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| Gregory again discusses the generation of the Only-Begotten, and other different modes of generation, material and immaterial, and nobly demonstrates that the Son is the brightness of the Divine glory, and not a creature. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
§9. Gregory again
discusses the generation of the Only-Begotten, and other different
modes of generation, material and immaterial, and nobly demonstrates
that the Son is the brightness of the Divine glory, and not a
creature.
And now let us return once more
to the precise statement of Eunomius. “We believe also in the Son
of God, the only begotten God, the first-born of all creation, very
Son, not Ungenerate, verily begotten before the worlds.”
That he transfers,
then, the sense of generation to indicate creation is
plain from his expressly calling Him created, when he speaks of Him as
“coming into being” and “not uncreate”. But
that the inconsiderate rashness and want of training which shows itself
in the doctrines may be made manifest, let us omit all expressions of
indignation at his evident blasphemy, and employ in the discussion of
this matter a scientific division. For it would be well, I think, to
consider in a somewhat careful investigation the exact meaning of the
term “generation.” That this expression conveys the meaning
of existing as the result of some cause is plain to all, and I suppose
there is no need to contend about this point: but since there are
different modes of existing as the result of a cause, this difference
is what I think ought to receive thorough explanation in our discussion
by means of scientific division. Of things which have come into being
as the results of some cause we recognize the following differences.
Some are the result of material and art, as the fabrics of houses and
all other works produced by means of their respective material, where
some art gives direction and conducts its purpose to its proper aim.
Others are the result of material and nature; for nature orders350
350 Reading οἰκονομεῖ
or οἰκοδομεῖ | the generation of animals one from another,
effecting her own work by means of the material subsistence in the
bodies of the parents; others again are by material efflux. In these
the original remains as it was before, and that which flows from it is
contemplated by itself, as in the case of the sun and its beam, or the
lamp and its radiance, or of scents and ointments, and the quality
given off from them. For these, while remaining undiminished in
themselves, have each accompanying them the special and peculiar effect
which they naturally produce, as the sun his ray, the lamp its
brightness, and perfumes the fragrance which they engender in the air.
There is also another kind of generation besides these, where the cause
is immaterial and incorporeal, but the generation is sensible and takes
place through the instrumentality of the body; I mean the generation of
the word by the mind. For the mind being in itself incorporeal begets
the word by means of sensible instruments. So many are the differences
of the term generation, which we discover in a philosophic view of
them, that is itself, so to speak, the result of generation.
And now that we have thus
distinguished the various modes of generation, it will be time to
remark how the benevolent dispensation of the Holy Spirit, in
delivering to us the Divine mysteries, imparts that instruction which
transcends reason by such methods as we can receive. For the inspired
teaching adopts, in order to set forth the unspeakable power of God,
all the forms of generation that human intelligence recognizes, yet
without including the corporeal senses attaching to the words. For when
it speaks of the creative power, it gives to such an energy the name of
generation, because its expression must stoop to our low capacity; it
does not, however, convey thereby all that we include in creative
generation, as time, place, the furnishing of matter, the fitness of
instruments, the design in the things that come into being, but it
leaves these, and asserts of God in lofty and magnificent language the
creation of all existent things, when it says, “He spake the word
and they were made351 , He commanded and
they were created.” Again when it interprets to us the
unspeakable and transcendent existence of the Only-begotten from the
Father, as the poverty of human intellect is incapable of receiving
doctrines which surpass all power of speech and thought, there too it
borrows our language and terms Him “Son,”—a name
which our usage assigns to those who are born of matter and nature. But
just as Scripture, when speaking of generation by creation, does not in
the case of God imply that such generation took place by means of any
material, affirming that the power of God’s will served for
material substance, place, time and all such circumstances, even so
here too, when using the term Son, it rejects both all else that human
nature remarks in generation here below,—I mean affections and
dispositions and the co-operation of time, and the necessity of
place,—and, above all, matter, without all which natural
generation here below does not take place. But when all such material,
temporal and local352
352 διαστηματικῆς
seems to include the idea of extension in time as well
as in space. | existence is excluded
from the sense of the term “Son,” community of nature alone
is left, and for this reason by the title “Son” is
declared, concerning the Only-begotten, the close affinity and
genuineness of relationship which mark His manifestation from the
Father. And since such a kind of generation was not sufficient to
implant in us an adequate notion of the ineffable mode of subsistence
of the Only-begotten, Scripture avails itself also of the third kind of
generation to indicate the doctrine of the Son’s
Divinity,—that kind, namely, which is the result of material
efflux, and speaks of Him as the “brightness of glory353 ,” the “savour of ointment354 ,” the “breath of God355 ;” illustrations which in the scientific
phraseology we have adopted we ordinarily designate as material
efflux.
But as in the cases alleged
neither the birth of the creation nor the force of the term
“Son” admits time, matter, place, or affection, so here too
the Scripture employing only the illustration of effulgence and the
others that I have mentioned, apart from all material conception, with
regard to the Divine fitness of such a mode of generation, shows that
we must understand by the significance of this expression, an existence
at once derived from and subsisting with the Father. For neither is the
figure of breath intended to convey to us the notion of dispersion into
the air from the material from which it is formed, nor is the figure of
fragrance designed to express the passing off of the quality of the
ointment into the air, nor the figure of effulgence the efflux which
takes place by means of the rays from the body of the sun: but as has
been said in all cases, by such a mode of generation is indicated this
alone, that the Son is of the Father and is conceived of along with
Him, no interval intervening between the Father and Him Who is of the
Father. For since of His exceeding loving-kindness the grace of the
Holy Spirit so ordered that the divine conceptions concerning the
Only-begotten should reach us from many quarters, and so be implanted
in us, He added also the remaining kind of generation,—that,
namely, of the word from the mind. And here the sublime John uses
remarkable foresight. That the reader might not through inattention and
unworthy conceptions sink to the common notion of “word,”
so as to deem the Son to be merely a voice of the Father, he therefore
affirms of the Word that He essentially subsisted in the first and
blessed nature Itself, thus proclaiming aloud, “In the Beginning
was the Word, and with God, and God, and Light, and Life356 ,” and all that the Beginning is, the
Word was also.
Since, then, these kinds of
generation, those, I mean, which arise as the result of some cause, and
are recognized in our every-day experience, are also employed by Holy
Scripture to convey its teaching concerning transcendent mysteries in
such wise as each of them may reasonably be transferred to the
expression of divine conceptions, we may now proceed to examine
Eunomius’ statement also, to find in what sense he accepts the
meaning of “generation.” “Very Son,” he says,
“not ungenerate, verily begotten before the worlds.” One
may, I think, pass quickly over the violence done to logical sequence
in his distinction, as being easily recognizable by all. For who does
not know that while the proper opposition is between Father and Son,
between generate and ungenerate, he thus passes over the term
“Father” and sets “ungenerate” in opposition to
“Son,” whereas he ought, if he had any concern for truth,
to have avoided diverting his phrase from the due sequence of
relationship, and to have said, “Very Son, not Father”? And
in this way due regard would have been paid at once to piety and to
logical consistency, as the nature would not have been rent asunder in
making the distinction between the persons. But he has exchanged in his
statement of his faith the true and scriptural use of the term
“Father,” committed to us by the Word Himself, and speaks
of the “Ungenerate” instead of the “Father,” in
order that by separating Him from that close relationship towards the
Son which is naturally conceived of in the title of Father, he may
place Him on a common level with all created objects, which equally
stand in opposition to the “ungenerate357
357 That
is, by using as the terms of his antithesis, not “Son” and
“Father,” but “Son” and
“Ungenerate,” he avoids suggesting relationship between the
two Persons, and does suggest that the Second Person stands in the same
opposition to the First Person in which all created objects stand as
contrasted with Him. | .” “Verily begotten,” he
says, “before the worlds.” Let him say of Whom He is
begotten. He will answer, of course, “Of the Father,”
unless he is prepared unblushingly to contradict the truth. But since
it is impossible to detach the eternity of the Son from the eternal
Father, seeing that the term “Father” by its very
signification implies the Son, for this reason it is that he rejects
the title Father and shifts his phrase to “ungenerate,”
since the meaning of this latter name has no sort of relation or
connection with the Son, and by thus misleading his readers through the
substitution of one term for the other, into not contemplating the Son
along with the Father, he opens up a path for his sophistry, paving the
way of impiety by slipping in the term “ungenerate.” For
they who according to the ordinance of the Lord believe in the Father,
when they hear the name of the Father, receive the Son along with Him
in their thought, as the mind passes from the Son to the Father,
without treading on an unsubstantial vacuum interposed between them.
But those who are diverted to the title “ungenerate”
instead of Father, get a bare notion of this name, learning only the
fact that He did not at any time come into being, not that He is
Father. Still, even with this mode of conception, the faith of those
who read with discernment remains free from confusion. For the
expression “not to come into being” is used in an identical
sense of all uncreated nature: and Father, Son, and Holy Ghost are
equally uncreated. For it has ever been believed by those who follow the Divine
word that all the creation, sensible and supramundane, derives its
existence from the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. He who has
heard that “by the word of the Lord were the heavens made, and
all the host of them by the breath of His mouth358 ,” neither understands by
“word” mere utterance, nor by “breath” mere
exhalation, but by what is there said frames the conception of God the
Word and of the Spirit of God. Now to create and to be created are not
equivalent, but all existent things being divided into that which makes
and that which is made, each is different in nature from the other, so
that neither is that uncreated which is made, nor is that created which
effects the production of the things that are made. By those then who,
according to the exposition of the faith given us by our Lord Himself,
have believed in the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the
Holy Ghost, it is acknowledged that each of these Persons is alike
unoriginate359
359 τὀ μὴ
γενέσθαι τι
τούτων
ἐπίσης
ὁμολογεῖται. This may possibly mean “it is acknowledged that
each of those alternatives” (viz. that that which comes into
being is uncreate, and that that which creates should itself be
created) “is equally untrue.” But this view would not be
confined to those who held the Catholic doctrine: the impossibility of
the former alternative, indeed, was insisted upon by the Arians as an
argument in their own favour. | , and the meaning conveyed by
“ungenerate” does no harm to their sound belief: but to
those who are dense and indefinite this term serves as a starting-point
for deflection from sound doctrine. For not understanding the true
force of the term, that “ungenerate” signifies nothing more
than “not having come into being,” and that “not
coming into being” is a common property of all that transcends
created nature, they drop their faith in the Father, and substitute for
“Father” the phrase “ungenerate:” and since, as
has been said, the Personal existence of the Only-begotten is not
connoted in this name, they determine the existence of the Son to have
commenced from some definite beginning in time, affirming (what
Eunomius here adds to his previous statements) that He is called Son
not without generation preceding His existence.
What is this vain juggling with
words? Is he aware that it is God of Whom he speaks, Who was in the
beginning and is in the Father, nor was there any time when He was not?
He knows not what he says nor whereof he affirms360 ,
but he endeavours, as though he were constructing the pedigree of a
mere man, to apply to the Lord of all creation the language which
properly belongs to our nature here below. For, to take an example,
Ishmael was not before the generation that brought him into being, and
before his birth there was of course an interval of time. But with Him
Who is “the brightness of glory361 ,”
“before” and “after” have no place: for before
the brightness, of course neither was there any glory, for concurrently
with the existence of the glory there assuredly beams forth its
brightness; and it is impossible in the nature of things that one
should be severed from the other, nor is it possible to see the glory
by itself before its brightness. For he who says thus will make out the
glory in itself to be darkling and dim, if the brightness from it does
not shine out at the same time. But this is the unfair method of the
heresy, to endeavour, by the notions and terms employed concerning the
Only-begotten God, to displace Him from His oneness with the Father. It
is to this end they say, “Before the generation that brought Him
into being He was not Son:” but the “sons of rams362 ,” of whom the prophet speaks,—are
not they too called sons after coming into being? That quality, then,
which reason notices in the “sons of rams,” that they are
not “sons of rams” before the generation which brings them
into being,—this our reverend divine now ascribes to the Maker of
the worlds and of all creation, Who has the Eternal Father in Himself,
and is contemplated in the eternity of the Father, as He Himself says,
“I am in the Father, and the Father in Me363 .” Those, however, who are not able to
detect the sophistry that lurks in his statement, and are not trained
to any sort of logical perception, follow these inconsequent statements
and receive what comes next as a logical consequence of what preceded.
For he says, “coming into being before all creation,” and
as though this were not enough to prove his impiety, he has a piece of
profanity in reserve in the phrase that follows, when he terms the Son
“not uncreate.” In what sense then does he call Him Who is
not uncreate “very Son”? For if it is meet to call Him Who
is not uncreate “very Son,” then of course the heaven is
“very Son;” for it too is “not uncreate.” So
the sun too is “very Son,” and all that the creation
contains, both small and great, are of course entitled to the
appellation of “very Son.” And in what sense does He call
Him Who has come into being “Only-begotten”? For all things
that come into being are unquestionably in brotherhood with each other,
so far, I mean, as their coming into being is concerned. And from whom
did He come into being? For assuredly all things that have ever come
into being did so from the Son. For thus did John testify, saying,
“All things were made by Him364 .” If then
the Son also came into being, according to Eunomius’ creed,
He is
certainly ranked in the class of things which have come into being. If
then all things that came into being were made by Him, and the Word is
one of the things that came into being, who is so dull as not to draw
from these premises the absurd conclusion that our new creed-monger
makes out the Lord of creation to have been His own work, in saying in
so many words that the Lord and Maker of all creation is “not
uncreate”? Let him tell us whence he has this boldness of
assertion. From what inspired utterance? What evangelist, what apostle
ever uttered such words as these? What prophet, what lawgiver, what
patriarch, what other person of all who were divinely moved by the Holy
Ghost, whose voices are preserved in writing, ever originated such a
statement as this? In the tradition of the faith delivered by the Truth
we are taught to believe in Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. If it were
right to believe that the Son was created, how was it that the Truth in
delivering to us this mystery bade us believe in the Son, and not in
the creature? and how is it that the inspired Apostle, himself adoring
Christ, lays it down that they who worship the creature besides the
Creator are guilty of idolatry365
365 Rom. i. 25, where
παρὰ
τὸν
κτίσαντα may be better translated “besides the Creator,” or
“rather than the Creator,” than as in the A.V. | ? For, were the Son
created, either he would not have worshipped Him, or he would have
refrained from classing those who worship the creature along with
idolaters, lest he himself should appear to be an idolater, in offering
adoration to the created. But he knew that He Whom he adored was God
over all366 , for so he terms the Son in his Epistle
to the Romans. Why then do those who divorce the Son from the essence
of the Father, and call Him creature, bestow on Him in mockery the
fictitious title of Deity, idly conferring on one alien from true
Divinity the name of “God,” as they might confer it on Bel
or Dagon or the Dragon? Let those, therefore, who affirm that He is
created, acknowledge that He is not God at all, that they may be seen
to be nothing but Jews in disguise, or, if they confess one who is
created to be God, let them not deny that they are
idolaters.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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