Chapter VI.-On the
Incarnation of
Christ.
1. It is now
time, after this
cursory notice of these
points, to
resume our
investigation of the
incarnation of our
Lord and
Saviour,
viz., how or why He became
man.
Having therefore, to the
best of our
feeble ability,
considered His
divine nature from the
contemplation of His own
works rather than from our own
feelings, and
having nevertheless
beheld (with the
eye) His
visible creation while the
invisible creation is
seen by
faith, because
human frailty can neither
see all
things with the
bodily eye nor
comprehend them by
reason,
seeing we
men are
weaker and
frailer than any other
rational beings (for those which are in
heaven, or are
supposed to
exist above the
heaven, are
superior), it
remains that we
seek a
being intermediate between all
created things and
God,
i.e., a
Mediator, whom the
Apostle Paul styles the "
first-born of every
creature."
Seeing, moreover, those
declarations regarding His
majesty which are
contained in
holy Scripture, that He is
called the "
image of the
invisible God, and the
first-born of every
creature," and that "in Him were all
things created,
visible and
invisible, whether they be
thrones, or
dominions, or
principalities, or
powers, all
things were
created by Him, and in Him: and He is before all
things, and by Him all
things consist," who is the
head of all
things, alone
having as
head God the
Father; for it is
written, "The
head of
Christ is
God; "
seeing clearly also that it is
written, "No one
knoweth the
Father,
save the
Son, nor
doth any one
know the
Son,
save the
Father" (for who can
know what
wisdom is,
save He who
called it into
being? or, who can
understand clearly what
truth is,
save the
Father of
truth? who can
investigate with
certainty the
universal nature of His
Word, and of
God Himself, which
nature proceeds from
God, except
God alone, with whom the
Word was), we
ought to
regard it as
certain that this
Word, or
Reason (if it is to be so
termed), this
Wisdom, this
Truth, is
known to no other than the
Father only; and of Him it is
written, that "I do not
think that the
world itself could
contain the
books which might be
written,"
regarding,
viz., the
glory and
majesty of the
Son of
God. For it is
impossible to
commit to
writing (all) those
particulars which
belong to the
glory of the
Saviour. After the
consideration of
questions of such
importance concerning the
being of the
Son of
God, we are
lost in the
deepest amazement that such a
nature,
pre-eminent above all others, should have
divested itself of its
condition of
majesty and become
man, and
tabernacled amongst
men, as the
grace that was
poured upon His
lips testifies, and as His
heavenly Father bore Him
witness, and as is
confessed by the
various signs and
wonders and
miracles that were
performed by Him; who also, before that
appearance of His which He
manifested in the
body,
sent the
prophets as His
forerunners, and the
messengers of His
advent; and after His
ascension into
heaven, made His
holy apostles,
men ignorant and
unlearned,
taken from the
ranks of
tax-gatherers or
fishermen, but who were
filled with the
power of His
divinity, to
itinerate throughout the
world, that they might
gather together out of every
race and every
nation a
multitude of
devout believers in Himself.
2. But of all the
marvellous and
mighty acts related of Him, this
altogether surpasses human admiration, and is beyond the
power of
mortal frailness to
understand or
feel, how that
mighty power of
divine majesty, that very
Word of the
Father, and that very
wisdom of
God, in which were
created all
things,
visible and
invisible, can be
believed to have
existed within the
limits of that
man who
appeared in
Judea;
nay, that the
Wisdom of
God can have
entered the
womb of a
woman, and have been
born an
infant, and have
uttered wailings like the
cries of
little children! And that afterwards it should be
related that He was
greatly troubled in
death,
saying, as He Himself;
declared, "My
soul is
sorrowful even unto
death; " and that at the last He was
brought to that
death which is
accounted the most
shameful among
men, although He
rose again on the
third day. Since, then, we
see in Him some
things so
human that they
appear to
differ in no
respect from the
common frailty of
mortals, and some
things so
divine that they can
appropriately belong to nothing else than to the
primal and
ineffable nature of
Deity, the
narrowness of
human understanding can
find no
outlet; but,
overcome with the
amazement of a
mighty admiration,
knows not whither to
withdraw, or what to
take hold of, or whither to
turn. If it
think of a
God, it
goes a
mortal; if it
think of a
man; it
beholds Him
returning from the
grave, after
overthrowing the
empire of
death,
laden with its
spoils. And therefore the
spectacle is to be
contemplated with all
fear and
reverence, that the
truth of both
natures may be
clearly shown to
exist in one and the same
Being; so that nothing
unworthy or
unbecoming may be
perceived in that
divine and
ineffable substance nor yet those
things which were done be
supposed to be the
illusions of
imaginary appearances. To
utter these
things in
human ears, and to
explain them in
words,
far surpasses the
powers either of our
rank, or of our
intellect and
language. I
think that it
surpasses the
power even of the
holy apostles;
nay, the
explanation of that
mystery may perhaps be beyond the
grasp of the
entire creation of
celestial powers.
Regarding Him, then, we shall
state, in the
fewest possible words, the
contents of our
creed rather than the
assertions which
human reason is
wont to
advance; and this from no
spirit of
rashness, but as
called for by the
nature of our
arrangement,
laying before you rather (what
may be
termed) our
suspicions than any
clear affirmations.
3. The
Only-begotten of
God, therefore, through whom, as the
previous course of the
discussion has
shown, all
things were made,
visible and
invisible, according to the
view of
Scripture, both made all
things, and
loves what He made. For since He is Himself the
invisible image of the
invisible God, He
conveyed invisibly a
share in Himself to all His
rational creatures, so that each one
obtained a
part of Him
exactly proportioned to the
amount of
affection with which he
regarded Him. But since,
agreeably to the
faculty of
free-will,
variety and
diversity characterized the
individual souls, so that one was
attached with a
warmer love to the
Author of its
being, and another with a
feebler and
weaker regard, that
soul (
anima)
regarding which
Jesus said, "No one shall
take my
life (
animam) from me,"
inhering, from the beginning of the
creation, and afterwards,
inseparably and
indissolubly in Him, as
being the
Wisdom and
Word of
God, and the
Truth and the
true Light, and
receiving Him
wholly, and
passing into His
light and
splendour, was made with Him in a
pre-eminent degree one
spirit, according to the
promise of the
apostle to those who
ought to
imitate it, that "he who is
joined in the
Lord is one
spirit." This
substance of a
soul, then,
being intermediate between
God and the
flesh-it being impossible for the
nature of
God to
intermingle with a
body without an
intermediate instrument-the God-man is
born, as we have
said, that
substance being the
intermediary to whose
nature it was not
contrary to
assume a
body. But neither, on the other
hand, was it
opposed to the
nature of that
soul, as a
rational existence, to
receive God, into whom, as
stated above, as into the
Word, and the
Wisdom, and the
Truth, it had already
wholly entered. And therefore
deservedly is it also
called, along with the
flesh which it had
assumed, the
Son of
God, and the
Power of
God, the
Christ, and the
Wisdom of
God, either because it was
wholly in the
Son of
God, or because it
received the
Son of
God wholly into itself. And again, the
Son of
God, through whom all
things were
created, is
named Jesus Christ and the
Son of
man. For the
Son of
God also is
said to have
died-in reference,
viz., to that
nature which could
admit of
death; and He is
called the
Son of
man, who is
announced as about to
come in the
glory of
God the
Father, with the
holy angels. And for this
reason, throughout the whole of
Scripture, not only is the
divine nature spoken of in
human words, but the
human nature is
adorned by
appellations of
divine dignity. More
truly indeed of this than of any other can the
statement be
affirmed, "They shall both be in one
flesh, and are no
longer two, but one
flesh." For the
Word of
God is to be
considered as
being more in one
flesh with the
soul than a
man with his
wife. But to whom is it more becoming to be also one
spirit with
God, than to this
soul which has so
joined itself to
God by
love as that it
may justly be
said to be one
spirit with Him?
4. That the
perfection of his
love and the
sincerity of his
deserved affection formed for it this
inseparable union with
God, so that the
assumption of that
soul was not
accidental, or the
result of a
personal preference, but was
conferred as the
reward of its
virtues,
listen to the
prophet addressing it thus: "Thou hast
loved righteousness, and
hated wickedness: therefore
God, thy
God, hath
anointed thee with the
oil of
gladness above thy
fellows." As a
reward for its
love, then, it is
anointed with the
oil of
gladness;
i.e., the
soul of
Christ along with the
Word of
God is made
Christ. Because to be
anointed with the
oil of
gladness means nothing else than to be
filled with the
Holy Spirit. And when it is
said "above thy
fellows," it is
meant that the
grace of the
Spirit was not
given to it as to the
prophets, but that the
essential fulness of the
Word of
God Himself was in it, according to the
saying of the
apostle, "In whom
dwelt all the
fulness of the
Godhead bodily."
Finally, on this
account he has not only
said, "Thou hast
loved righteousness; "but he
adds, "and Thou hast
hated wickedness." For to have
hated wickedness is what the
Scripture says of Him, that "He did no
sin, neither was any
guile found in His
mouth," and that "He was
tempted in all
things like as we are, without
sin."
Nay, the
Lord Himself also
said, "Which of you will
convince Me of
sin? " And again He
says with
reference to Himself, "
Behold, the
prince of this
world cometh, and
findeth nothing in Me." All which (
passages)
show that in Him there was no
sense of
sin; and that the
prophet might
show more
clearly that no
sense of
sin had ever
entered into Him, he
says, "Before the
boy could have
knowledge to
call upon
father or
mother, He
turned away from
wickedness."
5. Now, if our
having shown above that
Christ possessed a
rational soul should
cause a
difficulty to any one,
seeing we have
frequently proved throughout all our
discussions that the
nature of
souls is
capable both of
good and
evil, the
difficulty will be
explained in the
following way. That the
nature, indeed, of His
soul was the same as that of all others cannot be
doubted otherwise it could not be
called a
soul were it not
truly one. But since the
power of
choosing good and
evil is within the
reach of all, this
soul which
belonged to
Christ elected to
love righteousness, so that in
proportion to the
immensity of its
love it
clung to it
unchangeably and
inseparably, so that
firmness of
purpose, and
immensity of
affection, and an
inextinguishable warmth of
love,
destroyed all
susceptibility (
sensum) for
alteration and
change; and that which formerly
depended upon the will was
changed by the
power of
long custom into
nature; and so we must
believe that there
existed in
Christ a
human and
rational soul, without
supposing that it had any
feeling or
possibility of
sin.
6. To
explain the
matter more
fully, it will not
appear absurd to make
use of an
illustration, although on a
subject of so much
difficulty it is not
easy to
obtain suitable illustrations. However, if we
may speak without
offence, the
metal iron is
capable of
cold and
heat. If, then, a
mass of
iron be
kept constantly in the
fire,
receiving the
heat through all its
pores and
veins, and the
fire being continuous and the
iron never
removed from it, it become
wholly converted into the latter; could we at all
say of this, which is by
nature a
mass of
iron, that when
placed in the
fire, and
incessantly burning, it was at any
time capable of
admitting cold? On the
contrary, because it is more
consistent with
truth, do we not rather
say, what we often
see happening in
furnaces, that it has become
wholly fire,
seeing nothing but
fire is
visible in it? And if any one were to
attempt to
touch or
handle it, he would
experience the
action not of
iron, but of
fire. In this
way, then, that
soul which, like an
iron in the
fire, has been
perpetually placed in the
Word, and
perpetually in the
Wisdom, and
perpetually in
God, is
God in all that it does,
feels, and
understands, and therefore can be
called neither
convertible nor
mutable,
inasmuch as,
being incessantly heated, it
possessed immutability from its
union with the
Word of
God. To all the
saints,
finally, some
warmth from the
Word of
God must be
supposed to have
passed; and in this
soul the
divine fire itself must be
believed to have
rested, from which some
warmth may have
passed to others.
Lastly, the
expression, "
God, thy
God,
anointed thee with the
oil of
gladness above thy
fellows,"
shows that that
soul is
anointed in one
way with the
oil of
gladness,
i.e., with the
word of
God and
wisdom; and his
fellows,
i.e., the
holy prophets and
apostles, in another. For they are
said to have "
run in the
odour of his
ointments; " and that
soul was the
vessel which
contained that very
ointment of whose
fragrance all the
worthy prophets and
apostles were made
partakers. As, then, the
substance of an
ointment is one
thing and its
odour another, so also
Christ is one
thing and His
fellows another. And as the
vessel itself, which
contains the
substance of the
ointment, can by no
means admit any
foul smell; whereas it is
possible that those who
enjoy its
odour may, if they
remove a
little way from its
fragrance,
receive any
foul odour which
comes upon them: so, in the same
way, was it
impossible that
Christ,
being as it were the
vessel itself, in which was the
substance of the
ointment, should
receive an
odour of an
opposite kind, while they who are His "
fellows" will be
partakers and
receivers of His
odour, in
proportion to their
nearness to the
vessel.
7. I
think, indeed, that
Jeremiah the
prophet, also,
understanding what was the
nature of the
wisdom of
God in him, which was the same also which he had
assumed for the
salvation of the
world,
said, "The
breath of our
countenance is
Christ the
Lord, to whom we
said, that under His
shadow we shall
live among the
nations." And
inasmuch as the
shadow of our
body is
inseparable from the
body, and
unavoidably performs and
repeats its
movements and
gestures, I
think that he,
wishing to
point out the
work of
Christ's
soul, and the
movements inseparably belonging to it, and which
accomplished everything according to His
movements and will,
called this the
shadow of
Christ the
Lord, under which
shadow we were to
live among the
nations. For in the
mystery of this
assumption the
nations live, who,
imitating it through
faith,
come to
salvation.
David also, when
saying, "Be
mindful of my
reproach,
O Lord, with which they
reproached me in
exchange for Thy
Christ," seems to me to
indicate the same. And what else does
Paul mean when he
says, "Your
life is
hid with
Christ in
God; " and again in another
passage, "Do you
seek a
proof of
Christ, who
speaketh in me? " And now he
says that
Christ was
hid in
God. The
meaning of which
expression, unless it be
shown to be something such as we have
pointed out above as
intended by the
prophet in the
words "
shadow of
Christ,"
exceeds, perhaps, the
apprehension of the
human mind. But we
see also very many other
statements in
holy Scripture respecting the
meaning of the
word "
shadow," as that
well-known one in the
Gospel according to
Luke, where
Gabriel says to
Mary, "The
Spirit of the
Lord shall
come upon thee, and the
power of the
Highest shall
overshadow thee." And the
apostle says with
reference to the
law, that they who have
circumcision in the
flesh, "
serve for the
similitude and
shadow of
heavenly things." And elsewhere, "Is not our
life upon the
earth a
shadow? " If, then, not only the
law which is upon the
earth is a
shadow, but also all our
life which is upon the
earth is the same, and we
live among the
nations under the
shadow of
Christ, we must
see whether the
truth of all these
shadows may not
come to be
known in that
revelation, when no
longer through a
glass, and
darkly, but
face to
face, all the
saints shall
deserve to
behold the
glory of
God, and the
causes and
truth of
things. And the
pledge of this
truth being already
received through the
Holy Spirit, the
apostle said, "
Yea, though we have
known Christ after the
flesh, yet now
henceforth know we Him no more."
The above, meanwhile, are the
thoughts which have
occurred to us, when
treating of
subjects of such
difficulty as the
incarnation and
deity of
Christ. If there be any one, indeed, who can
discover something
better, and who can
establish his
assertions by
clearer proofs from
holy Scriptures, let his
opinion be
received in
preference to
mine.