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| Concerning things utterable and things unutterable, and things knowable and thing unknowable. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter II.—Concerning things utterable and
things unutterable, and things knowable and thing
unknowable.
It is necessary, therefore, that one who wishes to
speak or to hear of God should understand clearly that alike in the
doctrine of Deity and in that of the Incarnation1415
1415 τά τε τῆς
θεολογίας, τά
τε τῆς
οἰκονομίας. | , neither are all things unutterable nor all
utterable; neither all unknowable nor all knowable1416
1416
Dionys., De div. nom. c. 1; Greg. Naz.,
Orat. 34 and 37. | . But the knowable belongs to one
order, and the utterable to another; just as it is one thing to speak
and another thing to know. Many of the things relating to God,
therefore, that are dimly understood cannot be put into fitting terms,
but on things above us we cannot do else than express ourselves
according to our limited capacity; as, for instance, when we speak of
God we use the terms sleep, and wrath, and
regardlessness, hands, too, and feet, and such like
expressions.
We, therefore, both know and confess that God is without
beginning, without end, eternal and everlasting, uncreate,
unchangeable, invariable, simple, uncompound, incorporeal, invisible,
impalpable, uncircumscribed, infinite, incognisable, indefinable,
incomprehensible, good, just, maker of all things created, almighty,
all-ruling, all-surveying, of all overseer, sovereign, judge; and that
God is One, that is to say,
one essence1417
1417 οὐσία, substance,
being. | ; and that He is
known1418
1418 ὑποστάσεσι,
hypostases, persons. | , and has His being in three
subsistences, in Father, I say, and Son and Holy Spirit; and that the
Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit are one in all respects, except
in that of not being begotten, that of being begotten, and that of
procession; and that the Only-begotten Son and Word of God and God, in
His bowels of mercy, for our salvation, by the good pleasure of God and
the co-operation of the Holy Spirit, being conceived without seed, was
born uncorruptedly of the Holy Virgin and Mother of God, Mary, by the
Holy Spirit, and became of her perfect Man; and that the Same is at
once perfect God and perfect Man, of two natures, Godhead and Manhood,
and in two natures possessing intelligence, will and energy, and
freedom, and, in a word, perfect according to the measure and
proportion proper to each, at once to the divinity, I say, and to the
humanity, yet to one composite person1419
1419 μιᾷ δὲ
συνθέτῳ
ὑποστάσει. | ;
and that He suffered hunger and thirst and weariness, and was
crucified, and for three days submitted to the experience of death and
burial, and ascended to heaven, from which also He came to us, and
shall come again. And the Holy Scripture is witness to this and
the whole choir of the Saints.
But neither do we know, nor can we tell, what the
essence1420
1420 οὐσία, substance,
being. | of God is, or how
it is in all, or how the Only-begotten Son and God, having emptied
Himself, became Man of virgin blood, made by another law contrary to
nature, or how He walked with dry feet upon the waters1421
1421
Dionys., De div. nom., c. 2. | . It is not within our capacity,
therefore, to say anything about God or even to think of Him, beyond
the things which have been divinely revealed to us, whether by word or
by manifestation, by the divine oracles at once of the Old Testament
and of the New1422 .E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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