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Part III. On the Symbols ‘Of the
Essence’ And ‘Coessential.’
We must look at the sense not the wording. The
offence excited is at the sense; meaning of the Symbols; the question
of their not being in Scripture. Those who hesitate only at
‘coessential,’ not to be considered Arians. Reasons why
‘coessential’ is better than ‘like-in-essence,’
yet the latter may be interpreted in a good sense. Explanation of the
rejection of ‘coessential’ by the Council which condemned
the Samosatene; use of the word by Dionysius of Alexandria; parallel
variation in the use of Unoriginate; quotation from Ignatius and
another; reasons for using ‘coessential;’ objections to it;
examination of the word itself; further documents of the Council of
Ariminum.
33. But since they are thus minded both towards
each other and towards those who preceded them, proceed we to ascertain
from them what absurdity they have seen, or what they complain of in
the received phrases, that they have proved ‘disobedient to
parents’ (Rom. i.
30), and contend against an
Ecumenical Council3603
3603 The
subject before us, naturally rises out of what has gone before. The
Anomœan creed was hopeless; but with the Semi-Arians all that
remained was the adjustment of phrases. Accordingly, Athan. goes on to
propose such explanations as might clear the way for a re-union
of Christendom. §47, note. | ? ‘The phrases
“of the essence” and “coessential,”’ say
they, ‘do not please us, for they are an offence to some and a
trouble to many.’ This then is what they allege in their
writings; but one may reasonably answer them thus: If the very words
were by themselves a cause of offence to them, it must have followed,
not that some only should have been offended, and many troubled, but
that we also and all the rest should have been affected by them in the
same way; but if on the contrary all men are well content with the
words, and they who wrote them were no ordinary persons but men who
came together from the whole world, and to these testify in addition
the 400 Bishops and more who now met at Ariminum, does not this plainly
prove against those who accuse the Council, that the terms are not in
fault, but the perverseness of those who misinterpret them? How many
men read divine Scripture wrongly, and as thus conceiving it, find
fault with the Saints? such were the former Jews, who rejected the
Lord, and the present Manichees who blaspheme the Law3604
3604 Vid.
Orat. i. 8; iv. 23. | ; yet are not the Scriptures the cause to
them, but their own evil humours. If then ye can shew the terms to be
actually unsound, do so and let the proof proceed, and drop the
pretence of offence created, lest you come into the condition of the
Pharisees of old. For when they pretended offence at the Lord’s
teaching, He said, ‘Every plant, which My heavenly Father hath
not planted, shall be rooted up’ (Matt. xv. 13). By which He shewed that not the words
of the Father planted by Him were really an offence to them, but that
they misinterpreted what was well said, and offended themselves. And in
like manner they who at that time blamed the Epistles of the Apostle,
impeached, not Paul, but their own deficient learning and distorted
minds.
34. For answer, what is much to the purpose, Who
are they whom you pretend are offended and troubled at these terms? of
those who are religious towards Christ not one; on the contrary they
defend and maintain them. But if they are Arians who thus feel, what
wonder they should be distressed at words which destroy their heresy?
for it is not the terms which offend them, but the proscription of
their irreligion which afflicts them. Therefore let us have no more
murmuring against the Fathers, nor pretence of this kind; or next3605
3605 ὥρα. vid. Orat. i. §15; iv. §10; Serap.
ii. 1. καίρος de Decr. §15. init. | you will be making complaints of the
Lord’s Cross, because it is ‘to Jews an offence and to
Gentiles foolishness,’ as said the Apostle3606 (1
Cor. i. 23, 24). But as the
Cross is not faulty, for to us who believe it is ‘Christ the
power of God and the wisdom of God,’ though Jews rave, so neither
are the terms of the Fathers faulty, but profitable to those who
honestly read, and subversive of all irreligion, though the Arians so
often burst with rage as being condemned by them. Since then the
pretence that persons are offended does not hold, tell us yourselves,
why is it you are not pleased with
the phrase ‘of the essence’ (this must first be enquired
about), when you yourselves have written that the Son is generated from
the Father? If when you name the Father, or use the word
‘God,’ you do not signify essence, or understand Him
according to essence, who is that He is, but signify something else
about Him3607
3607 Cf.
de Decr. 22, note 1. | , not to say inferior, then you should
not have written that the Son was from the Father, but from what is
about Him or in Him3608
3608 De
Decr. 24, note 9. | ; and so, shrinking
from saying that God is truly Father, and making Him compound who is
simple, in a material way, you will be authors of a newer blasphemy.
And, with such ideas, you must needs consider the Word, and the title
‘Son,’ not as an essence but as a name3609
3609 Vid.
supr. Orat. i. §15; de Decr. §22, note
1. | only, and in consequence hold your own views
as far as names only, and be talking, not of what you believe to exist,
but of what you think not to exist.
35. But this is more like the crime of the
Sadducees, and of those among the Greeks who had the name of Atheists.
It follows that you will deny that even creation is the handy-work of
God Himself that is; at least, if ‘Father’ and
‘God’ do not signify the very essence of Him that is, but
something else, which you imagine: which is irreligious, and most
shocking even to think of. But if, when we hear it said, ‘I am
that I am,’ and, ‘In the beginning God created the heaven
and the earth,’ and, ‘Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God is
one Lord,’ and, ‘Thus saith the Lord Almighty’ (Ex. iii. 14; Gen. i. 1; Deut. vi.
4), we understand nothing
else than the very simple, and blessed, and incomprehensible essence
itself of Him that is, (for though we be unable to master what He is,
yet hearing ‘Father,’ and ‘God,’ and
‘Almighty,’ we understand nothing else to be meant than the
very essence of Him that is3610
3610 De
Decr. 29, note 7. | ); and if ye too
have said, that the Son is from God, it follows that you have said that
He is from the ‘essence’ of the Father. And since the
Scriptures precede you which say, that the Lord is Son of the Father,
and the Father Himself precedes them, who says, ‘This is My
beloved Son’ (Matt. iii.
17), and a son is no other
than the offspring from his father, is it not evident that the Fathers
have suitably said that the Son is from the Father’s essence?
considering that it is all one to say rightly ‘from God,’
and to say ‘from the essence.’ For all the creatures,
though they be said to have come into being from God, yet are not from
God as the Son is; for they are not offsprings in their nature, but
works. Thus, it is said, ‘in the beginning God,’ not
‘generated,’ but ‘made the heaven and the earth, and
all that is in them’ (Gen. i. 1). And not, ‘who generates,’
but ‘who maketh His angels spirits, and His ministers a flame of
fire’ (Ps. civ. 4). And though the Apostle has said,
‘One God, from whom all things’ (1 Cor. viii. 6), yet he says not this, as reckoning the
Son with other things; but, whereas some of the Greeks consider that
the creation was held together by chance, and from the combination of
atoms3611
3611 Democritus, or Epicurus. | ; and spontaneously from elements of similar
structure3612 , and has no cause; and others consider
that it came from a cause, but not through the Word; and each heretic
has imagined things at his will, and tells his fables about the
creation; on this account the Apostle was obliged to introduce
‘from God,’ that he might thereby certify the Maker, and
shew that the universe was framed at His will. And accordingly he
straightway proceeds: ‘And one Lord Jesus Christ, through whom
all things’ (1 Cor.
viii. 6), by way of excepting
the Son from that ‘all’ (for what is called God’s
work, is all done through the Son; and it is not possible that the
things framed should have one origin with their Framer), and by way of
teaching that the phrase ‘of God,’ which occurs in the
passage, has a different sense in the case of the works, from what it
bears when used of the Son; for He is offspring, and they are works:
and therefore He, the Son, is the proper offspring of His essence, but
they are the handywork of his will.
36. The Council, then, comprehending this3613 , and aware of the different senses of the
same word, that none should suppose, that the Son was said to be
‘from God’ like the creation, wrote with greater
explicitness, that the Son was ‘from the essence.’ For this
betokens the true genuineness of the Son towards the Father; whereas,
by the simple phrase ‘from God,’ only the Creator’s
will in framing is signified. If then they too had this meaning, when
they wrote that the Word was ‘from the Father,’ they had
nothing to complain of in the Council; but if they meant ‘of
God,’ in the instance of the Son, as it is used of the creation,
then as understanding it of the creation, they should not name the Son,
or they will be manifestly mingling blasphemy with religiousness; but
either they have to cease reckoning the Lord with the creatures, or at
least to refrain from unworthy and unbecoming statements about the Son. For if He is a Son, He is not a
creature; but if a creature, then not a Son. Since these are their
views, perhaps they will be denying the Holy Laver also, because it is
administered into Father and into Son and not into Creator and
Creature, as they account it. ‘But,’ they say, ‘all
this is not written: and we reject these words as unscriptural.’
But this, again, is an unblushing excuse in their mouths. For if they
think everything must be rejected which is not written, wherefore, when
the Arian party invent such a heap of phrases, not from Scripture3614
3614 De
Decr. 18, note 8. | , ‘Out of nothing,’ and
‘the Son was not before His generation,’ and ‘Once He
was not,’ and ‘He is alterable,’ and ‘the
Father is ineffable and invisible to the Son,’ and ‘the Son
knows not even His own essence;’ and all that Arius has vomited
in his light and irreligious Thalia, why do not they speak against
these, but rather take their part, and on that account contend with
their own Fathers? And, in what Scripture did they on their part find
‘Unoriginate,’ and ‘the term essence,’ and
‘there are three subsistences,’ and ‘Christ is not
very God,’ and ‘He is one of the hundred sheep,’ and
‘God’s Wisdom is ingenerate and without beginning, but the
created powers are many, of which Christ is one?’ Or how, when in
the so-called Dedication, Acacius and Eusebius and their fellows used
expressions not in Scripture, and said that ‘the First-born of
the creation’ was ‘the exact Image of the essence and power
and will and glory,’ do they complain of the Fathers, for making
mention of unscriptural expressions, and especially of essence? For
they ought either to complain of themselves, or to find no fault with
the Fathers.
37. Now, if certain others made excuses of the
expressions of the Council, it might perhaps have been set down, either
to ignorance or to caution. There is no question, for instance, about
George of Cappadocia3615
3615 [Prolegg. ch. ii. §8 (1).] | , who was expelled
from Alexandria; a man, without character in years past, nor a
Christian in any respect; but only pretending to the name to suit the
times, and thinking ‘religion to be a’ means of
‘gain’ (1 Tim. vi.
5). And therefore there is no
reason to complain of his making mistakes about the faith, considering
he knows neither what he says, nor whereof he affirms; but, according
to the text, ‘goeth after all, as a bird’ (1 Tim. i. 7; Prov. vii. 22, 23, not LXX.?) But when Acacius, and
Eudoxius, and Patrophilus say this, do not they deserve the strongest
reprobation? for while they write what is unscriptural themselves, and
have accepted many times the term ‘essence’ as suitable,
especially on the ground of the letter3616 of
Eusebius, they now blame their predecessors for using terms of the same
kind. Nay, though they say themselves, that the Son is ‘God from
God,’ and ‘Living Word,’ ‘Exact Image of the
Father’s essence;’ they accuse the Nicene Bishops of
saying, that He who was begotten is ‘of the essence’ of Him
who begat Him, and ‘Coessential’ with Him. But what marvel
if they conflict with their predecessors and their own Fathers, when
they are inconsistent with themselves, and fall foul of each other? For
after publishing, in the so-called Dedication at Antioch, that the Son
is exact Image of the Father’s essence, and swearing that so they
held and anathematizing those who held otherwise, nay, in Isauria,
writing down, ‘We do not decline the authentic faith published in
the Dedication at Antioch3617 ,’ where the
term ‘essence’ was introduced, as if forgetting all this,
shortly after, in the same Isauria, they put into writing the very
contrary, saying, We reject the words ‘coessential,’ and
‘like-in-essence,’ as alien to the Scriptures, and abolish
the term ‘essence,’ as not contained therein3618 .
38. Can we then any more account such men
Christians? or what sort of faith have they who stand neither to word
nor writing, but alter and change every thing according to the times?
For if, O Acacius and Eudoxius, you ‘do not decline the faith
published at the Dedication,’ and in it is written that the Son
is ‘Exact Image of God’s essence,’ why is it ye write
in Isauria, ‘we reject the Like in essence?’ for if the Son
is not like the Father according to essence, how is He ‘exact
image of the essence?’ But if you are dissatisfied at having
written ‘Exact Image of the essence,’ how is it that ye
‘anathematize those who say that the Son is Unlike?’ for if
He be not according to essence like, He is surely unlike: and the
Unlike cannot be an Image. And if so, then it does not hold that
‘he that hath seen the Son, hath seen the Father’ (John xiv. 9), there being then the greatest possible
difference between Them, or rather the One being wholly Unlike the
Other. And Unlike cannot possibly be called Like. By what artifice then
do you call Unlike like, and consider Like to be unlike, and pretend to
say that the Son is the Father’s Image? for if the Son be not
like the Father in essence, something is wanting to the Image, and it
is not a complete Image, nor a perfect radiance3619
3619 It
must not be supposed from this that he approves [as adequate] the
phrase ὅμοιος κατ᾽
οὐσίαν or ὁμοιούσιος, in this Treatise, for infr. §53. he rejects
it on the ground that when we speak of ‘like,’ we imply
qualities, not essence. Yet he himself frequently uses it, as other
Fathers, and Orat. i. §26. uses ὅμοιος τῆς
οὐσίας. | .
How then read you, ‘In Him
dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily?’ and, ‘from
His fulness all we received’ (Coloss. ii. 9; John i. 16)? how is it that you expel the Arian
Aetius as an heretic, though ye say the same with him? for he is your
companion, O Acacius, and he became Eudoxius’s master in this so
great irreligion3620
3620 [Prolegg. ch. ii. §8 (2) a.] | ; which was the
reason why Leontius the Bishop made him deacon, that using the name of
the diaconate as sheep’s clothing, he might be able with impunity
to pour forth the words of blasphemy.
39. What then has persuaded you to contradict
each other, and to procure to yourselves so great a disgrace? You
cannot give any good account of it; this supposition only remains, that
all you do is but outward profession and pretence, to secure the
patronage of Constantius and the gain from thence accruing. And ye make
nothing of accusing the Fathers, and ye complain outright of the
expressions as being unscriptural; and, as it is written, ‘opened
your legs to every one that passed by’ (Ez. xvi. 25); so as to change as often as they wish,
in whose pay and keep you are. Yet, though a man use terms not in
Scripture, it makes no difference so that his meaning be religious3621
3621 Vid.
p. 162, note 8. Cf. Greg. Naz. Orat. 31. 24. vid. also Hil.
contr. Constant. 16. August. Ep. 238. n. 4–6.
Cyril. Dial. i. p. 391. Petavius refers to other passages. de
Trin. v. 5. §6. | . But the heretic, though he use scriptural
terms, yet, as being equally dangerous and depraved, shall be asked in
the words of the Spirit, ‘Why dost thou preach My laws, and
takest My covenant in thy mouth’ (Ps. l. 16)? Thus whereas the devil, though
speaking from the Scriptures, is silenced by the Saviour, the blessed
Paul, though he speaks from profane writers, ‘The Cretans are
always liars,’ and, ‘For we are His offspring,’ and,
‘Evil communications corrupt good manners,’ yet has a
religious meaning, as being holy,—is ‘doctor of the
nations, in faith and verity,’ as having ‘the mind of
Christ’ (Bible:1Cor.2.16">Tit. i. 12;
Acts xvii. 28; 1 Cor. xv. 33; 1 Tim. ii. 7; 1 Cor. ii. 16), and what he speaks, he utters
religiously. What then is there even plausible, in the Arian terms, in
which the ‘caterpillar’ (Joel ii. 25) and the ‘locust’ are
preferred to the Saviour, and He is reviled with ‘Once Thou wast
not,’ and ‘Thou wast created,’ and ‘Thou art
foreign to God in essence,’ and, in a word, no irreverence is
unused among them? But what did the Fathers omit in the way of
reverence? or rather, have they not a lofty view and a Christ-loving
religiousness? And yet these, they wrote, ‘We reject;’
while those others they endure in their insults towards the Lord, and
betray to all men, that for no other cause do they resist that great
Council but that it condemned the Arian heresy. For it is on this
account again that they speak against the term Coessential, about which
they also entertain wrong sentiments. For if their faith was right, and
they confessed the Father as truly Father, believed the Son to be
genuine Son, and by nature true Word and Wisdom of the Father, and as
to saying that the Son is ‘from God,’ if they did not use
the words of Him, as of themselves, but understood Him to be the proper
offspring of the Father’s essence, as the radiance is from light,
they would not every one of them have found fault with the Fathers; but
would have been confident that the Council wrote suitably; and that
this is the right faith concerning our Lord Jesus Christ.
40. ‘But,’ say they, ‘the sense
of such expressions is obscure to us;’ for this is another of
their pretences,—‘We reject them3622 ,’ say they, ‘because we cannot
master their meaning.’ But if they were true in this profession,
instead of saying, ‘We reject them,’ they should ask
instruction from the well informed; else ought they to reject whatever
they cannot understand in divine Scripture, and to find fault with the
writers. But this were the venture of heretics rather than of us
Christians; for what we do not understand in the sacred oracles,
instead of rejecting, we seek from persons to whom the Lord has
revealed it, and from them we ask for instruction. But since they thus
make a pretence of the obscurity of such expressions, let them at least
confess what is annexed to the Creed, and anathematize those who hold
that ‘the Son is from nothing,’ and ‘He was not
before His generation,’ and ‘the Word of God is a creature
and work,’ and ‘He is alterable by nature,’ and
‘from another subsistence;’ and in a word let them
anathematize the Arian heresy, which has originated such irreligion.
Nor let them say any more, ‘We reject the terms,’ but that
‘we do not yet understand them;’ by way of having some
reason to shew for declining them. But I know well, and am sure, and
they know it too, that if they could confess all this and anathematize
the Arian heresy, they would no longer deny those terms of the Council.
For on this account it was that the Fathers, after declaring that the
Son was begotten from the Father’s essence, and Co-essential with
Him, thereupon added, ‘But those who say’—what has
just been quoted, the symbols of
the Arian heresy,—‘we anathematize;’ I mean, in order
to shew that the statements are parallel, and that the terms in the
Creed imply the disclaimers subjoined, and that all who confess the
terms, will certainly understand the disclaimers. But those who both
dissent from the latter and impugn the former, such men are proved on
every side to be foes of Christ.
41. Those who deny the Council altogether, are
sufficiently exposed by these brief remarks; those, however, who accept
everything else that was defined at Nicæa, and doubt only about
the Coessential, must not be treated as enemies; nor do we here attack
them as Ario-maniacs, nor as opponents of the Fathers, but we discuss
the matter with them as brothers with brothers3623
3623 [See
Prolegg. ch. ii. §8 (2) c.] | ,
who mean what we mean, and dispute only about the word. For, confessing
that the Son is from the essence of the Father, and not from other
subsistence, and that He is not a creature nor work, but His genuine
and natural offspring, and that He is eternally with the Father as
being His Word and Wisdom, they are not far from accepting even the
phrase, ‘Coessential.’ Now such is Basil, who wrote from
Ancyra concerning the faith3624
3624 [Ath.
is referring to the Council of Ancyra, 358.] | . For only to say
‘like according to essence,’ is very far from signifying
‘of the essence,’ by which, rather, as they say themselves,
the genuineness of the Son to the Father is signified. Thus tin is only
like to silver, a wolf to a dog, and gilt brass to the true metal; but
tin is not from silver, nor could a wolf be accounted the offspring of
a dog.3625
3625 So
also de Decr. §23. p. 40. Pseudo-Ath. Hyp. Mel. et
Euseb. Hil. de Syn. 89. The illustration runs into this
position, ‘Things that are like, [need] not be the same.’
vid. §39. note 5. On the other hand, Athan. himself contends for
the ταὐτὸν τῇ
ὁμοιώσει, ‘the same in likeness.’ de Decr.
§20. | But since they say that He is
‘of the essence’ and ‘Like-in-essence,’ what do
they signify by these but ‘Coessential3626
3626 Vid.
Socr. iii. 25. p. 204. a.b. Una substantia religiose
prædicabitur quæ ex nativitatis proprietate et ex
naturæ similitudine ita indifferens sit, ut una dicatur.
Hil. de Syn. 67. | ?’ For, while to say only
‘Like-in-essence,’ does not necessarily convey ‘of
the essence,’ on the contrary, to say ‘Coessential,’
is to signify the meaning of both terms, ‘Like-in-essence,’
and ‘of the essence.’ And accordingly they themselves in
controversy with those who say that the Word is a creature, instead of
allowing Him to be genuine Son, have taken their proofs against them
from human illustrations of son and father3627
3627 Here
at last Athan. alludes to the Ancyrene Synodal Letter, vid. Epiph.
Hær. 73, 5 and 7. about which he has kept a pointed silence
above, when tracing the course of the Arian confessions. That is, he
treats the Semi-Arians as tenderly as S. Hilary, as soon as they
break company with the Arians. The Ancyrene Council of 358 was a
protest against the ‘blasphemia’ or second Sirmian
Confession | ,
with this exception that God is not as man, nor the generation of the
Son as issue of man, but such as may be ascribed to God, and is fit for
us to think. Thus they have called the Father the Fount of Wisdom and
Life, and the Son the Radiance of the Eternal Light, and the Offspring
from the Fountain, as He says, ‘I am the Life,’ and,
‘I Wisdom dwell with Prudence’ (John xiv. 6; Prov. viii. 12). But the Radiance from the Light, and
Offspring from Fountain, and Son from Father, how can these be so fitly
expressed as by ‘Coessential?’ And is there any cause of
fear, lest, because the offspring from men are coessential, the Son, by
being called Coessential, be Himself considered as a human offspring
too? perish the thought! not so; but the explanation is easy. For the
Son is the Father’s Word and Wisdom; whence we learn the
impassibility and indivisibility of such a generation from the Father3628
3628 It is
usual with the Fathers to use the two terms ‘Son’ and
‘Word,’ to guard and complete the ordinary sense of each
other, vid. p. 157, note 6; and p. 167, note 4. The term Son, used by
itself, was abused into Arianism; and the term Word into Sabellianism;
again the term Son might be accused of introducing material notions,
and the term Word of imperfection and transitoriness. Each of them
corrected the other. Orat. i. §28. iv. §8. Euseb.
contr. Marc. ii. 4. p. 54. Isid. Pel. Ep. iv. 141. So S.
Cyril says that we learn ‘from His being called Son that He is
from Him, τὸ ἐξ
αὐτοῦ; from His
being called Wisdom and Word, that He is in Him,’ τὸ ἐν
αὐτῷ. Thesaur. iv.
p. 31. However, S. Athanasius observes, that properly speaking the one
term implies the other, i.e. in its fulness. Orat. iii. §3.
iv. §24 fin. On the other hand the heretics accused Catholics of
inconsistency, or of a union of opposite errors, because they accepted
all the Scripture images together. Vigilius of Thapsus, contr.
Eutych. ii. init. vid. also i. init. and Eulogius, ap. Phot.
225, p. 759. | . For not even man’s word is part of
him, nor proceeds from him according to passion3629 ;
much less God’s Word; whom the Father has declared to be His own
Son, lest, on the other hand, if we merely heard of ‘Word,’
we should suppose Him, such as is the word of man, impersonal; but
that, hearing that He is Son, we may acknowledge Him to be living Word
and substantive Wisdom.
42. Accordingly, as in saying
‘offspring,’ we have no human thoughts, and, though we know
God to be a Father, we entertain no material ideas concerning Him, but
while we listen to these illustrations and terms, we think suitably of
God, for He is not as man, so in like manner, when we hear of
‘coessential,’ we ought to transcend all sense, and,
according to the Proverb, ‘understand by the understanding what
is set before us’ (Prov.
xxiii. 1); so as to know,
that not by will, but in truth, is He genuine from the Father, as Life
from Fountain, and Radiance from Light. Else3630
3630 Vid.
Epiph. Hær. 73. 3, &c. |
why should we understand ‘offspring’ and ‘son,’
in no corporeal way, while we conceive of ‘coessential’ as
after the manner of bodies? especially since these terms are not here
used about different subjects, but of whom ‘offspring’ is
predicated, of Him is ‘coessential’ also. And it is but consistent to attach the same
sense to both expressions as applied to the Saviour, and not to
interpret ‘offspring’ in a good sense, and
‘coessential’ otherwise; since to be consistent, ye who are
thus minded and who say that the Son is Word and Wisdom of the Father,
should entertain a different view of these terms also, and understand
Word in another sense, and Wisdom in yet another. But, as this would be
absurd (for the Son is the Father’s Word and Wisdom, and the
Offspring from the Father is one and proper to His essence), so the
sense of ‘Offspring’ and ‘Coessential’ is one,
and whoso considers the Son an offspring, rightly considers Him also as
‘coessential.’
43. This is sufficient to shew that the meaning
of the beloved ones3631 is not foreign nor
far from the ‘Coessential.’ But since, as they allege3632
3632 Vid.
Hilar. de Syn. 81 init.; Epiph. Hær. 73.
12. | (for I have not the Epistle in question),
the Bishops who condemned the Samosatene3633
3633 There
were three Councils held against Paul of Samosata, of the dates of 264,
269, and an intermediate year. The third is spoken of in the text,
which contrary to the opinion of Pagi, S. Basnage, and Tillemont,
Pearson fixes at 265 or 266. |
have said in writing that the Son is not coessential with the Father,
and so it comes to pass that they, for caution and honour towards those
who have so said, thus feel about that expression, it will be to the
purpose cautiously to argue with them this point also. Certainly it is
unbecoming to make the one conflict with the others; for all are
fathers; nor is it religious to settle, that these have spoken well,
and those ill; for all of them fell asleep in Christ. Nor is it right
to be disputatious, and to compare the respective numbers of those who
met in the Councils, lest the three hundred seem to throw the lesser
into the shade; nor to compare the dates, lest those who preceded seem
to eclipse those that came after. For all, I say, are fathers; and yet
not even the three hundred laid down nothing new, nor was it in any
self-confidence that they became champions of words not in Scripture,
but they fell back upon fathers, as did the others, and used their
words. For there have been two of the name of Dionysius, much older
than the seventy who deposed the Samosatene, of whom one was of Rome,
and the other of Alexandria. But a charge had been laid by some persons
against the Bishop of Alexandria before the Bishop of Rome, as if he
had said that the Son was made, and not coessential with the Father.
And, the synod at Rome being indignant, the Bishop of Rome expressed
their united sentiments in a letter to his namesake. And so the latter,
in defence, wrote a book with the title ‘of Refutation and
Defence;’ and thus he writes to the other:
44. And3634
3634 Vid.
p. 167, and a different translation, p. 183. | I wrote in another
Letter a refutation of the false charge which they bring against me,
that I deny that Christ is coessential with God. For though I say that
I have not found or read this term anywhere in holy Scripture, yet my
remarks which follow, and which they have not noticed, are not
inconsistent with that belief. For I instanced a human production,
which is evidently homogeneous, and I observed that undeniably fathers
differed from their children, only in not being the same individuals;
otherwise there could be neither parents nor children. And my Letter,
as I said before, owing to present circumstances, I am unable to
produce, or I would have sent you the very words I used, or rather a
copy of it all; which, if I have an opportunity, I will do still. But I
am sure from recollection, that I adduced many parallels of things
kindred with each other, for instance, that a plant grown from seed or
from root, was other than that from which it sprang, and yet altogether
one in nature with it; and that a stream flowing from a fountain,
changed its appearance and its name, for that neither the fountain was
called stream, nor the stream fountain, but both existed, and that the
fountain was as it were father, but the stream was what was generated
from the fountain.
45. Thus the Bishop. If then any one finds fault
with those who met at Nicæa, as if they contradicted the decisions
of their predecessors, he might reasonably find fault also with the
seventy, because they did not keep to the statements of their own
predecessors; but such were the Dionysii and the Bishops assembled on
that occasion at Rome. But neither these nor those is it pious to
blame; for all were charged with the embassy of Christ, and all have
given diligence against the heretics, and the one party condemned the
Samosatene, while the other condemned the Arian heresy. And rightly
have both these and those written, and suitably to the matter in hand.
And as the blessed Apostle, writing to the Romans, said, ‘The Law
is spiritual, the Law is holy, and the commandment holy and just and
good’ (Rom. vii. 14;
12); and soon after,
‘What the Law could not do, in that it was weak’ (ib.
viii. 3), but wrote to the
Hebrews, ‘The Law has made no one perfect’ (Heb. vii. 19); and to the Galatians, ‘By the
Law no one is justified’ (Gal. iii. 11), but to Timothy, ‘The Law is
good, if a man use it lawfully’ (1 Tim. i. 8); and no one would accuse the Saint of
inconsistency and variation in writing, but rather would admire how
suitably he wrote to each, to teach the Romans and the others to turn
from the letter to the spirit, but to instruct the Hebrews and
Galatians to place their hopes, not in the Law, but in the Lord who had
given the Law;—so, if the Fathers of the two Councils made
different mention of the Coessential, we ought not in any respect to
differ from them, but to investigate their meaning, and this will fully
show us the agreement of both the
Councils. For they who deposed the Samosatene took Coessential in a
bodily sense, because Paul had attempted sophistry and said,
‘Unless Christ has of man become God, it follows that He is
Coessential with the Father; and if so, of necessity there are three
essences, one the previous essence, and the other two from it;’
and therefore guarding against this they said with good reason, that
Christ was not Coessential3635
3635 This
is in fact the objection which Arius urges against the Coessential,
supr. §16, when he calls it the doctrine of Manichæus
and Hieracas, vid. §16, note 11. The same objection is protested
against by S. Basil, contr. Eunom. i. 19. Hilar. de Trin.
iv. 4. Yet, while S. Basil agrees with Athan. in his account of the
reason of the Council’s rejection of the word, S. Hilary on the
contrary reports that Paul himself accepted it, i.e. in a Sabellian
sense, and therefore the Council rejected it. ‘Male
homoüsion Samosatenus confessus est, sed numquid melius Arii
negaverunt.’ de Syn. 86. | . For the Son is not
related to the Father as he imagined. But the Bishops who anathematized
the Arian heresy, understanding Paul’s craft, and reflecting that
the word ‘Coessential’ has not this meaning when used of
things immaterial3636
3636 Cf.
Soz. iii. 18. The heretical party, starting with the notion in which
their heresy in all its shades consisted, that the Son was a distinct
being from the Father, concluded that ‘like in
essence’ was the only term which would express the relation of
the Son to the Father. Here then the word ‘coessential’ did
just enable the Catholics to join issue with them, as exactly
expressing what the Catholics wished to express, viz. that there was no
such distinction between Them as made the term ‘like’
necessary, but that as material parent and offspring are individuals
under one common species, so the Eternal Father and Son are
Persons under one common individual essence. | , and especially of
God, and acknowledging that the Word was not a creature, but an
offspring from the essence, and that the Father’s essence was the
origin and root and fountain of the Son, and that he was of very truth
His Father’s likeness, and not of different nature, as we are,
and separate from the Father, but that, as being from Him, He exists as
Son indivisible, as radiance is with respect to Light, and knowing too
the illustrations used in Dionysius’s case, the
‘fountain,’ and the defence of ‘Coessential’
and before this the Saviour’s saying, symbolical of unity3637 , ‘I and the Father are one’ and
‘he that hath seen Me hath seen the Father’ (John x. 30; xiv. 9), on these grounds reasonably asserted
on their part, that the Son was Coessential. And as, according to a
former remark, no one would blame the Apostle, if he wrote to the
Romans about the Law in one way, and to the Hebrews in another; in like
manner, neither would the present Bishops find fault with the ancient,
having regard to their interpretation, nor again in view of theirs and
of the need of their so writing about the Lord, would the ancient
censure their successors. Yes surely, each Council has a sufficient
reason for its own language; for since the Samosatene held that the Son
was not before Mary, but received from her the origin of His being,
therefore those who then met deposed him and pronounced him heretic;
but concerning the Son’s Godhead writing in simplicity, they
arrived not at accuracy concerning the Coessential, but, as they
understood the word, so spoke they about it. For they directed all
their thoughts to destroy the device of the Samosatene, and to shew
that the Son was before all things, and that, instead of becoming God
from man, He, being God, had put on a servant’s form, and being
Word, had become flesh, as John says (Phil. ii. 7; Joh. i. 14). This is how they dealt with the
blasphemies of Paul; but when Eusebius, Arius, and their fellows said
that though the Son was before time, yet was He made and one of the
creatures, and as to the phrase ‘from God,’ they did not
believe it in the sense of His being genuine Son from Father, but
maintained it as it is said of the creatures, and as to the oneness3638
3638 τὴν τῆς
ὁμοιώσεως
ἑνότητα:
and so pp. 163, note 9, 165, 166. And Basil. ταὐτότητα
τῆς φύσεως, Ep. 8. 3: [but] ταὐτότητα
τῆς οὐσιάς, Cyril in Joan. lib. iii. c. v. p. 302. [cf.
ταὐτοούσιον, p. 315, note 6.] It is uniformly asserted by the
Catholics that the Father’s godhead, θεότης, is the Son’s; e.g. infr. §52; supr. p.
329 b, line 8; p. 333, note 5; Orat. i. 49 fin. ii. §18.
§73. fin. iii. §26; iii. §5 fin. iii. §53;
μίαν
τὴν θεότητα
καὶ τὸ ἴδιον
τῆς οὐσίας
τοῦ πατρός. §56 supr. p. 84 fin. vid. §52. note. This
is an approach to the doctrine of the Una Res, defined in the fourth
Lateran Council [in 1215, see Harnack Dogmg. iii. 447, note, and
on the doctrine of the Greek Fathers, Prolegg. ch. ii. §3
(2) b.] | of likeness3639
3639 Vid.
Epiph. Hær. 73. 9 fin. |
between the Son and the Father, did not confess that the Son is like
the Father according to essence, or according to nature as a son
resembles his father, but because of Their agreement of doctrines and
of teaching3640 ; nay, when they drew a line and an
utter distinction between the Son’s essence and the Father,
ascribing to Him an origin of being, other than the Father, and
degrading Him to the creatures, on this account the Bishops assembled
at Nicæa, with a view to the craft of the parties so thinking, and
as bringing together the sense from the Scriptures, cleared up the
point, by affirming the ‘Coessential;’ that both the true
genuineness of the Son might thereby be known, and that to things
originate might be ascribed nothing in common with Him. For the
precision of this phrase detects their pretence, whenever they use the
phrase ‘from God,’ and gets rid of all the subtleties with
which they seduce the simple. For whereas they contrive to put a
sophistical construction on all other words at their will, this phrase
only, as detecting their heresy, do they dread; which the Fathers set
down as a bulwark3641
3641 ἐπιτείχισμα; in like manner σύνδεσμον
πίστεως.
Epiph. Ancor. 6; cf. Hær. 69. 70; Ambros. de
Fid. iii. 15. | against their
irreligious notions one and all.
46. Let then all contention cease, nor let us any longer conflict, though the
Councils have differently taken the phrase ‘Coessential,’
for we have already assigned a sufficient defence of them; and to it
the following may be added:—We have not derived the word
‘Unoriginate’ from Scripture, (for no where does Scripture
call God Unoriginate,) yet since it has many authorities in its favour,
I was curious about the term, and found that it too has different
senses3642
3642 [In
this passage the difficulties and confusion which surround the
terms ἀγένητος and ἀγέννητος (supr. p. 149, &c.) come to a head. The question
is (assuming, as proved by Lightfoot, the validity of the distinction
of the two in Athan.) which word is to be read here. The mss. are divided throughout between the two readings, but
it is clear (so Lightf. and Zahn on Ign. Eph. 7) that one word
alone is in view throughout the present passage. That word, then, is
pronounced by Lightf., partly on the strength of the quotation from the
unnamed teachers (infr. note 7), partly on the ground of a
reference to §26 (see note 10 there), to be ἀγέννητος. With all deference to so great an authority, I cannot
hesitate to pronounce for ἀγένητος. (1.) The parallelism of the two senses with the third and fourth
senses of ἀγέν.
Orat. i. 30. is almost decisive by itself. (2.) Ath.’s
explanation of Ignatius. viz. that Christ is γένητος on account of the flesh (he
would have referred γέννητος to His Essence, Orat. i. 56, certainly not to the
flesh), while as Son and Word He is distinct from γένητα and ποιήματα, is even more decisive. (3.) His explanation §46,
sub fin. that the Son is ἀγένητος because He is ἀΐδιον
γέννημα would lose all sense if ἀγέννητος were read. As a matter of fact, ἀγέννητος is the specific, ἀγένητος the generic term: the former was not applicable to the Eternal
Son; the latter was, except in the first of the two senses
distinguished in the text; a sense, however, more properly coming under
the specific idea of ἀγέννητος. This was the ambiguity which made the similarity of the
two words so dangerous a weapon in Arian hands. The above note does not
of course affect the true reading of Ign. Eph. 7, as to which
Lightfoot and Zahn speak with authority: but it seems clear that
Athan., however mistakenly, quotes Ign. with the reading
ἀγένητος.] | . Some, for instance, call what is, but
is neither generated, nor has any personal cause at all, unoriginate;
and others, the uncreate. As then a person, having in view the former
of these senses, viz. ‘that which has no personal cause,’
might say that the Son was not unoriginate, yet would not blame any one
whom he perceived to have in view the other meaning, ‘not a work
or creature but an eternal offspring,’ and to affirm accordingly
that the Son was unoriginate, (for both speak suitably with a view to
their own object); so, even granting that the Fathers have spoken
variously concerning the Coessential, let us not dispute about it, but
take what they deliver to us in a religious way, when especially their
anxiety was directed in behalf of religion.
47. Ignatius, for instance, who was appointed
Bishop in Antioch after the Apostles, and became a martyr of Christ,
writes concerning the Lord thus: ‘There is one physician, fleshly
and spiritual, originate and unoriginate3643
3643 Ign.
ad Eph. [Lightf. Ign. p. 90, Zahn Patr. Apost. ii.
p. 338.] | ,’ God in man, true life in death, both
from Mary and from God;’ whereas some teachers who followed
Ignatius, write in their turn, ‘One is the Unoriginate, the
Father, and one the genuine Son from Him, true offspring, Word and
Wisdom of the Father3644
3644 Not
known, but cf. Clement. Strom. vi. 7. p. 769. ἓν
μὲν τὸ
ἀγέννητον, ὁ
παντοκράτωρ
θεὸς, ἓν δὲ
καὶ τὸ
προγεννηθὲν
δι᾽ οὖ τὰ
πάντα
ἐγένετο, καὶ
χωρὶς αὐτοῦ
ἐγένετο οὐδὲ
ἕν. | .’ If
therefore we have hostile feelings towards these writers, then have we
right to quarrel with the Councils; but if, knowing their faith in
Christ, we are persuaded that the blessed Ignatius was right in writing
that Christ was originate on account of the flesh (for He became
flesh), yet unoriginate, because He is not in the number of things made
and originated, but Son from Father; and if we are aware too that those
who have said that the Unoriginate is One, meaning the Father, did not
mean to lay down that the Word was originated and made, but that the
Father has no personal cause, but rather is Himself Father of Wisdom,
and in Wisdom has made all things that are originated; why do we not
combine all our Fathers in religious belief, those who deposed the
Samosatene as well as those who proscribed the Arian heresy, instead of
making distinctions between them and refusing to entertain a right
opinion of them? I repeat, that those, in view of the sophistical
explanation of the Samosatene, wrote, ‘He is not coessential3645
3645 [On
the subject of the rejection of the ὁμοούσιον at this Council of Antioch, see Prolegg. ch. ii.
§3 (2) b.] | ;’ and these, with an apposite meaning,
said that He was. For myself, I have written these brief remarks, from
my feeling towards persons who were religious to Christ-ward; but were
it possible to come by the Epistle which we are told that the former
wrote, I consider we should find further grounds for the aforesaid
proceeding of those blessed men. For it is right and meet thus to feel,
and to maintain a good conscience toward the Fathers, if we be not
spurious children, but have received the traditions from them, and the
lessons of religion at their hands.
48. Such then, as we confess and believe, being
the sense of the Fathers, proceed we even in their company to examine
once more the matter, calmly and with a kindly sympathy, with reference
to what has been said before, viz. whether the Bishops collected at
Nicæa do not really prove to have thought aright. For if the Word
be a work and foreign to the Father’s essence, so that He is
separated from the Father by the difference of nature, He cannot be one
in essence with Him, but rather He is homogeneous by nature with the
works, though He surpass them in grace3646 .
On the other hand, if we confess that He is not a work but the genuine
offspring of the Father’s essence, it would follow that He is
inseparable from the Father, being connatural, because He is begotten
from Him. And being such, good reason He should be called Coessential.
Next, if the Son be not such from
participation, but is in His essence the Father’s Word and
Wisdom, and this essence is the offspring of the Father’s
essence3647 , and its likeness as the radiance is
of the light, and the Son says, ‘I and the Father are One,’
and, ‘he that hath seen Me, hath seen the Father’ (John x. 30; xiv. 9), how must we understand these words? or
how shall we so explain them as to preserve the oneness of the Father
and the Son? Now as to its consisting in agreement3648
3648 §23, note 3, yet vid. Hipp. contr. Noet. 7. | of doctrines, and in the Son’s not
disagreeing with the Father, as the Arians say, such an interpretation
is a sorry one; for both the Saints, and still more Angels and
Archangels, have such an agreement with God, and there is no
disagreement among them. For he who disagreed, the devil, was beheld to
fall from the heavens, as the Lord said. Therefore if by reason of
agreement the Father and the Son are one, there would be things
originated which had this agreement with God, and each of these might
say, ‘I and the Father are One.’ But if this be absurd, and
so it truly is, it follows of necessity that we must conceive of
Son’s and Father’s oneness in the way of essence. For
things originate, though they have an agreement with their Maker, yet
possess it only by influence3649
3649 κινήσει vid. Cyril. contr. Jul. viii. p. 274. Greg. Nyss. de
Hom. Op. p. 87. | , and by
participation, and through the mind; the transgression of which
forfeits heaven. But the Son, being an offspring from the essence, is
one by essence, Himself and the Father that begat Him.
49. This is why He has equality with the Father
by titles expressive of unity3650 , and what is said
of the Father, is said in Scripture of the Son also, all but His being
called Father3651
3651 By
‘the Son being equal to the Father,’ is but meant
that He is His ‘exact image;’ it does not imply any
distinction of essence. Cf. Hil. de Syn. 73. But this implies
some exception, for else He would not be like or equal, but the same.
ibid. 72. Hence He is the Father’s image in all things
except in being the Father, πλὴν τῆς
ἀγεννησίας
καὶ τῆς
πατρότητος. Damasc. de Imag. iii. 18. p. 354. vid. also Basil.
contr. Eun. ii. 28; Theod. Inconfus. p. 91; Basil.
Ep. 38. 7 fin. [Through missing this point the] Arians asked why
the Son was not the beginning of a θεογονία. Supr. p. 319 a, note 1. vid. infr. note
8. | . For the Son
Himself said, ‘All things that the Father hath are Mine’
(John xvi. 15); and He says to the Father, ‘All
Mine are Thine, and Thine are Mine’ (John xvii. 10),—as for instance3652 , the name God; for ‘the Word was
God;’—Almighty, ‘Thus saith He that is, and that was,
and that is to come, the Almighty’ (John i. 1; Apoc. i. 8):—the being Light, ‘I
am,’ He says, ‘the Light’ (John viii. 12):—the Operative Cause, ‘All
things were made by Him,’ and, ‘whatsoever I see the Father
do, I do also’ (John i.
3; v. 19):—the being
Everlasting, ‘His eternal power and godhead,’ and,
‘In the beginning was the Word,’ and, ‘He was the
true Light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the
world;’—the being Lord, for, ‘The Lord rained fire
and brimstone from the Lord,’ and the Father says, ‘I am
the Lord,’ and, ‘Thus saith the Lord, the Almighty
God;’ and of the Son Paul speaks thus, ‘One Lord Jesus
Christ, through whom all things’ (Bible:Isa.45.5 Bible:Amos.5.16 Bible:1Cor.8.6">Rom. i. 20; John i. 1, 9; Gen. xix. 24;
Isa. xlv. 5; Am. v. 16; 1 Cor. viii. 6). And on the Father Angels wait, and
again the Son too is worshipped by them, ‘And let all the Angels
of God worship Him;’ and He is said to be Lord of Angels, for
‘the Angels ministered unto Him,’ and ‘the Son of Man
shall send His Angels.’ The being honoured as the Father, for
‘that they may honour the Son,’ He says, ‘as they
honour the Father;’—being equal to God, ‘He counted
it not a prize to be equal with God’ (Bible:Phil.2.6">Heb. i. 6; Matt. iv. 11; xxiv. 31; John v.
23; Phil. ii. 6):— the
being Truth from the True, and Life from the Living, as being truly
from the Fountain, even the Father;—the quickening and raising
the dead as the Father, for so it is written in the Gospel. And of the
Father it is written, ‘The Lord thy God is One Lord,’ and,
‘The God of gods, the Lord, hath spoken, and hath called the
earth;’ and of the Son, ‘The Lord God hath shined upon
us,’ and, ‘The God of gods shall be seen in Sion.’
And again of God, Isaiah says, ‘Who is a God like unto Thee,
taking away iniquities and passing over unrighteousness?’ (Bible:Ps.84.70 Bible:Mic.7.18">Deut. vi. 4; Ps. l. 1; cxviii. 27;
lxxxiv. 7, LXX.; Mic. vii. 18). But the Son said to whom He would,
‘Thy sins are forgiven thee;’ for instance, when, on the
Jews murmuring, He manifested the remission by His act, saying to the
paralytic, ‘Rise, take up thy bed, and go unto thy house.’
And of God Paul says, ‘To the King eternal;’ and again of
the Son, David in the Psalm, ‘Lift up your gates, O ye rulers,
and be ye lift up ye everlasting doors, and the King of glory shall
come in.’ And Daniel heard it said, ‘His Kingdom is an
everlasting Kingdom, and His Kingdom shall not be destroyed’
(Dan. iv. 3; vii. 14" id="xxii.ii.iii-p69.7" parsed="|Matt|9|5|0|0;|Mark|2|11|0|0;|1Tim|1|17|0|0;|Ps|24|7|0|0;|Dan|4|3|0|0;|Dan|7|14|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.9.5 Bible:Mark.2.11 Bible:1Tim.1.17 Bible:Ps.24.7 Bible:Dan.4.3 Bible:Dan.7.14">Matt. ix. 5; Mark ii. 11; 1
Tim. i. 17; Ps. xxiv. 7; Dan. iv. 3; vii. 14). And in a word, all that you find said
of the Father, so much will you find said of the Son, all but His being
Father, as has been said.
50. If then any think of other beginning, and
other Father, considering the equality of these attributes, it is a mad
thought. But if, since the Son is from the Father, all that is the
Father’s is the Son’s as in an image and Expression, let it
be considered dispassionately, whether an essence foreign from the
Father’s essence admit of
such attributes; and whether such a one be other in nature and alien in
essence, and not coessential with the Father. For we must take reverent
heed, lest transferring what is proper to the Father to what is unlike
Him in essence, and expressing the Father’s godhead by what is
unlike in kind and alien in essence, we introduce another essence
foreign to Him, yet capable of the properties of the first essence3653
3653 Arianism was in the dilemma of denying Christ’s divinity, or
introducing a second God. The Arians proper went off on the former side
of the alternative, the Semi-Arians on the latter; and Athan., as here
addressing the Semi Arians, insists on the greatness of the latter
error. This of course was the objection which attached to the
words ὁμοιούσιον,
ἀπαράλλακτος
εἴκων, &c., when
disjoined from the ὁμοούσιον; and Eusebius’s language, supr. p. 75, note 7,
shews us that it is not an imaginary one. | , and lest we be silenced by God Himself,
saying, ‘My glory I will not give to another,’ and be
discovered worshipping this alien God, and be accounted such as were
the Jews of that day, who said, ‘Wherefore dost Thou, being a
man, make Thyself God?’ referring, the while, to another source
the things of the Spirit, and blasphemously saying, ‘He casteth
out devils through Beelzebub’ (Isa. xlii. 8; John x. 33; Luke xi. 15). But if this is shocking, plainly
the Son is not unlike in essence, but coessential with the Father; for
if what the Father has is by nature the Son’s, and the Son
Himself is from the Father, and because of this oneness of godhead and
of nature He and the Father are one, and He that hath seen the Son hath
seen the Father, reasonably is He called by the Fathers
‘Coessential;’ for to what is other in essence, it belongs
not to possess such prerogatives.
51. And again, if, as we have said before, the
Son is not such by participation, but, while all things originated have
by participation the grace of God, He is the Father’s Wisdom and
Word of which all things partake3654
3654 De
Decr. §10. p. 15, note 4. | , it follows
that He, being the deifying and enlightening power of the Father, in
which all things are deified and quickened, is not alien in essence
from the Father, but coessential. For by partaking of Him, we partake
of the Father; because that the Word is the Father’s own. Whence,
if He was Himself too from participation, and not from the Father His
essential Godhead and Image, He would not deify3655
3655 ἐθεοποίησε
Orat.ii. §70.
de Decr. §14. | ,
being deified Himself. For it is not possible that He, who merely
possesses from participation, should impart of that partaking to
others, since what He has is not His own, but the Giver’s; and
what He has received, is barely the grace sufficient for Himself.
However, let us fairly examine the reason why some, as is said, decline
the ‘Coessential,’ whether it does not rather shew that the
Son is coessential with the Father. They say then, as you have written,
that it is not right to say that the Son is coessential with the
Father, because he who speaks of ‘coessential’ speaks of
three, one essence pre-existing, and that those who are generated from
it are coessential: and they add, ‘If then the Son be coessential
with the Father, then an essence must be previously supposed, from
which they have been generated; and that the One is not Father and the
Other Son, but they are brothers together.3656
3656 Cf.
supr. p. 314, note 1, Cyr. Thesaur. pp. 22,
23. | ’ As to all this, though it be a Greek
interpretation, and what comes from them does not bind us3657
3657 Cf.
p. 169, note 4a [and on οὐσία as a
philosophical and theological term, Prolegg. ch. ii. §3 (2)
b. On the divergence of its theological use from its philosophical
sense, see] Anastasius, Hodeg. 6. and Theorian, Legat. ad
Arm. pp. 441, 2. Socr. iii. 25. Damascene, speaking of the Jacobite
use of φύσις and
ὑπόστασις says, ‘Who of holy men ever thus spoke? unless ye
introduce to us your S. Aristotle, as a thirteenth Apostle, and prefer
the idolater to the divinely inspired.’ cont.
Jacob. 10. p. 399. and so again Leontius, speaking of
Philoponus, who from the Monophysite confusion of nature and hypostasis
was led into Tritheism. ‘He thus argued, taking his start from
Aristotelic principles; for Aristotle says that there are of
individuals particular substances as well as one common.’ De
Sect. v. fin. | , still let us see whether those things which
are called coessential and are collateral, as derived from one essence
presupposed, are coessential with each other, or with the essence from
which they are generated. For if only with each other, then are they
other in essence and unlike, when referred to that essence which
generated them; for other in essence is opposed to coessential; but if
each be coessential with the essence which generated them, it is
thereby confessed that what is generated from any thing, is coessential
with that which generated it; and there is no need of seeking for three
essences, but merely to seek whether it be true that this is from
that3658
3658 The
argument, when drawn out, is virtually this: if, because two subjects
are coessential, a third is pre-supposed of which they partake, then,
since either of these two is coessential with that of which both
partake, a new third must be supposed in which it and the pre-existing
substance partake and thus an infinite series of things coessential
must be supposed. Vid. Basil. Ep. 52. n. 2. [Cf. Aristot.
Frag. 183, p. 1509 b 23.] | . For should it happen that there were not
two brothers, but that only one had come of that essence, he that was
generated would not be called alien in essence, merely because there
was no other from the essence than he; but though alone, he must be
coessential with him that begat him. For what shall we say about
Jephtha’s daughter; because she was only-begotten, and ‘he
had not,’ says Scripture, ‘other child’ (Jud. xi. 34); and again, concerning the
widow’s son, whom the Lord raised from the dead, because he too
had no brother, but was only-begotten, was on that account neither of
these coessential with him that begat? Surely they were, for they were
children, and this is a property of children with reference to their
parents. And in like manner also,
when the Fathers said that the Son of God was from His essence,
reasonably have they spoken of Him as coessential. For the like
property has the radiance compared with the light. Else it follows that
not even the creation came out of nothing. For whereas men beget with
passion3659 , so again they work upon an existing
subject matter, and otherwise cannot make. But if we do not understand
creation in a human way3660
3660 Vid.
de Decr. §11, note 6: also Cyril, Thesaur. iv. p.
29: Basil. contr. Eun. ii. 23: Hil. de Syn.
17. | , when we attribute
it to God, much less seemly is it to understand generation in a human
way, or to give a corporeal sense to Coessential; instead of receding
from things originate, casting away human images, nay, all things
sensible, and ascending3661 to the Father3662
3662 S.
Basil says in like manner that, though God is Father κυρίως properly, supr. p. 156, note 1, 157, note 6, 171,
note 5, 319, note 3), yet it comes to the same thing if we were to say
that He is τροπικῶς and ἐκ
μεταφορᾶς, figuratively, such, contr. Eun. ii.
24; γέννησις implies two things,—passion, and relationship,
οἰκείωσις
φύσεως;
accordingly we must take the latter as an indication of the divine
sense of the term. Cf. also supr. p. 158, note 7, p. 322,
Orat. ii. 32, iii. 18, 67, and Basil. contr.
Eunom. ii. 17; Hil. de Trin. iv. 2. Vid. also Athan.
ad Serap. i. 20. and Basil. Ep. 38. n. 5. and what
is said of the office of faith in each of these. | , lest we rob the Father of the Son in
ignorance, and rank Him among His own creatures.
52. Further, if, in confessing Father and Son, we
spoke of two beginnings or two Gods as Marcion and Valentinus3663
3663 Supr. p. 167, note 7, and p. 307. | , or said that the Son had any other mode of
godhead, and was not the Image and Expression of the Father, as being
by nature born from Him, then He might be considered unlike; for such
essences are altogether unlike each other. But if we acknowledge that
the Father’s godhead is one and sole, and that of Him the Son is
the Word and Wisdom; and, as thus believing, are far from speaking of
two Gods, but understand the oneness of the Son with the Father to be,
not in likeness of their teaching, but according to essence and in
truth, and hence speak not of two Gods but of one God; there being but
one Form3664
3664 ἕνος
ὄντος εἴδους
θεότητος: for the word εἶδος, cf.
Orat. iii. 16 is generally applied to the Son, as in what
follows, and is synonymous [?] with hypostasis; but it is remarkable
that here it is almost synonymous with οὐσία or
φύσις. Indeed in one sense nature, substance, and hypostasis, are
all synonymous, i.e. as one and all denoting the Una Res, which is
Almighty God. The apparent confusion is useful as reminding us of this
great truth; vid. note 8, infr. | of Godhead, as the Light is one and
the Radiance; (for this was seen by the Patriarch Jacob, as Scripture
says, ‘The sun rose upon him when the Form of God passed
by,’ Gen. xxxii. 31, LXX.); and beholding this, and
understanding of whom He was Son and Image, the holy Prophets say,
‘The Word of the Lord came to me;’ and recognising the
Father, who was beheld and revealed in Him, they made bold to say,
‘The God of our fathers hath appeared unto me, the God of
Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob’ (Exod. iii. 16); this being so, wherefore scruple we to
call Him coessential who is one with the Father, and appears as doth
the Father, according to likeness and oneness of godhead? For if, as
has been many times said, He has it not to be proper to the
Father’s essence, nor to resemble, as a Son, we may well scruple:
but if this be the illuminating and creative Power, specially proper to
the Father, without Whom He neither frames nor is known (for all things
consist through Him and in Him); wherefore, perceiving the fact, do we
decline to use the phrase conveying it? For what is it to be thus
connatural with the Father, but to be one in essence with Him? for God
attached not to Him the Son from without3665 ,
as needing a servant; nor are the works on a level with the Creator,
and honoured as He is, or to be thought one with the Father. Or let a
man venture to make the distinction, that the sun and the radiance are
two lights, or different essences; or to say that the radiance accrued
to it over and above, and is not a simple and pure offspring from the
sun; such, that sun and radiance are two, but the light one, because
the radiance is an offspring from the Sun. But, whereas not more
divisible, nay less divisible is the nature3666
3666 [φύσις is here
(as the apodosis of the clause shows) as well as in the next section,
used as a somewhat more vague equivalent for οὐσία,
not, as Newman contends in an omitted note, for ‘person,’ a
use which is scarcely borne out by the (no doubt somewhat fluctuating)
senses of φύσις in the
passages quoted by him from Alexander (in Theod. H. E. i. 4, cf.
Origen’s use of οὐσία,
Prolegg. ch. ii. §3 (2) a) and Cyril c. Nest.
iii. p. 91. φύσις and
οὐσία
are nearly equivalent in the manifesto of Basil of
Ancyra, whom Ath. has in view here, see Epiph. Hær. 73.
12–22.] | of
the Son towards the Father, and the godhead not accruing to the Son,
but the Father’s godhead being in the Son, so that he that hath
seen the Son hath seen the Father in Him; wherefore should not such a
one be called Coessential?
53. Even this is sufficient to dissuade you from
blaming those who have said that the Son was coessential with the
Father, and yet let us examine the very term ‘Coessential,’
in itself, by way of seeing whether we ought to use it at all, and
whether it be a proper term, and is suitable to apply to the Son. For
you know yourselves, and no one can dispute it, that Like is not
predicated of essence, but of habits, and qualities; for in the case of
essences we speak, not of likeness, but of identity. Man, for instance,
is said to be like man, not in essence, but according to habit and
character; for in essence men are of one nature. And again, man is not
said to be unlike dog, but to be of different nature. Accordingly while the former are of one nature
and coessential, the latter are different in both. Therefore, in
speaking of Like according to essence, we mean like by participation;
(for Likeness is a quality, which may attach to essence), and this
would be proper to creatures for they, by partaking, are made like to
God. For ‘when He shall appear,’ says Scripture, ‘we
shall be like Him’ (1
John iii. 2), like, that is,
not in essence but in sonship, which we shall partake from Him. If then
ye speak of the Son as being by participation, then indeed call Him
Like-in-essence; but thus spoken of, He is not Truth, nor Light at all,
nor in nature God. For things which are from participation, are called
like, not in reality, but from resemblance to reality; so that they may
swerve, or be taken from those who share them. And this, again, is
proper to creatures and works. Therefore, if this be out of place, He
must be, not by participation, but in nature and truth Son, Light,
Wisdom, God; and being by nature, and not by sharing, He would properly
be called, not Like-in-essence, but Coessential. But what would not be
asserted, even in the case of others (for the Like has been shewn to be
inapplicable to essences), is it not folly, not to say violence, to put
forward in the case of the Son, instead of the
‘Coessential?’
54. This is why the Nicene Council was correct in
writing, what it was becoming to say, that the Son, begotten from the
Father’s essence, is coessential with Him. And if we too have
been taught the same thing, let us not fight with shadows, especially
as knowing, that they who have so defined, have made this confession of
faith, not to misrepresent the truth, but as vindicating the truth and
religiousness towards Christ, and also as destroying the blasphemies
against Him of the Ario-maniacs. For this must be considered and noted
carefully, that, in using unlike-in-essence, and other-in-essence, we
signify not the true Son, but some one of the creatures, and an
introduced and adopted Son, which pleases the heretics; but when we
speak uncontroversially of the Coessential, we signify a genuine Son
born of the Father; though at this Christ’s enemies often burst
with rage3667 . What then I have learned myself, and
have heard men of judgment say, I have written in few words; but do
you, remaining on the foundation of the Apostles, and holding fast the
traditions of the Fathers, pray that now at length all strife and
rivalry may cease, and the futile questions of the heretics may be
condemned, and all logomachy3668
3668 And
so ταῖς
λογομαχίαις, Basil de Sp. S. n. 16. It is used with an allusion
to the fight against the Word, as χριστομαχεῖν
and θεομαχεῖν. Thus λογομαχεῖν
μελετήσαντες,
καὶ λοιπὸν
πνευματομαχοῦντες,
ἔσονται μετ᾽
ὀλίγον
νεκροὶ τῇ
ἀλογί& 139·. Serap. iv. 1. | ; and the guilty and
murderous heresy of the Arians may disappear, and the truth may shine
again in the hearts of all, so that all every where may ‘say the
same thing’ (1 Cor. i.
10), and think the same
thing3669
3669 Cf.
Hil. de Syn. 77, and appendix, note 3, also supr. p. 303,
and note. The ὁμοούσιον was not imposed upon Ursacius and Valens, a.d. 347, by Pope Julius; nor in the Council of Aquileia
in 381, was it offered by S. Ambrose to Palladius and Secundianus. S.
Jerome’s account of the apology made by the Fathers of Ariminum
is of the same kind. ‘We thought,’ they said, ‘the
sense corresponded to the words, nor in the Church of God, where there
is simplicity, and a pure confession, did we fear that one thing would
be concealed in the heart, another uttered by the lips. We were
deceived by our good opinion of the bad.’ ad Lucif.
19. | , and that, no Arian contumelies remaining,
it may be said and confessed in every Church, ‘One Lord, one
faith, one baptism’ (Eph. iv. 5), in Christ Jesus our Lord, through whom
to the Father be the glory and the strength, unto ages of ages.
Amen.
Postscript.
55. After I had written my account of the
Councils3670 , I had information that the most
irreligious3671 Constantius had sent Letters to the
Bishops remaining in Ariminum; and I have taken pains to get copies of
them from true brethren and to send them to you, and also what the
Bishops answered; that you may know the irreligious craft of the
Emperor, and the firm and unswerving purpose of the Bishops towards the
truth.
Interpretation of the Letter3672
3672 These
two Letters are both in Socr. ii. 37. And the latter is in Theod. H.
E. ii. 15. p. 878. in a different version from the Latin
original. | .
Constantius, Victorious and Triumphant, Augustus,
to all Bishops who are assembled at Ariminum.
That the divine and adorable Law is our chief
care, your excellencies are not ignorant; but as yet we have been
unable to receive the twenty Bishops sent by your wisdom, and charged
with the legation from you, for we are pressed by a necessary
expedition against the Barbarians; and as ye know, it beseems to have
the soul clear from every care, when one handles the matters of the
Divine Law. Therefore we have ordered the Bishops to await our return
at Adrianople; that, when all public affairs are well arranged, then at
length we may hear and weigh their suggestions. Let it not then be
grievous to your constancy to await their return, that, when they come
back with our answer to you, ye may be able to bring matters to a close
which so deeply affect the well-being of the Catholic Church.
This was what the Bishops received at the hands
of three emissaries.
Reply of the Bishops.
The letter of your humanity we have received,
most God-beloved Lord Emperor, which reports that, on account of stress
of public affairs, as yet you have been unable to attend to our
deputies; and in which you command
us to await their return, until your godliness shall be advised by them
of what we have defined conformably to our ancestors. However, we now
profess and aver at once by these presents, that we shall not recede
from our purpose, as we also instructed our deputies. We ask then that
you will with serene countenance command these letters of our
mediocrity to be read; but also that you will graciously receive those,
with which we charged our deputies. This however your gentleness
comprehends as well as we, that great grief and sadness at present
prevail, because that, in these your most happy days, so many Churches
are without Bishops. And on this account we again request your
humanity, most God-beloved Lord Emperor, that, if it please your
religiousness, you would command us, before the severe winter weather
sets in, to return to our Churches, that so we may be able, unto God
Almighty and our Lord and Saviour Christ, His Only-begotten Son, to
fulfil together with our flocks our wonted prayers in behalf of your
imperial sway, as indeed we have ever performed them, and at this time
make them.
Additional Note.
The ‘list of Sirmian confessions’
published by Newman as an Excursus to the de Synodis is
omitted here. It will be found printed as ‘Appendix iii.’
to his Arians of the Fourth Century.
The Excursus on a Creed ascribed (at the
Council of Ephesus, see Hard. Conc. i. 1640, Hahn. §83;
Routh Rell. iii. 367) to the 70 bishops who condemned Paul of
Samosata, at Antioch a.d. 269, and containing
the formula ὁμοούσιον (against
this, supr. §§43–47), is also omitted, as
bearing only very indirectly on the de Synodis. Caspari Alte
und Neue Quellen (xi), p. 161, has thoroughly investigated the
Confession since Newman wrote, and has proved (what Newman half
suspected) that the document is of Apollinarian origin. As Caspari was
unaware of Newman’s discussion, this result comes as the result
of two independent investigations pursued on very different
lines.] E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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