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| Chapter VIII. Christ's saying, “The Father is greater than I,” is explained in accordance with the principle just established. Other like sayings are expounded in like fashion. Our Lord cannot, as touching His Godhead, be called inferior to the Father. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter VIII.
Christ’s saying, “The Father is greater than
I,” is explained in accordance with the principle just
established. Other like sayings are expounded in like
fashion. Our Lord cannot, as touching His Godhead, be called
inferior to the Father.
59. It was due to
His humanity, therefore, that our Lord doubted and was sore distressed,
and rose from the dead, for that which fell doth also rise again.
Again, it was by reason of His humanity that He said those words, which
our adversaries use to maliciously turn against Him:
“Because the Father is greater than I.”1980
60. But when in another passage we
read: “I came out from the Father, and am come into the
world; again, I leave the world, and go to the Father,”1981 how doth He go, except through death,
and how comes He, save by rising again? Furthermore, He added, in
order to show that He spake concerning His Ascension:
“Therefore have I told you before it come to pass, in order that,
when it shall have come to pass, ye may believe.”1982 For He was speaking of the
sufferings and resurrection of His body, and by that resurrection they
who before doubted were led to believe—for, indeed, God, Who is
always present in every place, passes not from place to place. As
it is a man who goes, so it is He Himself Who comes. Furthermore,
He says in another place: “Rise, let us go
hence.”1983 In
that, therefore, doth He go and come, which is common to Him and to
us.
61. How, indeed, can He be a lesser God when
He is perfect and true God? Yet in respect of His humanity He is
less—and still you wonder that speaking in the person of a man He
called the Father greater than Himself, when in the person of a man He
called Himself a worm, and not a man, saying: “But I am a
worm, and no man;”1984 and
again: “He was led as a sheep to the
slaughter.”1985
62. If you pronounce Him less than the
Father in this respect, I cannot deny it; nevertheless, to speak in the
words of Scripture, He was not begotten inferior, but “made
lower,”1986 that is,
made inferior. And how was He “made lower,”
except that, “being in the form of God, He thought it not a prey
that He should be equal with God, but emptied Himself;”1987 not, indeed, parting with what He was,
but taking up what He was not, for “He took the form of a
servant.”1988
63. Moreover, to the end that we might know
Him to have been “made lower,” by taking upon Him a body,
David has shown that he is prophesying of a man, saying:
“What is man, that Thou art mindful of him, or the son of man,
but that Thou visitest him? Thou hast made him a little lower
than the angels.”1989 And in
interpreting this same passage the Apostle says: “For we
see Jesus, made a little lower than the angels, crowned with glory and
honour because that He suffered death, in order that apart from
God
He might taste
death for all.”1990
64. Thus, the Son of God was made lower
than, not only the Father, but angels also. And if you will turn
this to His dishonour; [I ask] is then the Son, in respect of His
Godhead, less than His angels who serve Him and minister to Him?
Thus, in your purpose to diminish His honour, you run into the
blasphemy of exalting the nature of angels above the Son of God.
But “the servant is not above his master.”1991 Again, angels ministered to Him even
after His Incarnation, to the end that you should acknowledge Him to
have suffered no loss of majesty by reason of His bodily nature, for
God could not submit to any loss of Himself,1992
1992 For if that were
so, God might cease to be God. |
whilst that which He has taken of the Virgin neither adds to nor takes
away from His divine power.
65. He, therefore, possessing the fulness of
Divinity and glory,1993 is not, in
respect of His Divinity, inferior. Greater and less are
distinctions proper to corporeal existences; one who is greater is so
in respect of rank, or qualities, or at any rate of age. These
terms lose their meaning when we come to treat of the things of
God. He is commonly entitled the greater who instructs and
informs another, but it is not the case with God’s Wisdom that it
has been built up by teaching received from another, forasmuch as
Itself hath laid the foundation of all teaching. But how wisely
wrote the Apostle: “In order that apart from God He might
taste death for all,”—lest we should suppose the Godhead,
not the flesh, to have endured that Passion!
66. If our opponents, then, have found no
means to prove [the Father] greater [than the Son], let them not
pervert words unto false reports, but seek out their meaning. I
ask them, therefore, as touching what do they esteem the Father the
greater? If it is because He is the Father, then [I answer] here
we have no question of age or of time—the Father is not
distinguished by white hairs, nor the Son by youthfulness—and it
is on these conditions that the greater dignity of a father
depends.1994
1994 “In
respect of age only does a father take precedence of his son amongst
men, for in regard to generic nature the father is on a level with the
son, and in other respects the son may even excel his father. But
where the Persons are eternal, there is no difference constituted by
age. Still, as St. Ambrose acutely remarks, the names
‘Father’ and ‘Son’ indicate indeed a
distinction of Persons and mutual relations of those Persons, yet not
diversity of nature—rather, in fact, suppose equality and unity
of nature.”—Hurter in loc. | But
“father” and “son” are names, the one of the
parent, the other of the child—names which seem to join rather
than separate; for dutifulness inspires no loss of personal worth,
inasmuch as kinship binds men together, and does not rend them
asunder.
67. If, then, they cannot make the order of
nature a support for any questioning, let them now believe the witness
[of Scripture]. Now the Evangelist testifies that the Son is not
lower [than the Father] by reason of being the Son; nay, he even
declares that, in being the Son, He is equal, saying, “For the
Jews sought to kill Him for this cause, that not only did He break the
Sabbath, but even called God His own Father, making Himself equal to
God.”1995
68. This is not what the Jews said—it
is the Evangelist who testifies that, in calling Himself God’s
own Son, He made Himself equal to God, for the Jews are not presented
as saying, “For this cause we sought to kill Him;” the
Evangelist, speaking for himself, says, “For the Jews sought to
kill Him for this cause.”1996
Moreover, he has discovered the cause, [in saying] that the Jews were
stirred with desire to slay Him because, when as God He broke the
Sabbath, and also claimed God as His own Father, He ascribed to Himself
not only the majesty of divine authority in breaking the Sabbath, but
also, in speaking of His Father, the right appertaining to eternal
equality.
69. Most fitting was the answer which the
Son of God made to these Jews, proving Himself the Son and equal of
God. “Whatsoever things,” He said, “the Father
hath done, the Son doeth also in like wise.”1997 The Son, therefore, is both
entitled and proved the equal of the Father—a true equality,
which both excludes difference of Godhead, and discovers, together with
the Son, the Father also, to Whom the Son is equal; for there is no
equality where there is difference, nor again where there is but one
person, inasmuch as none is by himself equal to himself. Thus
hath the Evangelist shown why it is fitting that Christ should call
Himself the Son of God, that is, make Himself equal with
God.
70. Hence the Apostle, following this
revelation, hath said: “He thought it not a prey that He
should be equal with God.”1998
1998 Phil. ii. 6. Here and in § 62 I
have rendered “rapinam” in accordance with
Lightfoot’s rendering of the original “ἁρπαγμός.” | For
that which a man has not he seeks to carry off as a prey.
Equality with the Father, therefore, which, as God and Lord, He
possessed in His own substance, He had not as a spoil wrongfully
seized. Wherefore the Apostle added [the words]: “He
took the form of a servant.” Now surely a servant is the
opposite of an equal. Equal, therefore, is the Son, in the form
of God, but inferior in taking upon Him of the flesh and in His
sufferings as a man. For how could the same nature be both
lower and equal? And how, if [the Son] be inferior, can He do the
same things, in like manner, as the Father doeth? How, indeed,
can there be sameness of operation with diversity of power? Can
the inferior ever work such effects as the greater, or can there be
unity of operation where there is diversity of substance?
71. Admit, therefore, that Christ, as
touching His Godhead, cannot be called inferior [to the
Father].1999
1999 “Surely it is
clear that the Son, in respect of His Godhead, is not inferior to the
Father, for there is, in the Father and the Son, one and the same
Godhead. Still, the Greek Fathers allow that the Father is not
only greater than the Son in respect of the latter’s human
nature, but also in regard to personal properties, or a certain
‘personal dignity’—(ἀξ
ωμα
ὑποστατικόν).”—Hurter in loc. Canon Mason, in his
Faith of the Gospel, remarks that whilst it is quite right to
speak of “God and His Son” or “God’s
Son,” the converse language, “God and His Father,”
“God’s Father,” is not right. Yet S.
Ambrose says, “Dubitat de Patre Deus.” See §
43. | Christ
speaks to Abraham: “By Myself have I sworn.”2000 Now the Apostle shows that He Who swears
by Himself cannot be lower than any. Thus he saith, “When
God rewarded Abraham with His promise, He swore by Himself, forasmuch
as He had none other that was greater, saying, Surely with blessing
will I bless thee, and with multiplying will I multiply
thee.”2001 Christ had,
therefore, none greater, and for that cause sware He by Himself.
Moreover, the Apostle has
rightly added, “for men swear by one
greater than themselves,” forasmuch as men have one who is
greater than themselves, but God hath none.
72. Otherwise, if our adversaries will
understand this passage as referred to the Father, then the rest of the
record does not agree with it. For the Father did not appear to
Abraham, nor did Abraham wash the feet of God the Father, but the feet
of Him in Whom is the image of the man that shall be.2002 Moreover, the Son of God saith,
“Abraham saw My day, and rejoiced.”2003 It is He, therefore, Who sware by
Himself, [and] Whom Abraham saw.
73. And how, indeed, hath He any greater
than Himself Who is one with the Father in Godhead?2004 Where there is unity, there is no
dissimilarity, whereas between greater and less there is a
distinction. The teaching, therefore, of the instance from
Scripture before us, with regard to the Father and the Son, is that
neither is the Father greater, nor hath the Son any that is above Him,
inasmuch as in Father and Son there is no difference of Godhead parting
them, but one majesty.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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