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| He then shows, from the instance of Adam and Abel, and other examples, the absence of alienation of essence in the case of the “generate” and “ungenerate.” PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
§3.
He then shows, from the instance of Adam and Abel, and other
examples, the absence of alienation of essence in the case of the
“generate” and “ungenerate.”
Now seeing that Eunomius’
conflict with himself has been made manifest, where he has been shown
to contradict himself, at one time saying, “He ought to be called
‘Son,’ according to nature, because He is begotten,”
at another that, because He is created, He is no more called
“Son,” but a “product,” I think it right that
the careful and attentive reader, as it is not possible, when two
statements are mutually at variance, that the truth should be found
equally in both, should reject of the two that which is impious and
blasphemous—that, I mean, with regard to the
“creature” and the “product,” and should assent
to that only which is of orthodox tendency, which confesses that
the appellation of
“Son” naturally attaches to the Only-begotten God: so that
the word of truth would seem to be recommended even by the voice of its
enemies.
I resume my discourse, however,
taking up that point of his argument which we originally set aside.
“We do not refuse,” he says, “to call the Son, seeing
He is generate, even by the name of ‘product of generation574
574 γέννημα. This word, in what follows, is sometimes translated simply by
the word “product,” where it is not contrasted with
ποίημα
(the “product of making”), or where the
argument depends especially upon its grammatical form (which indicates
that the thing denoted is the result of a process), rather than
upon the idea of the particular process. | ,’ since the generated essence itself,
and the appellation of ‘Son,’ make such a relation of words
appropriate.” Meanwhile let the reader who is critically
following the argument remember this, that in speaking of the
“generated essence” in the case of the Only-begotten, he by
consequence allows us to speak of the “ungenerate essence”
in the case of the Father, so that neither absence of generation, nor
generation, can any longer be supposed to constitute the essence, but
the essence must be taken separately, and its being, or not being
begotten, must be conceived separately by means of the peculiar
attributes contemplated in it. Let us, however, consider more carefully
his argument on this point. He says that an essence has been begotten,
and that the name of this generated essence is “Son.” Well,
at this point our argument will convict that of our opponents on two
grounds, first, of an attempt at knavery, secondly, of slackness in
their attempt against ourselves. For he is playing the knave when he
speaks of “generation of essence,” in order to establish
his opposition between the essences, when once they are divided in
respect of a difference of nature between “generate” and
“ungenerate”: while the slackness of their attempt is shown
by the very positions their knavery tries to establish. For he who says
the essence is generate, clearly defines generation as being something
else distinct from the essence, so that the significance of generation
cannot be assigned to the word “essence.” For he has not in
this passage represented the matter as he often does, so as to say that
generation is itself the essence, but acknowledges that the essence is
generated, so that there is produced in his readers a distinct notion
in the case of each word: for one conception arises in him who hears
that it was generated, and another is called up by the name of
“essence.” Our argument may be made clearer by example. The
Lord says in the Gospel575 that a woman, when
her travail is drawing near, is in sorrow, but afterwards rejoices in
gladness because a man is born into the world. As then in this passage
we derive from the Gospel two distinct conceptions,—one the birth
which we conceive to be by way of generation, the other that which
results from the birth (for the birth is not the man, but the man is by
the birth),—so here too, when Eunomius confesses that the essence
was generated, we learn by the latter word that the essence comes from
something, and by the former we conceive that subject itself which has
its real being from something. If then the signification of essence is
one thing, and the word expressing generation suggests to us another
conception, their clever contrivances are quite gone to ruin, like
earthen vessels hurled one against the other, and mutually smashed to
pieces. For it will no longer be possible for them, if they apply the
opposition of “generate” and “ungenerate” to
the essence of the Father and the Son, to apply at the same time to the
things themselves the mutual conflict between these names576
576 If,
that is, they speak of the “generated essence” in
contra-distinction to “ungenerate essence” they are
precluded from saying that the essence of the Son is that He is
begotten, and that the essence of the Father is that He is
ungenerate: that which constitutes the essence cannot be made an
epithet of the essence. | . For as it is confessed by Eunomius that the
essence is generate (seeing that the example from the Gospel explains
the meaning of such a phrase, where, when we hear that a man is
generated, we do not conceive the man to be the same thing as his
generation, but receive a separate conception in each of the two
words), heresy will surely no longer be permitted to express by such
words her doctrine of the difference of the essences. In order,
however, that our account of these matters may be cleared up as far as
possible, let us once more discuss the point in the following way. He
Who framed the universe made the nature of man with all things in the
beginning, and after Adam was made, He then appointed for men the law
of generation one from another, saying, “Be fruitful and
multiply577 .” Now while Abel came into
existence by way of generation, what reasonable man would deny that, in
the actual sense of human generation, Adam existed ungenerately? Yet
the first man had in himself the complete definition of man’s
essential nature, and he who was generated of him was enrolled under
the same essential name. But if the essence that was generated was made
anything other than that which was not generated, the same essential
name would not apply to both: for of those things whose essence is
different, the essential name also is not the same. Since, then, the
essential nature of Adam and of Abel is marked by the same
characteristics, we must certainly agree that one essence is in both,
and that the one and the other are exhibited in the same nature. For
Adam and Abel are both one so far as the definition of their nature is
concerned, but are distinguished one from the other without confusion
by the individual attributes observed in each of them. We cannot
therefore properly say that Adam generated another essence besides
himself, but rather that of himself he generated another self, with
whom was produced the whole definition of the essence of him who
generated him. What, then, we learn in the case of human nature by
means of the inferential guidance afforded to us by the definition,
this I think we ought to take for our guidance also to the pure
apprehension of the Divine doctrines. For when we have shaken off from
the Divine and exalted doctrines all carnal and material notions, we
shall be most surely led by the remaining conception, when it is purged
of such ideas, to the lofty and unapproachable heights. It is confessed
even by our adversaries that God, Who is over all, both is and is
called the Father of the Only-begotten, and they moreover give to the
Only-begotten God, Who is of the Father, the name of
“begotten,” by reason of His being generated. Since then
among men the word “father” has certain significances
attaching to it, from which the pure nature is alien, it behoves a man
to lay aside all material conceptions which enter in by association
with the carnal significance of the word “father,” and to
form in the case of the God and Father a conception befitting the
Divine nature, expressive only of the reality of the relationship.
Since, therefore, in the notion of a human father there is included not
only all that the flesh suggests to our thoughts, but a certain notion
of interval is also undoubtedly conceived with the idea of human
fatherhood, it would be well, in the case of the Divine generation, to
reject, together with bodily pollution, the notion of interval also,
that so what properly belongs to matter may be completely purged away,
and the transcendent generation may be clear, not only from the idea of
passion, but from that of interval. Now he who says that God is a
Father will unite with the thought that God is, the further thought
that He is something: for that which has its being from some beginning,
certainly also derives from something the beginning of its being,
whatever it is: but He in Whose case being had no beginning, has not
His beginning from anything, even although we contemplate in Him some
other attribute than simple existence. Well, God is a Father. It
follows that He is what He is from eternity: for He did not become, but
is a Father: for in God that which was, both is and will be. On
the other hand, if He once was not anything, then He neither is nor
will be that thing: for He is not believed to be the Father of a Being
such that it may be piously asserted that God once existed by Himself
without that Being. For the Father is the Father of Life, and Truth,
and Wisdom, and Light, and Sanctification, and Power, and all else of a
like kind that the Only-begotten is or is called. Thus when the
adversaries allege that the Light “once was not,” I know
not to which the greater injury is done, whether to the Light, in that
the Light is not, or to Him that has the Light, in that He has not the
Light. So also with Life and Truth and Power, and all the other
characters in which the Only-begotten fills the Father’s bosom,
being all things in His own fulness. For the absurdity will be equal
either way, and the impiety against the Father will equal the blasphemy
against the Son: for in saying that the Lord “once was
not,” you will not merely assert the non-existence of Power, but
you will be saying that the Power of God, Who is the Father of the
Power, “was not.” Thus the assertion made by your doctrine
that the Son “once was not,” establishes nothing else than
a destitution of all good in the case of the Father. See to what an end
these wise men’s acuteness leads, how by them the word of the
Lord is made good, which says, “He that despiseth Me despiseth
Him that sent Me578 :” for by the
very arguments by which they despise the existence at any time of the
Only-begotten, they also dishonour the Father, stripping off by their
doctrine from the Father’s glory every good name and
conception.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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