AGAINST PRAXEAS
TERTULLIAN
IN WHICH HE DEFENDS, IN ALL ESSENTIAL POINTS, THE DOCTRINE
OF THE HOLY TRINITY.
[TRANSLATED BY DR. HOLMES.]
Published on the net for the Greater Glory of God ©Copyright
2018 ecatholic2000.com
AGAINST PRAXEAS
Part I
CHAPTER I
SATAN’S WILES AGAINST THE TRUTH. HOW THEY TAKE THE FORM OF THE PRAXEAN HERESY.
ACCOUNT OF THE PUBLICATION OF THIS HERESY
CHAPTER II
THE CATHOLIC DOCTRINE OF THE TRINITY AND UNITY, SOMETIMES CALLED THE DIVINE
ECONOMY, OR DISPENSATION OF THE PERSONAL RELATIONS OF THE GODHEAD
CHAPTER III
SUNDRY POPULAR FEARS AND PREJUDICES. THE DOCTRINE OF THE TRINITY IN UNITY
RESCUED FROM THESE MISAPPREHENSIONS
CHAPTER IV
THE UNITY OF THE GODHEAD AND THE SUPREMACY AND SOLE GOVERNMENT OF THE DIVINE
BEING. THE MONARCHY NOT AT ALL IMPAIRED BY THE CATHOLIC DOCTRINE
CHAPTER V
THE EVOLUTION OF THE SON OR WORD OF GOD FROM THE FATHER BY A DIVINE PROCESSION.
ILLUSTRATED BY THE OPERATION OF THE HUMAN THOUGHT AND CONSCIOUSNESS
CHAPTER VI
THE WORD OF GOD IS ALSO THE WISDOM OF GOD. THE GOING FORTH OF WISDOM TO CREATE
THE UNIVERSE, ACCORDING TO THE DIVINE PLAN
CHAPTER VII
THE SON BY BEING DESIGNATED WORD AND WISDOM, (ACCORDING TO THE IMPERFECTION OF
HUMAN THOUGHT AND LANGUAGE) LIABLE TO BE DEEMED A MERE ATTRIBUTE. HE IS SHOWN
TO BE A PERSONAL BEING
CHAPTER VIII
THOUGH THE SON OR WORD OF GOD EMANATES FROM THE FATHER, HE IS NOT, LIKE THE
EMANATIONS OF VALENTINUS, SEPARABLE FROM THE FATHER. NOR IS THE HOLY GHOST
SEPARABLE FROM EITHER. ILLUSTRATIONS FROM NATURE
CHAPTER IX
THE CATHOLIC RULE OF FAITH EXPOUNDED IN SOME OF ITS POINTS. ESPECIALLY IN THE UNCONFUSED
DISTINCTION OF THE SEVERAL PERSONS OF THE BLESSED TRINITY
CHAPTER X
THE VERY NAMES OF FATHER AND SON PROVE THE PERSONAL DISTINCTION OF THE TWO.
THEY CANNOT POSSIBLY BE IDENTICAL, NOR IS THEIR IDENTITY NECESSARY TO PRESERVE
THE DIVINE MONARCHY
CHAPTER XI
THE IDENTITY OF THE FATHER AND THE SON, AS PRAXEAS HELD IT, SHOWN TO BE FULL OF
PERPLEXITY AND ABSURDITY. MANY SCRIPTURES QUOTED IN PROOF OF THE DISTINCTION OF
THE DIVINE PERSONS OF THE TRINITY
CHAPTER XII
OTHER QUOTATIONS FROM HOLY SCRIPTURE ADDUCED IN PROOF OF THE PLURALITY OF
PERSONS IN THE GODHEAD
CHAPTER XIII
THE FORCE OF SUNDRY PASSAGES OF SCRIPTURE ILLUSTRATED IN RELATION TO THE
PLURALITY OF PERSONS AND UNITY OF SUBSTANCE. THERE IS NO POLYTHEISM HERE, SINCE
THE UNITY IS INSISTED ON AS A REMEDY AGAINST POLYTHEISM
CHAPTER XIV
THE NATURAL INVISIBILITY OF THE FATHER, AND THE VISIBILITY OF THE SON WITNESSED
IN MANY PASSAGES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. ARGUMENTS OF THEIR DISTINCTNESS, THUS
SUPPLIED
CHAPTER XV
NEW TESTAMENT PASSAGES QUOTED. THEY ATTEST THE SAME TRUTH OF THE SON’S
VISIBILITY CONTRASTED WITH THE FATHER’S INVISIBILITY
Part II
CHAPTER XVI
EARLY MANIFESTATIONS OF THE SON OF GOD, AS RECORDED IN THE OLD TESTAMENT;
REHEARSALS OF HIS SUBSEQUENT INCARNATION
CHAPTER XVII
SUNDRY AUGUST TITLES, DESCRIPTIVE OF DEITY, APPLIED TO THE SON, NOT, AS PRAXEAS
WOULD HAVE IT, ONLY TO THE FATHER
CHAPTER XVIII
THE DESIGNATION OF THE ONE GOD IN THE PROPHETIC SCRIPTURES. INTENDED AS A
PROTEST AGAINST HEATHEN IDOLATRY, IT DOES NOT PRECLUDE THE CORRELATIVE IDEA OF
THE SON OF GOD. THE SON IS IN THE FATHER
CHAPTER XIX
THE SON IN UNION WITH THE FATHER IN THE CREATION OF ALL THINGS. THIS UNION OF
THE TWO IN CO-OPERATION IS NOT OPPOSED TO THE TRUE UNITY OF GOD. IT IS OPPOSED
ONLY TO PRAXEAS’ IDENTIFICATION THEORY
CHAPTER XX
THE SCRIPTURES RELIED ON BY PRAXEAS TO SUPPORT HIS HERESY BUT FEW. THEY ARE
MENTIONED BY TERTULLIAN
CHAPTER XXI
IN THIS AND THE FOUR FOLLOWING CHAPTERS IT IS SHEWN, BY A MINUTE ANALYSIS OF
ST. JOHN’S GOSPEL, THAT THE FATHER AND SON ARE CONSTANTLY SPOKEN OF AS DISTINCT
PERSONS
CHAPTER XXII
SUNDRY PASSAGES OF ST. JOHN QUOTED, TO SHOW THE DISTINCTION BETWEEN THE FATHER
AND THE SON. EVEN PRAXEAS’ CLASSIC TEXT - I AND MY FATHER ARE ONE - SHOWN TO BE
AGAINST HIM
CHAPTER XXIII
MORE PASSAGES FROM THE SAME GOSPEL IN PROOF OF THE SAME PORTION OF THE CATHOLIC
FAITH. PRAXEAS’ TAUNT OF WORSHIPPING TWO GODS REPUDIATED
CHAPTER XXIV
ON ST. PHILIP’S CONVERSATION WITH CHRIST. HE THAT HATH SEEN ME, HATH SEEN THE
FATHER. THIS TEXT EXPLAINED IN AN ANTI-PRAXEAN SENSE
CHAPTER XXV
THE PARACLETE, OR HOLY GHOST. HE IS DISTINCT FROM THE FATHER AND THE SON AS TO
THEIR PERSONAL EXISTENCE. ONE AND INSEPARABLE FROM THEM AS TO THEIR DIVINE
NATURE. OTHER QUOTATIONS OUT OF ST. JOHN’S GOSPEL
CHAPTER XXVI
A BRIEF REFERENCE TO THE GOSPELS OF ST. MATTHEW AND ST. LUKE. THEIR AGREEMENT
WITH ST. JOHN, IN RESPECT TO THE DISTINCT PERSONALITY OF THE FATHER AND THE SON
CHAPTER XXVII
THE DISTINCTION OF THE FATHER AND THE SON, THUS ESTABLISHED, HE NOW PROVES THE
DISTINCTION OF THE TWO NATURES, WHICH WERE, WITHOUT CONFUSION, UNITED IN THE
PERSON OF THE SON. THE SUBTERFUGES OF PRAXEAS THUS EXPOSED
CHAPTER XXVIII
CHRIST NOT THE FATHER, AS PRAXEAS SAID. THE INCONSISTENCY OF THIS OPINION, NO
LESS THAN ITS ABSURDITY, EXPOSED. THE TRUE DOCTRINE OF JESUS CHRIST ACCORDING
TO ST. PAUL, WHO AGREES WITH OTHER SACRED WRITERS
CHAPTER XXIX
IT WAS CHRIST THAT DIED. THE FATHER IS INCAPABLE OF SUFFERING EITHER SOLELY OR
WITH ANOTHER. BLASPHEMOUS CONCLUSIONS SPRING FROM PRAXEAS’ PREMISES
CHAPTER XXX
HOW THE SON WAS FORSAKEN BY THE FATHER UPON THE CROSS. THE TRUE MEANING THEREOF
FATAL TO PRAXEAS. SO TOO, THE RESURRECTION OF CHRIST, HIS ASCENSION, SESSION AT
THE FATHER’S RIGHT HAND, AND MISSION OF THE HOLY GHOST
CHAPTER XXXI
RETROGRADE CHARACTER OF THE HERESY OF PRAXEAS. THE DOCTRINE OF THE BLESSED
TRINITY CONSTITUTES THE GREAT DIFFERENCE BETWEEN JUDAISM AND CHRISTIANITY
Part III
Postscript
Elucidations
I
(SUNDRY DOCTRINAL STATEMENTS OF TERTULLIAN. SEE P. 601 (ET SEQQ.), SUPRA.)
II
(THE BISHOP OF ROME, CAP. I. P. 597.)
AGAINST
PRAXEAS
In various ways has the devil rivalled and
resisted the truth. Sometimes his aim has been to destroy the truth by
defending it. He maintains that there is one only Lord, the Almighty Creator of
the world, in order that out of this doctrine of the unity he may fabricate a
heresy. He says that the Father Himself came down into the Virgin, was Himself
born of her, Himself suffered, indeed was Himself Jesus Christ. Here the old
serpent has fallen out with himself, since, when he tempted Christ after John’s
baptism, he approached Him as “the Son of God;” surely intimating that God had
a Son, even on the testimony of the very Scriptures, out of which he was at the
moment forging his temptation: “If thou be the Son of God, command that these
stones be made bread.” Again: “If thou be the Son of God, cast thyself down
from hence; for it is written, He shall give His angels charge concerning
thee”—referring no doubt, to the Father—”and in their hands they shall bear
thee up, that thou hurt not thy foot against a stone.” Or perhaps, after all,
he was only reproaching the Gospels with a lie, saying in fact: “Away with
Matthew; away with Luke! Why heed their words? In spite of them, I declare that
it was God Himself that I approached; it was the Almighty Himself that I
tempted face to face; and it was for no other purpose than to tempt Him that I
approached Him. If, on the contrary, it had been only the Son of God, most
likely I should never have condescended to deal with Him.” However, he is
himself a liar from the beginning, and whatever man he instigates in his own
way; as, for instance, Praxeas. For he was the first to import into Rome from
Asia this kind of heretical pravity, a man in other respects of restless
disposition, and above all inflated with the pride of confessorship simply and
solely because he had to bear for a short time the annoyance of a prison; on
which occasion, even “if he had given his body to be burned, it would have
profited him nothing,” not having the love of God, whose very gifts he has
resisted and destroyed. For after the Bishop of Rome had acknowledged the
prophetic gifts of Montanus, Prisca, and Maximilla, and, in consequence of the
acknowledgment, had bestowed his peace on the churches of Asia and Phrygia, he,
by importunately urging false accusations against the prophets themselves and
their churches, and insisting on the authority of the bishop’s predecessors in
the see, compelled him to recall the pacific letter which he had issued, as
well as to desist from his purpose of acknowledging the said gifts. By this
Praxeas did a twofold service for the devil at Rome: he drove away prophecy,
and he brought in heresy; he put to flight the Paraclete, and he crucified the
Father. Praxeas’ tares had been moreover sown, and had produced their fruit
here also, while many were asleep in their simplicity of doctrine; but these
tares actually seemed to have been plucked up, having been discovered and
exposed by him whose agency God was pleased to employ. Indeed, Praxeas had
deliberately resumed his old (true) faith, teaching it after his renunciation
of error; and there is his own handwriting in evidence remaining among the
carnally-minded, in whose society the transaction then took place; afterwards
nothing was heard of him. We indeed, on our part, subsequently withdrew from
the carnally-minded on our acknowledgment and maintenance of the Paraclete. But
the tares of Praxeas had then everywhere shaken out their seed, which having
lain hid for some while, with its vitality concealed under a mask, has now
broken out with fresh life. But again shall it be rooted up, if the Lord will,
even now; but if not now, in the day when all bundles of tares shall be
gathered together, and along with every other stumbling-block shall be burnt up
with unquenchable fire.
In the course of time, then, the Father forsooth
was born, and the Father suffered, God Himself, the Lord Almighty, whom in
their preaching they declare to be Jesus Christ. We, however, as we indeed
always have done (and more especially since we have been better instructed by
the Paraclete, who leads men indeed into all truth), believe that there is one
only God, but under the following dispensation, or οἰκονομία
, as it is called, that this one only God has also a Son, His Word, who
proceeded from Himself, by whom all things were made, and without whom nothing
was made. Him we believe to have been sent by the Father into the Virgin, and
to have been born of her—being both Man and God, the Son of Man and the Son of
God, and to have been called by the name of Jesus Christ; we believe Him to
have suffered, died, and been buried, according to the Scriptures, and, after
He had been raised again by the Father and taken back to heaven, to be sitting
at the right hand of the Father, and that He will come to judge the quick and
the dead; who sent also from heaven from the Father, according to His own
promise, the Holy Ghost, the Paraclete, the sanctifier of the faith of those
who believe in the Father, and in the Son, and in the Holy Ghost. That this
rule of faith has come down to us from the beginning of the gospel, even before
any of the older heretics, much more before Praxeas, a pretender of yesterday,
will be apparent both from the lateness of date which marks all heresies, and
also from the absolutely novel character of our new-fangled Praxeas. In this
principle also we must henceforth find a presumption of equal force against all
heresies whatsoever—that whatever is first is true, whereas that is spurious
which is later in date. But keeping this prescriptive rule inviolate, still
some opportunity must be given for reviewing (the statements of heretics), with
a view to the instruction and protection of divers persons; were it only that
it may not seem that each perversion of the truth is condemned without
examination, and simply prejudged; especially in the case of this heresy, which
supposes itself to possess the pure truth, in thinking that one cannot believe
in One Only God in any other way than by saying that the Father, the Son, and
the Holy Ghost are the very selfsame Person. As if in this way also one were
not All, in that All are of One, by unity (that is) of substance; while the
mystery of the dispensation is still guarded, which distributes the Unity into
a Trinity, placing in their order the three Persons—the Father, the Son, and
the Holy Ghost: three, however, not in condition, but in degree; not in
substance, but in form; not in power, but in aspect; yet of one substance, and
of one condition, and of one power, inasmuch as He is one God, from whom these
degrees and forms and aspects are reckoned, under the name of the Father, and
of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. How they are susceptible of number without
division, will be shown as our treatise proceeds.
The simple, indeed, (I will not call them unwise
and unlearned,) who always constitute the majority of believers, are startled
at the dispensation (of the Three in One), on the ground that their very rule
of faith withdraws them from the world’s plurality of gods to the one only true
God; not understanding that, although He is the one only God, He must yet be
believed in with His own οἰκονομία
. The numerical order and distribution of the Trinity they assume to be a
division of the Unity; whereas the Unity which derives the Trinity out of its
own self is so far from being destroyed, that it is actually supported by it.
They are constantly throwing out against us that we are preachers of two gods
and three gods, while they take to themselves pre-eminently the credit of being
worshippers of the One God; just as if the Unity itself with irrational
deductions did not produce heresy, and the Trinity rationally considered
constitute the truth. We, say they, maintain the Monarchy (or, sole government
of God). And so, as far as the sound goes, do even Latins (and ignorant ones
too) pronounce the word in such a way that you would suppose their
understanding of the μοναρχία (or
Monarchy) was as complete as their pronunciation of the term. Well, then Latins
take pains to pronounce the μοναρχία
(or Monarchy), while Greeks actually refuse to understand the οἰκονομία,
or Dispensation (of the Three in One). As for myself, however, if I have
gleaned any knowledge of either language, I am sure that
μοναρχία (or Monarchy) has no other
meaning than single and individual rule; but for all that, this monarchy does
not, because it is the government of one, preclude him whose government it is,
either from having a son, or from having made himself actually a son to
himself, or from ministering his own monarchy by whatever agents he will. Nay
more, I contend that no dominion so belongs to one only, as his own, or is in
such a sense singular, or is in such a sense a monarchy, as not also to be
administered through other persons most closely connected with it, and whom it
has itself provided as officials to itself. If, moreover, there be a son
belonging to him whose monarchy it is, it does not forthwith become divided and
cease to be a monarchy, if the son also be taken as a sharer in it; but it is
as to its origin equally his, by whom it is communicated to the son; and being
his, it is quite as much a monarchy (or sole empire), since it is held together
by two who are so inseparable. Therefore, inasmuch as the Divine Monarchy also
is administered by so many legions and hosts of angels, according as it is written,
“Thousand thousands ministered unto Him, and ten thousand times ten thousand
stood before Him;” and since it has not from this circumstance ceased to be the
rule of one (so as no longer to be a monarchy), because it is administered by
so many thousands of powers; how comes it to pass that God should be thought to
suffer division and severance in the Son and in the Holy Ghost, who have the
second and the third places assigned to them, and who are so closely joined
with the Father in His substance, when He suffers no such (division and
severance) in the multitude of so many angels? Do you really suppose that
Those, who are naturally members of the Father’s own substance, pledges of His
love, instruments of His might, nay, His power itself and the entire system of
His monarchy, are the overthrow and destruction thereof? You are not right in
so thinking. I prefer your exercising yourself on the meaning of the thing
rather than on the sound of the word. Now you must understand the overthrow of
a monarchy to be this, when another dominion, which has a framework and a state
peculiar to itself (and is therefore a rival), is brought in over and above it:
when, e.g., some other god is introduced in opposition to the Creator, as in
the opinions of Marcion; or when many gods are introduced, according to your
Valentinuses and your Prodicuses. Then it amounts to an overthrow of the
Monarchy, since it involves the destruction of the Creator.
But as for me, who derive the Son from no other
source but from the substance of the Father, and (represent Him) as doing
nothing without the Father’s will, and as having received all power from the
Father, how can I be possibly destroying the Monarchy from the faith, when I
preserve it in the Son just as it was committed to Him by the Father? The same
remark (I wish also to be formally) made by me with respect to the third degree
in the Godhead, because I believe the Spirit to proceed from no other source
than from the Father through the Son. Look to it then, that it be not you
rather who are destroying the Monarchy, when you overthrow the arrangement and
dispensation of it, which has been constituted in just as many names as it has
pleased God to employ. But it remains so firm and stable in its own state,
notwithstanding the introduction into it of the Trinity, that the Son actually
has to restore it entire to the Father; even as the apostle says in his
epistle, concerning the very end of all: “When He shall have delivered up the
kingdom to God, even the Father; for He must reign till He hath put all enemies
under His feet;” following of course the words of the Psalm: “Sit Thou on my
right hand, until I make Thine enemies Thy footstool.” “When, however, all
things shall be subdued to Him, (with the exception of Him who did put all
things under Him,) then shall the Son also Himself be subject unto Him who put
all things under Him, that God may be all in all.” We thus see that the Son is
no obstacle to the Monarchy, although it is now administered by the Son;
because with the Son it is still in its own state, and with its own state will
be restored to the Father by the Son. No one, therefore, will impair it, on
account of admitting the Son (to it), since it is certain that it has been
committed to Him by the Father, and by and by has to be again delivered up by
Him to the Father. Now, from this one passage of the epistle of the inspired apostle,
we have been already able to show that the Father and the Son are two separate
Persons, not only by the mention of their separate names as Father and the Son,
but also by the fact that He who delivered up the kingdom, and He to whom it is
delivered up—and in like manner, He who subjected (all things), and He to whom
they were subjected—must necessarily be two different Beings.
But since they will have the Two to be but One,
so that the Father shall be deemed to be the same as the Son, it is only right
that the whole question respecting the Son should be examined, as to whether He
exists, and who He is and the mode of His existence. Thus shall the truth
itself secure its own sanction from the Scriptures, and the interpretations
which guard them. There are some who allege that even Genesis opens thus in
Hebrew: “In the beginning God made for Himself a Son.” As there is no ground
for this, I am led to other arguments derived from God’s own dispensation, in
which He existed before the creation of the world, up to the generation of the
Son. For before all things God was alone—being in Himself and for Himself
universe, and space, and all things. Moreover, He was alone, because there was
nothing external to Him but Himself. Yet even not then was He alone; for He had
with Him that which He possessed in Himself, that is to say, His own Reason.
For God is rational, and Reason was first in Him; and so all things were from
Himself. This Reason is His own Thought (or Consciousness) which the Greeks
call λόγος, by which term we also designate Word or
Discourseand therefore it is now usual with our people, owing to the mere
simple interpretation of the term, to say that the Word was in the beginning
with God; although it would be more suitable to regard Reason as the more
ancient; because God had not Word from the beginning, but He had Reason even
before the beginning; because also Word itself consists of Reason, which it
thus proves to have been the prior existence as being its own substance. Not
that this distinction is of any practical moment. For although God had not yet
sent out His Word, He still had Him within Himself, both in company with and
included within His very Reason, as He silently planned and arranged within
Himself everything which He was afterwards about to utter through His Word.
Now, whilst He was thus planning and arranging with His own Reason, He was
actually causing that to become Word which He was dealing with in the way of
Word or Discourse. And that you may the more readily understand this, consider
first of all, from your own self, who are made “in the image and likeness of
God,” for what purpose it is that you also possess reason in yourself, who are
a rational creature, as being not only made by a rational Artificer, but
actually animated out of His substance. Observe, then, that when you are
silently conversing with yourself, this very process is carried on within you
by your reason, which meets you with a word at every movement of your thought,
at every impulse of your conception. Whatever you think, there is a word;
whatever you conceive, there is reason. You must needs speak it in your mind;
and while you are speaking, you admit speech as an interlocutor with you,
involved in which there is this very reason, whereby, while in thought you are
holding converse with your word, you are (by reciprocal action) producing
thought by means of that converse with your word. Thus, in a certain sense, the
word is a second person within you, through which in thinking you utter speech,
and through which also, (by reciprocity of process,) in uttering speech you
generate thought. The word is itself a different thing from yourself. Now how
much more fully is all this transacted in God, whose image and likeness even
you are regarded as being, inasmuch as He has reason within Himself even while
He is silent, and involved in that Reason His Word! I may therefore without
rashness first lay this down (as a fixed principle) that even then before the
creation of the universe God was not alone, since He had within Himself both
Reason, and, inherent in Reason, His Word, which He made second to Himself by
agitating it within Himself.
This power and disposition of the Divine
Intelligence is set forth also in the Scriptures under the name of
Σοφία, Wisdom; for what can be better entitled to the
name of Wisdom than the Reason or the Word of God? Listen therefore to Wisdom
herself, constituted in the character of a Second Person: “At the first the
Lord created me as the beginning of His ways, with a view to His own works,
before He made the earth, before the mountains were settled; moreover, before
all the hills did He beget me;” that is to say, He created and generated me in
His own intelligence. Then, again, observe the distinction between them implied
in the companionship of Wisdom with the Lord. “When He prepared the heaven,”
says Wisdom, “I was present with Him; and when He made His strong places upon
the winds, which are the clouds above; and when He secured the fountains, (and
all things) which are beneath the sky, I was by, arranging all things with Him;
I was by, in whom He delighted; and daily, too, did I rejoice in His presence.”
Now, as soon as it pleased God to put forth into their respective substances
and forms the things which He had planned and ordered within Himself, in
conjunction with His Wisdom’s Reason and Word, He first put forth the Word
Himself, having within Him His own inseparable Reason and Wisdom, in order that
all things might be made through Him through whom they had been planned and
disposed, yea, and already made, so far forth as (they were) in the mind and
intelligence of God. This, however, was still wanting to them, that they should
also be openly known, and kept permanently in their proper forms and substances.
Then, therefore, does the Word also Himself
assume His own form and glorious garb, His own sound and vocal utterance, when
God says, “Let there be light.” This is the perfect nativity of the Word, when
He proceeds forth from God—formed by Him first to devise and think out all
things under the name of Wisdom—”The Lord created or formed me as the beginning
of His ways;” then afterward begotten, to carry all into effect—”When He
prepared the heaven, I was present with Him.” Thus does He make Him equal to
Him: for by proceeding from Himself He became His first-begotten Son, because
begotten before all things; and His only-begotten also, because alone begotten
of God, in a way peculiar to Himself, from the womb of His own heart—even as
the Father Himself testifies: “My heart,” says He, “hath emitted my most
excellent Word.” The Father took pleasure evermore in Him, who equally rejoiced
with a reciprocal gladness in the Father’s presence: “Thou art my Son, to-day
have I begotten Thee;” even before the morning star did I beget Thee. The Son
likewise acknowledges the Father, speaking in His own person, under the name of
Wisdom: “The Lord formed Me as the beginning of His ways, with a view to His
own works; before all the hills did He beget Me.” For if indeed Wisdom in this
passage seems to say that She was created by the Lord with a view to His works,
and to accomplish His ways, yet proof is given in another Scripture that “all
things were made by the Word, and without Him was there nothing made;” as,
again, in another place (it is said), “By His word were the heavens established,
and all the powers thereof by His Spirit”—that is to say, by the Spirit (or
Divine Nature) which was in the Word: thus is it evident that it is one and the
same power which is in one place described under the name of Wisdom, and in
another passage under the appellation of the Word, which was initiated for the
works of God which “strengthened the heavens;””by which all things were made,”
“and without which nothing was made.” Nor need we dwell any longer on this
point, as if it were not the very Word Himself, who is spoken of under the name
both of Wisdom and of Reason, and of the entire Divine Soul and Spirit. He
became also the Son of God, and was begotten when He proceeded forth from Him.
Do you then, (you ask,) grant that the Word is a certain substance, constructed
by the Spirit and the communication of Wisdom? Certainly I do. But you will not
allow Him to be really a substantive being, by having a substance of His own;
in such a way that He may be regarded as an objective thing and a person, and
so be able (as being constituted second to God the Father,) to make two, the
Father and the Son, God and the Word. For you will say, what is a word, but a
voice and sound of the mouth, and (as the grammarians teach) air when struck
against, intelligible to the ear, but for the rest a sort of void, empty, and
incorporeal thing. I, on the contrary, contend that nothing empty and void
could have come forth from God, seeing that it is not put forth from that which
is empty and void; nor could that possibly be devoid of substance which has
proceeded from so great a substance, and has produced such mighty substances:
for all things which were made through Him, He Himself (personally) made. How
could it be, that He Himself is nothing, without whom nothing was made? How could
He who is empty have made things which are solid, and He who is void have made
things which are full, and He who is incorporeal have made things which have
body? For although a thing may sometimes be made different from him by whom it
is made, yet nothing can be made by that which is a void and empty thing. Is
that Word of God, then, a void and empty thing, which is called the Son, who
Himself is designated God? “The Word was with God, and the Word was God.” It is
written, “Thou shalt not take God’s name in vain.” This for certain is He “who,
being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God.” In what
form of God? Of course he means in some form, not in none. For who will deny
that God is a body, although “God is a Spirit?” For Spirit has a bodily
substance of its own kind, in its own form. Now, even if invisible things,
whatsoever they be, have both their substance and their form in God, whereby
they are visible to God alone, how much more shall that which has been sent
forth from His substance not be without substance! Whatever, therefore, was the
substance of the Word that I designate a Person, I claim for it the name of
Son; and while I recognize the Son, I assert His distinction as second to the
Father.
If any man from this shall think that I am
introducing some προβολή— that is to say,
some prolation of one thing out of another, as Valentinus does when he sets
forth Æon from Æon, one after another—then this is my first reply to you: Truth
must not therefore refrain from the use of such a term, and its reality and
meaning, because heresy also employs it. The fact is, heresy has rather taken
it from Truth, in order to mould it into its own counterfeit. Was the Word of
God put forth or not? Here take your stand with me, and flinch not. If He was
put forth, then acknowledge that the true doctrine has a prolation; and never
mind heresy, when in any point it mimics the truth. The question now is, in
what sense each side uses a given thing and the word which expresses it.
Valentinus divides and separates his prolations from their Author, and places
them at so great a distance from Him, that the Æon does not know the Father: he
longs, indeed, to know Him, but cannot; nay, he is almost swallowed up and
dissolved into the rest of matter. With us, however, the Son alone knows the
Father, and has Himself unfolded “the Father’s bosom.” He has also heard and
seen all things with the Father; and what He has been commanded by the Father,
that also does He speak. And it is not His own will, but the Father’s, which He
has accomplished, which He had known most intimately, even from the beginning.
“For what man knoweth the things which be in God, but the Spirit which is in
Him?” But the Word was formed by the Spirit, and (if I may so express myself)
the Spirit is the body of the Word. The Word, therefore, is both always in the
Father, as He says, “I am in the Father;” and is always with God, according to
what is written, “And the Word was with God;” and never separate from the
Father, or other than the Father, since “I and the Father are one.” This will
be the prolation, taught by the truth, the guardian of the Unity, wherein we
declare that the Son is a prolation from the Father, without being separated
from Him. For God sent forth the Word, as the Paraclete also declares, just as
the root puts forth the tree, and the fountain the river, and the sun the ray.
For these are προβολαί or emanations,
of the substances from which they proceed. I should not hesitate, indeed, to
call the tree the son or offspring of the root, and the river of the fountain,
and the ray of the sun; because every original source is a parent, and
everything which issues from the origin is an offspring. Much more is (this
true of) the Word of God, who has actually received as His own peculiar
designation the name of Son. But still the tree is not severed from the root,
nor the river from the fountain, nor the ray from the sun; nor, indeed, is the
Word separated from God. Following, therefore, the form of these analogies, I
confess that I call God and His Word—the Father and His Son—two. For the root
and the tree are distinctly two things, but correlatively joined; the fountain
and the river are also two forms, but indivisible; so likewise the sun and the
ray are two forms, but coherent ones. Everything which proceeds from something
else must needs be second to that from which it proceeds, without being on that
account separated. Where, however, there is a second, there must be two; and
where there is a third, there must be three. Now the Spirit indeed is third
from God and the Son; just as the fruit of the tree is third from the root, or
as the stream out of the river is third from the fountain, or as the apex of
the ray is third from the sun. Nothing, however, is alien from that original
source whence it derives its own properties. In like manner the Trinity,
flowing down from the Father through intertwined and connected steps, does not
at all disturb the Monarchy, whilst it at the same time guards the state of the
Economy.
Bear always in mind that this is the rule of
faith which I profess; by it I testify that the Father, and the Son, and the
Spirit are inseparable from each other, and so will you know in what sense this
is said. Now, observe, my assertion is that the Father is one, and the Son one,
and the Spirit one, and that They are distinct from Each Other. This statement
is taken in a wrong sense by every uneducated as well as every perversely
disposed person, as if it predicated a diversity, in such a sense as to imply a
separation among the Father, and the Son, and the Spirit. I am, moreover,
obliged to say this, when (extolling the Monarchy at the expense of the Economy)
they contend for the identity of the Father and Son and Spirit, that it is not
by way of diversity that the Son differs from the Father, but by distribution:
it is not by division that He is different, but by distinction; because the
Father is not the same as the Son, since they differ one from the other in the
mode of their being. For the Father is the entire substance, but the Son is a
derivation and portion of the whole, as He Himself acknowledges: “My Father is
greater than I.” In the Psalm His inferiority is described as being “a little
lower than the angels.” Thus the Father is distinct from the Son, being greater
than the Son, inasmuch as He who begets is one, and He who is begotten is
another; He, too, who sends is one, and He who is sent is another; and He,
again, who makes is one, and He through whom the thing is made is another.
Happily the Lord Himself employs this expression of the person of the
Paraclete, so as to signify not a division or severance, but a disposition (of
mutual relations in the Godhead); for He says, “I will pray the Father, and He
shall send you another Comforter…even the Spirit of truth,” thus making the
Paraclete distinct from Himself, even as we say that the Son is also distinct
from the Father; so that He showed a third degree in the Paraclete, as we
believe the second degree is in the Son, by reason of the order observed in the
Economy. Besides, does not the very fact that they have the distinct names of
Father and Son amount to a declaration that they are distinct in personality?
For, of course, all things will be what their names represent them to be; and
what they are and ever will be, that will they be called; and the distinction
indicated by the names does not at all admit of any confusion, because there is
none in the things which they designate. “Yes is yes, and no is no; for what is
more than these, cometh of evil.”
So it is either the Father or the Son, and the
day is not the same as the night; nor is the Father the same as the Son, in
such a way that Both of them should be One, and One or the Other should be
Both,—an opinion which the most conceited “Monarchians” maintain. He Himself,
they say, made Himself a Son to Himself. Now a Father makes a Son, and a Son
makes a Father; and they who thus become reciprocally related out of each other
to each other cannot in any way by themselves simply become so related to
themselves, that the Father can make Himself a Son to Himself, and the Son
render Himself a Father to Himself. And the relations which God establishes,
them does He also guard. A father must needs have a son, in order to be a father;
so likewise a son, to be a son, must have a father. It is, however, one thing
to have, and another thing to be. For instance, in order to be a husband, I
must have a wife; I can never myself be my own wife. In like manner, in order
to be a father, I have a son, for I never can be a son to myself; and in order
to be a son, I have a father, it being impossible for me ever to be my own
father. And it is these relations which make me (what I am), when I come to
possess them: I shall then be a father, when I have a son; and a son, when I
have a father. Now, if I am to be to myself any one of these relations, I no
longer have what I am myself to be: neither a father, because I am to be my own
father; nor a son, because I shall be my own son. Moreover, inasmuch as I ought
to have one of these relations in order to be the other; so, if I am to be both
together, I shall fail to be one while I possess not the other. For if I must
be myself my son, who am also a father, I now cease to have a son, since I am
my own son. But by reason of not having a son, since I am my own son, how can I
be a father? For I ought to have a son, in order to be a father. Therefore I am
not a son, because I have not a father, who makes a son. In like manner, if I
am myself my father, who am also a son, I no longer have a father, but am
myself my father. By not having a father, however, since I am my own father,
how can I be a son? For I ought to have a father, in order to be a son. I
cannot therefore be a father, because I have not a son, who makes a father. Now
all this must be the device of the devil—this excluding and severing one from
the other—since by including both together in one under pretence of the
Monarchy, he causes neither to be held and acknowledged, so that He is not the
Father, since indeed He has not the Son; neither is He the Son, since in like
manner He has not the Father: for while He is the Father, He will not be the
Son. In this way they hold the Monarchy, but they hold neither the Father nor
the Son. Well, but “with God nothing is impossible.” True enough; who can be
ignorant of it? Who also can be unaware that “the things which are impossible
with men are possible with God?” “The foolish things also of the world hath God
chosen to confound the things which are wise.” We have read it all. Therefore,
they argue, it was not difficult for God to make Himself both a Father and a
Son, contrary to the condition of things among men. For a barren woman to have
a child against nature was no difficulty with God; nor was it for a virgin to
conceive. Of course nothing is “too hard for the Lord.” But if we choose to
apply this principle so extravagantly and harshly in our capricious
imaginations, we may then make out God to have done anything we please, on the
ground that it was not impossible for Him to do it. We must not, however,
because He is able to do all things suppose that He has actually done what He
has not done. But we must inquire whether He has really done it. God could, if
He had liked, have furnished man with wings to fly with, just as He gave wings
to kites. We must not, however, run to the conclusion that He did this because
He was able to do it. He might also have extinguished Praxeas and all other
heretics at once; it does not follow, however, that He did, simply because He
was able. For it was necessary that there should be both kites and heretics; it
was necessary also that the Father should be crucified. In one sense there will
be something difficult even for God—namely, that which He has not done—not
because He could not, but because He would not, do it. For with God, to be
willing is to be able, and to be unwilling is to be unable; all that He has
willed, however, He has both been able to accomplish, and has displayed His
ability. Since, therefore, if God had wished to make Himself a Son to Himself,
He had it in His power to do so; and since, if He had it in His power, He
effected His purpose, you will then make good your proof of His power and His
will (to do even this) when you shall have proved to us that He actually did
it.
It will be your duty, however, to adduce your
proofs out of the Scriptures as plainly as we do, when we prove that He made
His Word a Son to Himself. For if He calls Him Son, and if the Son is none
other than He who has proceeded from the Father Himself, and if the Word has
proceeded from the Father Himself, He will then be the Son, and not Himself
from whom He proceeded. For the Father Himself did not proceed from Himself.
Now, you who say that the Father is the same as the Son, do really make the
same Person both to have sent forth from Himself (and at the same time to have
gone out from Himself as) that Being which is God. If it was possible for Him
to have done this, He at all events did not do it. You must bring forth the
proof which I require of you—one like my own; that is, (you must prove to me)
that the Scriptures show the Son and the Father to be the same, just as on our
side the Father and the Son are demonstrated to be distinct; I say distinct,
but not separate: for as on my part I produce the words of God Himself, “My
heart hath emitted my most excellent Word,” so you in like manner ought to
adduce in opposition to me some text where God has said, “My heart hath emitted
Myself as my own most excellent Word,” in such a sense that He is Himself both
the Emitter and the Emitted, both He who sent forth and He who was sent forth,
since He is both the Word and God. I bid you also observe, that on my side I
advance the passage where the Father said to the Son, “Thou art my Son, this
day have I begotten Thee.” If you want me to believe Him to be both the Father
and the Son, show me some other passage where it is declared, “The Lord said
unto Himself, I am my own Son, to-day have I begotten myself;” or again,
“Before the morning did I beget myself;” and likewise, “I the Lord possessed
Myself the beginning of my ways for my own works; before all the hills, too,
did I beget myself;” and whatever other passages are to the same effect. Why,
moreover, could God the Lord of all things, have hesitated to speak thus of
Himself, if the fact had been so? Was He afraid of not being believed, if He
had in so many words declared Himself to be both the Father and the Son? Of one
thing He was at any rate afraid—of lying. Of Himself, too, and of His own
truth, was He afraid. Believing Him, therefore, to be the true God, I am sure
that He declared nothing to exist in any other way than according to His own
dispensation and arrangement, and that He had arranged nothing in any other way
than according to His own declaration. On your side, however, you must make Him
out to be a liar, and an impostor, and a tamperer with His word, if, when He
was Himself a Son to Himself, He assigned the part of His Son to be played by
another, when all the Scriptures attest the clear existence of, and distinction
in (the Persons of) the Trinity, and indeed furnish us with our Rule of faith,
that He who speaks, and He of whom He speaks, and to whom He speaks, cannot
possibly seem to be One and the Same. So absurd and misleading a statement
would be unworthy of God, that, when it was Himself to whom He was speaking, He
speaks rather to another, and not to His very self. Hear, then, other
utterances also of the Father concerning the Son by the mouth of Isaiah:
“Behold my Son, whom I have chosen; my beloved, in whom I am well pleased: I will
put my Spirit upon Him, and He shall bring forth judgment to the Gentiles.”
Hear also what He says to the Son: “Is it a great thing for Thee, that Thou
shouldest be called my Son to raise up the tribes of Jacob, and to restore the
dispersed of Israel? I have given Thee for a light to the Gentiles, that Thou
mayest be their salvation to the end of the earth.” Hear now also the Son’s
utterances respecting the Father: “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because
He hath anointed me to preach the gospel unto men.” He speaks of Himself
likewise to the Father in the Psalm: “Forsake me not until I have declared the
might of Thine arm to all the generation that is to come.” Also to the same
purport in another Psalm: “O Lord, how are they increased that trouble me!” But
almost all the Psalms which prophesy of the person of Christ, represent the Son
as conversing with the Father—that is, represent Christ (as speaking) to God.
Observe also the Spirit speaking of the Father and the Son, in the character of
a third Person: “The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit Thou on my right hand, until I
make Thine enemies Thy footstool.” Likewise in the words of Isaiah: “Thus saith
the Lord to the Lord mine Anointed.” Likewise, in the same prophet, He says to
the Father respecting the Son: “Lord, who hath believed our report, and to whom
is the arm of the Lord revealed? We brought a report concerning Him, as if He
were a little child, as if He were a root in a dry ground, who had no form nor
comeliness.” These are a few testimonies out of many; for we do not pretend to
bring up all the passages of Scripture, because we have a tolerably large
accumulation of them in the various heads of our subject, as we in our several
chapters call them in as our witnesses in the fulness of their dignity and
authority. Still, in these few quotations the distinction of Persons in the
Trinity is clearly set forth. For there is the Spirit Himself who speaks, and
the Father to whom He speaks, and the Son of whom He speaks. In the same
manner, the other passages also establish each one of several Persons in His
special character—addressed as they in some cases are to the Father or to the
Son respecting the Son, in other cases to the Son or to the Father concerning
the Father, and again in other instances to the (Holy) Spirit.
If the number of the Trinity also offends you,
as if it were not connected in the simple Unity, I ask you how it is possible
for a Being who is merely and absolutely One and Singular, to speak in plural
phrase, saying, “Let us make man in our own image, and after our own likeness;”
whereas He ought to have said, “Let me make man in my own image, and after my
own likeness,” as being a unique and singular Being? In the following passage,
however, “Behold the man is become as one of us,” He is either deceiving or
amusing us in speaking plurally, if He is One only and singular. Or was it to
the angels that He spoke, as the Jews interpret the passage, because these also
acknowledge not the Son? Or was it because He was at once the Father, the Son,
and the Spirit, that He spoke to Himself in plural terms, making Himself plural
on that very account? Nay, it was because He had already His Son close at His
side, as a second Person, His own Word, and a third Person also, the Spirit in
the Word, that He purposely adopted the plural phrase, “Let us make;” and, “in
our image;” and, “become as one of us.” For with whom did He make man? and to
whom did He make him like? (The answer must be), the Son on the one hand, who
was one day to put on human nature; and the Spirit on the other, who was to
sanctify man. With these did He then speak, in the Unity of the Trinity, as
with His ministers and witnesses. In the following text also He distinguishes
among the Persons: “So God created man in His own image; in the image of God
created He him.” Why say “image of God?” Why not “His own image” merely, if He
was only one who was the Maker, and if there was not also One in whose image He
made man? But there was One in whose image God was making man, that is to say,
Christ’s image, who, being one day about to become Man (more surely and more
truly so), had already caused the man to be called His image, who was then going
to be formed of clay—the image and similitude of the true and perfect Man. But
in respect of the previous works of the world what says the Scripture? Its
first statement indeed is made, when the Son has not yet appeared: “And God
said, Let there be light, and there was light.” Immediately there appears the
Word, “that true light, which lighteth man on his coming into the world,” and
through Him also came light upon the world. From that moment God willed
creation to be effected in the Word, Christ being present and ministering unto
Him: and so God created. And God said, “Let there be a firmament,…and God made
the firmament;” and God also said, “Let there be lights (in the firmament); and
so God made a greater and a lesser light.” But all the rest of the created
things did He in like manner make, who made the former ones—I mean the Word of
God, “through whom all things were made, and without whom nothing was made.”
Now if He too is God, according to John, (who says,) “The Word was God,” then
you have two Beings—One that commands that the thing be made, and the Other
that executes the order and creates. In what sense, however, you ought to
understand Him to be another, I have already explained, on the ground of
Personality, not of Substance—in the way of distinction, not of division. But
although I must everywhere hold one only substance in three coherent and
inseparable (Persons), yet I am bound to acknowledge, from the necessity of the
case, that He who issues a command is different from Him who executes it. For,
indeed, He would not be issuing a command if He were all the while doing the
work Himself, while ordering it to be done by the second. But still He did
issue the command, although He would not have intended to command Himself if He
were only one; or else He must have worked without any command, because He
would not have waited to command Himself.
Well then, you reply, if He was God who spoke,
and He was also God who created, at this rate, one God spoke and another
created; (and thus) two Gods are declared. If you are so venturesome and harsh,
reflect a while; and that you may think the better and more deliberately,
listen to the psalm in which Two are described as God: “Thy throne, O God, is
for ever and ever; the sceptre of Thy kingdom is a sceptre of righteousness.
Thou hast loved righteousness, and hated iniquity: therefore God, even Thy God,
hath anointed Thee or made Thee His Christ.” Now, since He here speaks to God,
and affirms that God is anointed by God, He must have affirmed that Two are
God, by reason of the sceptre’s royal power. Accordingly, Isaiah also says to
the Person of Christ: “The Sabæans, men of stature, shall pass over to Thee;
and they shall follow after Thee, bound in fetters; and they shall worship
Thee, because God is in Thee: for Thou art our God, yet we knew it not; Thou
art the God of Israel.” For here too, by saying, “God is in Thee,” and “Thou
art God,” he sets forth Two who were God: (in the former expression in Thee, he
means) in Christ, and (in the other he means) the Holy Ghost. That is a still
grander statement which you will find expressly made in the Gospel: “In the
beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” There
was One “who was,” and there was another “with whom” He was. But I find in
Scripture the name Lord also applied to them Both: “The Lord said unto my Lord,
Sit Thou on my right hand.” And Isaiah says this: “Lord, who hath believed our
report, and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed?” Now he would most
certainly have said Thine Arm, if he had not wished us to understand that the
Father is Lord, and the Son also is Lord. A much more ancient testimony we have
also in Genesis: “Then the Lord rained upon Sodom and upon Gomorrah brimstone
and fire from the Lord out of heaven.” Now, either deny that this is Scripture;
or else (let me ask) what sort of man you are, that you do not think words
ought to be taken and understood in the sense in which they are written,
especially when they are not expressed in allegories and parables, but in
determinate and simple declarations? If, indeed, you follow those who did not
at the time endure the Lord when showing Himself to be the Son of God, because
they would not believe Him to be the Lord, then (I ask you) call to mind along
with them the passage where it is written, “I have said, Ye are gods, and ye
are children of the Most High;” and again, “God standeth in the congregation of
gods;” in order that, if the Scripture has not been afraid to designate as gods
human beings, who have become sons of God by faith, you may be sure that the
same Scripture has with greater propriety conferred the name of the Lord on the
true and one only Son of God. Very well! you say, I shall challenge you to
preach from this day forth (and that, too, on the authority of these same
Scriptures) two Gods and two Lords, consistently with your views. God forbid,
(is my reply). For we, who by the grace of God possess an insight into both the
times and the occasions of the Sacred Writings, especially we who are followers
of the Paraclete, not of human teachers, do indeed definitively declare that
Two Beings are God, the Father and the Son, and, with the addition of the Holy
Spirit, even Three, according to the principle of the divine economy, which
introduces number, in order that the Father may not, as you perversely infer,
be Himself believed to have been born and to have suffered, which it is not
lawful to believe, forasmuch as it has not been so handed down. That there are,
however, two Gods or two Lords, is a statement which at no time proceeds out of
our mouth: not as if it were untrue that the Father is God, and the Son is God,
and the Holy Ghost is God, and each is God; but because in earlier times Two
were actually spoken of as God, and two as Lord, that when Christ should come
He might be both acknowledged as God and designated as Lord, being the Son of
Him who is both God and Lord. Now, if there were found in the Scriptures but
one Personality of Him who is God and Lord, Christ would justly enough be
inadmissible to the title of God and Lord: for (in the Scriptures) there was
declared to be none other than One God and One Lord, and it must have followed
that the Father should Himself seem to have come down (to earth), inasmuch as
only One God and One Lord was ever read of (in the Scriptures), and His entire
Economy would be involved in obscurity, which has been planned and arranged
with so clear a foresight in His providential dispensation as matter for our
faith. As soon, however, as Christ came, and was recognised by us as the very
Being who had from the beginning caused plurality (in the Divine Economy),
being the second from the Father, and with the Spirit the third, and Himself
declaring and manifesting the Father more fully (than He had ever been before),
the title of Him who is God and Lord was at once restored to the Unity (of the
Divine Nature), even because the Gentiles would have to pass from the multitude
of their idols to the One Only God, in order that a difference might be
distinctly settled between the worshippers of One God and the votaries of
polytheism. For it was only right that Christians should shine in the world as
“children of light,” adoring and invoking Him who is the One God and Lord as
“the light of the world.” Besides, if, from that perfect knowledge which
assures us that the title of God and Lord is suitable both to the Father, and
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost, we were to invoke a plurality of gods and
lords, we should quench our torches, and we should become less courageous to
endure the martyr’s sufferings, from which an easy escape would everywhere lie
open to us, as soon as we swore by a plurality of gods and lords, as sundry
heretics do, who hold more gods than One. I will therefore not speak of gods at
all, nor of lords, but I shall follow the apostle; so that if the Father and
the Son, are alike to be invoked, I shall call the Father “God,” and invoke
Jesus Christ as “Lord.” But when Christ alone (is mentioned), I shall be able
to call Him “God,” as the same apostle says: “Of whom is Christ, who is over
all, God blessed for ever.” For I should give the name of “sun” even to a
sunbeam, considered in itself; but if I were mentioning the sun from which the
ray emanates, I certainly should at once withdraw the name of sun from the mere
beam. For although I make not two suns, still I shall reckon both the sun and
its ray to be as much two things and two forms of one undivided substance, as
God and His Word, as the Father and the Son.
Moreover, there comes to our aid, when we insist
upon the Father and the Son as being Two, that regulating principle which has
determined God to be invisible. When Moses in Egypt desired to see the face of
the Lord, saying, “If therefore I have found grace in Thy sight, manifest
Thyself unto me, that I may see Thee and know Thee,” God said, “Thou canst not
see my face; for there shall no man see me, and live:” in other words, he who
sees me shall die. Now we find that God has been seen by many persons, and yet
that no one who saw Him died (at the sight). The truth is, they saw God
according to the faculties of men, but not in accordance with the full glory of
the Godhead. For the patriarchs are said to have seen God (as Abraham and
Jacob), and the prophets (as, for instance Isaiah and Ezekiel), and yet they
did not die. Either, then, they ought to have died, since they had seen Him—for
(the sentence runs), “No man shall see God, and live;” or else if they saw God,
and yet did not die, the Scripture is false in stating that God said, “If a man
see my face, he shall not live.” Either way, the Scripture misleads us, when it
makes God invisible, and when it produces Him to our sight. Now, then, He must
be a different Being who was seen, because of one who was seen it could not be
predicated that He is invisible. It will therefore follow, that by Him who is
invisible we must understand the Father in the fulness of His majesty, while we
recognise the Son as visible by reason of the dispensation of His derived
existence; even as it is not permitted us to contemplate the sun, in the full
amount of his substance which is in the heavens, but we can only endure with
our eyes a ray, by reason of the tempered condition of this portion which is
projected from him to the earth. Here some one on the other side may be
disposed to contend that the Son is also invisible as being the Word, and as
being also the Spirit; and, while claiming one nature for the Father and the
Son, to affirm that the Father is rather One and the Same Person with the Son.
But the Scripture, as we have said, maintains their difference by the
distinction it makes between the Visible and the Invisible. They then go on to argue
to this effect, that if it was the Son who then spake to Moses, He must mean it
of Himself that His face was visible to no one, because He was Himself indeed
the invisible Father in the name of the Son. And by this means they will have
it that the Visible and the Invisible are one and the same, just as the Father
and the Son are the same; (and this they maintain) because in a preceding
passage, before He had refused (the sight of) His face to Moses, the Scripture
informs us that “the Lord spake face to face with Moses, even as a man speaketh
unto his friend;” just as Jacob also says, “I have seen God face to face.”
Therefore the Visible and the Invisible are one and the same; and both being
thus the same, it follows that He is invisible as the Father, and visible as
the Son. As if the Scripture, according to our exposition of it, were
inapplicable to the Son, when the Father is set aside in His own invisibility.
We declare, however, that the Son also, considered in Himself (as the Son), is
invisible, in that He is God, and the Word and Spirit of God; but that He was
visible before the days of His flesh, in the way that He says to Aaron and
Miriam, “And if there shall be a prophet amongst you, I will make myself known
to him in a vision, and will speak to him in a dream; not as with Moses, with
whom I shall speak mouth to mouth, even apparently, that is to say, in truth,
and not enigmatically,” that is to say, in image; as the apostle also expresses
it, “Now we see through a glass, darkly (or enigmatically), but then face to
face.” Since, therefore, He reserves to some future time His presence and
speech face to face with Moses—a promise which was afterwards fulfilled in the
retirement of the mount (of transfiguration), when as we read in the Gospel,
“Moses appeared talking with Jesus”—it is evident that in early times it was
always in a glass, (as it were,) and an enigma, in vision and dream, that God,
I mean the Son of God, appeared—to the prophets and the patriarchs, as also to
Moses indeed himself. And even if the Lord did possibly speak with him face to
face, yet it was not as man that he could behold His face, unless indeed it was
in a glass, (as it were,) and by enigma. Besides, if the Lord so spake with
Moses, that Moses actually discerned His face, eye to eye, how comes it to pass
that immediately afterwards, on the same occasion, he desires to see His face,
which he ought not to have desired, because he had already seen it? And how, in
like manner, does the Lord also say that His face cannot be seen, because He
had shown it, if indeed He really had, (as our opponents suppose). Or what is
that face of God, the sight of which is refused, if there was one which was
visible to man? “I have seen God,” says Jacob, “face to face, and my life is
preserved.” There ought to be some other face which kills if it be only seen.
Well, then, was the Son visible? (Certainly not,) although He was the face of
God, except only in vision and dream, and in a glass and enigma, because the
Word and Spirit (of God) cannot be seen except in an imaginary form. But, (they
say,) He calls the invisible Father His face. For who is the Father? Must He
not be the face of the Son, by reason of that authority which He obtains as the
begotten of the Father? For is there not a natural propriety in saying of some
personage greater (than yourself), That man is my face; he gives me his
countenance? “My Father,” says Christ, “is greater than I.” Therefore the
Father must be the face of the Son. For what does the Scripture say? “The
Spirit of His person is Christ the Lord.” As therefore Christ is the Spirit of
the Father’s person, there is good reason why, in virtue indeed of the unity,
the Spirit of Him to whose person He belonged—that is to say, the
Father—pronounced Him to be His “face.” Now this, to be sure, is an astonishing
thing, that the Father can be taken to be the face of the Son, when He is His
head; for “the head of Christ is God.”
If I fail in resolving this article (of our
faith) by passages which may admit of dispute out of the Old Testament, I will
take out of the New Testament a confirmation of our view, that you may not
straightway attribute to the Father every possible (relation and condition)
which I ascribe to the Son. Behold, then, I find both in the Gospels and in the
(writings of the) apostles a visible and an invisible God (revealed to us),
under a manifest and personal distinction in the condition of both. There is a
certain emphatic saying by John: “No man hath seen God at any time;” meaning,
of course, at any previous time. But he has indeed taken away all question of
time, by saying that God had never been seen. The apostle confirms this statement;
for, speaking of God, he says, “Whom no man hath seen, nor can see;” because
the man indeed would die who should see Him. But the very same apostles testify
that they had both seen and “handled” Christ. Now, if Christ is Himself both
the Father and the Son, how can He be both the Visible and the Invisible? In
order, however, to reconcile this diversity between the Visible and the
Invisible, will not some one on the other side argue that the two statements
are quite correct: that He was visible indeed in the flesh, but was invisible
before His appearance in the flesh; so that He who as the Father was invisible
before the flesh, is the same as the Son who was visible in the flesh? If,
however, He is the same who was invisible before the incarnation, how comes it
that He was actually seen in ancient times before (coming in) the flesh? And by
parity of reasoning, if He is the same who was visible after (coming in) the
flesh, how happens it that He is now declared to be invisible by the apostles?
How, I repeat, can all this be, unless it be that He is one, who anciently was
visible only in mystery and enigma, and became more clearly visible by His
incarnation, even the Word who was also made flesh; whilst He is another whom
no man has seen at any time, being none else than the Father, even Him to whom
the Word belongs? Let us, in short, examine who it is whom the apostles saw.
“That,” says John, “which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked
upon, and our hands have handled, of the Word of life.” Now the Word of life
became flesh, and was heard, and was seen, and was handled, because He was
flesh who, before He came in the flesh, was the “Word in the beginning with
God” the Father, and not the Father with the Word. For although the Word was
God, yet was He with God, because He is God of God; and being joined to the
Father, is with the Father. “And we have seen His glory, the glory as of the
only begotten of the Father;” that is, of course, (the glory) of the Son, even
Him who was visible, and was glorified by the invisible Father. And therefore,
inasmuch as he had said that the Word of God was God, in order that he might
give no help to the presumption of the adversary, (which pretended) that he had
seen the Father Himself and in order to draw a distinction between the
invisible Father and the visible Son, he makes the additional assertion, ex
abundanti as it were: “No man hath seen God at any time.” What God does he
mean? The Word? But he has already said: “Him we have seen and heard, and our
hands have handled the Word of life.” Well, (I must again ask,) what God does
he mean? It is of course the Father, with whom was the Word, the only begotten
Son, who is in the bosom of the Father, and has Himself declared Him. He was
both heard and seen and, that He might not be supposed to be a phantom, was
actually handled. Him, too, did Paul behold; but yet he saw not the Father.
“Have I not,” he says, “seen Jesus Christ our Lord?” Moreover, he expressly
called Christ God, saying: “Of whom are the fathers, and of whom as concerning
the flesh Christ came, who is over all, God blessed for ever.” He shows us also
that the Son of God, which is the Word of God, is visible, because He who
became flesh was called Christ. Of the Father, however, he says to Timothy: “Whom
none among men hath seen, nor indeed can see;” and he accumulates the
description in still ampler terms: “Who only hath immortality, and dwelleth in
the light which no man can approach unto.” It was of Him, too, that he had said
in a previous passage: “Now unto the King eternal, immortal, invisible, to the
only God;” so that we might apply even the contrary qualities to the Son
Himself—mortality, accessibility—of whom the apostle testifies that “He died
according to the Scriptures,” and that “He was seen by himself last of all,”—by
means, of course, of the light which was accessible, although it was not
without imperilling his sight that he experienced that light. A like danger to
which also befell Peter, and John, and James, (who confronted not the same light)
without risking the loss of their reason and mind; and if they, who were unable
to endure the glory of the Son, had only seen the Father, they must have died
then and there: “For no man shall see God, and live.” This being the case, it
is evident that He was always seen from the beginning, who became visible in
the end; and that He, (on the contrary,) was not seen in the end who had never
been visible from the beginning; and that accordingly there are two—the Visible
and the Invisible. It was the Son, therefore, who was always seen, and the Son
who always conversed with men, and the Son who has always worked by the
authority and will of the Father; because “the Son can do nothing of Himself,
but what He seeth the Father do”—”do” that is, in His mind and thought. For the
Father acts by mind and thought; whilst the Son, who is in the Father’s mind
and thought, gives effect and form to what He sees. Thus all things were made
by the Son, and without Him was not anything made.
But you must not suppose that only the works
which relate to the (creation of the) world were made by the Son, but also
whatsoever since that time has been done by God. For “the Father who loveth the
Son, and hath given all things into His hand,” loves Him indeed from the
beginning, and from the very first has handed all things over to Him. Whence it
is written, “From the beginning the Word was with God, and the Word was God;”
to whom “is given by the Father all power in heaven and on earth.” “The Father
judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgment to the Son”—from the very
beginning even. For when He speaks of all power and all judgment, and says that
all things were made by Him, and all things have been delivered into His hand,
He allows no exception (in respect) of time, because they would not be all
things unless they were the things of all time. It is the Son, therefore, who
has been from the beginning administering judgment, throwing down the haughty
tower, and dividing the tongues, punishing the whole world by the violence of
waters, raining upon Sodom and Gomorrah fire and brimstone, as the Lord from
the Lord. For He it was who at all times came down to hold converse with men,
from Adam on to the patriarchs and the prophets, in vision, in dream, in
mirror, in dark saying; ever from the beginning laying the foundation of the
course of His dispensations, which He meant to follow out to the very last.
Thus was He ever learning even as God to converse with men upon earth, being no
other than the Word which was to be made flesh. But He was thus learning (or
rehearsing), in order to level for us the way of faith, that we might the more
readily believe that the Son of God had come down into the world, if we knew
that in times past also something similar had been done. For as it was on our
account and for our learning that these events are described in the Scriptures,
so for our sakes also were they done—(even ours, I say), “upon whom the ends of
the world are come.” In this way it was that even then He knew full well what
human feelings and affections were, intending as He always did to take upon Him
man’s actual component substances, body and soul, making inquiry of Adam (as if
He were ignorant), “Where art thou, Adam?”—repenting that He had made man, as
if He had lacked foresight; tempting Abraham, as if ignorant of what was in
man; offended with persons, and then reconciled to them; and whatever other
(weaknesses and imperfections) the heretics lay hold of (in their assumptions)
as unworthy of God, in order to discredit the Creator, not considering that
these circumstances are suitable enough for the Son, who was one day to
experience even human sufferings—hunger and thirst, and tears, and actual birth
and real death, and in respect of such a dispensation “made by the Father a
little less than the angels.” But the heretics, you may be sure, will not allow
that those things are suitable even to the Son of God, which you are imputing
to the very Father Himself, when you pretend that He made Himself less (than
the angels) on our account; whereas the Scripture informs us that He who was
made less was so affected by another, and not Himself by Himself. What, again,
if He was One who was “crowned with glory and honour,” and He Another by whom
He was so crowned,—the Son, in fact, by the Father? Moreover, how comes it to
pass, that the Almighty Invisible God, “whom no man hath seen nor can see; He
who dwelleth in light unapproachable;” “He who dwelleth not in temples made
with hands;” “from before whose sight the earth trembles, and the mountains
melt like wax;” who holdeth the whole world in His hand “like a nest;” “whose
throne is heaven, and earth His footstool;” in whom is every place, but Himself
is in no place; who is the utmost bound of the universe;—how happens it, I say,
that He (who, though) the Most High, should yet have walked in paradise towards
the cool of the evening, in quest of Adam; and should have shut up the ark
after Noah had entered it; and at Abraham’s tent should have refreshed Himself
under an oak; and have called to Moses out of the burning bush; and have
appeared as “the fourth” in the furnace of the Babylonian monarch (although He
is there called the Son of man),—unless all these events had happened as an
image, as a mirror, as an enigma (of the future incarnation)? Surely even these
things could not have been believed even of the Son of God, unless they had
been given us in the Scriptures; possibly also they could not have been
believed of the Father, even if they had been given in the Scriptures, since
these men bring Him down into Mary’s womb, and set Him before Pilate’s
judgment-seat, and bury Him in the sepulchre of Joseph. Hence, therefore, their
error becomes manifest; for, being ignorant that the entire order of the divine
administration has from the very first had its course through the agency of the
Son, they believe that the Father Himself was actually seen, and held converse
with men, and worked, and was athirst, and suffered hunger (in spite of the
prophet who says: “The everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator of the ends of
the earth, shall never thirst at all, nor be hungry;” much more, shall neither
die at any time, nor be buried!), and therefore that it was uniformly one God,
even the Father, who at all times did Himself the things which were really done
by Him through the agency of the Son.
They more readily supposed that the Father acted
in the Son’s name, than that the Son acted in the Father’s; although the Lord
says Himself, “I am come in my Father’s name;” and even to the Father He
declares, “I have manifested Thy name unto these men;” whilst the Scripture
likewise says, “Blessed is He that cometh in the name of the Lord,” that is to
say, the Son in the Father’s name. And as for the Father’s names, God Almighty,
the Most High, the Lord of hosts, the King of Israel, the “One that is,” we say
(for so much do the Scriptures teach us) that they belonged suitably to the Son
also, and that the Son came under these designations, and has always acted in
them, and has thus manifested them in Himself to men. “All things,” says He,
“which the Father hath are mine.” Then why not His names also? When, therefore,
you read of Almighty God, and the Most High, and the God of hosts, and the King
of Israel, the “One that is,” consider whether the Son also be not indicated by
these designations, who in His own right is God Almighty, in that He is the
Word of Almighty God, and has received power over all; is the Most High, in
that He is “exalted at the right hand of God,” as Peter declares in the Acts;
is the Lord of hosts, because all things are by the Father made subject to Him;
is the King of Israel because to Him has especially been committed the destiny
of that nation; and is likewise “the One that is,” because there are many who
are called Sons, but are not. As to the point maintained by them, that the name
of Christ belongs also to the Father, they shall hear (what I have to say) in
the proper place. Meanwhile, let this be my immediate answer to the argument
which they adduce from the Revelation of John: “I am the Lord which is, and
which was, and which is to come, the Almighty;” and from all other passages
which in their opinion make the designation of Almighty God unsuitable to the
Son. As if, indeed, He which is to come were not almighty; whereas even the Son
of the Almighty is as much almighty as the Son of God is God.
But what hinders them from readily perceiving
this community of the Father’s titles in the Son, is the statement of
Scripture, whenever it determines God to be but One; as if the selfsame
Scripture had not also set forth Two both as God and Lord, as we have shown
above. Their argument is: Since we find Two and One, therefore Both are One and
the Same, both Father and Son. Now the Scripture is not in danger of requiring
the aid of any one’s argument, lest it should seem to be self-contradictory. It
has a method of its own, both when it sets forth one only God, and also when it
shows that there are Two, Father and Son; and is consistent with itself. It is
clear that the Son is mentioned by it. For, without any detriment to the Son,
it is quite possible for it to have rightly determined that God is only One, to
whom the Son belongs; since He who has a Son ceases not on that account to
exist,—Himself being One only, that is, on His own account, whenever He is
named without the Son. And He is named without the Son whensoever He is defined
as the principle (of Deity) in the character of “its first Person,” which had
to be mentioned before the name of the Son; because it is the Father who is
acknowledged in the first place, and after the Father the Son is named.
Therefore “there is one God,” the Father, “and without Him there is none else.”
And when He Himself makes this declaration, He denies not the Son, but says
that there is no other God; and the Son is not different from the Father.
Indeed, if you only look carefully at the contexts which follow such statements
as this, you will find that they nearly always have distinct reference to the
makers of idols and the worshippers thereof, with a view to the multitude of
false gods being expelled by the unity of the Godhead, which nevertheless has a
Son; and inasmuch as this Son is undivided and inseparable from the Father, so
is He to be reckoned as being in the Father, even when He is not named. The
fact is, if He had named Him expressly, He would have separated Him, saying in
so many words: “Beside me there is none else, except my Son.” In short He would
have made His Son actually another, after excepting Him from others. Suppose
the sun to say, “I am the Sun, and there is none other besides me, except my
ray,” would you not have remarked how useless was such a statement, as if the
ray were not itself reckoned in the sun? He says, then, that there is no God
besides Himself in respect of the idolatry both of the Gentiles as well as of
Israel; nay, even on account of our heretics also, who fabricate idols with
their words, just as the heathen do with their hands; that is to say, they make
another God and another Christ. When, therefore, He attested His own unity, the
Father took care of the Son’s interests, that Christ should not be supposed to
have come from another God, but from Him who had already said, “I am God and
there is none other beside me,” who shows us that He is the only God, but in
company with His Son, with whom “He stretcheth out the heavens alone.”
But this very declaration of His they will hastily
pervert into an argument of His singleness. “I have,” says He, “stretched out
the heaven alone.” Undoubtedly alone as regards all other powers; and He thus
gives a premonitory evidence against the conjectures of the heretics, who
maintain that the world was constructed by various angels and powers, who also
make the Creator Himself to have been either an angel or some subordinate agent
sent to form external things, such as the constituent parts of the world, but
who was at the same time ignorant of the divine purpose. If, now, it is in this
sense that He stretches out the heavens alone, how is it that these heretics
assume their position so perversely, as to render inadmissible the singleness
of that Wisdom which says, “When He prepared the heaven, I was present with
Him?”—even though the apostle asks, “Who hath known the mind of the Lord, or
who hath been His counsellor?” meaning, of course, to except that wisdom which
was present with Him. In Him, at any rate, and with Him, did (Wisdom) construct
the universe, He not being ignorant of what she was making. “Except Wisdom,”
however, is a phrase of the same sense exactly as “except the Son,” who is
Christ, “the Wisdom and Power of God,” according to the apostle, who only knows
the mind of the Father. “For who knoweth the things that be in God, except the
Spirit which is in Him?” Not, observe, without Him. There was therefore One who
caused God to be not alone, except “alone” from all other gods. But (if we are
to follow the heretics), the Gospel itself will have to be rejected, because it
tells us that all things were made by God through the Word, without whom
nothing was made. And if I am not mistaken, there is also another passage in
which it is written: “By the Word of the Lord were the heavens made, and all
the hosts of them by His Spirit.” Now this Word, the Power of God and the
Wisdom of God, must be the very Son of God. So that, if (He did) all things by
the Son, He must have stretched out the heavens by the Son, and so not have
stretched them out alone, except in the sense in which He is “alone” (and
apart) from all other gods. Accordingly He says, concerning the Son,
immediately afterwards: “Who else is it that frustrateth the tokens of the
liars, and maketh diviners mad, turning wise men backward, and making their
knowledge foolish, and confirming the words of His Son?”—as, for instance, when
He said, “This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased; hear ye Him.” By
thus attaching the Son to Himself, He becomes His own interpreter in what sense
He stretched out the heavens alone, meaning alone with His Son, even as He is
one with His Son. The utterance, therefore, will be in like manner the Son’s,
“I have stretched out the heavens alone,” because by the Word were the heavens
established. Inasmuch, then, as the heaven was prepared when Wisdom was present
in the Word, and since all things were made by the Word, it is quite correct to
say that even the Son stretched out the heaven alone, because He alone
ministered to the Father’s work. It must also be He who says, “I am the First,
and to all futurity I AM.” The Word, no doubt, was before all things. “In the
beginning was the Word;” and in that beginning He was sent forth by the Father.
The Father, however, has no beginning, as proceeding from none; nor can He be
seen, since He was not begotten. He who has always been alone could never have
had order or rank. Therefore, if they have determined that the Father and the
Son must be regarded as one and the same, for the express purpose of
vindicating the unity of God, that unity of His is preserved intact; for He is
one, and yet He has a Son, who is equally with Himself comprehended in the same
Scriptures. Since they are unwilling to allow that the Son is a distinct
Person, second from the Father, lest, being thus second, He should cause two
Gods to be spoken of, we have shown above that Two are actually described in
Scripture as God and Lord. And to prevent their being offended at this fact, we
give a reason why they are not said to be two Gods and two Lords, but that they
are two as Father and Son; and this not by severance of their substance, but
from the dispensation wherein we declare the Son to be undivided and
inseparable from the Father,—distinct in degree, not in state. And although,
when named apart, He is called God, He does not thereby constitute two Gods,
but one; and that from the very circumstance that He is entitled to be called
God, from His union with the Father.
But I must take some further pains to rebut
their arguments, when they make selections from the Scriptures in support of
their opinion, and refuse to consider the other points, which obviously
maintain the rule of faith without any infraction of the unity of the Godhead,
and with the full admission of the Monarchy. For as in the Old Testament
Scriptures they lay hold of nothing else than, “I am God, and beside me there
is no God;” so in the Gospel they simply keep in view the Lord’s answer to
Philip, “I and my Father are one;” and, “He that hath seen me hath seen the
Father; and I am in the Father, and the Father in me.” They would have the
entire revelation of both Testaments yield to these three passages, whereas the
only proper course is to understand the few statements in the light of the
many. But in their contention they only act on the principle of all heretics.
For, inasmuch as only a few testimonies are to be found (making for them) in
the general mass, they pertinaciously set off the few against the many, and
assume the later against the earlier. The rule, however, which has been from
the beginning established for every case, gives its prescription against the
later assumptions, as indeed it also does against the fewer.
Consider, therefore, how many passages present
their prescriptive authority to you in this very Gospel before this inquiry of
Philip, and previous to any discussion on your part. And first of all there
comes at once to hand the preamble of John to his Gospel, which shows us what
He previously was who had to become flesh. “In the beginning was the Word, and
the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God:
all things were made by Him, and without Him was nothing made.” Now, since
these words may not be taken otherwise than as they are written, there is without
doubt shown to be One who was from the beginning, and also One with whom He
always was: one the Word of God, the other God (although the Word is also God,
but God regarded as the Son of God, not as the Father); One through whom were
all things, Another by whom were all things. But in what sense we call Him
Another we have already often described. In that we called Him Another, we must
needs imply that He is not identical—not identical indeed, yet not as if
separate; Other by dispensation, not by division. He, therefore, who became
flesh was not the very same as He from whom the Word came. “His glory was
beheld—the glory as of the only-begotten of the Father;” not, (observe,) as of
the Father. He “declared” (what was in) “the bosom of the Father alone;” the
Father did not divulge the secrets of His own bosom. For this is preceded by
another statement: “No man hath seen God at any time.” Then, again, when He is
designated by John (the Baptist) as “the Lamb of God,” He is not described as
Himself the same with Him of whom He is the beloved Son. He is, no doubt, ever
the Son of God, but yet not He Himself of whom He is the Son. This (divine
relationship) Nathanæl at once recognised in Him, even as Peter did on another
occasion: “Thou art the Son of God.” And He affirmed Himself that they were
quite right in their convictions; for He answered Nathanæl: “Because I said, I
saw thee under the fig-tree, therefore dost thou believe?” And in the same
manner He pronounced Peter to be “blessed,” inasmuch as “flesh and blood had
not revealed it to him”—that he had perceived the Father—”but the Father which
is in heaven.” By asserting all this, He determined the distinction which is
between the two Persons: that is, the Son then on earth, whom Peter had
confessed to be the Son of God; and the Father in heaven, who had revealed to
Peter the discovery which he had made, that Christ was the Son of God. When He
entered the temple, He called it “His Father’s house,” speaking as the Son. In
His address to Nicodemus He says: “So God loved the world, that He gave His
only-begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have
everlasting life.” And again: “For God sent not His Son into the world to
condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved. He that
believeth on Him is not condemned; but he that believeth not is condemned
already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only-begotten Son of
God.” Moreover, when John (the Baptist) was asked what he happened to know of
Jesus, he said: “The Father loveth the Son, and hath given all things into His
hand. He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life; and he that believeth
not the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on him.” Whom,
indeed, did He reveal to the woman of Samaria? Was it not “the Messias which is
called Christ?” And so He showed, of course, that He was not the Father, but
the Son; and elsewhere He is expressly called “the Christ, the Son of God,” and
not the Father. He says, therefore,” My meat is to do the will of Him that sent
me, and to finish His work;” whilst to the Jews He remarks respecting the cure
of the impotent man, “My Father worketh hitherto, and I work.” “My Father and
I”—these are the Son’s words. And it was on this very account that “the Jews sought
the more intently to kill Him, not only because He broke the Sabbath, but also
because He said that God was His Father, thus making Himself equal with God.
Then indeed did He answer and say unto them, The Son can do nothing of Himself,
but what He seeth the Father do; for what things soever He doeth these also
doeth the Son likewise. For the Father loveth the Son, and showeth Him all
things that He Himself doeth; and He will also show Him greater works than
these, that ye may marvel. For as the Father raiseth up the dead and quickeneth
them, even so the Son also quickeneth whom He will. For the Father judgeth no
man, but hath committed all judgment unto the Son, that all men should honour
the Son, even as they honour the Father. He that honoureth not the Son,
honoureth not the Father, who hath sent the Son. Verily, verily, I say unto
you, He that heareth my words, and believeth on Him that sent me, hath
everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation, but is passed from
death unto life. Verily I say unto you, that the hour is coming, when the dead
shall hear the voice of the Son of God; and when they have heard it, they shall
live. For as the Father hath eternal life in Himself, so also hath He given to
the Son to have eternal life in Himself; and He hath given Him authority to
execute judgment also, because He is the Son of man”—that is, according to the
flesh, even as He is also the Son of God through His Spirit. Afterwards He goes
on to say: “But I have greater witness than that of John; for the works which
the Father hath given me to finish—those very works bear witness of me that the
Father hath sent me. And the Father Himself, which hath sent me, hath also
borne witness of me.” But He at once adds, “Ye have neither heard His voice at
any time, nor seen His shape;” thus affirming that in former times it was not
the Father, but the Son, who used to be seen and heard. Then He says at last:
“I am come in my Father’s name, and ye have not received me.” It was therefore
always the Son (of whom we read) under the designation of the Almighty and Most
High God, and King, and Lord. To those also who inquired “what they should do
to work the works of God,” He answered, “This is the work of God, that ye
believe on Him whom He hath sent.” He also declares Himself to be “the bread
which the Father sent from heaven;” and adds, that “all that the Father gave
Him should come to Him, and that He Himself would not reject them, because He
had come down from heaven not to do His own will, but the will of the Father; and
that the will of the Father was that every one who saw the Son, and believed on
Him, should obtain the life (everlasting,) and the resurrection at the last
day. No man indeed was able to come to Him, except the Father attracted him;
whereas every one who had heard and learnt of the Father came to Him.” He goes
on then expressly to say, “Not that any man hath seen the Father;” thus showing
us that it was through the Word of the Father that men were instructed and
taught. Then, when many departed from Him, and He turned to the apostles with
the inquiry whether “they also would go away,” what was Simon Peter’s answer?
“To whom shall we go? Thou hast the words of eternal life, and we believe that
Thou art the Christ.” (Tell me now, did they believe) Him to be the Father, or
the Christ of the Father?
Again, whose doctrine does He announce, at which
all were astonished? Was it His own or the Father’s? So, when they were in
doubt among themselves whether He were the Christ (not as being the Father, of
course but as the Son), He says to them “You are not ignorant whence I am; and I
am not come of myself, but He that sent me is true, whom ye know not; but I
know Him, because I am from Him.” He did not say, Because I myself am He; and,
I have sent mine own self: but His words are, “He hath sent me.” When,
likewise, the Pharisees sent men to apprehend Him, He says: “Yet a little while
am I with you, and (then) I go unto Him that sent me.” When, however, He
declares that He is not alone, and uses these words, “but I and the Father that
sent me,” does He not show that there are Two—Two, and yet inseparable? Indeed,
this was the sum and substance of what He was teaching them, that they were
inseparably Two; since, after citing the law when it affirms the truth of two
men’s testimony, He adds at once: “I am one who am bearing witness of myself;
and the Father (is another,) who hath sent me, and beareth witness of me.” Now,
if He were one—being at once both the Son and the Father—He certainly would not
have quoted the sanction of the law, which requires not the testimony of one,
but of two. Likewise, when they asked Him where His Father was, He answered
them, that they had known neither Himself nor the Father; and in this answer He
plainly told them of Two, whom they were ignorant of. Granted that “if they had
known Him, they would have known the Father also,” this certainly does not
imply that He was Himself both Father and Son; but that, by reason of the
inseparability of the Two, it was impossible for one of them to be either
acknowledged or unknown without the other. “He that sent me,” says He, “is
true; and I am telling the world those things which I have heard of Him.” And
the Scripture narrative goes on to explain in an exoteric manner, that “they
understood not that He spake to them concerning the Father,” although they
ought certainly to have known that the Father’s words were uttered in the Son,
because they read in Jeremiah, “And the Lord said to me, Behold, I have put my
words in thy mouth;” and again in Isaiah, “The Lord hath given to me the tongue
of learning that I should understand when to speak a word in season.” In
accordance with which, Christ Himself says: “Then shall ye know that I am He
and that I am saying nothing of my own self; but that, as my Father hath taught
me, so I speak, because He that sent me is with me.” This also amounts to a
proof that they were Two, (although) undivided. Likewise, when upbraiding the
Jews in His discussion with them, because they wished to kill Him, He said, “I
speak that which I have seen with my Father, and ye do that which ye have seen
with your father;” “but now ye seek to kill me, a man that hath told you the
truth which I have heard of God;” and again, “If God were your Father, ye would
love me, for I proceeded forth and came from God,” (still they are not hereby
separated, although He declares that He proceeded forth from the Father. Some
persons indeed seize the opportunity afforded them in these words to propound
their heresy of His separation; but His coming out from God is like the ray’s
procession from the sun, and the river’s from the fountain, and the tree’s from
the seed); “I have not a devil, but I honour my Father;” again, “If I honour
myself, my honour is nothing: it is my Father that honoureth me, of whom ye
say, that He is your God: yet ye have not known Him, but I know Him; and if I
should say, I know Him not, I shall be a liar like unto you; but I know Him,
and keep His saying.” But when He goes on to say, “Your father Abraham rejoiced
to see my day; and he saw it, and was glad,” He certainly proves that it was
not the Father that appeared to Abraham, but the Son. In like manner He
declares, in the case of the man born blind, “that He must do the works of the
Father which had sent Him;” and after He had given the man sight, He said to
him, “Dost thou believe in the Son of God?” Then, upon the man’s inquiring who
He was, He proceeded to reveal Himself to him, as that Son of God whom He had
announced to him as the right object of his faith. In a later passage He
declares that He is known by the Father, and the Father by Him; adding that He
was so wholly loved by the Father, that He was laying down His life, because He
had received this commandment from the Father. When He was asked by the Jews if
He were the very Christ (meaning, of course, the Christ of God; for to this day
the Jews expect not the Father Himself, but the Christ of God, it being nowhere
said that the Father will come as the Christ), He said to them, “I am telling
you, and yet ye do not believe: the works which I am doing, in my Father’s
name, they actually bear witness of me.” Witness of what? Of that very thing,
to be sure, of which they were making inquiry—whether He were the Christ of
God. Then, again, concerning His sheep, and (the assurance) that no man should
pluck them out of His hand, He says, “My Father, which gave them to me, is
greater than all;” adding immediately, “I am and my Father are one.” Here,
then, they take their stand, too infatuated, nay, too blind, to see in the
first place that there is in this passage an intimation of Two Beings—”I and my
Father;” then that there is a plural predicate, “are,” inapplicable to one
person only; and lastly, that (the predicate terminates in an abstract, not a
personal noun)—”we are one thing” Unum, not “one person” Unus. For if He had
said “one Person,” He might have rendered some assistance to their opinion.
Unus, no doubt, indicates the singular number; but (here we have a case where)
“Two” are still the subject in the masculine gender. He accordingly says Unum,
a neuter term, which does not imply singularity of number, but unity of
essence, likeness, conjunction, affection on the Father’s part, who loves the
Son, and submission on the Son’s, who obeys the Father’s will. When He says, “I
and my Father are one” in essence—Unum—He shows that there are Two, whom He puts
on an equality and unites in one. He therefore adds to this very statement,
that He “had showed them many works from the Father,” for none of which did He
deserve to be stoned. And to prevent their thinking Him deserving of this fate,
as if He had claimed to be considered as God Himself, that is, the Father, by
having said, “I and my Father are One,” representing Himself as the Father’s
divine Son, and not as God Himself, He says, “If it is written in your law, I
said, Ye are gods; and if the Scripture cannot be broken, say ye of Him whom
the Father hath sanctified and sent into the world, that He blasphemeth,
because He said, I am the Son of God? If I do not the works of my Father,
believe me not; but if I do, even if ye will not believe me, still believe the
works; and know that I am in the Father, and the Father in me.” It must
therefore be by the works that the Father is in the Son, and the Son in the
Father; and so it is by the works that we understand that the Father is one
with the Son. All along did He therefore strenuously aim at this conclusion,
that while they were of one power and essence, they should still be believed to
be Two; for otherwise, unless they were believed to be Two, the Son could not
possibly be believed to have any existence at all.
Again, when Martha in a later passage
acknowledged Him to be the Son of God, she no more made a mistake than Peter
and Nathanæl had; and yet, even if she had made a mistake, she would at once
have learnt the truth: for, behold, when about to raise her brother from the
dead, the Lord looked up to heaven, and, addressing the Father, said—as the
Son, of course: “Father, I thank Thee that Thou always hearest me; it is
because of these crowds that are standing by that I have spoken to Thee, that
they may believe that Thou hast sent me.” But in the trouble of His soul, (on a
later occasion,) He said: “What shall I say? Father, save me from this hour:
but for this cause is it that I am come to this hour; only, O Father, do Thou
glorify Thy name”—in which He spake as the Son. (At another time) He said: “I
am come in my Father’s name.” Accordingly, the Son’s voice was indeed alone
sufficient, (when addressed) to the Father. But, behold, with an abundance (of
evidence) the Father from heaven replies, for the purpose of testifying to the
Son: “This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased; hear ye Him.” So,
again, in that asseveration, “I have both glorified, and will glorify again,”
how many Persons do you discover, obstinate Praxeas? Are there not as many as
there are voices? You have the Son on earth, you have the Father in heaven. Now
this is not a separation; it is nothing but the divine dispensation. We know,
however, that God is in the bottomless depths, and exists everywhere; but then
it is by power and authority. We are also sure that the Son, being indivisible
from Him, is everywhere with Him. Nevertheless, in the Economy or Dispensation
itself, the Father willed that the Son should be regarded as on earth, and
Himself in heaven; whither the Son also Himself looked up, and prayed, and made
supplication of the Father; whither also He taught us to raise ourselves, and
pray, “Our Father which art in heaven,” etc.,—although, indeed, He is
everywhere present. This heaven the Father willed to be His own throne; while
He made the Son to be “a little lower than the angels,” by sending Him down to
the earth, but meaning at the same time to “crown Him with glory and honour,”
even by taking Him back to heaven. This He now made good to Him when He said:
“I have both glorified Thee, and will glorify Thee again.” The Son offers His
request from earth, the Father gives His promise from heaven. Why, then, do you
make liars of both the Father and the Son? If either the Father spake from
heaven to the Son when He Himself was the Son on earth, or the Son prayed to
the Father when He was Himself the Son in heaven, how happens it that the Son
made a request of His own very self, by asking it of the Father, since the Son
was the Father? Or, on the other hand, how is it that the Father made a promise
to Himself, by making it to the Son, since the Father was the Son? Were we even
to maintain that they are two separate gods, as you are so fond of throwing out
against us, it would be a more tolerable assertion than the maintenance of so
versatile and changeful a God as yours! Therefore it was that in the passage
before us the Lord declared to the people present: “Not on my own account has
this voice addressed me, but for your sakes,” that these likewise may believe
both in the Father and in the Son, severally, in their own names and persons
and positions. “Then again, Jesus exclaims, and says, He that believeth on me,
believeth not on me, but on Him that sent me;” because it is through the Son
that men believe in the Father, while the Father also is the authority whence
springs belief in the Son. “And he that seeth me, seeth Him that sent me.” How
so? Even because, (as He afterwards declares,) “I have not spoken from myself,
but the Father which sent me: He hath given me a commandment what I should say,
and what I should speak.” For “the Lord God hath given me the tongue of the
learned, that I should know when I ought to speak” the word which I actually
speak. “Even as the Father hath said unto me, so do I speak.” Now, in what way
these things were said to Him, the evangelist and beloved disciple John knew
better than Praxeas; and therefore he adds concerning his own meaning: “Now
before the feast of the passover, Jesus knew that the Father had given all
things into His hands, and that He had come from God, and was going to God.”
Praxeas, however, would have it that it was the Father who proceeded forth from
Himself, and had returned to Himself; so that what the devil put into the heart
of Judas was the betrayal, not of the Son, but of the Father Himself. But for
the matter of that, things have not turned out well either for the devil or the
heretic; because, even in the Son’s case, the treason which the devil wrought
against Him contributed nothing to his advantage. It was, then, the Son of God,
who was in the Son of man, that was betrayed, as the Scripture says afterwards:
“Now is the Son of man glorified, and God is glorified in Him.” Who is here
meant by “God?” Certainly not the Father, but the Word of the Father, who was
in the Son of man—that is in the flesh, in which Jesus had been already
glorified by the divine power and word. “And God,” says He, “shall also glorify
Him in Himself;” that is to say, the Father shall glorify the Son, because He
has Him within Himself; and even though prostrated to the earth, and put to
death, He would soon glorify Him by His resurrection, and making Him conqueror
over death.
But there were some who even then did not
understand. For Thomas, who was so long incredulous, said: “Lord, we know not
whither Thou goest; and how can we know the way? Jesus saith unto him, I am the
way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me. If ye
had known me, ye would have known the Father also: but henceforth ye know Him,
and have seen Him.” And now we come to Philip, who, roused with the expectation
of seeing the Father, and not understanding in what sense he was to take
“seeing the Father,” says: “Show us the Father, and it sufficeth us.” Then the
Lord answered him: “Have I been so long time with you, and yet hast thou not
known me, Philip?” Now whom does He say that they ought to have known?—for this
is the sole point of discussion. Was it as the Father that they ought to have
known Him, or as the Son? If it was as the Father, Praxeas must tell us how
Christ, who had been so long time with them, could have possibly ever been (I
will not say understood, but even) supposed to have been the Father. He is
clearly defined to us in all Scriptures—in the Old Testament as the Christ of
God, in the New Testament as the Son of God. In this character was He anciently
predicted, in this was He also declared even by Christ Himself; nay, by the
very Father also, who openly confesses Him from heaven as His Son, and as His
Son glorifies Him. “This is my beloved Son;” “I have glorified Him, and I will
glorify Him.” In this character, too, was He believed on by His disciples, and
rejected by the Jews. It was, moreover, in this character that He wished to be
accepted by them whenever He named the Father, and gave preference to the
Father, and honoured the Father. This, then, being the case, it was not the
Father whom, after His lengthened intercourse with them, they were ignorant of,
but it was the Son; and accordingly the Lord, while upbraiding Philip for not
knowing Himself who was the object of their ignorance, wished Himself to be
acknowledged indeed as that Being whom He had reproached them for being
ignorant of after so long a time—in a word, as the Son. And now it may be seen
in what sense it was said, “He that hath seen me hath seen the Father,”—even in
the same in which it was said in a previous passage, “I and my Father are one.”
Wherefore? Because “I came forth from the Father, and am come into the world”
and, “I am the way: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me;” and, “No man can
come to me, except the Father draw him;” and, “All things are delivered unto me
by the Father;” and, “As the Father quickeneth (the dead), so also doth the
Son;” and again, “If ye had known me, ye would have known the Father also.” For
in all these passages He had shown Himself to be the Father’s Commissioner,
through whose agency even the Father could be seen in His works, and heard in
His words, and recognised in the Son’s administration of the Father’s words and
deeds. The Father indeed was invisible, as Philip had learnt in the law, and
ought at the moment to have remembered: “No man shall see God, and live.” So he
is reproved for desiring to see the Father, as if He were a visible Being, and
is taught that He only becomes visible in the Son from His mighty works, and
not in the manifestation of His person. If, indeed, He meant the Father to be
understood as the same with the Son, by saying, “He who seeth me seeth the
Father,” how is it that He adds immediately afterwards, “Believest thou not
that I am in the Father, and the Father in me?” He ought rather to have said:
“Believest thou not that I am the Father?” With what view else did He so
emphatically dwell on this point, if it were not to clear up that which He
wished men to understand—namely, that He was the Son? And then, again, by
saying, “Believest thou not that I am in the Father, and the Father in me,” He
laid the greater stress on His question on this very account, that He should
not, because He had said, “He that hath seen me, hath seen the Father,” be
supposed to be the Father; because He had never wished Himself to be so
regarded, having always professed Himself to be the Son, and to have come from
the Father. And then He also set the conjunction of the two Persons in the
clearest light, in order that no wish might be entertained of seeing the Father
as if He were separately visible, and that the Son might be regarded as the
representative of the Father. And yet He omitted not to explain how the Father
was in the Son and the Son in the Father. “The words,” says He, “which I speak
unto you, are not mine,” because indeed they were the Father’s words; “but the
Father that dwelleth in me, He doeth the works.” It is therefore by His mighty
works, and by the words of His doctrine, that the Father who dwells in the Son
makes Himself visible—even by those words and works whereby He abides in Him,
and also by Him in whom He abides; the special properties of Both the Persons
being apparent from this very circumstance, that He says, “I am in the Father,
and the Father is in me.” Accordingly He adds: “Believe—” What? That I am the
Father? I do not find that it is so written, but rather, “that I am in the
Father, and the Father in me; or else believe me for my works’ sake;” meaning
those works by which the Father manifested Himself to be in the Son, not indeed
to the sight of man, but to his intelligence.
What follows Philip’s question, and the Lord’s
whole treatment of it, to the end of John’s Gospel, continues to furnish us
with statements of the same kind, distinguishing the Father and the Son, with
the properties of each. Then there is the Paraclete or Comforter, also, which
He promises to pray for to the Father, and to send from heaven after He had
ascended to the Father. He is called “another Comforter,” indeed; but in what
way He is another we have already shown, “He shall receive of mine,” says
Christ, just as Christ Himself received of the Father’s. Thus the connection of
the Father in the Son, and of the Son in the Paraclete, produces three coherent
Persons, who are yet distinct One from Another. These Three are one essence,
not one Person, as it is said, “I and my Father are One,” in respect of unity
of substance not singularity of number. Run through the whole Gospel, and you
will find that He whom you believe to be the Father (described as acting for
the Father, although you, for your part, forsooth, suppose that “the Father,
being the husbandman,” must surely have been on earth) is once more recognised
by the Son as in heaven, when, “lifting up His eyes thereto,” He commended His
disciples to the safe-keeping of the Father. We have, moreover, in that other
Gospel a clear revelation, i.e. of the Son’s distinction from the Father, “My
God, why hast Thou forsaken me?” and again, (in the third Gospel,) “Father,
into Thy hands I commend my spirit.” But even if (we had not these passages, we
meet with satisfactory evidence) after His resurrection and glorious victory
over death. Now that all the restraint of His humiliation is taken away, He
might, if possible, have shown Himself as the Father to so faithful a woman (as
Mary Magdalene) when she approached to touch Him, out of love, not from
curiosity, nor with Thomas’ incredulity. But not so; Jesus saith unto her,
“Touch me not, for I am not yet ascended to my Father; but go to my brethren”
(and even in this He proves Himself to be the Son; for if He had been the
Father, He would have called them His children, (instead of His brethren), “and
say unto them, I ascend unto my Father and your Father, and to my God and your
God.” Now, does this mean, I ascend as the Father to the Father, and as God to
God? Or as the Son to the Father, and as the Word to God? Wherefore also does
this Gospel, at its very termination, intimate that these things were ever
written, if it be not, to use its own words, “that ye might believe that Jesus
Christ is the Son of God?” Whenever, therefore, you take any of the statements
of this Gospel, and apply them to demonstrate the identity of the Father and
the Son, supposing that they serve your views therein, you are contending
against the definite purpose of the Gospel. For these things certainly are not
written that you may believe that Jesus Christ is the Father, but the Son.
In addition to Philip’s conversation, and the
Lord’s reply to it, the reader will observe that we have run through John’s
Gospel to show that many other passages of a clear purport, both before and
after that chapter, are only in strict accord with that single and prominent
statement, which must be interpreted agreeably to all other places, rather than
in opposition to them, and indeed to its own inherent and natural sense. I will
not here largely use the support of the other Gospels, which confirm our belief
by the Lord’s nativity: it is sufficient to remark that He who had to be born
of a virgin is announced in express terms by the angel himself as the Son of
God: “The Spirit of God shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest
shall overshadow thee; therefore also the Holy Thing that shall be born of thee
shall be called the Son of God.” On this passage even they will wish to raise a
cavil; but truth will prevail. Of course, they say, the Son of God is God, and
the power of the highest is the Most High. And they do not hesitate to
insinuate what, if it had been true, would have been written. Whom was he so
afraid of as not plainly to declare, “God shall come upon thee, and the Highest
shall overshadow thee?” Now, by saying “the Spirit of God” (although the Spirit
of God is God,) and by not directly naming God, he wished that portion of the
whole Godhead to be understood, which was about to retire into the designation
of “the Son.” The Spirit of God in this passage must be the same as the Word.
For just as, when John says, “The Word was made flesh,” we understand the
Spirit also in the mention of the Word: so here, too, we acknowledge the Word
likewise in the name of the Spirit. For both the Spirit is the substance of the
Word, and the Word is the operation of the Spirit, and the Two are One (and the
same). Now John must mean One when he speaks of Him as “having been made
flesh,” and the angel Another when he announces Him as “about to be born,” if
the Spirit is not the Word, and the Word the Spirit. For just as the Word of
God is not actually He whose Word He is, so also the Spirit (although He is
called God) is not actually He whose Spirit He is said to be. Nothing which
belongs to something else is actually the very same thing as that to which it
belongs. Clearly, when anything proceeds from a personal subject, and so
belongs to him, since it comes from him, it may possibly be such in quality
exactly as the personal subject himself is from whom it proceeds, and to whom
it belongs. And thus the Spirit is God, and the Word is God, because proceeding
from God, but yet is not actually the very same as He from whom He proceeds.
Now that which is God of God, although He is an actually existing thing, yet He
cannot be God Himself (exclusively), but so far God as He is of the same
substance as God Himself, and as being an actually existing thing, and as a
portion of the Whole. Much more will “the power of the Highest” not be the
Highest Himself, because It is not an actually existing thing, as being
Spirit—in the same way as the wisdom (of God) and the providence (of God) is
not God: these attributes are not substances, but the accidents of the
particular substance. Power is incidental to the Spirit, but cannot itself be
the Spirit. These things, therefore, whatsoever they are—(I mean) the Spirit of
God, and the Word and the Power—having been conferred on the Virgin, that which
is born of her is the Son of God. This He Himself, in those other Gospels also,
testifies Himself to have been from His very boyhood: “Wist ye not,” says He,
“that I must be about my Father’s business?” Satan likewise knew Him to be this
in his temptations: “Since Thou art the Son of God.” This, accordingly, the
devils also acknowledge Him to be: “we know Thee, who Thou art, the Holy Son of
God.” His “Father” He Himself adores. When acknowledged by Peter as the “Christ
(the Son) of God,” He does not deny the relation. He exults in spirit when He
says to the Father, “I thank Thee, O Father, because Thou hast hid these things
from the wise and prudent.” He, moreover, affirms also that to no man is the
Father known, but to His Son; and promises that, as the Son of the Father, He
will confess those who confess Him, and deny those who deny Him, before His
Father. He also introduces a parable of the mission to the vineyard of the Son
(not the Father), who was sent after so many servants, and slain by the
husbandmen, and avenged by the Father. He is also ignorant of the last day and
hour, which is known to the Father only. He awards the kingdom to His
disciples, as He says it had been appointed to Himself by the Father. He has
power to ask, if He will, legions of angels from the Father for His help. He
exclaims that God had forsaken Him. He commends His spirit into the hands of
the Father. After His resurrection He promises in a pledge to His disciples
that He will send them the promise of His Father; and lastly, He commands them to
baptize into the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost, not into a unipersonal
God. And indeed it is not once only, but three times, that we are immersed into
the Three Persons, at each several mention of Their names.
But why should I linger over matters which are
so evident, when I ought to be attacking points on which they seek to obscure
the plainest proof? For, confuted on all sides on the distinction between the
Father and the Son, which we maintain without destroying their inseparable
union—as (by the examples) of the sun and the ray, and the fountain and the
river—yet, by help of (their conceit) an indivisible number, (with issues) of
two and three, they endeavour to interpret this distinction in a way which
shall nevertheless tally with their own opinions: so that, all in one Person,
they distinguish two, Father and Son, understanding the Son to be flesh, that
is man, that is Jesus; and the Father to be spirit, that is God, that is
Christ. Thus they, while contending that the Father and the Son are one and the
same, do in fact begin by dividing them rather than uniting them. For if Jesus
is one, and Christ is another, then the Son will be different from the Father,
because the Son is Jesus, and the Father is Christ. Such a monarchy as this
they learnt, I suppose, in the school of Valentinus, making two—Jesus and
Christ. But this conception of theirs has been, in fact, already confuted in
what we have previously advanced, because the Word of God or the Spirit of God
is also called the power of the Highest, whom they make the Father; whereas
these relations are not themselves the same as He whose relations they are said
to be, but they proceed from Him and appertain to Him. However, another
refutation awaits them on this point of their heresy. See, say they, it was
announced by the angel: “Therefore that Holy Thing which shall be born of thee
shall be called the Son of God.” Therefore, (they argue,) as it was the flesh
that was born, it must be the flesh that is the Son of God. Nay, (I answer,)
this is spoken concerning the Spirit of God. For it was certainly of the Holy
Spirit that the virgin conceived; and that which He conceived, she brought
forth. That, therefore, had to be born which was conceived and was to be
brought forth; that is to say, the Spirit, whose “name should be called
Emmanuel which, being interpreted, is, God with us.” Besides, the flesh is not
God, so that it could not have been said concerning it, “That Holy Thing shall
be called the Son of God,” but only that Divine Being who was born in the
flesh, of whom the psalm also says, “Since God became man in the midst of it,
and established it by the will of the Father.” Now what Divine Person was born
in it? The Word, and the Spirit which became incarnate with the Word by the
will of the Father. The Word, therefore, is incarnate; and this must be the
point of our inquiry: How the Word became flesh,—whether it was by having been
transfigured, as it were, in the flesh, or by having really clothed Himself in
flesh. Certainly it was by a real clothing of Himself in flesh. For the rest,
we must needs believe God to be unchangeable, and incapable of form, as being
eternal. But transfiguration is the destruction of that which previously
existed. For whatsoever is transfigured into some other thing ceases to be that
which it had been, and begins to be that which it previously was not. God,
however, neither ceases to be what He was, nor can He be any other thing than
what He is. The Word is God, and “the Word of the Lord remaineth for
ever,”—even by holding on unchangeably in His own proper form. Now, if He
admits not of being transfigured, it must follow that He be understood in this
sense to have become flesh, when He comes to be in the flesh, and is
manifested, and is seen, and is handled by means of the flesh; since all the other
points likewise require to be thus understood. For if the Word became flesh by
a transfiguration and change of substance, it follows at once that Jesus must
be a substance compounded of two substances—of flesh and spirit,—a kind of
mixture, like electrum, composed of gold and silver; and it begins to be
neither gold (that is to say, spirit) nor silver (that is to say, flesh),—the
one being changed by the other, and a third substance produced. Jesus,
therefore, cannot at this rate be God for He has ceased to be the Word, which
was made flesh; nor can He be Man incarnate for He is not properly flesh, and
it was flesh which the Word became. Being compounded, therefore, of both, He
actually is neither; He is rather some third substance, very different from either.
But the truth is, we find that He is expressly set forth as both God and Man;
the very psalm which we have quoted intimating (of the flesh), that “God became
Man in the midst of it, He therefore established it by the will of the
Father,”—certainly in all respects as the Son of God and the Son of Man, being
God and Man, differing no doubt according to each substance in its own especial
property, inasmuch as the Word is nothing else but God, and the flesh nothing
else but Man. Thus does the apostle also teach respecting His two substances,
saying, “who was made of the seed of David;” in which words He will be Man and
Son of Man. “Who was declared to be the Son of God, according to the Spirit;”
in which words He will be God, and the Word—the Son of God. We see plainly the
twofold state, which is not confounded, but conjoined in One Person—Jesus, God
and Man. Concerning Christ, indeed, I defer what I have to say. (I remark
here), that the property of each nature is so wholly preserved, that the Spirit
on the one hand did all things in Jesus suitable to Itself, such as miracles,
and mighty deeds, and wonders; and the Flesh, on the other hand, exhibited the
affections which belong to it. It was hungry under the devil’s temptation,
thirsty with the Samaritan woman, wept over Lazarus, was troubled even unto
death, and at last actually died. If, however, it was only a tertium quid, some
composite essence formed out of the Two substances, like the electrum (which we
have mentioned), there would be no distinct proofs apparent of either nature.
But by a transfer of functions, the Spirit would have done things to be done by
the Flesh, and the Flesh such as are effected by the Spirit; or else such
things as are suited neither to the Flesh nor to the Spirit, but confusedly of
some third character. Nay more, on this supposition, either the Word underwent
death, or the flesh did not die, if so be the Word was converted into flesh;
because either the flesh was immortal, or the Word was mortal. Forasmuch,
however, as the two substances acted distinctly, each in its own character,
there necessarily accrued to them severally their own operations, and their own
issues. Learn then, together with Nicodemus, that “that which is born in the
flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is Spirit.” Neither the
flesh becomes Spirit, nor the Spirit flesh. In one Person they no doubt are
well able to be co-existent. Of them Jesus consists—Man, of the flesh; of the
Spirit, God—and the angel designated Him as “the Son of God,” in respect of
that nature, in which He was Spirit, reserving for the flesh the appellation
“Son of Man.” In like manner, again, the apostle calls Him “the Mediator
between God and Men,” and so affirmed His participation of both substances.
Now, to end the matter, will you, who interpret the Son of God to be flesh, be
so good as to show us what the Son of Man is? Will He then, I want to know, be
the Spirit? But you insist upon it that the Father Himself is the Spirit, on
the ground that “God is a Spirit,” just as if we did not read also that there
is “the Spirit of God;” in the same manner as we find that as “the Word was
God,” so also there is “the Word of God.”
And so, most foolish heretic, you make Christ to
be the Father, without once considering the actual force of this name, if
indeed Christ is a name, and not rather a surname, or designation; for it
signifies “Anointed.” But Anointed is no more a proper name than Clothed or
Shod; it is only an accessory to a name. Suppose now that by some means Jesus
were also called Vestitus (Clothed), as He is actually called Christ from the
mystery of His anointing, would you in like manner say that Jesus was the Son
of God, and at the same time suppose that Vestitus was the Father? Now then,
concerning Christ, if Christ is the Father, the Father is an Anointed One, and
receives the unction of course from another. Else if it is from Himself that He
receives it, then you must prove it to us. But we learn no such fact from the
Acts of the Apostles in that ejaculation of the Church to God, “Of a truth,
Lord, against Thy Holy Child Jesus, whom Thou hast anointed, both Herod and
Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles and the people of Israel were gathered
together.” These then testified both that Jesus was the Son of God, and that
being the Son, He was anointed by the Father. Christ therefore must be the same
as Jesus who was anointed by the Father, and not the Father, who anointed the
Son. To the same effect are the words of Peter: “Let all the house of Israel
know assuredly that God hath made that same Jesus, whom ye have crucified, both
Lord and Christ,” that is, Anointed. John, moreover, brands that man as “a
liar” who “denieth that Jesus is the Christ;” whilst on the other hand he
declares that “every one is born of God who believeth that Jesus is the
Christ.” Wherefore he also exhorts us to believe in the name of His (the
Father’s,) Son Jesus Christ, that “our fellowship may be with the Father, and
with His Son Jesus Christ.” Paul, in like manner, everywhere speaks of “God the
Father, and our Lord Jesus Christ.” When writing to the Romans, he gives thanks
to God through our Lord Jesus Christ. To the Galatians he declares himself to
be “an apostle not of men, neither by man, but through Jesus Christ and God the
Father.” You possess indeed all his writings, which testify plainly to the same
effect, and set forth Two—God the Father, and our Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of
the Father. (They also testify) that Jesus is Himself the Christ, and under one
or the other designation the Son of God. For precisely by the same right as
both names belong to the same Person, even the Son of God, does either name
alone without the other belong to the same Person. Consequently, whether it be
the name Jesus which occurs alone, Christ is also understood, because Jesus is
the Anointed One; or if the name Christ is the only one given, then Jesus is
identified with Him, because the Anointed One is Jesus. Now, of these two names
Jesus Christ, the former is the proper one, which was given to Him by the
angel; and the latter is only an adjunct, predicable of Him from His
anointing,—thus suggesting the proviso that Christ must be the Son, not the
Father. How blind, to be sure, is the man who fails to perceive that by the
name of Christ some other God is implied, if he ascribes to the Father this name
of Christ! For if Christ is God the Father, when He says, “I ascend unto my
Father and your Father, and to my God and your God,” He of course shows plainly
enough that there is above Himself another Father and another God. If, again,
the Father is Christ, He must be some other Being who “strengtheneth the
thunder, and createth the wind, and declareth unto men His Christ.” And if “the
kings of the earth stood up, and the rulers were gathered together against the
Lord and against His Christ,” that Lord must be another Being, against whose
Christ were gathered together the kings and the rulers. And if, to quote
another passage, “Thus saith the Lord to my Lord Christ,” the Lord who speaks
to the Father of Christ must be a distinct Being. Moreover, when the apostle in
his epistle prays, “That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ may give unto you the
spirit of wisdom and of knowledge,” He must be other (than Christ), who is the
God of Jesus Christ, the bestower of spiritual gifts. And once for all, that we
may not wander through every passage, He “who raised up Christ from the dead,
and is also to raise up our mortal bodies,” must certainly be, as the
quickener, different from the dead Father, or even from the quickened Father,
if Christ who died is the Father.
Silence! Silence on such blasphemy. Let us be
content with saying that Christ died, the Son of the Father; and let this
suffice, because the Scriptures have told us so much. For even the apostle, to
his declaration—which he makes not without feeling the weight of it—that
“Christ died,” immediately adds, “according to the Scriptures,” in order that
he may alleviate the harshness of the statement by the authority of the
Scriptures, and so remove offence from the reader. Now, although when two
substances are alleged to be in Christ—namely, the divine and the human—it
plainly follows that the divine nature is immortal, and that which is human is
mortal, it is manifest in what sense he declares “Christ died”—even in the
sense in which He was flesh and Man and the Son of Man, not as being the Spirit
and the Word and the Son of God. In short, since he says that it was Christ
(that is, the Anointed One) that died, he shows us that that which died was the
nature which was anointed; in a word, the flesh. Very well, say you; since we
on our side affirm our doctrine in precisely the same terms which you use on
your side respecting the Son, we are not guilty of blasphemy against the Lord
God, for we do not maintain that He died after the divine nature, but only
after the human. Nay, but you do blaspheme; because you allege not only that
the Father died, but that He died the death of the cross. For “cursed are they
which are hanged on a tree,”—a curse which, after the law, is compatible to the
Son (inasmuch as “Christ has been made a curse for us,” but certainly not the
Father); since, however, you convert Christ into the Father, you are chargeable
with blasphemy against the Father. But when we assert that Christ was
crucified, we do not malign Him with a curse; we only re-affirm the curse
pronounced by the law: nor indeed did the apostle utter blasphemy when he said
the same thing as we. Besides, as there is no blasphemy in predicating of the
subject that which is fairly applicable to it; so, on the other hand, it is
blasphemy when that is alleged concerning the subject which is unsuitable to
it. On this principle, too, the Father was not associated in suffering with the
Son. The heretics, indeed, fearing to incur direct blasphemy against the
Father, hope to diminish it by this expedient: they grant us so far that the
Father and the Son are Two; adding that, since it is the Son indeed who
suffers, the Father is only His fellow-sufferer. But how absurd are they even
in this conceit! For what is the meaning of “fellow-suffering,” but the
endurance of suffering along with another? Now if the Father is incapable of
suffering, He. is incapable of suffering in company with another; otherwise, if
He can suffer with another, He is of course capable of suffering. You, in fact,
yield Him nothing by this subterfuge of your fears. You are afraid to say that
He is capable of suffering whom you make to be capable of fellow-suffering.
Then, again, the Father is as incapable of fellow-suffering as the Son even is
of suffering under the conditions of His existence as God. Well, but how could
the Son suffer, if the Father did not suffer with Him? My answer is, The Father
is separate from the Son, though not from Him as God. For even if a river be
soiled with mire and mud, although it flows from the fountain identical in
nature with it, and is not separated from the fountain, yet the injury which
affects the stream reaches not to the fountain; and although it is the water of
the fountain which suffers down the stream, still, since it is not affected at
the fountain, but only in the river, the fountain suffers nothing, but only the
river which issues from the fountain. So likewise the Spirit of God, whatever
suffering it might be capable of in the Son, yet, inasmuch as it could not
suffer in the Father, the fountain of the Godhead, but only in the Son, it
evidently could not have suffered, as the Father. But it is enough for me that
the Spirit of God suffered nothing as the Spirit of God, since all that It
suffered It suffered in the Son. It was quite another matter for the Father to
suffer with the Son in the flesh. This likewise has been treated by us. Nor
will any one deny this, since even we are ourselves unable to suffer for God,
unless the Spirit of God be in us, who also utters by our instrumentality
whatever pertains to our own conduct and suffering; not, however, that He
Himself suffers in our suffering, only He bestows on us the power and capacity
of suffering.
However, if you persist in pushing your views
further, I shall find means of answering you with greater stringency, and of
meeting you with the exclamation of the Lord Himself, so as to challenge you
with the question, What is your inquiry and reasoning about that? You have Him
exclaiming in the midst of His passion: “My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken
me?” Either, then, the Son suffered, being “forsaken” by the Father, and the
Father consequently suffered nothing, inasmuch as He forsook the Son; or else,
if it was the Father who suffered, then to what God was it that He addressed
His cry? But this was the voice of flesh and soul, that is to say, of man—not
of the Word and Spirit, that is to say, not of God; and it was uttered so as to
prove the impassibility of God, who “forsook” His Son, so far as He handed over
His human substance to the suffering of death. This verity the apostle also
perceived, when he writes to this effect: “If the Father spared not His own
Son.” This did Isaiah before him likewise perceive, when he declared: “And the
Lord hath delivered Him up for our offences.” In this manner He “forsook” Him,
in not sparing Him; “forsook” Him, in delivering Him up. In all other respects
the Father did not forsake the Son, for it was into His Father’s hands that the
Son commended His spirit. Indeed, after so commending it, He instantly died;
and as the Spirit remained with the flesh, the flesh cannot undergo the full
extent of death, i.e., in corruption and decay. For the Son, therefore, to die,
amounted to His being forsaken by the Father. The Son, then, both dies and
rises again, according to the Scriptures. It is the Son, too, who ascends to
the heights of heaven, and also descends to the inner parts of the earth. “He
sitteth at the Father’s right hand”—not the Father at His own. He is seen by
Stephen, at his martyrdom by stoning, still sitting at the right hand of God
where He will continue to sit, until the Father shall make His enemies His
footstool. He will come again on the clouds of heaven, just as He appeared when
He ascended into heaven. Meanwhile He has received from the Father the promised
gift, and has shed it forth, even the Holy Spirit—the Third Name in the
Godhead, and the Third Degree of the Divine Majesty; the Declarer of the One
Monarchy of God, but at the same time the Interpreter of the Economy, to every
one who hears and receives the words of the new prophecy; and “the Leader into
all truth,” such as is in the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Ghost,
according to the mystery of the doctrine of Christ.
But, (this doctrine of yours bears a likeness)
to the Jewish faith, of which this is the substance—so to believe in One God as
to refuse to reckon the Son besides Him, and after the Son the Spirit. Now,
what difference would there be between us and them, if there were not this
distinction which you are for breaking down? What need would there be of the
gospel, which is the substance of the New Covenant, laying down (as it does)
that the Law and the Prophets lasted until John the Baptist, if thenceforward
the Father, the Son, and the Spirit are not both believed in as Three, and as
making One Only God? God was pleased to renew His covenant with man in such a
way as that His Unity might be believed in, after a new manner, through the Son
and the Spirit, in order that God might now be known openly, in His proper
Names and Persons, who in ancient times was not plainly understood, though
declared through the Son and the Spirit. Away, then, with those “Antichrists
who deny the Father and the Son.” For they deny the Father, when they say that
He is the same as the Son; and they deny the Son, when they suppose Him to be
the same as the Father, by assigning to Them things which are not Theirs, and taking
away from Them things which are Theirs. But “whosoever shall confess that
(Jesus) Christ is the Son of God” (not the Father), “God dwelleth in him, and
he in God.” We believe not the testimony of God in which He testifies to us of
His Son. “He that hath not the Son, hath not life.” And that man has not the
Son, who believes Him to be any other than the Son.
The learned Dr. Holmes, the translator of the
Second volume of the Edinburgh series, to which our arrangement has given another
position, furnished it with a Preface as follows:
“This volume contains all Tertullian’s polemical
works (placed in his second volume by Oehler, whose text we have followed),
with the exception of the long treatise Against Marcion, which has already formed
a volume of this series, and the Adversus Judæos, which, not to increase the
bulk of the present volume, appears among the Miscellaneous Tracts.
“For the scanty facts connected with our author’s
life, and for some general remarks on the importance and style of his writings,
the reader is referred to the Introduction of my translation of the Five Books
against Marcion.
“The treatises which comprise this volume will be
found replete with the vigorous thought and terse expression which always
characterize Tertullian.
“Brief synopses are prefixed to the several
treatises, and headings are supplied to the chapters: these, with occasional
notes on difficult passages and obscure allusions, will, it is hoped, afford
sufficient aid for an intelligent perusal of these ancient writings, which
cannot fail to be interesting alike to the theologian and the general
reader,—full as they are of reverence for revealed truth, and at the same time
of independence of judgment, adorned with admirable variety and fulness of knowledge,
genial humour, and cultivated imagination.”
Dr. Holmes further adorned this same volume with a
dedication to a valued friend, in the following words:
“The Right Rev. Father in God, W. I. Trower, D.D.,
late Lord Bishop of Gibraltar, and formerly Bishop of Glasgow and Galway:
My Dear Lord, In one of our conversations last
summer, you were kind enough to express an interest in this publication, and to
favour me with some valuable hints on my own share in it. It gives me therefore
great pleasure to inscribe your honoured name on the first page of this volume.
I avail myself of this public opportunity of
endorsing, on my own account, the high opinion which has long been entertained
of your excellent volumes on The Epistles and The Gospels.
Recalling to mind, as I often do, our pleasant
days at Pennycross and Mannamead, I remain, my dear Lord, very faithfully
yours, Peter Holmes.”
Mannamead, March 10, 1870.
I am glad for many reasons that Dr. Holmes
appends the following from Bishop Kaye’s Account of the Writings of Tertullian:
“On the doctrine of the blessed Trinity, in order
to explain his meaning Tertullian borrows illustrations from natural objects.
The three Persons of the Trinity stand to each other in the relation of the
root, the shrub, and the fruit; of the fountain, the river, and the cut from
the river; of the sun, the ray, and the terminating point of the ray. For these
illustrations he professes himself indebted to the Revelations of the
Paraclete. In later times, divines have occasionally resorted to similar
illustrations for the purpose of familiarizing the doctrine of the Trinity to
the mind; nor can any danger arise from the proceeding, so long as we recollect
that they are illustrations, not arguments—that we must not draw conclusions
from them, or think that whatever may be truly predicated of the illustrations,
may be predicated with equal truth of that which it was designed to
illustrate.”
“‘Notwithstanding, however, the intimate union
which subsists between the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, we must be careful,’
says Tertullian, ‘to distinguish between their Persons.’ In his representations
of this distinction he sometimes uses expressions which in after times, when
controversy had introduced greater precision of language, were studiously
avoided by the orthodox. Thus he calls the Father the whole substance—the Son a
derivation from or portion of the whole.”
“After showing that Tertullian’s opinions were
generally coincident with the orthodox belief of the Christian Church on the
great subject of the Trinity in Unity, Bp. Kaye goes on to say: ‘We are far
from meaning to assert that expressions may not occasionally be found which are
capable of a different interpretation, and which were carefully avoided by the
orthodox writers of later times, when the controversies respecting the Trinity
had introduced greater precision of language.’ Pamelius thought it necessary to
put the reader on his guard against certain of these expressions; and Semler
has noticed, with a sort of ill-natured industry (we call it ill-natured
industry, because the true mode of ascertaining a writer’s opinions is, not to
fix upon particular expressions, but to take the general tenor of his
language), every passage in the Tract against Praxeas in which there is any
appearance of contradiction, or which will bear a construction favourable to
the Arian tenets. Bp. Bull also, who conceives the language of Tertullian to be
explicit and correct on the subject of the pre-existence and the
consubstantiality, admits that he occasionally uses expressions at variance
with the co-eternity of Christ. For instance, in the Tract against Hermogenes,
we find a passage in which it is expressly asserted that there was a time when
the Son was not. Perhaps, however, a reference to the peculiar tenets of
Hermogenes will enable us to account for this assertion. That heretic affirmed
that matter was eternal, and argued thus: ‘God was always God, and always Lord;
but the word Lord implies the existence of something over which He was Lord.
Unless, therefore, we suppose the eternity of something distinct from God, it
is not true that He was always Lord.’ Tertullian boldly answered, that God was
not always Lord; and that in Scripture we do not find Him called Lord until the
work of creation was completed. In like manner, he contended that the titles of
Judge and Father imply the existence of sin, and of a Son. As, therefore, there
was a time when neither sin nor the Son existed, the titles of Judge and Father
were not at that time applicable to God. Tertullian could scarcely mean to
affirm (in direct opposition to his own statements in the Tract against
Praxeas) that there was ever a time when the λόγος, or
Ratio, or Sermo Internusdid not exist. But with respect to Wisdom and the Son
(Sophia and Filius) the case is different. Tertullian assigns to both a
beginning of existence: Sophia was created or formed in order to devise the
plan of the universe; and the Son was begotten in order to carry that plan into
effect. Bp. Bull appears to have given an accurate representation of the
matter, when he says that, according to our author, the Reason and Spirit of
God, being the substance of the Word and Son, were co-eternal with God; but
that the titles of Word and Son were not strictly applicable until the former
had been emitted to arrange, and the latter begotten to execute, the work of
creation. Without, therefore, attempting to explain, much less to defend, all
Tertullian’s expressions and reasonings, we are disposed to acquiesce in the
statement given by Bp. Bull of his opinions (Defence of the Nicene Creed, sec.
iii. ch. x. (p. 545 of the Oxford translation)): ‘From all this it is clear how
rashly, as usual, Petavius has pronounced that, “so far as relates to the
eternity of the Word, it is manifest that Tertullian did not by any means
acknowledge it.”‘ To myself, indeed, and as I suppose to my reader also, after
the many clear testimonies which I have adduced, the very opposite is manifest,
unless indeed Petavius played on the term, the Word, which I will not suppose.
For Tertullian does indeed teach that the Son of God was made and was called
the Word (Verbum or Sermo) from some definite beginning, i.e. at the time when
He went out from God the Father with the voice, ‘Let there be light’ in order
to arrange the universe. But, for all that, that he really believed that the
very hypostasis which is called the Word and Son of God is eternal, I have, I
think, abundantly demonstrated.” (The whole of Bp. Bull’s remark is worth
considering; it occurs in the translation just referred to, pp. 508–545.)—(Pp.
521–525.)
“In speaking also of the Holy Ghost, Tertullian
occasionally uses terms of a very ambiguous and equivocal character. He says,
for instance (Adversus Praxean, c. xii.), that in Gen. i. 26, God addressed the
Son, His Word (the Second Person in the Trinity), and the Spirit in the Word
(the Third Person of the Trinity). Here the distinct personality of the Spirit
is expressly asserted; although it is difficult to reconcile Tertullian’s
words, ‘Spiritus in Sermone,’ with the assertion. It is, however, certain both
from the general tenor of the Tract against Praxeas, and from many passages in
his other writings (for instance, Ad Martyras, iii.), that the distinct
personality of the Holy Ghost formed an article of Tertullian’s creed. The
occasional ambiguity of his language respecting the Holy Ghost is perhaps in
part to be traced to the variety of senses in which the term ‘Spiritus’ is
used. It is applied generally to God, for ‘God is a Spirit’ (Adv. Marcionem,
ii. 9); and for the same reason to the Son, who is frequently called ‘the
Spirit of God,’ and ‘the Spirit of the Creator’ (De Oratione, i.; Adv. Praxean,
xiv., xxvi.; Adv. Marcionem, v. 8; Apolog. xxiii.; Adv. Marcionem, iii. 6, iv.
33). Bp. Bull likewise (Defence of the Nicene Creed, i. 2), following Grotius,
has shown that the word ‘Spiritus’ is employed by the fathers to express the
divine nature in Christ.”—(Pp. 525, 526.)
Probably Victor (a.d. 190), who is elsewhere
called Victorinus, as Oehler conjectures, by a blunderer who tacked the inus to
his name, because he was thinking of Zephyrinus, his immediate successor. This
Victor “acknowledged the prophetic gifts of Montanus,” and kept up communion
with the Phrygian churches that adopted them: but worse than that, he now seems
to have patronized the Patri-passion heresy, under the compulsion of Praxeas.
So Tertullian says, who certainly had no idea that the Bishop of Rome was the
infallible judge of controversies, when he recorded the facts of this strange
history. Thus, we find the very founder of “Latin Christianity,” accusing a
contemporary Bishop of Rome of heresy and the patronage of heresy, in two
particulars. Our earliest acquaintance with that See presents us with
Polycarp’s superior authority, at Rome itself, in maintaining apostolic
doctrine and suppressing heresy. “He it was, who coming to Rome,” says Irenæus,
“in the time of Anicetus, caused many to turn away from the aforesaid heretics
(viz. Valentinus and Marcion) to the Church of God, proclaiming that he had
received this one and sole truth from the Apostles.” Anicetus was a pious
prelate who never dreamed of asserting a superior claim as the chief depositary
of Apostolic orthodoxy, and whose beautiful example in the Easter-questions
discussed between Polycarp and himself, is another illustration of the
independence of the sister churches, at that period. Nor is it unworthy to be
noted, that the next event, in Western history, establishes a like principle
against that other and less worthy occupant of the Roman See, of whom we have
spoken. Irenæus rebukes Victor for his dogmatism about Easter, and reproaches
him with departing from the example of his predecessors in the same See. With
Eleutherus he had previously remonstrated, though mildly, for his toleration of
heresy and his patronage of the raising schism of Montanus.
III.
(These three are one, cap. xxv. p. 621. Also p.
606.)
Porson having spoken Pontifically upon the matter
of the text of “the Three Witnesses,” cadit quæstio, locutus est Augur Apollo.
It is of more importance that Bishop Kaye in his calm wisdom, remarks as
follows; “In my opinion, the passage in Tertullian, far from containing an
allusion to 1 John v. 7, furnishes most decisive proof that he knew nothing of
the verse.” After this, and the acquiescence of scholars generally, it would be
presumption to say a word on the question of quoting it as Scripture. In
Textual Criticism it seems to be an established canon that it has no place in
the Greek Testament. I submit, however, that, something remains to be said for
it, on the ground of the old African Version used and quoted by Tertullian and
Cyprian; and I dare to say, that, while there would be no ground whatever for
inserting it in our English Version, the question of striking it out is a
widely different one. It would be sacrilege, in my humble opinion, for reasons
which will appear, in the following remarks, upon our author.
It appears to me very clear that Tertullian is
quoting 1 John v. 7 in the passage now under consideration: “Qui tres unum
sunt, non unus, quomodo dictum est, Ego et Pater unum sumus, etc.” Let me refer
to a work containing a sufficient answer to Porson, on this point of
Tertullian’s quotation, which it is easier to pass sub-silentio, than to
refute. I mean Forster’s New Plea, of which the full title is placed in the
margin. The whole work is worth thoughtful study, but, I name it with reference
to this important passage of our author, exclusively. In connection with other
considerations on which I have no right to enlarge in this place, it satisfies
me as to the primitive origin of the text in the Vulgate, and hence of its
right to stand in our English Vulgate until it can be shewn that the Septuagint
Version, quoted and honoured by our Lord, is free from similar readings, and
divergences from the Hebrew mss.
Stated as a mere question as to the early African
Church, the various versions known as the Itala, and the right of the Latin and
English Vulgates to remain as they are, the whole question is a fresh one. Let
me be pardoned for saying: (1) that I am not pleading for it as a proof-text of
the Trinity, having never once quoted it as such in a long ministry, during
which I have preached nearly a hundred Trinity-Sunday Sermons; (2) that I
consider it as practically Apocryphal, and hence as coming under St. Jerome’s
law, and being useless to establish doctrine; and (3) that I feel no need of
it, owing to the wealth of Scripture on the same subject. Tertullian, himself
says that he cites “only a few out of many texts—not pretending to bring up all
the passages of Scripture…having produced an accumulation of witnesses in the
fulness of their dignity and authority.”
To those interested in the question let me commend
the learned dissertation of Grabe on the textual case, as it stood in his day.
I value it chiefly because it proves that the Greek Testament, elsewhere says,
disjointedly, what is collected into 1 John v. 7. It is, therefore, Holy
Scripture in substance, if not in the letter. What seems to me important,
however, is the balance it gives to the whole context, and the defective
character of the grammar and logic, if it be stricken out. In the Septuagint
and the Latin Vulgate of the Old Testament we have a precisely similar case.
Refer to Psa. xiii., alike in the Latin and the Greek, as compared with our
English Version. Between the third and fourth verses, three whole verses are
interpolated: Shall we strike them out? Of course, if certain critics are to
prevail over St. Paul, for he quotes them (Rom. iii. 10) with the formula: “As
it is written.” Now, then, till we expurgate the English Version of the Epistle
to the Romans,—or rather the original of St. Paul himself, I employ Grabe’s
argument only to prove my point, which is this, viz., that 1 John v. 7 being
Scripture, ought to be left untouched in the Versions where it stands, although
it be no part of the Greek Testament.