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| On the Holy Spirit. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
On the Holy
Spirit.
Against the Followers of
Macedonius. 1221
1221 Macedonius had been a very eminent Semi-Arian doctor. He was
deposed from the See of Constantinople, A.D. 360: and it was actually
the influence of the Eunomians that brought this about. He went into
exile and formed his sect. He considered the Holy Spirit as “a
divine energy diffused throughout the universe: and not a person
distinct from the Father and the Son” (Socrates, H. E. iv. 4).
This opinion had many partizans in the Asiatic provinces,
“but,” says Mosheim, “the Council of Constantinople
crushed it.” However, that the final clauses of the Nicene Creed
which express distinctly, amongst other truths, the deity and
personality of the Third Person of the Trinity were added at that
Council to the original form, is extremely doubtful. For—1. We
find the expanded form which we now use in the Nicene Creed, in a work
written by Epiphanius seven years before the Council of
Constantinople. So that at all events the enlarged Creed was not
prepared by the Fathers then assembled. 2. It is extremely doubtful if
any symbol at all was set forth at Constantinople. Neither Socrates,
nor Sozomen, nor Theodoret makes mention of one: but all speak of
adherence to the evangelic faith ratified at Nicæa. It is
significant too that the expanded form was entirely ignored by the
Council of Ephesus, 431. But at the Council of Chalcedon, 451, it was
brought forward: though even then it appears that it was far from
attaining general acceptance. By 540 it had become the accepted form
(according to a letter of Pope Vigilius). “It seems most likely
therefore that it was a profession received amongst the churches in the
patriarchate of Constantinople, but at first not more widely
circulated” (J. R. Lumby, Commentary on Prayer-Book, S. P.
C. K., p. 66) F. J. A. Hort, however, (see Two Dissertations by)
regards this “Constantinopolitan” Creed as the old Creed of
Jerusalem enlarged and expanded; and he suggests that S. Cyril of
Jerusalem may have produced it before the Council, which gave it some
sort of approval. The addition, moreover, of the later clauses was not,
as Mosheim seems to imagine, the only difference between the
Nicene Creed and this Creed.
That this lateness of
accepted definition on a vital point should not excite our wonder,
Neander shows “the apprehension of the idea (of the ὁμοούσιον of the Holy Spirit) had been so little permeated as yet by
the Christian consciousness of the unity of God, that Gregory of
Nazianzum could still say in 380, ‘Some of our theologians
consider the Holy Spirit to be a certain mode of the Divine energy,
others a creature of God, others God Himself. Others say they do not
know which opinion they ought to accept, out of reverence for the
Scriptures which have not clearly explained this point.’
Hilary of Poictiers says in his own original way that ‘he was
well aware that nothing could be foreign to God’s nature, which
searches into the deep things of that nature. Should one be displeased
at being told that He exists by and through Him, by and from Whom are
all things, that He is the Spirit of God, but also God’s gift to
believers, then will the apostles and prophets displease him; for they
affirm only that He exists.’” There can be little
doubt, however, that Gregory, in the following fragment, is defending a
statement already in existence. He seems even to follow the order of
the words, “Lord and giver of Life.” “Who with the
Father and the Son together is worshipped and glorified.”
Doubtless the next clause, “Who spake by the Prophets,” was
dealt with in what is lost. But, essentially a creed-maker as he was,
his claim to have himself added these final clauses cannot be
substantiated. For the mss. of this treatise,
see p. 31. |
————————————
It may
indeed be undignified to give any answer at all to the statements that
are foolish; we seem to be pointed that way by Solomon’s wise
advice, “not to answer a fool according to his folly.” But
there is a danger lest through our silence error may prevail over the
truth, and so the rotting sore1222
1222 σηπεδονώδης…γάγγραινα: both used by Galen. | of this heresy may
invade it, and make havoc of the sound word of the faith. It has
appeared to me, therefore, to be imperative to answer, not indeed
according to the folly of these men who offer objections of such a
description to our Religion, but for the correction of their depraved
ideas. For that advice quoted above from the Proverbs gives, I think,
the watchword not for silence, but for the correction of those who are
displaying some act of folly; our answers, that is, are not to run on
the level of their foolish conceptions, but rather to overturn those
unthinking and deluded views as to doctrine.
What then is the charge they
bring against us? They accuse us of profanity for entertaining lofty
conceptions about the Holy Spirit. All that we, in following the
teachings of the Fathers, confess as to the Spirit, they take in a
sense of their own, and make it a handle against us, to denounce us for
profanity1223
1223 εἰς
ἀσεβείαν
γράφειν.
This is Mai’s reading. Cf. ἀσεβείας
γραφή. The
active (instead of middle) in this sense is found in Aristoph.
Av. 1052: the passive is not infrequent in Demosthenes and
Æschines. | . We, for instance, confess that the
Holy Spirit is of the same rank as the Father and the Son, so that
there is no difference between them in anything, to be thought or
named, that devotion can ascribe to a Divine nature. We confess that,
save His being contemplated as with peculiar attributes in regard of
Person, the Holy Spirit is indeed from God, and of the Christ,
according to Scripture1224
1224 From God, and of the Christ, according to Scripture.
This is noticeable. The Greek is ἐκ
τοῦ Θεοῦ
ἐστι, καὶ τοῦ
Χριστοῦ ἐστι,
καθὼς
γέγραπται. Compare the words below “proceeding from the Father,
receiving from the Son.” | , but that, while
not to be confounded with the Father in being never originated, nor
with the Son in being the Only-begotten, and while to be regarded
separately in certain distinctive properties, He has in all else, as I
have just said, an exact identity1225
1225 τὸ
ἀπαράλλακτον
(but there is something lost before this:
perhaps τὸ
ἡνωμένον). This word is used to express substantial identity. Origen uses
it in alluding to the “Stoic resurrection,” i.e. the
time when the “Great Year” shall again begin, and the
world’s history be literally repeated, i.e. the
“identical Socrates shall marry the identical Xantippe, and teach
the identical philosophy, &c.” This expression was a
favourite one also with Chrysostom and Cyril of Alexandria to express
the identity of Glory, of Godhead, and of Honour, in the Blessed
Trinity. | with them. But our
opponents aver that He is a stranger to any vital communion with the
Father and the Son; that by reason of an essential variation He is
inferior to, and less than they in every point; in power, in glory, in
dignity, in fine in everything that in word or thought we ascribe to
Deity; that, in consequence, in their glory He has no share, to equal
honour with them He has no claim; and that, as for power, He possesses
only so much of it as is sufficient for the partial activities assigned
to Him; that with the creative force He is quite
disconnected.
Such is the conception of Him
that possesses them; and the logical consequence of it is that the
Spirit has in Himself none of those marks which our devotion, in word
or thought, ascribes to a Divine nature. What then, shall be our way of
arguing? We shall answer nothing new, nothing of our own invention,
though they challenge us to it; we shall fall back upon the testimony
in Holy Scripture about the Spirit, whence we learn that the Holy
Spirit is Divine, and is to be called so. Now, if they allow this, and
will not contradict the words of inspiration, then they, with all their
eagerness to fight with us, must tell us why they are for contending
with us, instead of with Scripture. We say nothing different from that
which Scripture says.—But in a Divine nature, as such, when once
we have believed in it, we can recognize no distinctions suggested
either by the Scripture teaching or by our own common sense;
distinctions, that is, that would divide that Divine and transcendent
nature within itself by any degrees of intensity and remission, so as
to be altered from itself by being more or less. Because we firmly
believe that it is simple, uniform, incomposite, because we see in it
no complicity or composition of dissimilars, therefore it is that, when
once our minds have grasped the idea of Deity, we accept by the
implication of that very name the perfection in it of every conceivable
thing that befits the Deity. Deity, in fact, exhibits perfection in
every line in which the good can be found. If it fails and comes short
of perfection in any single point, in that point the conception of
Deity will be impaired, so that it cannot, therein, be or be called
Deity at all; for how could we apply that word to a thing that is
imperfect and deficient, and requiring an addition external to
itself?
We can confirm our argument by
material instances. Fire naturally imparts the sense of heat to those
who touch it, with all its component parts1226
1226 Reading μορίοις (cf. the same word below) for μορίαν. | ;
one part of it does not have the heat more intense, the other less
intense; but as long as it is fire at all, it exhibits an invariable
oneness with itself in an absolutely complete sameness of activity; if
in any part it gets cooled at all, in that part it can no longer be
called fire; for, with the change of its heat-giving activity into the
reverse, its name also is changed. It is the same with water, with air,
with every element that underlies the universe; there is one and the
same description of the element, in each case, admitting of no ideas of
excess or defect; water, for instance, cannot be called more or less
water; as long as it maintains an equal standard of wetness, so long
the term water will be realized by it; but when once it is changed in
the direction of the opposite quality1227
1227 πρὸς τὴν
ἐναντίαν
ποιότητα. |
the name to be applied to it must be changed also. The yielding,
buoyant, “nimble”1228
1228 nimble, κουφὸν;
compare Macbeth, I. vi.
“The air
Nimbly and sweetly recommends
itself
Unto our
senses.” | nature of the air,
too, is to be seen in every part of it; while what is dense, heavy,
downward gravitating, sinks out of the connotation of the very term
“air.” So Deity, as long as it possesses perfection
throughout all the properties that devotion1229
may attach to it, by virtue of this perfection in everything good does
not belie its name; but if any one of those things that contribute to
this idea of perfection is subtracted from it, the name of Deity is
falsified in that particular, and does not apply to the subject any
longer. It is equally impossible to apply to a dry substance the name
of water, to that whose quality is a state of coolness the name of
fire, to stiff and hard things the name of air, and to call that thing
Divine which does not at once imply the idea of perfection; or rather
the impossibility is greater in this last case.
If, then, the Holy Spirit is
truly, and not in name only, called Divine both by Scripture and by our
Fathers, what ground is left for those who oppose the glory of the
Spirit? He is Divine, and absolutely good, and Omnipotent, and wise,
and glorious, and eternal; He is everything of this kind that can be
named to raise our thoughts to the grandeur of His being. The
singleness of the subject of these properties testifies that He does
not possess them in a measure only, as if we could imagine that He was
one thing in His very substance, but became another by the presence of
the aforesaid qualities. That condition is peculiar1230
1230 Reading ἴδιον γὰρ
τοῦτο. | to those beings who have been given a composite nature; whereas
the Holy Spirit is single and simple in every respect equally. This is
allowed by all; the man who denies it does not exist. If, then, there
is but one simple and single definition of His being, the good which He
possesses is not an acquired good; but, whatever He may be besides, He
is Himself Goodness, and Wisdom, and Power, and Sanctification, and
Righteousness, and Everlastingness, and Imperishability, and every name
that is lofty, and elevating above other names. What, then, is the
state of mind that leads these men, who do not fear the fearful
sentence passed upon the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost, to maintain
that such a Being does not possess glory? For they clearly put that
statement forward; that we ought not to believe that He should be
glorified: though I know not for what reason they judge it to be
expedient not to confess the true nature of that which is essentially
glorious.
For the plea will not avail them
in their self-defence, that He is delivered by our Lord to His
disciples third in order, and that therefore He is estranged from our
ideal of Deity. Where in each case activity in working good shows no
diminution or variation whatever, how unreasonable it is to suppose the
numerical order to be a sign of any diminution or essential variation1231
1231 Reading ἐλαττώσεώς
τινος ἢ κατὰ
φύσιν
παραλλαγῆς, κ.
τ. λ. | ! It is as if a man were to see a separate
flame burning on three torches (and we will suppose that the third
flame is caused by that of the first being transmitted to the middle,
and then kindling the end torch1232
1232 “The Ancient Greek Fathers, speaking of this procession,
mention the Father only, and never, I think, express the Son, as
sticking constantly in this to the language of the Scriptures
(John
xv. 26)”—Pearson. The language of the above simile of
Gregory would be an illustration of this. So Greg. Naz., Orat. I. de
Filio, “standing on our definitions, we introduce the
Ungenerate, the Generated, and that which proceeds from the
Father.” This last expression was so known and public, that it is
recorded even by Lucian in his Philopatris, §12. | ), and were to
maintain that the heat in the first exceeded that of the others; that
that next it showed a variation from it in the direction of the less;
and that the third could not be called fire at all, though it burnt and
shone just like fire, and did everything that fire does. But if there
is really no hindrance to the third torch being fire, though it has
been kindled from a previous flame, what is the philosophy of these
men, who profanely think that they can slight the dignity of the Holy
Spirit because He is named by the Divine lips after the Father and the
Son? Certainly, if there is in our conceptions of the Substance of the
Spirit anything that falls short of the Divine ideal, they do well in
testifying to His not possessing glory; but if the highness of His
dignity is to be perceived in every point, why do they grudge to make
the confession of His glory? As if any one after describing some one as
a man, were to consider it not safe to go on to say of him as well that
he is reasoning, mortal, or anything else that can be predicated of a
man, and so were to cancel what he had just allowed; for if he is not
reasoning, he is not a man at all; but if the latter is granted, how
can there be any hesitation about the conceptions already implied in
“man”? So, with regard to the Spirit, if when one calls Him
Divine one speaks the truth, neither when one defines Him to be worthy
of honour, to be glorious, good, omnipotent, does one lie; for all such
conceptions are at once admitted with the idea of Deity. So that they
must accept one of two alternatives; either not to call Him Divine at
all, or to refrain from subtracting from His Deity any one of those
conceptions which are attributable to Deity. We must then, most surely,
comprehend along with each other these two thoughts, viz. the Divine
nature, and along with it a just idea, a devout intuition1233
1233 Reading καὶ
τῆς εὐσεβοῦς
ἐννοίας. | , of that Divine and transcendent
nature.
Since, then, it has been
affirmed, and truly affirmed, that the Spirit is of the Divine Essence,
and since in that one word “Divine” every idea of
greatness, as we have said, is involved, it follows that he who grants
that Divinity has potentially granted1234
1234 The
edition of Cardinal Mai has ὁ ἐκεῖνο δοὺς
τῇ δυνάμει,
συνωμολόγησε,
κ. τ. λ. But the sense requires
the comma to be placed after δοὺς. |
all the rest;—the gloriousness, the omnipotence, everything
indicative of superiority. It is indeed a monstrous thing to refuse to
confess this in the case of the Spirit; monstrous, because of the
incongruity, as applied to Him, of the terms which in the list of
opposites correspond to the above terms. I mean, if one does not grant
gloriousness, one must grant the absence of gloriousness; if one sets
aside His power, one must acquiesce in its opposite. So also with
regard to honour, and goodness, and any other superiority, if they are
not accepted, their opposites must be conceded.
But if all must shrink from
that, as going even beyond the most revolting blasphemy, then a devout
mind must accept the nobler names and conceptions of the Holy Spirit,
and must pronounce concerning Him all that we have already named, that
He has honour, power, glory, goodness, and everything else that
inspires devotion. It must own, too, that these realities do not attach
to Him in imperfection or with any limit to the quality of their
brilliance, but that they correspond with their names to infinity. He
is not to be regarded as possessing dignity up to a certain point, and
then becoming different; but He is always such. If you begin to
count behind the ages, or if you fix your gaze on the Hereafter1235 , you will find no falling off whatever in
dignity, or glory, or omnipotence, such as to constitute Him capable of
increase by addition, or of diminution by subtraction. Being wholly and
entirely perfect, He admits diminution in nothing. Whereinsoever, on
such a supposition as theirs, He is lessened, therein He will be
exposed to the inroad of ideas tending to dishonour Him. For that which
is not absolutely perfect must be suspected on some one point of
partaking of the opposite character. But if to entertain even the
thought of this is a sign of extreme derangement of mind, it is well to
confess our belief that His perfection in all that is good is
altogether unlimited, uncircumscribed, in no particular
diminished.
If such is the doctrine
concerning Him when followed out1236 , let the same
inquiry be made concerning the Son and the Father as well. Do you not
confess1237 a perfection of glory in the case of
the one as in the case of the other? I think that all who reflect will
allow it. If, then, the honour of the Father is perfect, and the honour
of the Son is perfect, and they have confessed as well the perfection
of honour for the Holy Spirit, wherefore do these new theorists dictate
to us that we are not to allow in His case an equality of honour with
the Father and the Son? As for ourselves, we follow out the above
considerations and find ourselves unable to think, as well as to say,
that that which requires no addition for its perfection is, as compared
with something else, less dignified; for when we have something
wherein, owing to its faultless perfection, reason can discover no
possibility of increase, I do not see either wherein it can discover
any possibility of diminution. But these men, in denying the equality
of honour, really lay down the comparative absence of it; and so also
when they follow out further this same line of thought, by a diminution
arising from comparison they divert all the conceptions that devotion
has formed of the Holy Spirit; they do not own His perfection either in
goodness, or omnipotence, or in any such attribute. But if they shrink
from such open profanity and allow His perfection in every attribute of
good, then these clever people must tell us how one perfect thing can
be more perfect or less perfect than another perfect thing; for so long
as the definition of perfection applies to it, that thing can not admit
of a greater and a less in the matter of perfection.
If, then, they agree that the
Holy Spirit is perfect absolutely, and it has been admitted in addition
that true reverence requires perfection in every good thing for the
Father and the Son as well, what reasons can justify them in taking
away the Father1238
1238 i.e.from fellowship with the Spirit.
The text is τίς
ὁ λόγος καθ᾽
ὃν εὔλογον
κρίνουσιν
πατέρα
ἀναιρεῖν, δεδώκασι; (for which δεδωκόσι is a conjecture). But perhaps πνεῦμα
ἀναιρεῖν, διδάσκωσι, or διδάξωσι, would be a more intelligible reading; though the examples
of the hortatory subjunctive other than in the first person are,
according to Porson (ad Eurip. Hec. 430), to be reckoned among
solecisms in classical Greek. | when once they have
granted Him? For to take away “equality of dignity” with
the Father is a sure proof that they do not think that the Spirit has a
share in the perfection of the Father. And as regards the idea itself
of this honour in the case of the Divine Being, from which they would
exclude the Spirit, what do they mean by it? Do they mean that honour
which men confer on men, when by word and gesture they pay respect to
them, signifying their own deference in the form of precedence and all
such-like practices, which in the foolish fashion of the day are kept
up in the name of “honour.” But all these things depend on
the goodwill of those who perform them; and if we suppose a case in
which they do not choose to perform them, then there is no one amongst
mankind who has from mere nature any advantage, such that he should
necessarily be more honoured than the rest; for all are marked alike
with the same natural proportions. The truth of this is clear; it does
not admit of any doubt. We see, for instance, the man who to-day,
because of the office which he holds, is considered by the crowd an
object of honour, becoming tomorrow himself one of those who pay
honour, the office having been transferred to another. Do they, then,
conceive of an honour such as that in the case of the Divine Being, so
that, as long as we please to pay it, that Divine honour is retained,
but when we cease to do so it ceases too at the dictate of our will?
Absurd thought, and blasphemous as well! The Deity, being independent
of us, does not grow in honour; He is evermore the same; He cannot pass
into a better or a worse state; for He has no better, and admits no
worse.
In what sort of manner, then,
can you honour the Deity? How can you heighten the Highest? How can you
give glory to that which is above all glory? How can you praise the
Incomprehensible? If “all the nations are as a drop of a bucket1239
1239 Is. xl. 15. But Mai’s
text has σταθμὸς, not σταγὼν (LXX.). | ,” as Isaiah says, if all living
humanity were to send up one united note of praise in harmony together,
what addition will this gift of a mere drop be to that which is
glorious essentially? The heavens are telling the glory of God1240 , and yet they are counted poor heralds of
His worth; because His Majesty is exalted, not as far as the
heavens, but high above those heavens, which are themselves included within
a small fraction of the Deity called figuratively His “span1241
1241 Is. xl. 12. Τίς
ἐμέtrjse…τὸν
οὐρανὸν
σπιθαμῇ. | .” And shall a man, this frail and
short-lived creature, so aptly likened to “grass,” who
“to-day is,” and to-morrow is not, believe that he can
worthily honour the Divine Being? It would be like some one lighting a
thin fibre from some tow and fancying that by that spark he was making
an addition to the dazzling rays of the sun. By what words, pray, will
you honour the Holy Spirit, supposing you do wish to honour Him at all?
By saying that He is absolutely immortal, without turning, or
variableness, always beautiful, always independent of ascription from
others, working as He wills all things in all, Holy, leading, direct,
just, of true utterance, “searching the deep things of
God,” “proceeding from the Father,”
“receiving1242 from the
Son,” and all such-like things, what, after all, do you lend to
Him by these and such-like terms? Do you mention what He has, or do you
honour Him by what He has not? Well, if you attest what He has not,
your ascription is meaningless and comes to nothing; for he who calls
bitterness “sweetness,” while he lies himself, has failed
to commend that which is blamable. Whereas, if you mention what He has,
such and such a quality is essential, whether men recognize it or not;
He remains the object of faith1243 , says the Apostle,
if we have not faith.
What means, then, this lowering
and this expanding of their soul, on the part of these men who are
enthusiastic for the Father’s honour, and grant to the Son an
equal share with Him, but in the case of the Spirit are for narrowing
down their favours; seeing that it has been demonstrated that the
intrinsic worth of the Divine Being does not depend for its contents
upon any will of ours, but has been always inalienably inherent in Him?
Their narrowness of mind, and unthankfulness, is exposed in this
opinion of theirs, while the Holy Spirit is essentially honourable,
glorious, almighty, and all that we can conceive of in the way of
exaltation, in spite of them.
“Yes,” replies one
of them, “but we have been taught by Scripture that the Father is
the Creator, and in the same way that it was ‘through the Son1244 ’ that ‘all things were
made’; but God’s word tells us nothing of this kind about
the Spirit; and how, then, can it be right to place the Holy Spirit in
a position of equal dignity with One Who has displayed such
magnificence of power through the Creation?”
What shall we answer to this?
That the thoughts of their hearts are so much idle talk, when they
imagine that the Spirit was not always with the Father and the Son, but
that, as occasion varies, He is sometimes to be contemplated as alone,
sometimes to be found in the closest union with Them. For if the
heaven, and the earth, and all created things were really made through
the Son and from the Father, but apart from the Spirit, what was the
Holy Spirit doing at the time when the Father was at work with the Son
upon the Creation? Was He employed upon some other works, and was this
the reason that He had no hand in the building of the Universe? But,
then, what special work of the Spirit have they to point to, at the
time when the world was being made? Surely, it is senseless folly to
conceive of a creation other than that which came into existence from
the Father through the Son. Well, suppose that He was not employed at
all, but dissociated Himself from the busy work of creating by reason
of an inclination to ease and rest, which shrank from toil?
May the gracious Spirit Himself
pardon this baseless supposition of ours! The blasphemy of these
theorists, which we have had to follow out in every step it takes, has
caused us unwittingly to soil our discussion with the mud of their own
imaginings. The view which is consistent with all reverence is as
follows. We are not to think of the Father as ever parted from the Son,
nor to look for the Son as separate from the Holy Spirit. As it is
impossible to mount to the Father, unless our thoughts are exalted
thither through the Son, so it is impossible also to say that Jesus is
Lord except by the Holy Spirit. Therefore, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit
are to be known only in a perfect Trinity, in closest consequence and
union with each other, before all creation, before all the ages, before
anything whatever of which we can form an idea1245
1245 πρὸ πάσης
καταληπτῆς
ἐπινοίας. | .
The Father is always Father, and in Him the Son, and with the Son the
Holy Spirit. If these Persons, then, are inseparate from each other,
how great is the folly of these men who undertake to sunder this
indivisibility by certain distinctions of time, and so far to divide
the Inseparable as to assert confidently, “the Father alone,
through the Son alone, made all things”; the Holy Spirit, that
is, being not present at all on the occasion of this making, or else
not working. Well, if He was not present, they must tell us where He
was; and whether, while God embraces all things, they can imagine any
separate standing-place for the Spirit, so that He could have remained
in isolation during the time occupied by the process of creating. If,
on the other hand, He was present, how was it that He was inactive? Because
He could not, or because He would not, work? Did He abstain willingly,
or because some strong necessity drove Him away? Now, if He
deliberately embraced this inactivity, He must reject working in any
other possible way either; and He Who affirmed that “He worketh
all things in all, as He wills1246 ,” is
according to them a liar. If, on the contrary, this Spirit has the
impulse to work, but some overwhelming control hinders His design, they
must tell us the wherefore of this hindrance. Was it owing to his being
grudged a share in the glory of those operations, and in order to
secure that the admiration at their success should not extend to a
third person as its object; or to a distrust of His help, as if His
co-operation would result in present mischief? These clever men most
certainly furnish the grounds for our holding one of these two
hypotheses; or else, if a grudging spirit has no connection with the
Deity, any more than a failure can be conceived of in any relation to
an Infallible Being, what meaning of any kind is there in these narrow
views of theirs, which isolate the Spirit’s power from all
world-building efficiency? Their duty rather was to expel their low
human way of thinking, by means of loftier ideas, and to make a
calculation more worthy of the sublimity of the objects in question.
For neither did the Universal God make the universe “through the
Son,” as needing any help, nor does the Only-begotten God work
all things “by the Holy Spirit,” as having a power that
comes short of His design; but the fountain of power is the Father, and
the power of the Father is the Son, and the spirit of that power is the
Holy Spirit; and Creation entirely, in all its visible and spiritual
extent, is the finished work of that Divine power. And seeing that no
toil can be thought of in the composition of anything connected with
the Divine Being (for performance being bound to the moment of willing,
the Plan at once becomes a Reality), we should be justified in calling
all that Nature which came into existence by creation a movement of
Will, an impulse of Design, a transmission of Power, beginning from the
Father, advancing through the Son, and completed in the Holy
Spirit.
This is the view we take, after
the unprofessional way usual with us; and we reject all these elaborate
sophistries of our adversaries, believing and confessing as we do, that
in every deed and thought, whether in this world, or beyond this world,
whether in time or in eternity, the Holy Spirit is to be apprehended as
joined to the Father and Son, and is wanting in no wish or energy, or
anything else that is implied in a devout conception of Supreme
Goodness1247
1247 κατὰ τὸ
ἀγαθόν;
probably here in its Platonic, rather than its ordinary
sense. | ; and, therefore, that, except for the
distinction of order and Person, no variation in any point is to be
apprehended; but we assert that while His place is counted third in
mere sequence after the Father and Son, third in the order of the
transmission, in all other respects we acknowledge His inseparable
union with them; both in nature, in honour, in godhead, and glory, and
majesty, and almighty power, and in all devout belief.
But with regard to service and
worship, and the other things which they so nicely calculate about, and
bring into prominence, we say this; that the Holy Spirit is exalted
above all that we can do for Him with our merely human purpose; our
worship is far beneath the honour due; and anything else that in human
customs is held as honourable is somewhere below the dignity of the
Spirit; for that which in its essence is measureless surpasses those
who offer their all with so slight and circumscribed and paltry a power
of giving. This, then, we say to those of them who subscribe to the
reverential conception of the Holy Spirit that He is Divine, and of the
Divine nature. But if there is any of them who rejects this statement,
and this idea involved in the very name of Divinity, and says that
which, to the destruction of the Spirit’s greatness, is in
circulation amongst the many, namely, that He belongs, not to making,
but to made, beings, that it is right to regard Him not as of a Divine,
but as of a created nature, we answer to a proposition such as this,
that we do not understand how we can count those who make it amongst
the number of Christians at all. For just as it would not be possible
to style the unformed embryo a human being, but only a potential one,
assuming that it is completed so as to come forth to human birth, while
as long as it is in this unformed state, it is something other than a
human being; so our reason cannot recognize as a Christian one who has
failed to receive, with regard to the entire mystery, the genuine form
of our religion1248
1248 τὴν ἀληθῆ
μόρφωσιν τῆς
εὐσεβείας | . We can hear Jews
believing in God, and our God too: even our Lord reminds1249
1249 ἐντίθεται:
συντίθεται, “concedes to,” would perhaps be
better. | them in the Gospel that they recognize no
other God than the Father of the Only-begotten, “of Whom ye say
that he is your God.” Are we, then, to call the Jews Christians
because they too agree to worship the God Whom we adore? I am aware,
too, that the Manichees go about vaunting the name of Christ. Because
they hold revered the Name to which we bow the knee, shall we therefore
number them amongst Christians? So, too, he who both believes in the
Father and receives the Son, but sets aside the Majesty of the Spirit,
has “denied the faith, and is worse than an infidel,” and
belies the name of Christ which he bears. The Apostle bids the man of
God to be “perfect1250 .” Now, to
take only the general man, perfection must consist in
completeness in every aspect of human nature, in having reason,
capability of thought and knowledge, a share of animal life, an upright
bearing, risibility, broadness of nail; and if any one were to term
some individual a man, and yet were unable to produce evidence in his
case of the foregoing signs of human nature, his terming him so would
be a valueless honour. Thus, too, the Christian is marked by his Belief
in Father, Son, and Holy Ghost; in this consists the form of him who is
fashioned1251 in accordance with the mystery of the
truth. But if his form is arranged otherwise, I will not recognize the
existence of anything whence the form is absent; there is a blurring
out of the mark, and a loss of the essential form, and an alteration of
the characteristic signs of our complete humanity, when the Holy Spirit
is not included in the Belief. For indeed the word of Ecclesiastes says
true; your heretic is no living man, but “bones,” he says1252
1252 Reading καθὼς
ἐκεῖνος
φησὶν. | , “in the womb of her that is with
child1253
1253 Eccles. xi. 5 (LXX.).
οὐκ
ἔστι
γινωσκων τίς
ἡ ὁδὸς τοῦ
πνεύματος, ὡς
ὀστᾶ ἐν
γαστρὶ
κυοφορούσης | ”; for how can one who does not think
of the unction along with the Anointed be said to believe in the
Anointed? “Him,” says (Peter), “did God anoint with
the Holy Spirit1254 .”
These destroyers of the
Spirit’s glory, who relegate Him to a subject world, must tell us
of what thing that unction is the symbol. It not a symbol of the
Kingship? And what? Do they not believe in the Only-begotten as in His
very nature a King? Men who have not once for all enveloped their
hearts with the Jewish “vail1255 ” will
not gainsay that He is this. If, then, the Son is in His very nature a
king, and the unction is the symbol of His kingship, what, in the way
of a consequence, does your reason demonstrate? Why, that the Unction
is not a thing alien to that Kingship, and so that the Spirit is not to
be ranked in the Trinity as anything strange and foreign either. For
the Son is King, and His living, realized, and personified Kingship is
found in the Holy Spirit, Who anoints the Only-begotten, and so makes
Him the Anointed, and the King of all things that exist. If, then, the
Father is King, and the Only-begotten is King, and the Holy Ghost is
the Kingship, one and the same definition of Kingship must prevail
throughout this Trinity, and the thought of “unction”
conveys the hidden meaning that there is no interval of separation
between the Son and the Holy Spirit. For as between the body’s
surface and the liquid of the oil nothing intervening can be detected,
either in reason or in perception, so inseparable is the union of the
Spirit with the Son; and the result is that whosoever is to touch the
Son by faith must needs first encounter the oil in the very act of
touching; there is not a part of Him devoid of the Holy Spirit.
Therefore belief in the Lordship of the Son arises in those who
entertain it, by means of the Holy Ghost; on all sides the Holy Ghost
is met by those who by faith approach the Son. If, then, the Son is
essentially a King, and the Holy Spirit is that dignity of Kingship
which anoints the Son, what deprivation of this Kingship, in its
essence and comparing it with itself, can be imagined?
Again, let us look at it in this
way. Kingship is most assuredly shown in the rule over subjects. Now
what is “subject” to this Kingly Being? The Word includes
the ages certainly, and all that is in them; “Thy Kingdom,”
it says, “is a Kingdom of ages,” and, by ages, it means
every substance in them created in infinite space1256
1256 ἐκ
τοῦ
περιέχοντος. This expression of Anaxagoras is repeated more than once
in the Treatise “On the Soul.” | , whether visible or invisible; for in them
all things were created by the Maker of those ages. If, then, the
Kingship must always be thought of along with the King, and the world
of subjects is acknowledged to be something other than the world of
rulers, what absurdity it is for these men to contradict themselves
thus, attributing as they do the unction as an expression for the worth
of Him Whose very nature it is to be a King, yet degrading that unction
Itself to the rank of a subject, as if wanting in such worth! If It is
a subject by virtue of its nature, then why is It made the unction of
Kingship, and so associated with the Kingly dignity of the
Only-begotten? If, on the other hand, the capacity to rule is shown by
Its being included in the majesty of Kingship, where is the necessity
of having everything dragged down to a plebeian1257
1257 ἰδιωτικήν. On 1 Cor. xiv. 16, ῾Ο ἀναπληρῶν
τὸν τόπον τοῦ
ἰδιώτου,
Theodoret says, “ἰδιώτην
καλεῖ τὸν ἐν
τῷ λαικῷ
τάγματι
τεταγμένον.” Theophylact also renders the word by the same
equivalent. |
and servile lower condition, and numbered with the subject creation?
When we affirm of the Spirit the two conditions, we cannot be in both
cases speaking the truth: i.e. that He is ruling, and that He is
subject. If He rules, He is not under any lord, but if He is subject,
then He cannot be comprehended with the Being who is a King. Men are
recognized as amongst men, angels amongst angels,
everything amongst its kind; and so the Holy Spirit must needs be
believed to belong to one only of two worlds; to the ruling, or to the
inferior world; for between these two our reason can recognize nothing;
no new invention of any natural attribute on the borderland of the
Created and the Uncreated can be thought of, such as would participate
in both, yet be neither entirely; we cannot imagine such an
amalgamation and welding together of opposites by anything being
blended of the Created and the Uncreated, and two opposites thus
coalescing into one person, in which case the result of that strange
mixture would not only be a composite thing, but composed of elements
that were unlike, and disagreeing as to time; for that which receives
its personality from a creation is assuredly posterior to that which
subsists without a creation.
If, then, they declare the Holy
Ghost to be blended of both, they must consequently view that blending
as of a prior with a posterior thing; and, according to them, He will
be prior to Himself; and reversely, posterior to Himself; from the
Uncreated He will get the seniority, and from the Created the
juniority. But, in the nature of things, this cannot be; and so it must
most certainly be true to affirm of the Holy Spirit one only of these
alternatives, and that is, the attribute of being Uncreated; for notice
the amount of absurdity involved in the other alternative; all things
that we can think of in the actual creation have, by virtue of all
having received their existence by an act of creation, a rank and value
perfectly equal in all cases, and so what reason can there be for
separating the Holy Spirit from the rest of the creation, and ranking
Him with the Father and the Son? Logic, then, will discover this about
Him; That which is contemplated as part of the Uncreated, does not
exist by creation; or, if It does, then It has no more power than its
kindred creation, It cannot associate itself with that Transcendent
Nature; if, on the other hand, they declare that He is a created being,
and at the same time has a power which is above the creation, then the
creation will be found at variance with itself, divided into ruler and
ruled, so that part of it is the benefactor, part the benefited, part
the sanctifier, part the sanctified; and all that fund of blessings
which we believe to be provided for the creation by the Holy Spirit are
present in Him, welling up abundantly, and pouring forth upon others,
while the creation remains in need of the thence-issuing help and
grace, and receives, as a mere dole, those blessings which can be
passed to it from a fellow-creature! That would be like favouritism and
respecting of persons; when we know that there is no such partiality in
the nature of things, as that those existences which differ in no way
from each other on the score of substance should not have equal power;
and I think that no one who reflects will admit such views. Either He
imparts nothing to others, if He possesses nothing essentially; or, if
we do believe that He does give, His possession beforehand of that gift
must be granted; this capacity of giving blessings, whilst needing
oneself no such extraneous help, is the peculiar and exquisite
privilege of Deity, and of no other.
Then let us look to this too. In
Holy Baptism, what is it that we secure thereby? Is it not a
participation in a life no longer subject to death? I think that no one
who can in any way be reckoned amongst Christians will deny that
statement. What then? Is that life-giving power in the water itself
which is employed to convey the grace of Baptism? Or is it not rather
clear to every one that this element is only employed as a means in the
external ministry, and of itself contributes nothing towards the
sanctification, unless it be first transformed itself by the
sanctification; and that what gives life to the baptized is the Spirit;
as our Lord Himself says in respect to Him with His own lips, “It
is the Spirit that giveth life;” but for the completion of this
grace He alone, received by faith, does not give life, but belief in
our Lord must precede, in order that the lively gift may come upon the
believer, as our Lord has spoken, “He giveth life to whom He
willeth.” But further still, seeing that this grace administered
through the Son is dependent on the Ungenerate Source of all, Scripture
accordingly teaches us that belief in the Father Who engendereth all
things is to come first; so that this life-giving grace should be
completed, for those fit to receive it, after starting from that Source
as from a spring pouring life abundantly, through the Only-begotten Who
is the True life, by the operation of the Holy Spirit. If, then, life
comes in baptism, and baptism receives its completion in the name of
Father, Son, and Spirit, what do these men mean who count this Minister
of life as nothing? If the gift is a slight one, they must tell us the
thing that is more precious than this life. But if everything whatever
that is precious is second to this life, I mean that higher and
precious life in which the brute creation has no part, how can they
dare to depreciate so great a favour, or rather the actual Being who
grants the favour, and to degrade Him in their conceptions of Him to a
subject world by disjoining Him from the higher world of deity1258
1258 “Whether or not the Macedonians explicitly denied the
Divinity of the Holy Ghost is uncertain; but they viewed Him as
essentially separate from, and external to, the One Indivisible
Godhead. The ‘Nicene’ Creed declares that He is the
Lord, or Sovereign Spirit because the heretics considered Him to
be a minister of God; and the Supreme Giver of Life, because
they considered Him a mere instrument by which we receive the
gift.”—Newman’s Arians, note p.
420. | . Finally, if they will have it that this bestowal of
life is a small thing, and that it means nothing great and awful in the
nature of the Bestower, how is it they do not draw the conclusion which
this very view makes inevitable, namely, that we must suppose, even
with regard to the Only-begotten and the Father Himself, nothing great
in Their life, the same as that which we have through the Holy Spirit,
supplied as it is from the Father through the Son?
So that if these despisers and
impugners of their very own life conceive of the gift as a little one,
and decree accordingly to slight the Being who imparts the gift, let
them be made aware that they cannot limit to one Person only their
ingratitude, but must extend its profanity beyond the Holy Spirit to
the Holy Trinity Itself. For like as the grace flows down in an
unbroken stream from the Father, through the Son and the Spirit, upon
the persons worthy of it, so does this profanity return backward, and
is transmitted from the Son to the God of all the world, passing from
one to the other. If, when a man is slighted, He Who sent him is
slighted (yet what a distance there was between the man and the
Sender!), what criminality1259 is thereby implied
in those who thus defy the Holy Spirit! Perhaps this is the blasphemy
against our Law-giver1260
1260 κατὰ τοῦ
νομοθέτου is Mai’s reading. But κατὰ τὸν
νομοθέτην, i.e. according to S. Mark iii. 29, S. Luke xii.
10,
would be preferable. Migne reads παρὰ in this
sense. | for which the
judgment without remission has been decreed; since in Him the1261
1261 τὸ has probably dropped
out. | entire Being, Blessed and Divine, is
insulted also. As the devout worshipper of the Spirit sees in Him the
glory of the Only-begotten, and in that sight beholds the image of the
Infinite God, and by means of that image makes an outline, upon his own
cognition1262 , of the Original, so most plainly does
this contemner1263
1263 Something has dropped out here. | (of the Spirit),
whenever he advances any of his bold statements against the glory of
the Spirit, extend, by virtue of the same reasoning, his profanity to
the Son, and beyond Him to the Father. Therefore, those who reflect
must have fear lest they perpetrate an audacity the result of which
will be the complete blotting out of the perpetrator of it; and while
they exalt the Spirit in the naming, they will even before the naming
exalt Him in their thought, it being impossible that words can mount
along with thought; still when one shall have reached the highest limit
of human faculties, the utmost height and magnificence of idea to which
the mind can ever attain, even then one must believe it is far below
the glory that belongs to1264 Him, according to
the words in the Psalms, that “after exalting the Lord our God,
even then ye scarcely worship the footstool beneath His feet”:
and the cause of this dignity being so incomprehensible is nothing else
than that He is holy.
If, then, every height of
man’s ability falls below the grandeur of the Spirit (for that is
what the Word means in the metaphor of “footstool”), what
vanity is theirs who think that there is within themselves a power so
great that it rests with them to define the amount of value to be
attributed to a being who is invaluable! And so they pronounce the Holy
Spirit unworthy of some things which are associated with the idea of
value, as if their own abilities could do far more than the Spirit, as
estimated by them, is capable of. What pitiable, what wretched madness!
They understand not what they are themselves when they talk like this,
and what the Holy Spirit against Whom they insolently range themselves.
Who will tell these people that men are “a spirit that goeth
forth and returneth not again1265 ,” built up in
their mother’s womb by means of a soiled conception, and
returning all of them to a soiled earth; inheriting a life that is
likened unto grass; blooming for a little during life’s
illusion1266 , and then withering away, and all the
bloom upon them being shed and vanishing; they themselves not knowing
with certainty what they were before their birth, nor into what they
will be changed, their soul being ignorant of her peculiar destiny as
long as she tarries in the flesh? Such is man.
On the contrary the Holy Spirit
is, to begin with, because of qualities that are essentially holy, that
which the Father, essentially Holy, is; and such as the Only-begotten
is, such is the Holy Spirit; then, again, He is so by virtue of
life-giving, of imperishability, of unvariableness, of everlastingness,
of justice, of wisdom, of rectitude, of sovereignty, of goodness, of
power, of capacity to give all good things, and above them all life
itself, and by being everywhere, being present in each, filling the
earth, residing in the heavens, shed abroad upon supernatural Powers,
filling all things according to the deserts of each, Himself remaining
full, being with all who are worthy, and yet not parted from the Holy
Trinity. He ever “searches the deep things of God,” ever
“receives” from the Son, ever is being “sent,”
and yet not separated, and being “glorified,” and yet He
has always had glory. It is plain, indeed, that one who gives glory to
another must be found himself in the possession of superabundant glory;
for how
could one devoid of glory glorify another? Unless a thing be itself
light, how can it display the gracious gift of light? So the power to
glorify could never be displayed by one who was not himself glory1267
1267 It is
worth noticing that Gregory maintains (Hom. xv. on Canticles)
that Δόξα
in Scripture means the Holy Ghost. | , and honour, and majesty, and greatness. Now
the Spirit does glorify the Father and the Son. Neither does He lie Who
saith, “Them that glorify Me I glorify”1268 ; and “I have glorified Thee1269 ,” is said by our Lord to the Father;
and again He says, “Glorify Thou Me with the glory which I had
with Thee before the world was1270 .” The Divine
Voice answers, “I have both glorified, and will glorify again1271 .” You see the revolving circle of the
glory moving from Like to Like. The Son is glorified by the Spirit; the
Father is glorified by the Son; again the Son has His glory from the
Father; and the Only-begotten thus becomes the glory of the Spirit. For
with what shall the Father be glorified, but with the true glory of the
Son: and with what again shall the Son be glorified, but with the
majesty of the Spirit? In like manner, again, Faith completes the
circle, and glorifies the Son by means of the Spirit, and the Father by
means of the Son.
If such, then, is the greatness
of the Spirit, and whatever is morally beautiful, whatever is good,
coming from God as it does through the Son, is completed by the
instrumentality of the Spirit that “worketh all in all,”
why do they set themselves against their own life? Why do they alienate
themselves from the hope belonging to “such as are to be
saved”? Why do they sever themselves from their cleaving unto
God? For how can any man cleave unto the Lord unless the Spirit
operates within us that union of ourselves with Him? Why do they haggle
with us about the amount of service and of worship? Why do they use
that word “worship” in an ironical sense, derogatory to a
Divine and entirely Independent Being, supposing that they desire their
own salvation? We would say to them, “Your supplication is the
advantage of you who ask, and not the honouring of Him Who grants it.
Why, then, do you approach your Benefactor as if you had something to
give? Or rather, why do you refuse to name as a benefactor at all Him
Who gives you your blessings, and slight the Life-giver while clinging
to Life? Why, seeking for His sanctification, do you misconceive of the
Dispenser of the Grace of sanctification; and as to the giving of those
blessings, why, not denying that He has the power, do you deem Him not
worthy to be asked to give, and fail to take this into consideration,
viz. how much greater a thing it is to give some blessing than to be
asked to give it? The asking does not unmistakably witness to greatness
in him who is asked; for it is possible that one who does not have the
thing to give might be asked for it, for the asking depends only on the
will of the asker. But one who actually bestows some blessing has
thereby given undoubted evidence of a power residing in him. Why then,
while testifying to the greater thing in Him,—I mean the power to
bestow everything that is morally beautiful1272 —do you deprive Him of the asking, as
of something of importance; although his asking, as we have said, is
often performed in the case of those who have nothing in their power,
owing to the delusion of their devotees? For instance, the slaves of
superstition ask the idols for the objects of their wishes; but the
asking does not, in this instance of the idols, confer any glory; only
people pay that attention to them owing to the deluded expectation that
they will get some one of the things they ask for, and so they do not
cease to ask. But you, persuaded as you are of what and how great
things the Holy Spirit is the Giver, do you neglect the asking them
from Him, taking refuge in the law which bids you ‘worship God
and serve Him only1273 ?’ Well, how
will you worship Him only, tell me, when you have severed Him from His
intimate union with His own Only-begotten and His own Spirit? This
worship is simply Jewish.
But you will say, “When I
think of the Father it is the Son (alone) that I have included as well
in that term.” But tell me; when you have grasped the notion of
the Son have you not admitted therein that of the Holy Spirit too? For
how can you confess the Son except by the Holy Spirit? At what moment,
then, is the Spirit in a state of separation from the Son, so that when
the Father is being worshipped, the worship of the Spirit is not
included along with that of the Son? And as regards their worship
itself, what in the world do they reckon it to be? They bestow it, as
some exquisite piece of honour, upon the God over all, and convey it
over, sometimes, so as to reach the Only-begotten also; but the Holy
Spirit they regard as unworthy of such a privilege. Now, in the common
parlance of mankind, that self-prostration of inferiors upon the ground
which they practise when they salute their betters is termed worship.
Thus, it was by such a posture that the patriarch Jacob, in his
self-humiliation, seems to have wished to show his inferiority when
coming to meet his brother and to appease his wrath; for “he bowed
himself to the ground,” says the Scripture, “three
times”1274 ; and Joseph’s brethren, as long
as they knew him not, and he pretended before them that he knew them
not, by reason of the exaltation of his rank reverenced his sovereignty
with this worship; and even the great Abraham himself “bowed
himself1275
1275 προσεκύνησε
τῷ λαῷ τῆς
γῆς, τοῖς υἱοῖς
τοῦ Χετ,
Gen. xxiii.
7. | ” “to the children of
Heth,” a stranger amongst the natives of that land, showing, I
opine, by that action, how far more powerful those natives were than
sojourners. It is possible to speak of many such actions both in the
ancient records, and from examples before our eyes in the world now1276
1276 τοῦ βίου. This is a late use of βίος. | .
Do they too, then, mean this by
their worship? Well, is it anything but absurdity to think that it is
wrong to honour the Holy Spirit with that with which the patriarch
honoured even Canaanites? Or do they consider their
“worship” something different to this, as if one sort were
fitting for men, another sort for the Supreme Being? But then, how is
it that they omit worship altogether in the instance of the Spirit, not
even bestowing upon Him the worship conceded in the case of men? And
what kind of worship do they imagine to be reserved especially for the
Deity? Is it to be spoken word, or acted gesture? Well, but are not
these marks of honour shared by men as well? In their case words are
spoken and gestures acted. Is it not, then, plain to every one who
possesses the least amount of reflection, that any gift worthy of the
Deity mankind has not got to give; for the Author of all blessings has
no need of us. But it is we men who have transferred these indications
of respect and admiration, which we adopt towards each other, when we
would show by the acknowledgment of a neighbour’s superiority
that one of us is in a humbler position than another, to our attendance
upon a Higher Power; out of our possessions we make a gift of what is
most precious to a priceless Nature. Therefore, since men, approaching
emperors and potentates for the objects which they wish in some way to
obtain from those rulers, do not bring to them their mere petition
only, but employ every possible means to induce them to feel pity and
favour towards themselves, adopting a humble voice, and a kneeling
position1277
1277 Still
the word προσκυνεῖν
became consecrated to the highest Christian worship
while θεραπεύειν
was employed for address to the angels. “Every
supplication, every prayer, every entreaty, and every giving of thanks
must be offered to the Almighty through the High Priest who is over all
the angels, the incarnate Word and God. And we shall make supplication
and prayer to the Word Himself also, and we shall give Him thanks if we
can distinguish prayer in its proper meaning from the wrong use of the
word,” Origen c. Cels. v. 4 (Cf. viii. 13, where he answers the
question whether Gabriel, Michael, and the rest of the archangels
should be addressed, θεραπευέσθαι). | , clasping their knees, prostrating
themselves on the ground, and putting forward to plead for their
petition all sorts of pathetic signs, to wake that pity,—so it is
that those who recognize the True Potentate, by Whom all things in
existence are controlled, when they are supplicating for that which
they have at heart, some lowly in spirit because of pitiable conditions
in this world, some with their thoughts lifted up because of their
eternal mysterious hopes, seeing that they know not how to ask, and
that their humanity is not capable of displaying any reverence that can
reach to the grandeur of that Glory, carry the ceremonial used in the
case of men into the service of the Deity. And this is what
“worship” is,—that, I mean, which is offered for
objects we have at heart along with supplication and humiliation.
Therefore Daniel too bends the knees to the Lord, when asking His love
for the captive people; and He Who “bare our sicknesses,”
and intercedes for us, is recorded in the Gospel to have fallen on His
face, because of the man that He had taken upon Him, at the hour of
prayer, and in this posture to have made His petition, enjoining
thereby, I think, that at the time of our petition our voice is not to
be bold, but that we are to assume the attitude of the wretched; since
the Lord “resisteth the proud, but giveth grace unto the
humble;” and somewhere else (He says), “he that exalteth
himself shall be abased.” If, then, “worship” is a
sort of suppliant state, or pleading put forward for the object of the
petition, what is the intention of these new-fashioned regulations?
These men do not even deign to ask of the Giver, nor to kneel to the
Ruler, nor to attend upon the Potentate.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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