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Chapter IV.—His Teaching on the Holy Trinity.
To estimate the exact value of the work done by S. Gregory in the
establishment of the doctrine of the Trinity and in the determination,
so far as Eastern Christendom is concerned, of the terminology employed
for the expression of that doctrine, is a task which can hardly be
satisfactorily carried out. His teaching on the subject is so closely
bound up with that of his brother, S. Basil of Cæsarea,—his
“master,” to use his own phrase,—that the two can
hardly be separated with any certainty. Where a disciple, carrying on
the teaching he has himself received from another, with perhaps almost
imperceptible variations of expression, has extended the influence of
that teaching and strengthened its hold on the minds of men, it must
always be a matter of some difficulty to discriminate accurately
between the services which the two have rendered to their common cause,
and to say how far the result attained is due to the earlier, how far
to the later presentment of the doctrine. But the task of so
discriminating between the work of S. Basil and that of S. Gregory is
rendered yet more complicated by the uncertainty attaching to the
authorship of particular treatises which have been claimed for both.
If, for instance, we could with certainty assign to S. Gregory that
treatise on the terms οὐσία and ὑπόστασις, which Dorner treats as one of the works by which he
“contributed materially to fix the uncertain usage of the
Church39
39 See
Dorner, Doctrine of the Person of Christ, Div. I. vol. ii. p.
314 (English Trans.). | ,” but which is found also among the
works of S. Basil in the form of a letter addressed to S. Gregory
himself, we should be able to estimate the nature and the extent of the
influence of the Bishop of Nyssa much more definitely than we can
possibly do while the authorship of this treatise remains uncertain.
Nor does this document stand alone in this respect, although it is
perhaps of more importance for the determination of such a question
than any other of the disputed treatises. Thus in the absence of
certainty as to the precise extent to which S. Gregory’s teaching
was directly indebted to that of his brother, it seems impossible to
say how far the “fixing of the uncertain usage of the
Church” was due to either of them singly. That together they did
contribute very largely to that result is beyond
question: and it is perhaps superfluous to endeavour to separate their
contributions, especially as there can be little doubt that S. Gregory
at least conceived himself to be in agreement with S. Basil upon all
important points, if not to be acting simply as the mouth-piece of his
“master’s” teaching, and as the defender of the
statements which his “master” had set forth against
possible misconceptions of their meaning. Some points, indeed, there
clearly were, in which S. Gregory’s presentment of the doctrine
differs from that of S. Basil; but to these it may be better to revert
at a later stage, after considering the more striking variation which
their teaching displays from the language of the earlier Nicene school
as represented by S. Athanasius.
The council held at Alexandria
in the year 362, during the brief restoration of S. Athanasius, shows
us at once the point of contrast and the substantial agreement between
the Western school, with which S. Athanasius himself is in this matter
to be reckoned, and the Eastern theologians to whom has been given the
title of “Neo-Nicene.” The question at issue was one of
language, not of belief; it turned upon the sense to be attached to the
word ὑπόστασις. The Easterns, following a use of the term which may be
traced perhaps to the influence of Origen, employed the word in the
sense of the Latin “Persona,” and spoke of the Three
Persons as τρεῖς
ὑποστάσεις, whereas the Latins employed the term
“hypostasis” as equivalent to
“sub-stantia,” to express what the Greeks
called οὐσία,—the one Godhead of the Three Persons. With the Latins
agreed the older school of the orthodox Greek theologians, who applied
to the Three Persons the phrase τρία
πρόσωπα,
speaking of the Godhead as μία
ὑπόστασις. This phrase, in the eyes of the newer Nicene school, was
suspected of Sabellianism40
40 It is to
be noted further that the use of the terms “Persona”
and πρόσωπον by those who avoided the phrase τρεῖς
ὑποστάσεις
no doubt assisted in the formation of this suspicion.
At the same time the Nicene anathema favoured the sense of ὑπόστασις as equivalent to οὐσία, and so
appeared to condemn the Eastern use. | , while on the other
hand the Westerns were inclined to regard the Eastern phrase
τρεῖς
ὑποστάσεις
as implying tritheism. The synodal letter sets forth
to us the means by which the fact of substantial agreement between the
two schools was brought to light, and the understanding arrived at,
that while Arianism on the one hand and Sabellianism on the other were
to be condemned, it was advisable to be content with the language of
the Nicene formula, which employed neither the phrase μία
ὑπόστασις nor the phrase τρεῖς
ὑποστάσεις41
41 S.
Athanasius, Tom. ad Antioch, 5. | . This resolution, prudent as
it may have been for the purpose of bringing together those who were in
real agreement, and of securing that the reconciled parties should, at
a critical moment, present an unbroken front in the face of their
common and still dangerous enemy, could hardly be long maintained. The
expression τρεῖς
ὑποστάσεις
was one to which many of the orthodox, including those
who had formerly belonged to the Semi-Arian section, had become
accustomed: the Alexandrine synod, under the guidance of S. Athanasius,
had acknowledged the phrase, as used by them, to be an orthodox one,
and S. Basil, in his efforts to conciliate the Semi-Arian party, with
which he had himself been closely connected through his namesake of
Ancyra and through Eustathius of Sebastia, saw fit definitely to adopt
it. While S. Athanasius, on the one hand, using the older terminology,
says that ὑπόστασις is equivalent to οὐσία, and has
no other meaning42
42 Ad Afr.
Episc. §4. S. Athanasius, however, does not shrink from the
phrase τρεῖς
ὑποστάσεις
in contradistinction to the μῖα
οὐσία: see the
treatise, In illud, ‘Omnia mihi tradita sunt.’
§6. | , S. Basil, on the other hand, goes so
far as to say that the terms οὐσία and ὑπόστασις, even in the Nicene anathema, are not to be understood as
equivalent43
43 S. Bas.
Ep. 125 (being the confession of faith drawn up by S. Basil for the
subscription of Eustathius). | . The adoption of the new phrase, even
after the explanations given at Alexandria, was found to require, in
order to avoid misconstruction, a more precise definition of its
meaning, and a formal defence of its orthodoxy. And herein consisted
one principal service rendered by S. Basil and S. Gregory; while with
more precise definition of the term ὑπόστασις there emerged, it may be, a more precise view of the
relations of the Persons, and with the defence of the new phrase as
expressive of the Trinity of Persons a more precise view of what is
implied in the Unity of the Godhead.
The treatise, De Sancta Trinitate is one of those which are
attributed by some to S. Basil, by others to S. Gregory: but for the
purpose of showing the difficulties with which they had to deal, the
question of its exact authorship is unimportant. 44
44 It
appears on the whole more probable that the treatise is the work of S.
Gregory; but it is found, in a slightly different shape, among the
Letters of S. Basil. (Ep. 189 in the Benedictine Edition.) | The
most obvious objection alleged against their teaching was that which
had troubled the Western theologians before the Alexandrine
Council,—the objection that the acknowledgment of Three Persons
implied a belief in Three Gods. To meet this, there was required a
statement of the meaning of the term ὑπόστασις, and of the relation of ὀυσία to ὑπόστασις. Another objection, urged apparently by the same party as
the former, was directed against the “novelty,” or
inconsistency, of employing in the singular terms expressive of the
Divine Nature such as “goodness” or “Godhead,”
while asserting that the Godhead exists in plurality of Persons45
45 In what
sense this language was charged with “novelty” is not very
clear. But the point of the objection appears to lie in a refusal to
recognize that terms expressive of the Divine Nature, whether they
indicate attributes or operations of that Nature, may be predicated of
each ὑπόστασις
severally, as well as of the οὐσία,
without attaching to the terms themselves that idea of plurality which,
so far as they express attributes or operations of the οὐσία, must be excluded from them. | . To meet this, it was required that the sense
in which the Unity of the Godhead was maintained should be more plainly
and clearly defined.
The position taken by S. Basil
with regard to the terms οὐσία and ὑπόστασις is very concisely stated in his letter to Terentius46 . He says that the Western theologians
themselves acknowledge that a distinction does exist between the two
terms: and he briefly sets forth his view of the nature of that
distinction by saying that οὐσία is
to ὑπόστασις
as that which is common to individuals is to that in
respect of which the individuals are naturally differentiated. He
illustrates this statement by the remark that each individual man has
his being τῷ
κοίνῳ τῆς
οὐσίας
λόγῳ, while he is
differentiated as an individual man in virtue of his own particular
attributes. So in the Trinity that which constitutes the οὐσία (be it “goodness” or be it
“Godhead”) is common, while the ὑπόστασις is marked by the Personal attribute of Fatherhood or Sonship
or Sanctifying Power47
47 The
differentia here assigned to the Third Person is not, in S.
Basil’s own view, a differentia at all: for he would no
doubt have been ready to acknowledge that this attribute is common to
all Three Persons. S. Gregory, as it will be seen, treats the question
as to the differentiation of the Persons somewhat differently, and
rests his answer on a basis theologically more scientific. | . This position is also
adopted and set forth in greater detail in the treatise, De Diff.
Essen. et Hypost.48
48 S. Bas.
Ep. 38 (Benedictine Ed.). | , already referred to,
where we find once more the illustration employed in the Epistle to
Terentius. The Nature of the Father is beyond our comprehension; but
whatever conception we are able to form of that Nature, we must
consider it to be common also to the Son and to the Holy Spirit: so far
as the οὐσία is
concerned, whatever is predicated of any one of the Persons may be
predicated equally of each of the Three Persons, just as the properties
of man, quâ man, belong alike to Paul and Barnabas and
Timothy: and as these individual men are differentiated by their own
particular attributes, so each Person of the Trinity is distinguished
by a certain attribute from the other two Persons. This way of putting
the case naturally leads to the question, “If you say, as you do
say, that Paul and Barnabas and Timothy are ‘three men,’
why do you not say that the Three Persons are ‘three
Gods?’” Whether the question was presented in this shape to
S. Basil we cannot with certainty decide: but we may gather from his
language regarding the applicability of number to the Trinity what his
answer would have been. He49 says that in
acknowledging One Father, One Son, One Holy Spirit, we do not enumerate
them by computation, but assert the individuality, so to say, of each
hypostasis—its distinctness from the others. He would probably
have replied by saying that strictly speaking we ought to decline
applying to the Deity, considered as Deity, any numerical idea at all,
and that to enumerate the Persons as “three” is a
necessity, possibly, imposed upon us by language, but that no
conception of number is really applicable to the Divine Nature or to
the Divine Persons, which transcend number50
50 On S.
Basil’s language on this subject, see Dorner, Doctrine of the
Person of Christ, Div. 1. vol. ii. pp. 309–11. (Eng.
Trans.) | . To S. Gregory,
however, the question did actually present itself as one demanding an
answer, and his reply to it marks his departure from S. Basil’s
position, though, if the treatise, De Diff. Essen. et Hyp. be S.
Basil’s, S. Gregory was but following out and defending the view
of his “master” as expressed in that treatise.
S. Gregory’s reply to the
difficulty may be found in the letter, or short dissertation, addressed
to Ablabius (Quod non sunt tres Dei), and in his treatise
περὶ
κοινῶν
ἐννοίων.
In the latter he lays it down that the term θεός is a
term οὐσίας
σημαντικόν, not a term προσώπων
δηλωτικόν: the Godhead of the Father is not that in which He
maintains His differentiation from the Son: the Son is not God because
He is Son, but because His essential Nature is what it is.
Accordingly, when we speak of “God the Father, God the Son, and
God the Holy Ghost,” the word and is employed to conjoin
the terms expressive of the Persons, not the repeated term which is
expressive of the Essence, and which therefore, while applied to each
of the Three Persons, yet cannot properly be employed in the plural.
That in the case of three individual “men” the term
expressive of essence is employed in the plural is due, he says,
to the fact that in this case there are circumstances which excuse or
constrain such a use of the term “man” while such
circumstances do not affect the case of the Holy Trinity. The
individuals included under the term “man” vary alike in
number and in identity, and thus we are constrained to speak of
“men” as more or fewer, and in a certain sense to treat the
essence as well as the persons numerically. In the Holy Trinity, on the
other hand, the Persons are always the same, and their number the same.
Nor are the Persons of the Holy Trinity differentiated, like individual
men, by relations of time and place, and the like; the differentiation
between them is based upon a constant causal relation existing among
the Three Persons, which does not affect the unity of the Nature: it
does not express the Being, but the mode of Being51
51 This
statement strikes at the root of the theory held by Eunomius, as well
as by the earlier Arians, that the ἀγεννησία of the Father constituted His Essence. S. Gregory treats
His ἀγεννησία
as that by which He is distinguished from the other
Persons, as an attribute marking His hypostasis. This subject is
treated more fully, with special reference to the Eunomian view, in the
Ref. alt. libri Eunomii. | . The Father is the Cause; the Son and the Holy
Spirit are differentiated from Him as being from the Cause, and again
differentiated inter se as being immediately from the Cause, and
immediately through that which is from the Cause. Further, while these
reasons may be alleged for holding that the cases are not in such a
sense parallel as to allow that the same conclusion as to modes of
speech should be drawn in both, he urges that the use of the term
“men” in the plural is, strictly speaking, erroneous. We
should, in strictness, speak not of “this or that man,” but
of “this or that hypostasis of man”—the “three
men” should be described as “three hypostases” of the
common οὐσία “man.” In the treatise addressed to Ablabius he goes
over the same ground, clothing his arguments in a somewhat less
philosophical dress; but he devotes more space to an examination of the
meaning of the term θεός, with a view to
showing that it is a term expressive of operation, and thereby of
essence, not a term which may be considered as applicable to any
one of the Divine Persons in any such peculiar sense that it may not
equally be applied also to the other two52
52 S.
Gregory would apparently extend this argument even to the operations
expressed by the names of “Redeemer,” or
“Comforter;” though he would admit that in regard of the
mode by which these operations are applied to man, the names expressive
of them are used in a special sense of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,
yet he would argue that in neither case does the one Person act without
the other two. | . His
argument is partly based upon an etymology now discredited, but this
does not affect the position he seeks to establish (a position which is
also adopted in the treatise, De S. Trinitate), that names
expressive of the Divine Nature, or of the Divine operation (by which
alone that Nature is known to us) are employed, and ought to be
employed, only in the singular. The unity and inseparability of all
Divine operation, proceeding from the Father, advancing through the
Son, and culminating in the Holy Spirit, yet setting forth one
κίνησις of the Divine will, is the reason why the idea of plurality is not
suffered to attach to these names53
53 See
Dorner, ut sup., pp. 317–18. | , while the reason for
refusing to allow, in regard to the three Divine Persons, the same
laxity of language which we tolerate in regard to the case of the three
“men,” is to be found in the fact that in the latter case
no danger arises from the current abuse of language: no one thinks of
“three human natures;” but on the other hand polytheism is
a very real and serious danger, to which the parallel abuse of language
involved in speaking of “three Gods” would infallibly
expose us.
S. Gregory’s own doctrine,
indeed, has seemed to some critics to be open to the charge of
tritheism. But even if his doctrine were entirely expressed in the
single illustration of which we have spoken, it does not seem that the
charge would hold good, when we consider the light in which the
illustration would present itself to him. The conception of the unity
of human nature is with him a thing intensely vivid: it underlies much
of his system, and he brings it prominently forward more than once in
his more philosophical writings54
54 Especially in the treatise, De Animâ et Resurrectione,
and in that De Conditione Hominis. A notable instance is to be
found in the former (p. 242 A.). | . We cannot, in
fairness, leave his realism out of account when we are estimating the
force of his illustration: and therefore, while admitting that the
illustration was one not unlikely to produce misconceptions of his
teaching, we may fairly acquit him of any personal bias towards
tritheism such as might appear to be involved in the unqualified
adoption of the same illustration by a writer of our own time, or such
as might have been attributed to theologians of the period of S.
Gregory who adopted the illustration without the qualification of a
realism as determined as his own55
55 See
Dorner, ut sup., p. 315, and p. 319, note 2. | . But the illustration
does not stand alone: we must not consider that it is the only one of
those to be found in the treatise, De Diff. Essen. et Hypost.,
which he would have felt justified in employing. Even if the
illustration of the rainbow, set forth in that treatise, was not
actually his own (as Dorner, ascribing the treatise to him, considers
it to have been), it was at all events (on the other theory of the
authorship), included in the teaching he had received from his
“master:” it would be present to his mind, although in his
undisputed writings, where he is dealing with objections brought
against the particular illustration from human relations, he naturally
confines himself to the particular illustration from which an erroneous
inference was being drawn. In our estimate of his teaching the one
illustration must be allowed to some extent to qualify the effect
produced by the other. And, further, we must remember that his argument
from human relations is professedly only an illustration. It
points to an analogy, to a resemblance, not to an identity of
relations; so much he is careful in his reply to state. Even if it were
true, he implies, that we are warranted in speaking, in the given case,
of the three human persons as “three men,” it would not
follow that we should be warranted thereby in speaking of the three
Divine Persons as “three Gods.” For the human personalities
stand contrasted with the Divine, at once as regards their being and as
regards their operation. The various human πρόσωπα draw their being from many other πρόσωπα, one from one, another from another, not, as the Divine,
from One, unchangeably the same: they operate, each in his own way,
severally and independently, not, as the Divine, inseparably: they are
contemplated each by himself, in his own limited sphere, κατ᾽
ἰδίαν
περιγραφήν, not, as the Divine, in mutual essential connexion,
differentiated one from the other only by a certain mutual relation.
And from this it follows that the human πρόσωπα are capable of enumeration in a sense in which number cannot be
considered applicable to the Divine Persons. Here we find S.
Gregory’s teaching brought once more into harmony with his
“master’s:” if he has been willing to carry the use
of numerical terms rather further than S. Basil was prepared to do, he
yet is content in the last resort to say that number is not in
strictness applicable to the Divine ὑποστάσεις, in that they cannot be contemplated κατ᾽
ἰδίαν
περιγραφήν, and therefore cannot be enumerated by way of addition.
Still the distraction of the ὑποστάσεις
remains; and if there is no other way (as he seems to
have considered there was none), of making full
acknowledgment of their distinct though inseparable existence than to
speak of them as “three,” he holds that that use of
numerical language is justifiable, so long as we do not transfer the
idea of number from the ὑποστάσεις
to the οὐσία, to that
Nature of God which is Itself beyond our conception, and which we can
only express by terms suggested to us by what we know of Its
operation.
Such, in brief, is the teaching
of S. Gregory on the doctrine of the Holy Trinity, as expressed in the
treatises in which he developed and defended those positions in which
S. Basil appeared to diverge from the older Nicene theologians. That
the terminology of the subject gained clearness and definiteness from
his exposition, in that he rendered it plain that the adoption of the
Eastern phraseology was a thing perfectly consistent with the Faith
confessed alike by East and West in varying terms, seems beyond doubt.
It was to him, probably, rather than to S. Basil, that this work was
due; for he cleared up the points which S. Basil’s illustration
had left doubtful; yet in so doing he was using throughout the weapons
which his “master” had placed in his hands, and arguing in
favour of his “master’s” statements, in language, it
may be, less guarded than S. Basil himself would have employed, but in
accordance throughout with the principles which S. Basil had followed.
Each bore his own part in the common work: to one, perhaps, is due the
credit of greater originality; to the other it was given to carry on
and to extend what his brother had begun: neither, we may well believe,
would have desired to claim that the work which their joint teaching
effected should be imputed to himself alone.
So far, we have especially had
in view those minor treatises of S. Gregory which illustrate such
variations from Athanasian modes of expression as are to be found in
the writers of the “Neo-Nicene” school. These are perhaps
his most characteristic works upon the subject. But the doctrine of the
Trinity, as he held it, is further set forth and enforced in other
treatises which are, from another point of view, much more important
than those with which we have been dealing—in his Oratio
Catechetica, and his more directly polemical treatises against
Eunomius. In both these sections of his writings, when allowance is
made for the difference of terminology already discussed, we are less
struck by the divergencies from S. Athanasius’ presentment of the
doctrine than by the substantial identity of S. Gregory’s
reasoning with that of S. Athanasius, as the latter is displayed, for
example, in the “Orations against the Arians.”
There are, of course, many
points in which S. Gregory falls short of his great predecessor; but of
these some may perhaps be accounted for by the different aspect of the
Arian controversy as it presented itself to the two champions of the
Faith. The later school of Arianism may indeed be regarded as a
perfectly legitimate and rigidly logical development of the doctrines
taught by Arius himself; but in some ways the task of S. Gregory was a
different task from that of S. Athanasius, and was the less formidable
of the two. His antagonist was, by his own greater definiteness of
statement, placed at a disadvantage: the consequences which S.
Athanasius had to extract from the Arian statements were by Eunomius
and the Anomœans either openly asserted or tacitly admitted: and
it was thus an easier matter for S. Gregory to show the real tendency
of Anomœan doctrine than it had been for S. Athanasius to point
out the real tendency of the earlier Arianism. Further, it may be said
that by the time of S. Basil, still more by the time when S. Gregory
succeeded to his brother’s place in the controversy, the victory
over Arianism was assured. It was not possible for S. Athanasius, even
had it been in his nature to do so, to treat the earlier Arianism with
the same sort of contemptuous criticism with which Eunomius is
frequently met by S. Gregory. For S. Gregory, on the other hand, it was
not necessary to refrain from such criticism lest he should thereby
detract from the force of his protest against error. The crisis in his
day was not one which demanded the same sustained effort for which the
contest called in the days of S. Athanasius. Now and then, certainly,
S. Gregory also rises to a white heat of indignation against his adversary: but it
is hardly too much to say that his work appears to lack just those
qualities which seem, in the writings of S. Athanasius, to have been
called forth by the author’s sense of the weight of the force
opposed to him, and of the “life and death” character of
the contest. S. Gregory does not under-estimate the momentous nature of
the questions at issue: but when he wrote, he might feel that to those
questions the answer of Christendom had been already given, that the
conflict was already won, and that any attempt at developing the Arian
doctrine on Anomœan lines was the adoption of an untenable
position,—even of a position manifestly and evidently untenable:
the doctrine had but to be stated in clear terms to be recognized as
incompatible with Christianity, and, that fact once recognized, he had
no more to do. Thus much of his treatises against Eunomius consists not
of constructive argument in support of his own position, but of a
detailed examination of Eunomius’ own statements, while a further
portion of the contents of these books, by no means inconsiderable in
amount, is devoted not so much to the defence of the Faith as to the
refutation of certain misrepresentations of S. Basil’s arguments
which had been set forth by Eunomius.
Even in the more distinctly
constructive portion of these polemical writings, however, it may be
said that S. Gregory does not show marked originality of thought either
in his general argument, or in his mode of handling disputed texts.
Within the limits of an introductory essay like the present, anything
like detailed comparison on these points is of course impossible; but
any one who will take the trouble to compare the discourses of S.
Gregory against Eunomius with the “Orations” of S.
Athanasius against the Arians,—the Athanasian writing, perhaps,
most closely corresponding in character to these books of S.
Gregory,—either as regards the specific passages of Scripture
cited in support of the doctrine maintained, and the mode of
interpreting them, or as to the methods of explanation applied to the
texts alleged by the Arian writers in favour of their own opinions, can
hardly fail to be struck by the number and the closeness of the
resemblances which he will be able to trace between the earlier and the
later representatives of the Nicene School. A somewhat similar relation
to the Athanasian position, as regards the basis of belief, and
(allowing for the difference of terminology) as regards the definition
of doctrine, may be observed in the Oratio
Catechetica.
Such originality, in fact, as S.
Gregory may claim to possess (so far as his treatment of this subject
is concerned) is rather the originality of the tactician than that of
the strategist: he deals rather with his particular opponent, and keeps
in view the particular point in discussion more than the general area
over which the war extends. S. Athanasius, on the other hand (partly,
no doubt, because he was dealing with a less fully developed form of
error), seems to have more force left in reserve. He presents his
arguments in a more concise form, and is sometimes content to suggest
an inference where S. Gregory proceeds to draw out conclusions in
detail, and where thereby the latter, while possibly strengthening his
presentment of the truth as against his own particular
adversary,—against the Anomœan or the polytheist on the one
side, or against the Sabellian or the Judaizer on the
other,—renders his argument, when considered per se as a
defence of the orthodox position, frequently more diffuse and sometimes
less forcible. Yet, even here, originality of a certain kind does
belong to S. Gregory, and it seems only fair to him to say that in
these treatises also he did good service in defence of the Faith
touching the Holy Trinity. He shows that alike by way of formal
statement of doctrine, as in the Oratio Catechetica, and by way
of polemical argument, the forces at the command of the defenders of
the Faith could be organized to meet varied forms of error, without
abandoning, either for a more original theology like that or Marcellus
of Ancyra, or for the compromise which the Homœan or Semi-Arian
school were in danger of being led to accept, the weapons with which S.
Athanasius had conquered at Nicæa. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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