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| Chapter III. He proves from the Epistle to the Romans the eternal Divinity of Christ. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter III.
He proves from the Epistle to the Romans the eternal
Divinity of Christ.
And so as it is clear
from the above testimony that God sent His own Son, and that He who was
ever the Son of God became the Son of man, let us see whether the same
Apostle gives any other testimony of the same sort elsewhere, that the
truth which is already clear enough in itself, may be rendered still
more clear by the light of a twofold testimony. So then the same
Apostle says: “God sent His own Son in the likeness of sinful
flesh.”2449 You see that
the Apostle certainly did not use these words by chance or at random,
as he repeated what he had already said once—for indeed there
could not be found in him chance or want of consideration as the
fulness of Divine counsel and speech had taken up its abode in him.
What then does he say? “God sent His own Son in the likeness of
sinful flesh.” He says the same thing again and repeats it,
saying, “God sent His own Son.” Oh renowned and excellent
teacher! for knowing that in this is contained the whole
mystery2450 of the Catholic
faith, in order that it might be believed that the Lord was born in the
flesh and that the Son of God was sent into this world, again and again
he makes the same proclamation saying, “God sent His own
Son.” Nor need we wonder that he who was specially sent to preach
the coming of God, made this announcement, since even before the law,
the giver of the law himself proclaimed it, saying: “I beseech
Thee, O Lord, provide another whom Thou mayest send,” or as it
stands still more clearly in the Hebrew text: “I beseech Thee, O
Lord, send whom Thou wilt send.”2451
2451 Exod. iv. 13. Where the LXX. has Δέομαι,
κύριε,
προχείρισαι
δυνάμενον
ἄλλον ὃν
ἀποστελεῖς,
which was followed by the old Latin. Jerome however rendered the
passage correctly from the Hebrew: “obsecro, Domine, mitte quem
misurus es.” Cf. the note on the Institutes, XII. xxxi. |
It is clear that the holy prophet,
feeling in himself a yearning for the whole
human race, prayed as it were with the voices of all mankind to God the
Father that He would send as speedily as possible Him who was to be
sent by the Father for the redemption and salvation of all men, when he
said, “I beseech Thee, O Lord, send whom Thou wilt send.”
“God,” he therefore says, “sent His own Son in the
likeness of sinful flesh.” Full well, when he says that He was
sent in the flesh, does he exclude for Him sin of the flesh: for he
says “God sent His own Son in the likeness of the flesh of
sin,” in order that we may know that though the flesh was truly
taken, yet there was no true sin, and that, as far as the body is
concerned, we should understand that there was reality; as far as sin
is concerned, only the likeness of sin. For though all flesh is sinful,
yet He had flesh without sin, and had in Himself the likeness of sinful
flesh, while He was in the flesh but He was free from what was truly
sin, because He was without sin: and therefore he says: “God sent
His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh.”E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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