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Chapter V. ---- Christ Truly Lived and Died in Human Flesh. Incidents of His Human Life on Earth, and Refutation of Marcion's Docetic Parody of the Same. |
Chapter V. ---- Christ Truly Lived and Died in Human Flesh. Incidents of His Human Life on Earth, and Refutation of Marcion's Docetic Parody of the Same.
[1] There are, to be sure, other
things also quite as foolish (as the birth of Christ), which have reference to
the humiliations and sufferings of God. Or else, let them call a crucified God
"wisdom." But Marcion will apply the knife to this doctrine also,
and even with greater reason. For which is more unworthy of God, which is more
likely to raise a blush of shame, that God should be born, or that He
should die? that He should bear the flesh, or the cross? be circumcised, or be
crucified? be cradled, or be coffined?
be laid in a manger, or in a tomb? Talk
of "wisdom!" You will show more of that if you
refuse to believe this also. But, after all, you will not be "wise"
unless you become a "fool" to the world, by believing" the
foolish things of God." [2] Have you, then,
cut away
all sufferings from Christ, on the
ground that, as a mere phantom, He was incapable of experiencing them? We have
said above that He might possibly have undergone the unreal mockeries
of an imaginary birth and infancy.
But answer me at once, you that murder truth: Was not God really crucified?
And, having been really crucified, did He not really die? And, having indeed
really died, did He not really rise again? [3] Falsely
did Paul
"determine to know nothing
amongst us but Jesus and Him crucified; "
falsely has he impressed upon us
that He was buried; falsely inculcated that He rose again. False, therefore, is
our faith also. And all that we hope for from Christ will be a phantom. O thou
most infamous of men, who acquittest of all guilt
the murderers of God! For nothing
did Christ suffer from them, if He really suffered nothing at all. Spare the
whole world's one only hope, thou who art destroying the indispensable
dishonour of our faith
Whatsoever is unworthy of God, is
of gain to me. I am safe, if I am not ashamed of my Lord.
"Whosoever," says He, "shall be ashamed of me, of him will I
also be ashamed."
[4] Other matters for shame find I none which can prove me to be
shameless in a good sense, and foolish in a happy one, by my own contempt of
shame. The Son of God was crucified; I am not ashamed because men must needs be
ashamed of it. And the Son of God died; it is by all means to be believed,
because it is absurd.
And He was buried, and rose again;
the fact is certain, because it is impossible. [5] But how will all this be true in Him, if He was not
Himself true ---- if He really had not in Himself that which might be
crucified, might die, might be buried, and might rise again? I mean this
flesh suffused with blood, built up with bones, interwoven with nerves,
entwined with veins, a flesh which knew how to be born, and how to die,
human without doubt, as born of a human being. It will therefore be mortal in
Christ, because Christ is man and the Son of man. [6] Else why is Christ man and the Son of man, if he
has nothing of man, and nothing from man? Unless it be either that man is
anything else than flesh, or man's flesh comes from any other source than man,
or Mary is anything else than a human being, or Marcion's man is as
Marcion's god.
Otherwise Christ could not be
described as being man without flesh, nor the Son of man without any human
parent; just as He is not God without the Spirit of God, nor the Son of God
without having God for His father. [7] Thus
the nature
of the two substances displayed Him
as man and God, ---- in one respect born, in the other unborn; in one respect
fleshly in the other spiritual; in one sense weak in the other exceeding
strong; in on sense dying, in the other living. This property of the two states
---- the divine and the human ---- is distinctly asserted
with equal truth of both natures
alike, with the same belief both in respect of the Spirit
and of the flesh. The powers of the
Spirit,
proved Him to be God, His
sufferings attested the flesh of man. [8] If
His powers were not without the Spirit
in like manner, were not His
sufferings without the flesh. if His flesh with its sufferings was fictitious,
for the same reason was the Spirit false with all its powers. Wherefore halve
Christ with a lie? He was wholly
the truth. [9] Believe me, He
chose rather to be born, than in any part to pretend ---- and that indeed to
His own detriment ---- that He was bearing about a flesh hardened without
bones, solid without muscles, bloody without blood, clothed without the tunic of
skin,
hungry without appetite, eating
without teeth, speaking without a tongue, so that His word was a phantom to the
ears through an imaginary voice. A phantom, too, it was of course after the
resurrection, when, showing His hands and His feet for the disciples to
examine, He said, "Behold and see that it is I myself, for a spirit hath
not flesh and bones, as ye see me have; "
[10] without doubt, hands, and
feet, and bones are not what a spirit possesses, but only the flesh.
Howdo you interpret this statement, Marcion, you who tell us that Jesus comes
only from the most excellent God, who is both simple and good? See how He rather
cheats, and deceives, and juggles the eyes of all, and the senses of all, as
well as their access to and contact with Him! You ought rather to have brought
Christ down, not from heaven, but from some troop of mountebanks, not as God
besides man, but simply as a man, a magician; not as the High Priest of our
salvation, but as the conjurer in a show; not as the raiser of the dead, but as
the misleader
of the living, ---- except that, if
He were a magician, He must have had a nativity!