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Chapter XV. ---- The Valentinian Figment of Christ's Flesh Being of a Spiritual Nature, Examined and Refuted Out of Scripture. |
Chapter XV. ---- The Valentinian Figment of Christ's Flesh Being of a Spiritual Nature, Examined and Refuted Out of Scripture.
[1] Valentinus,
indeed, on the strength of his heretical system, might consistently devise a
spiritual flesh for Christ. Any one who refused to believe that that flesh was
human might pretend it to be anything he liked, for ---- as much as (and this
remark is applicable, to all heretics), if it was not human, and was not
born of man, I do not see of what substance Christ Himself spoke when He called
Himself man and the Son of man, saying: "But now ye seek to kill
me, a man that hath told you the truth; " and "The Son of man is Lord of
the Sabbath-day."
For it is of Him that Isaiah
writes: "A man of suffering, and acquainted with the bearing of weakness;
"
and Jeremiah: "He is a man,
and who hath known Him? "
and Daniel: "Upon the clouds
(He came) as the Son of man."
The Apostle Paul likewise says:
"The man Christ Jesus is the one Mediator between God and man."
Also Peter, in the Acts of the
Apostles, speaks of Him as verily human (when he says), "Jesus Christ was
a man approved of God among you."
[2] These passages alone ought
to suffice as a prescriptive
testimony in proof that Christ had
human flesh derived from man, and not spiritual, and that His flesh was not
composed. of soul,
nor of stellar substance, and that
it was not an imaginary flesh; (and no doubt they would be sufficient) if heretics
could only divest themselves of all their contentious warmth and artifice. [3] For, as I have read in some
writer of Valentinus' wretched faction,
they refuse at the outset to
believe that a human and earthly substance was created
for Christ, lest the Lord should be
regarded as inferior to the angels, who are not formed of earthly flesh;
whence, too, it would be necessary that, if His flesh were like ours, it should
be similarly born, not of the Spirit, nor of God, but of the will of man. Why,
moreover, should it be born, not of corruptible [seed], but of incorruptible?
Why, again, since His flesh has both risen and returned to heaven, is not ours,
being like His, also taken up at once? Or else, why does not His flesh, since
it is like ours, return in like manner to the ground, and suffer dissolution? [4] Such objections even the
heathen used constantly to bandy about.
Was the Son of God reduced to such
a depth of degradation again, if He rose again as a precedent for our hope, how
is it that nothing like it has been thought desirable (to happen) to ourselves?
Such views are not improper for
heathens and they are fit and natural for the heretics too. For, indeed, what
difference is there between them, except it be that the heathen, in not
believing, do believe; while the heretics, in believing, do not believe? [5] Then, again, they read:
"Thou madest Him a little less than angels; "
and they deny the lower nature of
that Christ who declares Himself to be, "not a man, but a worm; "
who also had "no form nor
comeliness, but His form was ignoble, despised more than all men, a man in
suffering, and acquainted with the bearing of weakness."
[6] Here they discover a human
being mingled with a divine one and so they deny the manhood. They believe that
He died, and maintain that a being which has died was born of an incorruptible
substance;
as if, forsooth, corruptibility
were something else than death! But
our flesh, too, ought immediately to have risen again. Wait a while. Christ has
not yet subdued His enemies, so as to be able to triumph over them in company
with His friends.