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| Chapter V. That before His birth in time Christ was always called God by the prophets. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter V.
That before His birth in time Christ was always called
God by the prophets.
He it is then of whom the
Prophet says: “For in Thee is God, and there is no God beside
Thee. For Thou art our God and we knew Thee not, O God of Israel the
Saviour.”2503 Who
“afterwards appeared on earth and conversed with
men.”2504 Of whom and in
whose Person the Prophet David also speaks: “From my
mother’s womb Thou art my God:”2505
showing clearly that He who was Lord and man2506
2506 Dominicus
Homo, literally “the Lordly man.” The same title is
used again by Cassian in Book VI. cc. xxi., xxii. and in the
Conferences XI. xiii. It is however an instance of a title which the
mature judgment of the Church has rejected as savouring of an heretical
interpretation. We learn from Gregory Nazianzen (Orat. 51) that the
Greek equivalent of the title ὁ κυριακὸς
ἄνθρωπος, was a
favourite term with the Apollinarians, as it might be taken to favour
their view that the Divinity supplied the place of a human soul in
Christ. It is however freely used by Epiphanius in his Anchoratus, and
is also found in the exposition of faith assigned to Athanasius (Migne.
Pat. Græc. xxv. p. 197). And Augustine himself actually uses the
title Dominicus Homo in his treatise on the Sermon on the Mount, Book
II. c. vi., though he afterwards retracted the term, see
“Retract,” Book I. c. xx. “Non video utrum
recte dicatur Homo Dominicus, qui est mediator Dei et hominum,
homo Christus Jesus, cum sit utique Dominus: Dominicus antem homo quis
in ejus sancta familia non potest dici? Et hoc quidem ut dicerem, apud
quosdam legi tractores catholicos divinorum eloquiorum. Sed ubicunque
hoc dici, dixisse me nollem. Postea quippe vidi non esse dicendum,
quamvis nonnulla possit ratione defendi.” The question is
discussed by S. Thomas, whether the title is rightly applied to Christ
and decided by him in the negative. Summa III. Q. vi. art. 3. |
was never separate from God: in whom even in the Virgin’s womb
the fulness of the Godhead dwelt. As elsewhere the same Prophet says:
“Truth has sprung from the earth and righteousness hath looked
down from heaven,”2507 that we may know
that when the Son of God looked down from heaven (i.e., came and
descended), righteousness was born of the flesh of the Virgin, no
phantasm of a body, but the Truth: for He is the Truth, according to
His own witness of Truth: “I am the Truth and the
life.”2508 And so as we
have proved in the earlier books that this Truth; viz., the Lord Jesus
Christ, was God when born of the Virgin, let us now do as we determined
to do in the book before this, and show that He who was to be born of
the Virgin, was always declared to be God beforehand. And so the
prophet Isaiah says, “Cease ye from the man whose breath is in
his nostrils, for it is He in whom he is reputed to be;” or as it
is more exactly and clearly in the Hebrew: “for he is reputed
high.”2509
2509 Isa. ii. 22. Cf. the note on the Institutes xii.
xxxi. | But by saying
“cease ye,” a term which deprecates violence, he admirably
denotes the disturbance of persecution. “Cease ye,” he
says, “from the man whose breath is in his nostrils, for he is
reputed high.” Does he not in one and the same sentence speak of
the taking upon Him of the manhood, and the truth of His Godhead?
“Cease ye,” he says, “from the man whose breath is in
his nostrils, for he is reputed high.” Does he not, I ask you,
seem plainly to address the Lord’s persecutors, and to say,
“Cease ye from the man” whom ye are persecuting, for this
man is God: and though He appears in the lowliness of human flesh, yet
He still continues in the high estate of Divine glory? But by saying
“Cease ye from the man whose breath is in his nostrils,” he
admirably showed His manhood, by the clearest tokens of a human body,
and this fearlessly and confidently, as one who would as urgently
assert the truth of His humanity as that of His Godhead, for this is
the true and Catholic faith, to believe that the Lord Jesus Christ
possessed the substance of a true body just as He possessed a true and
perfect Divinity. Unless possibly you think that anything can be made
out of the fact that he uses the word “High” instead of
“God”; whereas it is the habit of holy Scripture to put
“High” for “God,” as where the prophet says:
“the Most High uttered His voice and the earth was
moved,”2510 and “Thou
alone art Most High over all the earth.”2511
Isaiah too, who says this: “The High and lofty one who inhabiteth
eternity”:2512 where we are
clearly to understand that as he there puts Most High without adding
the name of God, so here too he speaks of God by the name of Most High.
So then,
since the Divine
word spoken by the prophet clearly announced beforehand that the Lord
Jesus Christ would be both God and man, let us now see whether the New
Testament corresponds to and harmonizes with the testimony of the
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