander, ap. Theod. Hist. i. 3. p. 740.)
as by the Semiarians afterwards, who even added the words κατ᾽
οὐσίαν, or
‘according to substance.’ Even this strong phrase,
however, κατ᾽
οὐσίαν
ἀπαράλλακτος
εἰκὼν, or
ἀπαραλλάκτως
ὅμοιος, did not
appear to the Council an adequate safeguard of the doctrine. Athan.
notices de Syn. that ‘like’ applies to qualities
rather than to essence, §53. Also Basil. Ep. 8. n. 3.
‘while in itself,’ says the same Father, ‘it is
frequently used of faint similitudes and falling very far short of the
original.’ Ep. 9. n. 3. Accordingly, the Council
determined on the word ὁμοούσιον as implying, as the text expresses it, ‘the
same in likeness,’ ταὐτὸν τῇ
ὁμοιώσει, that the likeness might not be analogical. vid. the passage
about gold and brass, §23 below, Cyril in Joan. 1. iii. c. v. p.
302. [See below de Syn. 15, note 2.] | , and of shewing that the Son’s likeness
and unalterableness was different from such copy of the same as is
ascribed to us, which we acquire from virtue on the ground of
observance of the commandments. For bodies which are like each other
may be separated and become at distances from each other, as are human
sons relatively to their parents (as it is written concerning Adam and
Seth, who was begotten of him that he was like him after his own
pattern903 ); but since the generation of the Son from
the Father is not according to the nature of men, and not only like,
but also inseparable from the essence of the Father, and He and the
Father are one, as He has said Himself, and the Word is ever in the
Father and the Father in the Word, as the radiance stands towards the
light (for this the phrase itself indicates), therefore the Council, as
understanding this, suitably wrote ‘one in essence,’ that
they might both defeat the perverseness of the heretics, and shew that
the Word was other than originated things. For, after thus writing,
they at once added, ‘But they who say that the Son of God is from
nothing, or created, or alterable, or a work, or from other essence,
these the Holy Catholic Church anathematizes904
904 vid.
Euseb.’s Letter, supr. | .’ And by saying this, they shewed
clearly that ‘of the essence,’ and ‘one in
essence,’ are destructive of those catchwords of irreligion, such
as ‘created,’ and ‘work,’ and
‘originated,’ and ‘alterable,’ and ‘He
was not before His generation.’ And he who holds these,
contradicts the Council; but he who does not hold with Arius, must
needs hold and intend the decisions of the Council, suitably regarding
them to signify the relation of the radiance to the light, and from
thence gaining the illustration of the truth.
21. Therefore if they, as the others, make an
excuse that the terms are strange, let them consider the sense in which
the Council so wrote, and anathematize what the Council anathematized;
and then if they can, let them find fault with the expressions. But I
well know that, if they hold the sense of the Council, they will fully
accept the terms in which it is conveyed; whereas if it be the sense
which they wish to complain of, all must see that it is idle in them to
discuss the wording, when they are but seeking handles for irreligion.
This then was the reason of these expressions; but if they still
complain that such are not scriptural, that very complaint is a reason
why they should be cast out, as talking idly and disordered in mind.
And let them blame themselves in this matter, for they set the example,
beginning their war against God with words not in Scripture. However,
if a person is interested in the question, let him know, that, even if
the expressions are not in so many words in the Scriptures, yet, as was
said before, they contain the sense of the Scriptures, and expressing
it, they convey it to those who have their hearing unimpaired for
religious doctrine. Now this circumstance it is for thee to consider,
and for those ill-instructed men to give ear to. It has been shewn
above, and must be believed as true, that the Word is from the Father,
and the only Offspring905
905 γέννημα, offspring; this word is of very frequent occurrence in Athan. He
speaks of it, Orat. iv. 3. as virtually Scriptural. Yet Basil,
contr. Eunom. ii. 6–8. explicitly disavows the word, as an
unscriptural invention of Eunomius. ‘That the Father begat we are
taught in many places: that the Son is an offspring we never heard up
to this day, for Scripture says, “unto us a child is born,
unto us a son is given.”’ c. 7. He goes on to say
that ‘it is fearful to give Him names of our own to whom God has
given a name which is above every name;’ and observes that
offspring is not the word which even a human father would apply to his
son, as for instance we read, ‘Child, (τέκνον,) go into the vineyard,’ and ‘Who art thou, my
son?’ moreover that fruits of the earth are called offspring
(‘I will not drink of the offspring of this vine’), rarely
animated things, except indeed in such instances as, ‘O
generation (offspring) of vipers.’ Nyssen defends his brother,
contr. Eunom. Orat. iii. p 105. In the Arian formula ‘an
offspring, but not as one of the offsprings,’ it is
synonymous with ‘work’ or ‘creature.’ On the
other hand Epiphanius uses it, e.g. Hær. 76. n. 8. and Naz.
Orat. 29. n. 2. Eusebius, Demonstr. Ev. iv. 2.
Pseudo-Basil. adv. Eunom. iv. p. 280. fin. | proper to Him and
natural. For whence may one conceive the Son to be, who is the Wisdom
and the Word, in whom all things came to be, but from God Himself?
However, the Scriptures also teach us this, since the Father says by
David, ‘My heart uttered a good Word906 ,’ and, ‘From the womb before the
morning star I begat Thee907 ;’ and the Son
signifies to the Jews about Himself, ‘If God were your Father, ye
would love Me; for I proceeded forth from the Father908 .’ And again; ‘Not that anyone has
seen the Father, save He which is from God, He hath seen the Father909 .’ And moreover, ‘I and My Father
are one,’ and, ‘I in the Father and the Father in Me910 ,’ is equivalent to saying, ‘I am
from the Father, and inseparable from Him.’ And John in saying,
‘The Only-begotten Son which is in the bosom of the Father, He
hath declared Him,911 ’ spoke of what
He had learned from the Saviour. Besides, what else does ‘in the
bosom’ intimate, but the Son’s genuine generation from the
Father?
22. If then any man conceives God to be compound,
as accident912
912 συμβεβηκός. Cf. Orat. iv. 2. also Orat. i. 36. The text
embodies the common doctrine of the Fathers. Athenagoras, however,
speaks of God’s goodness as an accident, ‘as colour to the
body,’ ‘as flame is ruddy and the sky blue,’
Legat. 24. This, however is but a verbal difference, for shortly
before he speaks of His being, τὸ ὄντως
ὂν, and His unity of nature,
τὸ
μονοφυὲς, as in the number of ἐπισυμβεβηκότα
αὐτῶ. Eusebius uses the
word συμβεβηκὸς
in the same way [but see Orat. iv. 2, note 8],
Demonstr. Evang. iv. 3. And hence S. Cyril, in controversy with
the Arians, is led by the course of their objections to observe,
‘There are cogent reasons for considering these things as
accidents συμβεβηκότα
in God, though they be not.’ Thesaur. p.
263. vid. the following note. | is in essence, or to have any external envelopement913
913 περιβολὴ, and so de Syn. §34. which is very much the
same passage. Some Fathers, however, seem to say the reverse. E.g.
Nazianzen says that ‘neither the immateriality of God nor
ingenerateness, present to us His essence.’ Orat. 28. 9.
And S. Augustine, arguing on the word ingenitus, says, that ‘not
every thing which is said to be in God is said according to
essence.’ de Trin. v. 6. And hence, while Athan. in the
text denies that there are qualities or the like belonging to
Him, περὶ
αὐτὸν, it is still
common in the Fathers to speak of qualities, as in the passage of S.
Gregory just cited, in which the words περὶ θεὸν occur. There is no difficulty in reconciling these
statements, though it would require more words than could be given to
it here. Petavius has treated the subject fully in his work de
Deo. i. 7–11. and especially ii. 3. When the Fathers say that
there is no difference between the divine ‘proprietates’
and essence, they speak of the fact, considering the Almighty as He is;
when they affirm a difference, they speak of Him as contemplated by us,
who are unable to grasp the idea of Him as one and simple, but view His
Divine Nature as if in projection (if such a word may be used),
and thus divided into substance and quality as man may be divided into
genus and difference. | , and to be encompassed, or as if there is
aught about Him which completes the essence, so that when we say
‘God,’ or name ‘Father,’ we do not signify the
invisible and incomprehensible essence, but something about it, then
let them complain of the Council’s stating that the Son was from
the essence of God; but let them reflect, that in thus considering they
utter two blasphemies; for they make God corporeal, and they falsely
say that the Lord is not Son of the very Father, but of what is about
Him. But if God be simple, as He is, it follows that in saying
‘God’ and naming ‘Father,’ we name nothing as
if about Him, but signify his essence itself. For though to comprehend
what the essence of God is be impossible, yet if we only understand
that God is, and if Scripture indicates Him by means of these titles,
we, with the intention of indicating Him and none else, call Him God
and Father and Lord. When then He says, ‘I am that I am,’
and ‘I am the Lord God914 ,’ or when
Scripture says, ‘God,’ we understand nothing else by it but
the intimation of His incomprehensible essence Itself, and that He Is,
who is spoken of915
915 In like
manner de Synod. §34. Also Basil, ‘The essence is not
any one of things which do not attach, but is the very being of
God.’ contr. Eun. i. 10 fin. ‘The nature of God is
no other than Himself, for He is simple and uncompounded.’ Cyril
Thesaur. p. 59. ‘When we say the power of the Father, we
say nothing else than the essence of the Father.’ August. de
Trin. vii. 6. And so Numenius in Eusebius, ‘Let no one
deride, if I say that the name of the Immaterial is essence and
being.’ Præp. Evang. xi. 10. | . Therefore let no one
be startled on hearing that the Son of God is from the Essence of the
Father; but rather let him accept the explanation of the Fathers, who
in more explicit but equivalent language have for ‘from
God’ written ‘of the essence.’ For they considered it
the same thing to say that the Word was ‘of God’ and
‘of the essence of God,’ since the word ‘God,’
as I have already said, signifies nothing but the essence of Him Who
Is. If then the Word is not in such sense from God, as a son, genuine
and natural, from a father, but only as creatures because they are
framed, and as ‘all things are from God,’ then neither is
He from the essence of the Father, nor is the Son again Son according
to essence, but in consequence of virtue, as we who are called sons by
grace. But if He only is from God, as a genuine Son, as He is, then the
Son may reasonably be called from the essence of God.
23. Again, the illustration of the Light and the
Radiance has this meaning. For the Saints have not said that the Word
was related to God as fire kindled from the heat of the sun, which is
commonly put out again, for this is an external work and a creature of
its author, but they all preach of Him as Radiance916
916 Athan.’s ordinary illustration is, as here, not from
‘fire,’ but from ‘radiance,’ ἀπαύγασμα, after S. Paul [i.e. Hebrews] and the Author of the Book of
Wisdom, meaning by radiance the light which a light diffuses by means
of the atmosphere. On the other hand Arius in his letter to Alexander,
Epiph. Hær. 69. 7. speaks against the doctrine of Hieracas
that the Son was from the Father as a light from a light or as a lamp
divided into two, which after all was Arian doctrine. Athanasius refers
to fire, Orat. iv. §2 and 10, but still to fire and its
radiance. However we find the illustration of fire from fire, Justin.
Tryph. 61. Tatian contr. Græc. 5. At this early day
the illustration of radiance might have a Sabellian bearing, as that of
fire in Athan.’s had an Arian. Hence Justin protests against
those who considered the Son as ‘like the sun’s light in
the heaven,’ which ‘when it sets, goes away with it,’
whereas it is as ‘fire kindled from fire.’ Tryph.
128. Athenagoras, however, like Athanasius, says ‘as light from
fire,’ using also the word ἀπό&
207·ῥοια, effluence:
vid. also Orig. Periarch. i. 2. n. 4. Tertull. Ap. 21.
Theognostus, quoted infr. §25. | ,
thereby to signify His being from the essence, proper and indivisible,
and His oneness with the Father. This also will secure His true
unchangableness and immutability; for how can these be His, unless He
be proper Offspring of the Father’s essence? for this too must be
taken to confirm His identity with His own Father. Our explanation then
having so religious an aspect, Christ’s enemies should not be
startled at the ‘One in essence,’ either, since this term
also has a sound sense and good reasons. Indeed, if we say that the
Word is from the essence of God (for after what has been said this must
be a phrase admitted by them), what does this mean but the truth and
eternity of the essence from which He is begotten? for it is not
different in kind, lest it be combined with the essence of God as
something foreign and unlike it. Nor is He like only outwardly, lest He
seem in some respect or wholly to be other in essence, as brass shines
like gold and silver like tin. For these are foreign and of other
nature, are separated off from each other in nature and virtues, nor is
brass proper to gold, nor is the pigeon born from the dove917 ; but though they are considered like, yet they
differ in essence. If then it be thus with the Son, let Him be a
creature as we are, and not One in essence; but if the Son is Word,
Wisdom, Image of the Father, Radiance, He must in all reason be One in
essence. For unless it be proved that He is not from God, but an
instrument different in nature and different in essence, surely the
Council was sound in its doctrine and correct in its decree918
918 As
‘of the essence’ declared that our Lord was
uncreate, so ‘one in essence’ declared that He was
equal with the Father; no term derived from
‘likeness,’ even ‘like in essence’ answering
for this purpose, for such phrases might all be understood of
resemblance or representation. vid. §20, notes 8,
9. | .
24. Further, let every corporeal reference be
banished on this subject; and transcending every imagination of sense,
let us, with pure understanding and with mind alone, apprehend the
genuine relation of son to father, and the Word’s proper relation
towards God, and the unvarying likeness of the radiance towards the
light: for as the words ‘Offspring’ and ‘Son’
bear, and are meant to bear, no human sense, but one suitable to God,
in like manner when we hear the phrase ‘one in essence,’
let us not fall upon human senses, and imagine partitions and divisions
of the Godhead, but as having our thoughts directed to things
immaterial, let us preserve undivided the oneness of nature and the
identity of light; for this is proper to a son as regards a father, and
in this is shewn that God is truly Father of the Word. Here again, the
illustration of light and its radiance is in point919
919 Athan.
has just used the illustration of radiance in reference to ‘of
the essence:’ and now he says that it equally illustrates
‘one in essence;’ the light diffused from the sun being at
once contemporaneous and homogeneous with its original. | .
Who will presume to say that the radiance is unlike and foreign to the
sun? rather who, thus considering the radiance relatively to the sun,
and the identity of the light, would not say with confidence,
‘Truly the light and the radiance are one, and the one is
manifested in the other, and the radiance is in the sun, so that whoso
sees this, sees that also?’ but such a oneness and natural
property, what should it be named by those who believe and see aright,
but Offspring one in essence? and God’s Offspring what should we
fittingly and suitably consider, but Word, and Wisdom, and Power? which
it were a sin to say was foreign to the Father, or a crime even to
imagine as other than with Him everlastingly. For by this Offspring the
Father made all things, and extended His Providence unto all things; by
Him He exercises His love to man, and thus He and the Father are one,
as has been said; unless indeed these perverse men make a fresh
attempt, and say that the essence of the Word is not the same as the
Light which is in Him from the Father, as if the Light in the Son were
one with the Father, but He Himself foreign in essence as being a
creature. Yet this is simply the belief of Caiaphas and the Samosatene,
which the Church cast out, but these now are disguising; and by this
they fell from the truth, and were declared to be heretics. For if He
partakes in fulness the light from the Father, why is He not rather
that which others partake920
920 Vid.
§10 init. note 4. | , that there be no
medium introduced between Him and the Father? Otherwise, it is no
longer clear that all things were generated by the Son, but by Him, of
whom He too partakes921
921 The
point in which perhaps all the ancient heresies concerning our
Lord’s divine nature agreed, was in considering His different
titles to be those of different beings or subjects, or not really and
properly to belong to one and the same person; so that the Word was not
the Son, or the Radiance not the Word, or our Lord was the Son, but
only improperly the Word, not the true Word, Wisdom, or Radiance. Paul
of Samosata, Sabellius [?], and Arius, agreed in considering that the
Son was a creature, and that He was called, made after, or inhabited by
the impersonal attribute called the Word or Wisdom. When the Word or
Wisdom was held to be personal, it became the doctrine of
Nestorius. | . And if this is the
Word, the Wisdom of the Father, in whom the Father is revealed and
known, and frames the world, and without whom the Father doth nothing,
evidently He it is who is from the Father: for all things originated
partake of Him, as partaking of the Holy Ghost. And being such, He
cannot be from nothing, nor a creature at all, but rather a proper
Offspring from the Father, as the radiance from light.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|