IntraText Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library |
Chapter XIII. ---- Christ's Human Nature. The Flesh and the Soul Both Fully and Un-Confusedly Contained in It. |
Chapter XIII. ---- Christ's Human Nature. The Flesh and the Soul Both Fully and Un-Confusedly Contained in It.
[1] The
soul became flesh that the soul might become visible. Well, then, did the flesh likewise
become soul that the flesh might be manifested?
If the soul is flesh, it is no
longer soul, but flesh. If the flesh is soul, it is no longer flesh, but soul.
Where, then, there is flesh, and where there is soul, it has become both one
and the other.
Now, if they are neither in
particular, although they become both one and the other, it is, to say the
least, very absurd, that we should understand the soul when we name the flesh,
and when we indicate the soul, explain ourselves as meaning the flesh. [2] All things will be in danger
of being taken in a sense different from their own proper sense, and, whilst
taken in that different sense, of losing their proper one, if they are called
by a name which differs from their natural designation. Fidelity in names
secures the safe appreciation of properties. When these properties undergo a
change, they are considered to possess such qualities as their names indicate. Baked
clay, for instance, receives the name of brick.
It retains not the name which
designated its former state,
because it has no longer a share in
that state. [3] Therefore,
also, the soul of Christ having become flesh,
cannot be anything else than that
which it has become nor can it be any longer that which it once was, having
become indeed
something else. And since we have
just had recourse to an illustration, we will put it to further use. Our
pitcher, then, which was formed of the clay, is one body, and has one name
indicative, of course, of that one body; [4] nor
can the pitcher be also called clay, because what it once was, it is no longer.
Now that which is no longer (what it was) is also not an inseparable property.
And the soul is not an inseparable
property. Since, therefore, it has become flesh, the soul is a uniform solid
body; it is also a wholly incomplex being,
and an indivisible substance. But
in Christ we find the soul and the flesh expressed in simple un-figurative
terms; that is to say, the soul is
called soul, and the flesh, flesh; nowhere is the soul termed flesh, or the
flesh, soul; and yet they ought to have been thus (confusedly) named if such
had been their condition. The fact, however, is that even by Christ
Himself each substance has been separately mentioned by itself, conformably of
course, to the distinction which exists between the properties of both, the
soul by itself, and the flesh by itself." [5] "My soul," says He, "is
exceeding sorrowful, even unto death; "
and "the bread that I will
give is my flesh, (which I will give) for the life
of the world."
Now, if the soul had been flesh,
there would have only been in Christ the soul composed of flesh, or else the
flesh composed of soul.
Since, however, He keeps the
species distinct, the flesh and the soul, He shows them to be two. [6] If two, then they are no
longer one; if not one, then the soul is not composed of flesh, nor the flesh
of soul. For the soul-flesh, or the flesh-soul, is but one; unless indeed He
even had some other soul apart from that which was flesh, and bare about
another flesh besides that which was soul. But since He had but one flesh and
one soul, ---- that "soul which was sorrowful, even unto death," and
that flesh which was the "bread given for the life of the
world," ---- the number is unimpaired
of two substances distinct in kind,
thus excluding the unique species of the flesh-comprised soul.