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Chapter
XXXII.
What other objection is alleged by our adversaries? This; that (to take
the preferable view2014 ) it was altogether
needless that that transcendent Being should submit to the experience
of death, but He might independently of this, through the
superabundance of His power, have wrought with ease His purpose; still,
if for some ineffable reason or other it was absolutely necessary that
so it should be, at least He ought not to have been subjected to the
contumely of such an ignominious kind of death. What death, they ask,
could be more ignominious than that by crucifixion? What answer can we
make to this? Why, that the death is rendered necessary by the birth,
and that He Who had determined once for all to share the nature of man
must pass through all the peculiar conditions of that nature. Seeing,
then, that the life of man is determined between two boundaries, had
He, after having passed the one, not touched the other that follows,
His proposed design would have remained only half fulfilled, from His
not having touched that second condition of our nature. Perhaps,
however, one who exactly understands the mystery would be justified
rather in saying that, instead of the death occurring in consequence of
the birth, the birth on the contrary was accepted by Him for the sake
of the death; for He Who lives for ever did not sink down into the
conditions of a bodily birth from any need to live, but to call us back
from death to life. Since, then, there was needed a lifting up from
death for the whole of our nature, He stretches forth a hand as it were
to prostrate man, and stooping down to our dead corpse He came so far
within the grasp of death as to touch a state of deadness, and then in
His own body to bestow on our nature the principle of the resurrection,
raising as He did by His power along with Himself the whole man. For
since from no other source than from the concrete lump of our nature2015
2015 Cf. Rom. ix. 21: φύραμα is
used for the human body often in the Greek Fathers, i.e.
Athanasius, Chrysostom, John Damascene: by all of whom Christ is
called ἀπαρχὴ τοῦ
ἡμετέρου
φυράματος. Cf. Gen. ii. 7; Job x. 9: Epictetus also calls
the human body πηλοω
κομψῶς
πεφυραμένον. | had come that flesh, which was the
receptacle of the Godhead and in the resurrection was raised up
together with that Godhead, therefore just in the same way as, in the
instance of this body of ours, the operation of one of the organs of
sense is felt at once by the whole system, as one with that member, so
also the resurrection principle of this Member, as though the whole of
mankind was a single living being, passes through the entire race,
being imparted from the Member to the whole by virtue of the continuity
and oneness of the nature. What, then, is there beyond the bounds of
probability in what this Revelation teaches us; viz. that He Who stands
upright stoops to one who has fallen, in order to lift him up from his
prostrate condition? And as to the Cross, whether it possesses some
other and deeper meaning, those who are skilled in mysticism may
explain; but, however that may be, the traditional teaching which has
reached us is as follows. Since all things in the Gospel, both
deeds and words,
have a sublime and heavenly meaning, and there is nothing in it which
is not such, that is, which does not exhibit a complete mingling of the
human with the Divine, where the utterance exerted and the deeds
enacted are human but the secret sense represents the Divine, it would
follow that in this particular as well as in the rest we must not
regard only the one element and overlook the other; but in the
fact of this death we must contemplate the human feature, while
in the manner of it we must be anxious to find the Divine2016
2016 ἐν
μὲν τῷ
θανάτῳ
καθορᾷν τὸ
ἀνθρώπινον,
ἐν δὲ τῷ
τρόπῳ
πολυπραγμονεῖν
τὸ
θειότερον. This is Krabinger’s reading (for ἐν
τῳ ἀθανάτῳ…ἐν δὲ
τῷ ἀνθρώπῳ) on the authority of Theodoret’s quotation and two
Codd. for the first, and of all his Codd. for the second. Hervetus also
seems to have read the same, “in morte quidem quod est
humanum intueri, in modo autem perscrutari quod est
divinius.” Glauber, however, translates the common text,
“Man muss bei dem Unsterblichen zwar das Menschliche
betrachten, aber bei dem Menschen auch das Göttliche
hervorsuchen:” notwithstanding that he hints his preference for
another reading, σκοπῷ for this
last; cf. just above, “but the secret sense represents the
Divine,” which would then be parallel to this last
sentence. | . For since it is the property of the Godhead
to pervade all things, and to extend itself through the length and
breadth of the substance of existence in every part—for nothing
would continue to be if it remained not within the existent; and that
which is this existent properly and primarily is the Divine Being,
Whose existence in the world the continuance of all things that are
forces us to believe in,—this is the very thing we learn from the
figure of the Cross; it is divided into four parts, so that there are
the projections, four in number, from the central point where the whole
converges upon itself; because He Who at the hour of His pre-arranged
death was stretched upon it is He Who binds together all things into
Himself, and by Himself brings to one harmonious agreement the diverse
natures of actual existences. For in these existences there is the idea
either of something above, or of something below, or else the thought
passes to the confines sideways. If, therefore, you take into your
consideration the system of things above the heavens or of things below
the earth, or of things at the boundaries of the universe on either
side, everywhere the presence of Deity anticipates your thought as the
sole observable power that in every part of existing things holds in a
state of being all those things. Now whether we ought to call this
Existence Deity, or Mind, or Power, or Wisdom, or any other lofty term
which might be better able to express Him Who is above all, our
argument has no quarrel with the appellation or name or form of phrase
used. Since, then, all creation looks to Him, and is about and around
Him, and through Him is coherent with itself, things above being
through Him conjoined to things below and things lateral to themselves,
it was right that not by hearing only we should be conducted to the
full understanding of the Deity, but that sight also should be our
teacher in these sublime subjects for thought; and it is from sight
that the mighty Paul starts when he initiates2017
the people of Ephesus in the mysteries, and imbues them through his
instructions with the power of knowing what is that “depth and
height and breadth and length.” In fact he designates each
projection of the Cross by its proper appellation. The upper part he
calls height, the lower depth, and the side extensions breadth and
length; and in another passage2018 he makes his
thought still clearer to the Philippians, to whom he says, “that
at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and
things in earth, and things under the earth.” In that passage he
includes in one appellation the centre and projecting arms2019
2019 κεραίαν. The Fathers were fond of tracing similitudes to the form of the
Cross, in nature and art: in the sail-yards of a ship, as here, and in
the flight of birds on the wing. This is the reading of Codd. Morell.,
Reg., and three of Krabinger’s: but γαῖαν in the
margin of that of J. Vulcobius (Abbot of Belpré) has got into the
text of both Paris Editt., though the second asterisks it. Hervetus
(“et fastigium”) seems to have read καὶ
ἄκραν. | , calling “things in earth” all
that is in the middle between things in heaven and things under the
earth. Such is the lesson we learn in regard to the mystery of the
Cross. And the subsequent events which the narrative contains follow so
appropriately that, as even unbelievers must admit, there is nothing in
them adverse to the proper conceptions of the Deity. That He did not
abide in death, that the wounds which His body had received from the
iron of the nails and spear offered no impediment to His rising again,
that after His resurrection He showed Himself as He pleased to His
disciples, that when He wished to be present with them He was in their
midst without being seen, as needing no entrance through open doors,
and that He strengthened the disciples by the inspiration of the Holy
Ghost, and that He promised to be amongst them, and that no partition
wall should intervene between them and Him, and that to the sight He
ascended to Heaven while to the mind He was everywhere; all these, and
whatever like facts the history of Him comprises, need no assistance
from arguments to show that they are signs of deity and of a sublime
and supereminent power. With regard to them therefore I do not deem it
necessary to go into any detail, inasmuch as their description of
itself shows the supernatural character. But since the dispensation of
the washing (whether we choose to call it baptism, or illumination, or
regeneration; for we make the name no subject of controversy) is a part
of our revealed doctrines, it may be as well to enter on a short
discussion of this as well.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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