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| Gregory further shows that the Only-Begotten being begotten not only of the Father, but also impassibly of the Virgin by the Holy Ghost, does not divide the substance; seeing that neither is the nature of men divided or severed from the parents by being begotten, as is ingeniously demonstrated from the instances of Adam and Abraham. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
§7. Gregory further shows that the Only-Begotten being
begotten not only of the Father, but also impassibly of the Virgin by
the Holy Ghost, does not divide the substance; seeing that neither is
the nature of men divided or severed from the parents by being
begotten, as is ingeniously demonstrated from the instances of Adam and
Abraham.
And now let us see what he adds
to his previous statements. “Not dividing,” he says,
“His own essence by begetting, and being at once begetter and
begotten, at the same time Father and Son; for He is
incorruptible.” Of such a kind as this, perhaps, is that of which
the prophet says, touching the ungodly, “They weave a
spider’s web310 .” For as in the
cobweb there is the appearance of something woven, but no
substantiality in the appearance,—for he who touches it touches
nothing substantial, as the spider’s threads break with the touch
of a finger,—just such is the unsubstantial texture of idle
phrases. “Not dividing His own essence by begetting and being at
once begetter and begotten.” Ought we to give his words the name
of argument, or to call them rather a swelling of humours secreted by
some dropsical inflation? For what is the sense of “dividing His
own essence by begetting, and being at once begetter and
begotten?” Who is so distracted, who is so demented, as to make
the statement against which Eunomius thinks he is doing battle? For the
Church believes that the true Father is truly Father of His own Son, as
the Apostle says, not of a Son alien from Him. For thus he declares in
one of his Epistles, “Who spared not His own Son311 ,” distinguishing Him, by the addition
of “own,” from those who are counted worthy of the adoption
of sons by grace and not by nature. But what says He who disparages
this belief of ours? “Not dividing His own essence by begetting,
or being at once begetter and begotten, at the same time Father and
Son; for He is incorruptible.” Does one who hears in the Gospel
that the Word was in the beginning, and was God, and that the Word came
forth from the Father, so befoul the undefiled doctrine with these base
and fetid ideas, saying “He does not divide His essence by
begetting?” Shame on the abomination of these base and filthy
notions! How is it that he who speaks thus fails to understand that God
when manifested in flesh did not admit for the formation of His own
body the conditions of human nature, but was born for us a Child by the
Holy Ghost and the power of the Highest; nor was the Virgin subject to
those conditions, nor was the Spirit diminished, nor the power of the
Highest divided? For the Spirit is entire, the power of the Highest
remained undiminished: the Child was born in the fulness of our
nature312
312 This,
or something like this, appears to be the force of ὅλον. | , and did not sully the incorruption of His
mother. Then was flesh born of flesh without carnal passion: yet
Eunomius will not admit that the brightness of the glory is from the
glory itself, since the glory is neither diminished nor divided by
begetting the light. Again, the word of man is generated from his mind
without division, but God the Word cannot be generated from the Father
without the essence of the Father being divided! Is any one so witless
as not to perceive the irrational character of his position? “Not
dividing,” quoth he, “His own essence by begetting.”
Why, whose own essence is divided by begetting? For in the case of men
essence means human nature: in the case of brutes, it means,
generically, brute nature, but in the case of cattle, sheep, and all
brute animals, specifically, it is regarded according to the
distinctions of their kinds. Which, then, of these divides its own
essence by the process of generation? Does not the nature always remain
undiminished in the case of every animal by the succession of its
posterity? Further a man in begetting a man from himself does not
divide his nature, but it remains in its fulness alike in him who
begets and in him who is begotten, not split off and transferred from
the one to the other, nor mutilated in the one when it is fully formed
in the other, but at once existing in its entirety in the former and
discoverable in its entirety in the latter. For both before begetting
his child the man was a rational animal, mortal, capable of
intelligence and knowledge, and also after begetting a man endowed with
such qualities: so that in him are shown all the special properties of
his nature; as he does not lose his existence as a man by begetting the
man derived from him, but remains after that event what he was before
without causing any diminution of the nature derived from him by the
fact that the man derived from him comes into being.
Well, man is begotten of man,
and the nature of the begetter is not divided. Yet Eunomius does not
admit that the Only-begotten God, Who is in the bosom of the Father, is
truly of the Father, for fear forsooth, lest he should mutilate the inviolable
nature of the Father by the subsistence of the Only-begotten: but after
saying “Not dividing His essence by begetting,” he adds,
“Or being Himself begetter and begotten, or Himself becoming
Father and Son313
313 The
quotation does not verbally correspond with Eunomius’ words as
cited above. | ,” and thinks by such loose
disjointed phrases to undermine the true confession of godliness or to
furnish some support to his own ungodliness, not being aware that by
the very means he uses to construct a reductio ad absurdum he is
discovered to be an advocate of the truth. For we too say that He who
has all that belongs to His own Father is all that He is, save being
Father, and that He who has all that belongs to the Son exhibits in
Himself the Son in His completeness, save being Son: so that the
reductio ad absurdum, which Eunomius here invents, turns out to
be a support of the truth, when the notion is expanded by us so as to
display it more clearly, under the guidance of the Gospel. For if
“he that hath seen the Son seeth the Father314 ” then the Father begat another self,
not passing out of Himself, and at the same time appearing in His
fulness in Him: so that from these considerations that which seemed to
have been uttered against godliness is demonstrated to be a support of
sound doctrine.
But he says, “Not dividing
His own essence by begetting, and being at once begetter and begotten,
at the same time Father and Son; for He is incorruptible.” Most
cogent conclusion! What do you mean, most sapient sir? Because He is
incorruptible, therefore He does not divide His own essence by
begetting the Son: nor does He beget Himself or be begotten of Himself,
nor become at the same time His own Father and His own Son because He
is incorruptible. It follows then, that if any one is of corruptible
nature he divides his essence by begetting, and is begotten by himself,
and begets himself, and is his own father and his own son, because he
is not incorruptible. If this is so, then Abraham, because he was
corruptible, did not beget Ishmael and Isaac, but begat himself by the
bondwoman and by his lawful wife or, to take the other mountebank
tricks of the argument, he divided his essence among the sons who were
begotten of him, and first, when Hagar bore him a son, he was divided
into two sections, and in one of the halves became Ishmael, while in
the other he remained half Abraham; and subsequently the residue of the
essence of Abraham being again divided took subsistence in Isaac.
Accordingly the fourth part of the essence of Abraham was divided into
the twin sons of Isaac, so that there was an eighth in each of his
grandchildren! How could one subdivide the eighth part, cutting it
small in fractions among the twelve Patriarchs, or among the threescore
and fifteen souls with whom Jacob went down into Egypt? And why do I
talk thus when I really ought to confute the folly of such notions by
beginning with the first man? For if it is a property of the
incorruptible only not to divide its essence in begetting, and if Adam
was corruptible, to whom the word was spoken, “Dust thou art and
unto dust shalt thou return315 ,” then,
according to Eunomius’ reasoning, he certainly divided his
essence, being cut up among those who were begotten of him, and by
reason of the vast number of his posterity (the slice of his essence
which is to be found in each being necessarily subdivided according to
the number of his progeny), the essence of Adam is used up before
Abraham began to subsist, being dispersed in these minute and
infinitesimal particles among the countless myriads of his descendants,
and the minute fragment of Adam that has reached Abraham and his
descendants by a process of division, is no longer discoverable in them
as a remnant of his essence, inasmuch as his nature has been already
used up among the countless myriads of those who were before them by
its division into infinitesimal fractions. Mark the folly of him who
“understands neither what he says nor whereof he affirms316 .” For by saying “Since He is
incorruptible” He neither divides His essence nor begets Himself
nor becomes His own father, he implicitly lays it down that we must
suppose all those things from which he affirms that the incorruptible
alone are free to be incidental to generation in the case of every one
who is subject to corruption. Though there are many other
considerations capable of proving the inanity of his argument, I think
that what has been said above is sufficient to demonstrate its
absurdity. But this has surely been already acknowledged by all who
have an eye for logical consistency, that, when he asserted
incorruptibility of the Father alone, he places all things which are
considered after the Father in the category of corruptible, by virtue
of opposition to the incorruptible, so as to make out even the Son not
to be free from corruption. If then he places the Son in opposition to
the incorruptible, he not only defines Him to be corruptible, but also
asserts of Him all those incidents from which he affirms only the
incorruptible to be exempt. For it necessarily follows that, if the
Father alone neither begets Himself nor is begotten of Himself,
everything which is not incorruptible both begets itself and is begotten of
itself, and becomes its own father and son, shifting from its own
proper essence to each of these relations. For if to be incorruptible
belongs to the Father alone, and if not to be the things specified is a
special property of the incorruptible, then, of course, according to
this heretical argument, the Son is not incorruptible, and all these
circumstances of course, find place about Him,—to have His
essence divided, to beget Himself and to be begotten by Himself, to
become Himself His own father and His own son.
Perhaps, however, it is waste of
time to linger long over such follies. Let us pass to the next point of
his statement. He adds to what he had already said, “Not standing
in need, in the act of creation, of matter or parts or natural
instruments: for He stands in need of nothing.” This proposition,
though Eunomius states it with a certain looseness of phrase, we yet do
not reject as inconsistent with godly doctrine. For learning as we do
that “He spake the word and they were made: He commanded and they
were created317 ,” we know that the Word is the
Creator of matter, by that very act also producing with the matter the
qualities of matter, so that for Him the impulse of His almighty will
was everything and instead of everything, matter, instrument, place,
time, essence, quality, everything that is conceived in creation. For
at one and the same time did He will that that which ought to be should
be, and His power, that produced all things that are, kept pace with
His will, turning His will into act. For thus the mighty Moses in the
record of creation instructs us about the Divine power, ascribing the
production of each of the objects that were manifested in the creation
to the words that bade them be. For “God said,” he tells
us, “Let there be light, and there was light318 :” and so about the rest, without any
mention either of matter or of any instrumental agency. Accordingly the
language of Eunomius on this point is not to be rejected. For God, when
creating all things that have their origin by creation, neither stood
in need of any matter on which to operate, nor of instruments to aid
Him in His construction: for the power and wisdom of God has no need of
any external assistance. But Christ is “the Power of God and the
Wisdom of God319 ,” by Whom all things were made
and without Whom is no existent thing, as John testifies320 . If, then, all things were made by Him, both
visible and invisible, and if His will alone suffices to effect the
subsistence of existing things (for His will is power), Eunomius utters
our doctrine though with a loose mode of expression321
321 Reading ἐν
ἀτονούσῃ τῇ
λέξει for
ἐνατονούσῃ
τῇ λέξει (the reading of the Paris edition, which Oehler
follows). | .
For what instrument and what matter could He Who upholds all things by
the word of His power322
322 Cf. Heb. i. 3. The quotation is not verbally exact. | need in upholding the
constitution of existing things by His almighty word? But if he
maintains that what we have believed to be true of the Only-begotten in
the case of the creation, is true also in the case of the Son—in
the sense that the Father created Him in like manner as the creation
was made by the Son,—then we retract our former statement,
because such a supposition is a denial of the Godhead of the
Only-begotten. For we have learnt from the mighty utterance of Paul
that it is the distinguishing feature of idolatry to worship and serve
the creature more than the Creator323 , as well as from
David, when He says “There shall no new God be in thee: neither
shalt thou worship any alien God324
324 Ps. lxxxi. 10, LXX. The words
πρόσφατος
(“new”) and ἀλλότριος (“alien”) are both represented in the A.V. by
“strange,” and so in R.V. The Prayer-book version expresses
them by “strange” and “any other.” Both words
are subsequently employed by Gregory in his argument. | .” We use
this line and rule to arrive at the discernment of the object of
worship, so as to be convinced that that alone is God which is neither
“new” nor “alien.” Since then we have been
taught to believe that the Only-begotten God is God, we acknowledge, by
our belief that He is God, that He is neither “new” or
“alien.” If, then, He is God, He is not “new,”
and if He is not new, He is assuredly eternal. Accordingly, neither is
the Eternal “new,” nor is He Who is of the Father and in
the bosom of the Father and Who has the Father in Himself
“alien” from true Deity. Thus he who severs the Son from
the nature of the Father either absolutely disallows the worship of the
Son, that he may not worship an alien God, or bows down before an idol,
making a creature and not God the object of his worship, and giving to
his idol the name of Christ.
Now that this is the meaning to
which he tends in his conception concerning the Only-begotten will
become more plain by considering the language he employs touching the
Only-begotten Himself, which is as follows. “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, named Son
not without being begotten before He existed, coming into being before
all creation, not uncreate.” I think that the mere reading of his
exposition of his faith is quite sufficient to render its impiety plain
without any investigation on our part. For though he calls Him
“first-born,” yet that he may not raise any doubt in his
readers’ minds as to His not being created, he immediately adds
the words, “not uncreate,” lest if the natural significance
of the term “Son” were apprehended by his readers, any
pious conception concerning Him might find place in their minds. It is
for this reason that after at first confessing Him to be Son of God and Only-begotten God, he proceeds at once, by
what he adds, to pervert the minds of his readers from their devout
belief to his heretical notions. For he who hears the titles “Son
of God” and “Only-begotten God” is of necessity
lifted up to the loftier kind of assertions respecting the Son, led
onward by the significance of these terms, inasmuch as no difference of
nature is introduced by the use of the title “God” and by
the significance of the term “Son.” For how could He Who is
truly the Son of God and Himself God be conceived as something else
differing from the nature of the Father? But that godly conceptions may
not by these names be impressed beforehand on the hearts of his
readers, he forthwith calls Him “the first-born of all creation,
named Son, not without being begotten before He existed, coming into
being before all creation, not uncreate.” Let us linger a little
while, then, over his argument, that the miscreant may be shown to be
holding out his first statements to people merely as a bait to induce
them to receive the poison that he sugars over with phrases of a pious
tendency, as it were with honey. Who does not know how great is the
difference in signification between the term
“only-begotten” and “first-born?” For
“first-born” implies brethren, and
“only-begotten” implies that there are no other brethren.
Thus the “first-born” is not “only-begotten,”
for certainly “first-born” is the first-born among
brethren, while he who is “only-begotten” has no brother:
for if he were numbered among brethren he would not be only-begotten.
And moreover, whatever the essence of the brothers of the first-born
is, the same is the essence of the first-born himself. Nor is this all
that is signified by the title, but also that the first-born and those
born after him draw their being from the same source, without the
first-born contributing at all to the birth of those that come after
him: so that hereby325
325 Hereby,
i.e. by the use of the term πρωτότοκος
as applicable to the Divinity of the Son. | is maintained the
falsehood of that statement of John, which affirms that “all
things were made by Him326 .” For if He is
first-born, He differs from those born after Him only by priority in
time, while there must be some one else by Whom the power to be at all
is imparted alike to Him and to the rest. But that we may not by our
objections give any unfair opponent ground for an insinuation that we
do not receive the inspired utterances of Scripture, we will first set
before our readers our own view about these titles, and then leave it
to their judgment which is the better.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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