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| Chapter IV. The passage quoted adversely by heretics, namely, “The Son can do nothing of Himself,” is first explained from the words which follow; then, the text being examined, word by word, their acceptation in the Arian sense is shown to be impossible without incurring the charge of impiety or absurdity, the proof resting chiefly on the creation of the world and certain miracles of Christ. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter IV.
The passage quoted adversely by heretics, namely,
“The Son can do nothing of Himself,” is first explained
from the words which follow; then, the text being examined, word by
word, their acceptation in the Arian sense is shown to be impossible
without incurring the charge of impiety or absurdity, the proof resting
chiefly on the creation of the world and certain miracles of
Christ.
39. Again, another
objection that the Arians bring up, denying that the Power of the
Father and the Son can be one and the same, is rested on His
saying: “Verily, verily, I say unto you; the Son can do
nothing of Himself, but what He hath seen the Father
doing.”2360 And
therefore they affirm that the Son has done nothing of Himself, and can
do nothing, save what He hath seen the Father doing.
40. O wise foreknowledge of the arguments of
unbelievers, which made further provision of means whereby to answer
questions, by adding the words that follow: “For whatsoever
the Father doeth, the same doeth the Son also, in like
fashion,”2361 for this indeed
is the sequel. Why, then, is it written: “The Son
doeth the same things,” and not “such like things,”
but that thou mightest judge that in the Son there is unity in the
Father’s works, not imitation of them?
41. But to put their proofs in turn upon
trial: I would have them answer the question, whether the Son
sees the works of the Father. Does He see, I ask, or not?
If He sees them, then He also does them; if He does them, let heretics
cease to deny the omnipotence of Him Whom they confess able to do all
things that He has seen the Father doing.
42. But what are we to understand by
“hath seen”? Has the Son any need of bodily
eyes? Nay, if they will affirm this of the Son, they will make
out in the Father also a need of bodily activity,2362
2362 i.e. that
the Father is not a Spirit (S. John iv. 24) but exists in bodily shape. | in order that the Son may see that
which He Himself is to do.
43. Furthermore, what mean the words:
“The Son can do nothing of Himself”? Let us put this
question, and debate it. Now is there anything impossible to
God’s Power and Wisdom? These, observe, are names of the
Son of God, Whose Might is certainly not a gift received from another,
but just as He is the Life,2363 not depending
upon another’s quickening action, but Himself quickening others,
because He is the Life; so also He is Wisdom,2364 not as one that is ignorant acquiring
wisdom, but making others wise from His own store; so, too, He is
Power,2365 not as having
through weakness obtained increase of strength, but being Himself
Power, and bestowing power upon the strong.
44. How, then, does Power assert, as it
were, under oath: “Verily, verily I say unto you,”
which means: “Of a truth, of a truth, I tell
you”?2366 Truly,
then, Thou speakest, Lord Jesus, and dost affirm, repeating indeed thy
solemn declaration, that Thou canst do nothing, save what Thou hast
seen the Father doing. Thou didst make the universe. Did
Thy Father then make another universe, for Thee to take as a
model? So must Thy blasphemers confess that there are two, or a
multitude of universes, as philosophers affirm, and thus also entangle
themselves in this heathen error,2367
2367 Namely, the
error of postulating two mutually exclusive infinites. | or, if
they will follow the truth, let them say that what Thou hast made, Thou
didst make, without any pattern.
45. Tell me, Lord, when Thou sawest Thy
Father incarnate, and walking upon the sea, for I know not, I hold it
impious to believe this thing of the Father, knowing that Thou only
hast taken our flesh upon Thee. When sawest Thou the Father at a
marriage-feast, turning water into wine?2368 Nay, but I have read that Thou
alone art the only Son, begotten of the Father. I have been
taught that Thou alone, in the mystery of the Incarnation, wast born of
the Holy Ghost and the Virgin. The things, then, which we have
cited as Thy doings, the Father did not, but Thou alone, without
guidance of any work done by Thy Father, for the purchase of the
world’s salvation with Thy Blood, didst come forth spotless from
the Virgin’s womb.
46. When they say, “The Son can do
nothing of Himself,” they indeed except nothing, so that one
blasphemer has even said: “He cannot make even a
gnat,”2369
mocking with so headstrong
profanity and with insolence so overweening the majesty of Supreme
Power; yet perhaps they may think the mystery of Thine Incarnate Life a
needful exception. But say, Lord Jesu, what earth the Father made
without Thee. For without Thee He made no heaven, seeing that it
is written: “By the Word of the Lord were the heavens
established.”
47. But neither did the Father make the
earth without Thee, for it is written: “All things were
made by Him, and without Him was not anything made.”2370
2370 S. John i. 3; Ps. xxxiii. 6. | For if the Father made aught
without Thee, God the Word, then not all things were made by the Word,
and the Evangelist lies. Whereas if all things were made by the
Word, and if by Thee all things begin to be, which before were not,
then surely Thou Thyself, of Thyself, hast made what Thou didst not see
made by the Father; though perchance our adversaries may have recourse
to that theory of Plato, and place before Thee the ideas supposed by
philosophers, which, indeed, we know have been exploded by philosophers
themselves. On the other hand, if Thou Thyself hast of Thyself
made all things, vain are the assertions of the unbelieving, which
ascribe progress in learning to the Maker of all, Who of Himself
supplies the teaching of His craft.
48. But if heretics deny that either the
heavens or the earth were made by Thee, let them take heed into what a
gulf they are by their own madness hurling themselves, seeing that it
is written: “Perish the gods, which have not made heaven
and earth.”2371 Shall He
then perish, O Arian, Who has found and saved that which had
perished? But to purpose.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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