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On “Not Three Gods.”
To Ablabius.
————————————
Ye that
are strong with all might in the inner man ought by rights to carry on
the struggle against the enemies of the truth, and not to shrink from
the task, that we fathers may be gladdened by the noble toil of our
sons; for this is the prompting of the law of nature: but as you turn
your ranks, and send against us the assaults of those darts which are
hurled by the opponents of the truth, and demand that their “hot
burning coals”1299
1299 Ps. cxx. 3; the phrase is
rendered in A.V. by “coals of juniper,” in the Vulg. by
“carbonibus desolatoriis.” | and their shafts
sharpened by knowledge falsely so called should be quenched with the
shield of faith by us old men, we accept your command, and make
ourselves an example of obedience1300
1300 Reading, with Oehler, εὐπειθείας | , in order that
you may yourself give us the just requital on like commands, Ablabius,
noble soldier of Christ, if we should ever summon you to such a
contest.
In truth, the question you
propound to us is no small one, nor such that but small harm will
follow if it meets with insufficient treatment. For by the force of the
question, we are at first sight compelled to accept one or other of two
erroneous opinions, and either to say “there are three
Gods,” which is unlawful, or not to acknowledge the Godhead of
the Son and the Holy Spirit, which is impious and absurd.
The argument which you state is
something like this:—Peter, James, and John, being in one human
nature, are called three men: and there is no absurdity in describing
those who are united in nature, if they are more than one, by the
plural number of the name derived from their nature. If, then, in the
above case, custom admits this, and no one forbids us to speak of those
who are two as two, or those who are more than two as three, how is it
that in the case of our statements of the mysteries of the Faith,
though confessing the Three Persons, and acknowledging no difference of
nature between them, we are in some sense at variance with our
confession, when we say that the Godhead of the Father and of the Son
and of the Holy Ghost is one, and yet forbid men to say “there
are three Gods”? The question is, as I said, very difficult to
deal with: yet, if we should be able to find anything that may give
support to the uncertainty of our mind, so that it may no longer totter
and waver in this monstrous dilemma, it would be well: on the other
hand, even if our reasoning be found unequal to the problem, we must
keep for ever, firm and unmoved, the tradition which we received by
succession from the fathers, and seek from the Lord the reason which is
the advocate of our faith: and if this be found by any of those endowed
with grace, we must give thanks to Him who bestowed the grace; but if
not, we shall none the less, on those points which have been
determined, hold our faith unchangeably.
What, then, is the reason that
when we count one by one those who are exhibited to us in one nature,
we ordinarily name them in the plural and speak of “so many
men,” instead of calling them all one: while in the case of the
Divine nature our doctrinal definition rejects the plurality of Gods,
at once enumerating the Persons, and at the same time not admitting the
plural signification? Perhaps one might seem to touch the point if he
were to say (speaking offhand to straightforward people), that the
definition refused to reckon Gods in any number to avoid any
resemblance to the polytheism of the heathen, lest, if we too were to
enumerate the Deity, not in the singular, but in the plural, as they
are accustomed to do, there might be supposed to be also some community
of doctrine. This answer, I say, if made to people of a more guileless
spirit, might seem to be of some weight: but in the case of the others
who require that one of the alternatives they propose should be
established (either that we should not acknowledge the Godhead in Three
Persons, or that, if we do, we should speak of those who share in the
same Godhead as three), this answer is not such as to furnish any
solution of the difficulty. And hence we must needs make our reply at
greater length, tracing out the truth as best we may; for the question
is no ordinary one.
We say, then, to begin with, that the practice of calling those
who are not divided1301
1301 Reading τοὺς μὴ
διηρημένούς, as Sifanus seems to have read. The Paris Edit. of 1615
reads τοὺς
διηρημένους, which Oehler leaves uncorrected. | in nature by the
very name of their common nature in the plural, and saying they are
“many men,” is a customary abuse of language, and that it
would be much the same thing to say they are “many human
natures.” And the truth of this we may see from the following
instance. When we address any one, we do not call him by the name of
his nature, in order that no confusion may result from the community of
the name, as would happen if every one of those who hear it were to
think that he himself was the person addressed, because the call is
made not by the proper appellation but by the common name of their
nature: but we separate him from the multitude by using that name which
belongs to him as his own;—that, I mean, which signifies the
particular subject. Thus there are many who have shared in the
nature—many disciples, say, or apostles, or martyrs—but the
man in them all is one; since, as has been said, the term
“man” does not belong to the nature of the individual as
such, but to that which is common. For Luke is a man, or Stephen is a
man; but it does not follow that if any one is a man he is therefore
Luke or Stephen: but the idea of the persons admits of that separation
which is made by the peculiar attributes considered in each severally,
and when they are combined is presented to us by means of number; yet
their nature is one, at union in itself, and an absolutely indivisible
unit, not capable of increase by addition or of diminution by
subtraction, but in its essence being and continually remaining one,
inseparable even though it appear in plurality, continuous, complete,
and not divided with the individuals who participate in it. And as we
speak of a people, or a mob, or an army, or an assembly in the singular
in every case, while each of these is conceived as being in plurality,
so according to the more accurate expression, “man” would
be said to be one, even though those who are exhibited to us in the
same nature make up a plurality. Thus it would be much better to
correct our erroneous habit, so as no longer to extend to a plurality
the name of the nature, than by our bondage to habit to transfer1302
1302 Reading with Oehler μεταβιβάζειν, for the μὴ
μεταβιβάζειν
of the Paris Edit. | to our statements concerning God the error
which exists in the above case. But since the correction of the habit
is impracticable (for how could you persuade any one not to speak of
those who are exhibited in the same nature as “many
men”?—indeed, in every case habit is a thing hard to
change), we are not so far wrong in not going contrary to the
prevailing habit in the case of the lower nature, since no harm results
from the mistaken use of the name: but in the case of the statement
concerning the Divine nature the various use1303
1303 Sifanus seems to have read ἡ ἀδιάφορος
χρῆσις, as he
translates “promiscuus et indifferens nominum
usus.” | of
terms is no longer so free from danger: for that which is of small
account is in these subjects no longer a small matter. Therefore we
must confess one God, according to the testimony of Scripture,
“Hear, O Israel, the Lord thy God is one Lord,” even though
the name of Godhead extends through the Holy Trinity. This I say
according to the account we have given in the case of human nature, in
which we have learnt that it is improper to extend the name of the
nature by the mark of plurality. We must, however, more carefully
examine the name of “Godhead,” in order to obtain, by means
of the significance involved in the word, some help towards clearing up
the question before us.
Most men think that the word
“Godhead” is used in a peculiar degree in respect of
nature: and just as the heaven, or the sun, or any other of the
constituent parts of the universe are denoted by proper names which are
significant of the subjects, so they say that in the case of the
Supreme and Divine nature, the word “Godhead” is fitly
adapted to that which it represents to us, as a kind of special name.
We, on the other hand, following the suggestions of Scripture, have
learnt that that nature is unnameable and unspeakable, and we say that
every term either invented by the custom1304
1304 Reading with Oehler συνηθείας
for the οὐσίας of
the Paris Edit. | of
men, or handed down to us by the Scriptures, is indeed explanatory of
our conceptions of the Divine Nature1305
1305 Reading with Oehler τῶν περὶ τὴν
θείαν φύσιν
νοουμένων, for τῶν
τι περὶ τὴν θ.
φ. νοουμένων
in the Paris Edit. | , but does not
include the signification of that nature itself. And it may be shown
without much difficulty that this is the case. For all other terms
which are used of the creation may be found, even without analysis of
their origin, to be applied to the subjects accidentally, because we
are content to denote the things in any way by the word applied to them
so as to avoid confusion in our knowledge of the things signified. But
all the terms that are employed to lead us to the knowledge of God have
comprehended in them each its own meaning, and you cannot find any word
among the terms especially applied to God which is without a distinct
sense. Hence it is clear that by any of the terms we use the Divine
nature itself is not signified, but some one of its surroundings is
made known. For we say, it may be, that the Deity is incorruptible, or
powerful, or whatever else we are accustomed to say of Him. But
in each of these terms we find a peculiar sense, fit to be understood
or asserted of the Divine nature, yet not expressing that which that
nature is in its essence. For the subject, whatever it may be, is
incorruptible: but our conception of incorruptibility is
this,—that that which is, is not resolved into decay: so, when we
say that He is incorruptible, we declare what His nature does not
suffer, but we do not express what that is which does not suffer
corruption. Thus, again, if we say that He is the Giver of life, though
we show by that appellation what He gives, we do not by that word
declare what that is which gives it. And by the same reasoning we find
that all else which results from the significance involved in the names
expressing the Divine attributes either forbids us to conceive what we
ought not to conceive of the Divine nature, or teaches us that which we
ought to conceive of it, but does not include an explanation of the
nature itself. Since, then, as we perceive the varied operations of the
power above us, we fashion our appellations from the several operations
that are known to us, and as we recognize as one of these that
operation of surveying and inspection, or, as one might call it,
beholding, whereby He surveys all things and overlooks them all,
discerning our thoughts, and even entering by His power of
contemplation into those things which are not visible, we suppose that
Godhead, or θεότης, is
so called from θέα, or beholding, and
that He who is our θεατής or
beholder, by customary use and by the instruction of the Scriptures, is
called θεός, or God. Now if
any one admits that to behold and to discern are the same thing, and
that the God Who superintends all things, both is and is called the
superintender of the universe, let him consider this operation, and
judge whether it belongs to one of the Persons whom we believe in the
Holy Trinity, or whether the power extends1306
1306 Reading with Oehler διήκει for προσήκει |
throughout the Three Persons. For if our interpretation of the term
Godhead, or θεότης, is
a true one, and the things which are seen are said to be beheld,
or θεατά, and that
which beholds them is called θεός, or God, no one
of the Persons in the Trinity could reasonably be excluded from such an
appellation on the ground of the sense involved in the word. For
Scripture attributes the act of seeing equally to Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit. David says, “See, O God our defender1307 ”: and from this we learn that sight is
a proper operation of the idea1308
1308 Reading with Oehler ἰδέας for ἰδέαν. | of God, so far as
God is conceived, since he says, “See, O God.” But Jesus
also sees the thoughts of those who condemn Him, and questions why by
His own power He pardons the sins of men? for it says, “Jesus,
seeing their thoughts1309 .” And of the
Holy Spirit also, Peter says to Ananias, “Why hath Satan filled
thine heart, to lie to the Holy Ghost?1310 ” showing that the Holy Spirit was a
true witness, aware of what Ananias had dared to do in secret, and by
Whom the manifestation of the secret was made to Peter. For Ananias
became a thief of his own goods, secretly, as he thought, from all men,
and concealing his sin: but the Holy Spirit at the same moment was in
Peter, and detected his intent, dragged down as it was to avarice, and
gave to Peter from Himself1311
1311 Reading with Oehler παρ᾽
ἑαυτοῦ for δι᾽
ἑαυτοῦ. | the power of seeing
the secret, while it is clear that He could not have done this had He
not been able to behold hidden things.
But some one will say that the
proof of our argument does not yet regard the question. For even if it
were granted that the name of “Godhead” is a common name of
the nature, it would not be established that we should not speak of
“Gods”: but by these arguments, on the contrary, we are
compelled to speak of “Gods”: for we find in the custom of
mankind that not only those who are partakers1312
1312 Reading κοινωνοὺς
for κοινωνίας, with Oehler. | in
the same nature, but even any who may be of the same business, are not,
when they are many, spoken of in the singular; as we speak of
“many orators,” or “surveyors,” or
“farmers,” or “shoemakers,” and so in all other
cases. If, indeed, Godhead were an appellation of nature, it would be
more proper, according to the argument laid down, to include the Three
Persons in the singular number, and to speak of “One God,”
by reason of the inseparability and indivisibility of the nature: but
since it has been established by what has been said, that the term
“Godhead” is significant of operation, and not of nature,
the argument from what has been advanced seems to turn to the contrary
conclusion, that we ought therefore all the more to call those
“three Gods” who are contemplated in the same operation, as
they say that one would speak of “three philosophers” or
“orators,” or any other name derived from a business when
those who take part in the same business are more than one.
I have taken some pains, in
setting forth this view, to bring forward the reasoning on behalf of
the adversaries, that our decision may be the more firmly fixed, being
strengthened by the more elaborate contradictions. Let us now resume
our argument.
As we have to a certain extent
shown by our statement that the word “Godhead” is not significant
of nature but of operation, perhaps one might reasonably allege as a
cause why, in the case of men, those who share with one another in the
same pursuits are enumerated and spoken of in the plural, while on the
other hand the Deity is spoken of in the singular as one God and one
Godhead, even though the Three Persons are not separated from the
significance expressed by the term “Godhead,”—one
might allege, I say, the fact that men, even if several are engaged in
the same form of action, work separately each by himself at the task he
has undertaken, having no participation in his individual action with
others who are engaged in the same occupation. For instance, supposing
the case of several rhetoricians, their pursuit, being one, has the
same name in the numerous cases: but each of those who follow it works
by himself, this one pleading on his own account, and that on his own
account. Thus, since among men the action of each in the same pursuits
is discriminated, they are properly called many, since each of them is
separated from the others within his own environment, according to the
special character of his operation. But in the case of the Divine
nature we do not similarly learn that the Father does anything by
Himself in which the Son does not work conjointly, or again that the
Son has any special operation apart from the Holy Spirit; but every
operation which extends from God to the Creation, and is named
according to our variable conceptions of it, has its origin from the
Father, and proceeds through the Son, and is perfected in the Holy
Spirit. For this reason the name derived from the operation is not
divided with regard to the number of those who fulfil it, because the
action of each concerning anything is not separate and peculiar, but
whatever comes to pass, in reference either to the acts of His
providence for us, or to the government and constitution of the
universe, comes to pass by the action of the Three, yet what does come
to pass is not three things. We may understand the meaning of this from
one single instance. From Him, I say, Who is the chief source of gifts,
all things which have shared in this grace have obtained their life.
When we inquire, then, whence this good gift came to us, we find by the
guidance of the Scriptures that it was from the Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit. Yet although we set forth Three Persons and three names, we do
not consider that we have had bestowed upon us three lives, one from
each Person separately; but the same life is wrought in us by the
Father, and prepared by the Son, and depends on the will of the Holy
Spirit. Since then the Holy Trinity fulfils every operation in a manner
similar to that of which I have spoken, not by separate action
according to the number of the Persons, but so that there is one motion
and disposition of the good will which is communicated from the Father
through the Son to the Spirit (for as we do not call those whose
operation gives one life three Givers of life, neither do we call those
who are contemplated in one goodness three Good beings, nor speak of
them in the plural by any of their other attributes); so neither can we
call those who exercise this Divine and superintending power and
operation towards ourselves and all creation, conjointly and
inseparably, by their mutual action, three Gods. For as when we learn
concerning the God of the universe, from the words of Scripture, that
He judges all the earth1313 , we say that He is
the Judge of all things through the Son: and again, when we hear that
the Father judgeth no man1314 , we do not think
that the Scripture is at variance with itself,—(for He Who judges
all the earth does this by His Son to Whom He has committed all
judgment; and everything which is done by the Only-begotten has its
reference to the Father, so that He Himself is at once the Judge of all
things and judges no man, by reason of His having, as we said,
committed all judgment to the Son, while all the judgment of the Son is
conformable to the will of the Father; and one could not properly say
either that They are two judges, or that one of Them is excluded from
the authority and power implied in judgment);—so also in the case
of the word “Godhead,” Christ is the power of God and the
wisdom of God, and that very power of superintendence and beholding
which we call Godhead, the Father exercises through the Only-begotten,
while the Son perfects every power by the Holy Spirit, judging, as
Isaiah says, by the Spirit of judgment and the Spirit of burning1315 , and acting by Him also, according to the
saying in the Gospel which was spoken to the Jews. For He says,
“If I by the Spirit of God cast out devils1316 ”; where He includes every form of
doing good in a partial description, by reason of the unity of action:
for the name derived from operation cannot be divided among many where
the result of their mutual operation is one.
Since, then, the character of
the superintending and beholding power is one, in Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit, as has been said in our previous argument, issuing from the
Father as from a spring, brought into operation by the Son, and
perfecting its grace by the power of the Spirit; and since no operation
is separated in respect of the Persons, being fulfilled by each
individually apart from that which is joined with Him in our contemplation, but
all providence, care, and superintendence of all, alike of things in
the sensible creation and of those of supramundane nature, and that
power which preserves the things which are, and corrects those which
are amiss, and instructs those which are ordered aright, is one, and
not three, being, indeed, directed by the Holy Trinity, yet not severed
by a threefold division according to the number of the Persons
contemplated in the Faith, so that each of the acts, contemplated by
itself, should be the work of the Father alone, or of the Son
peculiarly, or of the Holy Spirit1317
1317 Reading with Oehler, ἤ τοῦ
ἁγίου Πνεύματος
for ἢ
διὰ τ. ἁγ.
Πν. | separately,
but while, as the Apostle says, the one and the selfsame Spirit divides
His good gifts to every man severally1318 ,
the motion of good proceeding from the Spirit is not without
beginning;—we find that the power which we conceive as preceding
this motion, which is the Only-begotten God, is the maker of all
things; without Him no existent thing attains to the beginning of its
being: and, again, this same source of good issues from the will of the
Father.
If, then, every good thing and
every good name, depending on that power and purpose which is without
beginning, is brought to perfection in the power of the Spirit through
the Only-begotten God, without mark of time or distinction (since there
is no delay, existent or conceived, in the motion of the Divine will
from the Father, through the Son, to the Spirit): and if Godhead also
is one of the good names and concepts, it would not be proper to divide
the name into a plurality, since the unity existing in the action
prevents plural enumeration. And as the Saviour of all men, specially
of them that believe1319 , is spoken of by
the Apostle as one, and no one from this phrase argues either that the
Son does not save them who believe, or that salvation is given to those
who receive it without the intervention of the Spirit; but God who is
over all, is the Saviour of all, while the Son works salvation by means
of the grace of the Spirit, and yet they are not on this account called
in Scripture three Saviours (although salvation is confessed to proceed
from the Holy Trinity): so neither are they called three Gods,
according to the signification assigned to the term
“Godhead,” even though the aforesaid appellation attaches
to the Holy Trinity.
It does not seem to me
absolutely necessary, with a view to the present proof of our argument,
to contend against those who oppose us with the assertion that we are
not to conceive “Godhead” as an operation. For we,
believing the Divine nature to be unlimited and incomprehensible,
conceive no comprehension of it, but declare that the nature is to be
conceived in all respects as infinite: and that which is absolutely
infinite is not limited in one respect while it is left unlimited in
another, but infinity is free from limitation altogether. That
therefore which is without limit is surely not limited even by name. In
order then to mark the constancy of our conception of infinity in the
case of the Divine nature, we say that the Deity is above every name:
and “Godhead” is a name. Now it cannot be that the same
thing should at once be a name and be accounted as above every
name.
But if it pleases our
adversaries to say that the significance of the term is not operation,
but nature, we shall fall back upon our original argument, that custom
applies the name of a nature to denote multitude erroneously: since
according to true reasoning neither diminution nor increase attaches to
any nature, when it is contemplated in a larger or smaller number. For
it is only those things which are contemplated in their individual
circumscription which are enumerated by way of addition. Now this
circumscription is noted by bodily appearance, and size, and place, and
difference figure and colour, and that which is contemplated apart from
these conditions is free from the circumscription which is formed by
such categories. That which is not thus circumscribed is not
enumerated, and that which is not enumerated cannot be contemplated in
multitude. For we say that gold, even though it be cut into many
figures, is one, and is so spoken of, but we speak of many coins or
many staters, without finding any multiplication of the nature of gold
by the number of staters; and for this reason we speak of gold, when it
is contemplated in greater bulk, either in plate or in coin, as
“much,” but we do not speak of it as “many
golds” on account of the multitude of the material,—except
when one says there are “many gold pieces” (Darics, for
instance, or staters), in which case it is not the material, but the
pieces of money to which the significance of number applies: indeed,
properly, we should not call them “gold” but
“golden.”
As, then, the golden staters are
many, but the gold is one, so too those who are exhibited to us
severally in the nature of man, as Peter, James, and John, are many,
yet the man in them is one. And although Scripture extends the word
according to the plural significance, where it says “men swear by
the greater1320 ,” and “sons of men,”
and in other phrases of the like sort, we must recognize that in using
the custom of the prevailing form of speech, it does not lay down a law
as to the propriety of using the words in one way or another,
nor does it say these things by way of giving us instruction about
phrases, but uses the word according to the prevailing custom, with a
view only to this, that the word may be profitable to those who receive
it, taking no minute care in its manner of speech about points where no
harm can result from the phrases in respect of the way they are
understood.
Indeed, it would be a lengthy
task to set out in detail from the Scriptures those constructions which
are inexactly expressed, in order to prove the statement I have made;
where, however, there is a risk of injury to any part of the truth, we
no longer find in Scriptural phrases any indiscriminate or indifferent
use of words. For this reason Scripture admits the naming of
“men” in the plural, because no one is by such a figure of
speech led astray in his conceptions to imagine a multitude of
humanities, or supposes that many human natures are indicated by the
fact that the name expressive of that nature is used in the plural. But
the word “God” it employs studiously in the singular form
only, guarding against introducing the idea of different natures in the
Divine essence by the plural signification of “Gods.” This
is the cause why it says, “the Lord our God is one Lord1321 ,” and also proclaims the Only-begotten
God by the name of Godhead, without dividing the Unity into a dual
signification, so as to call the Father and the Son two Gods, although
each is proclaimed by the holy writers as God. The Father is God: the
Son is God: and yet by the same proclamation God is One, because no
difference either of nature or of operation is contemplated in the
Godhead. For if (according to the idea of those who have been led
astray) the nature of the Holy Trinity were diverse, the number would
by consequence be extended to a plurality of Gods, being divided
according to the diversity of essence in the subjects. But since the
Divine, single, and unchanging nature, that it may be one, rejects all
diversity in essence, it does not admit in its own case the
signification of multitude; but as it is called one nature, so it is
called in the singular by all its other names, “God,”
“Good,” “Holy,” “Saviour,”
“Just,” “Judge,” and every other Divine name
conceivable: whether one says that the names refer to nature or to
operation, we shall not dispute the point.
If, however, any one cavils at
our argument, on the ground that by not admitting the difference of
nature it leads to a mixture and confusion of the Persons, we shall
make to such a charge this answer;—that while we confess the
invariable character of the nature, we do not deny the difference in
respect of cause, and that which is caused, by which alone we apprehend
that one Person is distinguished from another;—by our belief,
that is, that one is the Cause, and another is of the Cause; and again
in that which is of the Cause we recognize another distinction. For one
is directly from the first Cause, and another by that which is directly
from the first Cause; so that the attribute of being Only-begotten
abides without doubt in the Son, and the interposition of the Son,
while it guards His attribute of being Only-begotten, does not shut out
the Spirit from His relation by way of nature to the Father.
But in speaking of
“cause,” and “of the cause,” we do not by these
words denote nature (for no one would give the same definition of
“cause” and of “nature”), but we indicate the
difference in manner of existence. For when we say that one is
“caused,” and that the other is “without
cause,” we do not divide the nature by the word “cause1322
1322 The
Paris Edit. omits αιτιον. | ”, but only indicate the fact that the
Son does not exist without generation, nor the Father by generation:
but we must needs in the first place believe that something exists, and
then scrutinize the manner of existence of the object of our belief:
thus the question of existence is one, and that of the mode of
existence is another. To say that anything exists without generation
sets forth the mode of its existence, but what exists is not indicated
by this phrase. If one were to ask a husbandman about a tree, whether
it were planted or had grown of itself, and he were to answer either
that the tree had not been planted or that it was the result of
planting, would he by that answer declare the nature of the tree?
Surely not; but while saying how it exists he would leave the question
of its nature obscure and unexplained. So, in the other case, when we
learn that He is unbegotten, we are taught in what mode He exists, and
how it is fit that we should conceive Him as existing, but what
He is we do not hear in that phrase. When, therefore, we acknowledge
such a distinction in the case of the Holy Trinity, as to believe that
one Person is the Cause, and another is of the Cause, we can no longer
be accused of confounding the definition of the Persons by the
community of nature.
Thus, since on the one hand the
idea of cause differentiates the Persons of the Holy Trinity, declaring
that one exists without a Cause, and another is of the Cause; and since
on the one hand the Divine nature is apprehended by every conception as
unchangeable and undivided, for these reasons we properly declare the
Godhead to be one, and God to be one, and employ in the singular all
other names which express Divine attributes. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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