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Chapter IX. ---- Christ's Flesh Perfectly Natural, Like Our Own. None of the Supernatural Features Which the Heretics Ascribed to It Discoverable, on a Careful View. |
Chapter IX. ---- Christ's Flesh Perfectly Natural, Like Our Own. None of the Supernatural Features Which the Heretics Ascribed to It Discoverable, on a Careful View.
[1] We
have thus far gone on the principle, that nothing which is derived from some
other thing, however different it may be from that from which it is derived, is
so different as not to suggest the source from which it comes. No material
substance is without the witness of its own original, however great a change
into new properties it may have undergone. [2] There
is this very body of ours, the formation of which out of the dust of the ground
is a truth which has found its way into Gentile fables; it certainly testifies
its own origin from the two elements of earth and water, ---- from the former
by its flesh, from the latter by its blood. Now, although there is a difference
in the appearance of qualities (in other words, that which proceeds from
something else is in development different), yet, after all, what is
blood but red fluid? what is flesh but earth in an especial
form? [3] Consider the respective qualities, ---- of the
muscles as clods; of the bones as stones; the mammillary glands as a kind of
pebbles. Look upon the close junctions of the nerves as propagations of roots,
and the branching courses of the veins as winding rivulets, and the down (which
covers us) as moss, and the hair as grass, and the very treasures of marrow
within our bones as ores
of flesh. [4] All these marks of the earthy origin were in
Christ; and it is they which obscured Him as the Son of God, for He was looked
on as man, for no other reason whatever than because He existed in the
corporeal substance of a man. Or else, show us some celestial substance in Him
purloined from the Bear, and the Pleiades, and the Hyades. Well, then, the
characteristics which we have enumerated are so many proofs that His was an
earthy flesh, as ours is; but anything new or anything strange I do not
discover. [5] Indeed it was
from His words and actions only, from His teaching and miracles solely, that
men, though amazed, owned Christ to be man.
But if there had been in Him any
new kind of flesh miraculously obtained (from the stars), it would have been
certainly well known.
As the case stood, however, it was
actually the ordinary
condition of His terrene flesh
which made all things else about Him wonderful, as when they said, "Whence
hath this man this wisdom and these mighty works? "
[6] Thus spake even they who
despised His outward form. His body did not reach even to human beauty, to say
nothing of heavenly glory.
Had the prophets given us no
information whatever concerning His ignoble appearance, His very sufferings and
the very contumely He endured bespeak it all. The sufferings attested His human
flesh, the contumely proved its abject condition. [7] Would any man have dared to touch even with his
little finger, the body of Christ, if it had been of an unusual nature;
or to smear His face with spitting,
if it had not invited it
(by its abjectness)? Why talk of a
heavenly flesh, when you have no grounds to offer us for your celestial theory?
Why deny it to be earthy, when you
have the best of reasons for knowing it to be earthy? He hungered under the
devil's temptation; He thirsted with the woman of Samaria; He wept over
Lazarus; He trembles at death (for "the flesh," as He says, "is
weak "
); at last, He pours out His blood.
[8] These, I suppose, are
celestial marks? But how, I ask, could He have incurred contempt and suffering
in the way I have described, if there had beamed forth in that flesh of His
aught of celestial excellence? From this, therefore, we have a convincing proof
that in it there was nothing of heaven, because it must be capable of contempt
and suffering.