BOOK I
Chapter I.-On
God.
1. I
Know that some will
attempt to
say that, even according to the
declarations of our own
Scriptures,
God is a
body, because in the
writings of
Moses they
find it
said, that "our
God is a
consuming fire; " and in the
Gospel according to
John, that "
God is a
Spirit, and they who
worship Him must
worship Him in
spirit and in
truth."
Fire and
spirit, according to them, are to be
regarded as nothing else than a
body. Now, I should like to
ask these
persons what they have to
say respecting that
passage where it is
declared that
God is
light; as
John writes in his
Epistle, "
God is
light, and in Him there is no
darkness at all."
Truly He is that
light which
illuminates the whole
understanding of those who are
capable of
receiving truth, as is
said in the
Psalms 36, "In Thy
light we shall
see light." For what other
light of
God can be
named, "in which any one
sees light,"
save an
influence of
God, by which a
man,
being enlightened, either
thoroughly sees the
truth of all
things, or
comes to
know God Himself, who is
called the
truth? Such is the
meaning of the
expression, "In Thy
light we shall
see light; "
i.e., in Thy
word and
wisdom which is Thy
Son, in Himself we shall
see Thee the
Father. Because He is
called light, shall He be
supposed to have any
resemblance to the
light of the
sun? Or how should there be the
slightest ground for
imagining, that from that
corporeal light any one could
derive the
cause of
knowledge, and
come to the
understanding of the
truth?
2. If, then, they
acquiesce in our
assertion, which
reason itself has
demonstrated,
regarding the
nature of
light, and
acknowledge that
God cannot be
understood to be a
body in the
sense that
light is,
similar reasoning will
hold true of the
expression "a
consuming fire." For what will
God consume in
respect of His
being fire? Shall He be
thought to
consume material substance, as
wood, or
hay, or
stubble? And what in this
view can be
called worthy of the
glory of
God, if He be a
fire,
consuming materials of that
kind? But let us
reflect that
God does indeed
consume and
utterly destroy; that He
consumes evil thoughts,
wicked actions, and
sinful desires, when they
find their
way into the
minds of
believers; and that,
inhabiting along with His
Son those
souls which are
rendered capable of
receiving His
word and
wisdom, according to His own
declaration," I and the
Father shall
come, and We shall make our
abode with him? " He makes them, after all their
vices and
passions have been
consumed, a
holy temple,
worthy of Himself. Those, moreover, who, on
account of the
expression "
God is a
Spirit,"
think that He is a
body, are to be
answered, I
think, in the
following manner. It is the
custom of
sacred Scripture, when it
wishes to
designate anything
opposed to this
gross and
solid body, to
call it
spirit, as in the
expression, "The
letter killeth, but the
spirit giveth life," where there can be no
doubt that by "
letter" are
meant bodily things, and by "
spirit"
intellectual things, which we also
term "
spiritual." The
apostle, moreover,
says, "Even unto this
day, when
Moses is
read, the
veil is upon their
heart: nevertheless, when it shall
turn to the
Lord, the
veil shall be
taken away: and where the
Spirit of the
Lord is, there is
liberty." For so
long as any one is not
converted to a
spiritual understanding, a
veil is
placed over his
heart, with which
veil,
i.e., a
gross understanding,
Scripture itself is
said or
thought to be
covered: and this is the
meaning of the
statement that a
veil was
placed over the
countenance of
Moses when he
spoke to the
people,
i.e., when the
law was
publicly read aloud. But if we
turn to the
Lord, where also is the
word of
God, and where the
Holy Spirit reveals spiritual knowledge, then the
veil is
taken away, and with
unveiled face we shall
behold the
glory of the
Lord in the
holy Scriptures.
3. And since many
saints participate in the
Holy Spirit, He cannot therefore be
understood to be a
body, which
being divided into
corporeal parts, is
partaken of by each one of the
saints; but He is
manifestly a
sanctifying power, in which all are
said to have a
share who have
deserved to be
sanctified by His
grace. And in
order that what we
say may be more
easily understood, let us
take an
illustration from
things very
dissimilar. There are many
persons who
take a
part in the
science or
art of
medicine: are we therefore to
suppose that those who do so
take to themselves the
particles of some
body called medicine, which is
placed before them, and in this
way participate in the same? Or must we not rather
understand that all who with
quick and
trained minds come to
understand the
art and
discipline itself,
may be
said to be
partaken of the
art of
healing? But these are not to be
deemed altogether parallel instances in a
comparison of
medicine to the
Holy Spirit, as they have been
adduced only to
establish that that is not
necessarily to be
considered a
body, a
share in which is
possessed by many
individuals. For the
Holy Spirit differs widely from the
method or
science of
medicine, in
respect that the
Holy Spirit is an
intellectual existence and
subsists and
exists in a
peculiar manner, whereas
medicine is not at all of that
nature.
4. But we must
pass on to the
language of the
Gospel itself, in which it is
declared that "
God is a
Spirit," and where we have to
show how that is to be
understood agreeably to what we have
stated. For let us
inquire on what
occasion these
words were
spoken by the
Saviour, before whom He
uttered them, and what was the
subject of
investigation. We
find, without any
doubt, that He
spoke these
words to the
Samaritan woman,
saying to her, who
thought,
agreeably to the
Samaritan view, that
God ought to be
worshipped on
Mount Gerizim, that "
God is a
Spirit." For the
Samaritan woman,
believing Him to be a
Jew, was
inquiring of Him whether
God ought to be
worshipped in
Jerusalem or on this
mountain; and her
words were, "All our
fathers worshipped on this
mountain, and ye
say that in
Jerusalem is the
place where we
ought to
worship." To this
opinion of the
Samaritan woman, therefore, who
imagined that
God was less
rightly or
duly worshipped, according to the
privileges of the
different localities, either by the
Jews in
Jerusalem or by the
Samaritans on
Mount Gerizim, the
Saviour answered that he who would
follow the
Lord must
lay aside all
preference for
particular places, and thus
expressed Himself: "The
hour is
coming when neither in
Jerusalem nor on this
mountain shall the
true worshippers worship the
Father.
God is a
Spirit, and they who
worship Him must
worship Him in
spirit and in
truth." And
observe how
logically He has
joined together the
spirit and the
truth: He
called God a
Spirit, that He might
distinguish Him from
bodies; and He
named Him the
truth, to
distinguish Him from a
shadow or an
image. For they who
worshipped in
Jerusalem worshipped God neither in
truth nor in
spirit,
being in
subjection to the
shadow or
image of
heavenly things; and such also was the
case with those who
worshipped on
Mount Gerizim.
5.
Having refuted, then, as well as we could, every
notion which might
suggest that we were to
think of
God as in any
degree corporeal, we
go on to
say that, according to
strict truth,
God is
incomprehensible, and
incapable of
being measured. For whatever be the
knowledge which we are
able to
obtain of
God, either by
perception or
reflection, we must of
necessity believe that He is by many
degrees far better than what we
perceive Him to be. For, as if we were to
see any one
unable to
bear a
spark of
light, or the
flame of a very
small lamp, and were
desirous to
acquaint such a one, whose
vision could not
admit a
greater degree of
light than what we have
stated, with the
brightness and
splendour of the
sun, would it not be
necessary to
tell him that the
splendour of the
sun was
unspeakably and
incalculably better and more
glorious than all this
light which he
saw? So our
understanding, when
shut in by the
fetters of
flesh and
blood, and
rendered, on
account of its
participation in such
material substances,
duller and more
obtuse, although, in
comparison with our
bodily nature, it is
esteemed to be
far superior, yet, in its
efforts to
examine and
behold incorporeal things,
scarcely holds the
place of a
spark or
lamp. But among all
intelligent, that is,
incorporeal beings, what is so
superior to all
others-so unspeakably and
incalculably superior-as God, whose
nature cannot be
grasped or
seen by the
power of any
human understanding, even the
purest and
brightest?
6. But it will not
appear absurd if we
employ another
similitude to make the
matter clearer. Our
eyes frequently cannot
look upon the
nature of the
light itself-that is, upon the
substance of the
sun; but when we
behold his
splendour or his
rays pouring in, perhaps, through
windows or some
small openings to
admit the
light, we can
reflect how
great is the
supply and
source of the
light of the
body. So, in like
manner. the
works of
Divine Providence and the
plan of this whole
world are a
sort of
rays, as it were, of the
nature of
God, in
comparison with His
real substance and
being. As, therefore, our
understanding is
unable of itself to
behold God Himself as He is, it
knows the
Father of the
world from the
beauty of His
works and the
comeliness of His
creatures.
God, therefore, is not to be
thought of as
being either a
body or as
existing in a
body, but as an
uncompounded intellectual nature,
admitting within Himself no
addition of any
kind; so that He cannot be
believed to have within him a
greater and a less, but is such that He is in all
parts Mona/
j, and, so to
speak,
9Ena/
j, and is the
mind and
source from which all
intellectual nature or
mind takes its beginning. But
mind, for its
movements or
operations,
needs no
physical space, nor
sensible magnitude, nor
bodily shape, nor
colour, nor any other of those
adjuncts which are the
properties of
body or
matter.
Wherefore that
simple and
wholly intellectual nature can
admit of no
delay or
hesitation in its
movements or
operations,
lest the
simplicity of the
divine nature should
appear to be
circumscribed or in some
degree hampered by such
adjuncts, and
lest that which is the beginning of all
things should be found
composite and
differing, and that which
ought to be
free from all
bodily intermixture, in
virtue of
being the one
sole species of
Deity, so to
speak, should
prove, instead of
being one, to
consist of many
things. That
mind, moreover, does not
require space in
order to
carry on its
movements agreeably to its
nature, is
certain from
observation of our own
mind. For if the
mind abide within its own
limits, and
sustain no
injury from any
cause, it will never, from
diversity of
situation, be
retarded in the
discharge of its
functions; nor, on the other
hand, does it
gain any
addition or
increase of
mobility from the
nature of
particular places. And here, if any one were to
object, for
example, that among those who are at
sea, and
tossed by its
waves the
mind is
considerably less
vigorous than it is
wont to be on
land, we are to
believe that it is in this
state, not from
diversity of
situation, but from the
commotion or
disturbance of the
body to which the
mind is
joined or
attached. For it seems to be
contrary to
nature, as it were, for a
human body to
live at
sea; and for that
reason it
appears, by a
sort of
inequality of its own, to
enter upon its
mental operations in a
slovenly and
irregular manner, and to
perform the
acts of the
intellect with a
duller sense, in as
great degree as those who on
land are
prostrated with
fever; with
respect to whom it is
certain, that if the.
mind do not
discharge its
functions as well as before, in
consequence of the
attack of
disease, the
blame is to be
laid not upon the
place, but upon the
bodily malady, by which the
body,
being disturbed and
disordered,
renders to the
mind its
customary services under by no
means the
well-known and
natural conditions: for we
human beings are
animals composed of a
union of
body and
soul, and in this
way (only) was it
possible for us to
live upon the
earth. But
God, who is the beginning of all
things, is not to be
regarded as a
composite being,
lest perchance there should be found to
exist elements prior to the beginning itself, out of which everything is
composed, whatever that be which is
called composite. Neither does the
mind require bodily magnitude in
order to
perform any
act or
movement; as when the
eye by
gazing upon
bodies of
larger size is
dilated, but is
compressed and
contracted in
order to
see smaller objects. The
mind, indeed,
requires magnitude of an
intellectual kind, because it
grows, not after the
fashion of a
body, but after that of
intelligence. For the
mind is not
enlarged, together with the
body, by
means of
corporal additions, up to the
twentieth or
thirtieth year of
life; but the
intellect is
sharpened by
exercises of
learning, and the
powers implanted within it for
intelligent purposes are
called forth; and it is
rendered capable of
greater intellectual efforts, not
being increased by
bodily additions, but
carefully polished by
learned exercises. But these it cannot
receive immediately from
boyhood, or from
birth, because the
framework of
limbs which the
mind employs as
organs for
exercising itself is
weak and
feeble; and it is
unable to
bear the
weight of its own
operations, or to
exhibit a
capacity for
receiving training.
7. If there are any now who
think that the
mind itself and the
soul is a
body, I
wish they Would
tell me by
way of
answer how it
receives reasons and
assertions on
subjects of such
importance - of such
difficulty and such
subtlety? Whence does it
derive the
power of
memory? and whence
comes the
contemplation of
invisible things? How does the
body possess the
faculty of
understanding incorporeal existences? How does a
bodily nature investigate the
processes of the
various arts, and
contemplate the
reasons of
things? How, also, is it
able to
perceive and
understand divine truths, which are
manifestly incorporeal? Unless, indeed, some should
happen to be of
opinion, that as the very
bodily shape and
form of the
ears or
eyes contributes something to
hearing and to
sight, and as the
individual members,
formed by
God, have some
adaptation, even from the very
quality of their
form, to the end for which they were
naturally appointed; so also he
may think that the
shape of the
soul or
mind is to be
understood as if
created purposely and
designedly for
perceiving and
understanding individual things, and for
being set in
motion by
vital movements. I do not
perceive, however, who shall be
able to
describe or
state what is the
colour of the
mind, in
respect of its
being mind, and
acting as an
intelligent existence. Moreover, in
confirmation and
explanation of what we have already
advanced regarding the
mind or
soul-to the
effect that it is
better than the whole
bodily nature-the following remarks may be
added. There
underlies every
bodily sense a
certain peculiar sensible substance, on which the
bodily sense exerts itself. For
example,
colours,
form,
size,
underlie vision;
voices and
sound, the
sense of
hearing;
odours,
good or
bad, that of
smell;
savours, that of
taste;
heat or
cold,
hardness or
softness,
roughness or
smoothness, that of
touch. Now, of those
senses enumerated above, it is
manifest to all that the
sense of
mind is much the
best. How, then, should it not
appear absurd, that under those
senses which are
inferior,
substances should have been
placed on which to
exert their
powers, but that under this
power, which is
far better than any other,
i.e., the
sense of
mind, nothing at all of the
nature of a
substance should be
placed, but that a
power of an
intellectual nature should be an
accident, or
consequent upon
bodies? Those who
assert this,
doubtless do so to the
disparagement of that
better substance which is within them;
nay, by so
doing, they even do
wrong to
God Himself, when they
imagine He
may be
understood by
means of a
bodily nature, so that according to their
view He is a
body, and that which
may be
understood or
perceived by
means of a
body; and they are
unwilling to have it
understood that the
mind bears a
certain relationship to
God, of whom the
mind itself is an
intellectual image, and that by
means of this it
may come to some
knowledge of the
nature of
divinity,
especially if it be
purified and
separated from
bodily matter.
8. But perhaps these
declarations may seem to have less
weight with those who
wish to be
instructed in
divine things out of the
holy Scriptures, and who
seek to have it
proved to them from that
source how the
nature of
God surpasses the
nature of
bodies.
See, therefore, if the
apostle does not
say the same
thing, when,
speaking of
Christ, he
declares, that" He is the
image of the
invisible God, the
first-born of every
creature." Not, as some
suppose, that the
nature of
God is
visible to some and
invisible to others: for the
apostle does not
say "the
image of
God invisible" to
men or "
invisible" to
sinners, but with
unvarying constancy pronounces on the
nature of
God in these
words: "the
image of the
invisible God." Moreover,
John, in his
Gospel, when
asserting that "no one hath
seen God at any
time,"
manifestly declares to all who are
capable of
understanding, that there is no
nature to which
God is
visible: not as if, He were a
being who was
visible by
nature, and
merely escaped or
baffled the
view of a
frailer creature, but because by the
nature of His
being it is
impossible for Him to be
seen. And if you should
ask of me what is my
opinion regarding the
Only-begotten Himself, whether the
nature of
God, which is
naturally invisible, be not
visible even to Him, let not such a
question appear to you at once to be either
absurd or
impious, because we shall
give you a
logical reason. It is one
thing to
see, and another to
know: to
see and to be
seen is a
property of
bodies; to
know and to be
known, an
attribute of
intellectual being. Whatever, therefore, is a
property of
bodies, cannot be
predicated either of the
Father or of the
Son; but what
belongs to the
nature of
deity is
common to the
Father and the
Son.
Finally, even He Himself, in the
Gospel, did not
say that no one has
seen the
Father,
save the
Son, nor any one the
Son,
save the
Father; but His
words are: "No one
knoweth the
Son,
save the
Father; nor any one the
Father,
save the
Son." By which it is
clearly shown, that whatever among
bodily natures is
called seeing and
being seen, is
termed, between the
Father and the
Son, a
knowing and
being known, by
means of the
power of
knowledge, not by the
frailness of the
sense of
sight. Because, then, neither
seeing nor
being seen can be
properly applied to an
incorporeal and
invisible nature, neither is the
Father, in the
Gospel,
said to be
seen by the
Son, nor the
Son by the
Father, but the one is
said to be
known by the other.
9. Here, if any one
lay before us the
passage where it is
said, "
Blessed are the
pure in
heart, for they shall
see God," from that very
passage, in my
opinion, will our
position derive additional strength; for what else is
seeing God in
heart, but, according to our
exposition as above,
understanding and
knowing Him with the
mind? For the
names of the
organs of
sense are
frequently applied to the
soul, so that it
may be
said to
see with the
eyes of the
heart,
i.e., to
perform an
intellectual act by
means of the
power of
intelligence. So also it is
said to
hear with the
ears when it
perceives the
deeper meaning of a
statement. So also we
say that it makes
use of
teeth, when it
chews and
eats the
bread of
life which
cometh down from
heaven. In like
manner, also, it is
said to
employ the
services of other
members, which are
transferred from their
bodily appellations, and
applied to the
powers of the
soul, according to the
words of
Solomon, "You will
find a
divine sense." For he
knew that there were within us
two kinds of
senses: the one
mortal,
corruptible,
human; the other
immortal and
intellectual, which he now
termed divine. By this
divine sense, therefore, not of the
eyes, but of a
pure heart, which is the
mind,
God may be
seen by those who are
worthy. For you will
certainly find in all the
Scriptures, both
old and
new, the
term "
heart"
repeatedly used instead of "
mind,"
i.e.,
intellectual power. In this
manner, therefore, although
far below the
dignity of the
subject, have we
spoken of the
nature of
God, as those who
understand it under the
limitation of the
human understanding. In the next
place, let us
see what is
meant by the
name of
Christ.