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Frances Young
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Piotr Ashwin-Siejkowski
Early Christian Doctrine and the Creeds
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Piotr Ashwin-Siejkowski
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Liuwe H. Westra
Apostles' Creed: Origin History and Some Early Commentaries (Instrumenta Patristica Et Mediaevalia, 43)
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26. As if dissatisfied with this, they hold their meeting again
after three years, and dispatch Eudoxius, Martyrius, and Macedonius of Cilicia,
and some others with them, to the parts of Italy, to carry with them a faith
written at great length, with numerous additions over and above those which have
gone before. They went abroad with these, as if they had devised something new.
We believe in one God the Father Almighty, the Creator and Maker of all things,
from whom all fatherhood in heaven and on earth is named. And in His
Only-begotten Son our Lord Jesus Christ, who before all ages was begotten from
the Father, God from God, Light from Light, by whom all things were made, in
heaven and on the earth, visible and invisible, being Word and Wisdom and Power
and Life and True Light, who in the last days was made man for us, and was born
of the Holy Virgin, crucified and dead and buried, and rose again from the dead
the third day, and was taken up into heaven, and sat down on the right hand of
the Father, and is coming at the consummation of the age to judge quick and
dead, and to render to every one according to his works, whose Kingdom endures
unceasingly unto the infinite ages; for He sitteth on the right hand of the
Father not only in this age, but also in that which is to come. And we believe
in the Holy Ghost, that is, the Paraclete, which, having promised to the
Apostles, He sent forth after the ascension into heaven, to teach them and to
remind of all things: through whom also shall be sanctified the souls of those
who sincerely believe in Him.
But those who say, (1) that the Son was from nothing, or from other subsistence
and not from God; (2) and that there was a time or age when He was not, the
Catholic and Holy Church regards as aliens. Likewise those who say, (3) that
there are three Gods: (4) or that Christ is not God; (5) or that before the ages
He was neither Christ nor Son of God; (6) or that Father and Son, or Holy Ghost,
are the same; (7) or that the Son is Ingenerate; or that the Father begat the
Son, not by choice or will; the Holy and Catholic Church anathematizes.
(1.) For neither is safe to say that the Son is from nothing, (since this is no
where spoken of Him in divinely inspired Scripture,) nor again of any other
subsistence before existing beside the Father, but from God alone do we define
Him genuinely to be generated. For the divine Word teaches that the Ingenerate
and Unbegun, the Father of Christ, is One. (2.) Nor may we, adopting the
hazardous position, ‘There was once when He was not,’ from unscriptural sources,
imagine any interval of time before Him, but only the God who has generated Him
apart from time; for through Him both times and ages came to be. Yet we must not
consider the Son to be co-unbegun and co-ingenerate with the Father; for no one
can be properly called Father or Son of one who is co-unbegun and co-ingenerate
with Him. But we acknowledge that the Father who alone is Unbegun and
Ingenerate, hath generated inconceivably and incomprehensibly to all: and that
the Son hath been generated before ages, and in no wise to be ingenerate Himself
like the Father, but to have the Father who generated Him as His beginning; for
‘the Head of Christ is God.’
(3.) Nor again, in confessing three realities and three Persons, of the Father
and the Son and the Holy Ghost according to the Scriptures, do we therefore make
Gods three; since we acknowledge the Self-complete and Ingenerate and Unbegun
and Invisible God to be one only, the God and Father of the Only-begotten, who
alone hath being from Himself, and alone vouchsafes this to all others
bountifully. (4.) Nor again, in saying that the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ
is one only God, the only Ingenerate, do we therefore deny that Christ also is
God before ages: as the disciples of Paul of Samosata, who say that after the
incarnation He was by advance made God, from being made by nature a mere man.
For we acknowledge, that though He be subordinate to His Father and God, yet,
being before ages begotten of God, He is God perfect according to nature and
true, and not first man and then God, but first God and then becoming man for
us, and never having been deprived of being.
(5.) We abhor besides, and anathematize those who make a pretence of saying that
He is but the mere word of God and unexisting, having His being in another,—now
as if pronounced, as some speak, now as mental,—holding that He was not Christ
or Son of God or mediator or image of God before ages; but that He first became
Christ and Son of God, when He took our flesh from the Virgin, not quite four
hundred years since. For they will have it that then Christ began His Kingdom,
and that it will have an end after the consummation of all and the judgment.
Such are the disciples of Marcellus and Scotinus of Galatian Ancyra, who,
equally with Jews, negative Christ’s existence before ages, and His Godhead, and
unending Kingdom, upon pretence of supporting the divine Monarchy. We, on the
contrary, regard Him not as simply God’s pronounced word or mental, but as
Living God and Word, existing in Himself, and Son of God and Christ; being and
abiding with His Father before ages, and that not in foreknowledge only, and
ministering to Him for the whole framing whether of things visible or invisible.
For He it is, to whom the Father said, ‘Let Us make man in Our image, after Our
likeness’, who also was seen in His own Person by the patriarchs, gave the law,
spoke by the prophets, and at last, became man, and manifested His own Father to
all men, and reigns to never-ending ages. For Christ has taken no recent
dignity, but we have believed Him to be perfect from the first, and like in all
things to the Father.
(6.) And those who say that the Father and Son and Holy Ghost are the same, and
irreligiously take the Three Names of one and the same Reality and Person, we
justly proscribe from the Church, because they suppose the illimitable and
impassible Father to be limitable withal and passible through His becoming man:
for such are they whom Romans call Patripassians, and we Sabellians. For we
acknowledge that the Father who sent, remained in the peculiar state of His
unchangeable Godhead, and that Christ who was sent fulfilled the economy of the
Incarnation.
(7.) And at the same time those who irreverently say that the Son has been
generated not by choice or will, thus encompassing God with a necessity which
excludes choice and purpose, so that He begat the Son unwillingly, we account as
most irreligious and alien to the Church; in that they have dared to define such
things concerning God, beside the common notions concerning Him, nay, beside the
purport of divinely inspired Scripture. For we, knowing that God is absolute and
sovereign over Himself, have a religious judgment that He generated the Son
voluntarily and freely; yet, as we have a reverent belief in the Son’s words
concerning Himself, ‘The Lord created me a beginning of His ways for His works,’
we do not understand Him to have been originated like the creatures or works
which through Him came to be. For it is irreligious and alien to the
ecclesiastical faith, to compare the Creator with handiworks created by Him, and
to think that He has the same manner of origination with the rest. For divine
Scripture teaches us really and truly that the Only-begotten Son was generated
sole and solely.
Yet, in saying that the Son is in Himself, and both lives and exists like the
Father, we do not on that account separate Him from the Father, imagining place
and interval between their union in the way of bodies. For we believe that they
are united with each other without mediation or distance, and that they exist
inseparable; all the Father embosoming the Son, and all the Son hanging and
adhering to the Father, and alone resting on the Father’s breast continually.
Believing then in the All-perfect Triad, the most Holy, that is, in the Father,
and the Son, and the Holy Ghost, and calling the Father God, and the Son God,
yet we confess in them, not two Gods, but one dignity of Godhead, and one exact
harmony of dominion, the Father alone being Head over the whole universe wholly,
and over the Son Himself, and the Son subordinated to the Father; but, excepting
Him, ruling over all things after Him which through Himself have come to be, and
granting the grace of the Holy Ghost unsparingly to the saints at the Father’s
will. For that such is the account of the Divine Monarchy towards Christ, the
sacred oracles have delivered to us.
Thus much, in addition to the faith before published in epitome, we have been
compelled to draw forth at length, not in any officious display, but to clear
away all unjust suspicion concerning our opinions, among those who are ignorant
of our affairs: and that all in the West may know, both the audacity of the
slanders of the heterodox, and as to the Orientals, their ecclesiastical mind in
the Lord, to which the divinely inspired Scriptures bear witness without
violence, where men are not perverse.
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