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Chapter XIX. ---- Christ, as to His Divine Nature, as the Word of God, Became Flesh, Not by Carnal Conception, Nor by the Will of the Flesh and of Man, But by the Will of God. Christ's Divine Nature, of Its Own Accord, Descended into the Virgin's Womb. |
Chapter XIX. ---- Christ, as to His Divine Nature, as the Word of God, Became Flesh, Not by Carnal Conception, Nor by the Will of the Flesh and of Man, But by the Will of God. Christ's Divine Nature, of Its Own Accord, Descended into the Virgin's Womb.
[1] What,
then, is the meaning of this passage, "Born not of blood, nor of the will of
the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God? "
I shall make more use of this
passage after I have confuted those who have tampered with it. They maintain
that it was written thus (in the plural)
" Who were born, not of
blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God,"
as if designating those who were before mentioned as "believing in His
name," in order to point out the existence of that mysterious seed of the
elect and spiritual which they appropriate to themselves.
[2] But how can this be, when
all who believe in the name of the Lord are, by reason of the common principle
of the human race, born of blood, and of the will of the flesh, and of man, as
indeed is Valentinus himself? The expression is in the singular number, as
referring to the Lord, "He was born of God." And very properly,
because Christ is the Word of God, and with the Word the Spirit of God, and by
the Spirit the Power of God, and whatsoever else appertains to God. As flesh,
however, He is not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of man, because
it was by the will of God that the Word was made flesh. [3] To the flesh, indeed, and not to the Word, accrues
the denial of the nativity which is natural to us all as men,
because it was as flesh that He had
thus to be born, and not as the Word. Now, whilst the passage actually denies
that He was born of the will of the flesh, how is it that it did not also deny
(that He was born) of the substance of the flesh? For it did not disavow the
substance of the flesh when it denied His being "born of blood" but
only the matter of the seed, which, as all know, is the warm blood as convected
by ebullition
into the coagulum of the
woman's blood. [4] In the
cheese, it is from the coagulation that the milky substance acquires that
consistency,
which is condensed by infusing the
rennet.
We thus understand that what is
denied is the Lord's birth after sexual intercourse (as is suggested by the
phrase, "the will of man and of the flesh"), not His nativity
from a woman's womb. Why, too, is it insisted on with such an accumulation of
emphasis that He was not born of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor (of
the will) of man, if it were not that His flesh was such that no man could have
any doubt on the point of its being born from sexual intercourse? Again,
although denying His birth from such cohabitation, the passage did not deny
that He was born of real flesh; it rather affirmed this, by the very
fact that it did not deny His birth in the flesh in the same way that it denied
His birth from sexual intercourse. [5] Pray,
tell me, why the Spirit of God
descended into a woman's womb at all,
if He did not do so for the purpose of partaking of flesh from the womb. For He
could have become spiritual flesh
without such a process, ---- much
more simply, indeed, without the womb than in it. He had no reason for
enclosing Himself within one, if He was to bear forth nothing from it. Not
without reason, however, did He descend into a womb. Therefore He received
(flesh) therefrom; else, if He received nothing therefrom, His descent into it
would have been without a reason, especially if He meant to become flesh of
that sort which was not derived from a womb, that is to say, a spiritual one.