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| Thereafter he expounds the appellation of “Son,” and of “product of generation,” and very many varieties of “sons,” of God, of men, of rams, of perdition, of light, and of day. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
§6. Thereafter he
expounds the appellation of “Son,” and of “product of
generation,” and very many varieties of “sons,” of
God, of men, of rams, of perdition, of light, and of
day.
But our discourse has diverged
too far from the subject before us, in following out the questions
which arise from time to time by way of inference. Let us therefore
once more resume its sequence, as I imagine that the phrase under
examination has been sufficiently shown, by what we have said, to be
contradictory not only to the truth, but also to itself. For if,
according to their
view, the natural relation to the Father is established by the
appellation of “the Son,” and so with that of the
“product of generation” to Him Who has begotten Him (as
these men’s wisdom falsely models the terms significant of the
Divine nature into a verbal arrangement, according to some grammatical
frivolity), no one could longer doubt that the mutual relation of the
names which is established by nature is a proof of their kindred, or
rather of their identity of essence. But let not our discourse merely
turn about our adversaries’ words, that the orthodox doctrine may
not seem to gain the victory only by the weakness of those who fight
against it, but appear to have an abundant supply of strength in
itself. Let the adverse argument, therefore, be strengthened as much as
may be by us ourselves with more energetic advocacy, that the
superiority of our force may be recognized with full confidence, as we
bring to the unerring test of truth those arguments also which our
adversaries have omitted. He who contends on behalf of our adversaries
will perhaps say that the name of “Son,” or “product
of generation,” does not by any means establish the fact of
kindred in nature. For in Scripture the term “child of wrath593 ” is used, and “son of perdition594 ,” and “product of a viper595 ;” and in such names surely no community
of nature is apparent. For Judas, who is called “the son of
perdition,” is not in his substance the same with perdition,
according to what we understand by the word596
596 Reading κατὰ τὸ
νοούμενον, for κατὰ τὸν
νοούμενον as the words stand in the text of Oehler, who cites no mss. in favour of the change which he has
made. | . For
the signification of the “man” in Judas is one thing, and
that of “perdition” is another. And the argument may be
established equally from an opposite instance. For those who are called
in a certain sense “children of light,” and “children
of the day597 ,” are not the same with light and
day in respect of the definition of their nature, and the stones are
made Abraham’s children598 when they claim their
kindred with him by faith and works; and those who are “led by
the Spirit of God,” as the Apostle says, are called “Sons
of God599 ,” without being the same with God in
respect of nature; and one may collect many such instances from the
inspired Scripture, by means of which deceit, like some image decked
with the testimonies of Scripture, masquerades in the likeness of
truth.
Well, what do we say to this?
The divine Scripture knows how to use the word “Son” in
both senses, so that in some cases such an appellation is derived from
nature, in others it is adventitious and artificial. For when it speaks
of “sons of men,” or “sons of rams600 ,” it marks the essential relation of
that which is begotten to that from which it has its being: but when it
speaks of “sons of power,” or “children of
God,” it presents to us that kinship which is the result of
choice. And, moreover, in the opposite sense, too, the same persons are
called “sons of Eli,” and “sons of Belial601
601 1 Sam. ii. 12. The phrase
is υἱοὶ
λοιμοί, or
“pestilent sons,” as in the LXX. Gregory’s argument
would seem to require the reading υἱοὶ
λοιμοῦ. | ,” the appellation of “sons”
being easily adapted to either idea. For when they are called
“sons of Eli,” they are declared to have natural
relationship to him, but in being called “sons of Belial,”
they are reproved for the wickedness of their choice, as no longer
emulating their father in their life, but addicting their own purpose
to sin. In the case, then, of this lower nature of ours, and of the
things with which we are concerned, by reason of human nature being
equally inclined to either side (I mean, to vice and to virtue), it is
in our power to become sons either of night or of day, while our nature
yet remains, so far as the chief part of it is concerned, within its
proper limits. For neither is he who by sin becomes a child of wrath
alienated from his human generation, nor does he who by choice addicts
himself to good reject his human origin by the refinement of his
habits, but, while their nature in each case remains the same, the
differences of their purpose assume the names of their relationship,
according as they become either children of God by virtue, or of the
opposite by vice.
But how does Eunomius, in the
case of the divine doctrines at least—he who “preserves the
natural order” (for I will use our author’s very words),
“and abides by those things which are known to us from the
beginning, and does not refuse to call Him that is begotten by the name
of ‘product of generation,’ since the generated essence
itself” (as he says) “and the appellation of
‘Son’ makes such a relation of words
appropriate”,—how does he alienate the Begotten from
essential kindred with Him that begat Him? For in the case of those who
are called “sons” or “products” by way of
reproach, or again where some praise accompanies such names, we cannot
say that any one is called “a child of wrath,” being at the
same time actually begotten by wrath; nor again had any one the day for
his mother, in a corporeal sense, that he should be called its son; but
it is the difference of their will which gives occasion for names of
such relationship. Here, however, Eunomius says, “we do not
refuse to call the Son, seeing He is begotten, by the name of
‘product of generation,’ since the generated
essence,” he tells us, “and the appellation of
‘Son,’ makes such a relation of words appropriate.”
If, then, he confesses that such a relation of words is made appropriate by the
fact that the Son is really a “product of generation,” how
is it opportune to assign such a rationale of names, alike to those
which are used inexactly by way of metaphor, and to those where the
natural relation, as Eunomius tells us, makes such a use of names
appropriate? Surely such an account is true only in the case of those
whose nature is a border-land between virtue and vice, where one often
shares in turn opposite classes of names, becoming a child, now of
light, then again of darkness, by reason of affinity to the good or to
its opposite. But where contraries have no place, one could no longer
say that the word “Son” is applied metaphorically, in like
manner as in the case of those who by choice appropriate the title to
themselves. For one could not arrive at this view, that, as a man
casting off the works of darkness becomes, by his decent life, a child
of light, so too the Only-begotten God received the more honourable
name as the result of a change from the inferior state. For one who is
a man becomes a son of God by being joined to Christ by spiritual
generation: but He Who by Himself makes the man to be a son of God does
not need another Son to bestow on Him the adoption of a son, but has
the name also of that which He is by nature. A man himself changes
himself, exchanging the old man for the new; but to what shall God be
changed, so that He may receive what He has not? A man puts off
himself, and puts on the Divine nature; but what does He put off, or in
what does He array Himself, Who is always the same? A man becomes a son
of God, receiving what he has not, and laying aside what he has; but He
Who has never been in the state of vice has neither anything to receive
nor anything to relinquish. Again, the man may be on the one hand truly
called some one’s son, when one speaks with reference to his
nature; and, on the other hand, he may be so called inexactly, when the
choice of his life imposes the name. But God, being One Good, in a
single and uncompounded nature, looks ever the same way, and is never
changed by the impulse of choice, but always wishes what He is, and is,
assuredly, what He wishes: so that He is in both respects properly and
truly called Son of God, since His nature contains the good, and His
choice also is never severed from that which is more excellent, so that
this word is employed, without inexactness, as His name. Thus there is
no room for these arguments (which, in the person of our adversaries,
we have been opposing to ourselves), to be brought forward by our
adversaries as a demurrer to the affinity in respect of
nature. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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