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| After expounding the high estate of the Almighty, the Eternity of the Son, and the phrase “being made obedient,” he shows the folly of Eunomius in his assertion that the Son did not acquire His sonship by obedience. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
§11. After
expounding the high estate of the Almighty, the Eternity of the Son,
and the phrase “being made obedient,” he shows the folly of
Eunomius in his assertion that the Son did not acquire His sonship by
obedience.
What, moreover, is the high
estate of the Almighty in which Eunomius affirms that the Son has no
share? Let those, then, who are wise in their own eyes, and prudent in
their own sight389 , utter their
groundling opinions—they who, as the prophet says, “speak
out of the ground390 .” But let us
who reverence the Word and are disciples of the Truth, or rather who
profess to be so, not leave even this assertion unsifted. We know that
of all the names by which Deity is indicated some are expressive of the
Divine majesty, employed and understood absolutely, and some are
assigned with reference to the operations over us and all creation. For
when the Apostle says “Now to the immortal, invisible, only wise
God391 ,” and the like, by these titles he
suggests conceptions which represent to us the transcendent power, but
when God is spoken of in the Scriptures as gracious, merciful, full of
pity, true, good, Lord, Physician, Shepherd, Way, Bread, Fountain,
King, Creator, Artificer, Protector, Who is over all and through all,
Who is all in all, these and similar titles contain the declaration of
the operations of the Divine loving-kindness in the creation. Those
then who enquire precisely into the meaning of the term
“Almighty” will find that it declares nothing else concerning the
Divine power than that operation which controls created things and is
indicated by the word “Almighty,” stands in a certain
relation to something. For as He would not be called a Physician, save
on account of the sick, nor merciful and gracious, and the like, save
by reason of one who stood in need of grace and mercy, so neither would
He be styled Almighty, did not all creation stand in need of one to
regulate it and keep it in being. As, then, He presents Himself as a
Physician to those who are in need of healing, so He is Almighty over
one who has need of being ruled: and just as “they that are whole
have no need of a physician392 ,” so it follows
that we may well say that He Whose nature contains in it the principle
of unerring and unwavering rectitude does not, like others, need a
ruler over Him. Accordingly, when we hear the name
“Almighty,” our conception is this, that God sustains in
being all intelligible things as well as all things of a material
nature. For this cause He sitteth upon the circle of the earth, for
this cause He holdeth the ends of the earth in His hand, for this cause
He “meteth out leaven with the span, and measureth the waters in
the hollow of His hand393
393 Cf. Is. xl. 12 and
24.
The quotation is not verbally from the LXX. | ”; for this
cause He comprehendeth in Himself all the intelligible creation, that
all things may remain in existence controlled by His encompassing
power. Let us enquire, then, Who it is that “worketh all in
all.” Who is He Who made all things, and without Whom no existing
thing does exist? Who is He in Whom all things were created, and in
Whom all things that are have their continuance? In Whom do we live and
move and have our being? Who is He Who hath in Himself all that the
Father hath? Does what has been said leave us any longer in ignorance
of Him Who is “God over all394 ,” Who is
so entitled by S. Paul,—our Lord Jesus Christ, Who, as He Himself
says, holding in His hand “all things that the Father hath395 ,” assuredly grasps all things in the
all-containing hollow of His hand and is sovereign over what He has
grasped, and no man taketh from the hand of Him Who in His hand holdeth
all things? If, then, He hath all things, and is sovereign over that
which He hath, why is He Who is thus sovereign over all things
something else and not Almighty? If heresy replies that the Father is
sovereign over both the Son and the Holy Spirit, let them first show
that the Son and the Holy Spirit are of mutable nature, and then over
this mutability let them set its ruler, that by the help implanted from
above, that which is so overruled may continue incapable of turning to
evil. If, on the other hand, the Divine nature is incapable of evil,
unchangeable, unalterable, eternally permanent, to what end does it
stand in need of a ruler, controlling as it does all creation, and
itself by reason of its immutability needing no ruler to control it?
For this cause it is that at the name of Christ “every knee
boweth, of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the
earth396 .” For assuredly every knee would not
thus bow, did it not recognize in Christ Him Who rules it for its own
salvation. But to say that the Son came into being by the goodness of
the Father is nothing else than to put Him on a level with the meanest
objects of creation. For what is there that did not arrive at its birth
by the goodness of Him Who made it? To what is the formation of mankind
ascribed? to the badness of its Maker, or to His goodness? To what do
we ascribe the generation of animals, the production of plants and
herbs? There is nothing that did not take its rise from the goodness of
Him Who made it. A property, then, which reason discerns to be common
to all things, Eunomius is so kind as to allow to the Eternal Son! But
that He did not share His essence or His estate with the
Father—these assertions and the rest of his verbiage I have
refuted in anticipation, when dealing with his statements concerning
the Father, and shown that he has hazarded them at random and without
any intelligible meaning. For not even in the case of us who are born
one of another is there any division of essence. The definition
expressive of essence remains in its entirety in each, in him that
begets and in him who is begotten, without admitting diminution in him
who begets, or augmentation in him who is begotten. But to speak of
division of estate or sovereignty in the case of Him Who hath all
things whatsoever that the Father hath, carries with it no meaning,
unless it be a demonstration of the propounder’s impiety. It
would therefore be superfluous to entangle oneself in such discussions,
and so to prolong our treatise to an unreasonable length. Let us pass
on to what follows.
“Glorified,” he
says, “by the Father before the worlds.” The word of truth
hath been demonstrated, confirmed by the testimony of its adversaries.
For this is the sum of our faith, that the Son is from all eternity,
being glorified by the Father: for “before the worlds” is
the same in sense as “from all eternity,” seeing that
prophecy uses this phrase to set forth to us God’s eternity, when
it speaks of Him as “He that is from before the worlds397 .” If then to exist before the worlds is
beyond all beginning, he who confers glory on the Son before the worlds, does
thereby assert His existence from eternity before that glory398
398 Reading αὐτῆς, with
Oehler. The general sense is the same, if αὐτῷ be read;
“does yet more strongly attest His existence from all
eternity.” | : for surely it is not the non-existent, but
the existent which is glorified. Then he proceeds to plant for himself
the seeds of blasphemy against the Holy Spirit; not with a view to
glorify the Son, but that he may wantonly outrage the Holy Ghost. For
with the intention of making out the Holy Spirit to be part of the
angelic host, he throws in the phrase “glorified eternally by the
Spirit, and by every rational and generated being,” so that there
is no distinction between the Holy Spirit and all that comes into
being; if, that is, the Holy Spirit glorifies the Lord in the same
sense as all the other existences enumerated by the prophet,
“angels and powers, and the heaven of heavens, and the water
above the heavens, and all the things of earth, dragons, deeps, fire
and hail, snow and vapour, wind of the storm, mountains and all hills,
fruitful trees and all cedars, beasts and all cattle, worms and
feathered fowls399 .” If, then, he
says, that along with these the Holy Spirit also glorifies the Lord,
surely his God-opposing tongue makes out the Holy Spirit Himself also
to be one of them.
The disjointed incoherencies
which follow next, I think it well to pass over, not because they give
no handle at all to censure, but because their language is such as
might be used by the devout, if detached from its malignant context. If
he does here and there use some expressions favourable to devotion it
is just held out as a bait to simple souls, to the end that the hook of
impiety may be swallowed along with it. For after employing such
language as a member of the Church might use, he subjoins,
“Obedient with regard to the creation and production of all
things that are, obedient with regard to every ministration, not having
by His obedience attained Sonship or Godhead, but, as a consequence of
being Son and being generated as the Only-begotten God, showing Himself
obedient in words, obedient in acts.” Yet who of those who are
conversant with the oracles of God does not know with regard to what
point of time it was said of Him by the mighty Paul, (and that once for
all), that He “became obedient400 ”? For it
was when He came in the form of a servant to accomplish the mystery of
redemption by the cross, Who had emptied Himself, Who humbled Himself
by assuming the likeness and fashion of a man, being found as man in
man’s lowly nature—then, I say, it was that He became
obedient, even He Who “took our infirmities and bare our
sicknesses401 ,” healing the disobedience of men
by His own obedience, that by His stripes He might heal our wound, and
by His own death do away with the common death of all men,—then
it was that for our sakes He was made obedient, even as He became
“sin402 ” and “a curse403 ” by reason of the dispensation on our
behalf, not being so by nature, but becoming so in His love for man.
But by what sacred utterance was He ever taught His list of so many
obediences? Nay, on the contrary every inspired Scripture attests His
independent and sovereign power, saying, “He spake the word and
they were made: He commanded and they were created404 ”:—for it is plain that the
Psalmist says this concerning Him Who upholds “all things by the
word of His power405 ,” Whose
authority, by the sole impulse of His will, framed every existence and
nature, and all things in the creation apprehended by reason or by
sight. Whence, then, was Eunomius moved to ascribe in such manifold
wise to the King of the universe the attribute of obedience, speaking
of Him as “obedient with regard to all the work of creation,
obedient with regard to every ministration, obedient in words and in
acts”? Yet it is plain to every one, that he alone is obedient to
another in acts and words, who has not yet perfectly achieved in
himself the condition of accurate working or unexceptionable speech,
but keeping his eye ever on his teacher and guide, is trained by his
suggestions to exact propriety in deed and word. But to think that
Wisdom needs a master and teacher to guide aright Its attempts at
imitation, is the dream of Eunomius’ fancy, and of his alone. And
concerning the Father he says, that He is faithful in words and
faithful in works, while of the Son he does not assert faithfulness in
word and deed, but only obedience and not faithfulness, so that his
profanity extends impartially through all his statements. But it is
perhaps right to pass in silence over the inconsiderate folly of the
assertion interposed between those last mentioned, lest some
unreflecting persons should laugh at its absurdity when they ought
rather to weep over the perdition of their souls, than laugh at the
folly of their words. For this wise and wary theologian says that He
did not attain to being a Son as the result of His obedience! Mark his
penetration! with what cogent force does he lay it down for us that He
was not first obedient and afterwards a Son, and that we ought not to
think that His obedience was prior to His generation! Now if he had not
added this defining clause, who without it would have been sufficiently
silly and idiotic to fancy that His generation was bestowed on Him by His
Father, as a reward of the obedience of Him Who before His generation
had showed due subjection and obedience? But that no one may too
readily extract matter for laughter from these remarks, let each
consider that even the folly of the words has in it something worthy of
tears. For what he intends to establish by these observations is
something of this kind, that His obedience is part of His nature, so
that not even if He willed it would it be possible for Him not to be
obedient.
For he says that He was so
constituted that His nature was adapted to obedience alone406
406 If this
phrase is a direct quotation from Eunomius, it is probably from some
other context: its grammatical structure does not connect it with what
has gone before, nor is it quite clear where the quotation ends, or
whether the illustration of the instrument is Eunomius’ own, or
is Gregory’s exposition of the statement of Eunomius. | , just as among instruments that which is
fashioned with regard to a certain figure necessarily produces in that
which is subjected to its operation the form which the artificer
implanted in the construction of the instrument, and cannot possibly
trace a straight line upon that which receives its mark, if its own
working is in a curve; nor can the instrument, if fashioned to draw a
straight line, produce a circle by its impress. What need is there of
any words of ours to reveal how great is the profanity of such a
notion, when the heretical utterance of itself proclaims aloud its
monstrosity? For if He was obedient for this reason only that He was so
made, then of course He is not on an equal footing even with humanity,
since on this theory, while our soul is self-determining and
independent, choosing as it will with sovereignty over itself that
which is pleasing to it, He on the contrary exercises, or rather
experiences, obedience under the constraint of a compulsory law of His
nature, while His nature suffers Him not to disobey, even if He would.
For it was “as the result of being Son, and being begotten, that
He has thus shown Himself obedient in words and obedient in
acts.” Alas, for the brutish stupidity of this doctrine! Thou
makest the Word obedient to words, and supposest other words prior to
Him Who is truly the Word, and another Word of the Beginning is
mediator between the Beginning and the Word that was in the Beginning,
conveying to Him the decision. And this is not one only: there are
several words, which Eunomius makes so many links of the chain between
the Beginning and the Word, and which abuse His obedience as they think
good. But what need is there to linger over this idle talk? Any one can
see that even at that time with reference to which S. Paul says that He
became obedient (and he tells us that He became obedient in this wise,
namely, by becoming for our sakes flesh, and a servant, and a curse,
and sin),—even then, I say, the Lord of glory, Who despised the
shame and embraced suffering in the flesh, did not abandon His free
will, saying as He does, “Destroy this temple, and in three days
I will raise it up407 ;” and again,
“No man taketh My life from Me; I have power to lay it down, and
I have power to take it again408 ”; and when
those who were armed with swords and staves drew near to Him on the
night before His Passion, He caused them all to go backward by saying
“I am He409 ,” and again, when the dying thief
besought Him to remember him, He showed His universal sovereignty by
saying, “To-day shalt thou be with Me in Paradise410 .” If then not even in the time of His
Passion He is separated from His authority, where can heresy possibly
discern the subordination to authority of the King of
glory?E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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