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| He further shows that the pretemporal generation of the Son is not the subject of influences drawn from ordinary and carnal generation, but is without beginning and without end, and not according to the fabrications constructed by Eunomius, in ignorance of His power, from the statements of Plato concerning the soul and from the sabbath rest of the Hebrews. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
§3. He further shows
that the pretemporal generation of the Son is not the subject of
influences drawn from ordinary and carnal generation, but is without
beginning and without end, and not according to the fabrications
constructed by Eunomius, in ignorance of His power, from the statements
of Plato concerning the soul and from the sabbath rest of the
Hebrews.
What he says runs
thus:—“As all generation is not protracted to infinity, but
ceases on arriving at some end, those who admit the origination of the
Son are absolutely obliged to say that He then ceased being generated,
and not to look incredulously on the beginning of those things which
cease being generated, and therefore also surely begin: for the
cessation of generation establishes a beginning of begetting and being
begotten: and these facts cannot be disbelieved, on the ground at once
of nature itself and of the Divine laws914
914 This
quotation from Eunomius presents some difficulties, but it is quite as
likely that they are due to the obscurity of his style, as that they
are due to corruption of the text. | .” Now since he endeavours to establish
his point inferentially, laying down his universal proposition
according to the scientific method of those who are skilled in such
matters, and including in the general premise the proof of the
particular, let us first consider his universal, and then proceed to
examine the force of his inferences. Is it a reverent proceeding to
draw from “all generation” evidence even as to the
pre-temporal generation of the Son? and ought we to put forward
ordinary nature as our instructor on the being of the Only-begotten?
For my own part, I should not have expected any one to reach such a
point of madness, that any such idea of the Divine and unsullied
generation should enter his fancy. “All generation,” he
says, “is not protracted to infinity.” What is it that he
understands by “generation”? Is he speaking of fleshly,
bodily birth, or of the formation of inanimate objects? The affections
involved in bodily generation are well known—affections which no
one would think of transferring to the Divine Nature. In order
therefore that our discourse may not, by mentioning the works of nature
at length, be made to appear redundant, we shall pass such matters by
in silence, as I suppose that every sensible man is himself aware of
the causes by which generation is protracted, both in regard to its
beginning and to its cessation: it would be tedious and at the same
time superfluous to express them all minutely, the coming together of
those who generate, the formation in the womb of that which is
generated, travail, birth, place, time, without which the generation of
a body cannot be brought about,—things which are all equally
alien from the Divine generation of the Only-begotten: for if any one
of these things were admitted, the rest will of necessity all enter with
it. That the Divine generation, therefore, may be clear of every idea
connected with passion, we shall avoid conceiving with regard to it
even that extension which is measured by intervals. Now that which
begins and ends is surely regarded as being in a kind of extension, and
all extension is measured by time, and as time (by which we mark both
the end of birth and its beginning) is excluded, it would be vain, in
the case of the uninterrupted generation, to entertain the idea of end
or beginning, since no idea can be formed to mark either the point at
which such generation begins or that at which it ceases. If on the
other hand it is the inanimate creation to which he is looking, even in
this case, in like manner, place, and time, and matter, and
preparation, and power of the artificer, and many like things, concur
to bring the product to perfection. And since time assuredly is
concurrent with all things that are produced, and since with everything
that is created, be it animate or inanimate, there are conceived also
bases of construction relative to the product, we can find in these
cases evident beginnings and endings of the process of formation. For
even the procuring of material is actually the beginning of the fabric,
and is a sign of place, and is logically connected with time. All these
things fix for the products their beginnings and endings; and no one
could say that these things have any participation in the pretemporal
generation of the Only-begotten God, so that, by the aid of the things
now under consideration, we are able to calculate, with regard to that
generation, any beginning or end.
Now that we have so far
discussed these matters, let us resume consideration of our
adversaries’ argument. It says, “As all generation is not
protracted to infinity, but ceases on arriving at some end.” Now,
since the sense of “generation” has been considered with
respect to either meaning,—whether he intends by this word to
signify the birth of corporeal beings, or the formation of things
created (neither of which has anything in common with the unsullied
Nature), the premise is shown to have no connection with the subject915
915 i.
e.with the subject of discussion, the
generation of the Only-begotten. | . For it is not a matter of absolute
necessity, as he maintains, that, because all making and generation
ceases at some limit, therefore those who accept the generation of the
Son should circumscribe it by a double limit, by supposing, as regards
it, a beginning and an end. For it is only as being circumscribed in
some quantitative way that things can be said either to begin or to
cease on arriving at a limit, and the measure expressed by time (having
its extension concomitant with the quantity of that which is produced)
differentiates the beginning from the end by the interval between them.
But how can any one measure or treat as extended that which is without
quantity and without extension? What measure can he find for that which
has no quantity, or what interval for that which has no extension? or
how can any one define the infinite by “end” and
“beginning?” for “beginning” and
“end” are names of limits of extension, and, where there is
no extension, neither is there any limit. Now the Divine Nature is
without extension, and, being without extension, it has no limit; and
that which is limitless is infinite, and is spoken of accordingly. Thus
it is idle to try to circumscribe the infinite by
“beginning” and “ending”—for what is
circumscribed cannot be infinite. How comes it, then, that this
Platonic Phædrus disconnectedly tacks on to his own doctrine those
speculations on the soul which Plato makes in that dialogue? For as
Plato there spoke of “cessation of motion,” so this writer
too was eager to speak of “cessation of generation,” in
order to impose upon those who have no knowledge of these matters, with
fine Platonic phrases. “And these facts,” he tells us,
“cannot be disbelieved, on the ground at once of nature itself
and of the Divine laws.” But nature, from our previous remarks,
appears not to be trustworthy for instruction as to the Divine
generation,—not even if one were to take the universe itself as
an illustration of the argument: since through its creation also, as we
learn in the cosmogony of Moses, there ran the measure of time, meted
out in a certain order and arrangement by stated days and nights, for
each of the things that came into being: and this even our
adversaries’ statement does not admit with regard to the being of
the Only-begotten, since it acknowledges that the Lord was before the
times of the ages.
It remains to consider his
support of his point by “the Divine laws,” by which he
undertakes to show both an end and a beginning of the generation of the
Son. “God,” he says, “willing that the law of
creation should be impressed upon the Hebrews, did not appoint the
first day of generation for the end of creation, or to be the evidence
of its beginning; for He gave them as the memorial of the creation, not
the first day of generation, but the seventh, whereon He rested from
His works.” Will any one believe that this was written by
Eunomius, and that the words cited have not been inserted by us, by way
of misrepresenting his composition so as to make him appear ridiculous
to our readers, in dragging in to prove his point matters that have nothing to
do with the question? For the matter in hand was to show, as he
undertook to do, that the Son, not previously existing, came into
being; and that in being generated, He took a beginning of generation,
and of cessation916
916 The
genitive ληξέως is
rather awkward; it may be explained, however, as dependent upon
ἀρχήν; “He began
to be generated: He began to cease being generated.” | ,—His generation
being protracted in time, as it were by a kind of travail. And what is
his resource for establishing this? The fact that the people of the
Hebrews, according to the Law, keep sabbath on the seventh day! How
well the evidence agrees with the matter in hand! Because the Jew
honours his sabbath by idleness, the fact, as he says, is proved that
the Lord both had a beginning of birth and ceased being born! How many
other testimonies on this matter has our author passed by, not at all
of less weight than that which he employs to establish the point at
issue!—the circumcision on the eighth day, the week of unleavened
bread, the mystery on the fourteenth day of the moon’s course,
the sacrifices of purification, the observation of the lepers, the ram,
the calf, the heifer, the scapegoat, the he-goat. If these things are
far removed from the point, let those who are so much interested in the
Jewish mysteries tell us how that particular matter is within range of
the question. We judge it to be mean and unmanly to trample on the
fallen, and shall proceed to enquire, from what follows in his
writings, whether there is anything there of such a kind as to give
trouble to his opponent. All, then, that he maintains in the next
passage, as to the impropriety of supposing anything intermediate
between the Father and the Son, I shall pass by, as being, in a sense,
in agreement with our doctrine. For it would be alike undiscriminating
and unfair not to distinguish in his remarks what is irreproachable,
and what is blamable, seeing that, while he fights against his own
statements, he does not follow his own admissions, speaking of the
immediate character of the connection while refusing to admit its
continuity, and conceiving that nothing was before the Son and having
some suspicion that the Son was while yet contending that He
came into being when He was not. We shall spend but a short time on
these points (since the argument has already been established
beforehand), and then proceed to handle the arguments
proposed.
It is not allowable for the same
person to set nothing above the existence of the Only-begotten, and to
say that before His generation He was not, but that He was generated
then when the Father willed. For “then” and
“when” have a sense which specially and properly
refers to the denoting of time, according to the common use of men who
speak soundly, and according to their signification in Scripture. One
may take “then shall they say among the heathen917 ,” and “when I sent you918 ” and “then shall the
kingdom of heaven be likened919 ,” and countless
similar phrases through the whole of Scripture, to prove this point,
that the ordinary Scriptural use employs these parts of speech to
denote time. If therefore, as our opponent allows, time was not, the
signifying of time surely disappears too: and if this did not exist, it
will necessarily be replaced by eternity in our conception920
920 The
phrase is obscure, and the text possibly corrupt. To read τὰς
ἐννοίας (as Gulonius seems to have done) would simplify matters: but the
general sense is clear—that the denial of the existence of time
implies eternity. | . For in the phrase “was not”
there is surely implied “once”: as, if he should speak of
“not being,” without the qualification “once,”
he would also deny his existence now: but if he admits His
present existence, and contends against His eternity, it is surely not
“not being” absolutely, but “not being”
once which is present to his mind. And as this phrase is utterly
unreal, unless it rests upon the signification of time, it would be
foolish and idle to say that nothing was before the Son, and yet to
maintain that the Son did not always exist. For if there is neither
place nor time, nor any other creature where the Word that was in the
beginning is not, the statement that the Lord “once was
not” is entirely removed from the region of orthodox doctrine. So
he is at variance not so much with us as with himself, who declares
that the Only-begotten both was and was not. For in confessing that the
conjunction of the Son with the Father is not interrupted by anything,
He clearly testifies to His eternity. But if he should say that the Son
was not in the Father, we shall not ourselves say anything against such
a statement, but shall oppose to it the Scripture which declares that
the Son is in the Father, and the Father in the Son, without adding to
the phrase “once” or “when” or
“then,” but testifying His eternity by this affirmative and
unqualified utterance.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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