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| The thing that follows is not the same as the thing that it follows. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
§41. The thing that follows is not the same as the thing
that it follows.
He first says, “the
attribute of being ungenerate follows the Deity.” By that we
understood him to mean that this Ungeneracy is one of the things
external to God. Then he says, “Or rather this Ungeneracy is His
actual being.” We fail to understand the ‘sequitur’
of this; we notice in fact something very queer and incongruous about
it. If Ungeneracy follows God, and yet also constitutes His being, two
beings will be attributed to one and the same subject in this view; so
that God will be in the same way as He was before and has always been
believed to be223
223 ὡς εἶναι μὲν
τὸν Θεὸν κατὰ
ταὐτὸν ὡς
εἶναί ποτε(infinitive by attraction to preceding) καὶ εἶναι
πεπίστευται | , but besides that will have another
being accompanying, which they style Ungeneracy, quite
distinct from Him Whose ‘following’ it is, as our Master
puts it. Well, if he commands us to think so, he must pardon our
poverty of ideas, in not being able to follow out such subtle
speculations.
But if he disowns this view, and
does not admit a double being in the Deity, one represented by the
godhead, the other by the ungeneracy, let our friend, who is himself
neither ‘rash’ nor ‘malignant,’ prevail upon
himself not to be over partial to invective while these combats for the
truth are being fought, but to explain to us, who are so wanting in
culture, how that which follows is not one thing and that which leads
another, but how both coalesce into one; for, in spite of what he says
in defence of his statement, the absurdity of it remains; and the
addition of that handful of words224
224 ἐυαριθμήτων
ῥηματων.
But it is possible that the true reading may be εὐρύθμων, alluding to the ‘rhythm’ in the form of abuse
with which Eunomius connected his arguments (preceding
section). | does not
correct, as he asserts, the contradiction in it. I have not yet been
able to see that any explanation at all is discoverable in them. But we
will give what he has written verbatim. “We say, ‘or rather
the Ungeneracy is His actual being,’ without meaning to
contract into the being225
225 οὐκ εἰς τὸ
εἶναι
συναιροῦντες | that which we have
proved to follow it, but applying ‘follow’ to the title,
but is to the being.” Accordingly when these things are
taken together, the whole resulting argument would be, that the title
Ungenerate follows, because to be Ungenerate is His actual being. But
what expounder of this expounding shall we get? He says “without
meaning to contract into the being that which we have proved to follow
it.” Perhaps some of the guessers of riddles might tell us that
by ‘contract into’ he means ‘fastening
together.’ But who can see anything intelligible or coherent in
the rest? The results of ‘following’ belong, he tells us,
not to the being, but to the title. But, most learned sir, what is the
title? Is it in discord with the being, or does it not rather coincide
with it in the thinking? If the title is inappropriate to the being,
then how can the being be represented by the title; but if, as he
himself phrases it, the being is fittingly defined by the title of
Ungenerate, how can there be any parting of them after that? You make
the name of the being follow one thing and the being itself another.
And what then is the ‘construction of the entire view?’
“The title Ungenerate follows God, seeing that He Himself is
Ungenerate.” He says that there ‘follows’ God, Who is
something other than that which is Ungenerate, this very title. Then
how can he place the definition of Godhead within the Ungeneracy?
Again, he says that this title ‘follows’ God as existing
without a previous generation. Who will solve us the mystery of such
riddles? ‘Ungenerate’ preceding and then following; first a
fittingly attached title of the being, and then following like a
stranger! What, too, is the cause or this excessive flutter about this
name; he gives to it the whole contents of godhead226
226 He
gives to it the whole contents of godhead. It was the central point in Eunomius’ system that by
the ᾽Αγεννησία
we can comprehend the Divine Nature; he trusts
entirely to the Aristotelian divisions (logical) and sub-divisions. A
mere word (γέννητος) was thus allowed to destroy the equality of the Son. It
was almost inevitable, therefore, that his opponent, as a defender of
the Homoousion, should occasionally fall back so far upon Plato, as to
maintain that opposites are joined and are identical with each other,
i.e. that γέννησις and ἀγεννησία are not truly opposed to each other. Another method of
combating this excessive insistence on the physical and logical was, to
bring forward the ethical realities; and this Gregory does constantly
throughout this treatise. We are to know God by Wisdom, and Truth, and
Righteousness. Only occasionally (as in the next section) does he speak
of the ‘eternity’ of God: and here only because Eunomius
has obliged him, and in order to show that the idea is made up of two
negations, and nothing more. | ;
as if there will be nothing wanting in our adoration, if God be so
named; and as if the whole system of our faith will be endangered, if
He is not? Now, if a brief statement about this should not be deemed
superfluous and irrelevant, we will thus explain the
matter.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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