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| Concerning the Nature as viewed in Species and in Individual, and concerning the difference between Union and Incarnation: and how this is to be understood, “The one Nature of God the Word Incarnate.” PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XI.—Concerning the Nature as viewed in Species
and in Individual, and concerning the difference between Union and
Incarnation: and how this is to be understood, “The one
Nature of God the Word Incarnate.”
Nature2053
2053 Niceph. Call.,
Hist. xviii. 51, speaks of this Hymn and also the φῶς
ἱλαρόν as coming from the
Apostles themselves. The writer of the Life of Basil supposed to
be Amphilochius of Iconium, declares that the Trisagium was
recited by Basil at Nicæa. | is regarded either
abstractly as a matter of pure thought2054
2054 ἢ ψιλῇ θεωρί&
139·
κατανοεῖται. |
(for it has no independent existence): or commonly in all
subsistences of the same species as their bond of union, and is then
spoken of as nature viewed in species: or universally as the
same, but with the addition of accidents, in one subsistence, and is
spoken of as nature viewed in the individual, this being identical with
nature viewed in species2055
2055 This division is
absent in some copies and is not restored in the old translation, but
is not superfluous. | . God the
Word Incarnate, therefore, did not assume the nature that is regarded
as an abstraction in pure thought (for this is not incarnation, but
only an imposture and a figment of incarnation), nor the nature viewed
in species (for He did not assume all the subsistences): but
the nature viewed in the individual, which is identical with that
viewed in species. For He took on Himself the elements of our
compound nature, and these not as having an independent existence or as
being originally an individual, and in this way assumed by Him, but as
existing in His own subsistence. For the subsistence of God the
Word in itself became the subsistence of the flesh, and accordingly
“the Word became flesh2056 ” clearly
without any change, and likewise the flesh became Word without
alteration, and God became man. For the Word is God, and man is
God, through having one and the same subsistence. And so it is
possible to speak of the same thing as being the nature of the Word and
the nature in the individual. For it signifies strictly and
exclusively neither the individual, that is, the subsistence, nor the
common nature of the subsistences, but the common nature as viewed and
presented in one of the subsistences.
Union, then, is one thing, and incarnation is
something quite different. For union signifies only the
conjunction, but not at all that with which union is effected.
But incarnation (which is just the same as if one said “the
putting on of man’s nature”) signifies that the conjunction
is with flesh, that is to say, with man, just as the heating of
iron2057
2057 τοῦ
σιδήρου is absent in some
codices and also in the old translation. | implies its union with fire.
Indeed, the blessed Cyril himself, when he is interpreting the phrase,
“one nature of God the Word Incarnate,” says in the second
epistle to Sucensus, “For if we simply said ‘the one nature
of the Word’ and then were silent, and did not add the word
‘incarnate,’ but, so to speak, quite excluded the
dispensation2058 , there would be
some plausibility in the question they feign to ask, ‘If one
nature is the whole, what becomes of the perfection in humanity, or how
has the essence2059 like us come to
exist?’ But inasmuch as the perfection in humanity and the
disclosure of the essence like us are conveyed in the word
‘incarnate,’ they must cease from relying on a mere
straw.” Here, then, he placed the nature of the Word over
nature itself. For if He had received nature instead of
subsistence, it would not have been absurd to have omitted the
“incarnate.” For when we say simply one subsistence
of God the Word, we do not err2060 . In like
manner, also, Leontius the Byzantine2061
2061 Leont., De sect.
Act. 8. | considered
this phrase to refer to nature, and not to subsistence. But in
the Defence which he wrote in reply to the attacks that Theodoret made
on the second anathema, the blessed Cyril2062
2062 Cyril, Defens.
II., Anath. cont. Theod. |
says this: “The nature of the Word, that is, the
subsistence, which is the Word itself.” So that “the
nature of the Word” means neither the subsistence alone, nor
“the common nature of the subsistence,” but “the
common nature viewed as a whole in the subsistence of the
Word.”
It has been said, then, that the nature of the
Word became flesh, that is, was united to flesh: but that the
nature of the Word suffered in the flesh we have never heard up till
now, though we have been taught that Christ suffered in the
flesh. So that “the nature of the Word” does not mean
“the subsistence.” It remains, therefore, to say that
to become flesh is to be united with the flesh, while the Word having
become flesh means that the very subsistence of the Word became without
change the subsistence of the flesh. It has also been said that
God became man, and man God. For the Word which is God became
without alteration man. But that the Godhead became man, or
became flesh, or put on the nature of man, this we have never
heard. This, indeed, we have learned, that the Godhead was united
to humanity in one of its subsistences, and it has been stated that God
took on a different form or essence2063
2063 ὁ Θεὸς
μορφοῦται,
ἤτοι
οὐσιουται τὸ
ἀλλότριον.
Gregory of Nazianzum in his Carmen used the term
οὐσιοῦσθαι
of the word after the assumption of our nature. See also
Dionys., De div. nom., ch. 2; Ep. ad Carmen, 4;
&c. | , to wit our
own. For the name God is applicable to each of the subsistences,
but we cannot use the term Godhead in reference to subsistence.
For we are never told that the Godhead is the Father alone, or the Son
alone, or the Holy Spirit alone. For “Godhead”
implies “nature,” while “Father” implies
subsistence, just as “Humanity” implies nature, and
“Peter” subsistence. But “God” indicates
the common element of the nature, and is applicable derivatively to
each of the subsistences, just as “man” is. For He
Who has divine nature is God, and he who has human nature is
man.
Besides all this, notice2064
2064 Dion., De div.
nom., ch. 8. |
that the Father and the Holy Spirit take no part at all in the
incarnation of the Word except in connection with the miracles, and in
respect of good will and purpose.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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