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Chapter XX. ---- Christ Born of a Virgin, of Her Substance. The Physiological Facts of His Real and Exact Birth of a Human Mother, as Suggested by Certain Passages of Scripture. |
Chapter XX. ---- Christ Born of a Virgin, of Her Substance. The Physiological Facts of His Real and Exact Birth of a Human Mother, as Suggested by Certain Passages of Scripture.
[1] But
to what shifts you resort, in your attempt to rob the syllable ex (of) of its proper force as a
preposition, and to substitute another for it in a sense not found throughout
the Holy Scriptures! You say that He was born through
a virgin, not of
a virgin, and in a womb, not
of a womb, because the angel in the dream said to Joseph, "That
which is born in her" (not of her) "is of the Holy Ghost."
[2] But the fact is, if he had
meant "of her," he must have said "in her; "for that which
was of her, was also in her. The angel's expression, therefore, "in
her," has precisely the same meaning as the phrase "of her." It
is, however, a fortunate circumstance that Matthew also, when tracing down the
Lord's descent from Abraham to Mary, says, "Jacob begat Joseph the husband
of Mary, of whom was born Christ."
But Paul, too, silences these
critics
when he says, "God sent forth
His Son, made of a woman."
Does he mean through a
woman, or in a woman? [3] Nay
more, for the sake of greater emphasis, he uses the word "made"
rather than born, although the use of the latter expression would have
been simpler. But by saying "made," he not only confirmed the
statement, "The Word was made flesh,"
but he also asserted the reality of
the flesh which was made of a virgin We shall have also the support of the
Psalms on this point, not the "Psalms" indeed of Valentinus the
apostate, and heretic, and Platonist, but the Psalms of David, the most
illustrious saint and well-known prophet. He sings to us of Christ, and through
his voice Christ indeed also sang concerning Himself. [4] Hear, then, Christ the Lord speaking to God the
Father: "Thou art He that didst draw
me out of my mother's womb."
Here is the first point. "Thou
art my hope from my mother's breasts; upon Thee have I been cast from the
womb."
Here is another point. "Thou
art my God from my mother's belly."
Here is a third point. Now let us
carefully attend to the sense of these passages. [5] "Thou didst draw me," He says, "out
of the womb." Now what is it which is drawn, if it be not that
which adheres, that which is firmly fastened to anything from which it is drawn
in order to be sundered? If He clove not to the womb, how could He have been
drawn from it? If He who clove thereto was drawn from it, how could He have
adhered to it, if it were not that, all the while He was in the womb, He was
tied to it, as to His origin,
by the umbilical cord, which
communicated growth to Him from the matrix? Even when one strange matter
amalgamates with another, it becomes so entirely incorporated
with that with which it
amalgamates, that when it is drawn off from it, it carries with it some part of
the body from which it is torn, as if in consequence of the severance of the
union and growth which the constituent pieces had communicated to each other. [6] But what were His
"mother's breasts" which He mentions? No doubt they were those which
He sucked. Midwives, and doctors, and naturalists, can tell us, from the nature
of women's breasts, whether they usually flow at any other time than when the
womb is affected with pregnancy, when the veins convey therefrom the blood of
the lower parts
to the mammilla, and in the
act of transference convert the secretion into the nutritious
substance of milk. Whence it comes
to pass that during the period of lactation the monthly issues are suspended.
But if the Word was made flesh of Himself without any communication with a
womb, no mother's womb operating upon Him with its usual function and support,
how could the lacteal fountain have been conveyed (from the womb) to the
breasts, since (the womb) can only effect the change by actual possession of
the proper substance? But it could not possibly have had blood for
transformation into milk, unless it possessed the causes of blood also, that is
to say, the severance (by birth)
of its own flesh from the
mother's womb. [7] Now it
is easy to see what was the novelty of Christ's being born of a virgin. It was
simply this, that (He was born) of a virgin in the real manner which we have
indicated, in order that our regeneration might have virginal purity, ---- spiritually
cleansed from all pollutions through Christ, who was Himself a virgin, even in
the flesh, in that He was born of a virgin's flesh.