I. SUCH then is the account of the Son, and in this manner He has escaped
those who would stone Him, passing through the midst of
them.(
II. Now the subject of the Holy Spirit presents a special difficulty, not
only because when these men have become weary in their disputations concerning
the Son, they struggle with greater heat against the Spirit (for it seems to
be absolutely necessary for them to have some object on which to give
expression to their impiety, or life would appear to them no longer worth
living), but further because we ourselves also, being worn out by the
multitude of their questions, are in something of the same condition with men
who have lost their appetite; who having taken a dislike to some particular
kind of food, shrink from all food; so we in like manner have an aversion from
all discussions. Yet may the Spirit grant it to us, and then the discourse
will proceed, and God will be glorified. Well then, we will leave to
others(
III. They then who are angry with us on the ground that we are bringing in a
strange or interpolated God, viz.:--the Holy Ghost, and who fight so very hard
for the letter, should know that they are afraid where no fear
is;(
IV. If ever there was a time when the Father was not, then there was a time when the Son was not. If ever there was a time when the Son was not, then there was a time when the Spirit was not. If the One was from the beginning, then the Three were so too. If you 319 throw down the One, I am bold to assert that you do not set up the other Two. For what profit is there in an imperfect Godhead? Or rather, what Godhead can there be if It is not perfect? And how can that be perfect which lacks something of perfection? And surely there is something lacking if it hath not the Holy, and how would it have this if it were without the Spirit? For either holiness is something different from Him, and if so let some one tell me what it is conceived to be; or if it is the same, how is it not from the beginning, as if it were better for God to be at one time imperfect and apart from the Spirit? If He is not from the beginning, He is in the same rank with myself, even though a little before me; for we are both parted from Godhead by time. If He is in the same rank with myself, how can He make me God, or join me with Godhead?
V. Or rather, let me reason with you about Him from a somewhat earlier point, for we have already discussed the Trinity. The Sadducees altogether denied the existence of the Holy Spirit, just as they did that of Angels and the Resurrection; rejecting, I know not upon what ground, the important testimonies concerning Him in the Old Testament. And of the Greeks those who are more inclined to speak of God, and who approach nearest to us, have formed some conception of Him, as it seems to me, though they have differed as to His Name, and have addressed Him as the Mind of the World, or the External Mind, and the like. But of the wise men amongst ourselves, some have conceived of him as an Activity, some as a Creature, some as God; and some have been uncertain which to call Him, out of reverence for Scripture, they say, as though it did not make the matter clear either way. And therefore they neither worship Him nor treat Him with dishonour, but take up a neutral position, or rather a very miserable one, with respect to Him. And of those who consider Him to be God, some are orthodox in mind only, while others venture to be so with the lips also. And I have heard of some who are even more clever, and measure Deity; and these agree with us that there are Three Conceptions; but they have separated these from one another so completely as to make one of them infinite both in essence and power, and the second in power but not in essence, and the third circumscribed in both; thus imitating in another way those who call them the Creator, the Co-operator, and the Minister, and consider that the same order and dignity which belongs to these names is also a sequence in the facts.
VI. But we cannot enter into any discussion with those who do not even
believe in His existence, nor with the Greek babblers (for we would not be
enriched in our argument with the oil of sinners).(
VII. There--the word is with you. Let the slings be let go; let the
syllogism be woven. Either He is altogether Unbegotten, or else He is
Begotten. If He is Unbegotten, there are two Unoriginates. If he is Begotten,
you must make a further subdivision. He is so either by the Father or by the
Son. And if by the Father, there are two Sons, and they are Brothers. And you
may make them twins if you like, or the one older and the other younger, since
you are so very fond of the bodily conceptions. But if by the Son, then such a
one will say, we get a glimpse of a Grandson God, than which nothing could be
more absurd. For my part however, if I saw the necessity of the distinction, I
should
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have acknowledged the facts without fear of the names. For it does not follow
that because the Son is the Son in some higher relation (inasmuch as we could
not in any other way than this point out that He is of God and
Consubstantial), it would also be necessary to think that all the names of
this lower world and of our kindred should be transferred to the Godhead. Or
may be you would consider our God to be a male, according to the same
arguments, because he is called God and Father, and that Deity is feminine,
from the gender of the word, and Spirit neuter, because It has nothing to do
with generation; But if you would be silly enough to say, with the old myths
and fables, that God begat the Son by a marriage with His own Will, we should
be introduced(
VIII. But since we do not admit your first division, which declares that there
is no mean between Begotten and Unbegotten, at once, along with your magnificent
division, away go your Brothers and your Grandsons, as when the first link of
an intricate chain is broken they are broken with it, and disappear from your
system of divinity. For, tell me, what position will you assign to that which
Proceeds, which has started up between the two terms of your division, and is
introduced by a better Theologian than you, our Saviour Himself? Or perhaps
you have taken that word out of your Gospels for the sake of your Third Testament,
The Holy Ghost, which proceedeth from the Father;(
IX. What then, say they, is there lacking to the Spirit
which prevents His being a Son, for if there were not something lacking He would
be a Son? We assert that there is nothing lacking--for God has no deficiency.
But the difference of manifestation, if I may so express myself, or rather of
their mutual relations one to another, has caused the difference of their Names.
For indeed it is not some deficiency in the Son which prevents His being Father
(for Sonship is not a deficiency), and yet He is not Father. According to this
line of argument there must be some deficiency in the Father, in respect of
His not being Son. For the Father is not Son, and yet this is not due to either
deficiency or subjection of Essence; but the very fact of being Unbegotten or
Begotten, or Proceeding has given the name of Father to the First, of the Son
to the Second, and of the Third, Him of Whom we are speaking, of the Holy Ghost
that the distinction of the Three Persons may be preserved in the one nature
and dignity of the Godhead. For neither is the Son Father, for the Father is
One, but He is what the Father is; nor is the Spirit Son because He is of God,
for the Only-begotten is One, but He is what the Son is. The Three are One in
Godhead, and the One Three in properties; so that neither is the Unity a Sabellian
one,(
X. What then? Is the Spirit God? Most certainly. Well then, is He
Consubstantial? Yes, if He is God. Grant me, says my opponent, that there
spring from the same Source One who is a Son, and One who is not a Son, and
these of One Substance with the Source, and I admit a God and a God. Nay, if
you will grant me that there is another God and another nature of God I will
give you the same Trinity with the same name and facts. But since God is One
and the Supreme Nature is One, how can I present to you the Likeness? Or will
you seek it again in lower regions and in your own surroundings? It is very
shameful, and not only shameful, but very foolish, to take from things below a
guess at things above, and from a fluctuating nature at the things that are
unchanging, and as Isaiah says, to seek the Living among the
dead.(
XI. What was Adam? A creature of God. What then was Eve? A fragment of the creature. And what was Seth? The begotten of both. Does it then seem to you that Creature and Fragment and Begotten are the same thing? Of course it does not. But were not these persons consubstantial? Of course they were. Well then, here it is an acknowledged fact that different persons may have the same substance. I say this, not that I would attribute creation or fraction or any property of body to the Godhead (let none of your contenders for a word be down upon me again), but that I may contemplate in these, as on a stage, things which are objects of thought alone. For it is not possible to trace out any image exactly to the whole extent of the truth. But, they say, what is the meaning of all this? For is not the one an offspring, and the other a something else of the One? Did not both Eve and Seth come from the one Adam? And were they both begotten by him? No; but the one was a fragment of him, and the other was begotten by him. And yet the two were one and the same thing; both were human beings; no one will deny that. Will you then give up your contention against the Spirit, that He must be either altogether begotten, or else cannot be consubstantial, or be God; and admit from human examples the possibility of our position? I think it will be well for you, unless you are determined to be very quarrelsome, and to fight against what is proved to demonstration.
XII. But, he says, who in ancient or modern times ever worshipped the
Spirit? Who ever prayed to Him? Where is it written that we ought to worship
Him, or to pray to Him, and whence have you derived this tenet of yours? We
will give the more perfect reason hereafter, when we discuss the question of
the unwritten; for the present it will suffice to say that it is the Spirit in
Whom we worship, and in Whom we pray. For Scripture says, God is a Spirit, and
they that worship Him must worship Him in Spirit and in
truth.(
XIII. Our argument has now come to its principal point; and I am grieved that a problem that was long dead, and that had given way to faith, is now stirred up afresh; yet it is necessary to stand against these praters, and not to let judgment go by default, when we have the Word on our side, and are pleading the cause of the Spirit. If, say they, there is God and God and God, how is it that there are not Three Gods, or how is it that what is glorified is not a plurality of Principles? Who is it who say this? Those who have reached a more complete ungodliness, or even those who have taken the secondary part; I mean who are moderate in a sense in respect of the Son. For my argument is partly against both in common, partly against these latter in particular. What I have to say in answer to these is as follows:--What right have you who worship the Son, even though you have revolted from the Spirit, to call us Tritheists? Are not you Ditheists? For if you deny also the worship of the Only Begotten, you have clearly ranged yourself among our adversaries. And why should we deal kindly with you as not quite dead? But if you do worship Him, and are so far in the way of salvation, we will ask you what reasons you have to give for your ditheism, if you are charged with it? If there is in you a word of wisdom answer, and open to us also a way to an answer. For the very same reason with which you will repel a charge of Ditheism will prove sufficient for us against one of Tritheism. And thus we shall win the day by making use of you our accusers as our Advocates, than which nothing can be more generous. XIV. What is our quarrel and dispute with both? To us there is One God, for the Godhead is One, and all that proceedeth from Him is referred to One, though we believe in Three Persons. For one is not more and another less God; nor is One before and another after; nor are They divided in will or parted in power; nor can you find here any of the qualities of divisible things; but the Godhead is, to speak concisely, undivided in separate Persons; and there is one mingling of Light, as it were of three suns joined to each other. When then we look at the Godhead, or the First Cause, or the Monarchia, that which we conceive is One; but when we look at the Persons in Whom the Godhead dwells, and at Those Who timelessly and with equal glory have their Being from the First Cause--there are Three Whom we worship.
XV. What of that, they will say perhaps; do not the Greeks also believe in
one Godhead, as their more advanced philosophers declare? And with us Humanity
is one, namely the entire race; but yet they have many gods, not One, just as
there are many men. But in this case the common nature has a unity which is
only conceivable in thought; and the individuals are parted from one another
very far indeed, both by time and by dispositions and by power. For we are not
only compound beings, but also contrasted beings, both with one another and
with ourselves; nor do we remain entirely the same for a single day, to say
nothing of a whole lifetime, but both in body and in soul are in a perpetual
state of flow and change. And perhaps the same may be said of the
Angels(
XVI. Nor do those whom the Greeks worship as gods, and (to use their own
expression) daemons, need us in any respect for their accusers, but are
convicted upon the testimony of their own theologians, some as subject to
passion, some as given to faction, and full of innumerable evils and changes,
and in a state of opposition, not only to one another, but even to their first
causes, whom they call Oceani
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and Tethyes and Phanetes, and by several other names; and last of all a
certain god who hated his children through his lust of rule, and swallowed up
all the rest through his greediness that he might become the father of all men
and gods whom he miserably devoured, and then vomited forth again. And if
these are but myths and fables, as they say in order to escape the
shamefulness of the story, what will they say in reference to the dictum that
all things are divided into three parts,(
XVIII. You say, Things of one essence are counted together, but those which
are not con-substantial are reckoned one by one. Where did you get this from?
From what teachers of dogma or mythology? Do you not know that every number
expresses the quantity of what is included under it, and not the nature of the
things? But I am so old fashioned, or perhaps I should say so unlearned, as to
use the word Three of that number of things, even if they are of a different
nature, and to use One and One and One in a different way of so many units,
even if they are united in essence, looking not so much at the things
themselves as at the quantity of the things in respect of which the
enumeration is made. But since you hold so very close to the letter (although
you are contending against the letter), pray take your demonstrations from
this source. There are in the Book of Proverbs three things which go well, a
lion, a goat, and a cock; and to these is added a fourth;--a King making a
speech before the people,(
XIX. But to my mind, he says, those things are said to be connumerated and
of the same essence of which the names also correspond, as Three Men, or Three
gods, but not Three this and that. What does this concession amount to? It is
suitable to one laying down the law as to names, not to one who is asserting
the truth. For I also will assert that Peter and James and John are not three
or consubstantial, so long as I cannot say Three Peters, or Three Jameses, or
Three Johns; for what you have reserved for common names we demand also for
proper names, in accordance with your arrangement; or else you will be unfair
in not conceding to others what you assume for yourself. What about John then,
when in his Catholic Epistle he says that there are Three that bear
witness,(
XX. I will look also at this further point, which is not without its bearing on the subject. One and One added together make Two; and Two resolved again becomes One and One, as is perfectly evident. If, however, elements which are added together must, as your theory requires, be consubstantial, and those which are separate be heterogeneous, then it will follow that the same things must be both consubstantial and heterogeneous. No: I laugh at your Counting Before and your Counting After, of which you are so proud, as if the facts themselves depended upon the order of their names. If this were so, according to the same law, since the same things are in consequence of the equality of their nature counted in Holy Scripture, sometimes in an earlier, sometimes in a later place, what prevents them from being at once more honourable and less honourable than themselves? I say the same of the names God and Lord, and of the prepositions Of Whom, and By Whom, and In Whom, by which you describe the Deity according to the rules of art for us, attributing the first to the Father, the second to the Son, and the third to the Holy Ghost. For what would you have done, if each of these expressions were constantly allotted to Each Person, when, the fact being that they are used of all the Persons, as is evident to those who have studied the question, you even so make them the ground of such inequality both of nature and dignity. This is sufficient for all who are not altogether wanting in sense. But since it is a matter of difficulty for you after you have once made an assault upon the Spirit, to check your rush, and not rather like a furious boar to push your quarrel to the bitter end, and to thrust yourself upon the knife until you have received the whole wound in your own breast; let us go on to see what further argument remains to you.
XXI. Over and over again you turn upon us the silence of Scripture. But that it is not a strange doctrine, nor an afterthought, but acknowledged and plainly set forth both by the ancients and many of our own day, is already demonstrated by many persons who have treated of this subject, and who have handled the Holy Scriptures, not with indifference or as a mere pastime, but have gone beneath the letter and looked into the inner meaning, and have been deemed worthy to see the hidden beauty, and have been irradiated by the light of knowledge. We, however in our turn will briefly prove it as far as may be, in order not to seem to be over-curious or improperly ambitious, building on another's foundation. But since the fact, that Scripture does not very clearly or very often write Him God in express words (as it does first the Father and afterwards the Son), becomes to you an occasion of blasphemy and of this excessive wordiness and impiety, we will release you from this inconvenience by a short discussion of things and names, and especially of their use in Holy Scripture.
XXII. Some things have no existence, but are spoken of; others which do
exist are not spoken of; some neither exist nor are spoken of, and some both
exist and are spoken of. Do you ask me for proof of this? I am ready to give
it. According to Scripture God sleeps and is awake, is angry, walks, has the
Cherubim for His Throne. And yet when did He become liable to passion, and
have you ever
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heard that God has a body? This then is, though not really fact, a figure of
speech. For we have given names according to our own comprehension from our
own attributes to those of God. His remaining silent apart from us, and as it
were not caring for us, for reasons known to Himself, is what we call His
sleeping; for our own sleep is such a state of inactivity. And again, His
sudden turning to do us good is the waking up; for waking is the dissolution
of sleep, as visitation is of turning away. And when He punishes, we say He is
angry; for so it is with us, punishment is the result of anger. And His
working, now here now there, we call walking; for walking is change from one
place to another. His resting among the Holy Hosts, and as it were loving to
dwell among them, is His sitting and being enthroned; this, too, from
ourselves, for God resteth nowhere as He doth upon the Saints. His swiftness
of moving is called flying, and His watchful care is called His Face, and his
giving and bestowing(
XXIII. Again, where do you get your Un-begotten and Unoriginate, those two
citadels of your position, or we our Immortal? Show me these in so many words,
or we shall either set them aside, or erase them as not contained in
Scripture; and you are slain by your own principle, the names you rely on
being overthrown, and therewith the wall of refuge in which you trusted. Is it
not evident that they are due to passages which imply them, though the words
do not actually occur? What are these passages?--I am the first, and I am the
last,(
XXIV. Since, then, there is so much difference in terms and things, why are you such a slave to the letter, and a partisan of the Jewish wisdom, and a follower of syllables at the expense of facts? But if, when you said twice five or twice seven, I concluded from your words that you meant Ten or Fourteen; or if, when you spoke of a rational and mortal animal, that you meant Man, should you think me to be talking nonsense? Surely not, because I should be merely repeating your own meaning; for words do not belong more to the speaker of them than to him who called them forth. As, then, in this case, I should have been looking, not so much at the terms used, as at the thoughts they were meant to convey; so neither, if I found something else either not at all or not clearly expressed in the Words of Scripture to be included in the meaning, should I avoid giving it utterance, out of fear of your sophistical trick about terms. In this way, then, we shall hold our own against the semi-orthodox --among whom I may not count you. For since you deny the Titles of the Son, which are so many and so clear, it is quite evident that even if you learnt a great many more and clearer ones you would not be moved to reverence. But now I will take up the argument again a little way further back, and shew you, though you are so clever, the reason for this entire system of secresy.
XXV. There have been in the whole period of the duration of the world two
conspicuous changes of men's lives, which are also called two
Testaments,(
XXVI. To this I may compare the case of Theology(
XXVII. You see lights breaking upon us, gradually; and the order of
Theology, which it is better for us to keep, neither proclaiming things too
suddenly, nor yet keeping them hidden to the end. For the former course would
be unscientific, the latter atheistical; and the former would be calculated to
startle outsiders, the latter to alienate our own people. I will add another
point to what I have said; one which may readily have come into the mind of
some others, but which I think a fruit of my own thought. Our Saviour had some
things which, He said, could not be borne at that time by His
disciples(
XXVIII. This, then, is my position with regard to these things, and I hope
it may be always my position, and that of whosoever is dear
327
to me; to worship God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost, Three
Persons, One Godhead, undivided in honour and glory and substance and kingdom,
as one of our own inspired philosophers(
XXIX. This, then, is what may be said by one who admits the silence of
Scripture. But now the swarm of testimonies shall burst upon you from which
the Deity of the Holy Ghost(
XXX. They who say and teach these things, and moreover call Him another
Paraclete in the sense of another God, who know that blasphemy against Him
alone cannot be forgiven,(
XXXI. I have very carefully considered this matter in my own mind, and have
looked at it in every point of view, in order to find some illustration of
this most important subject, but I have been unable to discover any thing on
earth with which to compare the nature of the Godhead. For even if I did
happen upon some tiny likeness it escaped me for the most part, and left me
down below with my example. I picture to myself an eye,(
XXXII. Again I thought of the sun and a ray and light. But here again there was a fear lest people should get an idea of composition in the Uncompounded Nature, such as there is in the Sun and the things that are in the Sun. And in the second place lest we should give Essence to the Father but deny Personality to the Others, and make Them only Powers of God, existing in Him and not Personal. For neither the ray nor the light is another sun, but they are only effulgences from the Sun, and qualities of His essence. And lest we should thus, as far as the illustration goes, attribute both Being and Not-being to God, which is even more monstrous. I have also heard that some one has suggested an illustration of the following kind. A ray of the Sun flashing upon a wall and trembling with the movement of the moisture which the beam has taken up in mid air, and then, being checked by the hard body, has set up a strange quivering. For it quivers with many rapid movements, and is not one rather than it is many, nor yet many rather than one; because by the swiftness of its union and separating it escapes before the eye can see it.
XXXIII. But it is not possible for me to make use of even this; because it is very evident what gives the ray its motion; but there is nothing prior to God which could set Him in motion; for He is Himself the Cause of all things, and He has no prior Cause. And secondly because in this case also there is a suggestion of such things as composition, diffusion, and an unsettled and unstable nature ... none of which we can suppose in the Godhead. In a word, there is nothing which presents a standing point to my mind in these illustrations from which to consider the Object which I am trying to represent to myself, unless one may indulgently accept one point of the image while rejecting the rest. Finally, then, it seems best to me to let the images and the shadows go, as being deceitful and very far short of the truth; and clinging myself to the more reverent conception, and resting upon few words, using the guidance of the Holy Ghost, keeping to the end as my genuine comrade and companion the enlightenment which I have received from Him, and passing through this world to persuade all others also to the best of my power to worship Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, the One Godhead and Power. To Him belongs all glory and honour and might for ever and ever. Amen.