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church fathers 32
ON THE COUNCILS OR THE FAITH OF THE EASTERNS
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ON THE COUNCILS
OR
THE FAITH OF THE EASTERNS
To the most dearly loved and blessed brethren our fellow-bishops of the
province of Germania Prima and Germania Secunda, Belgica Prima and
Belgica Secunda, Lugdunensis Prima and Lugdunensis Secunda, and the
province of Aquitania, and the province of Novempopulana, and to the
laity and clergy of Tolosa in the Provincia Narbonensis, and to the
bishops of the provinces of Britain, Hilary the servant of Christ,
eternal salvation in God our Lord.
I had determined, beloved brethren, to send no letter to you concerning
the affairs of the Church in consequence of your prolonged silence. For
when I had by writing from several cities of the Roman world frequently
informed you of the faith and efforts of our religions brethren, the
bishops of the East, and bow the Evil One profiting by the discords of
the times had with envenomed lips and tongue hissed out his deadly
doctrine, I was afraid. I feared lest while so many bishops were
involved in the serious danger of disastrous sin or disastrous mistake,
you were holding your peace because a defiled and sin-stained
conscience tempted you to despair. Ignorance I could not attribute to
you; you had been too often warned. I judged therefore that I also
ought to observe silence towards you, carefully remembering the Lord's
saying, that those who after a first and second entreaty, and in
spite of the witness of the Church, neglect to hear, are to be unto us
as heathen men and publicans(1).
2. But when I received the letters that your blessed faith inspired,
and understood that their slow arrival and their paucity were due to
the remoteness and secrecy of my place of exile, I rejoiced in the Lord
that you had continued pure and undefiled by the contagion of any
execrable heresy, and that you were united with me in faith and spirit,
and so were partakers of that exile into which Saturninus, fearing his
own conscience, had thrust me after beguiling the Emperor, and after
that you had denied him communion for the whole three years ago until
now. I equally rejoiced that the impious and infidel creed which was
sent straightway to you from Sirmium was not only not accepted by you,
but condemned as soon as reported and notified. I felt that it was now
binding on me as a religious duty to write sound and faithful words to
you as my fellow-bishops, who communicate with me in
Christ. I, who through fear of what might have been could at one time
only rejoice with my own conscience that I was free from all these
errors, was now bound to express delight at the purity of our common
faith. Praise God for the unshaken stability of your noble hearts, for
your firm house built on the foundation of the faithful rock, for the
undefiled and unswerving constancy of a will that has proved
immaculate! For since the good profession at the Council of Biterrae,
where I denounced the ringleaders of this heresy with some of you for
my witnesses, it has remained and still continues to remain, pure,
unspotted and scrupulous.
3. You awaited the noble triumph of a holy and steadfast perseverance
without yielding to the threats, the powers and the assaults of
Saturninus: and when all the waves of awakening blasphemy struggled
against God, you who still remain with me faithful in Christ did not
give way when threatened with the onset of heresy, and now by meeting
that onset you have broken all its violence. Yes, brethren, you have
conquered, to the abundant joy of those who share your faith: and your
unimpaired constancy gained the double glory of keeping a pure
conscience and giving an authoritative example. For the fame of your
unswerving and unshaken faith has moved certain Eastern bishops, late
though it be, to some shame for the heresy fostered and supported in
those regions: and when they heard of the godless confession composed
at Sirmium, they contradicted its audacious authors by passing certain
decrees themselves. And though they withstood them not without in their
turn raising some scruples, and inflicting some wounds upon a sensitive
piety, yet they withstood them so vigorously as to compel those who at
Sirmium yielded to the views of Potamius and Hosius as accepting and
confirming those views, to declare their ignorance and error in so
doing; in fact they had to condemn in writing their own action. And
they subscribed with the express purpose of condemning something else
in advance(2).
4. But your invincible faith keeps the honourable distinction of
conscious worth, and content with repudiating crafty, vague, or
hesitating action, safely abides in Christ, preserving the profession
of its liberty. You abstain from communion with those who oppose their
bishops with their blasphemies and keep them in exile, and do not by
assenting to any crafty subterfuge bring yourselves under a charge of
unrighteous judgment. For since we all suffered deep and grievous pain
at the actions of the wicked against God, within our boundaries alone
is communion in Christ to be found from the time that the Church began
to be harried by disturbances such as the expatriation of bishops, the
deposition of priests, the intimidation of the people, the threatening
of the faith, and the determination of the meaning of Christ's doctrine
by human will and power. Your resolute faith does not
pretend to be ignorant of these facts or profess that it can tolerate
them, perceiving that by the act of hypocritical assent it would bring
itself before the bar of conscience.
5. And although in all your actions, past and present, you bear witness
to the uninterrupted independence and security of your faith; yet in
particular you prove your warmth and fervour of spirit by the fact that
some of you whose letters have succeeded in reaching me have expressed
a wish that I, unfit as I am, should notify to you what the Easterns
have since said in their confessions of faith. They affectionately laid
the additional burden upon me of indicating my sentiments on all their
decisions. I know that my skill and learning are inadequate, for I feel
it most difficult to express in words my own belief as I understand it
in my heart; far less easy must it be to expound the statements of
others.
6. Now I beseech you by the mercy of the Lord, that as I will in this
letter according to your desire write to you of divine things and of
the witness of a pure conscience to our faith, no one will think to
judge me by the beginning of my letter before he has read the
conclusion of my argument. For it is unfair before the complete
argument has been grasped, to conceive a prejudice on account of
initial statements, the reason of which is yet unknown, since it is not
with imperfect statements before us that we must make a decision for
the sake of investigation, but on the conclusion for the sake of
knowledge. I have some fear, not about you, as God is witness of my
heart, but about some who in their own esteem are very cautious and
prudent but do not understand the blessed apostle's precept not to
think of themselves more highly than they ought(3): for I am afraid
that they are
unwilling to know all those facts, the complete account of which I will
offer at the end, and at the same time they avoid drawing the true
conclusion from the aforesaid facts. But whoever takes up these lines
to read and examine them has only to be consistently patient with me
and with himself and peruse the whole to its completion. Perchance all
this assertion of my faith will result in those who conceal their
heresy being unable to practise the deception they wish, and in true
Catholics attaining the object which they desire.
7. Therefore I comply with your affectionate and urgent wish, and I
have set down all the creeds which have been promulgated at different
times and places since the holy Council of Nicaea, with my appended
explanations of all the phrases and even words employed. If they be
thought to contain anything faulty, no one can impute the fault to me:
for I am only a reporter, as you wished me to be, and not an author.
But if anything is found to be laid down in right and apostolic
fashion, no one can doubt that it is no credit to the interpreter but
to the originator. In any case I have sent you a faithful account of
these transactions: it is for you to determine by the decision your
faith inspires whether their spirit is Catholic or heretical.
8. For although it was necessary to reply to your letters, in which you
offered me Christian communion with your faith, (and, moreover, certain
of your number who were summoned to the Council which seemed pending in
Bithynia did refuse with firm consistency of faith to hold communion
with any but myself outside Gaul), it also seemed fit to use my
episcopal office and authority, when heresy was so rife, in submitting
to you by letter some godly and faithful counsel. For the word of God
cannot be exiled as our bodies are, or so chained and bound that it
cannot be imparted to you in any place. But when I had learnt that
synods were to meet in Ancyra and Ariminum, and that one or two bishops
from each province in Gaul would assemble there, I thought it
especially needful that I, who am confined in the East, should explain
and make known to you the grounds of those mutual suspicious which
exist between us and the Eastern bishops, though some of you know those
grounds; in order that whereas you had condemned and they had
anathematized this heresy that spreads from Sirmium, you might
nevertheless know with what confession of faith the Eastern bishops had
come to the same result that you had come to, and that I might prevent
you, whom I hope to see as shining lights in future Councils,
differing, through a mistake about words, even a hair's-breadth from
pure Catholic belief, when your interpretation of the apostolic faith
is identically the same and you are Catholics at heart.
9. Now it seems to me right and appropriate, before I begin my argument
about suspicions and dissensions as to words, to give as complete an
account as possible of the decisions of the Eastern bishops adverse to
the heresy compiled at Sirmium. Others have published all these
transactions very plainly, but much obscurity is caused by a
translation from Greek into Latin, and to be absolutely literal is to
be sometimes partly unintelligible.
10. You remember that in the Blasphemia, lately written at Sirmium, the
object of the authors was to proclaim the Father to be the one and only
God of all things, and deny the Son to be God: and while they
determined that men should hold their peace about
<greek>omoousion</greek> and
<greek>omoiousion</greek> they determined that God the Son
should be asserted to be born not of God the Father, but of nothing, as
the first creatures were, or of another essence than God, as the later
creatures. And further that in saying the Father was greater in honour,
dignity, splendour and majesty, they implied that the Son lacked those
things which constitute the Father's superiority. Lastly, that while it
is affirmed that His birth is unknowable, we were commanded by this
Compulsory Ignorance Act not to know that He is of God: just as if it
could be commanded or
decreed that a man should know what in future he is to be ignorant of,
or be ignorant of what he already knows. I have subjoined in full this
pestilent and godless blasphemy, though against my will, to facilitate
a more complete knowledge of the worth and reason of the replies made
on the opposite side by those Easterns who endeavoured to counteract
all the wiles of the heretics according to their understanding and
comprehension.
A copy of the Blasphemia composed at Sirmium by Osius and Polamius.
11. Since there appeared to be some misunderstanding respecting the
faith, all points have been carefully investigated and discussed at
Sirmium in the presence of our most reverend brothers and
fellow-bishops, Valens, Ursacius and Germinius.
It is evident that there is one God, the Father Almighty, according as
it is believed throughout the whole world; and His only Son Jesus
Christ our Saviour, begotten of Him before the ages. But we cannot and
ought not to say that there are two Gods, for the Lord Himself said, I
will go unto My Father and your Father, unto My God and your God(4). So
there is one God over all, as the Apostle hath taught us, Is He God of
the Jews only? Is He not also of the Gentiles? Yes, of the Gentiles
also: seeing it is one God, which shall justify the circumcision by
faith, and the uncircumcision through faith. And in all other things
they agreed thereto, nor would they allow any difference.
But since some or many persons were disturbed by questions concerning
substance, called in Greek <greek>ousia</greek>, that is,
to make it understood more exactly, as to
<greek>omoousion</greek>, or what is called
<greek>omoiousion</greek>, there ought to be no mention
made of these at all. Nor ought any exposition to be made of them for
the reason and consideration that they are not contained in the divine
Scriptures, and that they are above man's understanding, nor can any
man declare the birth of the Son, of whom it is written, Who shall
declare His generation(5)? For it is plain that only the Father knows
how He begot the Son, and the Son how He was begotten of the Father.
There is no question hat the Father is greater. No one can doubt hat
the Father is greater than the Son in honour, dignity, splendour,
majesty, and in the very name of
Father, the Son Himself testifying, He that sent Me is greater than
I(6). And no one is ignorant that it is Catholic doctrine that there
are two Persons of Father and Son; and that the Father is greater, and
that the Son is subordinated to the Father, together with all things
which the Father has subordinated to Him, and that the Father has no
beginning and is invisible, immortal and impassible, but that the Son
has been begotten of the Father God of God, Light of Light, and that
the generation of this Son, as is aforesaid, no one knows but His
Father, And that the Son of God Himself, our Lord and God, as we read
took flesh, that is, a body, that is, man of the womb of the Virgin
Mary, of the Angel announced. And as all the Scriptures teach, and
especially the doctor of the Gentiles himself, He took of Mary the
Virgin, man, through whom He suffered. And the whole faith is summed up
and
secured in this, that the Trinity must always be preserved, as we read
in the Gospel, Go ye and baptize all nations in the Name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost[7]. Complete and perfect is the
number of the Trinity. How the Paraclete, the Spirit, is through the
Son: Who was sent and came according to His promise in order to
instruct, teach and sanctify the apostles and all believers.
12. After these many and most impious statements had been made, the
Eastern bishops on their side again met together and composed
definitions of their confession. Since, however, we have frequently to
mention the words essence and substance, we must determine the meaning
of essence, lest in discussing facts we prove ignorant of the
signification of our words. Essence is a reality which is, or the
reality of those things from which it is, and which subsists inasmuch
as it is permanent. Now we can speak of the essence, or nature, or
genus, or substance of anything. And the strict reason why the word
essence is employed is because it is always. But this is identical with
substance, because a thing which is, necessarily subsists in itself,
and whatever thus subsists possesses unquestionably a permanent genus,
nature or substance. When, therefore, we say that essence signifies
nature, or
genus, or substance, we mean the essence of that thing which
permanently exists in the nature, genus, or substance. Now, therefore,
let us review the definitions of faith drawn up by the Easterns.
I. "If any one hearing that the Son is the image of the invisible God,
says that the image of God is the same as the invisible God, as though
refusing to confess that He is truly Son: let him be anathema."
13. Hereby is excluded the assertion of those who wish to represent the
relationship of Father and Son as a matter of names, inasmuch as every
image is similar in species to that of which it is an image. For no one
is himself his own image, but it is necessary that the image should
demonstrate him of whom it is an image. So an image is the figured and
indistinguishable likeness of one thing equated with another. Therefore
the Father is, and the Son is, because the Son is the image of the
Father: and he who is an image, if he is to be truly an image, must
have in himself his original's species, nature and essence in virtue of
the fact that he is an image.
II. "And if any one hearing the Son say, As the Father hath life in
Himself, so also hath He given to the Son to have life in Himself[8],
shall say that He who has received life from the Father, and who also
declares, I live by the Father[9], is the same as He who gave life: let
him be anathema."
14. The person of the recipient and of the giver are distinguished so
that the same should not be made one and sole. For since he is under
anathema who has believed that, when recipient and giver are mentioned
one solitary and unique person is implied, we may not suppose that the
selfsame person who gave received from Himself. For He who lives and He
through whom He lives are not identical, for one lives to Himself, the
other declares that He lives through the Author of His life, and no one
will declare that He who enjoys life and He through whom His life is
caused are personally identical.
III. "And if any one hearing that the Only-begotten Son is like the
invisible God, denies that the Son who is the image of the invisible
God (whose image is understood to include essence) is Son in essence,
as though denying His true Sonship: let him be anathema."
15. It is here insisted that the nature is indistinguishable and
entirely similar. For since He is the Only-begotten Son of God and the
image of the invisible God, it is necessary that He should be of an
essence similar in species and nature. Or what distinction can be made
between Father and Son affecting their nature with its similar genus,
when the Son subsisting through the nature begotten in Him is invested
with the properties of the Father, viz., glory, worth, power,
invisibility, essence? And while these prerogatives of divinity are
equal we neither understand the one to be less because He is Son, nor
the other to be greater because He is Father; since the Son is the
image of the Father in species, and not disssimilar in genus; since the
similarity of a Son
begotten of the substance of His Father does not admit of any diversity
of substance, and the Son and image of the invisible God embraces in
Himself the whole form of His Father's divinity both in kind and in
amount: and this is to be truly Son, to reflect the truth of the
Father's forth by the perfect likeness of the nature imaged in Himself.
IV. "And if any one hearing this text, For as the Father hath life in
Himself so also He hath given to the Son to have life in Himself[1];
denies that the Son is like the Father even in essence, though He
testifies that it is even as He has said; let him be anathema. For it
is plain that since the life which is understood to exist in the Father
signifies substance, and the life of the Only-begotten which was
begotten of the Father is also understood to mean substance or essence,
He there signifies a likeness of essence to essence."
16. With the Son's origin as thus stated is connected the perfect birth
of the undivided nature. For what in each is life, that in each is
signified by essence. And in the life which is begotten of life, i.e.
in the essence which is born of essence, seeing that it is not born
unlike (and that because life is of life), He keeps in Himself a nature
wholly similar to His original, because there is no diversity in the
likeness of the essence that is born and that besets, that is, of the
life which is possessed and which has been given. For though God begat
Him of Himself, in likeness to His own nature, He in whom is the
unbegotten likeness did not relinquish the property of His natural
substance. For He only has what He gave; and as possessing life He gave
life to be
possessed. And thus what is born of essence, as life of life, is
essentially like itself, and the essence of Him who is begotten and of
Him who begets admits no diversity or unlikeness.
V. "It any one hearing the words formed or treated it and begat me
spoken by the same lips[2], refuses to understand this begat me of
likeness of essence, but says that begat me and formed me are the same:
as if to deny that the perfect Son of God was here signified as Son
under two different expressions, as Wisdom has given Us to piously
understand, and asserts that formed me and begat me only imply
formation and not sonship: let him be anathema."
17. Those who say that the Son of God is only a creature or formation
are opposed on the fact that they say they have read The Lord formed or
created me, which seems to imply formation or creation; hot they omit
the following sentence, which is the key to the first, and from the
first wrest authority for their impious statement that the Son is a
creature, because Wisdom has said that she was created. But if she were
created, how could she be also born? For all birth, of whatever kind,
attains its own nature from the nature that begets it: but creation
takes its beginning from the power of the Creator, the Creator being
able to form a creature from nothing. So Wisdom, who said that she was
created, does in the next sentence say that she was also begotten,
using the
word creation of the act of the changeless nature of her Parent, which
nature, unlike the manner and wont of human parturition, without any
detriment or change of self created from itself what it begat.
Similarly a Creator has no need of passion or intercourse or
parturition. And that which is created out of nothing begins to exist
at a definite moment. And He who creates makes His object through His
mere power, and creation is the work of might, not the birth of a
nature from a nature that besets it. But because the Son of God was not
begotten after the manner of corporeal childbearing, but was born
perfect God of perfect God; therefore Wisdom says that she was created,
excluding in her manner of birth every kind of corporeal process.
18. Moreover, to shew that she possesses a nature that was born and not
created, Wisdom has added that she was begotten, that by declaring that
she was created and also begotten, she might completely explain her
birth. By speaking of creation she implies that the nature of the
Father is changeless, and she also shews that the substance of her
nature begotten of God the Father is genuine and real. And so her words
about creation and generation have explained the perfection of her
birth: the former that the Father is changeless, the latter the reality
of her own nature. The two things combined become one, and that one is
both in perfection: for the Son being born of God without any change in
God, is so born of the Father as to be created; and the Father, who is
changeless in Himself and the Son's Father by nature, so forms the Son
as to beget Him. Therefore the heresy which has dared
to aver that the Son of God is a creature is condemned because while
the first statement shews the impossible perfection of the divinity,
the second, which asserts His natural generation, crushes the impious
opinion that He was created out of nothing.
VI. "And if any one grant the Son only a likeness of activity, but rob
Him of the likeness of essence which is the corner-stone of our faith,
in spite of the fact that the Son Himself reveals His essential
likeness with the Father in the words, For as the Father hath life in
Himself, so also hath He given to the Son to have life in Himself[3],
as well as His likeness in activity by teaching us that What things
soever the Father doeth, these also doeth the Son likewise[4], such a
man robs himself of the knowledge of eternal life which is in the
Father and the Son, and let him be anathema."
19. The heretics when beset by authoritative passages in Scripture are
wont only to grant that the Son is like the Father in might while they
deprive Him of similarity of nature. This is foolish and impious, for
they do not understand that similar might can only be the result of a
similar nature. For a lower nature can never attain to the might of a
higher and more powerful nature. What will the men who make these
assertions say about the omnipotence of God the Father, if the might of
a lower nature is made equal to His own? For they cannot deny that the
Son's power is the same, seeing that He has said What things soever the
Father doeth, these also doeth the Son likewise.
No, a similarity of nature follows on a similarity of might when He
says, As the Father hath life in Himself, so also hath He given to the
Son to have lift in Himself. In life is implied nature and essence;
this, Christ teaches, has been given Him to have as the Father hath.
Therefore similarity of life contains similarity of might: for there
cannot be similarity of life where the nature is dissimilar. So it is
necessary that similarity of essence follows on similarity of might:
for as what the Father does, the Son does also, so the life that the
Father has He has given to the Son to have likewise. Therefore we
condemn the rash and impious statements of those who confess a
similarity of might but have dared to preach a dissimilarity of nature,
since it is the chief ground of our hope to confess that in the Father
and the Son there is an identical divine substance.
VII. "And if any one professing that he believes that there is a Father
and a Son, says that the Father is Father of an essence unlike Himself
but of similar activity; for speaking profane and novel words against
the essence of the Son and nullifying His true divine Sonship, let him
be anathema."
20. By confused and involved expressions the heretics very frequently
elude the truth and secure the ears of the unwary by the mere sound of
common words, such as the titles Father and Son, which they do not
truthfully utter to express a natural and genuine community of essence:
for they are aware that God is called the Father of all creation, and
remember that all the saints are named sons of God. In like manner they
declare that the relationship between the Father and the Son resembles
that between the Father and the universe, so that the names Father and
Son are rather titular than real. For the names are titular if the
Persons have a distinct nature of a different essence, since no reality
can be attached to the name of father unless it be based on the nature
of
his offspring. So the Father cannot be called Father of an alien
substance unlike His own, for a perfect birth manifests no diversity
between itself and the original substance. Therefore we repudiate all
the impious assertions that the Father is Father of a Son begotten of
Himself and yet not of His own nature. We shall not call God Father for
having a creature like Him in might and activity, but for begetting a
nature of an essence not unlike or alien to Himself: for a natural
birth does not admit of any dissimilarity with the Father's nature.
Therefore those are anathema who assert that the Father is Father of a
nature unlike Himself, so that something other than God is born of God,
and who suppose that the essence of the Father degenerated in begetting
the Son. For so far as in them lies they destroy the very birthless and
changeless essence of the Father by daring to attribute to Him in the
birth of His Only-begotten an alteration and degeneration of His
natural essence.
VIII. "And if any one understanding that the Son is like in essence to
Him whose Son He is admitted to be, says that the Son is the same as
the Father, or part of the Father, or that it is through an emanation
or any such passion as is necessary for the procreation of corporeal
children that the incorporeal Son draws His life from the incorporeal
Father: let him be anathema."
21. We have always to beware of the vices of particular perversions,
and countenance no opportunity for delusion. For many heretics say that
the Son is like the Father in divinity in order to support the theory
that in virtue of this similarity the Son is the same Person as the
Father: for this undivided similarity appears to countenance a belief
in a single monad. For what does not differ in kind seems to retain
identity of nature. 22. But birth does not countenance this vain
imagination; for such identity without differentiation excludes birth.
For what is born has a father who caused its birth. Nor because the
divinity of Him who is being born is inseparable from that of Him who
begets, are the Begetter and the Begotten the same Person; while on the
other hand He
who is born and He who begets cannot be unlike. He is therefore
anathema who shall proclaim a similarity of nature in the Father and
the Son in order to abolish the personal meaning of the word Son: for
while through mutual likeness one differs in no respect from the other,
yet this very likeness, which does not admit of bare union, confesses
both the Father and the Son because the Son is the changeless likeness
of the Father. For the Son is not part of the Father so that He who is
born and He who begets can be called one Person. Nor is He an emanation
so that by a continual flow of a corporeal uninterrupted stream the
flow is itself kept in its source, the source being identical with the
flow in virtue of the successive and unbroken continuity. But the birth
is perfect, and remains alike in nature; not taking its beginning
materially from a corporeal conception and bearing, but as an
incorporeal Son drawing His existence from an incorporeal Father
according to the likeness which belongs to an identical nature.
IX. "And if any one, because the Father is never admitted to be the Son
and the Son is never admitted to be the Father, when he says that the
Son is other than the Father (because the Father is one Person and the
Son another, inasmuch as it is said, There is another that beareth
witness of Me, even the father who sent Me[5]), does in anxiety for the
distinct personal qualities of the Father and the Son which in the
Church must be piously understood to exist, fear that the Son and the
Father may sometimes be admitted to be the same Person, and therefore
denies that the Son is like in essence to the Father: let him be
anathema."
23. It was said unto the apostles of the Lord, Be ye wise as serpents,
and harmless as doves[6]. Christ therefore wished there to be in us the
nature of different creatures: but in such a sort that the harmlessness
of the dove might temper the serpent's wisdom, and the wisdom of the
serpent might instruct the harmlessness of the dove, and that so wisdom
might be made harmless and harmlessness wise. This precept has been
observed in the exposition of this creed. For the former sentence of
which we have spoken guarded against the teaching of a unity of person
under the cloak of an essential likeness, and against the denial of the
Son's birth as the result of an identity of nature, lest we should
understand God to be a single monad because one Person does not differ
in
kind from the other. In the next sentence, by harmless and apostolic
wisdom we have again taken refuge in that wisdom of the serpent to
which we are bidden to be conformed no less than to the harmlessness of
the dove, lest perchance through a repudiation of the unity of persons
on the ground that the Father is one Person and the Son another, a
preaching of the dissimilarity of their natures should again take us
unawares, and test on the ground that He who sent and He who was sent
are two Persons (for the Sent and the Sender cannot be one Person) they
should be considered to have divided and dissimilar natures, though He
who is born and He who begets Him cannot be of a different essence. So
we preserve in Father and in Son the likeness of an identical nature
through an essential birth: yet the similarity of nature does not
injure personality by making the Sent and the Sender to be but
one. Nor do we do away with the similarity of nature by admitting
distinct personal qualities, for it is impossible that the one God
should be called Son and Father to Himself. So then the truth as to the
birth supports the similarity of essence and the similarity of essence
does not undermine the personal reality of the birth. Nor again does a
profession of belief in the Begetter and the Begotten exclude a
similarity of essence; for while the Begetter and the Begotten cannot
be one Person, He who is born and He who begets cannot be of a
different nature.
X. "And if any one admits that God became Father of the Only-begotten
Son at any point in times and not that the Only-begotten Son came into
existence without passion beyond all times and beyond all human
calculation: for contravening the teaching of the Gospel which scorned
any interval of times between the being of the Father and the Son and
faithfully has instructed us that In the beginning was the Word, and
the Word was with God, and the Word was God[7], let him be anathema."
24. It is a pious saying that the Father is not limited by times: for
the true meaning of the name of Father which He bore before times began
surpasses comprehension. Although religion teaches us to ascribe to Him
this name of Father through which comes the impassible origin of the
Son, yet He is not bound in time, for the eternal and infinite God
cannot be understood as having become a Father in time, and according
to the teaching of the Gospel the Only-begotten God the Word is
recognized even in the beginning rather to be with God than to be born.
XI. "And if any one says that the Father is older in times than His
Only-begotten Son, and that the Son is younger than the Father: let him
be anathema"
25. The essential likeness conformed to the Father's essence in kind is
also taught to be identical in time: lest He who is the image of God,
who is the Word, who is God with God in the beginning, who is like the
Father, by the insertion of times between Himself and the Father should
not have in Himself in perfection that which is both image, and Word,
and God. For if He be proclaimed to be younger in time, He has lost the
truth of the image and likeness: for that is no longer likeness which
is found to be dissimilar in times. For that very fact that God is
Father prevents there being any times in which He was not Father:
consequently there can be no times in the Son's existence in which He
was not Son. Wherefore we must neither call the Father older than the
Son nor
the Son younger than the Father: for the true meaning of neither name
can exist without the other.
XII. "And if any one attributes the timeless substance (i.e. Person) of
the Only-begotten Son derived from the Father to the unborn essence of
God, as though calling the Father Son: let him be anathema[8]."
26. The above definition when it denied that the idea of time could be
applied to the birth of the Son seemed to have given an occasion for
heresy (we saw that it would be monstrous if the Father were limited by
time, but that He would be so limited if the Son were subjected to
time), so that by the help of this repudiation of time, the Father who
is unborn might under the appellation of Son be proclaimed as both
Father and Son in a single and unique Person. For in excluding times
from the Son's birth it seemed to countenance the opinion that there
was no birth, so that He whose birth is not in times might be
considered not to have been born at all. Wherefore, lest at the
suggestion of this denial of times the heresy of the unity of Persons
should insinuate itself,
that impiety is condemned which dares to refer the timeless birth to
the unique and singular Person of the unborn essence. For it is one
thing to be outside times and another to be unborn; the first admits of
birth (though outside time), the other, so far as it is, is the one
sole author froth eternity of its being what it is.
27. We have reviewed, beloved brethren, all the definitions of faith
made by the Eastern bishops which they formulated in their assembly
against the recently emerging heresy. And we, as far as we have been
able, have adapted the wording of our exposition to express their
meaning, following their diction rather than desiring to be thought the
originators of new phrases. In these words they decree the principles
of their conscience and a long maintained doctrine against a new and
profane impiety. Those who compiled this heresy at Sirmium, or accepted
it after its compilation, they have thereby compelled to confess their
ignorance and to sign such decrees. There the Son is the perfect image
of the Father: there under the qualities of an identical essence, the
Person of the Son is not annihilated and confounded with the Father:
there the Son is declared to be image of the Father in
virtue of a real likeness, and does not differ in substance from the
Father, whose image He is: there on account of the life which the
Father has and the life which the Son has received, the Father can have
nothing different in substance (this being implied in life) from that
which the Son received to have: there the begotten Son is not a
creature, but is a Person undistinguished from the Father's nature:
there, just as an identical might belongs to the Father and the Son, so
their essence admits of no difference: there the Father by begetting
the Son in no wise degenerates from Himself in Him through any
difference of nature: there, though the likeness of nature is the same
in each, the proper qualities which mark this likeness are repugnant to
a confusion of Persons, so that there is not one subsisting Person who
is called both Father and Son: there, though it is piously affirmed
that
there is both a Father who sends and a Son who is sent, yet no
distinction in essence is drawn between the Father and the Son, the
Sent and the Sender: there the truth of God's Fatherhood is not bound
by limits of times: there the Son is not later in time: there beyond
all time is a perfect birth which refutes the error that the Son could
not be born.
28. Here, beloved brethren, is the entire creed which was published by
some Easterns, few in proportion to the whole number of bishops, and
which first saw light at the very times when you repelled the
introduction of this heresy. The reason for its promulgation was the
fact that they were bidden to say nothing of the
<greek>omoousion</greek>. But even in former times, through
the urgency of these numerous causes, it was necessary at different
occasions to compose other creeds, the character of which will be
understood from their wording. For when you are frilly aware of the
results, it will be easier for us to bring to a full consummation, such
as religion and unity demand, the argument in which we are interested.
An
exposition of the faith of the Church made at the Council held an the
occasion of the Dedication of the church at Antioch by ninety-seven
bishops there present, because of suspicions felt as to the orthodoxy
of a certain bishop[9].
29. "We believe in accordance with evangelical and apostolic tradition
in one God the Father Almighty, the Creator, Maker and Disposer of all
things that are, and from whom are all things.
"And in one Lord Jesus Christ, His Only-begotten Son, God through whom
are all things, who was begotten of the Father, God of God, whole God
of whole God, One of One perfect God of perfect God, King of King, Lord
of Lord, the Word, the Wisdom, the Life, true Light, true Way, the
Resurrection the Shepherd, the Gate, unable to change or alter, the
unvarying image of the essence and might and glory of the Godhead, the
first-born of all creation, who always was in the beginning with God,
the Word of God, according to what is said in the Gospel, and the Word
was God, through whom all things were made, and in whom all things
subsist, who in the last days came down from above, and was born of a
virgin according to the Scriptures, and was made the Lamb[1], the
Mediator between God and man, the Apostle of our faith, and leader of
life. For He said,[7] came down from heaven, not to do Mine own
will, but the will of Him that sent me[2]. Who suffered and rose again
for us on the third day, and ascended into heaven, and sitteth on the
right hand of the Father, and is to come again with glory to judge the
quick and the dead.
"And in the Holy Ghost, who was given to them that believe, to comfort,
sanctify and perfect, even as our Lord Jesus Christ ordained His
disciples, saying, Go ye, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the
name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost[3],
manifestly, that is, of a Father who is truly Father, and clearly of a
Son who is truly Son, and a Holy Ghost who is truly a Holy Ghost, these
words not being set forth idly and without meaning, but carefully
signifying the Person, and order, and glory of each of those who are
named, to teach us that they are three Persons, but in agreement one.
30. "Having therefore held this faith from the beginning, anti being
resolved to hold it to the end in the sight of God and Christ, we say
anathema to every heretical and perverted sect, and if any man teaches
contrary to the wholesome and right faith of the Scriptures, saying
that there is or was time, or space, or age before the Son was
begotten, let him be anathema. And if any one say that the Son is a
formation like one of the things that are formed, or a birth resembling
other births, or a creature like the creatures, and not as the divine
Scriptures have affirmed in each passage aforesaid, or teaches or
proclaims as the Gospel anything else than what we have received: let
him be anathema. For all those things which were written in the divine
Scriptures by Prophets and by Apostles we believe and follow truly and
with fear."
31. Perhaps this creed has not spoken expressly enough of the identical
similarity of the Father and the Son, especially in concluding that the
names Father, Son and Holy Ghost referred to the Person and order and
glory of each of those who are named to teach us that they are three
Persons, but in agreement one.
32. But in the first place we must remember that the bishops did not
assemble at Antioch to oppose the heresy which has dared to declare
that the substance of the Son is unlike that of the Father, but to
oppose that which, in spite of the Council of Nicaea, presumed to
attribute the three names to the Father. Of this we will treat in its
proper place. I recollect that at the beginning of my argument I
besought the patience anti forbearance of my readers and hearers until
the completion of my letter, lest any one should rashly rise to judge
me before he was acquainted with the entire argument. I ask it again.
This assembly of the saints wished to strike a blow at that impiety
which by a mere counting of names evades the truth as to the Father and
the Son and the Holy Ghost; which represents that there is no personal
cause for each name, and by a false use of these names makes the
triple nomenclature imply only one Person, so that the Father alone
could be also called both Holy Ghost and Son. Consequently they
declared there were three substances, meaning three subsistent Persons,
and not thereby introducing any dissimilarity of essence to separate
the substance of Father and Son. For the words to teach us that they
are three in substance, but in agreement one are free from objection,
because as the Spirit is also named, and He is the Paraclete, it is
more fitting that a unity of agreement should be asserted than a unity
of essence based on likeness of substance.
33. Further the whole of the above statement has drawn no distinction
whatever between the essence and nature of the Father and the Son. For
when it is said, God of God, whole God of whole God, there is no room
for doubting that whole God is born of whole God. For the nature of God
who is of God admits of no difference, and as whole God of whole God He
is in all in which the Father is. One of One excludes the passions of a
human birth and conception, so that since He is One of One, He comes
from no other source, nor is different nor alien, for He is One of One,
perfect God of perfect God. Except in having a cause of its origin His
birth does not differ from the birthless nature since the perfection of
both Persons is the same. King of King. A power that is expressed by
one and the same title allows no dissimilarity of power. Lord of Lord.
In 'Lord' also the lordship is equal: there
can be no difference where domination is confessed of both without
diversity. But plainest of all is the statement appended after several
others unable to change or alter, the unvarying image of the Godhead
and essence and might and glory. For as God of God, whole God of whole
God, One of One, perfect God of perfect God, King of King and Lord of
Lord, since in all that glory and nature of Godhead in which the Father
ever abides, the Son born of Him also subsists; He derives this also
from the Father's substance that He is unable to change. For in His
birth that nature from which He is born is not changed; but the Son has
maintained a changeless essence since His origin is in a changeless
nature. For though He is an image, yet the image cannot alter, since in
Him was born the image of the Father's essence, and there could not be
in Him a change of nature caused by any unlikeness to the
Father's essence from which He was begotten. Now when we are taught
that He was brought into being as the first of all creation, and He is
Himself said to have always been in the beginning with God as God the
Word, the fact that He was brought into being shews that He was born,
and the fact that He always was, shews that He is not separated from
the Father by time. Therefore this Council by dividing the three
substances, which it did to exclude a monad God with a threefold title,
did not introduce any separation of substance between the Father and
the Son. The whole exposition of faith makes no distinction between
Father and Son, the Unborn and the Only-begotten, in time, or name, or
essence, or dignity, or domination. But our common conscience demands
that we should gain a knowledge of the other creeds of the same Eastern
bishops, composed at different times and places, that by the study of
many confessions we may understand the sincerity of their faith.
The Creed according to the Council of the East.
34. "We, the holy synod met in Sardica from different provinces of the
East, namely, Thebais, Egypt, Palestine, Arabia, Phoenicia, Coele
Syria, Mesopotamia, Cilicia, Cappadocia, Pontus, Paphlagonia, Galatia,
Bithynia and Hellespont, from Asia, namely, the two provinces of
Phrygia, Pisidia, the islands of the Cyclades, Pamphylia, Caria, Lydia,
from Europe, namely, Thrace, Haemimontus[4], Moesia, and the two
provinces of Pannonia, have set forth this creed.
"We believe in one God, the Father Almighty, Creator and Maker of all
things, from whom all fatherhood in heaven and earth is named:
"And we believe in His Only-begotten Son our Lord Jesus Christ, who
before all ages was begotten of the Father, God of God, Light of Light,
through whom were made all things which are in heaven and earth,
visible and invisible: who is the Word and Wisdom and Might and Life
and true Light: and who in the last days for our sake was incarnate,
and Was born of the holy Virgin, who was crucified and dead and buried,
And rose from the dead on the third day, And was received into heaven,
And sitteth on the right hand of the Father, And shall come to judge
the quick and the dead and to give to every man according to his works:
Whose kingdom remaineth without end for ever and ever. For He sitteth
on the right hand of the Father not only in this age, but also in the
age to come.
"We believe also in the Holy Ghost, that is, the Paraclete, whom
according to His promise He sent to His apostles after His return into
the heavens to teach them and to bring all things to their remembrance,
through whom also the souls of them that believe sincerely in Him are
sanctified.
"But those who say that the Son of God is sprung from things
non-existent or from another substance and not from God, and that there
was a time or age when He was not, the holy Catholic Church holds them
as aliens. Likewise also those who say that there are three Gods, or
that Christ is not God and that before the ages He was neither Christ
nor Son of God, or that He Himself is the Father and the Son and the
Holy Ghost, or that the Son is incapable of birth; or that the Father
begat the Son without purpose or will: the holy Catholic Church
anathematizes."
35. In the exposition of this creed, concise but complete definitions
have been employed. For in condemning those who said that the Son
sprang from things non-existent, it attributed to Him a source which
had no beginning but continues perpetually. And lest this source from
which He drew His permanent birth should be understood to be any other
substance than that of God, it also declares to be blasphemers those
who said that the Son was born of some other substance and not of God.
And so since He does not draw His subsistence from nothing, or spring
from any other source than God, it cannot be doubted that He was born
with those qualities which are God's; since the Only-begotten essence
of the Son is generated neither from things which are non-existent nor
from any other substance than the birthless and eternal substance of
the Father. But the creed also rejects intervals of times or ages: on
the assumption that He who does not differ in nature cannot be
separable by time.
36. On every side, where anxiety might be felt, approach is barred to
the arguments of heretics lest it should be declared that there is any
difference in the Son. For those are anathematized who say that there
are three Gods: because according to God's true nature His substance
does not admit a number of applications of the title, except as it is
given to individual men and angels in recognition of their merit,
though the substance of their nature and that of God is different. In
that sense there are consequently many gods. Furthermore in the nature
of God, God is one, yet in such a way that the Son also is God, because
in Him there is not a different nature: and since He is God of God,
both must be God, and since there is no difference of kind between them
there is no distinction in their essence. A number of titular Gods is
rejected; because there is no diversity in the quality of
the divine nature. Since therefore he is anathema who says there are
many Gods and he is anathema who denies that the Son is God; it is
fully shewn that the fact that each has one and the same name arises
from the real character of the similar substance in each: since in
confessing the Unborn God the Father, and the Only-begotten God the
Son, with no dissimilarity of essence between them, each is called God,
yet God must be believed and be declared to be one. So by the diligent
and watchful care of the bishops the creed guards the similarity of the
nature begotten and the nature begetting, confirming it by the
application of one name.
37. Yet to prevent the declaration of one God seeming to affirm that
God is a solitary monad without offspring of His own, it immediately
condemns the rash suggestion that because God is one, therefore God the
Father is one and solitary, having in Himself the name of Father and of
Son: since in the Father who begets and the Son who comes to birth one
God must be declared to exist on account of the substance of their
nature being similar in each. The faith of the saints knows nothing of
the Son being incapable of birth: because the nature of the Son only
draws its existence from birth. But the nature of the birth is in Him
so perfect that He who was born of the substance of God is born also of
His purpose and will. For from His will and purpose, not from the
process of a corporeal nature, springs the absolute perfection of the
essence of God born from the essence of God. It follows
that we should now consider that creed which was compiled not long ago
when Photinus was deposed from the episcopate.
A copy of the creed composed at Sirmium by the Easterns to offense Photinus.
38. "We believe in one God the Father Almighty, the Creator and Maker,
from whom every fatherhood in heaven and in earth is named.
"And in His only Son Jesus Christ our Lord, who was born of the Father
before all ages, God of God, Light of Light through whom all things
were made in heaven and in earth, visible and invisible. Who is the
Word and Wisdom and Might and Life and true Light: who in the last days
for our sake took a body, And was born of the holy Virgin, And was
crucified, And was dead and buried: who also rose from the dead on the
third day, And ascended into heaven, And sitteth on the right hand of
the Father, And shall come at the end of the world to judge the quick
and the dead; whose kingdom continueth without end and remaineth for
perpetual ages. For He shall be sitting at the right hand of the Father
not only in this age, but also in the age to come.
"And in the Holy Ghost, that is, the Paraclete, whom according to His
promise He sent to the apostles after He ascended into heaven to teach
them and to remind them of all things, through whom also are sanctified
the souls of those who believe sincerely in Him.
I. "But those who say that the Son is sprung from things non-existent,
or from another substance and not from God, and that there was a time
or age when He was not, the holy Catholic Church regards as aliens.
II. "If any man says that the Father and the Son are two Gods: let him be anathema.
III. "And if any man says that God is one, but does not confess that
Christ, God the Son of God, ministered to the Father in the creation of
all things: let him be anathema.
IV. "And if any man dares to say that the Unborn God, or a part of Him, was born of Mary: let him be anathema.
V. "And if any man say that the Son born of Mary was, before born of
Mary, Son only according to foreknowledge or predestination, and denies
that He was born of the Father before the ages and was with God, and
that all things were made through Him: let him be anathema.
VI. "If any man says that the substance of God is expanded and contracted: let him be anathema.
VII. "If any man says that the expanded substance of God makes the Son;
or names Son His supposed expanded substance: let him be anathema.
VIII. "If any man says that the Son of God is the internal or uttered Word of God: let him be anathema.
IX. "If any man says that the man alone born of Mary is the Son: let him be anathema.
X. "If any man though saying that God and Man was born of Mary, understands thereby the Unborn God: let him be anathema.
XI. "If any man hearing The Word was, made Flesh[3] thinks that the
Word was transformed into Flesh, or says that He suffered change in
taking Flesh: let him be anathema.
XII. "If any man hearing that the only Son of God was crucified, says
that His divinity suffered corruption, or pain, or change, or
diminution, or destruction: let him be anathema.
XIII. "If any man says Let us make man[6] was not spoken by the Father
to the Son, but by God to Himself: let him be anathema.
XIV. "If any man says that the Son did not appear to Abraham, but the Unborn God, or a part of Him: let him be anathema.
XV. "If any man says that the Son did not wrestle with Jacob as a man,
but the Unborn God, or a part of Him: let him be anathema.
XVI. "If any man does not understand The Lord rained from the Lord to
be spoken of the Father and the Son, but that the Father rained from
Himself: let him be anathema. For the Lord the Son rained from the Lord
the Father.
XVII. "If any man says that the Lord and the Lord, the Father and the
Son are two Gods. because of the aforesaid words: let him be anathema.
For we do not make the Son the equal or peer of the Father, but
understand the Son to be subject. For He did not come down to Sodom
without the Father's will, nor rain from Himself but from the Lord, to
wit by the Father's authority; nor does He sit at the Father's right
hand by His own authority, but He hears the Father saying. Sit thou on
My, right hand[7].
XVIII. "If any man says that the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost are one Person: let him be anathema.
XIX. "If any man speaking of the Holy Ghost the Paraclete says that He is the Unborn God: let him be anathema.
XX. "If any man denies that, as the Lord has taught us, the Paraclete
is different from the Son; for He said, And the Father shall send you
another Comforter, whom I shall ask[8]: let him be anathema.
XXI. "If any man says that the Holy Spirit is a part of the Father or of the Son: let him be anathema.
XXII. "If any man says that the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit are three Gods: let him be anathema.
XXIII. "If any man after the example of the Jews understands as said
for the destruction of the Eternal Only-begotten God the words, I am
the first God, and I am the last God, and beside Me there is no God[9],
which were spoken for the destruction of idols and them that are no
gods: let him be anathema.
XXIV. "If any man says that the Son was made by the will of God, like any object in creation: let him be anathema.
XXV. "If any man says that the Son was born against the will of the
Father: let him be anathema. For the Father was not forced against His
own will, or induced by any necessity of nature to beget the Son: but
as soon as He willed, before time and without passion He begat Him of
Himself and shewed Him forth.
XXVI. "If any man says that the Son is incapable of birth and without
beginning, saying as though there were two incapable of birth and
unborn and without beginning, and makes two Gods: let him be anathema.
For the Head, which is the beginning of all things, is the Son; but the
Head or beginning of Christ is God: for so to One who is without
beginning and is the beginning of all things, we refer the whole world
through Christ.
XXVII. "Once more we strengthen the understanding of Christianity by
saying, If any man denies that Christ who is God and Son of God,
personally existed before time began and aided the Father in the
perfecting of all things; but says that only from the time that He was
born of Mary did He gain the name of Christ and Son and a beginning of
His deity: let him be anathema."
39. The necessity of the moment urged the Council to set forth a wider
and broader exposition of the creed including many intricate questions,
because the heresy which Photinus was reviving was sapping our Catholic
home by many secret mines. Their purpose was to oppose every form of
stealthy subtle heresy by a corresponding form of pure and unsullied
faith, and to have as many complete explanations of the faith as there
were instances of peculiar faithlessness. Immediately after the
universal and unquestioned statement of the Christian mysteries, the
explanation of the faith against the heretics begins as follows.
I. "But those who say that the Son is sprung from things non-existent,
or from another substance and not from God, and that there was a time
or age when He was not, the holy Catholic Church regards as aliens."
40. What ambiguity is there here? What is omitted that the
consciousness of a sincere faith could suggest? He does not spring from
things non-existent: therefore His origin has existence. There is no
other substance extant to be His origin, but that of God: therefore
nothing else can be born in Him but all that is God; because His
existence is not from nothing, and He draws subsistence from no other
source. He does not differ in time: therefore the Son like the Father
is eternal. And so the Unborn Father and the Only-begotten Son share
all the same qualities. They are equal in years, and that very
similarity between the sole-existing paternal essence and its offspring
prevents distinction in any quality.
II. "If any man says that the Father and the Son are two Gods: let him be anathema.
III." And if any man says that God is one, but does not confess that
Christ who is God and eternal Son of God ministered to the Father in
the creation of all things: let him be anathema."
41. The very statement of the name as our religion states it gives us a
clear insight into the fact. For since it is condemned to say that the
Father and the Son are two Gods, and it is also accursed to deny that
the Son is God, any opinion as to the substance of the one being
different from that of the other in asserting two Gods is excluded. For
there is no other essence, except that of God the Father, from which
God the Son of God was born before time. For since we are compelled to
confess God the Father, and roundly declare that Christ the Son of God
is God, and between these two truths lies the impious confession of two
Gods: They must on the ground of their identity of nature and name be
one in the kind of their essence if the name of their essence is
necessarily one.
IV. "If any one dares to say that the Unborn God, or a part of Him, was born of Mary: let him be anathema."
42. The fact of the essence declared to be one in the Father and the
Son having one name on account of their similarity of nature seemed to
offer an opportunity to heretics to declare that the Unborn God, or a
part of Him, was born of Mary. The danger was met by the wholesome
resolution that he who declared this should be anathema. For the unity
of the name which religion employs and which is based on the exact
similarity of their natural essence, has not repudiated the Person of
the begotten essence so as to represent, trader cover of the unity of
name, that the substance of God is singular and undifferentiated
because we predicate one name for the essence of each, that is,
predicate one God, on account of the exactly similar substance of the
undivided nature in each Person.
V. "If any man say that the Son existed before Mary only according to
foreknowledge or predestination, and denies that He was born of the
Father before the ages and with God, and that all things were made
through Him: let him be anathema."
43. While denying that the God of us all, the Son of God, existed
before He was born in bodily form, some assert that He existed
according to foreknowledge and predestination, and not according to the
essence of a personally subsistent nature: that is, because the Father
predestined the Son to have existence some day by being born of the
Virgin, He was announced to us by the Father's foreknowledge rather
than born and existent before the ages in the substance of the divine
nature, and that all things which He Himself spake in the prophets
concerning the mysteries of His incarnation and passion were simply
said concerning Him by the Father according to His foreknowledge.
Consequently this perverse doctrine is condemned, so that we know that
the Only-begotten Son of God
was born of the Father before all worlds, and formed the worlds and all
creation, and that He was not merely predestined to be born.
VI. "If any man says that the substance of God is expanded and contracted: let him be anathema."
44. To contract and expand are bodily affections: but God who is a
Spirit and breathes where He listeth, does not expand or contract
Himself through any change of substance. Remaining free and outside the
bond of any bodily nature, He supplies out of Himself what He wills,
when He wills, and where He wills. Therefore it is impious to ascribe
any change of substance to such an unfettered Power.
VII. "If any man says that the expanded substance of God makes the Son,
or names Son His expanded substance: let him be anathema."
45. The above opinion, although meant to teach the immutability of God,
yet prepared the way for the following heresy. Some have ventured to
say that the Unborn God by expansion of His substance extended Himself
as far as the holy Virgin, in order that this extension produced by the
increase of His nature and assuming manhood might be called Son. They
denied that the Son who is perfect God born before time began was the
same as He who was afterwards born as Man. Therefore the Catholic Faith
condemns all denial of the immutability of the Father and of the birth
of the Son.
VIII. "If any man says that the Son is the internal or uttered Word of God: let him be anathema."
46. Heretics, destroying as far as in them lies the Son of God, confess
Him to be only the word, going forth as an utterance from the speaker's
lips and the unembodied sound of an impersonal voice: so that God the
Father has as Son a word resembling any word we utter in virtue of our
inborn power of speaking. Therefore this dangerous deceit is condemned,
which asserts that God the Word. who was in the beginning with God, is
only the word of a voice sometimes internal and sometimes expressed.
IX. "If any man says that the man alone born of Mary is the Son: let him be anathema."
We cannot declare that the Son of God is born of Mary without declaring
Him to be both Man and God. But lest the declaration that He is both
God and Man should give occasion to deceit, the Council immediately
adds,
X. "If any man though saying that God and Man was born of Mary, understands thereby the Unborn God: let him be anathema"
47. Thus is preserved both the name and power of the divine substance.
For since he is anathema who says that the Son of God by Mary is man
and not God; and he falls under the same condemnation who says that the
Unborn God became man: God made Man is not denied to be God but denied
to be the Unborn God, the Father being distinguished from the Son not
under the head of nature or by diversity of substance, but only by such
pre-eminence as His birthless nature gives.
XI. "If any man hearing The Word was made Flesh thinks that the Word
was transformed into Flesh, or says that He suffered change in taking
Flesh: let him be anathema."
48. This preserves the dignity of the Godhead: so that in the fact that
the Word was made Flesh, the Word, in becoming Flesh, has not lost
through being Flesh what constituted the Word, nor has become
transformed into Flesh, so as to cease to be the Word; but the Word was
made Flesh[1] in order that the Flesh might begin to be what the Word
is. Else whence came to His Flesh miraculous power in working, glory on
the Mount, knowledge of the thoughts of human hearts, calmness in His
passion, life in His death? God knowing no change, when made Flesh lost
nothing of the prerogatives of His substance.
XII. "If any man hearing that the only Son of God was crucified, says
that His divinity suffered corruption or pain or change or diminution
or destruction: let him be anathema."
49. It is clearly shewn why the Word, though He was made Flesh, was
nevertheless not transformed into Flesh. Though these kinds of
suffering affect the infirmity of the flesh, yet ·
God the Word when made Flesh could not change under suffering.
Suffering and change are not identical. Suffering of every kind causes
all flesh to change through sensitiveness and endurance of pain. But
the Word that was made Flesh, although He made Himself subject to
suffering, was nevertheless unchanged by the liability to suffer. For
He was able to suffer, and yet the Word was not possible. Possibility
denotes a nature that is weak; but suffering in itself is the endurance
of pains inflicted, and since the Godhead is immutable and
yet the Word was made Flesh, such pains found in Him a material which
they could affect though the Person of the Word had no infirmity or
possibility. And so when He suffered His Nature remained immutable
because like His Father, His Person is of an impossible essence, though
it is born[2].
XIII. "If any man says Let us make man[3] was not spoken by the Father
to the Son, but by God to Himself: let him be anathema.
XIV. "If any man says that the Son did not appear to Abraham[4], but the Unborn God, or a part of Him: let him be anathema.
XV. "If any man says that the Son did not wrestle with Jacob as a
man[5], but the Unborn God, or a part of Him: let him be anathema.
XVI: "If any man does not understand The Lord rained from the Lord[6]
to be spoken of the Father and the Son, but says that the Father rained
from Himself: let him be anathema. For the Lord the Son rained from the
Lord the Father."
50. These points had to be inserted into the creed because Photinus,
against whom the synod was held, denied them. They were inserted lest
any one should dare to assert that the Son of God did not exist before
the Son of the Virgin, and should attach to the Unborn God with the
foolish perversity of an insane heresy all the above passages which
refer to the Son of God, and while applying them to the Father, deny
the Person of the Son. The clearness of these statements absolves us
from the necessity of interpreting them.
XVII. "If any man says that the Lord and the Lord, the Father and the
Son, are two Gods because of the aforesaid words: let him be anathema.
For we do not make the Son the equal or peer of the Father, but
understand the Son to be subject. For He did not come down to Sodom
without the Father's will, nor rain from Himself but from the Lord, to
wit, by the Father's authority; nor does He sit at the Father's right
hand by His own authority, but because He hears the Father saying, Sit
Thou on My right hand[7]."
51. The foregoing and the following statements utterly remove any
ground for suspecting that this definition asserts a diversity of
different deities in the Lord and the Lord. No comparison is made
because it was seen to be impious to say that there are two Gods: not
that they refrain from making the Son equal and peer of the Father in
order to deny that He is God. For, since he is anathema who denies that
Christ is God, it is not on that score that it is profane to speak of
two equal Gods. God is One on account of the true character of His
natural essence and because from the Unborn God the Father, who is the
one God, the Only-begotten God the Son is born, and draws His divine
Being only from God; and since the essence of Him who is begotten is
exactly similar to the
essence of Him who begot Him, there must be one name for the exactly
similar nature. That the Son is not on a level with the Father and is
not equal to Him is chiefly shewn in the fact that He was subjected to
Him to render obedience, in that the Lord rained from the Lord and that
the Father did not, as Photinus and Sabellius say, rain from Himself,
as the Lord from the Lord; in that He then sat down at the right hand
of God when it was told Him to seat Himself; in that He is sent, in
that He receives, in that He submits in all things to the will of Him
who sent Him. But the subordination of filial love is not a diminution
of essence, nor does pious duty cause a degeneration of nature, since
in spite of the fact that both the Unborn Father is God and the
Only-begotten Son of God is God, God is nevertheless One, and the
subjection and dignity of the Son are both taught in that by being
called Son He is made subject to that name which because it implies
that God is His Father is yet a name which denotes His nature. Having a
name which belongs to Him whose Son He is, He is subject to the Father
both in service and name; yet in such a way that the subordination of
His name bears witness to the true character of His natural and exactly
similar essence.
XVIII. "If any man says that the Father and the Son are one Person: let him be anathema."
52. Sheer perversity calls for no contradiction: and yet the mad frenzy
of certain men has been so violent as to dare to predicate one Person
with two names.
XIX. "If any man speaking of the Holy Ghost the Paraclete say that He is the Unborn God: let him be anathema."
53. The further clause makes liable to anathema the predicating Unborn
God of the Paraclete. For it is most impious to say that He who was
sent by the Son for our consolation is the Unborn God.
XX. "If any man deny that, as the Lord has taught us, the Paraclete is
different from the Son; for He said, And the Further shall send you
another Comforter, whom I shall ask: let him be anathema."
54. We remember that the Paraclete was sent by the Son, and at the
beginning the creed explained this. But since through the virtue of His
nature, which is exactly similar, the Son has frequently called His own
works the works of the Father, saying, I do the works of My Father[8]:
so when He intended to send the Paraclete, as He often promised, He
said sometimes that He was to be sent from the Father, in that He was
piously wont to refer all that He did to the Father. And from this the
heretics often seize an opportunity of saying that the Son Himself is
the Paraclete: while by the fact that He promised to pray that another
Comforter should be sent from the Father, He shews the difference
between Him who is sent and Him who asked.
XXI. "If any man says that the Holy Spirit is a part of the Father or of the Son: let him be anathema."
55. The insane frenzy of the heretics, and not any genuine difficulty,
rendered it necessary that this should be written. For since the name
of Holy Spirit has its own signification, and the Holy Spirit the
Paraclete has the office and rank peculiar to His Person, and since the
Father and the Son are everywhere declared to be immutable: how could
the Holy Spirit be asserted to be a part either of the Father or of the
Son? But since this folly is often affirmed amid other follies by
godless men, it was needful that the pious should condemn it.
XXII. "If any man says that the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit are three Gods: let him be anathema."
56. Since it is contrary to religion to say that there are two Gods,
because we remember and declare that nowhere has it been affirmed that
there is more than one God: how much more worthy of condemnation is it
to name three Gods in the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost? Nevertheless,
since heretics say this, Catholics rightly condemn it.
XXIII. "If any man, after the example of the Jews, understand as said
for the destruction of the Eternal Only-begotten God, the words, I am
the first God, and I am the last God, and beside Me there is no God[9],
which were spoken for the destruction of idols and them that are no
gods: let him be anathema."
57. Though we condemn a plurality of gods and declare that God is only
one, we cannot deny that the Son of God is God. Nay, the true character
of His nature causes the name that is denied to a plurality to be the
privilege of His essence. The words, Beside Me there is no God, cannot
rob the Son of His divinity: because beside Him who is of God there is
no other God. And these words of God the Father cannot annul the
divinity of Him who was born of Himself with an essence in no way
different from His own nature. The Jews interpret this passage as
proving the bare unity of God, because they are ignorant of the
Only-begotten God. But we, while we deny that there are two Gods, abhor
the idea of a diversity of natural essence in the Father and the Son.
The words, Beside Me
there is no God, take away an impious belief in false gods. In
confessing that God is One, and also saying that the Son is God, our
use of the same name affirms that there is no difference of substance
between the two Persons.
XXIV. "If any man says that the Son was made by the will of God, like any object in creation: let him be anathema."
58. To all creatures the will of God has given substance: but a perfect
birth gave to the Son a nature from a substance that is impossible and
itself unborn. All created things are such as God willed them to be:
but the Son who is born of God has such a personality as God has. God's
nature did not produce a nature unlike itself: but the Son begotten of
God's substance has derived the essence of His nature by virtue of His
origin, not from an act of will after the manner of creatures.
XXV. "If any man says that the Son was born against the will of the
Father: let him be anathema. For the Father was not forced against His
own will, or induced against His will by any necessity of nature, to
beget Ills Son; but as soon as He willed, before time and without
passion He begat Him of Himself and shewed Him forth."
59. Since it was taught that the Son did not, like all other things,
owe His existence to God's will, lest He should be thought to derive
His essence only at His Father's will and not in virtue of His own
nature, an opportunity seemed thereby to be given to heretics to
attribute to God the Father a necessity of begetting the Son from
Himself, as though He had brought forth the Son by a law of nature in
spite of Himself. But such liability to be acted upon does not exist in
God the Father in the ineffable and perfect birth of the Son it was
neither mere will that begat Him nor was the Father's essence changed
or forced at the bidding of a natural law. Nor was any substance sought
for to beget Him, nor is the nature of the Begetter changed in the
Begotten, nor is the
Father's unique name affected by time. Before all time the Father, out
of the essence of His nature, with a desire that was subject to no
passion, gave to the Son a birth that conveyed the essence of His
nature.
XXVI. "If any man says that the Son is incapable of birth and without
beginning, speaking as though there were two incapable of birth and
unborn and without beginning, and makes two Gods: let him be anathema.
For the Head, which is the beginning of all things, is the Son; but the
Head or beginning of Christ is God: for so to One who is without
beginning and is the beginning of all things, we refer the whole world
through Christ."
60. To declare the Son to be incapable of birth is the height of
impiety. God would no longer be One: for the nature of the one Unborn
God demands that we should confess that God is one. Since therefore God
is one, there cannot be two incapable of birth: because God is one
(although both the Father is God and the Son of God is God) for the
very reason that incapability of birth is the only quality that can
belong to one Person only. The Son is God for the very reason that He
derives His birth from that essence which cannot be born. Therefore our
holy faith rejects the idea that the Son is incapable of birth in order
to predicate one God incapable of birth and consequently one God, and
in order to embrace the Only-begotten nature, begotten from the unborn
essence, in
the one name of the Unborn God. For the Head of all things is the Son:
but the Head of the Son is God. And to one God through this
stepping-stone and by this confession all things are referred, since
the whole world takes its beginning from Him to whom God Himself is the
beginning.
XXVII. "Once more we strengthen the understanding of Christianity by
saying, If any man denies that Christ, who is God and the Son of God,
existed before time began and aided the Father in the perfecting of all
things; but says that only from the time that He was born of Mary did
He gain the name of Christ and Son and a beginning of His deity: let
him be anathema."
61. A condemnation of that heresy on account of which the Synod was
held necessarily concluded with an explanation of the whole faith that
was being opposed. This heresy falsely stated that the beginning of the
Son of God dated from His birth of Mary. According to evangelical and
apostolic doctrine the corner-stone of our faith is that our Lord Jesus
Christ, who is God and Son of God, cannot be separated from the Father
in title or power or difference of substance or interval of time.
62. You perceive that the truth has been sought by many paths through
the advice and opinions of different bishops, and the ground of their
views has been set forth by the separate declarations inscribed in this
creed. Every separate point of heretical assertion has been
successfully refuted. The infinite and boundless God cannot be made
comprehensible by a few words of human speech. Brevity often misleads
both learner and teacher, and a concentrated discourse either causes a
subject not to be understood, or spoils the meaning of an argument
where a thing is hinted at, and is not proved by full demonstration.
The bishops fully understood this, anti therefore have used for the
purpose of teaching many definitions and a profusion of words that the
ordinary understanding might find no difficulty, but that their hearers
might be saturated with the truth thus differently expressed, and
that in treating of divine things these adequate and manifold
definitions might leave no room for danger or obscurity.
63. You must not be surprised, dear brethren, that so many creeds have
recently been written. The frenzy of heretics makes it necessary. The
danger of the Eastern Churches is so great that it is rare to find
either priest or layman that belongs to this faith, of the orthodoxy of
which you may judge. Certain individuals have acted so wrongly as to
support the side of evil, and the strength of the wicked has been
increased by the exile of some of the bishops, the cause of which you
are acquainted with. I am not speaking about distant events or writing
down incidents of which I know nothing: I have heard and seen the
faults which we now have to combat. They are not laymen but bishops who
are guilty. Except the bishop Eleusius[1] and his few comrades, the
greater part of the ten provinces of Asia, in which I am now staying,
really know not God. Would that they knew nothing about Him, for
their ignorance would meet with a readier pardon than their detraction.
These faithful bishops do not keep silence in their pain. They seek for
the unity of that faith of which others have long since robbed them.
The necessity of a united exposition of that faith was first felt when
Hosius forgot his former deeds and words, and a fresh yet festering
heresy broke out at Sirmium. Of Hosius I say nothing, I leave his
conduct in the background lest man's judgment should forget what once
he was. But everywhere there are scandals, schisms and treacheries.
Hence some of those who had formerly written one creed were compelled
to sign another. I make no complaint against these long-suffering
Eastern bishops, it was enough that they gave at least a compulsory
assent to the faith after they had once been willing to blaspheme. I
think it a subject of congratulation that a single penitent should be
found among such obstinate, blaspheming and heretical bishops. But,
brethren, you enjoy happiness and glory in the Lord, who meanwhile
retain and conscientiously confess the whole apostolic faith, and have
hitherto been ignorant of written creeds. You have not needed the
letter, for you abounded in the spirit. You required not the office of
a hand to write what you believed in your hearts and professed unto
salvation. It was unnecessary for you to read as bishops what you held
when new-born converts. But necessity has introduced the custom of
ex-pounding creeds and signing expositions. Where the conscience is in
danger we must use the letter. Nor is it wrong to write what it is
wholesome to confess.
64. Kept always from guile by the gift of the Holy Spirit, we confess
and write of our own will that there are not two Gods but one God; nor
do we therefore deny that the Son of God is also God; for He is God of
God. We deny that there are two incapable of birth, because God is one
through the prerogative of being incapable of birth; nor does it follow
that the Unbegotten is not God, for His source is the Unborn substance.
There is not one subsistent Person, but a similar substance in both
Persons. There is not one name of God applied to dissimilar natures,
but a wholly similar essence belonging to one name and nature. One is
not superior to the other on account of the kind of His substance, but
one is subject to the other because born of the other. The Father is
greater because He is Father, the Son is not the less because He is
Son. The difference is one of the meaning of a name
anti not of a nature. We confess that the Father is not affected by
time, but do not deny that the Son is equally eternal. We assert that
the Father is in the Son because the Son has nothing in Himself unlike
the Father: we confess that the Son is in the Father because the
existence of the Son is not from any other source. We recognize that
their nature is mutual and similar because equal: we do not think them
to be one Person because they are one: we declare that they are through
the similarity of an identical nature one, in such a way that they
nevertheless are not one Person.
65. I have expounded, beloved brethren, my belief in our common faith
so far as our wonted human speech permitted and the Lord, whom I have
ever besought, as He is my witness, has given me power. If I have said
too little, nay, if I have said almost nothing, I ask you to remember
that it is not belief but words that are lacking. Perhaps I shall
thereby prove that my human nature, though not my will, is weak: and I
pardon my human nature if it cannot speak as it would of God, for it is
enough for its salvation to have believed the things of God.
66. Since your faith and mine, so far as I am conscious, is in no
danger before God, and I have shewn you, as you wished, the creeds that
have been set forth by the Eastern bishops (though I repeat that they
were few in number, for, considering how numerous the Eastern Churches
are, that faith is held by few), I have also declared my own
convictions about divine things, according to the doctrine of the
apostles. it remains for you to investigate without suspicion the
points that mislead the unguarded temper of our simple minds, for there
is now no opportunity left of hearing. And although I shall no longer
fear that sentence will not be passed upon me in accordance with the
whole exposition of the creed, I ask you to allow me to express a wish
that I may not have the sentence passed until the exposition is
actually completed.
67. Many of us, beloved brethren, declare the substance of the Father
and the Son to be one in such a spirit that I consider the statement to
be quite as much wrong as right. The expression contains both a
conscientious conviction and the opportunity for delusion. If we assert
the one substance, understanding it to mean the likeness of natural
qualities and such a likeness as includes not only the species but the
genus, we assert it in a truly religious spirit, provided we believe
that the one substance signifies such a similitude of qualities that
the unity is not the unity of a monad but of equals. By equality I mean
exact similarity so that the likeness may be called an equality,
provided that the equality imply unity because it implies an equal
pair, and that the unity which implies an equal pair be not wrested to
mean a single Person. Therefore the one substance will be asserted
piously if it does not abolish the subsistent personality or divide the
one substance into two, for their substance by the true character of
the Son's birth and by their natural likeness is so free from
difference that it is called one.
68. But if we attribute one substance to the Father and the Son to
teach that there is a solitary personal existence although denoted by
two titles: then though we confess the Son with our lips we do not keep
Him in our hearts, since in confessing one substance we then really say
that the Father and the Son constitute one undifferentiated Person.
Nay, there immediately arises an opportunity for the erroneous belief
that the Father is divided, and that He cut off a portion of Himself to
be His Son. That is what the heretics mean when they say the substance
is one: and the terminology of our good confession so gratifies them
that it aids heresy when the word <greek>omoousios</greek>
is left by itself, undefined and ambiguous. There is also a third
error. When the Father and the Son are said to be of one substance this
is thought to imply a prior substance, which the two
equal Persons both possess. Consequently the word implies three things,
one original substance and two Persons, who are as it were fellow-heirs
of this one substance. For as two fellow-heirs are two, and the
heritage of which they are fellow-heirs is anterior to them, so the two
equal Persons might appear to be sharers in one anterior substance. The
assertion of the one substance of the Father and the Son signifies
either that there is one Person who has two titles, or one divided
substance that has made two imperfect substances, or that there is a
third prior substance which has been usurped and assumed by two and
which is called one because it was one before it was severed into two.
Where then is there room for the Son's birth? Where is the Father or
the Son, if these names are explained not by the birth of the divine
nature but a severing or sharing of one anterior substance?
69. Therefore amid the numerous dangers which threaten the faith,
brevity of words must be employed sparingly, lest what is piously meant
be thought to be impiously expressed, and a word be judged guilty of
occasioning heresy when it has been used in conscientious and
unsuspecting innocence. A Catholic about to state that the substance of
the Father and the Son is one, must not begin at that point: nor hold
this word all important as though true faith did not exist where the
word was not used. He will be safe in asserting the one substance if he
has first said that the Father is unbegotten, that the Son is born,
that He draws His personal subsistence from the Father, that He is like
the Father in might, honour and nature, that He is subject to the
Father as to the Author of His being, that He did not commit robbery by
making Himself equal with God, in whose form He remained, that He
was obedient unto death. He did not spring from nothing, but was born.
He is not incapable of birth but equally eternal. He is not the Father,
but the Son begotten of Him. He is not any portion of God, but is whole
God. He is not Himself the source but the image; the image of God born
of God to be God. He is not a creature but is God. Not another God in
the kind of His substance, but the one God in virtue of the essence of
His exactly similar substance. God is not one in Person but in nature,
for the Born and the Begetter have nothing different or unlike. After
saying all this, he does not err in declaring one substance of the
Father and the Son. Nay, if he now denies the one substance he sins.
70. Therefore let no one think that our words were meant to deny the
one substance. We are giving the very reason why it should not be
denied. Let no one think that the word ought to be used by itself and
unexplained. Otherwise the word <greek>omoousios</greek> is
not used in a religious spirit. I will not endure to hear that Christ
was born of Mary unless I also hear, In the beginning was the Word, and
the Word was God[2]. I will not hear Christ was hungry, unless I hear
that after His fast of forty days He said, Man doth not live by bread
alone[3]. I will not hear He thirsted unless I also hear, Whosoever
drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst[4]. I
will not hear Christ suffered unless I hear, The hour is come that the
Son of man should be glorified[5]. I will not hear He died unless I
hear He rose again. Let us bring forward no isolated point of
the divine mysteries to rouse the suspicions of our hearers and give an
occasion to the blasphemers. We must first preach the birth and
subordination of the Son and the likeness of His nature, and then we
may preach in godly fashion that the Father and the Son are of one
substance. I do not personally understand why we ought to preach before
everything else, as the most valuable and important of doctrines and in
itself sufficient, a truth which cannot be piously preached before
other truths, although it is impious to deny it after them.
71. Beloved brethren, we must not deny that there is one substance of
the Father and the Son, but we must not declare it without giving our
reasons. The one substance must be derived from the true character of
the begotten nature, not from any division, any confusion of Persons,
any sharing of an anterior substance. It may be right to assert the one
substance, it may be right to keep silence about it. You believe in the
birth and you believe in the likeness. Why should the word cause mutual
suspicions, when we view the fact in the same way? Let us believe and
say that there is one substance, but in virtue of the true character of
the nature and not to imply a blasphemous unity of Persons. Let the
oneness be due to the fact that there are similar Persons and not a
solitary Person.
72. But perhaps the word similarity may not seem fully appropriate. If
so, I ask how I can express the equality of one Person with the other
except by such a word? Or is to be like not tile same thing as to be
equal? If I say the divine nature is one I am suspected of meaning that
it is undifferentiated: if I say the Persons are similar, I mean that I
compare what is exactly like. I ask what position equal holds between
like and one? I enquire whether it means similarity rather than
singularity. Equality does not exist between things unlike, nor does
similarity exist in one. What is the difference between those that are
similar and those that are equal? Can one equal be distinguished from
the other? So those who are equal are not unlike. then those who are
unlike are not equals, what can those who are like be but equals?
73. Therefore, beloved brethren, in declaring that the Son is like in
all things to the Father, we declare nothing else than that He is
equal. Likeness means perfect equality, and this fact we may gather
from the Holy Scriptures, And Adam lived two hundred and thirty years,
and begat a son according to his own image and according to his own
likeness; and called his name Seth[6]. I ask what was the nature of his
likeness and image which Adam begot in Seth? Remove bodily infirmities,
remove the first stage of conception, remove birth-pangs, and every
kind of human need. I ask whether this likeness which exists in Seth
differs in nature from the author of his being, or whether there was in
each an essence of a different kind, so that Seth had not at his birth
the natural essence of Adam? Nay, he had a likeness to Adam, even
though we deny it, for his nature was not different. This
likeness of nature in Seth was not due to a nature of a different kind,
since Seth was begotten from only one father, so we see that a likeness
of nature renders things equal because this likeness betokens an
exactly similar essence. Therefore every son by virtue of his natural
birth is the equal of his father, in that he has a natural likeness to
him. And with regard to the nature of the Father and the Son the
blessed John teaches the very likeness which Moses says existed between
Seth and Adam, a likeness which is this equality of nature. He says,
Therefore the Jews sought the more to kill Him, because He not only had
broken the Sabbath, but said also that God was His father, making
Himself equal with God[7]. Why do we allow minds that are dulled with
the weight of sin to interfere with the doctrines and sayings of such
holy men, and impiously match our rash though sluggish senses
against their impregnable assertions? According to Moses, Seth is the
likeness of Adam, according to John, the Son is equal to the Father,
yet we seek to find a third impossible something between the Father and
the Son. He is like the Father, He is the Son of the Father, He is born
of Him: this fact alone justices the assertion that they are one.
74. I am aware, dear brethren, that there are some who confess the
likeness, but deny the equality. Let them speak as they will, and
insert the poison of their blasphemy into ignorant ears. If they say
that there is a difference between likeness and equality, I ask whence
equality can be obtained? If the Son is like the Father in essence,
might, glory and eternity, I ask why they decline to say He is equal?
In the above creed an anathema was pronounced on any man who should say
that the Father was Father of an essence unlike Himself. Therefore if
He gave to Him whom He begat without effect upon Himself a nature which
was neither another nor a different nature, He cannot have given Him
any other than His own. Likeness then is the sharing of what is one's
own, the sharing of one's own is equality, and equality admits of no
difference[8]. Those things which do not differ at all are one. So the
Father and the Son are one, not by unity of Person but by equality of
nature.
75. Although general conviction and divine authority sanction no
difference between likeness and equality, since both Moses and John
would lead us to believe the Son is like the Father and also His equal,
yet let us consider whether the Lord, when the Jews were angry with Him
for calling God His Father and thus making Himself equal with God, did
Himself teach that He was equal with God. He says, The Son can do
nothing of Himself, but what He seeth the Father do[9]. He shewed that
the Father originates by saying Can do nothing of Himself, He calls
attention to His own obedience by adding, but what He seeth the Father
do. There is no difference of might, He says He can do nothing that He
does not see because it is His nature and not His sight that gives Him
power. But His obedience consists in His being able only when He sees.
And so by the fact that He has power when He sees, He shews
that He does not gain power by seeing but claims power on the authority
of seeing. The natural might does not differ in Father and Son, the
Son's equality of power with the Father not being due to any increase
or advance of the Son's nature but to the Father's example. In short
that honour which the Son's subjection retained for the Father belongs
equally to the Son on the strength of His nature. He has Himself added,
What things soever He doeth, these also doeth the Son likewise[9a].
Surely then the likeness implies equality. Certainly it does, even
though we deny it: for these also doeth the Son likewise. Are not
things done likewise the same? Or do not the same things admit
equality? Is there any other difference between likeness and equality,
when things that are done likewise are understood to be made the same?
Unless perchance any one will deny that the same things are equal, or
deny that similar things are equal, for things that are done in like
manner are not only declared to be equal but to be the same things.
76. Therefore, brethren, likeness of nature can be attacked by no
cavil, and the Son cannot be said to lack the true qualities of the
Father's nature because He is like Him. No real likeness exists where
there is no equality of nature, and equality of nurture cannot exist
unless it imply unity, not unity of person but of kind. It is right to
believe, religious to feel, and wholesome to confess, that we do not
deny that the substance of the Father and the Son is one because it is
similar, and that it is similar because they are one.
77. Beloved, after explaining in a faithful and godly manner the
meaning of the phrases one substance, in Greek
<greek>omoousios</greek>, and similar substance or
<greek>omoiousios</greek>, and shewing very completely the
faults which may arise from a deceitful brevity or dangerous simplicity
of language, it only remains for me to address myself to the holy
bishops of the East. We have no longer any mutual suspicions about our
faith, and those which before now have been due to mere
misunderstanding are being cleared away. They will pardon me if I
proceed to speak somewhat freely with them on the basis of our common
faith.
78. Ye who have begun to be eager for apostolic and evangelical
doctrine, kindled by the fire of faith amid the thick darkness of a
night of heresy, with how great a hope of recalling the true faith have
you inspired us by consistently checking the bold attack of infidelity!
In former days it was only in obscure corners that our Lord Jesus
Christ was denied to be the Son of God according to His nature, and was
asserted to have no share in the Father's essence, but like the
creatures' to have received His origin from things that were not. But
the heresy now bursts forth backed by civil authority, and what it once
muttered in secret it has of late boasted of in open triumph. Whereas
in former times it has tried by secret mines to creep into the Catholic
Church, it has now put forth every power of this world in the fawning.
manners of a false religion. For the perversity of these men
has been so audacious that when they dared not preach this doctrine
publicly themselves, they beguiled the Emperor to give them hearing.
For they did beguile an ignorant sovereign so successfully that though
he was busy with war he expounded their infidel creed, and before he
was regenerate by baptism imposed a form of faith upon the churches.
Opposing bishops they drove into exile. They drove me also to wish for
exile, by trying to force me to commit blasphemy. May I always be an
exile, if only the truth begins to be preached again! I thank God that
the Emperor, through your warnings, acknowledged his ignorance, and
through these your definitions of faith came to recognize an error
which was not his own but that of his advisers. He freed himself from
the reproach of impiety in the eyes of God and men, when he
respectfully received your embassy, and after you had won from him a
confession of his ignorance, shewed his knowledge of the hypocrisy of
the men whose influence brought him under this reproach.
79. These are deceivers, I both fear and believe they are deceivers,
beloved brethren; for they have ever deceived. This very document is
marked by hypocrisy. They excuse themselves for having desired silence
as to <greek>omoousion</greek> and
<greek>omoiousion</greek> on the ground that they taught
that the meaning of the words was identical. Rustic bishops, I trow,
and untutored in the significance of
<greek>omoousion</greek>: as though there had never been
any Council about the matter, or any dispute. But suppose they did not
know what <greek>omoousion</greek> was, or were really
unaware that <greek>omoiousion</greek> meant of a like
essence. Granted that they were ignorant of this, why did they wish to
be ignorant of the generation of the Son? If it cannot be expressed in
words, is it therefore unknowable? But if we
cannot know how He was born, can we refuse to know even this, that God
the Son being born not of another substance but of God, has not an
essence differing from the Father's? Have they not read that the Son is
to be honoured even as the Father, that they prefer the Father in
honour? Were they ignorant that the Father is seen in the Son, that
they make the Son differ in dignity, splendour and majesty? Is this due
to ignorance that the Son, like all other things, is made subject to
the Father, and while thus subjected is not distinguished from them? A
distinction does exist, for the subjection of the Son is filial
reverence, the subjection of all other things is the weakness of things
created. They knew that He suffered, but when, may I ask, did they come
to know that He jointly suffered? They avoid the words
<greek>omoousion</greek> and
<greek>omoiousion</greek>,
because they are not in Scripture: I enquire whence they gathered that
the Son jointly suffered? Can they mean that there were two Persons who
suffered? This is what the word leads us to believe. What of those
words, Jesus Christ the Son of God? Is Jesus Christ one, and the Son of
God another? If the Son of God is not one and the same inwardly and
outwardly, it ignorance on such a point is permissible, then believe
that they were ignorant of the meaning of
<greek>omoousion</greek>. But if on these points ignorance
leads to blasphemy and yet cannot find even a false excuse, I fear that
they lied in professing ignorance of the word
<greek>omoiousion</greek>. I do not greatly complain of the
pardon you extended them; it is reverent to reserve for God His own
prerogatives, and mistakes of ignorance are but human. But the two
bishops, Ursacius and Valens, must pardon
me for not believing that at their age and with their experience they
were really ignorant. It is very difficult not to think they are lying,
seeing that it is only by a falsehood that they can clear themselves on
another score. But God rather grant that I am mistaken than that they
really knew. For I had rather be judged in the wrong than that your
faith should be contaminated by communion with the guilt of heresy.
80. Now I beseech you, holy brethren, to listen to my anxieties with
indulgence. The Lord is my witness that in no matter do I wish to
criticise the definitions of your faith, which you brought to Sirmium.
But forgive me if I do not understand certain points; I will comfort
myself with the recollection that the spirits of the prophets are
subject to the prophets[1]. Perhaps I am not presumptuous in gathering
from this that I too may understand something that another does not
know. Not that I have dared to hint that you are ignorant of anything
according to the measure of knowledge: but for the unity of the
Catholic faith suffer me to be as anxious as yourselves.
81. Your letter on the meaning of <greek>omoousion</greek>
and <greek>omoiousion</greek>, which Valens, Ursacius and
Germinius demanded should be read at Sirmium, I understand to have been
on certain points no less cautious than outspoken. And with regard to
<greek>omoousion</greek> and
<greek>omoiousion</greek> your proof has left no difficulty
untouched. As to the latter, which implies the similarity of essence,
our opinions are the same. But in dealing with the
<greek>omoousion</greek>, or the one essence, you declared
that it ought to be rejected because the use of this word led to the
idea that there was a prior substance which two Persons had divided
between themselves. I see the flaw in that way of taking it. Any such
sense is profane, and must be rejected by the Church's common decision.
The second reason that you
added was that our fathers, when Paul of Samosata was pronounced a
heretic, also rejected the word <greek>omoousion</greek>,
on the ground that by attributing this title to God he had ta |
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