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Chapter XVI. ---- Christ's Flesh in Nature, the Same as Ours, Only Sinless. The Difference Between Carnem Peccati and Peccatum Carnis: It is the Latter Which Christ Abolished. The Flesh of the First Adam, No Less Than that of the Second Adam, Not Received from Human Seed, Although as Entirely Human as Our Own, Which is Derived from It. |
Chapter XVI. ---- Christ's Flesh in Nature, the Same as Ours, Only Sinless. The Difference Between Carnem Peccati and Peccatum Carnis: It is the Latter Which Christ Abolished. The Flesh of the First Adam, No Less Than that of the Second Adam, Not Received from Human Seed, Although as Entirely Human as Our Own, Which is Derived from It.
[1] The
famous Alexander, too, instigated by his love of
disputation in the true fashion of heretical temper, has made himself
conspicuous against us; he will have us say that Christ put on flesh of an
earthly origin,
in order that He might in His own
person abolish sinful flesh.
Now, even if we did assert this as
our opinion, we should be able to defend it in such a way as completely to
avoid the extravagant folly which he ascribes to us in making us suppose that
the very flesh of Christ was in Himself abolished as being sinful; because we
mention our belief (in public),
that it is sitting at the right
hand of the Father in heaven; and we further declare that it will come again
from thence in all the pomp
of the Father's glory: [2] it is therefore just as
impossible for us to say that it is abolished, as it is for us to maintain that
it is sinful, and so made void, since in it there has been no fault. We
maintain, moreover, that what has been abolished in Christ is not carnem
peccati, "sinful flesh," but peccatum carnis, "sin in
the flesh," ---- not the material thing, but its condition;
not the substance, but its flaw;
and (this we aver) on the authority
of the apostle, who says, "He abolished sin in the flesh."
[3] Now in another sentence he
says that Christ was "in the likeness of sinful flesh,"
not, however, as if He had taken on
Him "the likeness of the flesh," in the sense of a semblance of body
instead of its reality; but he means us to understand likeness to the flesh
which sinned,
because the flesh of Christ, which
committed no sin itself, resembled that which had sinned, ---- resembled it in
its nature, but not in the corruption it received from Adam; [4] whence we also affirm that there was in Christ the
same flesh as that whose nature in man is sinful. In the flesh, therefore, we
say that sin has been abolished, because in Christ that same flesh is
maintained without sin, which in than was not maintained without sin. Now, it
would not contribute to the purpose of Christ's abolishing sin in the flesh, if
He did not abolish it in that flesh in which was the nature of sin, nor (would
it conduce) to His glory. For surely it would have been no strange thing if He
had removed the stain of sin in some better flesh, and one which should possess
a different, even a sinless, nature! Then, you say, if He took our flesh,
Christ's was a sinful one. [5] Do
not, however, fetter with mystery a sense which is quite intelligible. For in
putting on our flesh, He made it His own; in making it His own, He made it
sinless. A word of caution, however, must be addressed to all who refuse to
believe that our flesh was in Christ on the ground that it came not of the seed
of a human father,
let them remember that Adam himself
received this flesh of ours without the seed of a human father. As earth was
converted into this flesh of ours without the seed of a human father, so also
was it quite possible for the Son of God to take to Himself
the substance of the selfsame
flesh, without a human father's agency.