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Chapter VI. ---- The Doctrine of Apelles Refuted, that Christ's Body Was of Sidereal Substance, Not Born. Nativity and Mortality are Correlative Circumstances, and in Christ's Case His Death Proves His Birth. |
Chapter VI. ---- The Doctrine of Apelles Refuted, that Christ's Body Was of Sidereal Substance, Not Born. Nativity and Mortality are Correlative Circumstances, and in Christ's Case His Death Proves His Birth.
[1] But certain disciples of the heretic of Pontus, compelled
to be wiser than their teacher, concede to Christ real flesh, without effect,
however, on
their denial of His nativity. He
might have had, they say, a flesh which was not at all born. So we have found
our way "out of a frying-pan," as the proverb runs, "into the
fire,"
---- from Marcion to Apelles. This man having
first fallen from the principles of Marcion into (intercourse with) a woman, in
the flesh, and afterwards shipwrecked himself, in the spirit, on the virgin
Philumene,
proceeded from that time
to preach that the body of Christ
was of solid flesh, but without having been born. [2] To
this angel, indeed, of Philumene, the apostle will reply in tones like those in
which he even then predicted him, saying, "Although an angel from heaven
preach any other gospel unto you than that which we have preached unto you, let
him be accursed."
To the arguments, however, which
have been indicated just above, we have now to show our resistance. [3] They allow that Christ really had a body. Whence
was the material of it, if not from the same sort of thing as
that in which He appeared? Whence
came His body, if His body were not flesh? Whence came His flesh, if it were
not born? Inasmuch as that which is born must undergo this nativity in order to
become flesh. He borrowed, they say, His flesh from the stars, and from the
substances of the higher world. And they assert it for a certain principle,
that a body without nativity is nothing to be astonished at, because it has
been submitted to angels to appear even amongst ourselves in the flesh without
the intervention of the womb. [4] We admit, of
course, that such facts have been related. But then, how comes it to pass that
a faith which holds to a different rule borrows materials for its own arguments
from the faith which it impugns? What has it to do with Moses, who has rejected
the God of Moses? Since the God is a different one, everything belonging to him
must be different also. But let the heretics always use the Scriptures of that
God whose world they also enjoy. The fact will certainly recoil on them as a
witness to judge them, that they maintain their own blasphemies from examples
derived from Him.
But it is an easy task for the
truth to prevail without raising any such demurrer against them. [5] When, therefore, they set forth the flesh of Christ
after the pattern of the angels, declaring it to be not born, and yet flesh for
all that, I should wish them to compare the causes, both in Christ's case and
that of the angels, wherefore they came in the flesh. Never did any angel
descend for the purpose of being crucified, of tasting death, and of
rising again from the dead. Now, since there never was such a reason for angels
becoming embodied, you have the cause why they assumed flesh without undergoing
birth. They had not come to die, therefore they also (came not) to be born. [6] Christ, however, having been
sent to die, had necessarily to be also born, that He might be capable of
death; for nothing is in the habit of dying but that which is born. Between
nativity and mortality there is a mutual contrast. The law
which makes us die is the cause of
our being born. [7] Now, since
Christ died owing to the condition which undergoes death, but that undergoes
death which is also born, the consequence was ---- nay, it was an antecedent
necessity ---- that He must have been born also,
by reason of the condition which
undergoes birth; because He had to die in obedience to that very condition
which, because it begins with birth, ends in death.
It was not fitting for Him not to
be born under the pretence
that it was fitting for Him to die.
But the Lord Himself at that very time appeared to Abraham amongst those angels
without being born, and yet in the flesh without doubt, in virtue of the
before-mentioned diversity of cause. [8] You,
however, cannot admit this, since you do not receive that Christ, who was even
then rehearsing
how to converse with, and liberate,
and judge the human race, in the habit of a flesh which as yet was not born,
because it did not yet mean to die until both its nativity and mortality were
previously (by prophecy) announced. Let them, then, prove to us that those
angels derived their flesh from the stars. [9] If
they do not prove it because it is not written, neither will the flesh of
Christ get its origin therefrom, for which they borrowed the precedent of the
angels. It is plain that the angels bore a flesh which was not naturally their
own; their nature being of a spiritual substance, although in some sense
peculiar to themselves, corporeal; and yet they could be transfigured into
human shape, and for the time be able to appear and have intercourse with men. [10] Since, therefore, it has not
been told us whence they obtained their flesh, it remains for us not to doubt
in our minds that a property of angelic power is this, to assume to themselves
bodily Shape out of no material substance. How much more, you say, is it
(within their competence to take a body) out of some material substance? That
is true enough. But there is no evidence of this, because Scripture says
nothing. [11] Then, again,
how should they who are able to
form themselves into that which by nature they are not, be unable to do this
out of no material substance? If they become that which they are not, why
cannot they so become out of that which is not? But that which has not
existence when it comes into existence, is made out of nothing. This is
why it is unnecessary either to inquire or to demonstrate what has subsequently
become of their
bodies. What came out of nothing,
came to nothing. They, who were able to convert themselves into flesh
have it in their power to convert nothing itself into flesh. It is a
greater thing to change a nature than to make matter. [12] But even if it were necessary to suppose
that angels derived their flesh from some material substance, it is surely more
credible that it was from some earthly matter than from any kind of celestial
substances, since it was composed of so palpably terrene a quality that it fed
on earthly ailments. Suppose that even now a celestial flesh
had fed on earthly aliments, although it was
not itself earthly, in the same way that earthly flesh actually fed on
celestial aliments, although it had nothing of the celestial nature (for we
read of manna having been food for the people: "Man," says the
Psalmist, "did eat angels' bread,"
) yet this does not once infringe
the separate condition of the Lord's flesh, because of His different
destination. [13] For One who
was to be truly a man, even unto death, it was necessary that He should be
clothed with that flesh to which death belongs. Now that flesh to which death
belongs is preceded by birth.