Chapter II.-On
Christ.
1. In the first
place, we must
note that the
nature of that
deity which is in
Christ in
respect of His
being the
only-begotten Son of
God is one
thing, and that
human nature which He
assumed in these last
times for the
purposes of the
dispensation (of
grace) is another. And therefore we have first to
ascertain what the
only-begotten Son of
God is,
seeing He is
called by many
different names, according to the
circumstances and
views of
individuals. For He is
termed Wisdom, according to the
expression of
Solomon: "The
Lord created me-the beginning of His
ways, and among His
works, before He made any other
thing; He
rounded me before the
ages. In the beginning, before He
formed the
earth, before He
brought forth the
fountains of
waters, before the
mountains were made
strong, before all the
hills, He
brought me
forth." He is also
styled First-born, as the
apostle has
declared: "who is the
first-born of every
creature." The
first-born, however, is not by
nature a
different person from the
Wisdom, but one and the same.
Finally, the
Apostle Paul says that "
Christ (is) the
power of
God and the
wisdom of
God."
2. Let no one, however,
imagine that we
mean anything
impersonal when we
call Him the
wisdom of
God; or
suppose, for
example, that we
understand Him to be, not a
living being endowed with
wisdom, but something which makes
men wise,
giving itself to, and
implanting itself in, the
minds of those who are made
capable of
receiving His
virtues and
intelligence. If, then, it is once
rightly understood that the
only-begotten Son of
God is His
wisdom hypostatically existing, I
know not whether our
curiosity ought to
advance beyond this, or
entertain any
suspicion that that
u9po/
stasij or
substantia contains anything of a
bodily nature, since everything that is
corporeal is
distinguished either by
form, or
colour, or
magnitude. And who in his
sound senses ever
sought for
form, or
colour, or
size, in
wisdom, in
respect of its
being wisdom? And who that is
capable of
entertaining reverential thoughts or
feelings regarding God, can
suppose or
believe that
God the
Father ever
existed, even for a
moment of
time, without
having generated this
Wisdom? For in that
case he must
say either that
God was
unable to
generate Wisdom before He
produced her, so that He afterwards
called into
being her who formerly did not
exist, or that He
possessed the
power indeed,
but-what cannot be
said of
God without
impiety-was unwilling to
use it; both of which
suppositions, it is
patent to all, are
alike absurd and
impious: for they
amount to this, either that
God advanced from a
condition of
inability to one of
ability, or that, although
possessed of the
power, He
concealed it, and
delayed the
generation of
Wisdom.
Wherefore we have always
held that
God is the
Father of His
only-begotten Son, who was
born indeed of Him, and
derives from Him what He is, but without any beginning, not only such as
may be
measured by any
divisions of
time, but even that which the
mind alone can
contemplate within itself, or
behold, so to
speak, with the
naked powers of the
understanding. And therefore we must
believe that
Wisdom was
generated before any beginning that can be either
comprehended or
expressed. And since all the
creative power of the
coming creation was
included in this very
existence of
Wisdom (whether of those
things which have an
original or of those which have a
derived existence),
having been
formed beforehand and
arranged by the
power of
foreknowledge; on
account of these very
creatures which had been
described, as it were, and
prefigured in
Wisdom herself, does
Wisdom say, in the
words of
Solomon, that she was
created the beginning of the
ways of
God,
inasmuch as she
contained within herself either the
beginnings, or
forms, or
species of all
creation.
3. Now, in the same
way in which we have
understood that
Wisdom was the beginning of the
ways of
God, and is
said to be
created,
forming beforehand and
containing within herself the
species and
beginnings of all
creatures, must we
understand her to be the
Word of
God, because of her
disclosing to all other
beings,
i.e., to
universal creation, the
nature of the
mysteries and
secrets which are
contained within the
divine wisdom; and on this
account she is
called the
Word, because she is, as it were, the
interpreter of the
secrets of the
mind. And therefore that
language which is found in the
Acts of
Paul, where it is
said that "here is the
Word a
living being,"
appears to me to be
rightly used.
John, however, with more
sublimity and
propriety,
says in the beginning of his
Gospel, when
defining God by a
special definition to be the
Word, "And
God was the
Word, and this was in the beginning with
God." Let him, then, who
assigns a beginning to the
Word or
Wisdom of
God,
take care that he be not
guilty of
impiety against the
unbegotten Father Himself,
seeing he
denies that He had always been a
Father, and had
generated the
Word, and had
possessed wisdom in all
preceding periods, whether they be
called times or
ages, or anything else that can be so
entitled.
4. This
Son,
accordingly, is also the
truth and
life of all
things which
exist. And with
reason. For how could those
things which were
created live, unless they
derived their
being from
life? or how could those
things which are,
truly exist, unless they
came down from the
truth? or how could
rational beings exist, unless the
Word or
reason had
previously existed? or how could they be
wise, unless there were
wisdom? But since it was to
come to
pass that some also should
fall away from
life, and
bring death upon themselves by their
declension-for death is nothing else than a
departure from
life-and as it was not to
follow that those
beings which had once been
created by
God for the
enjoyment of
life should
utterly perish, it was
necessary that, before
death, there should be in
existence such a
power as would
destroy the
coming death, and that there should be a
resurrection, the
type of which was in our
Lord and
Saviour, and that this
resurrection should have its
ground in the
wisdom and
word and
life of
God. And then, in the next
place, since some of those who were
created were not to be always
willing to
remain unchangeable and
unalterable in the
calm and
moderate enjoyment of the
blessings which they
possessed, but, in
consequence of the
good which was in them
being theirs not by
nature or
essence, but by
accident, were to be
perverted and
changed, and to
fall away from their
position, therefore was the
Word and
Wisdom of
God made the
Way. And it was so
termed because it
leads to the
Father those who
walk along it.
Whatever, therefore, we have
predicated of the
wisdom of
God, will be
appropriately applied and
understood of the
Son of
God, in
virtue of His
being the
Life, and the
Word, and the
Truth and the
Resurrection: for all these
titles are
derived from His
power and
operations, and in none of them is there the
slightest ground for
understanding anything of a
corporeal nature which might seem to
denote either
size, or
form, or
colour; for those
children of
men which
appear among us, or those
descendants of other
living beings,
correspond to the
seed of those by whom they were
begotten, or
derive from those
mothers, in whose
wombs they are
formed and
nourished, whatever that is, which they
bring into this
life, and
carry with them when they are
born. But it is
monstrous and
unlawful to
compare God the
Father, in the
generation of His
only-begotten Son, and in the
substance of the same, to any
man or other
living thing engaged in such an
act; for we must of
necessity hold that there is something
exceptional and
worthy of
God which does not
admit of any
comparison at all, not
merely in
things, but which cannot even be
conceived by
thought or
discovered by
perception, so that a
human mind should be
able to
apprehend how the
unbegotten God is made the
Father of the
only-begotten Son. Because His
generation is as
eternal and
everlasting as the
brilliancy which is
produced from the
sun. For it is not by
receiving the
breath of
life that He is made a
Son, by any
outward act, but by His own
nature.
5. Let us now
ascertain how those
statements which we have
advanced are
supported by the
authority of
holy Scripture. The
Apostle Paul says, that the
only-begotten Son is the "
image of the
invisible God," and "the
first-born of every
creature." And when
writing to the
Hebrews, he
says of Him that He is "the
brightness of His
glory, and the
express image of His
person." Now, we
find in the
treatise called the
Wisdom of
Solomon the
following description of the
wisdom of
God: "For she is the
breath of the
power of
God, and the
purest efflux of the
glory of the
Almighty." Nothing that is
polluted can therefore
come upon her. For she is the
splendour of the
eternal light, and the
stainless mirror of
God's
working, and the
image of His
goodness. Now we
say, as before, that
Wisdom has her
existence nowhere else
save in Him who is the beginning of all
things: from whom also is
derived everything that is
wise, because He Himself is the only one who is by
nature a
Son, and is therefore
termed the
Only-begotten.
6. Let us now
see how we are to
understand the
expression "
invisible image," that we
may in this
way perceive how
God is
rightly called the
Father of His
Son; and let us, in the first
place,
draw our
conclusions from what are
customarily called images among
men. That is sometimes
called an
image which is
painted or
sculptured on some
material substance, such as
wood or
stone; and sometimes a
child is
called the
image of his
parent, when the
features of the
child in no
respect belie their
resemblance to the
father. I
think, therefore, that that
man who was
formed after the
image and
likeness of
God may be
fittingly compared to the first
illustration.
Respecting him, however, we shall
see more
precisely,
God willing, when we
come to
expound the
passage in
Genesis. But the
image of the
Son of
God, of whom we are now
speaking,
may be
compared to the
second of the above
examples, even in
respect of this, that He is the
invisible image of the
invisible God, in the same
manner as we
say, according to the
sacred history, that the
image of
Adam is his
son Seth. The
words are, "And
Adam begat Seth in his own
likeness, and after his own
image." Now this
image contains the
unity of
nature and
substance belonging to
Father and
Son. For if the
Son do, in like
manner, all those
things which the
Father doth, then, in
virtue of the
Son doing all
things like the
Father, is the
image of the
Father formed in the
Son, who is
born of Him, like an
act of His will
proceeding from the
mind. And I am therefore of
opinion that the will of the
Father ought alone to be
sufficient for the
existence of that which He
wishes to
exist. For in the
exercise of His
wilt He
employs no other
way than that which is made
known by the
counsel of His will. And thus also the
existence of the
Son is
generated by Him. For this
point must above all others be
maintained by those who
allow nothing to be
unbegotten,
i.e.,
unborn,
save God the
Father only. And we must be
careful not to
fall into the
absurdities of those who
picture to themselves
certain emanations, so as to
divide the
divine nature into
parts, and who
divide God the
Father as
far as they can, since even to
entertain the
remotest suspicion of such a
thing regarding an
incorporeal being is not only the
height of
impiety, but a
mark of the
greatest folly, it
being most
remote from any
intelligent conception that there should be any
physical division of any
incorporeal nature. Rather, therefore, as an
act of the will
proceeds from the
understanding, and neither
cuts off any
part nor is
separated or
divided from it, so after some such
fashion is the
Father to be
supposed as
having begotten the
Son, His own
image; namely, so that, as He is Himself
invisible by
nature, He also
begat an
image that was
invisible. For the
Son is the
Word, and therefore we are not to
understand that anything in Him is
cognisable by the
senses. He is
wisdom, and in
wisdom there can be no
suspicion of anything
corporeal. He is the
true light, which
enlightens every
man that
cometh into this
world; but He has nothing in
common with the
light of this
sun. Our
Saviour, therefore, is the
image of the
invisible God,
inasmuch as
compared with the
Father Himself He is the
truth: and as
compared with us, to whom He
reveals the
Father, He is the
image by which we
come to the
knowledge of the
Father, whom no one
knows save the
Son, and he to whom the
Son is
pleased to
reveal Him. And the
method of
revealing Him is through the
understanding. For He by whom the
Son Himself is
understood,
understands, as a
consequence, the
Father also, according to His own
words: "He that hath
seen Me, hath
seen the
Father also."
7. But since we
quoted the
language of
Paul regarding Christ, where He
says of Him that He is "the
brightness of the
glory of
God, and the
express figure of His
person," let us
see what
idea we are to
form of this. According to
John, "
God is
light." The
only-begotten Son, therefore, is the
glory of this
light,
proceeding inseparably from (
God) Himself, as
brightness does from
light, and
illuminating the whole of
creation. For,
agreeably to what we have already
explained as to the
manner in which He is the
Way, and
conducts to the
Father; and in which He is the
Word,
interpreting the
secrets of
wisdom, and the
mysteries of
knowledge,
making them
known to the
rational creation; and is also the
Truth, and the
Life, and the
Resurrection,-in the same
way ought we to
understand also the
meaning of His
being the
brightness: for it is by its
splendour that we
understand and
feel what
light itself is. And this
splendour,
presenting itself
gently and
softly to the
frail and
weak eyes of
mortals, and
gradually training, as it were, and
accustoming them to
bear the
brightness of the
light, when it has
put away from them every
hindrance and
obstruction to
vision, according to the
Lord's own
precept,"
Cast forth the
beam out of thine
eye,"
renders them
capable of
enduring the
splendour of the
light,
being made in this
respect also a
sort of
mediator between
men and the
light.
8. But since He is
called by the
apostle not only the
brightness of His
glory, but also the
express figure of His
person or
subsistence, it does not seem
idle to
inquire how there can be
said to be another
figure of that
person besides the
person of
God Himself, whatever be the
meaning of
person and
subsistence.
Consider, then, whether the
Son of
God,
seeing He is His
Word and
Wisdom, and alone
knows the
Father, and
reveals Him to whom He will (
i.e., to those who are
capable of
receiving His
word and
wisdom),
may not, in
regard of this very
point of
making God to be
understood and
acknowledged, be
called the
figure of His
person and
subsistence; that is, when that
Wisdom, which
desires to make
known to others the
means by which
God is
acknowledged and
understood by them,
describes Himself first of all, it
may by so
doing be
called the
express figure of the
person of
God. In
order, however, to
arrive at a
fuller understanding of the
manner in which the
Saviour is the
figure of the
person or
subsistence of
God, let us
take an
instance, which, although it does not
describe the
subject of which we are
treating either
fully or
appropriately,
may nevertheless be
seen to be
employed for this
purpose only, to
show that the
Son of
God, who was in the
form of
God,
divesting Himself (of His
glory), makes it His
object, by this very
divesting of Himself, to
demonstrate to us the
fulness of His
deity. For
instance,
suppose that there were a
statue of so
enormous a
size as to
fill the whole
world, and which on that
account could be
seen by no one; and that another
statue were
formed altogether resembling it in the
shape of the
limbs, and in the
features of the
countenance, and in
form and
material, but without the same
immensity of
size, so that those who were
unable to
behold the one of
enormous proportions, should, on
seeing the latter,
acknowledge that they had
seen the former, because it
preserved all the
features of its
limbs and
countenance, and even the very
form and
material, so
closely, as to be
altogether undistinguishable from it; by some such
similitude, the
Son of
God,
divesting Himself of His
equality with the
Father, and
showing to us the
way to the
knowledge of Him, is made the
express image of His
person: so that we, who were
unable to
look upon the
glory of that
marvellous light when
placed in the
greatness of His
Godhead,
may, by His
being made to us
brightness,
obtain the
means of
beholding the
divine light by
looking upon the
brightness. This
comparison, of
course, of
statues, as
belonging to
material things, is
employed for no other
purpose than to
show that the
Son of
God, though
placed in the very
insignificant form of a
human body, in
consequence of the
resemblance of His
works and
power to the
Father,
showed that there was in Him an
immense and
invisible greatness,
inasmuch as He
said to His
disciples, "He who
sees Me,
sees the
Father also; "and, "I and the
Father are one." And to these
belong also the
similar expression, "The
Father is in Me, and I in the
Father."
9. Let us
see now what is the
meaning of the
expression which is found in the
Wisdom of
Solomon, where it is
said of
Wisdom that "it is a
kind of
breath of the
power of
God, and the
purest efflux of the
glory of the
Omnipotent, and the
splendour of
eternal light, and the
spotless mirror of the
working or
power of
God, and the
image of His
goodness." These, then, are the
definitions which he
gives of
God,
pointing out by each one of them
certain attributes which
belong to the
Wisdom of
God,
calling wisdom the
power, and the
glory, and the
everlasting light, and the
working, and the
goodness of
God. He does not
say, however, that
wisdom is the
breath of the
glory of the
Almighty, nor of the
everlasting light, nor of the
working Of the
Father, nor of His
goodness, for it was not
appropriate that
breath should be
ascribed to any one of these; but, with all
propriety, he
says that
wisdom is the
breath of the
power of
God. Now, by the
power of
God is to be
understood that by which He is
strong; by which He
appoints,
restrains, and
governs all
things visible and
invisible; which is
sufficient for all those
things which He
rules over in His
providence; among all which He is
present, as if one
individual. And although the
breath of all this
mighty and
immeasurable power, and the
vigour itself
produced, so to
speak, by its own
existence,
proceed from the
power itself, as the will does from the
mind, yet even this will of
God is nevertheless made to become the
power of
God.
Another
power accordingly is
produced, which
exists with
properties of its own,-a
kind of
breath, as
Scripture says, of the
primal and
unbegotten power of
God,
deriving from Him its
being, and never at any
time non-existent. For if any one were to
assert that it did not formerly
exist, but
came afterwards into
existence, let him
explain the
reason why the
Father, who
gave it
being, did not do so before. And if he shall
grant that there was once a beginning, when that
breath proceeded from the
power of
God, we shall
ask him again, why not even before the beginning, which he has
allowed; and in this
way, ever
demanding an
earlier date, and
going upwards with our
interrogations, we shall
arrive at this
conclusion, that as
God was always
possessed of
power and will, there never was any
reason of
propriety or otherwise, why He
may not have always
possessed that
blessing which He
desired. By which it is
shown that that
breath of
God's
power always
existed,
having no beginning
save God Himself. Nor was it
fitting that there should be any other beginning
save God Himself, from whom it
derives its
birth. And according to the
expression of the
apostle, that
Christ "is the
power of
God," it
ought to be
termed not only the
breath of the
power of
God, but
power out of
power.
10. Let us now
examine the
expression, "
Wisdom is the
purest efflux of the
glory of the
Almighty; "and let us first
consider what the
glory of the
omnipotent God is, and then we shall also
understand what is its
efflux. As no one can be a
father without
having a
son, nor a
master without
possessing a
servant, so even
God cannot be
called omnipotent unless there
exist those over whom He
may exercise His
power; and therefore, that
God may be
shown to be
almighty, it is
necessary that all
things should
exist. For if any one would have some
ages or
portions of
time, or whatever else he
likes to
call them, to have
passed away, while those
things which were afterwards made did not yet
exist, he would
undoubtedly show that during those
ages or
periods God was not
omnipotent, but became so afterwards,
viz., from the
time that He
began to have
persons over whom to
exercise power; and in this
way He will
appear to have
received a
certain increase, and to have
risen from a
lower to a
higher condition; since there can be no
doubt that it is
better for Him to be
omnipotent than not to be so. And now how can it
appear otherwise than
absurd, that when
God possessed none of those
things which it was
befitting for Him to
possess, He should afterwards, by a
kind of
progress,
come into the
possession of them? But if there never was a
time when He was not
omnipotent, of
necessity those
things by which He
receives that
title must also
exist; and He must always have had those over whom He
exercised power, and which were
governed by Him either as
king or
prince, of which we shall
speak more
fully in the
proper place, when we
come to
discuss the
subject of the
creatures. But even now I
think it
necessary to
drop a
word, although
cursorily, of
warning, since the
question before us is, how
wisdom is the
purest efflux of the
glory of the
Almighty,
lest any one should
think that the
title of
Omnipotent was
anterior in
God to the
birth of
Wisdom, through whom He is
called Father,
seeing that
Wisdom, which is the
Son of
God, is the
purest efflux of the
glory of the
Almighty. Let him who is
inclined to
entertain this
suspicion hear the
undoubted declaration of
Scripture pronouncing, "In
wisdom hast Thou made them all," and the
teaching of the
Gospel, that "by Him were all
things made, and without Him nothing was made; " and let him
understand from this that the
title of
Omnipotent in
God cannot be
older than that of
Father; for it is through the
Son that the
Father is
almighty. But from the
expression "
glory of the
Almighty," of which
glory Wisdom is the
efflux, this is to be
understood, that
Wisdom, through which
God is
called omnipotent, has a
share in the
glory of the
Almighty. For through
Wisdom, which is
Christ,
God has
power over all
things, not only by the
authority of a
ruler, but also by the
voluntary obedience of
subjects. And that you
may understand that the
omnipotence of
Father and
Son is one and the same, as
God and the
Lord are one and the same with the
Father,
listen to the
manner in which
John speaks in the
Apocalypse: "Thus
saith the
Lord God, which is, and which was, and which is to
come, the
Almighty." For who else was "He which is to
come" than
Christ? And as no one
ought to be
offended,
seeing God is the
Father, that the
Saviour is also
God; so also, since the
Father is
called omnipotent, no one
ought to be
offended that the
Son of
God is also
cared omnipotent. For in this
way will that
saying be
true which He
utters to the
Father, "All
Mine are Thine, and Thine are
Mine, and I am
glorified in them." Now, if all
things which are the
Father's are also
Christ's,
certainly among those
things which
exist is the
omnipotence of the
Father; and
doubtless the
only-begotten Son ought to be
omnipotent, that the
Son also
may have all
things which the
Father possesses. "And I am
glorified in them," He
declares. For "at the
name of
Jesus every
knee shall
bow, of
things in
heaven, and
things in
earth, and
things under the
earth; and every
tongue shall
confess that the
Lord Jesus is in the
glory of
God the
Father." Therefore He is the
efflux of the
glory of
God in this
respect, that He is
omnipotent-the pure and
limpid Wisdom herself-glorified as the
efflux of
omnipotence or of
glory. And that it
may be more
clearly understood what the
glory of
omnipotence is, we shall
add the
following.
God the
Father is
omnipotent, because He has
power over all
things,
i.e., over
heaven and
earth,
sun,
moon, and
stars, and all
things in them. And He
exercises His
power over them by
means of His
Word, because at the
name of
Jesus every
knee shall
bow, both of
things in
heaven, and
things on
earth, and
things under the
earth. And if every
knee is
bent to
Jesus, then, without
doubt, it is
Jesus to whom all
things are
subject, and He it is who
exercises power over all
things, and through whom all
things are
subject to the
Father; for through
wisdom,
i.e., by
word and
reason, not by
force and
necessity, are all
things subject. And therefore His
glory consists in this very
thing, that He
possesses all
things, and this is the
purest and most
limpid glory of
omnipotence, that by
reason and
wisdom, not by
force and
necessity, all
things are
subject. Now the
purest and most
limpid glory of
wisdom is a
convenient expression to
distinguish it from that
glory which cannot be
called pure and
sincere. But every
nature which is
convertible and
changeable, although
glorified in the
works of
righteousness or
wisdom, yet by the
fact that
righteousness or
wisdom are
accidental qualifies, and because that which is
accidental may also
fall away, its
glory cannot be
called sincere and
pure. But the
Wisdom of
God, which is His
only-begotten Son,
being in all
respects incapable of
change or
alteration, and every
good quality in Him
being essential, and such as cannot be
changed and
converted, His
glory is therefore
declared to be
pure and
sincere.
11. In the
third place,
wisdom is
called the
splendour of
eternal light. The
force of this
expression we have
explained in the
preceding pages, when we
introduced the
similitude of the
sun and the
splendour of its
rays, and
showed to the
best of our
power how this should be
understood. To what we then
said we shall
add only the
following remark. That is
properly termed everlasting or
eternal which neither had a beginning of
existence, nor can ever
cease to be what it is. And this is the
idea conveyed by
John when he
says that "
God is
light." Now His
wisdom is the
splendour of that
light, not only in
respect of its
being light, but also of
being everlasting light, so that His
wisdom is
eternal and
everlasting splendour. If this be
fully understood, it
clearly shows that the
existence of the
Son is
derived from the
Father but not in
time, nor from any other beginning, except, as we have
said, from
God Himself.
12. But
wisdom is also
called the
stainless mirror of the
e0ne/
rgeia or
working of
God. We must first
understand, then, what the
working of the
power of
God is. It is a
sort of
vigour, so to
speak, by which
God operates either in
creation, or in
providence, or in
judgment, or in the
disposal and
arrangement of
individual things, each in its
season. For as the
image formed in a
mirror unerringly reflects all the
acts and
movements of him who
gazes on it, so would
Wisdom have herself to be
understood when she is
called the
stainless mirror of the
power and
working of the
Father: as the
Lord Jesus Christ also, who is the
Wisdom of
God,
declares of Himself when He
says, "The
works which the
Father doeth, these also
doeth the
Son likewise." And again He
says, that the
Son cannot do anything of Himself,
save what He
sees the
Father do. As therefore the
Son in no
respect differs from the
Father in the
power of His
works, and the
work of the
Son is not a
different thing from that of the
Father, but one and the same
movement, so to
speak, is in all
things, He therefore
named Him a
stainless mirror, that by such an
expression it might be
understood that them is no
dissimilarity whatever between the
Son and the
Father. How, indeed, can those
things which are
said by some to be done after the
manner in which a
disciple resembles or
imitates his
master, or according to the
view that those
things are made by the
Son in
bodily material which were first
formed by the
Father in their
spiritual essence,
agree with the
declarations of
Scripture,
seeing in the
Gospel the
Son is
said to do not
similar things, but the same
things in a
similar manner?
13. It
remains that we
inquire what is the "
image of His
goodness; "and here, I
think, we must
understand the same
thing which we
expressed a
little ago, in
speaking of the
image formed by the
mirror. For He is the
primal goodness,
doubtless, out of which the
Son is
born, who,
being in all
respects the
image of the
Father,
may certainly also be
called with
propriety the
image of His
goodness. For there is no other
second goodness existing in the
Son,
save that which is in the
Father. And therefore also the
Saviour Himself
rightly says in the
Gospel, "Them is none
good save one only,
God the
Father," that by such an
expression it
may be
understood that the
Son is not of a
different goodness, but of that only which
exists in the
Father, of whom He is
tightly termed the
image, because He
proceeds from no other
source but from that
primal goodness,
lest there might
appear to be in the
Son a
different goodness from that which is in the
Father. Nor is there any
dissimilarity or
difference of
goodness in the
Son. And therefore it is not to be
imagined that there is a
kind of
blasphemy, as it were, in the
words, "There is none
good save one only,
God the
Father," as if thereby it
may be
supposed to be
denied that either
Christ or the
Holy Spirit was
good. But, as we have already
said, the
primal goodness is to be
understood as
residing in
God the
Father, from whom both the
Son is
born and the
Holy Spirit proceeds,
retaining within them, without any
doubt, the
nature of that
goodness which is in the
source whence they are
derived. And if there be any other
things which in
Scripture are
called good, whether
angel, or
man, or
servant, or
treasure, or a
good heart, or a
good tree, all these are so
termed catachrestically,
having in them an
accidental, not an
essential goodness. But it would
require both much
time and
labour to
collect together all the
titles of the
Son of
God, such,
e.g., as the
true light, or the
door, or the
righteousness, or the
sanctification, or the
redemption, and
countless others; and to
show if or what
reasons each one of them is so
given.
Satisfied, therefore, with what we have already
advanced, we
go on with our
inquiries into those other
matters which
follow.