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| Texts Explained; Seventhly, John xiv. 10. Introduction. The doctrine of the coinherence. The Father and the Son Each whole and perfect God. They are in Each Other, because their Essence is One and the Same. They are Each Perfect and have One Essence, because the Second Person is the Son of the First. Asterius's evasive explanation of the text under review; refuted. Since the Son has all that the Father has, He is His Image; and the Father is the One God, because the Son is in the Father. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Discourse
III.
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Chapter
XXIII.—Texts Explained;
Seventhly, John xiv. 10
Introduction. The doctrine of the coinherence. The Father and the
Son Each whole and perfect God. They are in Each Other, because their
Essence is One and the Same. They are Each Perfect and have One
Essence, because the Second Person is the Son of the First.
Asterius’s evasive explanation of the text under review; refuted.
Since the Son has all that the Father has, He is His Image; and the
Father is the One God, because the Son is in the Father.
1. The Ario-maniacs, as
it appears, having once made up their minds to transgress and revolt
from the Truth, are strenuous in appropriating the words of Scripture,
‘When the impious cometh into a depth of evils, he despiseth2786 ;’ for refutation does not stop them,
nor perplexity abash them; but, as having ‘a whore’s
forehead,’ they ‘refuse to be ashamed2787 ’ before all men in their irreligion.
For whereas the passages which they alleged, ‘The Lord created
me2788 ,’ and ‘Made better than the
Angels2789 ,’ and ‘First-born2790 ,’ and ‘Faithful to Him that made
Him2791 ’ have a right sense2792 , and inculcate religiousness towards Christ,
so it is that these men still, as if bedewed with the serpent’s
poison, not seeing what they ought to see, nor understanding what they
read, as if in vomit from the depth of their irreligious heart, have
next proceeded to disparage our Lord’s words, ‘I in the
Father and the Father in Me2793 ;’ saying,
‘How can the One be contained in the Other and the Other in the
One?’ or ‘How at all can the Father who is the greater be
contained in the Son who is the less?’ or ‘What wonder, if
the Son is in the Father,’ considering it is written even of us,
‘In Him we live and move and have our being2794
2794 Acts xvii. 28. Vid.
supr. ii. 41, note 11. The doctrine of the περιχώρησις, which this objection introduces, is the test of orthodoxy
opposed to Arianism. Cf. de Syn. 15, n. 4. This is seen clearly
in the case of Eusebius, whose language approaches to Catholic more
nearly than Arians in general. After all his strong assertions, the
question recurs, is our Lord a distinct being from God, as we are, or
not? he answers in the affirmative, vid. supr. p. 75, n. 7,
whereas we believe that He is literally and numerically one with the
Father, and therefore His Person dwells in the Father’s Person by
an ineffable union. And hence the language of Dionysius [of Rome]
supr. de Decr. 26. ‘the Holy Ghost must repose and
habitate in God,’ ἐμφιλοχωρεῖν
τῷ θεῷ καὶ
ἐνδιαιτᾶσθαι. And hence the strong figure of S. Jerome (in which he is
followed by S. Cyril, Thesaur. p. 51), ‘Filius locus est
Patris, sicut et Pater locus est Filii.’ in Ezek. iii. 12. So Athan.
contrasts the creatures who are ἐν
μεμερισμένοις
τόποις and the
Son. Serap. iii. 4. Cf. even in the Macrostich Creed, language
of this character, viz. ‘All the Father embosoming the Son, and
all the Son hanging and adhering to the Father, and alone resting on
the Father’s breast continually.’ De Syn. 26 (7),
where vid. note 3. | ?’ And this state of mind is consistent
with their perverseness, who think God to be material, and understand
not what is ‘True
Father’ and ‘True Son,’ nor ‘Light
Invisible’ and ‘Eternal,’ and Its ‘Radiance
Invisible,’ nor ‘Invisible Subsistence,’ and
‘Immaterial Expression’ and ‘Immaterial Image.’
For did they know, they would not dishonour and ridicule the Lord of
glory, nor interpreting things immaterial after a material manner,
pervert good words. It were sufficient indeed, on hearing only words
which are the Lord’s, at once to believe, since the faith of
simplicity is better than an elaborate process of persuasion; but since
they have endeavoured to profane even this passage to their own heresy,
it becomes necessary to expose their perverseness and to shew the mind
of the truth, at least for the security of the faithful. For when it is
said, ‘I in the Father and the Father in Me,’ They are not
therefore, as these suppose, discharged into Each Other, filling the
One the Other, as in the case of empty vessels, so that the Son fills
the emptiness of the Father and the Father that of the Son2795
2795 This
is not inconsistent with S. Jerome as quoted in the foregoing note.
Athan. merely means that such illustrations cannot be taken literally,
as if spoken of natural subjects. The Father is the τόπος or locus of the Son, because when we contemplate the Son in His
fulness as ὅλος
θεός, we merely view the
Father as that Person in whom God the Son is; our mind abstracts His
Essence which is the Son for the moment from Him, and regards Him
merely as Father. Thus in Illud. Omn. 4, supr. p.
89. It is, however, but an operation of the mind, and not a real
emptying of Godhead from the Father, if such words may be used. Father
and Son are both the same God, though really and eternally distinct
from each other; and Each is full of the Other, that is, their Essence
is one and the same. This is insisted on by S. Cyril, in Joan.
p. 28. And by S. Hilary, Trin. vii. fin. vid. also iii. 23. Cf.
the quotation from S. Anselm made by Petavius, de Trin. iv. 16
fin. [Cf. D.C.B. s.v. Metangismonitae.] | , and Each of Them by Himself is not complete
and perfect (for this is proper to bodies, and therefore the mere
assertion of it is full of irreligion), for the Father is full and
perfect, and the Son is the Fulness of Godhead. Nor again, as God, by
coming into the Saints, strengthens them, thus is He also in the Son.
For He is Himself the Father’s Power and Wisdom, and by partaking
of Him things originate are sanctified in the Spirit; but the Son
Himself is not Son by participation, but is the Father’s own
Offspring2796
2796 Vid.
de Decr. 10, n. 4, 19, n. 3; Or. i. 15, n. 6. On the
other hand Eusebius considers the Son, like a creature, ἐξ
αὐτῆς τῆς
πατρικῆς [not οὐσίας,
but] μετουσίας,
ὥσπερ ἀπὸ
πηγῆς, ἐπ᾽
αὐτὸν
προχεομένης
πληρούμενον. Eccl. Theol. i. 2. words which are the more
observable, the nearer they approach to the language of Athan. in the
text and elsewhere. Vid. infr. by way of contrast, οὐδὲ
κατὰ
μετουσίαν
αὐτοῦ, ἀλλ᾽
ὅλον ἴδιον
αὐτοῦ
γέννημα.
4. | . Nor again is the Son in the Father,
in the sense of the passage, ‘In Him we live and move and have
our being;’ for, He as being from the Fount2797 of the Father is the Life, in which all
things are both quickened and consist; for the Life does not live in
life2798
2798 i.e.
Son does not live by the gift of life, for He is life,
and does but give it, not receive. S. Hilary uses different language
with the same meaning, de Trin. ii. 11. Other modes of
expression for the same mystery are found infr. 3. also 6 fin.
Vid. de Syn. 45, n. 1. and Didymus ἡ πατρικὴ
θεότης. p. 82.
and S. Basil, ἐξ οὗ ἔχει
τὸ εἶναι.
contr. Eunom. ii. 12 fin. Just above Athan. says that
‘the Son is the fulness of the Godhead.’ Thus the Father is
the Son’s life because the Son is from Him, and the Son the
Father’s because the Son is in Him. All these are but different
ways of signifying the περιχώρησις | , else it would not be Life, but rather He
gives life to all things.
2. But now let us see what Asterius the Sophist
says, the retained pleader2799
2799 συνηγόρου, infr. §60. | for the heresy. In
imitation then of the Jews so far, he writes as follows; ‘It is
very plain that He has said, that He is in the Father and the Father
again in Him, for this reason, that neither the word on which He was
discoursing is, as He says, His own, but the Father’s, nor the
works belong to Him, but to the Father who gave Him the power.’
Now this, if uttered at random by a little child, had been excused from
his age; but when one who bears the title of Sophist, and professes
universal knowledge2800
2800 πάντα
γινώσκειν
ἐπαγγελλόμενος. Gorgias, according to Cicero de fin. ii. init. was
the first who ventured in public to say προβάλλετε, ‘give me a question.’ This was the
ἐπάγγελμα of the Sophists; of which Aristotle speaks. Rhet. ii.
24 fin. Vid. Cressol. Theatr. Rhet. iii. 11. | , is the writer,
what a serious condemnation does he deserve! And does he not shew
himself a stranger to the Apostle2801 , as being
puffed up with persuasive words of wisdom, and thinking thereby to
succeed in deceiving, not understanding himself what he says nor
whereof he affirms2802 ? For what the Son
has said as proper and suitable to a Son only, who is Word and Wisdom
and Image of the Father’s Essence, that he levels to all the
creatures, and makes common to the Son and to them; and he says,
lawless2803
2803 παράνομος. infr. 47, c. Hist. Ar. 71, 75, 79. Ep.
Æg. 16, d. Vid. ἄνομος.
2 Thess. ii.
8. | man, that the Power of the Father
receives power, that from this his irreligion it may follow to say that
in a son2804
2804 ἐν υἱ&
254·, but ἐν τῷ
υἱ& 254·. Ep.
Æg. 14 fin. vid. Or. ii. 22, note 2. | the Son was made a son, and the Word
received a word’s authority; and, far from granting that He spoke
this as a Son, He ranks Him with all things made as having learned it
as they have. For if the Son said, ‘I am in the Father and the
Father in Me,’ because His discourses were not His own words but
the Father’s, and so of His works, then,—since David says,
‘I will hear what the Lord God shall say in me2805 ,’ and again Solomon2806 , ‘My words are spoken by God,’
and since Moses was minister of words which were from God, and each of
the Prophets spoke not what was his own but what was from God,
‘Thus saith the Lord,’ and since the works of the Saints,
as they professed, were not their own but God’s who gave the
power, Elijah for instance and Elisha invoking God that He Himself
would raise the dead, and Elisha saying to Naaman, on cleansing him
from the leprosy, ‘that thou
mayest know that there is a God in Israel2807 ,’ and Samuel too in the days of the
harvest praying to God to grant rain, and the Apostles saying that not
in their own power they did miracles but in the Lord’s
grace—it is plain that, according to Asterius such a statement
must be common to all, so that each of them is able to say, ‘I in
the Father and the Father in me;’ and as a consequence that He is
no longer one Son of God and Word and Wisdom, but, as others, is only
one out of many.
3. But if the Lord said this, His words would not
rightly have been, ‘I in the Father and the Father in Me,’
but rather, ‘I too am in the Father, and the Father is in Me
too,’ that He may have nothing of His own and by prerogative2808 , relatively to the Father, as a Son, but the
same grace in common with all. But it is not so, as they think; for not
understanding that He is genuine Son from the Father, they belie Him
who is such, whom alone it befits to say, ‘I in the Father and
the Father in Me.’ For the Son is in the Father, as it is allowed
us to know, because the whole Being of the Son is proper to the
Father’s essence2809
2809 Since
the Father and the Son are the numerically One God, it is but
expressing this in other words to say that the Father is in the Son and
the Son in the Father, for all They have and all They are is common to
Each, excepting Their being Father and Son. A περιχώρησις
of Persons is implied in the Unity of Essence. This is
the connexion of the two texts so often quoted; ‘the Son is in
the Father and the Father in the Son,’ because ‘the Son and
the Father are one.’ And the cause of this unity and περιχώρησις
is the Divine γέννησις. Thus S. Hilary, Trin. ii. 4. vid. Or. ii.
33, n. 1. | , as radiance from
light, and stream from fountain; so that whoso sees the Son, sees what
is proper to the Father, and knows that the Son’s Being, because
from the Father, is therefore in the Father. For the Father is in the
Son, since the Son is what is from the Father and proper to Him, as in
the radiance the sun, and in the word the thought, and in the stream
the fountain: for whoso thus contemplates the Son, contemplates what is
proper to the Father’s Essence, and knows that the Father is in
the Son. For whereas the Form2810
2810 εἴδους.
Petavius here prefers the reading ἰδίου; θεότης and τὸ
ἱδιον occur together
infr. 6. and 56. εἶδος occurs
Orat. i. 20, a. de Syn. 52. vid. de Syn. 52, n. 6.
infr. 6, 16, Ep. Æg. 17, contr. Sabell. Greg.
8, c. 12, vid. infr. §§6, 16, notes. | and Godhead of the
Father is the Being of the Son, it follows that the Son is in the
Father and the Father in the Son2811
2811 In
accordance with §1, note 10, Thomassin observes that by the mutual
coinherence or indwelling of the Three Blessed Persons is meant
‘not a commingling as of material liquids, nor as of soul with
body, nor as the union of our Lord’s Godhead and humanity, but it
is such that the whole power, life, substance, wisdom, essence, of the
Father, should be the very essence, substance, wisdom, life, and power
of the Son.’ de Trin. xxviii. 1. S. Cyril adopts
Athan.’s language to express this doctrine in Joan. p.
105. de Trin. vi. p. 621, in Joan. p. 168. Vid.
infr. ταὐτότης
οὐσίας,
21. πατρικὴ
θεότης τοῦ
υἱοῦ, 26. and 41. and
de Syn. 45, n. 1. vid. also Damasc. F. O. i. 8. pp. 139,
140. | .
4. On this account and reasonably, having said
before, ‘I and the Father are One,’ He added, ‘I in
the Father and the Father in Me,2812 ’ by way
of shewing the identity2813 of Godhead and the
unity of Essence. For they are one, not2814 as
one thing divided into two parts, and these nothing but one, nor as one
thing twice named, so that the Same becomes at one time Father, at
another His own Son, for this Sabellius holding was judged an heretic.
But They are two, because the Father is Father and is not also Son, and
the Son is Son and not also Father2815 ; but the
nature is one; (for the offspring is not unlike2816
2816 ἀνόμοιον; and so ἀνόμοιος
κατὰ πάντα. Orat. i. 6. κατ᾽
οὐσίαν. 17.
Orat. ii. 43. τῆς
οὐσίας.
infr. 14. vid. ἀνομοιότης. infr. 8, c. |
its parent, for it is his image), and all that is the Father’s,
is the Son’s2817
2817 Cf.
in illud. Omn. 4. ‘As the Father is I am (ὁ ὤν) so His Word is I Am and God
over all.’ Serap. i. 28, a; ib. ii. 2. | . Wherefore neither
is the Son another God, for He was not procured from without, else were
there many, if a godhead be procured foreign from the Father’s2818 ; for if the Son be other, as an Offspring,
still He is the Same as God; and He and the Father are one in propriety
and peculiarity of nature, and in the identity of the one Godhead, as
has been said. For the radiance also is light, not second to the sun,
nor a different light, nor from participation of it, but a whole and
proper offspring of it. And such an offspring is necessarily one light;
and no one would say that they are two lights2819
2819 Doctrine of the Una Res, de Syn. 45, n. 1. | ,
but sun and radiance two, yet one the light from the sun enlightening
in its radiance all things. So also the Godhead of the Son is the
Father’s; whence also it is indivisible; and thus there is one
God and none other but He. And so, since they are one, and the Godhead
itself one, the same things are said of the Son, which are said of the
Father, except His being said to be Father2820 :—for instance2821
2821 Parallel to de Syn. 49. | ,
that He is God, ‘And the Word was God2822 ;’ Almighty, ‘Thus saith He which
was and is and is to come, the Almighty2823 ;’ Lord, ‘One Lord Jesus Christ2824 ;’ that He is Light, ‘I am the
Light2825 ;’ that He wipes out sins, ‘that
ye may know,’ He says, ‘that the Son of man hath power upon
earth to forgive sins2826 ;’ and so with
other attributes. For ‘all things,’ says the Son Himself,
‘whatsoever the Father hath, are Mine2827 ;’ and again, ‘And Mine are
Thine.’
5. And on hearing the attributes of the Father
spoken of a Son, we shall thereby see the Father in the Son; and we
shall contemplate the Son in the Father, when what is said of the Son
is said of the Father also. And why
are the attributes of the Father ascribed to the Son, except that the
Son is an Offspring from Him? and why are the Son’s attributes
proper to the Father, except again because the Son is the proper
Offspring of His Essence? And the Son, being the proper Offspring of
the Father’s Essence, reasonably says that the Father’s
attributes are His own also; whence suitably and consistently with
saying, ‘I and the Father are One,’ He adds, ‘that ye
may know that I am in the Father and the Father in Me2828 .’ Moreover, He has added this again,
‘He that hath seen Me, hath seen the Father2829 ;’ and there is one and the same sense
in these three2830
2830 Here
these three texts, which so often occur together, are recognized as
‘three;’ so are they by Eusebius Eccl. Theol. iii.
19; and he says that Marcellus and ‘those who Sabellianize with
him,’ among whom he included Catholics, were in the practice of
adducing them, θρυλλοῦντες; which bears incidental testimony to the fact that the
doctrine of the περιχώρησις
was the great criterion between orthodox and Arian.
Many instances of the joint use of the three are given supr. i.
34, n. 7. to which may be added Orat. ii. 54 init. iii. 16 fin.
67 fin. iv. 17, a. Serap. ii. 9, c. Serm. Maj. de fid.
29. Cyril. de Trin. p. 554. in Joann. p. 168. Origen
Periarch. p. 56. Hil. Trin. ix. 1. Ambros. Hexaem.
6. August. de Cons. Ev. i. 7. | passages. For he
who in this sense understands that the Son and the Father are one,
knows that He is in the Father and the Father in the Son; for the
Godhead of the Son is the Father’s, and it is in the Son; and
whoso enters into this, is convinced that ‘He that hath seen the
Son, hath seen the Father;’ for in the Son is contemplated the
Father’s Godhead. And we may perceive this at once from the
illustration of the Emperor’s image. For in the image is the
shape and form of the Emperor, and in the Emperor is that shape which
is in the image. For the likeness of the Emperor in the image is
exact2831
2831 ἀπαράλλακτος, de Syn. 23, n. 1. | ; so that a person who looks at the image,
sees in it the Emperor; and he again who sees the Emperor, recognises
that it is he who is in the image2832
2832 Vid.
Basil. Hom. contr. Sab. p. 192. The honour paid to the Imperial
Statues is well known. Ambros. in Psalm cxviii. x. 25. vid. also
Chrysost. Hom. on Statues, passim, fragm. in Act. Conc. vii. (t.
4, p. 89. Hard.) Socr. vi. 18. The Seventh Council speaks of the images
sent by the Emperors into provinces instead of their coming in person;
Ducange in v. Lauratum. Vid. a description of the imperial statutes and
their honours in Gothofred, Cod. Theod. t. 5, pp. 346, 7. and in
Philostorg. xii. 12. vid. also Molanus de Imaginibus ed. Paquot,
p. 197. | . And from the
likeness not differing, to one who after the image wished to view the
Emperor, the image might say, ‘I and the Emperor are one; for I
am in him, and he in me; and what thou seest in me, that thou beholdest
in him, and what thou hast seen in him, that thou holdest in me2833
2833 Athanasius guards against what is defective in this illustration
in the next chapter, but independent of such explanation a mistake as
to his meaning would be impossible; and the passage affords a good
instance of the imperfect and partial character of all illustrations of
the Divine Mystery. What it is taken to symbolize is the unity of the
Father and Son, for the Image is not a Second Emperor but the same.
vid. Sabell. Greg. 6. But no one, who bowed before the
Emperor’s Statue can be supposed to have really worshipped it;
whereas our Lord is the Object of supreme worship, which terminates in
Him, as being really one with Him whose Image He is. From the custom of
paying honour to the Imperial Statues, the Cultus Imaginum was
introduced into the Eastern Church. The Western Church, not having had
the civil custom, resisted. vid. Döllinger, Church History,
vol. 3. p. 55. E. Tr. The Fathers, e.g. S. Jerome, set themselves
against the civil custom, as idolatrous, comparing it to that paid to
Nebuchadnezzar’s statue. vid. Hieron. in Dan. iii. 18. Incense
was burnt before those of the Emperors; as afterwards before the images
of the Saints. | .’ Accordingly he who worships the
image, in it worships the Emperor also; for the image is his form and
appearance. Since then the Son too is the Father’s Image, it must
necessarily be understood that the Godhead and propriety of the Father
is the Being of the Son.
6. And this is what is said, ‘Who being in
the form of God2834 ,’ and
‘the Father in Me.’ Nor is this Form2835
2835 εἶδος, vid.
infr. 16, note. | of the Godhead partial merely, but the
fulness of the Father’s Godhead is the Being of the Son, and the
Son is whole God. Therefore also, being equal to God, He ‘thought
it not a prize to be equal to God;’ and again since the Godhead
and the Form of the Son is none other’s than the Father’s2836
2836 Here
first the Son’s εἶδος is
the εἶδος of the
Father, then the Son is the εἶδος of the
Father’s Godhead, and then in the Son is the εἶδος of the Father. These expressions are equivalent, if Father and Son
are, each separately, ὅλος
θεός. vid. infr.
§16, note. S. Greg. Naz. uses the word ὀπίσθια (Exod. xxxiii. 23), which forms a
contrast to εἶδος, for the
Divine Works. Orat. 28, 3. | , this is what He says, ‘I in the
Father.’ Thus ‘God was in Christ reconciling the world unto
Himself2837 ;’ for the propriety of the
Father’s Essence is that Son, in whom the creation was then
reconciled with God. Thus what things the Son then wrought are the
Father’s works, for the Son is the Form of that Godhead of the
Father, which wrought the works. And thus he who looks at the Son, sees
the Father; for in the Father’s Godhead is and is contemplated
the Son; and the Father’s Form which is in Him shews in Him the
Father; and thus the Father is in the Son. And that propriety and
Godhead which is from the Father in the Son, shews the Son in the
Father, and His inseparability from Him; and whoso hears and beholds
that what is said of the Father is also said of the Son, not as
accruing to His Essence by grace or participation, but because the very
Being of the Son is the proper Offspring of the Father’s Essence,
will fitly understand the words, as I said before, ‘I in the
Father, and the Father in Me;’ and ‘I and the Father are
One2838 .’ For the Son is such as the Father
is, because He has all that is the Father’s. Wherefore also is He
implied together with the Father. For, a son not being, one cannot say
father; whereas when we call God a Maker, we do not of necessity
intimate the things which have come to be; for a maker is before his
works2839
2839 Vid.
supr. de Decr. 30; Or. i. 33. This is in opposition to
the Arians, who said that the title Father implied priority of
existence. Athan. says that the title ‘Maker’ does, but
that the title ‘father’ does not. vid. supr. p. 76,
n. 3; Or. i. 29, n. 10: ii. 41, n. 11. | . But
when we call God Father, at once with the Father we signify the
Son’s existence. Therefore also he who believes in the Son,
believes also in the Father: for he believes in what is proper to the
Father’s Essence; and thus the faith is one in one God. And he
who worships and honours the Son, in the Son worships and honours the
Father; for one is the Godhead; and therefore one2840
2840 Athan. de Incarn. c. Ar. 19, c. vid. Ambros. de fid.
iii. cap. 12, 13. Naz. Orat. 23, 8. Basil. de Sp. S. n.
64. | the honour and one the worship which is paid
to the Father in and through the Son. And he who thus worships,
worships one God; for there is one God and none other than He.
Accordingly when the Father is called the only God, and we read that
there is one God2841 , and ‘I
am,’ and ‘beside Me there is no God,’ and ‘I
the first and I the last2842 ,’ this has a
fit meaning. For God is One and Only and First; but this is not said to
the denial of the Son2843 , perish the
thought; for He is in that One, and First and Only, as being of that
One and Only and First the Only Word and Wisdom and Radiance. And He
too is the First, as the Fulness of the Godhead of the First and Only,
being whole and full God2844
2844 Vid.
supr. 1, note 10; ii. 41 fin. also infr. iv. 1.
Pseudo-Ath. c. Sab. Greg. 5–12. Naz. Orat. 40, 41.
Synes. Hymn. iii. pp. 328, 9. Ambros. de Fid. i. n. 18.
August. Ep. 170, 5. vid. Or. ii. 38, n. 6. and
infr. note on 36 fin. | . This then is not
said on His account, but to deny that there is other such as the Father
and His Word.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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