ARIANISM
FOUR DISCOURSES AGAINST THE ARIANS
(WRITTEN BETWEEN 356 AND 360)
DISCOURSE II
CHAPTER XIV.
TEXTS EXPLAINED; FOURTHLY, HEBREWS iii. 2.
Introduction; the Regula Fidei counter to an Arian sense of the text; which is
not supported by the word 'servant,' nor by 'made' which occurs in it; (how can
the Judge be among the 'works' which 'God will bring into judgment?') nor by
'faithful;' and is confuted by the immediate context, which is about Priesthood;
and by the foregoing passage, which explains the word 'faithful' as meaning
trustworthy, as do 1 Pet. iv. fin. and other texts. On the whole made may safely
be understood either of the divine generation or the human creation.
1. I DID indeed think that enough had been said already against the hollow
professors of Arius's madness, whether for their refutation or in the truth's
behalf, to insure a cessation and repentance of their evil thoughts and words
about the Saviour. They, however, for whatever reason, still do not succumb;
but, as swine and dogs wallow(1) in their own vomit and their own mire, rather
invent new expedients for their irreligion. Thus they misunderstand the passage
in the Proverbs, 'The Lord hath created me a beginning of His ways for His
works(2),' and the words of the Apostle, 'Who was faithful to Him that made
Him(3),' and straightway argue, that the Son of God is a work and a creature.
But although they might have learned from what is said above, had they not
utterly lost their power of apprehension, that the Son is not front nothing nor
in the number of things originate at all, the Truth witnessing(4) it (for, being
God, He cannot be a work, and it is impious to call Him a creature, and it is of
creatures and works that we say, 'out of nothing,' and 'it was not before its
generation'), yet since, as if dreading to desert their own fiction, they are
accustomed to allege the aforesaid passages of divine Scripture, which have a
good meaning, but are by them practised on, let us proceed afresh to take up the
question of the sense of these, to remind the faithful, and to shew from each of
these passages that they have no knowledge at all of Christianity. Were it
otherwise, they would not have shut themselves up in the unbelief(5) of the
present Jews(6), but would have inquired and learned(6) that, whereas 'In the
beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God,' in
consequence, it was when at the good pleasure of the Father the Word became man,
that it was said of Him, as by John, 'The Word became flesh(7);' so by Peter,
'He hath made Him Lord and Christs(8);--as by means of Solomon in the Person of
the Lord Himself, 'The Lord created me a beginning of His ways for His
works(9);' so by Paul, 'Become so much better than the Angels(10);' and again,
'He emptied Himself, and took upon Him the form of a servant(11);' and again,
'Wherefore, holy brethren, partakers of the heavenly calling, consider the
Apostle and High Priest of our profession, Jesus, who was faithful to Him that
made Him(12).' For all these texts have the same force and meaning, a religious
one, declarative of the divinity of the Word, even those of them which speak
humanly concerning Him, as having become the Son of man. But, though this
distinction is sufficient for their refutation, still, since from a
misconception of the Apostle's words (to mention them first), they consider the
Word of God to be one of the works, because of its being written, 'Who was
faithful to Him that made Him,' I have thought it needful to, silence this
further argument of theirs, taking in hand(13), as before, their statement.
2. If then He be not a Son, let Him be called a work, and let all that is said
of works be said of Him, nor let Him and Him alone be called Son, nor Word, nor
Wisdom neither let God be called Father, but only Framer and Creator of things
which by Him come to be; and let the creature be Image and Expression of His
framing will, and let Him, as they would have it, be without gene-rative nature,
so that there be neither Word, nor Wisdom, no, nor Image, of His proper
substance. For if He be not Son(1), neither is He Image(2). But if there be not
a Son, how then say you that God is a Creator? since all things that come to be
are through the Word and in Wisdom, and without This nothing can be, whereas you
say He hath not That in and through which He makes all things. For if the Divine
Essence be not fruitful itself(3), but barren, as they hold, as a light that
lightens not, and a dry fountain, are they not ashamed to speak of His
possessing framing energy? and whereas they deny what is by nature, do they not
blush to place before it what is by will(4)? But if He frames things that are
external to Him and before were not, by willing them to he, and becomes their
Maker, much more will He first be Father of an Offspring from His proper
Essence. For if they attribute to God the willing about things which are not,
why recognise they not that in God which ties above the will? now it is a
something that surpasses will, that He should be by nature, and should be Father
of His proper Word. If then that which comes first, which is according to
nature, did not exist, as they would have it in their folly, how could that
which is second come to be, which is according to will? for the Word is first,
and then the creation. On the contrary the Word exists, whatever they affirm,
those irreligious ones; for through Him did creation come to be, and God, as
being Maker, plainly has also His framing Word, not external, but proper to
Him;--for this must be repeated. If He has the power of will, and His will is
effective, and suffices for the consistence of the things that come to be, and
His Word is effective, and a Framer, that Word must surely be the living Will(5)
of the Father, and an essential(6) energy, and a real Word, in whom all things
both consist and are excellently governed. No one can even doubt, that He who
disposes is prior to the disposition and the things disposed. And thus, as I
said, God's creating is second to His begetting; for Son implies something
proper to Him and truly from that blessed and everlasting Essence; but what is
from His will, comes into consistence from without, and is framed through His
proper Offspring who is from It.
3. As we have shewn then they are guilty of great extravagance who say that the
Lord is not Son of God, but a work, and it follows that we all of necessity
confess that He is Son. And if He be Son, as indeed He is, and a son is
confessed to be not external to his father but from him, let them not question
about the terms, as I said before, which the sacred writers use of the Word
Himself, viz. not 'to Him that begat Him,' but 'to Him that made Him;' for while
it is confessed what His nature is, what word is used in such instances need
raise no question(7). For terms do not disparage His Nature; rather that Nature
draws to Itself those terms and changes them. For terms are not prior to
essences, but essences are first, and terms second. Wherefore also when the
essence is a work or creature, then the words 'He made,' and 'He became,' and
'He created,' are used of it properly, and designate the work. But when the
Essence is an Offspring and Son, then 'He made,' and 'He became,' and 'He
created,' no longer properly belong to it, nor designate a work; but 'He made'
we use without question for 'He begat.' Thus fathers often call the sons born of
them their servants, yet without denying the genuineness of their nature; and
often they affectionately call their own servants children, yet without putting
out of sight their purchase of them originally; for they use the one appellation
from their authority as being fathers, but in the other they speak from
affection. Thus Sara called Abraham lord, though not a servant but a wife; and
while to Philemon the master the Apostle joined Onesimus the servant as a
brother, Bathsheba, although mother, called her son servant, saying to his
father, 'Thy servant Solomon(8);'--afterwards also Nathan the Prophet came in
and repeated her words to David, 'Solomon thy servant(9).' Nor did they mind
calling the son a servant, for while David heard it, he recognised the 'nature,'
and while they spoke it, they forgot not the 'genuineness,' praying that he
might be made his father's heir, to whom they gave the name of servant; for to
David he was son by nature.
4. As then, when we read this, we interpret it fairly, without accounting
Solomon a servant because we hear him so called, but a son natural and genuine,
so also, if, concerning the Saviour, who is confessed to be in truth the Son,
and to be the Word by nature, the saints say, 'Who was faithful to Him that made
Him,' or if He say of Himself, 'The Lord created me,' and, 'I am Thy servant and
the Son of Thine handmaid(1),' and the like, let not any on this account deny
that He is proper to the Father and from Hint; but, as in the case of Solomon
and David, let them have a right idea of the Father and the Son. For if, though
they hear Solomon called a servant, they acknowledge him to be a son are they
not descrying of many deaths(2), who, instead of preserving the same explanation
in the instance of the Lord, whenever they hear 'Offspring,' and 'Word,' and
'Wisdom,' forcibly misinterpret and deny the generation, natural and genuine, of
the Son from the Father; but on hearing words and terms proper to a work,
forthwith drop down to the notion of His being by nature a work, and deny the
Word; and this, though it is possible, from His having been made man, to refer
all these terms to His humanity? And are they not proved to be an abomination'
also 'unto the Lord,' as having 'diverse weights(3)' with them, and with this
estimating those other instances, and with that blaspheming the Lord? But
perhaps they grant that the word 'servant' is used under a certain
understanding, but lay stress upon 'Who made' as some great support of their
heresy. But this stay of theirs also is but a broken reed; for if they are aware
of the style of Scripture, they must at once give sentence against(4)
themselves. For as Solomon, though a son, is called a servant, so, to repeat
what was said above, although parents call the sons springing from themselves
'made' and 'created' and 'becoming,' for all this they do not deny their nature.
Thus Hezekiah, as it is written in Isaiah, said in his prayer, 'From this day I
will make children, who shall declare Thy righteousness, O God of my
salvation(5).' He then said, 'I will make;' but the Prophet in that very book
and the Fourth of Kings, thus speaks, 'And the sons who shall come forth of
thee(6).' He uses then 'make' for 'beget' and he calls them who were to spring
from him, 'made,' and no one questions whether the term has reference to a
natural offspring. Again, Eve on bearing Cain said, 'I have gotten a man from
the Lord(7);' thus she too used 'gotten' for 'brought forth.' For, first she saw
the child, yet next she said, 'I have gotten.' Nor would any one consider,
because of 'I have gotten,' that Cain was purchased from without, instead of
being born of her. Again, the Patriarch Jacob said to Joseph, 'And now thy two
sons, Ephraim and Manasseh, which became thine in Egypt, before I came unto thee
into Egypt, are mine(8).' And Scripture says about Job, 'And there came to him
seven sons and three daughters(9).' As Moses too has said in the Law, 'If sons
become to any one,' and 'If he make a son(10).' Here again they speak of those
who are begotten, as 'become' and 'made,' knowing that, while they are
acknowledged to be sons, we need not make a question of 'they became,' or 'I
have gotten,' or 'I made(11).' For nature and truth draw the meaning to
themselves.
5. This being so(1), when persons ask whether the Lord is a creature or work, it
is proper to ask of them this first, whether He is Son and Word and Wisdom. For
if this is shewn, the surmise about work and creation fails to the ground at
once and is ended. For a work could never be Son and Word; nor could the Son be
a work. And again, this being the state of the case, the proof is plain to all,
that the phrase, 'To Him who made Him' does not serve their heresy, but rather
condemns it. For it has been shewn that the expression 'He made' is applied in
divine Scripture even to children genuine and natural; whence, the Lord being
proved to be the Father's Son naturally and genuinely, and Word, and Wisdom,
though 'He made' be used concerning Him, or 'He became,' this is not said of Him
as if a work, but the saints make no question about using the expression,--for
instance in the case of Solomon, and Hezekiah's children. For though the fathers
had begotten them from themselves, still it is written, 'I have made,' and 'I
have gotten,' and 'He became.' Therefore God's enemies, in spite of their
repeated allegation of such phrases(2), ought now, though late in the day, after
what has been said, to disown their irreligious thoughts, and think of the Lord
as of a true Son, Word, and Wisdom of the Father, not a work, not a creature.
For if the Son be a creature, by what word then and by what wisdom was He made
Himself(3)? for all the works were made through the Word and the Wisdom, as it
is written, 'In wisdom hast Thou made them all,' and, 'All things were made by
Him, and without Him was not anything made(4).' But if it be He who is the Word
and the Wisdom, by which all things come to be, it follows that He is not in the
number of works, nor in short of things originate, but the Offspring of the
Father.
6. For consider how grave an error it is, to call God's Word a work. Solomon
says in one place in Ecclesiastes, that 'God shall bring every work into
judgment, with every secret thing, whether it be good or whether it be evil(1).'
If then the Word be a work, do you mean that He as well as others will be
brought into judgment? and what room is there for judgment, when the Judge is on
trial? who will give to the just their blessing, who to the unworthy their
punishment, the Lord, as you must suppose, standing on trial with the rest? by
what law shall He, the Lawgiver, Himself be judged? These things are proper to
the works, to be on trial, to be blessed and to be punished by the Son. Now then
fear the Judge, and let Solomon's words convince you. For if God shall bring the
works one and all into judgment, but the Son is not in the number of things put
on trial, but rather is Himself the Judge of works one and all, is not the proof
clearer than the sun, that the Son is not a work but the Father's Word, in whom
all the works both come to be and come into judgment? Further, if the
expression, 'Who was faithful,' is a difficulty to them, from the thought that
'faithful' is used of Him as of others, as if He exercises faith and so receives
the reward of faith, they must proceed at this rate to find fault with Moses for
saying, 'God faithful and true(2),' and with St. Paul for writing, 'God is
faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able(3).' But
when the saints; spoke thus, they were not thinking of God in a human way, but
they acknowledged two senses of the word 'faithful' in Scripture, first
'believing,' then 'trustworthy,' of which the former belongs to man, the latter
to God. Thus Abraham was faithful, because He believed God's word; and God
faithful, for, as David says in the Psalm, 'The Lord is faithful in all His
words(4),' or is trustworthy, and cannot lie. Again, 'If any faithful woman have
widows(5),' she is so called for her right faith; but, 'It is a faithful
saying(6),' because what He hath spoken has a claim on our faith, for it is
true, and is not otherwise. Accordingly the words, 'Who is faithful to Him that
made Him,' implies no parallel with others, nor means that by having faith He
became well-pleasing; but that, being Son of the True God, He too is faithful,
and ought to be believed in all He says and does, Himself remaining unalterable
and not changed(7) in His human Economy and fleshly presence.
7. Thus then we may meet these men who are shameless, and from the single
expression 'He made,' may shew that they err in thinking that the Word of God is
a work. But further, since the drift also of the context is orthodox, shewing
the time and the relation to which this expression points, I ought to shew from
it also how the heretics lack reason; viz. by considering, as we have done
above, the occasion when it was used and for what purpose. Now the Apostle is
not discussing things before the creation when he thus speaks, but when 'the
Word became flesh;' for thus it is written, 'Wherefore, holy brethren, partakers
of the heavenly calling, consider the Apostle and High Priest of our profession
Jesus, who was faithful to Him that made Him.' Now when became He 'Apostle,' but
when He put on our flesh? and when became He 'High Priest of our profession,'
but when, after offering Himself for us, He raised His Body from the dead, and,
as now, Himself brings near and offers to the Father those who in faith approach
Him, redeeming all, and for all propitiating God? Not then as wishing to signify
the Essence of the Word nor His natural generation from the Father, did the
Apostle say, 'Who was faithful to Him that made Him'--(perish the thought! for
the Word is not made, but makes)--but as signifying His descent to mankind and
High-priesthood which did 'become'--as one may easily see from the account given
of the Law and of Aaron. I mean, Aaron was not born a high-priest, but a man;
and in process of time, when God willed, he became a high-priest; yet became so,
not simply, nor as betokened by his ordinary garments, but putting over them the
ephod, the breastplate(1), the robe, which the women wrought at God's command,
and going in them into the holy place, he offered the sacrifice for the people;
and in them, as it were, mediated between the vision of God and the sacrifices
of men. Thus then the Lord also, 'In the beginning was the Word, and the Word
was with God, and the Word was God;' but when the Father willed that ransoms
should be paid for all and to all, grace should be given, then truly the Word,
as Aaron his robe, so did He take earthly flesh, having Mary for the Mother of
His Body as if virgin earth(2), that, as a High Priest, having He as others an
offering, He might offer Himself to the Father, and cleanse us all from sins in
His own blood, and might rise from the dead.
8. For what happened of old was a shadow of this; and what the Saviour did on
His coming, this Aaron shadowed out according to the Law. As then Aaron was the
same and did not change by putting on the high priestly dress(3), but remaining
the same was only robed, so that, had any one seen him offering, and had said,
'Lo, Aaron has this day become high-priest,' he had not implied that he then had
been born man, for man he was even before he became high-priest, but that he had
been made high-priest in his ministry, on putting on the garments marie and
prepared for the high-priesthood; in the same way it is possible in the Lord's
instance also to understand aright, that He did not become other than Himself on
taking the flesh, but, being the same as before, He was robed in it; and the
expressions 'He became' and 'He was made,' must not be understood as if the
Word, considered as the Word(3a), were made, but that the Word, being Framer of
all, afterwards(4) was made High Priest, by putting on a body which was
originate and made, and such as He can offer for us; wherefore He is said to be
made. If then indeed the Lord did not become man(5), that is a point for the
Arians to battle; but if the 'Word became flesh,' what ought to have been said
concerning Him when become man, but 'Who was faithful to Him that made Hint?'
for as it is proper to the Word to have it said of Him, 'In the beginning was
the Word,' so it is proper to man to 'become' and to be 'made.' Who then, on
seeing the Lord as a man walking about, and yet appearing to be God from His
works, would not have asked, Who made Him man? and who again, on such a
question, would not have answered, that the Father made Him man, and sent Him to
us as High Priest? And this meaning, and time, and character, the Apostle
himself, the writer of the words, Who is faithful to Him that made Him,' will
best make plain to us, if we attend to what goes before them. For there is one
train of thought, and the lection is all about One and the Same. He writes then
in the Epistle to the Hebrews thus; 'Forasmuch then as the children are
partakers of flesh and blood, He also Himself likewise took part of the same;
that through death He might destroy him that had the power of death, that is,
the devil; and deliver them who through fear of death were all their lifetime
subject to bondage. For verily He took not on Him the nature of Angels; but He
took on Him the seed of Abraham. Wherefore in all things it behoved Him to be
made like unto His brethren, that He might be a merciful and faithful High
Priest in things pertaining to God, to make reconciliation for the sins of the
people. For in that He Himself hath suffered being tempted, He is able to
succour them that are tempted. Wherefore, holy brethren, partakers of a heavenly
calling, consider the Apostle and High Priest of our profession, Jesus; who was
faithful to Him that made Him[6].'
9. Who can read this whole passage without condemning the Arians, and admiring
the blessed Apostle, who has spoken well? for when was Christ 'made,' when
became He 'Apostle,' except when, like us, He 'took part in flesh and blood?'
And when became He 'a merciful and faithful High Priest,' except when 'in all
things He was made like unto His brethren?' And then was He 'made like,' when He
became man, having put upon Him our flesh. Wherefore Paul was writing concerning
the Word's human Economy, when he said, 'Who was faithful to Him that made Him,'
and not concerning His Essence. Have not therefore any more the madness to say,
that the Word of God is a work; whereas He is Son by nature Only-begotten, and
then had 'brethren,' when He took on Him flesh like ours; which moreover, by
Himself offering Himself, He was named and became 'merciful and
faithful,'--merciful, because in mercy to us He offered Himself for us, and
faithful, not as sharing faith with us, nor as having, faith in any one as we
have, but as deserving to receive faith in all He says and does, and as offering
a faithful sacrifice, one which remains and does not come to nought. For those
which were offered according to the Law, had not this faithfulness, passing away
with the day and needing a further cleansing; but the Saviour's sacrifice,
taking place once has perfected everything, and is become faithful as remaining
for ever. And Aaron had successors, and in a word the priesthood under the Law
exchanged its first ministers as time and death went on; but the Lord having a
high priesthood without transition and without succession, has become a
'faithful. High Priest,' as continuing for ever; and faithful too by promise,
that He may hear[7] and not mislead those who come to Him. This may be also
learned from the Epistle of the great Peter, who says, 'Let them that suffer
according to the will of God, commit their souls to a faithful Creator[8].' For
He is faithful as not changing, but abiding ever, and rendering what He has
promised.
10. Now the so called gods of the Greeks, unworthy the name, are faithful
neither in their essence nor in their promises; for the same are not everywhere,
nay, the local deities come to nought in course of time, and undergo a natural
dissolution; wherefore the Word cries out against them, that 'faith is not
strong in them,' but they are 'waters that fall,' and 'there is no faith in
them.' But the God of all, being one really and indeed and true, is faithful,
who is ever the same, and says, 'See now, that I, even I am He,' and I 'change
not[1];' and therefore His Son is 'faithful,' being ever the same and
unchanging, deceiving neither in His essence nor in His promise;--as again says
the Apostle writing to the Thessaloninns, 'Faithful is He who calleth you, who
also will do it[2];' for in doing what He promises, He is faithful to His words.
And he thus writes to the Hebrews as to the word's meaning ' unchangeable;' 'If
we believe not, yet He abideth faithful; He cannot deny Himself[3].' Therefore
reasonably the Apostle, discoursing concerning the bodily presence of the Word,
says, an 'Apostle and faithful to Him that made Him,' shewing us that, even when
made man, 'Jesus Christ' is 'the same yesterday, and to-day, and for ever[4]' is
unchangeable. And as the Apostle makes mention in his Epistle of His being made
man when mentioning His High Priesthood, so too he kept no long silence about
His Godhead, but rather mentions it forthwith, furnishing to us a safeguard on
every side, and most of all when he speaks of His humility, that we may
forthwith know His loftiness and His majesty which is the Father's. For
instance, he says, 'Moses as a servant, but Christ as a Sons;' and the former
'faithful in his house,' and the latter ' over the house,' as having Himself
built it, and being its Lord and Framer, and as God sanctifying it. For Moses, a
man by nature, became faithful, in believing God who spoke to Him by His Word;
but[6] the Word was not as one of things originate in a body, nor as creature in
creature, but as God in flesh[7], and Framer of all and Builder in that which
was built by Him. And men are clothed in flesh in order to be and to subsist;
but the Word of God was made man in order to sanctify the flesh, and, though He
was Lord, was in the form of a servant; for the whole creature is the Word's
servant, which by Him came to be and was made.
11. Hence it holds that the Apostle's expression, 'He made,' does not prove that
the Word is made, but that body, which He took like ours; and in consequence He
is called our brother, as having become man. But if it has been shewn, that,
even though the word 'made' be referred to the Very Word, it is used for
'begat,' what further perverse expedient will they be able to fall upon, now
that the present discussion has cleared up the word in every point of view, and
shewn that the Son is not a work, hut in Essence indeed the Father's offspring,
while in the Economy, according to the good pleasures of the Father, He was on
our behalf made, and consists as man? For this reason then it is said by the
Apostle, 'Who was faithful to Him that made Him;' and in the Proverbs, even
creation is spoken of. For so long as we are confessing that He became man,
there is no question about saying, as was observed before, whether 'He became,'
or 'He has been made,' or 'created,' or 'formed,' or 'servant,' or 'son of an
handmaid,' or 'son of man,' or 'was constituted,' or 'took His journey,' or
'bridegroom,' or 'brother's son,' or 'brother.' All these terms happen to be
proper to man's constitution; and such as these do not designate the Essence of
the Word, but that He has become man.
CHAPTER XV.
TEXTS EXPLAINED; FIFTHLY, ACTS ii. 36.
The Regula Fidei must be observed; made applies to our Lord's manhood; and to
His manifestation; and to His office relative to us; and is relative to the
Jews. Parallel instance in Gen. xxvii. 29, 37. The context contradicts the Arian
interpretation.
11 (continued). THE same is the meaning of the passage in the Acts which they
also allege, that in which Peter says, that 'He hath made both Lord and Christ
that same Jesus whom ye have crucified.' For here too it is not written, 'He
made for Himself a Son,' or 'He made Himself a Word,' that they should have such
notions. If then it has not escaped their memory, that they speak concerning the
Son of God, let them make search whether it is anywhere written. 'God made
Himself a Son,' or 'He created for Himself a Word;' or again, whether it is
anywhere written in plain terms, 'The Word is a work or creation;' and then let
them proceed to make their case, the insensate men, that here too they may
receive their answer. But if they can produce nothing of the kind, and only
catch at such stray expressions as 'He made' and 'He has been made,' I fear
test, from hearing, 'In the beginning God made the heaven and the earth,' and
'He made the sun and the moon,' and 'He made the sea,' they should come in time
to call the Word the heaven, and the Light which took place on the first day,
and the earth, and each particular thing that has been made, so as to end in
resembling the Stoics, as they are called, the one drawing out their God into
all things[1], the other ranking God's Word with each work in particular; which
the they have well nigh done already, saying that He is one of His works.
12. But here they must have the same answer as before, and first be told that
the Word is a Son, as has been said above[2], and not a work, and that such
terms are not to be understood of His Godhead, but the reason and manner of them
investigated. To persons who so inquire, the human Economy will plainly present
itself, which He undertook for our sake. For Peter, after saying, 'He hath made
Lord and Christ,' straightway added, 'this Jesus whom ye crucified;' which makes
it plain to any one, even, if so be, to them, provided they attend to the
context, that not the Essence of the Word, but He according to His manhood is
said to have been made. For what was crucified but the body? and how could be
signified what was bodily in the Word, except by saying 'He made?' Especially
has that phrase, 'He made,' a meaning consistent with orthodoxy; in that he has
not said, as I observed before, 'He made Him Word,' but 'He made Him Lord,' nor
that in general terms[3], but 'towards' us, and 'in the midst of' us, as much as
to say, 'He manifested Him.' And this Peter himself, when he began this primary
teaching, carefully[4] expressed, when he said to them, 'Ye men of Israel, hear
these words: Jesus of Nazareth, a man manifested of God towards you by miracles,
and wonders, and signs, which God did by Him in the midst of you, as ye
yourselves know[5].' Consequently the term which he uses in the end, 'made; this
He has explained in the beginning by 'manifested,' for by the signs and wonders
which the Lord did, He was manifested to be not merely man, but God in a body
and Lord also, the Christ. Such also is the passage in the Gospel according to
John, 'Therefore the more did the Jews persecute Him, because He not only broke
the Sabbath, but said also that God was His own Father, making Himself equal
with God[6]., For the Lord did not then fashion Himself to be God, nor indeed is
a made God conceivable, but He manifested it by the works, saying, 'Though ye
believe not Me, believe My works, that ye may know that I am in the Father, and
the Father in Me 7.' Thus then the Father has 'made' Him Lord and King in the
midst of us, and towards us who were once disobedient; and it is plain that He
who is now displayed as Lord and King, does not then begin to be King and Lord,
but begins to shew His Lordship, and to extend it even over the disobedient.
13. If then they suppose that the Saviour was not Lord and King, even before He
became man and endured the Cross, but then began to be Lord, let them know that
they are openly reviving the statements of the Samosatene. But if, as we have
quoted and declared above, He is Lord and King everlasting, seeing that Abraham
worships Him as Lord, and Moses says, 'Then the Lord rained upon Sodore and upon
Gomorrah brimstone and fire from the Lord out of heaven[8];, and David in the
Psalms, 'The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit Thou on My right hand[9];' and, 'Thy
Throne, O God, is for ever and ever; a sceptre of righteousness is the sceptre
of Thy Kingdom[10];' and, 'Thy Kingdom is an everlasting Kingdom[11];' it is
plain that even before He became man, He was King and Lord everlasting, being
Image and Word of the Father. And the Word being everlasting Lord and King, it
is very plain again that Peter said not that the Essence of the Son was made,
but spoke of His Lordship over us, which 'became' when He became man, and,
redeeming all by the Cross, became Lord of all and King. But if they continue
the argument on the ground of its being written, 'He made,' not willing that 'He
made' should be taken in the sense of 'He manifested,' either from want of
apprehension, or from their Christ-opposing purpose, let them attend to another
sound exposition of Peter's words. For he who becomes Lord of others, comes into
the possession of beings already in existence; but if the Lord is Framer of all
and everlasting King, and when He became man, then gained possession of us, here
too is a way in which Peter's language evidently does not signify that the
Essence of the Word is a work, but the after-subjection of all things, and the
Saviour's Lordship which came to be over all. And this coincides with what we
said before[11a]; for as we then introduced the words, 'Become my God and
defence,' and 'the Lord became a refuge for the oppressed[12],' and it stood to
reason that these expressions do not shew that God is originate, but that His
beneficence 'becomes' towards each individual, the same sense has the expression
of Peter also.
14. For the Son of God indeed, being Himself the Word, is Lord of all; but we
once were subject from the first to the slavery of corruption and the curse of
the Law, then by degrees fashioning for ourselves things that were not, we
served, as says the blessed Apostle, 'them which by nature are no Gods[1],' and,
ignorant of the true God, we preferred things that were not to the truth; but
afterwards, as the ancient people when oppressed in Egypt groaned, so, when we
too had the Law ' engrafted[2]' in us, and according to the unutterable
sighings[3] of the Spirit made our intercession, 'O Lord our God, take
possession of us 4,' then, as 'He became for a house of refuge' and a 'God and
defence,' so also He became our Lord. Nor did He then begin to be, but we began
to have Him for our Lord. For upon this, God being good and Father of the Lord,
in pity, and desiring to be known by all, makes His own Son put on Him a human
body and become man, and be called Jesus, that in this body offering Himself for
all, He might deliver all from false worship and corruption, and might Himself
become of all Lord and King. His becoming therefore in this way Lord and King,
this it is that Peter means by, 'He hath made Him Lord,' and 'hath sent Christ;'
as much as to say, that the Father in making Him man for to be made belongs to
man), did not simply make Him man, but has made Him in order to His being Lord
of all men, and to His hallowing all through the Anointing. For though the Word
existing in the form of God took a servant's form, yet the assumption of the
flesh did not make a servant[5] of the Word, who was by nature Lord; but rather,
not only was it that emancipation of all humanity which takes place by the Word,
but that very Word who was by nature Lord, and was then made man, hath by means
of a servant's form been made Lord of all and Christ, that is, in order to
hallow all by the Spirit. And as God, when 'becoming a God and defence,' and
saying, 'I will be a God to them,' does not then become God more than before,
nor then begins to become God, but, what He ever is, that He then becomes to
those who need Him, when it pleaseth Him, so Christ also being by nature Lord
and King everlasting, does not become Lord more than He was at the time He is
sent forth, nor then begins to be Lord and King, but what He is ever, that He
then is made according to the flesh; and, having redeemed all, He becomes
thereby again Lord of quick and dead. For Him henceforth do all things serve,
and this is David's meaning in the Psalm, 'The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit Thou
on My right hand, until I make Thine enemies Thy footstool[6]., For it was
fitting that the redemption should take place through none other than Him who is
the Lord by nature, lest, though created by the Son, we should name another
Lord, and fall into the Arian and Greek folly, serving the creature beyond the
all-creating God[7].
15. This, at least according to my nothingness, is the meaning of this passage;
moreover, a true and a good meaning have these words of Peter as regards the
Jews. For Jews, astray from the truth, expect indeed the Christ as coming, but
do not reckon that He undergoes a passion, saying what they understand not; 'We
know that, when the Christ cometh, He abideth for ever, and how sayest Thou,
that He must be lifted up[8]?' Next they suppose Him, not the Word coming in
flesh, but a mere man, as were all the kings. The Lord then, admonishing Cleopas
and the other, taught them that the Christ must first suffer; and the rest of
the Jews that God was come among them, saying, 'If He called them gods to whom
the word of God came, and the Scripture cannot be broken, say ye of Him whom the
Father hath sanctified and sent into the world, Thou blasphemest, because I
said, I am the Son of God[9]?'
16. Peter then, having learned this from the Saviour, in both points set the
Jews right, saying, "O Jews, the divine Scriptures announce that Christ cometh,
and you consider Him a mere man as one of David's descendants, whereas what is
written of Him shews Him to be not such as you say, but rather announces Him as
Lord and God, and immortal, and dispenser of life. For Moses has said, 'Ye shall
see your Life hanging before your eyes[1].' And David in the hundred and ninth
Psalm, 'The Lord said unto My Lord, Sit Thou on My right hand, till I make Thine
enemies Thy footstool[2];' and in the fifteenth, 'Thou shalt not leave my soul
in hades, neither shalt Thou suffer Thy Holy One to see corruption[3].' Now that
these passages have not David for their scope he himself witnesses, avowing that
He who was coming was His own Lord. Nay you yourselves know that He is dead, and
His remains are with you. That the Christ then must be such as the Scriptures
say, you will plainly confess yourselves. For those announcements come from God,
and in them falsehood cannot be. If then ye can state that such a one has come
before, and can prove him God from the signs and wonders which he did, ye have
reason for maintaining the contest, but if ye are not able to prove His coming,
but are expecting such an one still, recognise the true season from Daniel, for
his words relate to the present time. But if this present season be that which
was of old, afore-announced, and ye have seen what has taken place among us, be
sure that this Jesus, whom ye crucified, this is the expected Christ. For David
and all the Prophets died, and the sepulchres of all are with you, but that
Resurrection which has now taken place, has shewn that the scope of these
passages is Jesus. For the crucifixion is denoted by 'Ye shall see your Life
hanging,' and the wound in the side by the spear answers to 'He was led as a
sheep to the slaughter[4],' and the resurrection, nay more, the rising of the
ancient dead from out their sepulchres (for these most of you have seen), this
is, 'Thou shall not leave My soul in hades,' and 'He swallowed up death in
strengths,' and again, 'God will wipe away.' For the signs which actually took
place shew that He who was in a body was God, and also the Life and Lord of
death. For it became the Christ, when giving life to others, Himself not to be
detained by death; but this could not have happened, had He, as you suppose,
been a mere man. But in truth He is the Son of God, for men are all subject to
death. Let no one therefore doubt, but the whole house of Israel know assuredly
that this Jesus, whom ye saw in shape a man, doing signs and such works, as no
one ever yet had done, is Himself the Christ and Lord of all. For though made
man, and called JESUS, as we said before, He received no loss by that human
passion, but rather, in being made man, He is manifested as Lord of quick and
dead. For since, as the Apostle said,' in the wisdom of God the world by wisdom
knew not God, it pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save them that
believe[6].' And so, since we men would not acknowledge God through His Word,
nor serve the Word of God our natural Master, it pleased God to shew in man His
own Lordship, and so to draw all men to Himself. But to do this by a mere man
be-seemed not 7; lest, having man for our Lord, we should become worshippers of
man[8]. Therefore the Word Himself became flesh, and the Father called His Name
Jesus, and so 'made' Him Lord and Christ, as much as to say, 'He made Him to
rule and to reign;' that while in the Name of Jesus, whom ye crucified, every
knee bows, we may acknowledge as Lord and King both the Son and through Him the
Father."
17. The Jews then, most of them[1], hearing this, came to themselves and
forthwith acknowledged the Christ, as it is written in the Acts. But, the Ario-maniacs
on the contrary choose to remain Jews, and to contend with Peter; so let us
proceed to place before them some parallel phrases; perhaps it may have some
effect upon them, to find what the usage is of divine Scripture. Now that Christ
is everlasting Lord and King, has become plain by what has gone before, nor is
there a man to doubt about it; for being Son of God, He must be like Him[2], and
being like, He is certainly both Lord and King, for He says Himself, 'He that
hath seen Me, hath seen the Father.' On the other hand, that Peter's there
words, 'He hath made Him both Lord and Christ,' do not imply the Son to be a
creature, may be seen from Isaac's blessing, though this illustration is but a
faint one for our subject. Now he said to Jacob, 'Become thou lord over thy
brother;' and to Esau, 'Behold, I have made him thy lord 3.' Now though the word
'made' had implied Jacob's essence and the coming into being, even then it would
not be right in them as much as to imagine the same of the Word of God, for the
Son of God is no creature as Jacob was; besides, they might inquire and so rid
themselves of that extravagance. But if they, do not understand it of his
essence nor of his coming into being, though Jacob was by nature creature and
work, is not their madness worse than the Devil's[4], if what they dare not
ascribe in consequence of a like phrase even to things by nature originate, that
they attach to the Son of God, saying that He is a creature? For Isaac said
'Become' and 'I have made,' signifying neither the coming into being nor the
essence of Jacob (for after thirty years and more from his birth he said this);
but his authority over his brother, which came to pass subsequently.
18. Much more then did Peter say this without meaning that the Essence of the
Word was a work; for he knew Him to be God's Son, confessing, 'Thou art the
Christ, the Son of the Living God[5];' but he meant His Kingdom and Lordship
which was formed and came to be according to grace, and was relatively to us.
For while saying this, he was not silent about the Son of God's everlasting
Godhead which is the Father's; but He had said already, that He had poured the
Spirit on us; now to give the Spirit with authority, is not in the power of
creature or work, but the Spirit is God's Gift[6]. For the creatures are
hallowed by the Holy Spirit; but the Son, in that He is not hallowed by the
Spirit, but on the contrary Himself the Giver of it to all 7, is therefore no
creature, but true Son of the Father. And yet He who gives the Spirit, the same
is said also to be made; that is, to be made among us Lord because of His
manhood, while giving the Spirit because He is God's Word. For He ever was and
is, as Son, so also Lord and Sovereign of all, being like in all things[8] to
the Father, and having all that is the Father's[9] as He Himself has said[10].
CHAPTER XVI.
INTRODUCTORY TO PROVERBS viii. 22, THAT THE SON IS NOT A CREATURE.
Arian formula, a creature but not as one of the creatures; but each creature is
unlike all other creatures; and no creature can create. The Word then differs
from all creatures in that in which they, though otherwise differing, all agree
together, as creatures; viz. in being an efficient cause; in being the one
medium or instrumental agent in creation; moreover in being the revealer of the
Father; and in being the object of worship.
18. (continued). Now in the next place let us consider the passage in the
Proverbs, 'The Lord created me a beginning of His ways for His works[1];'
although in shewing that the Word is no work, it has been also shewn that He is
no creature. For it is the same to say work or creature, so that the proof that
He is no work is a proof also that He is no creature. Whereas one may marvel at
these men, thus devising excuses to be irreligious, and nothing daunted at the
refutations which meet them upon every point. For first they set about deceiving
the simple by their questions 'Did He who is make from that which was not one
that was not or one that was 3?'and, 'Had you a son before begetting him[4]?'And
when this had been proved worthless,next they invented the question, 'Is the
Unoriginate one or two[5]?' Then, when in this they had been confuted,
straightway they formed another, 'Has He free-will and an alterable nature[6]?'
But being forced to give up this, next they set about saying, 'Being made so
much better than the Angels[7];' and when the truth exposed this pretence, now
again, collecting them all together, they think to recommend their heresy by
'work' and 'creature[8].' For they mean those very things over again, and are
true to their own perverseness, putting into various shapes and turning to and
fro the same errors, if so be to deceive some by that variousness. Although then
abundant proof has been given above of this their reckless expedient, yet, since
they make all places sound with this passage from the Proverbs, and to many who
are ignorant of the faith of Christians, seem to say somewhat it is necessary to
examine separately, 'He created' as well as 'Who was faithful to Him that made
Him[9];' that, as in all others, so in this text also, they may be proved to
have got no further than a fantasy.
19. And first let us see the answers, which they returned to Alexander of
blessed memory, in the outset, while their heresy was in course of formation.
They wrote thus: 'He is a creature, but not as one of the creatures; a work, but
not as one of the works; an offspring, but not as one of the offsprings Let
every one consider the profligacy and craft of this heresy; for knowing the
bitterness of its own malignity, it makes an effort to trick itself out with
fair words, and says, what indeed it means, that He is a creature, yet thinks to
be able to screen itself by adding, 'but not as one of the creatures.' However,
in thus writing, they rather convict themselves of irreligion; for if, in your
opinion, He is simply a creature, why add the pretence[2], 'but not as one of
the creatures?' And if He is simply a work, how 'not as one of the works?' In
which we may see the poison of the heresy. For by saying, 'offspring, but not as
one of the offsprings,' they reckon many sons, and one of these they pronounce
to be the Lord; so that according to them He is no more Only begotten, but one
out of many brethren, and is called[3] offspring and son. What use then is this
pretence of saying that He is a creature and not a creature? for though ye shall
say, Not as 'one of the creatures,' I will prove this sophism of yours to be
foolish. For still ye pronounce Him to be one of the creatures; and whatever a
man might say of the other creatures, such ye hold concerning the Son, ye truly
'fools and blind[4].' For is any one of the creatures just what another is[5],
that ye should predicate this of the Son as some prerogative[6]? And all the
visible creation was made in six days:--in the first, the light which He called
day; in the second the firmament; in the third, gathering together the waters,
He bared the dry land, and brought out the various fruits that are in it; and in
the fourth, He made the sun and the moon and all the host of the stars; and on
the fifth, He created the race of living things in the sea, and of birds in the
air; and on the sixth, He made the quadrupeds on the earth, and at length man.
And 'the invisible things of Him from the creation of the world are clearly
seen, being understood by the things that are made[7]; and neither the light is
as the night, nor the sun as the moon; nor the irrational as rational man; nor
the Angels as the Thrones, nor the Thrones as the Authorities, yet they are all
creatures, but each of the things made according to its kind exists and remains
in its own essence, as it was made.
20. Let the Word then be excepted from the works, and as Creator be restored to
the Father, and be confessed to be Son by nature; or if simply He be a creature,
then let Him be assigned the same condition as the rest one with another, and
let them as well as He be said every one of them to be 'a creature but not as
one of the creatures, offspring or work, but not as one of the works or
offsprings.' For ye say that an offspring is the same as a work, writing
'generated or made[1].' For though the Son excel the rest on a comparison, still
a creature He is nevertheless, as they are; since in those which are by nature
creatures one may find some excelling others. Star, for instance, differs from
star in glory, and the rest have all of them their mutual differences when
compared together; yet it follows not for all this that some are lords, and
others servants to the superior, nor that some are efficient causes[2], others
by them come into being, but all have a nature which comes to be and is created,
confessing in their own selves their Framer: as David says in the Psalms, 'The
heavens declare the glory of God, and the firmament sheweth His handiworks;' and
as Zorobabel the wise says, 'All the earth calleth upon the Truth, and the
heaven blesseth it: all works shake and tremble at it[4].' But if the whole
earth hymns the Framer and the Truth, and blesses, and fears it, and its Framer
is the Word, and He Himself says, 'I am the Truths,' it follows that the Word is
not a creature, but alone proper to the Father, in whom all things are disposed,
and He is celebrated by all, as Framer; for 'I was by Him disposing[6];' and 'My
Father worketh hitherto, and I work[7].' And the word 'hitherto' shews His
eternal existence in the Father as the Word; for it is proper to the Word to
work the Father's works and not to be external to Him.
21. But if what the Father worketh, that the Son worketh also[1], and what the
Son createth, that is the creation of the Father, and yet the Son be the
Father's work or creature, then either He will work His own self, and will be
His own creator (since what the Father worketh is the Son's work also), which is
absurd and impossible; or, in that He creates and worketh the things of the
Father, He Himself is not a work nor a creature; for else being Himself an
efficient cause[2], He may cause that to be in the case of things caused, which
He Himself has become, or rather He may have no power to cause at all.
For how, if, as you hold, He is come of nothing, is He able to frame things that
are nothing into being? or if He, a creature, withal frames a creature, the same
will be conceivable in the case of every creature, viz. the power to frame
others. And if this pleases you, what is the need of the Word, seeing that
things inferior can be brought to be by things superior? or at all events, every
thing that is brought to be could have heard in the beginning God's words,
'Become' and be made,' and so would have been framed. But this is not so
written, nor could it be. For none of things which are brought to be is an
efficient cause, but all things were made through the Word: who would not have
wrought all things, were He Himself in the number of the creatures. For neither
would the Angels be able to frame, since they too are creatures, though
Valentinus, and Marcion, and Basilides think so, and you are their copyists; nor
will the sun, as being a creature, ever make what is not into what is; nor will
man fashion man, nor stone devise stone, nor wood give growth to wood. But God
is He who fashions man in the womb, and fixes the mountains, and makes wood
grow; whereas man, as being capable of science, puts together and arranges that
material, and works things that are, as he has learned; and is satisfied if they
are but brought to be, and being conscious of what his nature is, if he needs
aught, knows to ask[3] it of God.
22. If then God also wrought and compounded out of materials, this indeed is a
gentile thought, according to which God is an artificer and not a Maker, but yet
even in that case let the Word work the materials, at the bidding and in the
service of God[1]. But if He calls into existence things which existed not by
His proper Word, then the Word is not in the number of things non-existing and
called; or we have to seek another Word[2], through whom He too was called; for
by the Word the things which were not have come to be. And if through Him He
creates and makes He is not Himself of things created and made but rather He is
the Word of the Creator God and is known from the Father's works which He
Himself worketh, to be 'in the Father and the Father in Him,' and 'He that hath
seen Him hath seen the Father[3],' because the Son's Essence is proper to the
Father, and He in all points like Him[4]. How then does He create through Him,
unless it be His Word and His Wisdom? and how can He be Word and Wisdom, unless
He be the proper offspring of His Essences, and did not come to be, as others,
out of nothing? And whereas all things are from nothing, and are creatures, and
the Son, as they say, is one of the creatures too and of things which once were
not, how does He alone reveal the Father, and none else but He know the Father?
For could He, a work possibly know the Father, then must the Father be also
known by all according to the proportion of the measures of each: for all of
them are works as He is. But if it be impossible for things originate either to
see or to know, for the sight and the knowledge of Him surpasses all (since God
Himself says, 'No one shall see My face and live[6]'), yet the Son has declared,
'No one knoweth the Father, save the Son[7],' therefore the Word is different
from all things originate, in that He alone knows and alone sees the Father, as
He says, 'Not that any one hath seen the Father, save He that is from the
Father,' and 'no one knoweth the Father save the Son[8],' though Arius think
otherwise. How then did He alone know, except that He alone was proper to Him?
and how proper, if He were a creature, and not a true Son from Him? (For one
must not mind saying often the same thing for religion's sake.) Therefore it is
irreligious to think that the Son is one of all things; and blasphemous and
unmeaning to call Him 'a creature, but not as one of the creatures, and a work,
but not as one of the works, an offspring, but not as one of the offsprings;'
for how not as one of these, if, as they say, He was not before His generation
9? for it is proper to the creatures and works not to be before their
origination, and to subsist out of nothing, even though they excel other
creatures in glory; for this difference of one with another will be found in all
creatures, which appears in those which are visible[10].
23. Moreover if, as the heretics hold, the Son were creature or work, but not as
one of the creatures, because of His excelling them in glory, it were natural
that Scripture should describe and display Him by a comparison in His favour
with the other works; for instance, that it should say that He is greater than
Archangels, and more honourable than the Thrones, and both brighter than sun and
moon, and greater than the heavens. But he is not in fact thus referred to; but
the Father shews Him to be His own proper and only Son, saying, 'Thou art My
Son,' and 'This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased[1]' Accordingly the
Angels ministered unto Him, as being one beyond themselves; and they worship
Him, not as being greater in glory, but as being some one beyond all the
creatures, and beyond themselves, and alone the Father's proper Son according to
essence[2]. For if He was worshipped as excelling them in glory, each of things
subservient ought to worship what excels itself. But this is not the case 3; for
creature does not worship creature, but servant Lord, and creature God. Thus
Peter the Apostle hinders Cornelius who would worship him, saying, 'I myself
also am a man[4].' And an Angel, when John would worship him in the Apocalypse,
hinders him, saying, 'See thou do it not; for I am thy fellow-servant, and of
thy brethren the Prophets, and of them that keep the sayings of this book:
worship God[5].' Therefore to God alone appertains worship, and this the very
Angels know, that though they excel other beings in glory, yet they are all
creatures and not to be worshipped[6], but worship the Lord. Thus Manoah, the
father of Samson, wishing to offer sacrifice to the Angel, was thereupon
hindered by him, saying, 'Offer not to me, but to God[7].' On the other hand,
the Lord is worshipped even by the Angels; for it is written, 'Let all the
Angels of God worship Him[8];' and by all the Gentiles, as Isaiah says, 'The
labour of Egypt and merchandize of Ethiopia and of the Subeans, men of stature,
shall come over unto thee, and they shall be thy servants;' and then, 'they
shall fall down unto thee, and shall make supplication unto thee, saying, Surely
God is in thee, and there is none else, there is no God[9].' And He accepts His
disciples' worship, and certifies them who He is, saying, 'Call ye Me not Lord
and Master? and ye say well, for so I am.' And when Thomas said to Him, 'My Lord
and my God[10] He allows his words, or rather accepts him instead of hindering
him. For He is, as the other Prophets declare, and David says in the Psalm, 'the
Lord of hosts, the Lord of Sabaoth,' which is interpreted, 'the Lord of Armies,'
and God True and Almighty, though the Arians burst[11] at the tidings.
24. But He had not been thus worshipped, nor been thus spoken of, were He a
creature merely. But now since He is not a creature, but the proper offspring of
the Essence of that God who is worshipped, and His Son by nature, therefore He
is worshipped and is believed to be God, and is Lord of armies, and in
authority, and Almighty, as the Father is; for He has said Himself, 'All things
that the Father hath, are Mine[1].' For it is proper to the Son, to have the
things of the Father, and to be such that the Father is seen in Him, and that
through Him all things were made, and that the salvation of all comes to pass
and consists in Him.
CHAPTER XVII.
INTRODUCTION TO PROVERBS viii. 22 CONTINUED.
Absurdity of supposing a Son or Word created in order to the creation of other
creatures; as to the creation being unable to bear God's immediate hand, God
condescends to the lowest. Moreover, if the Son a creature, He too could not
bear God's hand, and an infinite series of media will be necessary. Objected,
that, as Moses who led out the Israelites was a man, so our Lord; but Moses was
not the Agent in creation:--again, that unity is found in created ministrations,
but all such ministrations are defective and dependent:--again, that He learned
to create, yet could God's Wisdom need teaching? and why should He learn, if the
Father worketh hitherto? If the Son was created to create us, He is for our
sake, not we for His.
24 (continued). AND here it were well to ask them also this question[1], for a
still clearer refutation of their heresy;--Wherefore, when all things are
creatures, and all are brought into consistence from nothing, and the Son
Himself, according to you, is creature and work, and once was not, wherefore has
He made 'all things through Him' alone, 'and without Him was made not one
thing'?' or why is it, when 'all things' are spoken of, that no one thinks the
Son is signified in the number, but only things originate; whereas when
Scripture speaks of the Word, it does not understand Him as being in the number
of 'all,' but places Him with the Father, as Him in whom Providence and
salvation for 'all' are wrought and effected by the Father, though all things
surely might at the same command have come to be, at which He was brought into
being by God alone? For God is not wearied by commanding 3, nor is His strength
unequal to the making of all things, that He should alone create the only
Son[4], and need His ministry and aid for the framing of the rest. For He lets
nothing stand over, which He wills to be done; but He willed only[5], and all
things subsisted, and no one 'hath resisted His will[6].' Why then were not all
things brought into being by God alone at that same command, at which the 'Son
came into being? Or let them tell us, why did all things through Him come to be,
who was Himself but originate? How void of reason! however, they say concerning
Him, that 'God willing to create originate nature, when He saw that it could not
endure the untempered hand of the Father, and to be created by Him, makes and
creates first and alone one only, and calls Him Son and Word, that, through Him
as a medium, all things might thereupon be brought to be[6a]." This they not
only have said, but they have dared to put it into writing, namely, Eusebius,
Arius, and Asterius who sacrificed 7.
25. Is not this a full proof of that irreligion, with which they have drugged
themselves with much madness, till they blush not to be intoxicate against the
truth? For if they shall assign the toil of making all things as the reason why
God made the Son only, the whole creation will cry out against them as saying
unworthy things of God; and Isaiah too who has said in Scripture, 'The
Everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator of the ends of the earth, fainteth not,
neither is weary: there is no searching of His understanding[1].' And if God
made the Son alone, as not deigning to make the rest, but committed them to the
Son as an assistant, this on the other hand is unworthy of God, for in Him there
is no pride. Nay the Lord reproves the thought, when He says, 'Are not two
sparrows sold for a farthing?' and 'one of them shall not fall on the ground
without your Father which is in heaven.' And again, 'Take no thought for your
life, what ye shall eat, nor yet for your body, what ye shall put on. Is not the
life more than meat, and the body than raiment? Behold the fowls of the air, for
they sow not, neither do they reap, nor gather into barns; yet your heavenly
Father feedeth them; are ye not much better than they? Which of you by taking
thought, can add one cubit unto his stature? And why take ye thought for
raiment? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither
do they spin: and yet I say unto you, that even Solomon in all his glory was not
arrayed like one of these. Wherefore if God so clothe the grass of the field
which to-day is, and to-morrow is cast into the oven, shall He not much more
clothe you, O ye of little faith[2]?' If then it be not unworthy of God to
exercise His Providence, even down to things so small, a hair of the head, and a
sparrow, and the grass of the field, also it was not unworthy of Him to make
them. For what things are the subjects of His Providence, of those He is Maker
through His proper Word. Nay a worse absurdity lies before the men who thus
speak; for they distinguish[3] between the creatures and the framing; and
consider the latter the work of the Father, the creatures the work of the Son;
whereas either all things must be brought to be by the with the Son, or if all
that is originate comes to be through the Son, we must not call Him one of the
originated things.
26. Next, their folly may be exposed thus:--if even the Word be of originated
nature, how, whereas this nature is too feeble to be God's own handy work, could
He alone of all endure to be made by the unoriginate and unmitigated Essence of
God, as ye say? for it follows either that, if He could endure it, all could
endure it, or, it being endurable by none, it was not endurable by the Word, for
you say that He is one of originate things. And again, if because originate
nature could not endure to be God's own handiwork, there arose need of a
mediator[4], it must follow, that, the Word being originate and a creature,
there is need of medium in His framing also, since He too is of that originate
nature which endures not to be made of God, but needs a medium. But if some
being as a medium be found for Him, then again a fresh mediator is needed for
that second, and thus tracing back and following out, we shall invent a vast
crowd of accumulating mediators; and thus it will be impossible that the
creation should subsist, as ever wanting a mediator, and that medium not coming
into being without another mediator; for all of them will be of that originate
nature which endures not to be made of God alone, as ye say. How abundant is
that folly, which obliges them to hold that what has already come into being,
admits not of coming! Or perhaps they opine that they have not even come to be,
as still seeking their mediator; for, on the ground of their so irreligious and
futile notions, what is would not have subsistence, for want of the medium.
27. But again they allege this:--'Behold, through Moses too did He lead the
people from Egypt, and through him He gave the Law, yet he was a man; so that it
is possible for like to be brought into being by like.' They should veil their
face when they say this, to save their much shame. For Moses was not sent to
frame the world, nor to call into being things which were not, or to fashion men
like himself, but only to be the minister of words to the people, and to King
Pharaoh. And this is a very different thing, for to minister is of things
originate as of servants, but to frame and to create is of God alone, and of His
proper Word and His Wisdom. Wherefore, in the matter of framing, we shall find
none but God's Word; for 'all things are made in Wisdom,' and 'without the Word
was made not one thing.' But as regards ministrations there are, not one only,
but man}' out of their whole number, whomever the Lord will send. For there are
many Archangels, many Thrones, and Authorities, and Dominions, thousands of
thousands, and myriads of myriads, standing before Him[1], ministering and ready
to be sent. And many Prophets, and twelve Apostles, and Paul. And Moses himself
was not alone, but Aaron with him, and next other seventy were filled with the
Holy Ghost. And Moses was succeeded by Joshua the son of Nun, and he by the
Judges, and they not by one, but by a number of Kings. If then the Son were a
creature and one of things originate, there must have been many such sons, that
God might have many such ministers, just as there is a multitude of those
others. But if this is not to be seen, but while the creatures are many, the
Word is one, any one will collect from this, that the Son differs from all, and
is not on a level with the creatures, but proper to the Father. Hence there are
not many Words, but one only Word of the one Father, and one Image of the one
God[2]. 'But behold,' they say, 'there is one sun only[3], and one earth.' Let
them maintain, senseless as they are, that there is one water and one fire, and
then they may be told that everything that is brought to be, is one in its own
essence; but for the ministry and service committed to it, by itself it is not
adequate nor sufficient alone. For God said, 'Let there be lights in the
firmament of heaven, to give light upon the earth and to divide the day from the
night; and let them be for signs and for seasons and for days and years.' And
then he says, 'And God made two great lights, the greater light to rule the day,
and the lesser light to rule the night He made the stars also. And God set them
in the firmament of the heaven, to give light upon the earth, and to rule over
the day and over the night[4].'
28. Behold there are many lights, and not the sun only, nor the moon only, but
each is one in essence, and yet the service of all is one and common; and what
each lacks, is supplied by the other, and the office of lighting is performed by
all[5]. Thus the sun has authority to shine throughout the day and no more; and
the moon through the night; and the stars together with them accomplish the
seasons and years, and become for signs, each according to the need that calls
for it. Thus too the earth is not for all things, but for the fruits only, and
to be a ground to tread on for the living things that inhabit it. And the
firmament is to divide between waters and waters, and to be a place to set the
stars in. So also fire and water, with other things, have been brought into
being to be the constituent parts of bodies; and in short no one thing is alone,
but all things that are made, as if members of each other, make up as it were
one body, namely, the world. If then they thus conceive of the Son, let all men
throw stones[6] at them, considering the Word to be a part of this universe, and
a part insufficient without the rest for the service committed to Him. But if
this be manifestly irreligious, let them acknowledge that the Word is not in the
number of things originate, but the sole and proper Word of the Father, and
their Framer. 'But,' say they, 'though He is a creature and of things originate;
yet as from a master and artificer has He[7] learned to frame, and thus
ministered[8] to God who taught Him.' For thus the Sophist Asterius, on the
strength of having learned to deny the Lord, has dared to write, not observing
the absurdity which follows. For if framing be a thing to be taught, let 'them
beware lest they say that God Himself be a Framer not by nature but by science,
so as to admit of His losing the power. Besides, if the Wisdom of God attained
to frame by teaching, how is He still Wisdom, when He needs to learn? and what
was He before He learned? For it was not Wisdom, if it needed teaching; it was
surely but some empty thing, and not essential Wisdom[9], but from advancement
it had the name of Wisdom, and will be only so long Wisdom as it can keep what
it has learned. For what has accrued not by any nature, but from learning,
admits of being one time unlearned. But to speak thus of the Word of God, is not
the part of Christians but of Greeks.
29. For if the power of framing accrues to anyone from teaching, these insensate
men are ascribing jealousy and weakness[1] to God;__ jealousy, in that He has
not taught many how to frame, so that there may be around Him, as Archangels and
Angels many, so framers many; and weakness, in that He could not make by
Himself, but needed a fellow-worker, or under-worker; and that, though it has
been already shewn that created nature admits of being made by God alone, since
they consider the Son to be of such a nature and so made. But God is deficient
in nothing: perish the thought! for He has said Himself, 'I am full[2].' Nor did
the Word become Framer of all from teaching; but being the Image and Wisdom of
the Father, He does the things of the Father. Nor hath He made the Son for the
making of things created; for behold, though the Son exists, still[3] the Father
is seen to work, as the Lord Himself says, 'My Father worketh hitherto and I
work[4].' If however, as you say, the Son came into being for the purpose of
making the things after Him, and yet the Father is seen to work even after the
Son, you must hold even in this light the making of such a Son to be
superfluous. Besides, why, when He would create us, does He seek for a mediator
at all, as if His will did not suffice to constitute whatever seemed good to
Him? Yet the Scriptures say, 'He hath done whatsoever pleased Hires[5],' and
'Who hath resisted His will[6]?' And if His mere will[7] is sufficient for the
framing of all things, you make the office of a mediator superfluous; for your
instance of Moses, and the sun and the moon has been shewn not to hold. And here
again is an argument to silence you. You say that God, willing the creation of
originated nature, and deliberating concerning it, designs and creates the Son,
that through Him He may frame us; now, if so, consider how great an
irreligion[8] you have dared to utter.
30. First, the Son appears rather to have been for us brought to be, than we for
Him; for we were not created for Him, but He is made for us[9]; so that He owes
thanks to us, not we to Him, as the woman to the man. 'For the man,' says
Scripture, 'was not created for the woman, but the woman for the man.'
Therefore, as 'the man is the image and glory of God, and the woman the glory of
the man[10],' so we are made God's image and to His glory; but the Son is our
image, and exists for our glory. And we were brought into being that we might
be; but God's Word was made, as you must hold, not that He might be[1]; but as
an instrument for our need, so that not we from Him, but He is constituted from
our need. Are not men who even conceive such thoughts, more than insensate? For
if for us the Word was made, He has not precedence[3] of us with God; for He did
not take counsel about us having Him within Him, but having us in Himself,
counselled, as they say, concerning His own Word. But if so, perchance the
Father had not even a will for the Son at all; for not as having a will for Him,
did He create Him, but with a will for us, He formed Him for our sake; for He
designed Him after designing us so that, according to these irreligious men,
henceforth the Son, who was made as an instrument, is superfluous, now that they
are made for whom He was created. But if the Son alone was made by God alone,
because He could endure it, but we, because we could not, were made by the Word,
why does He not first take counsel about the Word, who could endure His making,
instead of taking counsel about us? or why does He not make more of Him who was
strong, than of us who were weak? or why making Him first, does He not counsel
about Him first? or why counselling about us first, does He not make us first,
His will being sufficient for the constitution of all things? But He creates Him
first, yet counsels first about us; and He wills us before the Mediator; and
when He wills to create us, and counsels about us, He calls us creatures; but
Him, whom He frames for us, He calls Son and proper Heir. But we, for whose sake
He made Him, ought rather to be called sons; or certainly He, who is His Son, is
rather the object of His previous thoughts and of His will, for whom He makes
all us. Such the sickness, such the vomit[4] of the heretics.
CHAPTER XVIII.
INTRODUCTION TO PROVERBS viii. 22 CONTINUED.
Contrast between the Father's operations immediately and naturally in the Son,
instrumentally by the creatures; Scripture terms illustrative of this.
Explanation of these illustrations; which should be interpreted by the doctrine
of the Church; perverse sense put on them by the Arians, refutted. Mystery of
Divine Generation. Contrast between God's Word and man's word drawn out at
length. Asterius betrayed into holding two Unoriginates; his inconsistency.
Baptism how by the Son as well as by the Father. On the Baptism of heretics. Why
Asian worse than oilier heresies.
31. BUT the sentiment of Truth[1] in this matter must not be hidden, but must
have high utterance. For the Word of God was not made for us, but rather we for
Him, and 'in Him all things were created[2].' Nor for that we were weak, was He
strong and made by the Father alone, that He might frame us by means of Him as
an instrument; perish the thought! it is not so. For though it had seemed good
to God not to make things originate, still had the Word been no less with God,
and the Father in Him. At the same time, things originate could not without the
Word be brought to be; hence they were made through Him,--and reasonably. For
since the Word is the Son of God by nature proper to His essence, and is from
Him, and in Him[3], as He said Himself, the creatures could not have come to be,
except through Him. For as the light enlightens all things by its radiance, and
without its radiance nothing would be illuminated, so also the Father, as by a
hand[4], in the Word wrought all things, and without Him makes nothing. For
instance, God said, as Moses relates, 'Let there be light,' and 'Let the waters
be gathered together,' and 'let the dry land appear,' and 'Let Us make man s;'
as also Holy David in the Psalm, 'He spake and they were made; He commanded and
they were created 6.' And He spoke[7], not that, as in the case of men, some
under-worker might hear, and learning the will of Him who spoke might go away
and do it; for this is what is proper to creatures, but it is unseemly so to
think or speak of the Word. For the Word of God is Framer and Maker, and He is
the Father's Will s. Hence it is that divine Scripture says not that one heard
and answered, as to the manner or nature of the things which He wished made; but
God only said, 'Let it become,' and he adds, 'And it became;' for what He
thought good and counselled, that forthwith the Word began to do and to finish.
For when God commands others, whether the Angels, or converses with Moses, or
commands Abraham, then the hearer answers; and the one says, 'Whereby shall I
know[9]?' and the other, 'Send some one else[10];' and again, 'If they ask me,
what is His Name, what shall I say to them"?' and the Angel said to Zacharias,
'Thus saith the Lord[12];' and he asked the Lord, 'O Lord of hosts, how long
wilt Thou not have mercy on Jerusalem?' and waits to hear good words and
comfortable. For each of these has the Mediator[13] Word, and the Wisdom of God
which makes known the will of the Father. But when that Word Himself works and
creates, then there is no questioning and answer, for the Father is in Him and
the Word in the Father; but it suffices to will, and the work is done; so that
the word 'He said' is a token of the will for our sake, and 'It was so,' denotes
the work which is done through the Word and the Wisdom, in which Wisdom also is
the Will of the Father. And 'God said' is explained in 'the Word,' for, he says,
'Thou hast made all things in Wisdom;' and 'By the Word of the Lord were the
heavens made fast;' and 'There is one Lord Jesus Christ, by whom are all things,
and we by Him[1].'
32. It is plain from this that the Arians are not fighting with us about their
heresy; but while they pretend us, their real fight is against the Godhead
Itself. For if the voice were ours which says, 'This it My Son[2],' small were
our complaint of them; but if it is the Father's voice, and the disciples heard
it, and the Son too says of Himself, 'Before all the mountains He begat me[3],'
are they not fighting against God, as the giants[4] in story, having their
tongue, as the Psalmist says, a sharp sword[5] for irreligion? For they neither
feared the voice of the Father, nor reverenced the Saviour's words, nor trusted
the Saints, one of whom writes, 'Who being the Brightness of His glory and the
Expression of His subsistence,' and 'Christ the power 'of God and the Wisdom of
God[6];' and another says in the Psalm, 'With Thee is the well of life, and in
Thy Light shall we see light,' and 'Thou madest all things in Wisdom[7];' and
the Prophets say, 'And the Word of the Lord came to me[8];' and John, 'In the
beginning was the Word;' and Luke, 'As they delivered them unto us which from
the beginning were eye-witnesses and ministers of the Word[9];' and as David
again says, 'He sent His Word and healed them[10].' All these passages proscribe
in every light the Arian heresy, and signify the eternity of the Word, and that
He is not foreign but proper to the Father's Essence. For when saw any one light
without radiance? or who dares to say that the expression can be different from
the subsistence? or has not a man himself lost his mind[11] who even entertains
the thought that God was ever without Reason and without Wisdom? For such
illustrations and such images has Scripture proposed, that, considering the
inability of human nature to comprehend God, we might be able to form ideas even
from these however poorly and dimly, and as far as is attainable[12]. And as the
creation contains abundant matter for the knowledge of the being of a God and a
Providence (' for by the greatness and beauty of the creatures proportionably
the Maker of them is seen[13]'), and we learn from them without asking for
voices, but hearing the Scriptures we believe, and surveying the very order and
the harmony of all things, we acknowledge that He is Maker and Lord and God of
all, and apprehend His marvellous Providence and governance over all things; so
in like manner about the Son's Godhead, what has been above said is sufficient,
and it becomes superfluous, or rather it is very mad to dispute about it, or to
ask in an heretical way, How can the Son be from eternity? or how can He be from
the Father's Essence, yet not a part? since what is said to be of another, is a
part of him; and what 'is divided, is not whole.
33. These are the evil sophistries of the heterodox; yet, though we have already
shewn their shallowness, the exact sense of these passages themselves and the
force of these illustrations will serve to shew the baseless nature of their
loathsome tenet. For we see that reason is ever, and is from him and proper to
his essence, whose reason it is, and does not admit a before and an after. So
again we see that the radiance from the sun is proper to it, and the sun's
essence is not divided or impaired; but its essence is whole and its radiance
perfect and whole[1], yet without impairing the essence of light, but as a true
offspring from it. We understand in like manner that the Son is begotten not
from without but from the Father, and while the Father remains whole, the
Expression of His Subsistence is ever, and preserves the Father's likeness and
unvarying Image, so that he who sees Him, sees in Him the Subsistence too, of
which He is the Expression. And from the operation of the Expression we
understand the true Godhead of the Subsistence, as the Saviour Himself teaches
when He says, 'The Father who dwelleth in Me, He doeth the works[2] which I do;
and 'I and the Father are one,' and 'I in the Father and the Father in Me[3].'
Therefore let this Christ--opposing heresy attempt first to divide[4] the
examples found in things originate, and say, 'Once the sun was without his
radiance,' or, 'Radiance is not proper to the essence of light,' or 'It is
indeed proper, but it is a part of light by division; and then let it divide
Reason, and pronounce that it is foreign to mind, or that once it was not, or
that it was not proper to its essence, or that it is by division a part of mind.
And so of His Expression and the Light and the Power, let it do violence to
these as in the case of Reason and Radiance; and instead let it imagine what it
will s. But if such extravagance be impossible for them, are they not greatly
beside themselves, presumptuously intruding into what is higher than things
originate and their own nature, and essaying impossibilities[6]?
34. For if in the case of these originate and irrational things offsprings are
found which are not parts of the essences from which they are, nor subsist with
passion, nor impair the essences of their originals, are they not mad again in
seeking and conjecturing parts and passions in the instance of the immaterial
and true God, and ascribing divisions to Him who is beyond passion and change,
thereby to perplex the ears of the simple[1] and to pervert them from the Truth?
for who hears of a son but conceives of that which is proper to the father's
essence? who heard, in his first catechising[2], that God has a Son and has made
all things by His proper Word, but understood it in that sense in which we now
mean it? who on the rise of this odious heresy of the Arians, was not at once
startled at what he heard, as strange[3], and a second sowing, besides that Word
which had been sown from the beginning? For what is sown in every soul from the
beginning is that God has a Son, the Word, the Wisdom, the Power, that is, His
Image and Radiance; from which it at once follows that He is always; that He is
from the Father; that He is like; that He is the eternal offspring of His
essence; and there is no idea involved in these of creature or work. But when
the man who is an enemy, while men slept, made a second sowing[4], of 'He is a
creature,' and 'There was once when He was not,' and 'How can it be?'
thenceforth the wicked heresy of Christ's enemies rose as tares, and forthwith,
as bereft of every right thought, they meddle[5] like robbers, and venture to
say, 'How can the Son always exist with the Father?' for men come of men and are
sons, after a time; and the father is thirty years old, when the son begins to
be, being begotten; and in short of every son of man, it is true that he was not
before his generation. And again they whisper, 'How can the Son be Word, or the
Word be God's Image? for the word of men is composed of syllables[6], and only
signifies the speaker's will, and then is over[7] and is lost.'
35. They then afresh, as if forgetting the proofs which have been already urged
against them, 'pierce themselves through[1] 'with these bonds of irreligion, and
thus argue. But the word of truth[2] confutes them as follows:--if they were
disputing concerning any man, then let them exercise reason in this human way,
both concerning His Word and His Son; but if of God who created man, no longer
let them entertain human thoughts, but others which are above human nature. For
such as he that besets, such of necessity is the offspring; and such as is the
Word's Father, such must be also His Word. Now man, begotten in time, in time[3]
also himself besets the child; and whereas from nothing he came to be, therefore
his word[4] also is over and continues not. But God is not as man, as Scripture
has said; but is existing and is ever; therefore also His Word is existings and
is everlastingly with the Father, as radiance of light. And man's word is
composed of syllables, and neither lives nor operates anything, but is only
significant of the speaker's intention, and does but go forth and go by, no more
to appear, since it was not at all before it was spoken; wherefore the word of
man neither lives nor operates anything, nor in short is man. And this happens
to it, as I said before, because man who besets it, has his nature out of
nothing. But God's Word is not merely pronounced, as one may say, nor a sound of
accents, nor by His Son is meant His command[6]; but as radiance of light, so is
He perfect offspring from perfect[7]. Hence He is God also, as being God's
Image; for 'the Word was God[8]' says Scripture. And man's words avail not for
operation; hence man works not by means of words but of hands, for they have
being, and man's word subsists not. But the 'Word of God,' as the Apostle says,
'is living and powerful and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to
the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a
discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart. Neither is there any
creature that is not manifest in His sight; but all things are naked and opened
unto the eyes of Him with whom we have to do[9]' He is then Framer of all, 'and
without Him was made not one thing[10],' nor can anything be made without Him.
36. Nor must we ask why the Word of God is not such as our word, considering God
is not such as we, as has been before said; nor again is it right to seek how
the word is from God, or how He is God's radiance, or how God besets, and what
is the manner of His besetting[1]. For a man must be beside himself to venture
on such points; since a thing ineffable and proper to God's nature, and known to
Him alone and to the Son, this he demands to be explained in words. It is all
one as if they sought where God is, and how God is, and of what nature the
Father is. But as to ask such questions is irreligious, and argues an ignorance
of God, so it is not holy to venture such questions concerning the generation of
the Son of God, nor to measure God and His Wisdom by our own nature and
infirmity. Nor is a person at liberty on that account to swerve in his thoughts
from the truth, nor, if any one is perplexed in such inquiries, ought he to
disbelieve what is written. For it is better in perplexity to be silent and
believe, than to disbelieve on account of the perplexity: for he who is
perplexed may in some way obtain mercy[2], because, though he has questioned, he
has yet kept quiet; but when a man is led by his perplexity into forming for
himself doctrines which beseem not, and utters what is unworthy of God, such
daring recurs a sentence without mercy. For in such perplexities divine
Scripture is able to afford him some relief, so as to take rightly what is
written, and to dwell upon our word as an illustration; that as it is proper to
us and is from us, and not a work external to us, so also God's Word is proper
to Him and from Him, and is not a work; and yet is not like the word of man, or
else we must suppose God to be man. For observe, many and various are men's
words which pass away day by day; because those that come before others continue
not, but vanish. Now this happens because their authors are men, and have
seasons which pass away, and ideas which are successive; and what strikes them
first and second, that they utter; so that they have many words, and yet after
them all nothing at all remaining; for the speaker ceases, and his word
forthwith is spent. But God's Word is one and the same, and, as it is written,
'The Word of God endureth for ever[3],' not changed, not before or after other,
but existing the same always. For it was fitting, whereas God is One, that His
Image should be One also, and His Word One and One His Wisdom[4].
37. Wherefore I am in wonder how, whereas God is One, these men introduce, after
their private notions, many images and wisdoms and words[5], and say that the
Father's proper and natural Word is other than the Son, by whom He even made the
Son[6] and that He who is really Son is but notionally[7] called Word, as vine,
and way, and door, and tree of life; and that He is called Wisdom also in name,
the proper and true Wisdom of the Father, which coexist ingenerately[8] with
Him, being other than the Son, by which He even made the Son, and named Him
Wisdom as partaking of it. This they have not confined to words, but Arius
composed in his Thalia, and the Sophist Asterius wrote, what we have stated
above, as follows: 'Blessed Paul said not that he preached Christ, the Power of
God or the Wisdom of God, but without the addition of the article, 'God's power'
and 'God's wisdom[9],' thus preaching that the proper Power of God Himself which
is natural to Him, and co-existent in Him ingenerately, is something besides,
generative indeed of Christ, and creative of the whole world, concerning which
he teaches in his Epistle to the Romans thus,--'The invisible things of Him from
the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that
are made, even His eternal Power and Godhead[10].' For as no one would say that
the Godhead there mentioned was Christ, but the Father Himself, so, as I think,
'His eternal Power and Godhead also is not the Only Begotten Son, but the Father
who begat Him[11].' And he teaches that there is another power and wisdom of
God, manifested through Christ. And shortly after the same Asterius says,
'However His eternal power and wisdom, which truth argues to be without
beginning and ingenerate, the same must surely be one. For there are many
wisdoms which are one by one created by Him, of whom Christ is the first-born
and only-begotten; all however equally depend on their Possessor. And all the
powers are rightly called His who created and uses them:--as the Prophet says
that the locust, which came to be a divine punishment of human sins, was called
by God Himself not only a power, but a great power; and blessed David in most of
the Psalms invites, not the Angels alone, but the Powers to praise God.'
38. Now are they not worthy of all hatred for merely uttering this? for if, as
they hold, He is Son, not because He is begotten of the Father and proper to His
Essence, but that He is called Word only because of things rational[1], and
Wisdom because of things gifted with wisdom, and Power because of things gifted
with power, surely He must be named a Son because of those who are made sons:
and perhaps because there are things existing, He has even His existence[2], in
our notions only[3]. And then after all what is He? for He is none of these
Himself, if they are but His names[4]: and He has but a semblance of being, and
is decorated with these names from us. Rather this is some recklessness of the
devil, or worse, if they are not unwilling that they should truly subsist
themselves, but think that God's Word is but in name. Is not this portentous, to
say that Wisdom coexists with the Father, yet not to say that this. is the
Christ, but that there are many created powers and wisdoms, of which one is the
Lord whom they go on to compare to the caterpillar and locust? and are they not
profligate, who, when they hear us say that the Word coexists with the Father,
forthwith murmur out, 'Are you not speaking of two Unoriginates?' yet in
speaking themselves of 'His Unoriginate Wisdom,' do not see that they have
already incurred themselves the charge which they so rashly urge against us[5]?
Moreover, what folly is there in that thought of theirs, that the Unoriginate
Wisdom coexisting with God is God Himself! for what-coexists does not coexist
with itself, but with some one else, as the Evangelists say of the Lord, that He
was together with His disciples; for He was not together with Himself, but with
His disciples;--unless indeed they would say that God is of a compound nature,
having wisdom a constituent or complement of His Essence, un-originate as well
as Himself[6], which moreover they pretend to be the framer of the world, that
so they may deprive the Son of the framing of it. For there is nothing they
would not maintain, sooner than hold the truth concerning the Lord.
39. For where at all have they found in divine Scripture, or from whom have they
heard, that there is another Word and another Wisdom besides this Son, that they
should frame to themselves such a doctrine? True, indeed, it is written, 'Are
not My words like fire, and like a hammer that breaketh the rock in pieces[1]?'
and in the Proverbs, 'I will make known My words unto you[2];' but these are
precepts and commands, which God has spoken to the saints through His proper and
only true Word, concerning which the Psalmist said, 'I have refrained my feet
from every evil way, that I may keep Thy words[3].' Such words accordingly the
Saviour signifies to be distinct from Himself, when He says in His own person,
'The words which I have spoken unto you[4].' For certainly such words are not
off-springs or sons, nor are there so many words that frame the world, nor so
many images of the One God, nor so many who have become men for us, nor as if
from many such there were one who has become flesh, as John says; but as being
the only Word of God was He preached by John, 'The Word was made flesh,' and
'all things were made by Himself.' Wherefore of Him alone, our Lord Jesus
Christ, and of His oneness with the Father, are written and set forth the
testimonies, both of the Father signifying that the Son is One, and of the
saints, aware of this and saying that the Word is One, and that He is
Only-Begotten. And His works also are set forth; for all things, visible and
invisible, have been brought to be through Him, and 'without Him was made not
one 'thing[6].' But concerning another or any one else they have not a thought,
nor frame to themselves words or wisdoms, of which neither name nor deed are
signified by Scripture, but are named by these only. For it is their invention
and Christ-opposing surmise, and they make the most[7] of the name of the Word
and the Wisdom; and framing to themselves others, they deny the true Word of
God, and the real and only Wisdom of the Father, and thereby, miserable men,
rival the Manichees. For they too, when they behold the works of God, deny Him
the only and true God, and frame to themselves another, whom they can shew
neither by work, nor in any testimony drawn from the divine oracles.
40. Therefore, if neither in the divine oracles is found another wisdom besides
this Son, nor from the fathers[1] have we heard of any such, yet they have
confessed and written of the Wisdom coexisting with the Father unoriginately,
proper to Him, and the Framer of the world, this must be the Son who even
according to them is eternally coexistent with the Father. For He is Framer of
all, as it is written, 'In Wisdom hast Thou made them ally[2].' Nay, Asterius
himself, as if forgetting what he wrote before, afterwards, in Caiaphas's[3]
fashion, involuntarily, when urging the Greeks, instead of naming many wisdoms,
or the caterpillar, confesses but one, in these words;--'God the 'Word is one,
but many are the things rational; and one is the essence and nature of Wisdom,
but many are the things wise and beautiful.' And soon afterwards he says
again:--'Who are they whom they honour with the title of God's children? for
they will not say that they too are words, nor maintain that there are many
wisdoms. For it is not possible, whereas the Word is one, and Wisdom has been
set forth as one, to dispense to the multitude of children the Essence of the
Word, and to bestow on them the appellation of Wisdom.' It is not then at all
wonderful, that the Arians should battle with the truth, when they have
collisions with their own principles and conflict with each other, at one time
saying that there are many wisdoms, at another maintaining one; at one time
classing wisdom with the caterpillar, at another saying that it coexists with
the Father and is proper to Him; now that the Father alone is unoriginate, and
then again that His Wisdom and His Power are unoriginate also. And they battle
with us for saying that the Word of God is ever, yet forget their own doctrines,
and say themselves that Wisdom coexists with God unoriginately[4]. So dizzied[5]
are they in all these matters, denying the true Wisdom, and inventing one which
is not, as the Manichees who make to themselves another God, after denying Him
that is.
41. But let the other heresies and the Manichees also know that the Father of
the Christ is One, and is Lord and Maker of the creation through His proper
Word. And let the Ariomaniacs know in particular, that the Word of God is One,
being the only Son proper and genuine from His Essence, and having with His
Father the oneness of Godhead indivisible, as we said many times, being taught
it by the Saviour Himself. Since, were it not so, wherefore through Him does the
Father create, and in Him reveal Himself to whom He will, and illuminate them?
or why too in the baptismal consecration is the Son named together with the
Father? For if they say that the Father is not all-sufficient, then their answer
is irreligious[6], but if He be, for this it is right to say, what is the need
of the Son for framing the worlds, or for the holy laver? For what fellowship is
there between creature and Creator? or why is a thing made classed with the
Maker in the consecration of all of us? or why, as you hold, is faith in one
Creator and in one creature delivered to us? for if it was that we might be
joined to the Godhead, what need of the creature? but if that we might be united
to the Son a creature, superfluous, according to you, is this naming of the Son
in Baptism, for God who made Him a Son is able to make us sons also. Besides, if
the Son be a creature, the nature of rational creatures being one, no help will
come to creatures from a creature[7], since all[8] need grace from God. We said
a few words just now on the fitness that all things should be made by Him; but
since the course of the discussion has led us also to mention holy Baptism, it
is necessary to state, as I think and believe, that the Son is named with the
Father, not as if the Father were not all-sufficient, not without meaning, and
by accident; but, since He is God's Word and own Wisdom, and being His Radiance,
is ever with the Father, therefore it is impossible, if the Father bestows
grace, that He should not give it in the Son, for the Son is in the Father as
the radiance in the light. For, not as if in need, but as a Father in His own
Wisdom hath God rounded the earth, and made all things in the Word which is from
Him, and in the Son confirms the Holy Laver. For where the Father is, there is
the Son, and where the light, there the radiance; and as what the Father worketh,
He worketh through the Son[9], and the Lord Himself says, 'What I see the Father
do, that do I also;' so also when baptism is given, whom the Father baptizes,
him the Son baptizes; and whom the Son baptizes, he is consecrated in the Holy
Ghost[10]. And again as when the sun shines, one might say that the radiance
illuminates, for the light is one and indivisible, nor can be detached, so where
the Father is or is named, there plainly is the Son also; and is the Father
named in Baptism? then must the Son be named with Him[11].
42. Therefore, when He made His promise to the saints, He thus spoke; 'I and the
Father will come, and make Our abode in him;' and again, 'that, as I and Thou
are One, so they may be one in Us.' And the grace given is one, given from the
Father in the Son, as Paul writes in every Epistle, 'Grace unto you, and peace
from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ(1).' For the light must be with
the ray, and the radiance must be contemplated together with its own light.
Whence the Jews, as denying the Son as well as they, have not the Father either;
for, as having left the 'Fountain of Wisdom(2),' as Baruch reproaches them, they
put from them the Wisdom springing from it, our Lord Jesus Christ (for 'Christ,'
says the Apostle, is 'God's power and God's wisdom(3)),' when they said, 'We
have no king but C'sar 4.' The Jews then have the penal award of their denial;
for their' city as well as their reasoning came to nought. And these too hazard
the fulness of the mystery, I mean Baptism; for if the consecration is given to
us into the Name of Father and Son, and they do not confess a true Father,
because they deny what is from Him and like His Essence, and deny also the true
Son, and name another of their own framing as created out of nothing, is not the
rite administered by them altogether empty and unprofitable, making a show, but
in reality being no help towards religion? For the Arians do not baptize into
Father and Son, but into Creator and creature, and into Maker and work(5). And
as a creature is other than the Son, so the Baptism, which is supposed to be
given by them, is other than the truth, though they pretend to name the Name of
the Father and the Son, because of the words of Scripture, For not he who simply
says, 'O Lord,' gives Baptism; but he who with the Name has also the right
faith(6). On this account therefore our Saviour also did not simply command to
baptize, but first says, 'Teach;' then thus: 'Baptize into the Name of Father,
and Son, and Holy Ghost;' that the right faith might follow upon learning, and
together with faith might come the consecration of Baptism.
43. There are many other heresies too, which use the words only, but not in a
right sense, as I have said, nor with sound faith(1), and in consequence the
water which they administer is unprofitable, as deficient in piety, so that he
who is sprinkled(2) by them is rather polluted(3) by irreligion than redeemed.
So Gentiles also, though the name of God is on their lips, incur the charge of
Atheism(4), because they know not the real and very God, the Father of our Lord
Jesus Christ. So Manichees and Phrygians(5), and the disciples of the Samosatene,
though using the Names, nevertheless are heretics, and the Arians follow in the
same course, though they read the words of Scripture, and use the Names, yet
they too mock those who receive the rite from them, being more irreligious than
the other heresies, and advancing beyond them, and making them seem innocent by
their own recklessness of speech. For these other heresies lie against the truth
in some certain respect, either erring concerning the Lord's Body, as if He did
not take flesh of Mary, or as if He has not died at all, nor become man, but
only appeared, and was not truly, and seemed to have a body when He had not, and
seemed to have the shape of man, as visions in a dream; but the Arians are
without disguise irreligious against the Father Himself. For hearing from the
Scriptures that His Godhead is represented in the Son as in an image, they
blaspheme, saying, that it is a creature, and everywhere concerning that Image,
they carry about(6) with them the phrase, 'He was not,' as mud in a wallet(7),
and spit it forth as serpents s their venom. Then, whereas their doctrine is
nauseous to all men, forthwith, as a support against its fall, they prop up the
heresy with human(9) patronage, that the simple, at the sight or even by the
fear may overlook the mischief of their perversity. Right indeed is it to pity
their dupes; well is it to weep over them, for that they sacrifice their own
interest for that immediate phantasy which pleasures furnish, and forfeit their
future hope. In thinking to be baptized into the name of one who exists not,
they will receive nothing; and ranking themselves with a creature, from the
creation they will have no help, and believing in one unlike(10) and foreign to
the Father in essence, to the Father they will not be joined, not having His own
Son by nature, who is from Him, who is in the Father, and in whom the Father is,
as He Himself has said; but being led astray by them, the wretched men
henceforth remain destitute and stripped of the Godhead. For this phantasy of
earthly goods will not follow them upon their death; nor when they see the Lord
whom they have denied, sitting on His Father's throne, and judging quick and
dead, will they be able to call to their help any one of those who have now
deceived them; for they shall see them also at the judgment-seat, repenting for
their deeds of sin and irreligion.
CHAPTER XIX.
TEXTS EXPLAINED; SIXTHLY, PROVERBS viii. 22.
Proverbs are of a figurative nature, and must be interpreted as such. We must
interpret them, and in particular this passage, by the Regula Fidei. 'He created
me' not equivalent to 'I am a creature.' Wisdom a creature so far forth as Its
human body. Again, if He is a creature, it is as 'a beginning of ways,' an
office which, though not an attribute, is a consequence, of a higher and divine
nature. And it is 'for the works,' which implied the works existed, and
therefore much more He, before He was created. Also 'the Lord' not the Father
'created' Him, which implies the creation was that of a servant.
44. We have gone through thus much before the passage in the Proverbs, resisting
the insensate fables which their hearts have invented, that they may know that
the Son of God ought not to be called a creature, and may learn lightly to read
what admits in truth of a right(1) explanation. For it is written, 'The Lord
created me a beginning of His ways, for His works(2);' since, however, these are
proverbs, and it is expressed in the way of proverbs, we must not expound them
nakedly in their first sense, but we must inquire into the person, and thus
religiously put the sense on it. For what is said in proverbs, is not said
plainly, but is put forth latently(3), as the Lord Himself has taught us in the
Gospel according to John, saying, 'These things have I spoken unto you in
proverbs, but the time cometh when I shall no more speak unto you in proverbs,
but openly(4).' Therefore it is necessary to unfold the senses of what is said,
and to seek it as something hidden, and not nakedly to expound as if the meaning
were spoken 'plainly,' lest by a false interpretation we wander from the truth.
If then what is written be about Angel, or any other of things originate, as
concerning one of us who are works, let it be said, 'created me;' but if it be
the Wisdom of God, in whom all things originate have been framed, that speaks
concerning Itself, what ought we to understand but that 'He created' means
nothing contrary to 'He begat?' Nor, as forgetting that It is Creator and
Framer, or ignorant of the difference between the Creator and the creatures,
does It number Itself among the creatures; but It signifies a certain sense, as
in proverbs, not 'plainly,' but latent; which It inspired the saints to use in
prophecy, while soon after It doth Itself give the meaning of 'He created' in
other but parallel expressions, saying, 'Wisdom made herself a house(6).' Now it
is plain that our body is Wisdom's house(7), which It took on Itself to become
man; hence consistently does John say, 'The Word was made flesh(8);' and by
Solomon Wisdom says of Itself with cautious exactness(9), not 'I am a creature,'
but only 'The Lord created me a beginning of His ways for His works(10),' yet
not 'created me that I might have being,' nor 'because I have a creature's
beginning and origin.'
45. For in this passage, not as signifying the Essence of His Godhead, nor His
own everlasting and genuine generation from the Father, has the Word spoken by
Solomon, but on the other hand His manhood and Economy towards us. And, as I
said before, He has not said 'I am a creature,' or 'I became a creature,' but
only 'He created(1).' For the creatures, having a created essence, are
originate, and are said to be created, and of course the creature is created:
but this mere term 'He created' does not necessarily signify the essence or the
generation, but indicates something else as coming to pass in Him of whom it
speaks, and not simply that He who is said to be created, is at once in His
Nature and Essence a creature'. And this difference divine Scripture recognises,
saying concerning the creatures, 'The earth is full of Thy creation,' and 'the
creation itself groaneth together and travaileth together(3);' and in the
Apocalypse it says, 'And the third part of the creatures in the sea died which
had life;' as also Paul says, 'Every creature of God is good, and nothing is to
be refused if it be received with thanksgiving(4);' and in the book of Wisdom it
is written, 'Having ordained man through Thy wisdom, that he should have
dominion over the creatures which Thou hast made(5).' And these, being
creatures, are also said to be created, as we may further hear from the Lord,
who says, 'He who created them, made them male and female(6);' and from Moses in
the Song, who writes, 'Ask now of the days that are past, which were before thee
since the day that God created man upon the earth, and from the one side of
heaven unto the other(7).' And Paul in Colossians, 'Who is the Image of the
Invisible God, the Firstborn of every creature, for in Him were all things
created that are in heaven, and that are on earth, visible and invisible,
whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers; all things
were created through Him, and for Him, and He is before all(8).'
46. That to be called creatures, then, and to be created beIongs to things which
have by nature a created essence, these passages are sufficient to remind us,
though Scripture is full of the like; on the other hand that the single word 'He
created' does not simply denote the essence and mode of generation, David shews
in the Psalm, 'This shall be written for another generation, and the people that
is created shall praise the Lord(1);' and again, 'Create in me a clean heart, O
God(2);' and Paul in Ephesians says, 'Having abolished the law of commandments
contained in ordinances, for to create in Himself of two one new man(3); and
again, 'Put ye on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and
true holiness(4).' For neither David spoke of any people created in essence, nor
prayed to have another heart than that he had, but meant renovation according to
God and renewal; nor did Paul signify two persons created in essence in the
Lord, nor again did he counsel us to put on any other man; but he called the
life according to virtue the 'man after God,' and by the 'created' in Christ he
meant the two people who are renewed in Him. Such too is the language of the
book of Jeremiah; 'The Lord created a new salvation for a planting, in which
salvation men shall walk to and fro(5);' and in thus speaking, he does not mean
any essence of a creature, but prophesies of the renewal of salvation among men,
which has taken place in Christ for us. Such then being the difference between
'the creatures' and the single word 'He created,' if you find anywhere in divine
Scripture the Lord called 'creature,' produce it and fight; but if it is nowhere
written that He is a creature, only He Himself says about Himself in the
Proverbs, 'The Lord created me,' shame upon you, both on the ground of the
distinction aforesaid and for that the diction is like that of proverbs; and
accordingly let 'He created' be understood, not of His being a creature, but of
that human nature which became His, for to this belongs creation. Indeed is it
not evidently unfair in you, when David and Paul say 'He created,' then indeed
not to understand it of the essence and the generation, but the renewal; yet,
when the Lord says 'He created' to number His essence with the creatures? and
again when Scripture says, 'Wisdom built her an house, she set it upon seven
pillars(6), to understand 'house' allegorically, but to take 'He created' as it
stands, and to fasten on it the idea of creature? and neither His being Framer
of all has had any weight with you, nor have you feared His being the sole and
proper Offspring of the Father, but recklessly, as if you had enlisted against
Him, do ye fight, and think less of Him than of men.
47. For the very passage proves that it is only an invention of your own to call
the Lord creature For the Lord, knowing His own Essence to be the Only-begotten
Wisdom and Offspring of the Father, and other than things originate and natural
creatures, says in love to man, 'The Lord created me a beginning of His ways,'
as if to say, 'My Father hath prepared for Me a body, and has created Me for men
in behalf of their salvation.' For, as when John says, 'The Word was made
flesh(1), we do not conceive the whole Word Himself to be flesh(2), but to have
put on flesh and become man, and on hearing, 'Christ hath become a curse for
us,' and 'He hath made Him sin for us who knew no sin(3),' we do not simply
conceive this, that whole Christ has become curse and sin, but that He has taken
on Him the curse which lay against us (as the Apostle has said, 'Has redeemed us
from the curse,' and 'has carried,' as Isaiah has said, 'our sins,' and as Peter
has written, 'has borne them in the body on the wood 4); so, if it is said in
the Proverbs 'He created,' we must not conceive that the whole Word is in nature
a creature, but that He put on the created body s and that God created Him for
our sakes, preparing for Him the created body, as it is written, for us, that in
Him we might be capable of being renewed and deified. What then deceived you, O
senseless, to call the Creator a creature? or whence did you purchase for you
this new thought, to parade it(6)? For the Proverbs say 'He created,' but they
call not the Son creature, but Offspring; and, according to the distinction in
Scripture aforesaid of 'He created' and 'creature,' they acknowledge, what is by
nature proper to the Son, that He is the Only-begotten Wisdom and Framer of the
creatures, and when they say 'He created,' they say it not in respect of His
Essence, but signify that He was becoming a beginning of many ways; so that 'He
created' is in contrast to 'Offspring,' and His being called the 'Beginning of
ways(7)' to His being the Only-begotten Word.
48. For if He is Offspring, how call ye Him creature? for no one says that He
begets what He creates, nor calls His proper offspring creatures; and again, if
He is Only-begotten, how becomes He 'beginning of the ways?' for of necessity,
if He was created a beginning of all things, He is no longer alone, as having
those who came into being after Him. For Reuben, when he became a beginning of
the children(1), was not only-begotten, but in time indeed first, but in nature
and relationship one among those who came after him. Therefore if the Word also
is 'a beginning of the ways,' He must be such as the ways are, and the ways must
be such as the Word, though in point of time He be created first of them. For
the beginning or initiative of a city is such as the other parts of the city
are, and the members too being joined to it, make the city whole and one, as the
many members of one body; nor does one part of it make, and another come to be,
and is subject to the former, but all the city equally has its government and
constitution from its maker. If then the Lord is in such sense created as a
'beginning' of all things, it would follow that He and all other things together
make up the unity of the creation, and He neither differs from all others,
though He become the 'beginning' of all, nor is He Lord of them, though older in
point of time; but He has the same manner of framing and the same Lord as the
rest. Nay, if He be a creature, as you hold, how can He be created sole and
first at all, so as to be beginning of all? when it is plain from what has been
said, that among the creatures not any is of a constant(2) nature and of prior
formation, but each has its origination with all the rest, however it may excel
others in glory. For as to the separate stars or the great lights, not this
appeared first, and that second, but in one day and by the same command, they
were all called into being. And such was the original formation of the
quadrupeds, and of birds, and fishes, and cattle, and plants; thus too has the
race made after God's Image come to be, namely men; for though Adam only was
formed out of earth, yet in him was involved the succession of the whole race.
49. And from the visible creation, we clearly discern that His invisible things
also, 'being perceived by the things that are made(3),' are not independent of
each other; for it was not first one and then another, but all at once were
constituted after their kind. For the Apostle did not number individually, so as
to say 'whether Angel, or Throne, or Dominion, or Authority,' but he mentions
together all according to their kind, 'whether Angels, or Archangels, or
Principalities(4):' for in this way is the origination of the creatures. If
then, as I have said, the Word were creature He must have been brought into
being, not first of them, but with all the other Powers, though in glory He
excel the rest ever so much. For so we find it to be in their case, that at once
they came to be, with neither first nor second, and they differ from each other
in glory, some on the right of the throne, some all around, and some on the
left, but one and all praising and standing in service before the Lords.
Therefore if the Word be creature He would not be first or beginning of the rest
yet if He be before all, as indeed He is, and is Himself alone First and Son, it
does not follow that He is beginning of all things as to His Essence(6), for
what is the beginning of all is in the number of all. And if He is not such a
beginning, then neither is He a creature, but it is very plain that He differs
in essence and nature from the creatures, and is other than they, and is
Likeness and Image of the sole and true God, being Himself sole also. Hence He
is not classed with creatures in Scripture, but David rebukes those who dare
even to think of Him as such, saying, 'Who among the gods is like unto the
Lord(7)?' and 'Who is like unto the Lord among the sons of God?' and Baruch,
'This is our God, and another shall not be reckoned wills Him(8).' For the One
creates, and the rest are created; and the One is the own Word and Wisdom of the
Father's Essence, and through this Word things which came to be, which before
existed not, were made.
50. Your famous assertion then, that the Son is a creature, is not true, but is
your fantasy only; nay Solomon convicts you of having many times slandered him.
For he has not called Him creature, but God's Offspring and Wisdom, saying, 'God
in Wisdom established the earth,' and 'Wisdom built her an house(1).' And the
very passage in question proves your irreligious spirit; for it is written, 'The
Lord created me a beginning of His ways for His works.' Therefore if He is
before all things, yet says 'He created me' (not 'that I might make the works,'
but) 'for the works,' unless 'He created' relates to something later than
Himself, He will seem later than the works, finding them on His creation already
in existence before Him, for the sake of which He is also brought into being.
And if so, how is He before all things notwithstanding? and how were all things
made through Him and consist in Him? for behold, you say that the works
consisted before Him, for which He is created and sent. But it is not so; perish
the thought! false is the supposition of the heretics. For the Word of God is
not creature but Creator; and says in the manner of proverbs, 'He created me'
when He put on created flesh. And something besides may be understood from the
passage itself; for, being Son and having God for His Father, for He is His
proper Offspring, yet here He names the Father Lord; not that He was servant,
but because He took the servant's form. For it became Him, on the one hand being
the Word from the Father, to call God Father: for this is proper to son towards
father; on the other, having come to finish the work, and taken a servant's
form, to name the Father Lord. And this difference He Himself has taught by an
apt distinction, saying in the Gospels, 'I thank Thee, O Father,' and then,
'Lord of heaven and earth(2).' For He calls God His Father, but of the creatures
He names Him Lord; as shewing clearly from these words, that, when He put on the
creature(3), then it was He called the Father Lord. For in the prayer of David
the Holy. Spirit marks the same distinction, saying in the Psalms, 'Give Thy
strength unto Thy Child, and help the Son of Thine handmaid(4).' For the natural
and true child of God is one, and the sons of the handmaid, that is, of the
nature of things originate, are other. Wherefore the One, as Son, has the
Father's might; but the rest are in need of salvation.
51. (But if, because He was called child, they idly talk, let them know that
both Isaac was named Abraham's child, and the son of the Shunamite was called
young child.) Reasonably then, we being servants, when He became as we, He too
calls the Father Lord, as we do; and this He has so done from love to man, that
we too, being servants by nature, and receiving the Spirit of the Son, might
have confidence to call Him by grace Father, who is by nature our Lord. But as
we, in calling the Lord Father, do not deny our servitude by nature (for we are
His works, and it is 'He that hath made us, and not we ourselves(1)'), so when
the Son, on taking the servant's form, says, 'The Lord created me a beginning of
His ways,' let them not deny the eternity of His Godhead, and that 'in the
beginning was the Word,' and 'all things were made by Him,' and 'in Him all
things were created(2).'
CHAPTER XX.
TEXTS EXPLAINED; SIXTHLY, PROVERBS viii. 22 CONTINUED.
Our Lord is said to be created 'for the works,' i.e. with a particular purpose,
which no mere creatures are ever said to be. Parallel of Isai. xlix. 5, &c. When
His manhood is spoken of, a reason for it is added; not so when His Divine
Nature; Texts in proof.
51 (continued). FOR the passage in the Proverbs, as I have said before,
signifies, not the Essence, but the manhood of the Word; for if He says that He
was created 'for the works,' He shews His intention of signifying, not His
Essence, but the Economy which took place 'for His works,' which comes second to
being. For things which are in formation and creation are made specially that
they may be and exist(3), and next they have to do whatever the Word bids them,
as may be seen in the case of all things. For Adam was created, not that He
might work, but that first he might be man; for it was after this that he
received the command to work. And Noah was created, not because of the ark, but
that first he might exist and be a man; for after this he received commandment
to prepare the ark. And the like will be found in every case on inquiring into
it; -- thus the great Moses first was made a man, and next was entrusted with
the government of the people. Therefore here too we must suppose the like; for
thou seest, that the Word is not created into existence, but, 'In the beginning
was the Word,' and He is afterwards sent 'for the works" and the Economy towards
them. For before the works were made, the Son was ever, nor was there yet need
that He should be created; but when the works were created and need arose
afterwards of the Economy for their restoration, then it was that the Word took
upon Himself this condescension and assimilation to the works; which He has
shewn us by the word 'He created.' And through the Prophet Isaiah willing to
signify the like, He says again: 'And now thus saith the Lord, who formed me
from the womb to be His servant, to gather together Jacob unto Him and Israel, I
shall be brought together and be glorified before the Lord(4).'
52. See here too, He is formed, not into existence, but in order to gather
together the tribes, which were in existence before He was formed. For as in the
former passage stands 'He created,' so in this 'He formed;' and as there 'for
the works,' so here 'to gather together;' so that in every point of view it
appears that 'He created' and 'He formed' are said after 'the Word was.' For as
before His forming the tribes existed, for whose sake He was formed, so does it
appear that the works exist, for which He was created. And when 'in the
beginning was the Word,' not yet were the works, as I have said before; but when
the works were made and the need required, then 'He created' was said; and as if
some son, when the servants were lost, and in the hands of the enemy by their
own carelessness, and need was urgent, were sent by his father to succour and
recover them, and on setting out were to put over him the like dress(1) with
them, and should fashion himself as they, test the capturers, recognising him(2)
as the master, should take to flight and prevent his descending to those who
were hidden under the earth by them; and then were any one to inquire of him,
why he did so, were to make answer, 'My Father thus formed and prepared me for
his works,' while in thus speaking, he neither implies that he is a servant nor
one of the works, nor speaks of the beginning of His origination, but of the
subsequent charge given him over the works,--in the same way the Lord also,
having put over Him our flesh, and 'being found in fashion as a man, if He were
questioned by those who saw Him thus and marvelled, would say, 'The Lord created
Me the beginning of His ways for His works,' and 'He formed Me to gather
together Israel.' This again the Spirit(3) foretells in the Psalms, saying,
'Thou didst set Him over the works of Thine hands(4);' which elsewhere the Lord
signified of Himself, 'I am set as King by Him upon His holy hill of Sion(5).'
And as, when He shone(6) in the body upon Sion, He had not His beginning of
existence or of reign, but being God's Word and everlasting King, He vouchsafed
that His kingdom should shine in a human way in Sion, that redeeming them and us
from the sin which reigned in them, He might bring them under His Father's
Kingdom, so, on being set 'for the works,' He is not set for things which did
not yet exist, but for such as already were and needed restoration.
53. 'He created' then and 'He formed' and 'He set,' having the same meaning, do
not denote the beginning of His being, or of His essence as created, but His
beneficent renovation which came to pass for us. Accordingly, though He thus
speaks, yet He taught also that He Himself existed before this, when He said,
'Before Abraham came to be, I am(1);' and 'when He prepared the heavens, I was
present with Him;' and 'I was with Him disposing things(2).' And as He Himself
was before Abraham came to be, and Israel had come into being after Abraham, and
plainly He exists first and is formed afterwards, and His forming signifies not
His beginning of being but His taking manhood, wherein also He collects together
the tribes of Israel; so, as 'being always with the Father,' He Himself is
Framer of the creation, and His works are evidently later than Himself, and 'He
created' signifies, not His beginning of being, but the Economy which took place
for the works, which He effected in the flesh. For it became Him, being other
than the works, nay rather their Framer, to take upon Himself their
renovation(3), that, whereas He is created for us, all things may be now created
in Him. For when He said 'He created,' He forthwith added the reason, naming
'the works,' that His creation for the works might signify His becoming man for
their renovation. And this is usual with divine Scripture(4); for when it
signifies the fleshly origination of the Son, it adds also the cause(5) for
which He became man; but when he speaks or His servants declare anything of His
Godhead, all is said in simple diction, and with an absolute sense, and without
reason being added. For He is the Father's Radiance; and as the Father is, but
not for any reason, neither must we seek the reason of that Radiance. Thus it is
written, 'In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word
was God(6);' and the wherefore it assigns not(7); but when 'the Word was made
flesh(8),' then it adds the reason why, saying, 'And dwelt among us.' And again
the Apostle saying, 'Who being in the form of Gods' has not introduced the
reason, till 'He took on Him the form of a servant;' for then he continues, 'He
humbled Himself unto death, even the death of the cross(9);' for it was for this
that He both became flesh and took the form of a servant.
54. And the Lord Himself has spoken many things in proverbs; but when giving us
notices about Himself, He has spoken absolutely(1); 'I in the Father and the
Father in Me,' and 'I and the Father are one,' and, 'He that hath seen Me, hath
seen the Father, and I am the Light of the world,' and, 'I am the Truth(2);' not
setting down in every case the reason, nor the wherefore, lest He should seem
second to those things for which He was made. For that reason would needs take
precedence of Him, without which not even He Himself had come into being. Paul,
for instance, 'separated an Apostle for the Gospel, which the Lord had promised
afore by the Prophets(3),' was thereby made subordinate to the Gospel, of which
he was made minister, and John, being chosen to prepare the Lord's way, was made
subordinate to the Lord; but the Lord, not being made subordinate to any reason
why He should be Word, save only that He is the Father's Offspring and
Only-begotten Wisdom, when He becomes man, then assigns the reason why He is
about to take flesh. For the need of man preceded His becoming man, apart from
which He had not put on flesh(4). And what the need was for which He became man,
He Himself thus signifies, 'I came down from heaven, not to do Mine own will,
but the will of Him that sent Me. And this is the will of Him which hath sent
Me, that of all which He hath given Me, I should lose nothing, but should raise
it up again at the last day. And this is the will of My Father, that every one
which seeth the Son and believeth on Him may have everlasting life, and I will
raise him up at the last day(5).' And again; 'I am come a light into the world,
that whosoever believeth on Me, should not abide in darkness(6).' And again he
says; 'To this end was I born, and for this cause came I into the world, that I
should bear witness unto the truth(7).' And John has written: 'For this was
manifested the Son of God, that He might destroy the works of the devil(8).'
55. To give a witness then, and for our sakes to undergo death, to raise man up
and destroy the works of the devil(1), the Saviour came, and this is the reason
of His incarnate presence. For otherwise a resurrection had not been, unless
there had been death; and how had death been, unless He had had a mortal body?
This the Apostle, learning from Him, thus sets forth, 'Forasmuch then as the
children are partakers of flesh and blood, He also Himself likewise took part of
the same; that through death He might bring to nought him that had the power of
death, that is, the devil, and deliver them who through fear of death were all
their lifetime subject to bondage(2).' And, 'Since by man came death, by man
came also the resurrection of the dead(3).' And again, 'For what the Law could
not do, in that it was weak through the flesh, God, sending His own Son in the
likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the flesh; that the
ordinance of the Law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh but
after the Spirit(4).' And John says, 'For God sent not His Son into the world to
condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved(5).' And again,
the Saviour has spoken in His own person, 'For judgment am I come into this
world, that they who see not might see, and that they which see might become
blind(6).' Not for Himself then, but for our salvation, and to abolish death,
and to condemn sin, and to give sight to the blind, and to raise up all from the
dead, has He come; but if not for Himself, but for us, by consequence not for
Himself but for us is He created. But if not for Himself is He created, but for
us, then He is not Himself a creature, but, as having put on our flesh, He uses
such language. And that this is the sense of the Scriptures, we may learn from
the Apostle, who says in Ephesians, 'Having broken down the middle wall of
partition between us, having abolished in His flesh the enmity, even the law of
commandments contained in ordinances, to create in Himself of twain one new man,
so making peace(7).' But if in Him the twain are created, and these are in His
body, reasonably then, bearing the twain in Himself, He is as if Himself
created; for those who were created in Himself He made one, and He was in them,
as they. And thus, the two being created in Him, He may say suitably, 'The Lord
created me.' For as by receiving our infirmities, He is said to be infirm
Himself, though not Himself infirm, for He is the Power of God, and He became
sin for us and a curse, though not having sinned Himself, but because He Himself
bare our sins and our curse, so(8), by creating us in Him, let Him say, He
created me for the works,' though not Himself a creature.
56. For if, as they hold, the Essence of the Word being of created nature,
therefore He says, 'The Lord created me,' being a creature, He was not created
for us; but if He was not created for us, we are not created in Him; and, if not
created in Him, we have Him not in ourselves but externally; as, for instance,
as receiving instruction from Him as from a teacher(1). And it being so with us,
sin has not lost its reign over the flesh, being inherent and not cast out of
it. But the Apostle opposes such a doctrine a little before, when he says, 'For
we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus(2);' and if in Christ we are
created, then it is not He who is created, but we in Him; and thus the words 'He
created' are for our sake. For because of our need, the Word, though being
Creator, endured words which are used of creatures; which are not proper to Him,
as being the Word, but are ours who are created in Him. And as, since the Father
is always, so is His Word, and always being, always says 'I was daily His
delight, rejoicing always before Him(3),' and 'I am in the Father and the Father
in Me(4);' so, when for our need He became man, consistently does He use
language, as ourselves, The Lord hath created Me,' that, by His dwelling in the
flesh, sin might perfectly be expelled from the flesh, and we might have a free
mind(5). For what ought He, when made man, to say? 'In the beginning 1 was man?'
this were neither suitable to Him nor true; and as it beseemed not to say this,
so it is natural and proper in the case of man to say, 'He created' and 'He
made' Him. On this account then the reason of 'He created' is added, namely, the
need of the works; and where the reason is added, surely the reason rightly
explains the lection. Thus here, when He says 'He created,' He sets down the
cause, 'the works;' on the other hand, when He signifies absolutely the
generation from the Father, straightway He adds, 'Before all the hills He begets
me(6);' but He does not add the 'wherefore,' as in the case of 'He created,'
saying, 'for the works,' but absolutely, 'He begets me,' as in the text, 'In the
beginning was the Word(7).' For, though no works had been created, still 'the
Word' of God 'was,' and 'the Word was God.' And His becoming man would not have
taken place, had not the need of men become a cause. The Son then is not a
creature.
CHAPTER XXI.
TEXTS EXPLAINED; SIXTHLY, PROVERBS viii. 22, CONTINUED.
Our Lord not said in Scripture to be 'created,' or the works to be 'begotten.'
'In the beginning' means in the case of the works 'from the beginning.'
Scripture passages explained. We are made by God first, begotten next; creatures
by nature, sons by grace. Christ begotten first, made or created afterwards.
Sense of 'First-born of the dead;' of 'First-born among many brethren;' of
'First-born of all creation,' contrasted with 'Only-begotten.' Further
interpretation of 'beginning of ways,' and 'for the works.' Why a creature could
not redeem; why redemption was necessary at all. Texts which contrast the Word
and the works.
57. FOR had He been a creature, He had not said, 'He begets me,' for the
creatures are from without, and are works of the Maker; but the Offspring is not
from without nor a work, but from the Father, and proper to His Essence.
Wherefore they are creatures; this God's Word and Only-begotten Son. For
instance, Moses did not say of the creation, 'In the beginning He begat,' nor
'In the beginning was,' but 'In the beginning God created the heaven and the
earth(1).' Nor did David say in the Psalm, 'Thy hands have "begotten me,"' but
'made me and fashioned me(2),' everywhere applying the word 'made' to the
creatures. But to the Son contrariwise; for he has not said 'I made,' but 'I
begat(3),' and 'He begets me,' and 'My heart uttered a good Word(4).' And in the
instance of the creation, 'In the beginning He made;' but in the instance of the
Son, 'In the beginning was the Word(5).' And there is this difference, that the
creatures are made upon the beginning, and have a beginning of existence
connected with an interval; wherefore also what is said of them, 'In the
beginning He made,' is as much as saying of them, 'From the beginning He
made:'--as the Lord, knowing that which He had made, taught, when He silenced
the Pharisees, with the words, 'He which made them from the beginning, made them
male and female(6);' for from some beginning, when they were not yet, were
originate things brought into being and created. This too the Holy Spirit has
signified in the Psalms, saying, 'Thou, Lord, at the beginning hast laid the
foundation of the earth(7);' and again, 'O think upon Thy congregation which
Thou hast purchased from the beginning(8);' now it is plain that what takes
place at the beginning, has a beginning of creation, and that from some
beginning God purchased His congregation. And that In the beginning He made,'
from his saying made,' means 'began to make,' Moses himself shews by saying,
after the completion of all things, 'And God blessed the seventh day and
sanctified it, because that in it He had rested from all His work which God
began to make(9).' Therefore the creatures began to be made; but the Word of
God, not having beginning of being, certainly did not begin to be, nor begin to
come to be, but was ever. And the works have their beginning in their making,
and their beginning precedes their coming to be; but the Word, not being of
things which come to be, rather comes to be Himself the Framer of those which
have a beginning. And the being of things originate is measured by their
becoming(10), and from some beginning does God begin to make them through the
Word, that it may be known that they were not before their origination; but the
Word has His being, in no other beginning(11) than the Father, whom(12) they
allow to be without beginning, so that He too exists without beginning m the
Father, being His Offspring, not His creature.
58. Thus does divine Scripture recognise the difference between the Offspring
and things made, and shew that the Offspring is a Son, not begun from any
beginning, but eternal; but that the thing made, as an external work of the
Maker, began to come into being. John therefore delivering divine doctrine(1)
about the Son, and knowing the difference of the phrases, said not, 'In the
beginning has become' or 'been made,' but 'In the beginning was the Word;' that
we might understand 'Offspring' by 'was,' and not account of Him by intervals,
but believe the Son always and eternally to exist. And with these proofs, how, O
Arians, misunderstanding the passage in Deuteronomy, did you venture a fresh act
of irreligion(2) against the Lord, saying that 'He is a work,' or 'creature,' or
indeed 'offspring?' for offspring and work you take to mean the same thing; but
here too you shall be shewn to be as unlearned as you are irreligious. Your
first passage is this, 'Is not He thy Father that bought thee? did He not make
thee and create thee(3)? And shortly after in the same Song he says, 'God that
begat thee thou didst desert, and forgattest God that nourished thee(4).' Now
the meaning conveyed in these passages is very remarkable; for he says not first
'He begat,' lest that term should be taken as indiscriminate with 'He made,' and
these men should have a pretence for saying, 'Moses tells us indeed that God
said from the beginning, "Let Us make man(5)," but he soon after says himself,
'God that begat thee thou didst desert,' as if the terms were indifferent; for
offspring and work are the same. But after the words 'bought' and 'made,' he has
added last of all 'begat,' that the sentence might carry its own interpretation;
for in the word 'made' he accurately denotes what belongs to men by nature, to
be works and things made; but in the word 'begat' he shews God's lovingkindness
exercised towards men after He had created them. And since they have proved
ungrateful upon this, thereupon Moses reproaches them, saying first, 'Do ye thus
requite the Lord?' and then adds, 'Is not He thy Father that bought thee? Did He
not make thee and create thee(6)?' And next he says, 'They sacrificed unto
devils, not to God, to gods whom they knew not. New gods and strange came up,
whom your fathers knew not; the God that begat thee thou didst desert (7). '
59. For God not only created them to be men, but called them to be sons, as
having begotten them. For the term 'begat' is here as elsewhere expressive of a
Son, as He says by the Prophet, 'I begat sons and exalted them;' and generally,
when Scripture wishes to signify a son, it does so, not by the term 'created,'
but undoubtedly by that of 'begat.' And this John seems to say, 'He gave to them
power to become children of God, even to them that believe on His Name; which
were begotten not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of
man, but of God(1).' And here too the cautious distinction(2) is well kept up,
for first he says 'become,' because they are not called sons by nature but by
adoption; then he says 'were begotten,' because they too had received at any
rate the name of son. But the People, as says the Prophet, 'despised' their
Benefactor. But this is God's kindness to man, that of whom He is Maker, of them
according to grace He afterwards becomes Father also; becomes, that is, when
men, His creatures, receive into their hearts, as the Apostle says, 'the Spirit
of His Son, crying, Abba, Father(3).' And these are they who, having received
the Word, gained power from Him to become sons of God; for they could not become
sons, being by nature creatures, otherwise than by receiving the Spirit of the
natural and true Son. Wherefore, that this might be, 'The Word became flesh,'
that He might make man capable of Godhead. This same meaning may be gained also
from the Prophet Malachi, who says, 'Hath not One God created us? Have we not
all one Father(4)?' for first he puts 'created,' next 'Father,' to shew, as the
other writers, that from the beginning we were creatures by nature, and God is
our Creator through the Word; but afterwards we were made sons, and
thenceforward God the Creator becomes our Father also. Therefore 'Father' is
proper to the Son; and not 'creature,' but 'Son' is proper to the Father.
Accordingly this passage also proves, that we are not sons by nature, but the
Son who is in us(5); and again, that God is not our Father by nature, but of
that Word in us, in whom and because of whom we 'cry, Abba, Father(6).' And so
in like manner, the Father calls them sons in whomsoever He sees His own Son,
and says, 'I begat;' since begetting is significant of a Son, and making is
indicative of the works. And thus it is that we are not begotten first, but
made; for it is written, 'Let Us make man(7);' but afterwards, on receiving the
grace of the Spirit, we are said thenceforth to be begotten also; just as the
great Moses in his Song with an apposite meaning says first 'He bought,' and
afterwards 'He begat;' lest, hearing 'He begat,' they might forget their own
original nature; but that they might know that from the beginning they are
creatures, but when according to grace they are said to be begotten, as sons,
still no less than before are men works according to nature.
60. And that creature and offspring are not the same, but differ from each other
in nature and the signification of the words, the Lord Himself shews even in the
Proverbs. For having said, 'The Lord treated me a beginning of His ways;' He has
added, 'But before all the hills He begat me.' If then the Word were by nature
and in His Essence(1) a creature, and there were no difference between offspring
and creature, He would not have added, 'He begat me,' but had been satisfied
with 'He created,' as if that term implied the begat;' but, as it is, after
saying, 'He created me a beginning of His ways for His works,' He has added, not
simply 'begat me,' but with the connection of the conjunction 'But,' as guarding
thereby the term 'created,' when he says, 'But before all the hills He begat
me.' For 'begat me' succeeding in such close connection to 'created me,' makes
the meaning one, and shews that 'created' is said with an object(2), but that
'begat me' is prior to 'treated me.' For as, if He had said the reverse, 'The
Lord begat me,' and went on, 'But before the hills He created me,' 'created'
would certainly precede 'begat,' so having said first 'created,' and then added
'But before all the hills He begat me,' He necessarily shews that 'begat
preceded 'created.' For in saying, 'Before all lie begat me,' He intimates that
He is other than all things; it having been shewn to be trues in an earlier part
of this book, that no one creature was made before another, but all things
originate subsisted at once together upon one and the same command(4). Therefore
neither do the words which follow 'created,' also follow 'begat me;' but in the
case of 'created' is added 'beginning of ways,' but of 'begat me,' He says not,
'He begat me as a beginning,' but 'before all He begat me.' But He who is before
all is not a beginning of all, but is other than all(5); but if other than all
(in which 'all' the beginning of all is included), it follows that He is other
than the creatures; and it becomes a clear point, that the Word, being other
than all things and before all, afterwards is created 'a beginning of the ways
for works,' because He became man, that, as the Apostle has said, He who is the
'Beginning' and 'First-born from the dead, in all things might have the
preeminence(6).'
61. Such then being the difference between 'created' and 'begat me,' and between
'beginning of ways' and 'before all,' God, being first Creator, next, as has
been said, becomes Father of men, because of His Word dwelling in them. But in
the case of the Word the reverse; for God, being His Father by nature, becomes
afterwards both His Creator and Maker, when the Word puts on that flesh which
was created and made, and becomes man. For, as men, receiving the Spirit of the
Son, become children through Him, so the Word of God, when He Himself puts on
the flesh of man, then is said both to be created and to have been made. If then
we are by nature sons, then is He by nature creature and work; but if we become
sons by adoption and grace, then has the Word also, when in grace towards us He
became man, said, 'The Lord created me.' And in the next place, when He put on a
created nature and became like us in body, reasonably was He therefore called
both our Brother and 'First-born(1).' For though it was after us(2) that He was
made man for us, and our brother by similitude of body, still He is therefore
called and is the 'First-born' of us, because, all men being lost, according to
the transgression of Adam, His flesh before all others was saved and liberated,
as being the Word's body(3); and henceforth we, becoming incorporate with It,
are saved after Its pattern. For in It the Lord becomes our guide to the Kingdom
of Heaven and to His own Father, saying, 'I am the way' and 'the door(4),' and
through Me all must enter.' Whence also is He said to be 'First-born from the
dead(5),' not that He died before us, for we had died first; but because having
undergone death for us and abolished it, He was the first to rise, as man, for
our sakes raising His own Body. Henceforth He having risen, we too from Him and
because of Him rise in due course from the dead.
62. But if He is also called 'First-born of the creation(1),' still this is not
as if He were levelled to the creatures, and only first of them in point of time
(for how should that be, since He is 'Only-begotten?'), but it is because of the
Word's condescension(2) to the creatures, according to which He has become the
'Brother' of 'many.' For the term 'Only-begotten' is used where there are no
brethren, but 'First-born(3)' because of brethren. Accordingly it is nowhere
written in the Scriptures, 'the first-born of God,' nor 'the creature of God;'
but 'Only-begotten' and 'Son' and 'Word' and 'Wisdom,' refer to Him as proper to
the Father(4). Thus, 'We have seen His glory, the glory as of the Only-be-gotten
of the Father(5);' and 'God sent His Only-begotten Son(6);' and 'O Lord, Thy
Word endureth for ever(7);' and 'In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was
with God;' and 'Christ the Power of God and the Wisdom of God(8);' and 'This is
My beloved Son;' and 'Thou art the Christ, the Son of the Living God(9).' But '
first-born' implied the descent to the creation(10); for of it has He been
called first-born; and 'He created' implies His grace towards the works, for for
them is He created. If then He is Only-begotten, as indeed He is, 'First-born'
needs some explanation; but if He be really First-born, then He is not
Only-begotten(10). For the same cannot be both Only-begotten and First-born,
except in different relations; -that is, Only-begotten, because of His
generation from the Father, as has been said; and First-born, because of His
condescension to the creation and His making the many His brethren. Certainly,
those two terms being inconsistent with each other, one should say that the
attribute of being Only-begot-ten has justly the preference in the instance of
the Word, in that there is no other Word, or other Wisdom, but He alone is very
Son of the Father. Moreover(11), as was before(12) said, not in connection with
any reason, but absolutely(13) it is said of Him, 'The Only-begotten Son which
is in the bosom of the Father(14);' but the word 'First-born' has again the
creation as a reason in connection with it, which Paul proceeds to say, 'for in
Him all things were created(15).' But if all the creatures were created in Him,
He is other than the creatures, and is not a creature, but the Creator of the
creatures.
63. Not then because He was from the Father was He called 'First-born,' but
because in Him the creation came to be; and as before the creation He was the
Son, through whom was the creation, so also before He was called the First-born
of the whole creation, not the less was the Word Himself with God and the Word
was God. But this also not understanding, these irreligious men go about saying,
'If He is First-born of all creation, it is plain that He too is one of the
creation.' Senseless men! if He is simply 'First-born(1) of the whole creation,'
then He is other than the whole creation; for he says not, 'He is First-born
above the rest of the creatures,' lest He be reckoned to be as one of the
creatures, but it is written, 'of the whole creation,' that He may appear other
than the creation(2). Reuben, for instance, is not said to be first-born of all
the children of Jacob(3), but of Jacob himself and his brethren; lest he should
be thought to be some other beside the children of Jacob. Nay, even concerning
the Lord Himself the Apostle says not, 'that He may become First-born of all,'
lest He be thought to bear a body other than ours, but 'among many brethren(4),'
because of the likeness of the flesh. If then the Word also were one of the
creatures, Scripture would have said of Him also that He was First-born of other
creatures; but in fact, the saints saying that He is 'First-born of the whole
creation(5),' the Son of God is plainly shewn to be other than the whole
creation and not a creature. For if He is a creature, He will be First-born of
Himself. How then is it possible, O Arians, for Him to be before and after
Himself? next, if He is a creature, and the whole creation through Him came to
be, and in Him consists, how can He both create the creation and be one of the
things which consist in Him? Since then such a notion is in itself unseemly, it
is proved against them by the truth, that He is called 'First-born among many
brethren' because of the relationship of the flesh, and 'First-born from the
dead,' because the resurrection of the dead is from Him and after Him; and
'First-born of the whole creation,' because of the Father's love to man, which
brought it to pass that in His Word not, only 'all things consist(6),' but the
creation itself, of which the Apostle speaks, 'waiting for the manifestation of
the sons of God, shall be delivered' one time 'from the bondage of corruption
into the glorious liberty of the children of God(7).' Of this creation thus
delivered, the Lord will be First-born, both of it and of all those who are made
children, that by His being called first, those that come after Him may
abide(8), as depending on the Word as a beginning(9).
64. And I think that the irreligious men themselves will be shamed from such a
thought; for if the case stands not as we have said, but they will rule it that
He is 'First-born of the whole creation' as in essence--a creature among
creatures, let them reflect that they will be conceiving Him as brother and
fellow of the things without reason and life. For of the whole creation these
also are parts; and the 'First-born' must be first indeed in point of time but
only thus, and in kind and similitude(1) must be the same with all. How then can
they say this without exceeding all measures of irreligion? or who will endure
them, if this is their language? or who can but hate them even imagining such
things? For it is evident to all, that neither for Himself, as being a creature,
nor as having any connection according to essence with the whole creation, has
He been called 'First-born' of it: but because the Word, when at the beginning
He framed the creatures, condescended to things originate, that it might be
possible for them to come to be. For they could not have endured His nature,
which was untempered splendour, even that of the Father, unless condescending by
the Father's love for man He had supported them and taken hold of them and
brought them into existence(2); and next, because, by this condescension of the
Word, the creation too is made a sons through Him, that He might be in all
respects 'First-born' of it, as has been said, both in creating, and also in
being brought for the sake of all into this very world. For so it is written,
'When He bringeth the First-born into the world, He saith, Let all the Angels of
God worship Him(4).' Let Christ's enemies hear and tear themselves to pieces,
because His coming into the world is what makes Him called 'First-born' of all;
and thus the Son is the Father's 'Only-begotten,' because He alone is from Him,
and He is the 'First-born of creations,' because of this adoption of all as
sons(5). And as He is First-born among brethren and rose from the dead 'the
first fruits of them that slept(6);' so, since it became Him 'in all things to
have the preeminence(7),' therefore He is created 'a beginning of ways,' that
we, walking along it and entering through Him who says, 'I am the Way' and 'the
Door,' and partaking of the knowledge of the Father, may also hear the words,
'Blessed are the undefiled in the Way,' and 'Blessed are the pure in heart, for
they shall see God(8).'
65. And thus since the truth declares that the Word is not by nature a creature,
it is fitting now to say, in what sense He is 'beginning of ways.' For when the
first way, which was through Adam, was lost, and in place of paradise we
deviated unto death, and heard the words, 'Dust thou art, and unto dust(1) shall
thou return,' therefore the Word of God, who loves man, puts on Him created
flesh at the Father's will(2), that whereas the first man had made it dead
through the transgression, He Himself might quicken it in the blood of His own
body(3), and might open 'for us a way new and living,' as the Apostle says,
'through the veil, that is to say, His flesh(4);' which he signifies elsewhere
thus, 'Wherefore, if any man be in Christ, he is a new creation; old things are
passed away, behold all things are become new(5).' But if a new creation has
come to pass, some one must be first of this creation; now a man, made of earth
only, such as we are become from the transgression, he could not be. For in the
first creation, men had become unfaithful, and through them that first creation
had been lost; and there was need of some one else to renew the first creation,
and preserve the new which had come to be. Therefore from love to man none other
than the Lord, the 'beginning' of the new creation, is created as 'the Way,' and
consistently says,' The Lord created me a beginning of ways for His works;' that
man might walk no longer according to that first creation, but there being as it
were a beginning of a new creation, and with the Christ 'a beginning of its
ways,' we might follow Him henceforth, who says to us,' I am the Way:'--as the
blessed Apostle teaches in Colossians, saying, 'He is the Head of the body, the
Church, who is the Beginning, the First-born from the dead, that in all things
He might have the preeminence.'
66. For if, as has been said, because of the resurrection from the dead He is
called a beginning, and then a resurrection took place when He, bearing our
flesh, had given Himself to death for us, it is evident that His words, 'He
created me a beginning of ways,' is indicative not of His essence(6), but of His
bodily presence. For to the body death was proper(7); and in like manner to the
bodily presence are the words proper, 'The Lord created me a beginning of His
ways.' For since the Saviour was thus created according to the flesh, and had
become a beginning of things new created, and had our first fruits, viz. that
human flesh which He took to Himself, therefore after Him, as is fit, is created
also the people to come, David saying, 'Let this be written for another
generation, and the people that shall be created shall praise the Lord(2).' And
again in the twenty-first Psalm, 'The generation to come shall declare unto the
Lord, and they shall declare His righteousness, unto a people that shall be born
whom the Lord made(3).' For we shall no more hear, 'In the day that thou eatest
thereof, thou shalt surely die but 'Where I am, there ye' shall 'be also;' so
that we may say, 'We are His workmanship, created unto good works(5).' And
again, since God's work, that is, man, though created perfect, has become
wanting through the transgression, and dead by sin, and it was unbecoming that
the work of God should remain imperfect (wherefore all the saints were praying
concerning this, for instance in the hundred and thirty-seventh Psalm, saying,
'Lord, Thou shall requite for me; despise not then the works of Thine hands(6));
therefore the perfect(7) Word of God puts around Him an imperfect body, and is
said to be created 'for the works;' that, paying the debts in our stead, He
might, by Himself, perfect. what was wanting to man. Now immortality was wanting
to him, and the way to paradise. This then is what the Saviour says, 'I
glorified Thee on the earth, I perfected the work which Thou hast given Me to
do(9);' and again, 'The works which the Father hath given Me to perfect, the
same works that I do, bear witness of Me;' but 'the works(10)' He here says that
the Father had given Him to perfect, are those for which He is created, saying
in the Proverbs, 'The Lord created me a beginning of His ways, for His works;'
for it is all one to say, 'The Father hath given me the works,' and 'The Lord
created me for the works.'
67. When then received He the works to perfect, O God's enemies? for from this
also 'He created' will be understood. If ye say, 'At the beginning when He
brought them into being out of what was not,' it is an untruth; for they were
not yet made; whereas He appears to speak as taking what was already in being.
Nor is it pious to refer to the time which preceded the Word's becoming flesh,
lest His coming should thereupon seem superfluous, since for the sake of these
works that coming took place. Therefore it remains for us to say that when He
has become man, then He took the works. For then He perfected them, by healing
our wounds and vouchsafing to us the resurrection from the dead. But if, when
the Word became flesh, then were given to Him the works, plainly when He became
man, then also is He created for the works. Not of His essence then is 'He
created' indicative, as has many times been said, but of His bodily generation.
For then, because the works were become imperfect and mutilated from the
transgression, He is said in respect to the body to be created; that by
perfecting them and making them whole, He might present the Church unto the
Father, as the Apostle says, 'not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing, but
holy and without blemish(1).' Mankind then is perfected in Him and restored, as
it was made at the beginning, nay, with greater grace. For, on rising from the
dead, we shall no longer fear death, but shall ever reign in Christ in the
heavens. And this has been done, since the own Word of God Himself, who is from
the Father, has put on the flesh, and become man. For if, being a creature, He
had become man, man had remained just what he was, not joined to God; for how
had a work been joined to the Creator by a work(2)? or what succour had come
from like to like, when one as well as other needed it(3)? And how, were the
Word a creature, had He power to undo God's sentence, and to remit sin, whereas
it is written in the Prophets, that this is God's doing? For 'who is a God like
unto Thee, that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth by transgression (4)?' For
whereas God has said, 'Dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return(5),' men
have become mortal; how then could things originate undo sin? but the Lord is He
who has undone it, as He says Himself, 'Unless the Son shall make you free(6);'
and the Son, who made free, has shewn in truth that He is no creature, nor one
of things originate, but the proper Word and Image of the Father's Essence, who
at the beginning sentenced, and alone remitteth sins. For since it is said in
the Word, 'Dust thou art, and unto dust thou shalt return,' suitably through the
Word Himself and in Him the freedom and the undoing of the condemnation has come
to pass.
68. 'Yet,' they say, 'though the Saviour were a creature, God was able to speak
the word only and undo the curse.' And so another will tell them in like manner,
'Without His coming among us at all, God was able just to speak and undo the
curse;' but we must consider what was expedient for mankind, and not what simply
is possible with God(1). He could have destroyed, before the ark of Noah, the
then transgressors; but He did it after the ark. He could too, without Moses,
have spoken the word only and have brought the people out of Egypt; but it
pro-fired to do it through Moses. And God was able without the judges to save
His people; but it was profitable for the people that for a season judges should
be raised up to them. The Saviour too might have come among us from the
beginning, or on His coming might not have been delivered to Pilate; but He came
'at the fulness of the ages(2),' and when sought for said, 'I am He(3).' For
what He does, that is profitable for men, and was not fitting in any other way;
and what is profitable and fitting, for that He provides(4). Accordingly He
came, not 'that He might be ministered unto, but that He might minister(5),' and
might work our salvation. Certainly He was able to speak the Law from heaven,
but He saw that it was expedient to men for Him to speak from Sinai; and that He
has done, that it might be possible for Moses to go up, and for them hearing the
word near them the rather to believe. Moreover, the good reason of what He did
may be seen thus; if God had but spoken, because it was in His power, and so the
curse had been undone, the power had been shewn of Him who gave the word, but
man had become such as Adam was before the transgression, having received grace
from without(6), and not having it united to the body; (for he was such when he
was placed in Paradise) nay, perhaps had become worse, because he had learned to
transgress. Such then being his condition, had he been seduced by the serpent,
there had been fresh need for God to give command and undo the curse; and thus
the need had become interminable(7), and men had remained under guilt not less
than before, as being enslaved to sin; and, ever sinning, would have ever needed
one to pardon them, and had never become free, being in themselves flesh, and
ever worsted by the Law because of the infirmity of the flesh.
69. Again, if the Son were a creature, man had remained mortal as before, not
being joined to God; for a creature had not joined creatures to God, as seeking
itself one to join it(1); nor would a portion of the creation have been the
creation's salvation, as needing salvation itself. To provide against this also,
He sends His own Son, and He becomes Son of Man, by taking created flesh; that,
since all were under sentence of death, He, being other than them all, might
Himself for all offer to death His own body; and that henceforth, as if all land
died through Him, the word of that sentence might be accomplished (for 'all
died(2)' in Christ), and all through Him might thereupon become free from sin
and from the curse which came upon it, and might truly abide(3) for ever, risen
from the dead and clothed in immortality and incorruption. For the Word being
clothed in the flesh, as has many times been explained, every bite of the
serpent began to be utterly staunched from out it; and whatever evil sprung from
the motions of the flesh, to be cut away, and with these death also was
abolished, the companion of sin, as the Lord Himself says(4), 'The prince of
this world cometh, and findeth nothing in Me;' and 'For this end was He
manifested,' as John has written, 'that He might destroy the works of the
devil(5).' And these being destroyed from the flesh, we all were thus liberated
by the kinship of the flesh, and for the future were joined, even we, to the
Word. And being joined to God, no longer do we abide upon earth; but, as He
Himself has said, where He is, there shall we be also; and henceforward we shall
fear no longer the serpent, for he was brought to nought when he was assailed by
the Saviour in the flesh, and heard Him say, 'Get thee behind Me, Satan(6),' and
thus he is cast out of paradise into the eternal fire. Nor shall we have to
watch against woman beguiling us, for 'in the resurrection they neither marry
nor are given in marriage, but are as the Angels(7);' and in Christ Jesus it
shall be 'a new creation,' and 'neither male nor female, but all and in all
Christ(8);' and where Christ is, what fear, what danger can still happen?
70. But this would not have come to pass, had the Word been a creature; for with
a creature, the devil, himself a creature, would have ever continued the battle,
and man, being between the two, had been ever in peril of death, having none in
whom and through whom he might be joined to God and delivered from all fear.
Whence the truth shews us that the Word is not of things originate, but rather
Himself their Framer. For therefore did He assume the body originate and human,
that having renewed it as its Framer, He might deify it(1) in Himself, and thus
might introduce us all into the kingdom of heaven after His likeness. For man
had not been deified if joined to a creature, or unless the Son were very God;
nor had man been brought into the Father's presence, unless He had been His
natural and true Word who had put on the body. And as we had not been delivered
from sin and the curse, unless it had been by nature human flesh, which the Word
put on (for we should have had nothing common with what was foreign), so also
the man had not been deified, unless the Word who became flesh had been by
nature from the Father and true and proper to Him. For therefore the union was
of this kind, that He might unite what is man by nature to Him who is in the
nature of the Godhead, and his salvation and deification might be sure.
Therefore let those who deny that the Son is from the Father by nature and
proper to His Essence, deny also that He took true human flesh(2) of Mary
Ever-Virgin(3); for in neither case had it been of profit to us men, whether the
Word were not true and naturally Son of God, or the flesh not true which He
assumed. But surely He took true flesh, though Valentinus rave; yea the Word was
by nature Very God, though Ariomaniacs rave(4); and in that flesh has come to
pass the beginnings of our new creation, He being created man for our sake, and
having made for us that new way, as has been said.
71. The Word then is neither creature nor work; for creature, thing made, work,
are all one; and were He creature and thing made, He would also be work.
Accordingly He has not said, 'He created Me a work,' nor 'He made Me with the
works,' lest He should appear to be in nature and essence(6) a creature; nor,
'He created Me to make works,' lest, on the other hand, according to the
perverseness of the irreligious, He should seem as an instrument(7) made for our
sake. Nor again has He declared, 'He created Me before the works,' lest, as He
really is before all, as an Offspring, so, if created also before the works, He
should give 'Offspring' and 'He created' the same meaning. But He has said with
exact discrimination(8), 'for the works;' as much as to say, 'The Father has
made Me, into flesh, that I might be man,' which again shews that He is not a
work but an offspring. For as he who comes into a house, is not part of the
house, but is other than the house, so He who is created for the works, must be
by nature other than the works. But if otherwise, as you hold, O Arians, the
Word of God be a work, by what(9) Hand and Wisdom did He Himself come into
being? for all things that came to be, came by the Hand and Wisdom of God, who
Himself says, 'My hand hath made all these things(1);' and David says in the
Psalm, 'And Thou, Lord, in the beginning hast laid the foundations of the earth,
and the heavens are the work of Thy hands(2);' and again, in the hundred and
forty-second Psalm, 'I do remember the time past, I muse upon all Thy works, yea
I exercise myself in the works of Thy hands(3).' Therefore if by the Hand of God
the works are wrought, and it is written that 'all things were made through the
Word,' and 'without Him was not made one thing(4),' and again, 'One Lord Jesus,
through whom are all things,' and 'in Him all things consist(6),' it is very
plain that the Son cannot be a work, but He is the Hand(7) of God and the
Wisdom. This knowing, the martyrs in Babylon, Ananias, Azarias, and Misael,
arraign the Arian irreligion. For when they say, 'O all ye works of the Lord,
bless ye the Lord,' they recount things in heaven, things on earth, and the
whole creation, as works; but the Son they name not. For they say not, 'Bless, O
Word, and praise, O Wisdom;' to shew that all other things are both praising and
are works; but the Word is not a work nor of those that praise, but is praised
with the Father and worshipped and confessed as God(8), being His Word and
Wisdom, and of the works the Framer. This too the Spirit has declared in the
Psalms with a most apposite distinction, 'the Word of the Lord is true, and all
His works are faithful(9);' as in another Psalm too He says, 'O Lord, how
manifold are Thy works! in Wisdom hast Thou made them all(10).'
72. But if the Word were a work, then certainly He as others had been made in
Wisdom; nor would Scripture distinguish Him from the works, nor while it named
them works, preach Him as Word and own Wisdom of God. But, as it is,
distinguishing Him from the works, He shews that Wisdom is Framer of the works,
and not a work. This distinction Paul also observes, writing to the Hebrews,
'The Word of God is quick and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword,
reaching even to the dividing of soul and spirit, joints and marrow, and a
discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart, neither is there any
creature hidden before Him, but all things are naked and open unto the eyes of
Him with whom is our account(1).' For behold he calls things originate
'creature;' but the Son he recognises as the Word of God, as if He were other
than the creatures. And again saying, 'All things are naked and open to the eyes
of Him with whom is our account,' he signifies that He is other than all of
them. For hence it is that He judges, but each of all things originate is bound
to give account to Him. And so also, when the whole creation is groaning
together with us in order to be set free from the bondage of corruption, the Son
is thereby shewn to be other than the creatures. For if He were creature, He too
would be one of those who groan, and would need one who should bring adoption
and deliverance to Himself as well as others. But if the whole creation groans
together, for the sake of freedom from the bondage of corruption, whereas the
Son is not of those that groan nor of those who need freedom, but He it is who
gives sonship and freedom to all, saying to the Jews of His time(2), 'The
servant remains not in the house for ever, but the Son remaineth for ever; if
then the Son shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed(3);' it is clearer
than the light from these considerations also, that the Word of God is not a
creature but true Son, and by nature genuine, of the Father. Concerning then
'The Lord hath created me a beginning of the ways,' this is sufficient, as I
think, though in few words, to afford matter to the learned to frame more ample
refutations of the Arian heresy.
CHAPTER XXII.
TEXTS EXPLAINED; SIXTHLY, THE CONTEXT -- PROVERBS viii. 22, viz. 22--30.
It is right to interpret this passage by the Regula Fidei. 'Founded' is used in
contrast to superstructure; and it implies, as in the case of stones in
building, previous existence. 'Before the world' signifies the divine intention
and purpose. Recurrence to Prov. viii. 22, and application of it to created
Wisdom as seen in the works. The Son reveals the Father, first by the works,
then by the Incarnation.
BUT since the heretics, reading the next verse, take a perverse view of that
also, because it is written, 'He founded me before the world(4),' namely, that
this is said of the Godhead of the Word and not of His incarnate Presence(5), it
is necessary, explaining this verse also, to shew their error.
73. It is written, 'The Lord in Wisdom rounded the earth(1);' if then by Wisdom
the earth is founded, how can He who founds be founded? nay, this too is said
after the manner of proverbs(2), and we must in like manner investigate its
sense; that we may know that, while by Wisdom the Father frames and founds the
earth to be firm and steadfast(3), Wisdom Itself is founded for us, that It may
become beginning and foundation of our new creation and renewal. Accordingly
here as before, He says not, 'Before the world He hath made me Word or Son,'
lest there should be as it were a beginning of His making. For this we must seek
before all things, whether He is Son(4), and on this point specially search the
Scriptures(5);' for this it was, when the Apostles were questioned, that Peter
answered, saying, 'Thou art the Christ, the Son of the Living God(6)., This also
the father(7) of the Arian heresy asked as one of his first questions; 'If Thou
be the Son of God(8);' for he knew that this is the truth and the sovereign
principle of our faith; and that, if He were Himself the Son, the tyranny of the
devil would have its end; but if He were a creature, He too was one of those
descended from that Adam whom he deceived, and he had no cause for anxiety. For
the same reason the Jews of the day(9) were angered, because the Lord said that
He was Son of God, and that God was His proper Father. For had He called Himself
one of the creatures, or said, 'I am a work,' they had not been startled at the
intelligence, nor thought such words blasphemy, knowing, as they did, that even
Angels had come among their fathers; but since He called Himself Son, they
perceived that such was not the note of a creature, but of Godhead and of the
Father's nature(10). The Arians then ought, even in imitation of their own
father the devil, to take some special pains(11) on this point; and if He has
said, 'He founded me to be Word or Son,' then to think as they do; but if He has
not so spoken, not to invent for themselves what is not.
74. For He says not, 'Before the world He founded me as Word or Son,' but
simply, 'He founded me,' to shew again, as I have said, that not for His own
sake(1) but for those who are built upon Him does He here also speak, after the
way of proverbs. For this knowing, the Apostle also writes, 'Other foundation
can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ; but let every man take
heed how he buildeth thereupon(2).' And it must be that the foundation should be
such as the things built on it, that they may admit of being well compacted
together. Being then the Word, He has not, as Word(3), any such as Himself, who
may be compacted with Him; for He is Only-begotten; but having become man, He
has the like of Him, those namely the likeness of whose flesh He has put on.
Therefore according to His manhood He is rounded, that we, as precious stones,
may admit of building upon Him, and may become a temple of the Holy Ghost who
dwelleth in us. And as He is a foundation, and we stones built upon Him, so
again He is a Vine and we knit to Him as branches,--not according to the Essence
of the Godhead; for this surely is impossible; but according to His manhood, for
the branches must be like the vine, since we are like Him according to the
flesh. Moreover, since the heretics have such human notions, we may suitably
confute them with human resemblances contained in the very matter they urge.
Thus He saith not, 'He made me a foundation,' lest He might seem to be made and
to have a beginning of being, and they might thence find a shameless occasion of
irreligion; but, 'He founded me.' Now what is founded is founded for the sake of
the stones which are raised upon it; it is not a random process, but a stone is
first transported from the mountain and set down in the depth of the earth. And
while a stone is in the mountain, it is not yet founded; but when need demands,
and it is transported, and laid in the depth of the earth, then forthwith if the
stone could speak, it would say, 'He now founded me, who brought me hither from
the mountain.' Therefore the Lord also did not when rounded take a beginning of
existence; for He was the Word before that; but when He put on our body, which
He severed and took from Mary, then He says 'He hath founded me;' as much as to
say, 'Me, being the Word, He hath enveloped in a body of earth.' For so He is
founded for our sakes, taking on Him what is ours(4), that we, as incorporated
and compacted and bound together in Him through the likeness of the flesh, may
attain unto a perfect man, and abide(5) immortal and incorruptible.
75. Nor let the words 'before the world' and 'before He made the earth' and
'before the mountains were settled' disturb any one; for they very well accord
with 'founded' and 'created;' for here again allusion is made to the Economy
according to the flesh. For though the grace which came to us from the Saviour
appeared, as the Apostle says, just now, and has come when He sojourned among
us; yet this grace had been prepared even before we came into being, nay, before
the foundation of the world, and the reason why is kindly and wonderful. It
beseemed not that God should counsel concerning us afterwards, lest He should
appear ignorant of our fate. The God of all then,--creating us by His own Word,
and knowing our destinies better than we, and foreseeing that, being made
'good(1),' we should in the event be transgressors of the commandment, and be
thrust out of paradise for disobedience,--being loving and kind, prepared
beforehand in His own Word, by whom also. He created us(2), the Economy of our
salvation; that though by the serpent's deceit we fell from Him, we might not
remain quite dead, but having in the Word the redemption and salvation which was
afore prepared for us, we might rise again and abide immortal, what time He
should have been created for us 'a beginning of the ways,' and He who was the
'First-born of creation' should become 'first-born' of the 'brethren,' and again
should rise 'first-fruits of the dead.' This Paul the blessed Apostle teaches in
his writings; for, as interpreting the words of the Proverbs 'before the world'
and before the earth was,' he thus speaks to Timothy(3); 'Be partaker of the
afflictions of the Gospel according to the power of God, who hath saved us and
called us with a holy calling, not according to our works, but according to His
own purpose and grace, which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world
began, but is now made manifest by the appearing of our Saviour Jesus Christ,
who hath abolished death, and brought to light life(4).' And to the Ephesians;
'Blessed be God even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us
with all spiritual blessing in heavenly places in Christ Jesus, according as He
hath chosen us in Him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy
and without blame before Him in love, having predestinated us to the adoption of
children by Jesus Christ to Himself(5).'
76. How then has He chosen us, before we came into existence, but that, as he
says himself, in Him we were represented(6) beforehand? and how at all, before
men were created, did He predestinate us unto adoption, but that the Son Himself
was 'founded before the world,' taking on Him that economy which was for our
sake? or how, as the Apostle goes on to say, have we 'an inheritance being
predestinated,' but that the Lord Himself was founded 'before the world,'
inasmuch as He had a purpose, for our sakes, to take on Him through the flesh
all that inheritance of judgment which lay against us, and we henceforth were
made sons in Him? and how did we receive it 'before the world was,' when we were
not yet in being, but afterwards in time, but that in Christ was stored the
grace which has reached us? Wherefore also in the Judgment, when every one shall
receive according to his conduct, He says, 'Come, ye blessed of My Father,
inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world(1).' How
then, or in whom, was it prepared before we came to be, save in the Lord who
'before the world' was founded for this purpose; that we, as built upon Him,
might partake, as well-compacted stones, the life and grace which is from Him?
And this took place, as naturally suggests itself to the religious mind, that,
as I said, we, rising after our brief death, may be capable of an eternal life,
of which we had not been capable(2), men as we are, formed of earth, but that
'before the world' there had been prepared for us in Christ the hope of life and
salvation. Therefore reason is there that the Word, on coming into our flesh,
and being created in it as 'a beginning of ways for His works,' is laid as a
foundation according as the Father's will(3) was in Him before the world, as has
been said, and before land was, and before the mountains were settled, and
before the fountains burst forth; that, though the earth and the mountains and
the shapes of visible nature pass away in the fulness of the present age, we on
the contrary may not grow old after their pattern, but may be able to live after
them, having the spiritual life and blessing which before these things have been
prepared for us in the Word Himself according to election. For thus we shall be
capable of a life not temporary, but ever afterwards abide(4) and live in
Christ; since even before this our life had been founded and prepared in Christ
Jesus.
77. Nor in any other way was it fitting that our life should be founded, but in
the Lord who is before the ages, and through whom the ages were brought to be;
that, since it was in Him, we too might be able to inherit that everlasting
life. For God is good; and being good always, He willed this, as knowing that
our weak nature needed the succour and salvation which is from Him. And as a
wise architect, proposing to build a house, consults also about repairing it,
should it at any time become dilapidated after building, and, as counselling
about this, makes preparation and gives to the workmen materials for a repair;
and thus the means of the repair are provided before the house; in the same way
prior to us is the repair of our salvation founded in Christ, that in Him we
might even be new-created. And the will and the purpose were made ready 'before
the world,' but have taken effect when the need required, and the Saviour came
among us. For the Lord Himself will stand us in place of all things in the
heavens, when He receives us into everlasting life. This then suffices to prove
that the Word of God is not a creature, but that the sense of the passage is
right(5). But since that passage, when scrutinized, has a right sense in every
point of view, it may be well to state what it is; perhaps many words may bring
these senseless men to shame. Now here I must recur to what has been said
before, for what I have to say relates to the same proverb and the same Wisdom.
The Word has not called Himself a creature by nature, but has said in proverbs,
'The Lord created me;' and He plainly indicates a sense not spoken 'plainly' but
latent(6), such as we shall be able to find by taking away the veil from the
proverb. For who, on hearing from the Framing Wisdom, 'The Lord created me a
beginning of His ways,(3) does not at once question the meaning, reflecting how
that creative Wisdom can be created? who on hearing the Only-begotten Son of God
say, that He was created 'a beginning of ways,' does not investigate the sense,
wondering how the Only-begotten Son can become a Beginning of many others? for
it is a dark saying(7); but 'a man of understanding,' says he, 'shall understand
a proverb and the interpretation, the words of the wise and their dark
sayings(8).'
78. Now the Only-begotten and very Wisdom(1) of God is Creator and Framer of all
things; for 'in Wisdom hast Thou made them all(2),' he says, and 'the earth is
full of Thy creation.' But that what came into being might not only be, but be
good(3), it pleased God that His own Wisdom should condescend(4) to the
creatures, so as to introduce an impress and semblance of Its Image on all in
common and on each, that what was made might be manifestly wise works and worthy
of God(5). For as of the Son of God, considered as the Word, our word is an
image, so of the same Son considered as Wisdom is the wisdom which is implanted
in us an image; in which wisdom we, having the power of knowledge and thought,
become recipients of the All-framing Wisdom; and through It we are able to know
Its Father. 'For he who hath the Son,' saith He, 'hath the Father also;' and 'he
that receiveth Me, receiveth Him that sent Me(6).' Such an impress then of
Wisdom being created in us, and being in all the works, with reason does the
true and framing Wisdom take to Itself what belongs to its own impress, and say,
'The Lord created me for His works;' for what the wisdom in us says, that the
Lord Himself speaks as if it were His own; and, whereas He is not Himself
created, being Creator, yet because of the image of Him created in the works(7),
He says this as if of Himself. And as the Lord Himself has said, 'He that
receiveth you, receiveth Me(8),' because His impress is in us, so, though He be
not among the creatures, yet because His image and impress is created in the
works, He says, as if in His own person, 'The Lord created me a beginning of His
ways for His works.' And therefore has this impress of Wisdom in the works been
brought into being, that, as I said before, the world might recognise in it its
own Creator the Word, and through Him the Father. And this is what Paul said,
'Because that which may be known of God is manifest in them, for God has shewed
it unto them: for the invisible things of Him from the creation of the world are
clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made(9).' But if so, the
Word is not a creature in essence(10); but the wisdom which is in us and so
called, is spoken of in this passage in the Proverbs.
79. But if this too fails to persuade them, let them tell us themselves, whether
there is any wisdom in the creatures or not(1)? If not how is it that the
Apostle complains, 'For after that in the Wisdom of God the world by wisdom knew
not God(2)?' or how is it if there is no wisdom, that a 'multitude of wise
men(3)' are found in Scripture? for 'a wise man feareth and departeth from
evil(4);' and 'through wisdom is a house builded(5);' and the Preacher says, 'A
man's wisdom maketh his face to shine;' and he blames those who are headstrong
thus, 'Say not thou, what is the cause that the former days were better than
these? for thou dost not inquire in wisdom concerning this(6).' But if, as the
Son of Sirach says, 'He poured her out upon all His works; she is with all flesh
according to His gift, and He hath given her to them that love Him(7),' and this
outpouring is a note, not of the Essence of the Very(8) Wisdom and
Only-begotten, but of that wisdom which is imaged in the world, how is it
incredible that the All-framing and true Wisdom Itself, whose impress is the
wisdom and knowledge poured out in the world, should say, as I have already
explained, as if of Itself, 'The Lord created me for His works?' For the wisdom
in the world is not creative, but is that which is created in the works,
according to which 'the heavens declare the glory of God, and the firmament
sheweth His handywork(9).' This if men have within them(10), they will
acknowledge the true Wisdom of God; and will know that they are made really(11)
after God's Image. And, as some son of a king, when the father wished to build a
city(12), might cause his own name to be printed upon each of the works that
were rising, both to give security to them of the works remaining, by reason of
the show of his name on everything, and also to make them remember him and his
father from the name, and having finished the city might be asked concerning it,
how it was made, and then would answer, 'It is made securely, for according to
the will of my father, I am imaged in each work, for my name was made in the
works;' but saying this, he does not signify that his own essence is created,
but the impress of himself by means of his name; in the same manner, to apply
the illustration, to those who admire the wisdom in the creatures, the true
Wisdom makes answer, 'The Lord created me for the works,' for my impress is in
them; and I have thus condescended for the framing of all things.
80. Moreover, that the Son should be speaking of the impress that is within us
as if it were Himself, should not startle any one, considering (for we must not
shrink from repetition(1)) that, when Saul was persecuting the Church, in which
was His impress and image, He said, as if He were Himself under persecution,
'Saul, why persecutest thou Me(2)?' Therefore (as has been said), as, supposing
the impress itself of Wisdom which is in the works had said, 'The Lord created
me for the works,' no one would have been startled, so, if He, the True and
Framing Wisdom, the Only-begotten Word of God, should use what belongs to His
image as about Himself, namely, 'The Lord created me for the works,' let no one,
overlooking the wisdom created in the world and in the works, think that 'He
created' is said of the Substance of the Very(3) Wisdom, lest, diluting the wine
with water(3a), he be judged a defrauder of the truth. For It is Creative and
Framer; but Its impress is created in the works, as the copy of the image. And
He says, 'Beginning of ways,' since such wisdom becomes a sort of beginning.
and, as it were, rudiments of the knowledge of God; for a man entering, as it
were, upon this way first, and keeping it in the fear of God (as Solomon
says(4), 'The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom'), then advancing
upwards in his thoughts and perceiving the Framing Wisdom which is in the
creation, will perceive in It also Its Father(5), as the Lord Himself has said,
'He that hath seen Me, hath seen the Father,' and as John writes, 'He who
acknowledgeth the Son, hath the Father also(6).' And He says, 'Before the world
He founded me(7),' since in Its impress the works remain settled and eternal.
Then, lest any, hearing concerning the wisdom thus created in the works, should
think the true Wisdom, God's Son, to be by nature a creature, He has found it
necessary to add, 'Before the mountains, and before the earth, and before the
waters, and before all hills He begets me,' that in saying, 'before every
creature' (for He includes all the creation under these heads), He may shew that
He is not created together with the works according to Essence. For if He was
created 'for the works,' yet is before them, it follows that He is in being
before He was created. He is not then a creature by nature and essence, but as
He Himself has added, an Offspring. But in what differs a creature from an
offspring, and how it is distinct by nature, has been shewn in what has gone
before.
81. But since He proceeds to say, 'When He prepared the heaven, I was present
with Him(8),' we ought to know that He says not this as if without Wisdom the
Father prepared the heaven or the clouds above (for there is no room to doubt
that all things are created in Wisdom, and without It was made not even one(1)
thing); but this is what He says, 'All things took place in Me and through Me,
and when there was need that Wisdom should be, created in the works, in My
Essence indeed I was with the Father, but by a condescension(2) to things
originate, I was disposing over the works My own impress, so that the whole
world as being in one body, might not be at variance but in concord with
itself.' All those then who with an upright understanding, according to the
wisdom given unto them, come to contemplate the creatures, are able to say for
themselves, 'By Thy appointment all things continue(3);' but they who make light
of this must be told, 'Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools;' for
'that which may be known of God is manifest in them; for God has revealed it
unto them; for the invisible things of Him from the creation of the world are
clearly seen, being perceived by the things that are made, even His eternal
Power and Godhead, so that they are without excuse. Because that when they knew
God, they glorified Him not as God, but served the creature more than the
Creator of all, who is blessed for ever. Amen(4).' And they will surely be
shamed at hearing, 'For, after that in the wisdom of God (in the mode we have
explained above), the world by wisdom knew not God, it pleased God by the
foolishness of the preaching to save them that believe(5).' For no longer, as in
the former times, God has willed to be known by an image and shadow of wisdom,
that namely which is in the creatures, but He has made the true Wisdom Itself to
take flesh, and to become man, and to undergo the death of the cross; that by
the faith in Him, henceforth all that believe may obtain salvation. However, it
is the same Wisdom of God, which through Its own Image in the creatures (whence
also It is said to be created), first manifested Itself, and through Itself Its
own Father; and afterwards, being Itself the Word, has 'become flesh(6),' as
John says, and after abolishing death and saving our race, still more revealed
Himself and through Him His own Father, saying, 'Grant unto them that they may
know Thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom Thou hast sent(7).'
82. Hence the whole earth is filled with the knowledge of Him; for the knowledge
of Father through Son and of Son from Father is one and the same, and the Father
delights in Him, and in the same joy the Son rejoices in the Father, saying, 'I
was by Him, daily His delight, rejoicing always before Him(1).' And this again
proves that the Son is not foreign, but proper to the Father's Essence. For
behold, not because of us has He come to be, as the irreligious men say, nor is
He out of nothing (for not from without did God procure for Himself a cause of
rejoicing), but the words denote what is His own and like. When then was it,
when the Father rejoiced not? but if He ever rejoiced, He was ever, in whom He
rejoiced. And in whom does the Father rejoice, except as seeing Himself in His
own Image, which is His Word? And though in sons of men also He had delight, on
finishing the world, as it is written in these same Proverbs(2), yet this too
has a consistent sense. For even thus He had delight, not because joy was added
to Him, but again on seeing the works made after His own Image; so that even
this rejoicing of God is on account of His Image. And how too has the Son
delight, except as seeing Himself in the Father? for this is the same as saying,
'He that hath seen Me, hath seen the Father,' and 'I am in the Father and the
Father in Me(3).' Vain then is your vaunt as is on all sides shewn, O Christ's
enemies, and vainly did ye parade(4) and circulate everywhere your text, 'The
Lord created me a beginning of His ways,' perverting its sense, and publishing,
not Solomon's meaning, but your own comment(5). For behold your sense is proved
to be but a fantasy; but the passage in the Proverbs, as well as all that is
above said, proves that the Son is not a creature in nature and essence, but the
proper Offspring of the Father, true Wisdom and Word, by whom 'all things were
made,' and 'without Him was made not one thing.