|  | READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |  | 
|  | SAINT BASIL THE GREAT
 THE BOOK OF SAINT BASIL ON THE SPIRIT.DE SPIRITU SANCTO.CHAPTER I.
                       Prefatory remarks on the need of exact investigation
                  of the most minute portions of theology.
                       Your desire for information, my right well-beloved and
                  most deeply respected brother Amphilochius, I highly commend, and not less your
                  industrious energy. I have been exceedingly delighted at the care and
                  watchfulness shown in the expression of your opinion that of all the terms
                  concerning God in every mode of speech, not one ought to be left without exact
                  investigation. You have turned to good account your reading of the exhortation
                  of the Lord, “Every one that asketh receiveth, and he that seeketh findeth,” and by your diligence in asking might, I ween,
                  stir even the most reluctant to give you a share of what they possess. And this
                  in you yet further moves my admiration, that you do not, according to the
                  manners of the most part of the men of our time, propose your questions by way
                  of mere test, but with the honest desire to arrive at the actual truth. There
                  is no lack in these days of captious listeners and questioners; but to find a
                  character desirous of information, and seeking the truth as a remedy for
                  ignorance, is very difficult. Just as in the hunter’s snare, or in the
                  soldier’s ambush, the trick is generally ingeniously concealed, so it is with
                  the inquiries of the majority of the questioners who advance arguments, not so
                  much with the view of getting any good out of them, as in order that, in the
                  event of their failing to elicit answers which chime in with their own desires,
                  they may seem to have fair ground for controversy.
                   If “To the fool on his asking for wisdom, wisdom shall
                  be reckoned,” at how high a price shall we value “the wise hearer” who is
                  quoted by the Prophet in the same verse with  the admirable counsellor”? It is right, I ween, to hold him worthy of
                  all approbation, and to urge him on to further progress, sharing his
                  enthusiasm, and in all things toiling at his side as he presses onwards to
                  perfection. To count the terms used in theology as of primary importance, and
                  to endeavour to trace out the hidden meaning in every phrase and in every
                  syllable, is a characteristic wanting in those who are idle in the pursuit of
                  true religion, but distinguishing all who get knowledge of “the mark” “of our
                  calling”; for what is set before us is, so far as is possible with human
                  nature, to be made like unto God. Now without knowledge there can be no making
                  like; and knowledge is not got without lessons. The beginning of teaching is
                  speech, and syllables and words are parts of speech. It follows then that to
                  investigate syllables is not to shoot wide of the mark, nor, because the
                  questions raised are what might seem to some insignificant, are they on that
                  account to be held unworthy of heed. Truth is always a quarry hard to hunt, and
                  therefore we must look everywhere for its tracks. The acquisition of true
                  religion is just like that of crafts; both grow bit by bit; apprentices must
                  despise nothing. If a man despise the first elements as small and
                  insignificant, he will never reach the perfection of wisdom.
                   Yea and Nay are but two syllables, yet there is often
                  involved in these little words at once the best of all good things, Truth, and
                  that beyond which wickedness cannot go, a Lie. But why mention Yea and Nay?
                  Before now, a martyr bearing witness for Christ has been judged to have paid in
                  full the claim of true religion by merely nodding his head? If, then, this be
                  so, what term in theology is so small but that the effect of its weight in the
                  scales according as it be rightly or wrongly used is not great? Of the law we
                  are told “not one jot nor one tittle shall pass away”; how then could it be
                  safe for us to leave even the least unnoticed? The very points which you yourself
                  have sought to have thoroughly sifted by us are at the same time both small and
                  great. Their use is the matter of a moment, and peradventure they are
                  therefore made of small account; but, when we reckon the force of their
                  meaning, they are great. They may be likened to the mustard plant which, though
                  it be the least of shrubseeds, yet when properly
                  cultivated and the forces latent in its germs unfolded, rises to its own
                  sufficient height.
                   If anyone laughs when he sees our subtilty, to use the
                  Psalmist’s words, about syllables, let him know that he reaps laughter’s
                  fruitless fruit; and let us, neither giving in to men’s reproaches, nor yet
                  vanquished by their disparagement, continue our investigation. So far, indeed,
                  am I from feeling ashamed of these things because they are small, that, even if
                  I could attain to ever so minute a fraction of their dignity, I should both
                  congratulate myself on having won high honour, and should tell ray brother and
                  fellow-investigator that no small gain had accrued to him therefrom.
                       While, then, I am aware that the controversy contained
                  in little words is a very great one, in hope of the prize I do not shrink from
                  toil, with the conviction that the discussion will both prove profitable to
                  myself, and that my hearers will be rewarded with no small benefit. Wherefore
                  now with the help, if I may so say, of the Holy Spirit Himself, I will approach
                  the exposition of the subject, and, if you will, that I may be put in the way
                  of the discussion, I will for a moment revert to the origin of the question
                  before us.
                       Lately when praying with the people, and using the
                  full doxology to God the Father in both forms, at one time “with the Son
                  together with the Saint Spirit,” and at another “through the Son in the Saint Spiritt,” I was attacked by some of those present on the ground that I was
                  introducing novel and at the same time mutually contradictory terms.
                       You, however, chiefly with the view of benefiting
                  them, or, if they are wholly incurable, for the security of such as may fall in
                  with them, have expressed the opinion that some clear instruction ought to be
                  published concerning the force underlying the syllables employed. I will
                  therefore write as concisely as possible, in the endeavour to lay down some
                  admitted principle for the discussion.
                       
                   CHAPTER II. The origin of the heretics’ close
                  observation of syllables.
                           The petty exactitude of these men about syllables and
                  words is not, as might be supposed, simple and straightforward; nor is the
                  mischief to which it tends a small one. There is involved a deep and covert
                  design against true religion. Their pertinacious contention is to show that the
                  mention of Father, Son, and Saint Spirit is unlike, as though they will thence
                  find it easy to demonstrate that there is a variation in nature. They have an
                  old sophism, invented by Aetius, the champion of this heresy, in one of whose
                  Letters there is a passage to the effect that things naturally unlike are
                  expressed in unlike terms, and, conversely, that things expressed in unlike
                  terms are naturally unlike. In proof of this statement he drags in the words
                  of the Apostle, “One God and Father of whom are all things, ... and one Lord
                  Jesus Christ by whom are all things.” “Whatever, then,” he goes on, “is
                  the relation of these terms to one another, such will be the relation of the
                  natures indicated by them; and as the term ‘of whom’ is unlike the term ‘by’
                  whom,’ so is the Father unlike the Son.” On this heresy depends the idle
                  subtilty of these men about the phrases in question. They accordingly assign to
                  God the Father, as though it were His distinctive portion and lot, the phrase
                  “of Whom”; to God the Son they confine the phrase “by Whom” ; to the Saint Spirit that of “in Whom,” and say that this use of the syllables is never
                  interchanged, in order that, as I have already said, the variation of language
                  may indicate the variation of nature. Verily it is sufficiently obvious that in
                  their quibbling about the words they are endeavouring to maintain the force of
                  their impious argument.
                   By the term “of whom” they wish to indicate the
                  Creator; by the term “through whom,” the subordinate agent or instrument; by the term “in whom,” or “in which,” they mean to show
                    the time or place. The object of all this is that the Creator of the universe
                    may be regarded as of no higher dignity than an instrument, and that the Holy
                    Spirit may appear to be adding to existing things nothing more than the
                    contribution derived from place or time.
                     
                   CHAPTER III. The systematic discussion of syllables is
                  derived from heathen philosophy.
                           They have, however, been led into this error by their
                  close study of heathen writers, who have respectively applied the terms “of
                  whom” and “through whom” to things which are by nature distinct. These writers
                  suppose that by the term “of whom” or “of which” the matter is indicated, while
                  the term “through whom” or “through which” represents the instrument, or,
                  generally speaking, subordinate agency. Or rather—for there seems no reason
                  why we should not take up their whole argument, and briefly expose at once its
                  incompatibility with the truth and its inconsistency with their own
                  teaching—the students of vain philosophy, while expounding the manifold nature
                  of cause and distinguishing its peculiar significations, define some causes as
                  principal, some as cooperative or con-causal, while others are of the character
                  of sine qua non or indispensable.
                   For every one of these they have a distinct and
                  peculiar use of terms, so that the maker is indicated in a different way from
                  the instrument. For the maker they think the proper expression is “by whom,”
                  maintaining that the bench is produced “by” the carpenter; and for the
                  instrument  through which,” in that it is
                  produced “through” or by means of adze and gimlet and the rest. Similarly they
                  appropriate “of which” to the material, in that the thing made is “of” wood,
                  while “according to which” shows the design, or pattern put before the
                  craftsman. For he either first makes a mental sketch, and so brings his fancy
                  to bear upon what he is about, or else he looks at a pattern previously put
                  before him, and arranges his work accordingly. The phrase “on account of which”
                  they wish to be confined to the end or purpose, the bench, as they say, being
                  produced for, or on account of, the use of man. “In which” is supposed to indicate
                  time and place. When was it produced? In this time. And where? In this place.
                  And though place and time contribute nothing to what is being produced, yet
                  without these the production of anything is impossible, for efficient agents
                  must have both place and time. It is these careful distinctions, derived from
                  unpractical philosophy and vain delusion, which our opponents have first
                  studied and admired, and then transferred to the simple and unsophisticated
                  doctrine of the Spirit, to the belittling of God the Word, and the setting at
                  naught of the Divine Spirit. Even the phrase set apart by non-Christian writers
                  for the case of lifeless instruments or of manual service of the meanest kind,
                  I mean the expression “through or by means of which,” they do not shrink from
                  transferring to the Lord of all, and Christians feel no shame in applying to
                  the Creator of the universe language belonging to a hammer or a saw.
                   
                   CHAPTER IV. That there is no distinction in the
                  scriptural use of these syllables.
                           We acknowledge that the word of truth has in many
                  places made use of these expressions ; yet we absolutely deny that the freedom
                  of the Spirit is in bondage to the pettiness of Paganism. On the contrary, we
                  maintain that Scripture varies its expressions as occasion requires, according
                  to the circumstances of the case. For instance, the phrase “of which” does not
                  always and absolutely, as they suppose, indicate the material, but it is more
                  in accordance with the usage of Scripture to apply this term in the case of the
                  Supreme Cause, as in the words “One God, of whom are all things,” and again,
                  “All things of God.” The word of truth has, however, frequently used this term
                  in the case of the material, as when it says “Thou shalt make an ark of incorruptible wood;” and “Thou shalt make the
                  candlestick of pure gold!”, and “The first man is, of the earth, earthy;” and
                  “Thou art formed out of clay as I am.” But these men, to the end, as we have
                  already remarked, that they may establish the difference of nature, have laid
                  down the law that this phrase befits the Father alone. This distinction they
                  have originally derived from heathen authorities, but here they have shown no
                  faithful accuracy of imitation. To the Son they have in conformity with the
                  teaching of their masters given the title of instrument, and to the Spirit that
                  of place, for they say in the Spirit, and through the Son. But when they apply
                  “of whom” to God they no longer follow heathen example, but go over, as they
                  say, to apostolic usage, as it is said, “But of him are ye in Christ Jesus,”
                  and “All things of God.”  What, then, is
                  the result of this systematic discussion? There is one nature of Cause; another
                  of Instrument; another of Place. So the Son is by nature distinct from the
                  Father, as the tool from the craftsman; and the Spirit is distinct in so far as
                  place or time is distinguished from the nature of tools or from that of them
                  that handle them.
                   
                   CHAPTER V. That  through whom” is said also in the case of the Father, and “of whom"
                  in the case of the Son and of the Spirit.
             After thus describing the outcome of our adversaries’
                  arguments, we shall now proceed to show, as we have proposed, that the Father
                  does not first take “of whom” and then abandon “through whom” to the Son; and
                  that there is no truth in these men’s ruling that the Son refuses to admit the
                  Holy Spirit to a share in “of whom” or in “through whom,” according to the
                  limitation of their new-fangled allotment of phrases. “There is one God and
                  Father of whom are all things, and one Lord Jesus Christ through whom are all
                  things.”
                     Yes; but these are the words of a writer not laying
                  down a rule, but carefully distinguishing the hypostases.
                       The object of the apostle in thus writing was not to
                  introduce the diversity of nature, but to exhibit the notion of Father and of
                  Son as unconfounded. That the phrases are not opposed to one another and do
                  not, like squadrons in war marshalled one against another, bring the natures to
                  which they are applied into mutual conflict, is perfectly plain from the passage
                  in question. The blessed Paul brings both phrases to bear upon one and the same
                  subject, in the words “of him and through him and to him are all things.” That
                  this plainly refers to the Lord will be admitted even by a reader paying but
                  small attention to the meaning of the words. The apostle has just quoted from
                  the prophecy of Isaiah, “Who hath known the mind of the Lord, or who hath been
                  his counsellor, and then goes on, “For of him and from him and to him are all
                  things.” That the prophet is speaking about God the Word, the Maker of all
                  creation, may be learnt from what immediately precedes: “Who hath measured the
                  waters in the hollow of his hand, and meted out heaven with the span, and
                  comprehended the dust of the earth in a measure, and weighed the mountains in
                  scales, and the hills in a balance? Who hath directed the Spirit of the Lord,
                  or being his counsellor hath taught him?” Now the word ‘‘who” in this passage
                  does not mean absolute impossibility, but rarity, as in the passage “ Who will
                  rise up for me against the evil doers?” and “What man is he that desireth life?” and “Who shall ascend into the hill of the
                  Lord?” So is it in the passage in question, “Who hath directed the Spirit of
                  the Lord, or being his counsellor hath known him?” “For the Father loveth the
                  Son and shows him all things.” This is He who holds the earth, and hath grasped
                  it with His hand, who brought all things to order and adornment, who poised the
                  hills in their places, and measured the waters, and gave to all things in the
                  universe their proper rank, who encompasseth the
                  whole of heaven with but a small portion of His power, which, in a figure, the
                  prophet calls a span. Well then did the apostle add  Of him and through him and to him are all
                  things.” For of Him, to all things that are, comes the cause of their being,
                  according to the will of God the Father. Through Him all things have their
                  continuance and constitution, for He created all things, and metes out to each
                  severally what is necessary for its health and preservation. Wherefore to Him
                  all things are turned, looking with irresistible longing and unspeakable
                  affection to “the author”  and maintainer
                  of their life, as it is written “The eyes of all wait upon thee,” and again,
                  “These wait all upon thee,” and “Thou openest thine
                  hand, and satisfiest the desire of every living
                  thing.”
                   But if our adversaries oppose this our interpretation,
                  what argument will save them from being caught in their own trap?
                       They are thus overthrown by their own selves, while
                  our position will be on both sides made sure. Suppose it proved that the
                  passage refers to the Son, “of whom” will be found applicable to the Son.
                  Suppose on the other hand it be insisted that the prophet’s words relate to
                  God, then it will be granted that “through whom” is properly used of God, and
                  both phrases have equal value, in that both are used with equal force of God.
                  Under either alternative both terms, being employed of one and the same Person,
                  will be shown to be equivalent. But let us revert to our subject.
                       In his Epistle to the Ephesians the apostle says, “But
                  speaking the truth in love, may grow up into him in all things, which is the
                  head, even Christ; from whom the whole body fitly joined together and compacted
                  by that which every joint supplieth, according to the
                  effectual working in the measure of every part, maketh increase of the body.”
                   And again in the Epistle to the Colossians, to them
                  that have not the knowledge of the Only Begotten, there is mention of him that holdeth “the head,” that is, Christ, “from which all the
                  body by joints and bands having nourishment ministered increaseth with the increase of God.” And that Christ is the head of the Church we have
                  learned in another passage, when the apostle says “gave him to be the head over
                  all things to the Church,” and “of his fulness have all we received.” And the
                  Lord Himself says “He shall take of mine, and shall show it unto you.” In a
                  word, the diligent reader will perceive that “of whom” is used in diverse
                  manners. For instance, the Lord says, “I perceive that virtue is gone out of
                  me.” Similarly we have frequently observed “of whom” used of the Spirit. “He
                  that soweth to the spirit,” it is said, “ shall of the spirit reap life
                  everlasting.” John too writes, “Hereby we know that he abideth in us by the spirit which he hath given us.” “ That which is conceived in
                  her,” says the angel, “is of the Saint Spirit,” and the Lord says “ that which is
                  born of the spirit is spirit.” Such then is the case so far.
                   It must now be pointed out that the phrase “through
                  whom” is admitted by Scripture in the case of the Father and of the Son and of
                  the Saint Spirit alike. It would indeed be tedious to bring forward evidence of
                  this in the case of the Son, not only because it is perfectly well known, but
                  because this very point is made by our opponents. We now show that “through
                  whom” is used also in the case of the Father. “God is faithful,” it is said, “
                  by whom ye were called unto the fellowship of his Son,” and “Paul an apostle of
                  Jesus Christ by the will of God”; and again, “Wherefore thou art no more a
                  servant, but a son; and if a son, then an heir through God.” And “like as
                  Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of God the Father.” Isaiah,
                  moreover, says, “Woe unto them that make deep counsel and not through the
                  Lord”; and many proofs of the use of this phrase in the case of the Spirit
                  might be adduced. “God hath revealed him to us,” it is said, “by the spirit”;
                  and in another place, “That good thing which was committed unto thee keep by
                  the Saint Spirit”; and again, “To one is given by the spirit the word of wisdom.”
                     In the same manner it may also be said of the word
                  “in,” that Scripture admits its use in the case of God the Father. In the Old
                  Testament it is said through God we shall do valiantly, and, “My praise shall
                  be continually of thee”;  and again, “In
                  thy name will I rejoice.” In Paul we read, “In God who created all things,”
                  and, “Paul and Silvanus and Timotheus unto the church of the Thessalonians in
                  God our Father”; and “if now at length I might have a prosperous journey by the
                  will of God to come to you”; and, “Thou makest thy
                  boast of God.” Instances are indeed too numerous to reckon; but what we want is
                  not so much to exhibit an abundance of evidence as to prove that the
                  conclusions of our opponents are unsound. I shall, therefore, omit any proof of
                  this usage in the cake of our Lord and of the Saint Spirit, in that it is
                  notorious. But I cannot forbear to remark that “the wise hearer” will find
                  sufficient proof of the proposition before him by following the method of
                  contraries. For if the difference of language indicates, as we are told, that
                  the nature has been changed, then let identity of language compel our
                  adversaries to confess with shame that the essence is unchanged.
                   And it is not only in the case of the theology that
                  the use of the terms varies, but whenever one of the terms takes the meaning of
                  the other we find them frequently transferred from the one subject to the
                  other. As, for instance, Adam says, “I have gotten a man through God,” meaning
                  to say the same as from God ; and in another passage “Moses commanded Israel through
                  the word of the Lord,” and, again, “Is not the interpretation through God?”.
                  Joseph, discoursing about dreams to the prisoners, instead of saying “from
                  God,” says plainly “through God.” Inversely Paul uses the term “from whom”
                  instead of “through whom,” when he says “made from a woman” instead of “through
                  a woman”.
                    And this he has plainly distinguished in another passage, where he says that it
                    is proper to a woman to be made of the man, and to a man to be made through the
                    woman, in the words “For as the woman is from the man, even so is the man also
                    through the woman.” Nevertheless in the passage in question the apostle, while
                    illustrating the variety of usage, at the same time corrects obiter the error
                    of those who supposed that the body of the Lord was a spiritual body, and, to
                    show that the Godbearing flesh was formed out of the
                    common lump of human nature, gave precedence to the more emphatic preposition.
                     The phrase “through a woman” would be likely to give
                  rise to the suspicion of mere transit in the generation, while the phrase “of
                  the woman” would satisfactorily indicate that the nature was shared by the
                  mother and the offspring. The apostle was in no wise contradicting himself, but
                  he showed that the words can without difficulty be interchanged. Since,
                  therefore, the term “from whom” is transferred to the identical subjects in the
                  case of which “through whom” is decided to be properly used, with what
                  consistency can these phrases be invariably distinguished one from the other,
                  in order that fault may be falsely found with true religion?
                       
                   CHAPTER VI. Issue joined with those who assert that
                  the Son is not with the Father, but after the Father. Also concerning the equal
                  glory.
                           Our opponents, while they thus artfully and perversely
                  encounter our argument, cannot even have recourse to the plea of ignorance. It
                  is obvious that they are annoyed with us for completing the doxology to the
                  Only Begotten together with the Father, and for not separating the Saint Spirit
                  from the Son. On this account they style us innovators, revolutionizers,
                  phrase-coiners, and every other possible name of insult. But so far am I from
                  being irritated at their abuse, that, were it not for the fact that their loss
                  causes me “heaviness and continual sorrow,” I could almost have said that I was
                  grateful to them for the blasphemy, as though they were agents for providing me
                  with blessing. For “blessed are ye,” it is said, “when men shall revile you for
                  my sake.” The grounds of their indignation are these : The Son, according to
                  them, is not together with the Father, but after the Father. Hence it follows
                  that glory should be ascribed to the Father “through him,” but not “with him;”
                  inasmuch as “with him” expresses equality of dignity, while ‘‘through, him” denotes
                    subordination. They further assert that the Spirit is not to be ranked along
                    with the Father and the Son, but under the Son and the Father; not coordinated,
                    but subordinated ; not connumerated, but subnumerated.
                     With technical terminology of this kind they pervert
                  the simplicity and artlessness of the faith, and thus by their ingenuity,
                  suffering no one else to remain in ignorance, they cut off from themselves the
                  plea that ignorance might demand.
                       Let us first ask them this question : In what sense do
                  they say that the Son is “after the Father”; later in time, or in order, or in
                  dignity? But in time no one is so devoid of sense as to assert that the Maker
                  of the ages holds a second place, when no interval intervenes in the natural
                  conjunction of the Father with the Son. And indeed so far as our conception of
                  human relations goes, it is impossible to think of the Son as being later than
                  the Father, not only from the fact that Father and Son are mutually conceived
                  of in accordance with the relationship subsisting between them, but because
                  posteriority in time is predicated of subjects separated by a less interval from
                  the present, and priority of subjects farther off. For instance, what happened
                  in Noah’s time is prior to what happened to the men of Sodom, inasmuch as Noah
                  is more remote from our own day; and, again, the events of the history of the
                  men of Sodom are posterior, because they seem in a sense to approach nearer to
                  our own day. But, in addition to its being a breach of true religion, is it not
                  really the extremest folly to measure the existence
                  of the life which transcends all time and all the ages by its distance from the
                  present? Is it not as though God the Father could be compared with, and be made
                  superior to, God the Son, who exists before the ages, precisely in the same way
                  in which things liable to beginning and corruption are described as prior to one
                  another?
                   The superior remoteness of the Father is really
                  inconceivable, in that thought and intelligence are wholly impotent to go
                  beyond the generation of the Lord; and St. John has admirably confined the
                  conception within circumscribed boundaries by two words, “In the beginning was
                  the Word.” For thought cannot travel outside “was,” nor imagination beyond “beginning.” Let your
                    thought travel ever so far backward, you cannot get beyond the  was,” and however
                    you may strain and strive to see what is beyond the Son, you will find it
                    impossible to get further than the “beginning." True religion, therefore,
                    thus teaches us to think of the Son together with the Father.
                     If they really conceive of a kind of degradation of
                  the Son in relation to the Father, as though He were in a lower place, so that
                  the Father sits above, and the Son is thrust off to the next seat below, let
                  them confess what they mean. We shall have no more to say. A plain statement of
                  the view will at once expose its absurdity. They who refuse to allow that the
                  Father pervades all things do not so much as maintain the logical sequence of
                  thought in their argument. The faith of the sound is that God fills all things;
                  but they who divide their up and down between the Father and the Son do not remember
                  even the word of the Prophet: “If I climb up into heaven thou art there; if I
                  go down to hell thou art there also.” Now, to omit all proof of the ignorance
                  of those who predicate place of incorporeal things, what excuse can be found
                  for their attack upon Scripture, shameless as their antagonism is, in the
                  passages “Sit thou on my right hand” and “Sat down on the right hand of the
                  majesty of God”? The expression “right hand” does not, as they contend,
                  indicate the lower place, but equality of relation ; it is not understood
                  physically, in which case there might be something sinister about God, but
                  Scripture puts before us the magnificence of the dignity of the Son by the use
                  of dignified language indicating the seat of honour. It is left then for our opponents
                  to allege that this expression signifies inferiority of rank. Let them learn
                  that “Christ is the power of God and wisdom of God,” and that “He is the image
                  of the invisible God” and “brightness of his glory,” and that “Him hath God the
                  Father sealed,” by engraving Himself on Him.
                       Now are we to call these passages, and others like
                  them, throughout the whole of Holy Scripture, proofs of humiliation, or rather
                  public proclamations of the majesty of the Only Begotten, and of the equality
                  of His glory with the Father? We ask them to listen to the Lord Himself,
                  distinctly setting forth the equal dignity of His glory with the Father, in His
                  words, “He that hath seen me hath seen the Father;” and again, “When the Son
                  cometh in the glory of his Father that they “should honour the Son even as they
                  honour the Father;” and, “We beheld his glory, the glory as of the only
                  begotten of the Father; and “the only begotten God which is in the bosom of the
                  Father.” Of all these passages they take no account, and then assign to the Son
                  the place set apart for His foes. A father’s bosom is a fit and becoming seat
                  for a son, but the place of the footstool is for them that have to be forced to
                  fall.
                       We have only touched cursorily on these proofs,
                  because our object is to pass on to other points. You at your leisure can put
                  together the items of the evidence, and then contemplate the height of the
                  glory and the preeminence of the power of the Only
                  Begotten. However, to the well-disposed hearer, even these are not
                  insignificant, unless the terms “right hand” and “bosom” be accepted in a
                  physical and derogatory sense, so as at once to circumscribe God in local
                  limits, and invent form, mould, and bodily position, all of which are totally
                  distinct from the idea of the absolute, the infinite, and the incorporeal.
                  There is moreover the fact that what is derogatory in
                  the idea of it is the same in the case both of the Father and the Son; so that
                  whoever repeats these arguments does not take away the dignity of the Son, but
                  does incur the charge of blaspheming the Father; for whatever audacity a man be
                  guilty of against the Son he cannot but transfer to the Father. If he assigns
                  to the Father the upper place by way of precedence, and asserts that the only
                  begotten Son sits below, he will find that to the creature of his imagination
                  attach all the consequent conditions of body. And if these are the imaginations
                  of drunken delusion and phrensied insanity, can it be
                  consistent with true religion for men taught by the Lord himself that “He that honoureth not the Son honoureth not the Father”  to refuse to worship and
                  glorify with the Father him who in nature, in glory, and in dignity is
                  conjoined with him? What shall we say? What just defence shall we have in the
                  day of the awful universal judgment of all creation, if, when the Lord clearly
                  announces that He will come “in the glory of his Father;” when Stephen beheld
                  Jesus standing at the right hand of God; when Paul testified in the spirit
                  concerning Christ “that he is at the right hand of God;” when the Father says,
                  “Sit thou on my right hand”;  when the
                  Holy Spirit bears witness that he has sat down on “ he right hand of the majesty” of God; we attempt to degrade him who shares the
                  honour and the throne, from his condition of equality, to a lower state?
                  Standing and sitting, I apprehend, indicate the fixity and entire stability of
                  the nature, as Baruch, when he wishes to exhibit the immutability and
                  immobility of the Divine mode of existence, says, “For thou sittest for ever and we perish utterly.” Moreover, the place on the right hand
                  indicates in my judgment equality of honour. Malign, then, is the attempt to
                  deprive the Son of participation in the doxology, as though worthy only to be
                  ranked in a lower place of honour.
                   
                   CHAPTER VII. Against those who assort that it is not
                  proper for “with whom” to be said of the Son, and that the proper phrase is
                  “through whom.”
                           But their contention is that to use the phrase “with
                  him” is altogether strange and unusual, while “through him” is at once most familiar
                  in Holy Scripture, and very common in the language of the brotherhood. What is
                  our answer to this? We say, Blessed are the ears that have not heard you and
                  the hearts that have been kept from the wounds of your words. To you, on the other
                  hand, who are lovers of Christ, I say that the Church recognizes both uses, and
                  deprecates neither as subversive of the other. For whenever we are
                  contemplating the majesty of the nature of the Only Begotten, and the
                  excellence of His dignity, we bear witness that the glory is with the Father;
                  while on the other hand, whenever we bethink us of His bestowal on us of good
                  gifts, and of our access to, and admission into, the household of God, we
                  confess that this grace is effected for us through Him and by Him.
                       It follows that the one phrase “with whom” is the
                  proper one to be used in the ascription of glory, while the other, “through
                  whom,” is specially appropriate in giving of thanks. It is
                    also quite untrue to allege that the phrase “with whom” is unfamiliar
                      in the usage of the devout. All those whose soundness of character leads them
                      to hold the dignity of antiquity to be more honourable than mere new-fangled
                      novelty, and who have preserved the tradition of their fathers unadulterated,
                      alike in town and in country, have employed this phrase. It is, on the
                      contrary, they who are surfeited with the familiar and the customary, and
                      arrogantly assail the old as stale, who welcome innovation, just as in dress
                      your lovers of display always prefer some utter novelty to what is generally
                      worn. So you may even still see that the language of country folk preserves the
                      ancient fashion, while of these, our cunning experts 7 in logomachy, the
                      language bears the brand of the new philosophy.
                       What our fathers said, the same say we, that the glory
                  of the Father and of the Son is common; wherefore we offer the doxology to the
                  Father with the Son. But we do not rest only on the fact that such is the
                  tradition of the Fathers; for they too followed the sense of Scripture, and
                  started from the evidence which, a few sentences back, I deduced from Scripture
                  and laid before you. For “the brightness” is always thought of with “the
                  glory,” “the image” with the archetype, and the Son always and everywhere
                  together with the Father; nor does even the close connexion of the names, much
                  less the nature of the things, admit of separation.
                       
                   CHAPTER VIII. In how many ways “through whom” is used;
                  and in what sense “with whom” is more suitable. Explanation of how the Son
                  receives a commandment, and how He is sent.
                           When, then, the apostle “thanks God through Jesus
                  Christ,” and again says that “through Him” we have “received grace and
                  apostleship for obedience to the faith among all nations,” or “through Him have
                  access unto this grace wherein we stand and rejoice,” he sets forth the boons
                  conferred on us by the Son, at one time making the grace of the good gifts pass
                  through from the Father to us, and at another bringing us to the Father through
                  Himself. For by saying “through whom we have received grace and apostleship,”
                  he declares the supply of the good gifts to proceed from that source; and again
                  in saying “through whom we have had access,” he sets forth our acceptance and
                  being made “of the household of God” through Christ. Is then the confession of
                  the grace wrought by Him to usward a detraction from His glory? Is it not truer
                  to say that the recital of His benefits is a proper argument for glorifying
                  Him? It is on this account that we have not found Scripture describing the Lord
                  to us by one name, nor even by such terms alone as are indicative of His
                  godhead and majesty. At one time it uses terms descriptive of His nature, for
                  it recognises the “name which is above every name,” the name of Son, and speaks
                  of true Son, and only begotten God, and Power of God, and Wisdom, and Word.
                  Then again, on account of the divers manners wherein grace is given to us,
                  which, because of the riches of His goodness, according to his manifold wisdom,
                  he bestows on them that need, Scripture designates Him by innumerable other
                  titles, calling Him Shepherd, King, Physician, Bridegroom, Way, Door, Fountain,
                  Bread, Axe, and Rock. And these titles do not set forth His nature, but, as I
                  have remarked, the variety of the effectual working which, out of His tenderheartedness to His own creation, according to the
                  peculiar necessity of each, He bestows upon them that need. Them that have fled
                  for refuge to His ruling care, and through patient endurance have mended their
                  wayward ways, He calls “sheep,” and confesses Himself
                  to be, to them that hear His voice and refuse to give heed to strange teaching,
                  a “shepherd.” For “my sheep,” He says, “ hear my voice.” To them that have now
                  reached a higher stage and stand in need of righteous royalty, He is a King.
                   And in that, through the straight
                  way of His commandments, He leads men to good actions, and again because
                  He safely shuts in all who through faith in Him betake themselves for shelter
                  to the blessing of the higher wisdom, He is a Door.
                   So He says, “By me if any man enter in, he shall go
                  in and out and shall find pasture.”  Again, because to the faithful He is a defence strong, unshaken, and
                  harder to break than any bulwark, He is a Rock. Among these titles, it is when
                  He is styled Door, or Way, that the phrase “through Him” is very appropriate
                  and plain. As, however, God and Son, He is glorified with and together with the Father, in that “at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in
                  heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth ; and that every tongue
                  should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.” Wherefore we use both
                    terms, expressing by the one His own proper dignity, and by the other His grace
                    to usward.
                     For “through Him” comes every succour to our souls,
                  and it is in accordance with each kind of care that an appropriate title has
                  been devised. So when He presents to Himself the blameless soul, not having
                  spot or wrinkle, like a pure maiden, He is called Bridegroom, but whenever He
                  receives one in sore plight from the devil’s evil strokes, healing it in the
                  heavy infirmity of its sins, He is named Physician. And shall this His care for
                  us degrade to meanness our thoughts of Him? Or, on the contrary, shall it smite
                  us with amazement at once at the mighty power and love to man of the Saviour,
                  in that He both endured to suffer with us in our infirmities, and was able to
                  come down to our weakness? For not heaven and earth and the great seas, not the
                  creatures that live in the water and on dry land, not plants, and stars, and
                  air, and seasons, not the vast variety in the order of the universe, so well
                  sets forth the excellency of His might as that God, being incomprehensible,
                  should have been able, impassibly, through flesh, to have come into close
                  conflict with death, to the end that by His own suffering He might give us the
                  boon of freedom from suffering. The apostle, it is true, says, “In all these
                  things we are more than conquerors through him that loved us.” But in a phrase
                  of this kind there is no suggestion of any lowly and subordinate ministry, but
                  rather of the succour rendered “in the power of his might.” For He Himself has
                  bound the strong man and spoiled his goods, that is, us men, whom our enemy had
                  abused in every evil activity, and made “vessels meet for the Master’s use”,
                  who have been perfected for every work through the making ready of that part of
                  us which is in our own control. Thus we have had our approach to the Father
                  through Him, being translated from “the power of darkness to be partakers of
                  the inheritance of the saints in light.” We must not, however, regard the oeconomy through the Son as a compulsory and subordinate
                  ministration resulting from the low estate of a slave, but rather the voluntary
                  solicitude working effectually for His own creation in goodness and in pity,
                  according to the will of God the Father. For we shall be consistent with true
                  religion if in all that was and is from time to time perfected by Him, we both
                  bear witness to the perfection of His power, and in no case put it asunder from
                  the Father’s will. For instance, whenever the Lord is called the Way, we are
                  carried on to a higher meaning, and not to that which is derived from the
                  vulgar sense of the word. We understand by Way that advance to perfection which
                  is made stage by stage, and in regular order, through the works of
                  righteousness and “the illumination of knowledge ever longing after what is
                  before, and reaching forth unto those things which remain, until we shall have
                  reached the blessed end, the knowledge of God, which the Lord through Himself
                  bestows on them that have trusted in Him. For our Lord is an essentially good
                  Way, where erring and straying are unknown, to that which is essentially good,
                  to the Father. For “no one,” He says, “cometh to the Father but through me.”
                  Such is our way up to God “through the Son.”
                   It will follow that we should next in order point out
                  the character of the provision of blessings bestowed on us by the Father
                  “through him.” Inasmuch as all created nature, both this visible world and all
                  that is conceived of in the mind, cannot hold together without the care and
                  providence of God, the Creator Word, the Only begotten God, apportioning His
                  succour according to the measure of the needs of each, distributes mercies
                  various and manifold on account of the many kinds and characters of the
                  recipients of His bounty, but appropriate to the necessities of individual
                  requirements. Those that are confined in the darkness of ignorance He
                  enlightens: for this reason He is true Light. Portioning requital in accordance
                  with the desert of deeds, He judges: for this reason He is righteous Judge.
                  “For the Father judgeth no man, but hath committed
                  all judgment to the Son.” Those that have lapsed from the lofty height of life
                  into sin He raises from their fall: for this reason He is Resurrection.
                  Effectually working by the touch of His power and the will of His goodness He
                  does all things. He shepherds; He enlightens; He nourishes; He heals; He
                  guides; He raises up; He calls into being things that were not; He upholds what
                  has been created. Thus the good things that come from God reach us “through the
                  Son,” who works in each case with greater speed than speech can utter. For not
                  lightnings, not light’s course in air, is so swift; not eyes’ sharp turn, not the
                  movements of our very thought. Nay, by the divine energy is each one of these
                  in speed further surpassed than is the slowest of all living creatures outdone
                  in motion by birds, or even winds, or the rush of the heavenly bodies; or, not
                  to mention these, by our very thought itself. For what extent of time is needed
                  by Him who “upholds all things by the word of His power,”and works not by bodily agency, nor requires the help of hands to form and fashion,
                  but holds in obedient following and unforced consent the nature of all things
                  that are? So as Judith says, “Thou hast thought, and what things thou didst
                  determine were ready at hand.” On the other hand, and lest we should ever be
                  drawn away by the greatness of the works wrought to imagine that the Lord is without
                  beginning,’ what saith the Self-Existent ? “I live through the Father”, and the
                  power of God; “The Son hath power to do nothing of himself.” And the
                  self-complete Wisdom? I received “a commandment what I should say and what I
                  should speak.” Through all these words He is guiding us to the knowledge of the
                  Father, and referring our wonder at all that is brought into existence to Him,
                  to the end that “through Him” we may know the Father. For the Father is not
                  regarded from the difference of the operations, by the exhibition of a separate
                  and peculiar energy; for whatsoever things He sees the Father doing, ‘‘these
                  also doeth the Son likewise”; but He enjoys our wonder at all that comes to
                  pass out of the glory which comes to Him from the Only Begotten, rejoicing in
                  the Doer Himself as well as in the greatness of the deeds, and exalted by all
                  who acknowledge Him as Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, “through whom are all
                  things, and for whom are all things.” Wherefore, saith the Lord, “All mine are
                  thine,” as though the sovereignty over created things were conferred on Him,
                  and “Thine are mine,” as though the creating Cause came thence to Him. We are
                  not to suppose that He used assistance in His action, or yet was entrusted with
                  the ministry of each individual work by detailed commission, a condition
                  distinctly menial and quite inadequate to the divine dignity. Rather was the
                  Word full of His Father’s excellences; He shines forth from the Father, and
                  does ail things according to the likeness of Him that begat Him. For if in
                  essence He is without variation, so also is He without variation in power. And
                  of those whose power is equal, the operation also is in all ways equal. And
                  Christ is the power of God, and the wisdom of God. And so “all things are made
                  through him,” and “all things were created through him and for him,” not in the
                  discharge of any slavish service, but in the fulfilment of the Father’s will as
                  Creator.
                   When then He says,  I have not spoken of myself,” and again, “As the Father said unto me, so
                  I speak,” and “The word which ye hear is not mine, but the Father’s which sent
                  me,” and in another place, “As the Father gave me commandment, even so I do,”
                  it is not because He lacks deliberate purpose or power of initiation, nor yet
                  because He has to wait for the preconcerted key-note, that he employs language
                  of this kind. His object is to make it plain that His own will is connected in
                  indissoluble union with the Father. Do not then let us understand by what is
                  called a “commandment” a peremptory mandate delivered by organs of speech, and
                  giving orders to the Son, as to a subordinate, concerning what He ought to do.
                  Let us rather, in a sense befitting the Godhead, perceive a transmission of
                  will, like the reflexion of an object in a mirror, passing without note of time
                  from Father to Son. “For the Father loveth the Son and shows him all
                  things,”  so that “all things that the
                  Father hath” belong to the Son, not gradually accruing to Him little by little,
                  but with Him all together and at once. Among men, the workman who has been
                  thoroughly taught his craft, and, through long training, has sure and
                  established experience in it, is able, in accordance with the scientific
                  methods which now he has in store, to work for the future by himself. And are
                  we to suppose that the wisdom of God, the Maker of all creation, He who is
                  eternally perfect, who is wise without a teacher, the Power of God, “in whom
                  are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge,” 1needs piecemeal
                  instruction to mark out the manner and measure of His operations? I presume
                  that in the vanity; of your calculations, you mean to open a school; you will
                  make the one take His seat in the teacher’s place, and the other stand by in a
                  scholar’s ignorance, gradually learning wisdom and advancing to perfection, by
                  lessons given Him bit by bit. Hence, if you have sense to abide by what
                  logically follows, you will find the Son being eternally taught, nor yet ever
                  able to reach the end of perfection, inasmuch as the wisdom of the Father is
                  infinite, and the end of the infinite is beyond apprehension. It results that
                  whoever refuses to grant that the Son has all things from the beginning will
                  never grant that He will reach perfection. But I am ashamed at the degraded
                  conception to which, by the course of the argument, I have been brought down.
                  Let us therefore revert to the loftier themes of our discussion.
                    “He that hath
                  seen me hath seen the Father;” not the express image, nor yet the form, for the
                  divine nature does not admit of combination; but the goodness of the will,
                  which, being concurrent with the essence, is beheld as like and equal, or
                  rather the same, in the Father as in the Son.
                       What then is meant by “became subject”? What by
                  “delivered him up for us all”? It is meant that the Son has it of the Father
                  that He works in goodness on behalf of men. But you must hear too the words,
                  “Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law” and “while we were yet
                  sinners, Christ died for us.”
                   Give careful heed, too, to the words of the Lord, and
                  note how, whenever He instructs us about His Father, He is in the habit of
                  using terms of personal authority, saying, “I will; be thou clean”; and “Peace,
                  be still” and “But I say unto you” and “Thou dumb and deaf spirit, I charge
                  thee and all other expressions of the same kind, in order that by these we
                  may recognise our Master and Maker, and by the former may be taught the Father
                  of our Master and Creator.
                   Thus on all sides is demonstrated the true doctrine
                  that the fact that the Father creates through the Son neither constitutes the
                  creation of the Father imperfect nor exhibits the active energy of the Son as
                  feeble, but indicates the unity of the will; so the expression “through whom”
                  contains a confession of an antecedent Cause, and is not adopted in objection
                  to the efficient Cause.
                       
                   CHAPTER IX. Definitive conceptions about the Spirit
                  which conform to the teaching of the Scriptures.
                           Let us now investigate what are our common conceptions
                  concerning the Saint Spirit, as well those which have been gathered by us from Holy
                  Scripture concerning It as those which we have received from the unwritten
                  tradition of the Fathers. First of all we ask, who on hearing the titles of the
                  Spirit is not lifted up in soul, who does not raise his conception to the
                  supreme nature? It is called “Spirit of God,” “Spirit of truth which proceedeth from the Father,” “right Spirit,” “a leading
                  Spirit.” Its  proper and peculiar title
                  is “Saint Spirit”; which is a name specially appropriate to everything that is
                  incorporeal, purely immaterial, and indivisible. So our Lord, when teaching the
                  woman who thought God to be an object of local worship that the incorporeal is incomprehensible,
                  said “God is a spirit.” On our hearing, then, of a spirit, it is impossible to
                  form the idea of a nature circumscribed, subject to change and variation, or at
                  all like the creature. We are compelled to advance in our conceptions to the
                  highest, and to think of an intelligent essence, in power infinite, in
                  magnitude unlimited, unmeasured by times or ages, generous of It’s good gifts,
                  to whom turn all things needing sanctification, after whom reach all things
                  that live in virtue, as being watered by its inspiration and helped on toward
                  their natural and proper end; perfecting all other things, but Itself in
                  nothing lacking; living not as needing restoration, but as Supplier of life;
                  not growing by additions, but straightway full, self-established, omnipresent,
                  origin of sanctification, light perceptible to the mind, supplying, as it were,
                  through Itself, illumination to every faculty in the search for truth  by nature unapproachable, apprehended by
                  reason of goodness, filling all things with Its power, but communicated only to
                  the worthy; not shared in one measure, but distributing Its energy according to
                  “the proportion of faith”; in essence simple, in powers various, wholly present
                  in each and being wholly everywhere; impassively divided, shared without loss
                  of ceasing to be entire, after the likeness of the sunbeam, whose kindly light
                  falls on him who enjoys it as though it shone for him alone, yet illumines land
                  and sea and mingles with the air. So, too, is the Spirit to everyone who
                  receives It, as though given to him alone, and vet It sends forth grace
                  sufficient and full for all mankind, and is enjoyed by all who share It,
                  according to the capacity, not of Its power, but of their nature.
                   Now the Spirit is not brought into intimate
                  association with the soul by local approximation. How indeed could there be a
                  corporeal approach to the incorporeal? This association results from the
                  withdrawal of the passions which, coming afterwards gradually on the soul from
                  its friendship to the flesh, have alienated it from its close relationship with
                  God. Only then after a man is purified from the shame whose stain he took
                  through his wickedness, and has come back again to his natural beauty, and as
                  it were cleaning the Royal Image and restoring its ancient form, only thus is
                  it possible for him to draw near to the Paraclete. And He, like the sun, will
                  by the aid of thy purified eye show thee in Himself the image of the invisible,
                  and in the blessed spectacle of the image thou shalt behold the unspeakable
                  beauty of the archetype. Through His aid hearts are lifted up, the weak are
                  held by the hand, and they who are advancing are brought to perfection. Shining
                  upon those that are cleansed from every spot, He makes them spiritual by
                  fellowship with Himself. Just as when a sunbeam falls on bright and transparent
                  bodies, they themselves become brilliant too, and shed forth a fresh brightness
                  from themselves, so souls wherein the Spirit dwells, illuminated by the Spirit,
                  themselves become spiritual, and send forth their grace to others. Hence comes
                  foreknowledge of the future, understanding of mysteries, apprehension of what
                  is hidden, distribution of good gifts, the heavenly citizenship, a place in the
                  chorus of angels, joy without end, abiding in God, the being made like to God,
                  and, highest of all, the being made God. Such, then, to instance a few out of
                  many, are the conceptions concerning the Saint Spirit, which we have been
                  taught to hold concerning His greatness, His dignity, and His operations, by
                  the oracles of the Spirit themselves.
                       
                   CHAPTER X. Against those who say that it is not right
                  to rank the Holy Spirit with the Father and the Son.
                           But we must proceed to attack our opponents, in the
                  endeavour to confute those “oppositions” advanced against us which are derived
                  from “knowledge falsely so-called.”
                       It is not permissible, they assert, for the Saint Spirit to be ranked with the Father and Son, on account of the difference of
                  His nature and the inferiority of His dignity. Against them it is right to
                  reply in the words of the apostles, “We ought to obey God rather than men.”
                       For if our Lord, when enjoining the baptism of
                  salvation, charged His disciples to baptize all nations in the name “of the
                  Father and of the Son and of the Saint Spirit,” not disdaining fellowship with
                  Him, and these men allege that we must not rank Him with the Father and the
                  Son, is it not clear that they openly withstand the commandment of God? If they
                  deny that coordination of this kind is declaratory of any fellowship and
                  conjunction, let them tell us why it behoves us to hold this opinion, and what
                  more intimate mode of conjunction they have.
                       If the Lord did not indeed conjoin the Saint Spirit with the
                  Father and Himself in baptism, do not let them lay the blame of conjunction
                  upon us, for we neither hold nor say anything different. If on the contrary the
                  Saint Spirit is there conjoined with the Father and the Son, and no one is so
                  shameless as to say anything else, then let them not lay blame on us for
                  following the words of Scripture.
                       But all the apparatus of war has been got ready
                  against us; every intellectual missile is aimed at us; and now blasphemers’
                  tongues shoot and hit and hit again, yet harder than Stephen of old was smitten
                  by the killers of the Christ. And do not let them succeed in concealing the
                  fact that, while an attack on us serves for a pretext for the war, the real aim
                  of these proceedings is higher. It is against us, they say, that they are
                  preparing their engines and their snares; against us that they are shouting to
                  one another, according to each one’s strength or cunning, to come on. But the
                  object of attack is faith. The one aim of the whole band of opponents and
                  enemies of “sound doctrine” is to shake down the foundation of the faith of
                  Christ by levelling apostolic tradition with the ground, and utterly destroying
                  it. So like the debtors,—of course bona fide debtors,—they clamour for
                  written proof, and reject as worthless the unwritten tradition of the Fathers
                  But we will not slacken in our defence of the truth. We will not cowardly
                  abandon the cause. The Lord has delivered to us as a necessary and saving
                  doctrine that the Holy Spirit is to be ranked with the Father. Our opponents
                  think differently, and see fit to divide and rend1 asunder, and relegate Him to
                  the nature of a ministering spirit. Is it not then indisputable that they make
                  their own blasphemy more authoritative than the law prescribed by the Lord?
                  Come, then, set aside mere contention. Let us consider the points before us, as
                  follows :
                       Whence is it that we are Christians? Through our
                  faith, would be the universal answer. And in what way are we saved? Plainly
                  because we were regenerate through the grace given in our baptism. How else
                  could we be? And after recognising that this salvation is established through
                  the Father and the Son and the Saint Spirit, shall we fling away “that form of
                  doctrine”  which we received? Would it
                  not rather be ground for great groaning if we are found now further off from
                  our salvation “than when we first believed,” and deny now what we then
                  received? Whether a man have departed this life without baptism, or have
                  received a baptism lacking in some of the requirements of the tradition, his
                  loss is equal. And whoever does not always and everywhere keep to and hold fast
                  as a sure protection the confession which we recorded at our first admission,
                  when, being delivered “from the idols,” we came “to the living God,” constitutes
                  himself a “stranger” from the “promise ” of God, fighting against his own
                  handwriting, which he put on record when he professed the faith. For if to me
                  my baptism was the beginning of life, and that day of regeneration the first of
                  days, it is plain that the utterance uttered in the grace of adoption was the
                  most honourable of all. Can I then, perverted by these men’s seductive words,
                  abandon the tradition which guided me to the light, which bestowed on me the
                  boon of the knowledge of God, whereby I, so long a foe by reason of sin, was
                  made a child of God? But, for myself, I pray that with this confession I may
                  depart hence to the Lord, and them I charge to preserve the faith secure until
                  the day of Christ, and to keep the Spirit undivided from the Father and the
                  Son, preserving, both in the confession of faith and in the doxology, the
                  doctrine taught them at their baptism.
                   
                   CHAPTER XI. That they who deny the Spirit are
                  transgressors.
                            “Who hath woe?
                  Who hath sorrow?” For whom is distress and darkness? For whom eternal doom? Is
                  it not for the transgressors? For them that deny the faith? And what is the
                  proof of their denial? Is it not that they have set at naught their own
                  confessions? And when and what did they confess? Belief in the Father and in
                  the Son and in the Saint Spirit, when they renounced the devil and his angels,
                  and uttered those saving words. What fit title then for them has been
                  discovered, for the children of light to use ? Are they not addressed as
                  transgressors, as having violated the covenant of their salvation? What am I to
                  call the denial of God? What the denial of Christ? What but transgressions? And
                  to him who denies the Spirit, what title do you wish me to apply? Must it not
                  be the same, inasmuch as he has broken bis covenant with God ? And when the
                  confession of faith in Him secures the blessing of true religion, and its
                  denial subjects men to the doom of godlessness, is it not a fearful thing for
                  them to set the confession at naught, not through fear of fire, or sword, or
                  cross, or scourge, or wheel, or rack, but merely led astray by the sophistry
                  and seductions of the pneumatomachi? I testify to
                  every man who is confessing Christ and denying God, that Christ will profit him
                  nothing; to every man that calls upon God but rejects the Son, that his faith
                  is vain; to every man that sets aside the Saint Spirit, that his faith in the Father
                  and the Son will be useless, for he cannot even hold it without the presence of
                  the Spirit. For he who does not believe the Saint Spirit does not believe in the Son,
                  and he who has not believed in the Son does not believe in the Father. For none
                  “can say that Jesus is the Lord but by the Saint Spirit,” and “No man hath seen
                  God at any time, but the only begotten God which is in the bosom of the Father,
                  he hath declared him.”
                   Such an one hath neither part nor lot in the true
                  worship ; for it is impossible to worship the Son, save by the Saint Spirit; impossible
                  to call upon the Father, save by the Spirit of adoption.
                       
                   CHAPTER XII. Against those who assert that the baptism
                  in the name of the Father alone is sufficient.
                           Let no one be misled by the fact of the apostle’s
                  frequently omitting the name of the Father and of the Saint Spirit when making
                  mention of baptism, or on this account imagine that the invocation of the names
                  is not observed. “As many of you,” he says, “as were baptized into Christ have
                  put on Christ;” and again, “As many of you as were baptized into Christ were
                  baptized into his death.” For the naming of Christ is the confession of the
                  whole, showing forth as it does the God who gave, the Son who received, and the
                  Spirit who is, the unction. So we have learned from Peter, in the Acts, of “Jesus
                  of Nazareth whom God anointed with the Saint Spirit”; and in Isaiah, “The Spirit
                  of the Lord is upon me, because the Lord hath anointed me”; and the Psalmist,
                  “Therefore God, even thy God, hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above
                  thy fellows.” Scripture, however, in the case of baptism, sometimes plainly
                  mentions the Spirit alone.
                       “For into one Saint Spirit,” it says, “we were all baptized
                  in one body.” And in harmony with this are the passages: “You shall be baptized
                  with the Saint Spirit,” and “He shall baptize you with the Saint Spirit.” But no
                  one on this account would be justified in calling that baptism a perfect
                  baptism wherein only the name of the Saint Spirit was invoked. For the tradition that
                  has been given us by the quickening grace must remain for ever inviolate. He
                  who redeemed our life from destruction gave us power of renewal, whereof the
                  cause is ineffable and hidden in mystery, but bringing great salvation to our
                  souls, so that to add or to take away anything involves manifestly a falling away
                  from the life everlasting. If then in baptism the separation of the Spirit from
                  the Father and the Son is perilous to the baptizer, and of no advantage to the
                  baptized, how can the rending asunder of the Spirit from Father and from Son be
                  safe for us? Faith and baptism are two kindred and inseparable ways of
                  salvation : faith is perfected through baptism, baptism is established through
                  faith, and both are completed by the same names. For as we believe in the
                  Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, so are we also baptized in the name of
                  the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit: first comes the confession,
                  introducing us to salvation, and baptism follows, setting the seal upon our
                  assent.
                       
                   CHAPTER XIII. Statement of the reason why in the writings
                  of Paul the angels are associated with the Father and the Son.
                           It is, however, objected that other beings which are
                  enumerated with the Father and the Son are certainly not always glorified
                  together with them. The apostle, for instance, in his charge to Timothy,
                  associates the angels with them in the words, “I charge thee before God and the
                  Lord Jesus Christ and the elect angels.” We are not for alienating the angels
                  from the rest of creation, and yet, it is argued, we do not allow of their being
                  reckoned with the Father and the Son. To this I reply, although the argument,
                  so obviously absurd is it, does not really deserve a reply, that possibly
                  before a mild and gentle judge, and especially before One who by His leniency
                  to those arraigned before Him demonstrates the unimpeachable equity of His
                  decisions, one might be willing to offer as witness even a fellow-slave; but
                  for a slave to be made free and called a son of God and quickened from death
                  can only be brought about by Him who has acquired natural kinship with us, and
                  has been changed from the rank of a slave. For how can we be made kin with God
                  by one who is an alien? How can we be freed by one who is himself under the
                  yoke of slavery? It follows that the mention of the Saint Spirit and that of angels
                  are not made under like conditions. The Saint Spirit is called on as Lord of life,
                  and the angels as allies of their fellowslaves and
                  faithful witnesses of the truth. It is customary for the saints to deliver the
                  commandments of God in the presence of witnesses, as also the apostle himself
                  says to Timothy, “The things which thou hast heard of me among many witnesses,
                  the same commit thou to faithful men”; and now he calls the angels to witness,
                  for he knows that angels shall be present with the Lord when He shall come in
                  the glory of His Father to judge the world in righteousness. For He says,
                  “Whoever shall confess me before men, him shall the Son of Man also confess
                  before the angels of God, but he that denieth Me
                  before men shall be denied before the angels of God”; and Paul in another place
                  says, “When the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his angels”. Thus
                  he already testifies before the angels, preparing good proofs for himself at
                  the great tribunal.
                   And not only Paul, but generally all those to whom is
                  committed any ministry of the word, never cease from testifying, but call
                  heaven and earth to witness on the ground that now every deed that is done is
                  done within them, and that in the examination of all the actions of life they
                  will be present with the judged. So it is said, “He shall call to the heavens
                  above and to earth, that he may judge his people.” And so Moses when about to
                  deliver his oracles to the people says, “I call heaven and earth to witness
                  this day”; and again in his song he says, “Give ear, O ye heavens, and I will
                  speak, and hear, O earth, the words of my mouth”; and Isaiah, “Hear, O heavens,
                  and give ear, O earth”; and Jeremiah describes astonishment in heaven at the
                  tidings of the unholy deeds of the people: “The heaven was astonished at this,
                  and was horribly afraid, because my people committed two evils.” And so the
                  apostle, knowing the angels to be set over men as tutors and guardians, calls
                  them to witness. Moreover, Joshua, the son of Nun, even set up a stone as
                  witness of his words (already a heap somewhere had been called a witness by
                  Jacob), for he says, “Behold this stone shall be a witness unto you this day to
                  the end of days, when ye lie to the Lord our God,” perhaps believing that by
                  God’s power even the stones would speak to the conviction of the transgressors;
                  or, if not, that at least each man’s conscience would be wounded by the force
                  of the reminder. In this manner they who have been entrusted with the
                  stewardship of souls provide witnesses, whatever they may be, so as to produce
                  them at some future day. But the Spirit is ranked together with God, not on
                  account of the emergency of the moment, but on account of the natural
                  fellowship; is not dragged in by us, but invited by the Lord.
                       
                   CHAPTER XIV. Objection that some were baptized unto
                  Moses and believed in him, and an answer to it; with remarks upon types.
                           But even if some are baptized unto the Spirit, it is
                  not, it is urged, on this account right for the Saint Spirit to be ranked with God.
                  Some “were baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea.” And it is admitted
                  that faith even before now has been put in men; for “The people believed God
                  and his servant Moses.” Why then, it is asked, do we, on account of faith and
                  of baptism, exalt and magnify the Saint Spirit so far above creation, when there
                  is evidence that the same things have before now been said of men? What, then,
                  shall we reply? Our answer is that the faith in the Saint Spirit is the same as the
                  faith in the Father and the Son; and in like manner, too, the baptism. But the
                  faith in Moses and in the cloud is, as it were, in a shadow and type. The
                  nature of the divine is very frequently represented by the rough and shadowy
                  outlines of the types; but because divine things are prefigured by small and human
                  things, it is obvious that we must not therefore conclude the divine nature to
                  be small. The type is an exhibition of things expected, and gives an imitative
                  anticipation of the future. So Adam was a type of “Him that was to come.”  Typically, “That rock was Christ”;  and the water a type of the living power of
                  the word; as He says, “If any man thirst, let him come unto me and drink.” The
                  manna is a type of the living bread that came down from heaven; and the serpent
                  on the standard, of the passion of salvation accomplished by means of the
                  cross, wherefore they who even looked thereon were preserved. So in like
                  manner, the history of the exodus of Israel is recorded to show forth those who
                  are being saved through baptism. For the firstborn of the Israelites were
                  preserved, like the bodies of the baptized, by the giving of grace to them that
                  were marked with blood. For the blood of the sheep is a type of the blood of
                  Christ; and the firstborn, a type of the first-formed. And inasmuch as the
                  first-formed of necessity exists in us, and, in sequence of succession, is
                  transmitted till the end, it follows that “in Adam” we “all die,” and that
                  “death reigned” until the fulfilling of the law and the coming of Christ. And
                  the firstborn were preserved by God from being touched by the destroyer, to
                  show that we who were made alive in Christ no longer die in Adam. The sea and
                  the cloud for the time being led on through amazement to faith, but for the
                  time to come they typically prefigured the grace to be. “Who is wise and he
                  shall understand these things?”—how the sea is typically a baptism bringing about
                  the departure of Pharaoh, in like manner as this washing causes the departure
                  of the tyranny of the devil. The sea slew the enemy in itself: and in baptism
                  too dies our enmity towards God. From the sea the people came out unharmed : we
                  too, as it were, alive from the dead, step up from the water “saved” by the
                  “grace” of Him who called us. And the cloud is a shadow of the gift of the
                  Saint Spirit, who cools the flame of our passions by the “mortification” of our
                  “members.”
                   What then? Because they were typically baptized unto
                  Moses, is the grace of baptism therefore small? Were it so, and if we were in
                  each case to prejudice the dignity of our privileges by comparing them with
                  their types, not even one of these privileges could be reckoned great; then not
                  the love of God, who gave His only begotten Son for our sins, would be great
                  and extraordinary, because Abraham did not spare his own son; then even the
                  passion of the Lord would not be glorious, because a sheep typified the
                  offering instead of Isaac; then the descent into hell was not fearful, because
                  Jonah had previously typified the death in three days and three nights. The
                  same prejudicial comparison is made also in the case of baptism by all who
                  judge of the reality by the shadow, and, comparing the typified with the type,
                  attempt by means of Moses and the sea to disparage at once the whole
                  dispensation of the Gospel. What remission of sins, what renewal of life, is
                  there in the sea? What spiritual gift is there through Moses? What dying1 of
                  sins is there? Those men did not die with Christ; wherefore they were not
                  raised with Him. They did not “bear the image of the heavenly”; they did not
                  “bear about in the body the dying of Jesus”; they did not “put off the old
                  man”; they did not “put on the new man which is renewed in knowledge after the
                  image of Him which created him.” Why then do you compare baptisms which have
                  only the name in common, while the distinction between the things themselves is
                  as great as might be that of dream and reality, that of shadow and figures with
                  substantial existence?
                       But belief in Moses not only does not show our belief
                  in the Spirit to be worthless, but, if we adopt our opponents’ line of argument,
                  it rather weakens our confession in the God of the universe. “The people,” it
                  is written, “believed the Lord and his servant Moses.” Moses then is joined
                  with God, not with the Spirit; and he was a type not of the Spirit, but of
                  Christ. For at that time in the ministry of the law, he by means of himself
                  typified “the Mediator between God and men.” Moses, when mediating for the
                  people in things pertaining to God, was not a minister of the Saint Spirit; for the
                  law was given, “ordained by angels in the hand of a mediator,” namely Moses, in
                  accordance with the summons of the people, “Speak thou with us, ... but let not
                  God speak with us.” Thus faith in Moses is referred to the Lord, the Mediator
                  between God and men, who said, “Had ye believed Moses, ye would have believed
                  me.” Is then our faith in the Lord a trifle, because it was signified
                  beforehand through Moses? So then, even if men were baptized unto Moses, it
                  does not follow that the grace given of the Saint Spirit in baptism is small. I may
                  point out, too, that it is usual in Scripture to say Moses and the law, as in
                  the passage, “They have Moses and the prophets.” When therefore it is meant to
                  speak of the baptism of the law, the words are, “They were baptized unto
                  Moses.”  Why then do these calumniators
                  of the truth, by means of the shadow and the types, endeavour to bring contempt
                  and ridicule on the “rejoicing” of our “hope,” and the rich gift of our God
                  and Saviour, who through regeneration renews our youth like the eagle’s? Surely
                  it is altogether childish, and like a babe who must needs be fed on milk, to be
                  ignorant of the great mystery of our salvation; inasmuch as, in accordance with
                  the gradual progress of our education, while being brought to perfection in
                  our training for godliness, we were first taught elementary and easier lesions,
                  suited to our intelligence, while the Dispenser of our lots was ever leading
                  us up, by gradually accustoming us, like eyes brought up in the dark, to the
                  great light of truth. For He spares our weakness, and in the depth of the
                  riches of His wisdom, and the inscrutable judgments of His intelligence, used
                  this gentle treatment, fitted for our needs, gradually accustoming us to see
                  first the shadows of objects, and to look at the sun in water, to save us from
                  dashing against the spectacle of pure unadulterated light, and being blinded.
                  Just so the Law, having a shadow of things to come, and the typical teaching of
                  the prophets, which is a dark utterance of the truth, have been devised as means
                  to train the eyes of the heart, in that hence the transition to the wisdom
                  hidden in mystery will be made easy. Enough so far concerning types; nor indeed
                  would it be possible to linger longer on this topic, or the incidental
                  discussion would become many times bulkier than the main argument.
                   
                   CHAPTER XV. Reply to the suggested objection that we
                  are baptized “ into water”. Also concerning baptism.
                           What more? Verily, our opponents are well equipped
                  with arguments. We are baptized, they urge, into water, and of course we shall
                  not-honour the water above all creation, or give it a share of the honour of
                  the Father and of the Son. The arguments of these men are such as might be
                  expected from angry disputants, leaving no means untried in their attack on him
                  who has offended them, because their reason is clouded over by their feelings.
                  We will not, however, shrink from the discussion even of these points. If we do
                  not teach the ignorant, at least we shall not turn away before evil doers. But
                  let us for a moment retrace our steps.
                       The dispensation of our God and Saviour concerning man
                  is a recall from the fall, and a return from the alienation caused by disobedience
                  to close communion with God. This is the reason for the sojourn of Christ in
                  the flesh, the pattern life described in the Gospels, the sufferings, the
                  cross, the tomb, the resurrection; so that the man who is being saved through
                  imitation of Christ receives that old adoption. For perfection of life the
                  imitation of Christ is necessary, not only in the example of gentleness,
                  lowliness, and long suffering set us in His life, but also of His actual death.
                  So Paul, the imitator of Christ, says, “being made conformable unto his death;
                  if by any means I might attain unto the resurrection of the dead.”  How then are we made in the likeness of His
                  death?  In that we were buried with Him
                  by baptism. What then is the manner of the burial? And what is the advantage
                  resulting from the imitation? First of all, it is necessary that the
                  continuity of the old life be cut. And this is impossible unless a man be born
                  again, according to the Lord’s word; for the regeneration, as indeed the name
                  shows, is a beginning of a second life. So before beginning the second, it is
                  necessary to put an end to the first. For just as in the case of runners who
                  turn and take the second course, a kind of halt and pause intervenes between
                  the movements in the opposite direction, so also in making a change in lives
                  it seemed necessary for death to come as mediator between the two, ending all
                  that goes before, and beginning all that comes after. How then do we achieve
                  the descent into hell? By imitating, through baptism, the burial of Christ. For
                  the bodies of the baptized are, as it were, buried in the water. Baptism then
                  symbolically signifies the putting off of the works of the flesh; as the
                  apostle says, ye were “circumcised with the circumcision made without hands, in
                  putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by the circumcision of Christ;
                  buried with him in baptism.” And there is, as it were, a cleansing of the soul
                  from the filth that has grown on it from the carnal mind, as it is written,
                  “Thou shalt wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.” On this account we do
                  not, as is the fashion of the Jews, wash ourselves at each defilement, but own
                  the baptism of salvation to be one. For there the death on behalf of the world
                  is one, and one the resurrection of the dead, whereof baptism is a type. For
                  this cause the Lord, who is the Dispenser of our life, gave us the covenant of
                  baptism, containing a type of life and death, for the water fulfils the image
                  of death, and the Saint Spirit gives us the earnest of life. Hence it follows that
                  the answer to our question why the water was associated with the Spirit is
                  clear: the reason is because in baptism two ends were proposed; on the one
                  hand, the destroying of the body of sin, that it may never bear fruit unto
                  death; on the other hand, our living unto the Saint Spirit, and having our fruit in
                  holiness; the water receiving the body as in a tomb figures death, while the
                  Saint Spirit pours in the quickening power, renewing our souls from the deadness of
                  sin unto their original life. This then is what it is to be born again of water
                  and of the Saint Spirit, the being made dead being effected in the water, while our
                  life is wrought in us through the Saint Spirit. In three immersions, then, and with
                  three invocations, the great mystery of baptism is performed, to the end that
                  the type of death may be fully figured, and that by the tradition of the divine
                  knowledge the baptized may have their souls enlightened. It follows that if
                  there is any grace in the water, it is not of the nature of the water, but of
                  the presence of the Spirit. For baptism is “not the putting away of the filth
                  of the flesh, but the answer of a good conscience towards God.” So in training
                  us for the life that follows on the resurrection the Lord sets out all the
                  manner of life required by the Gospel, laying down for us the law of
                  gentleness, of endurance of wrong, of freedom from the defilement that comes of
                  the love of pleasure, and from covetousness, to the end that we may of set
                  purpose win beforehand and achieve all that the life to come of its inherent
                  nature possesses. If therefore any one in attempting a definition were to
                  describe the gospel as a forecast of the life that follows on the resurrection,
                  he would not seem to me to go beyond what is meet and right. Let us now return
                  to our main topic.
                   Through the Saint Spirit comes our restoration to
                  paradise, our ascension into the kingdom of heaven, our return to the adoption
                  of sons, our liberty to call God our Father, our being made partakers of the
                  grace of Christ, our being called children of light, our sharing in eternal
                  glory, and, in a word, our being brought into a state of all “fulness of
                  blessing,” both in this world and in the world to come, of all the good gifts
                  that are in store for us, by promise whereof, through faith, beholding the
                  reflection of their grace as though they were already present, we await the
                  full enjoyment. If such is the earnest, what the perfection? If such the first
                  fruits, what the complete fulfilment? Furthermore, from this too may be
                  apprehended the difference between the grace that comes from the Saint Spirit and the
                  baptism by water: in that John indeed baptized with water, but our Lord Jesus
                  Christ by the Saint Spirit. “I indeed,” he says, “ baptize you with water unto
                  repentance; but he that cometh after me is mightier than I, whose shoes I am
                  not worthy to bear: he shall baptize you with the Saint Spirit and with fire.”
                  Here He calls the trial at the judgment the baptism of fire, as the apostle
                  says, “The fire shall try every man’s work, of what sort it is.” And again,
                  “The day shall declare it, because it shall be revealed by fire.” And ere now
                  there have been some who in their championship of true religion have undergone
                  the death for Christ’s sake, not in mere similitude, but in actual fact, and so
                  have needed none of the outward signs of water for their salvation, because
                  they were baptized in their own blood. Thus I write not to disparage the
                  baptism by water, but to overthrow the arguments of those who exalt themselves
                  against the Spirit; who confound things that are distinct from one another, and
                  compare those which admit of no comparison.
                       
                   CHAPTER XVI.
                         That the Holy Spirit is in every conception
                  inseparable from the Father and the Son, alike in the creation of perceptible
                  objects, in the dispensation of human affairs, and in the judgment to come.
                         Let us then revert to the point raised from the
                  outset, that in all things the Saint Spirit is inseparable and wholly incapable
                  of being parted from the Father and the Son. St. Paul, in the passage about the
                  gift of tongues, writes to the Corinthians, “If ye all prophesy and there come
                  in one that believeth not, or one unlearned, he is convinced of all, he is
                  judged of all; and thus are the secrets of the heart made manifest; and so
                  falling down on his face he will worship God and report that God is in you of a
                  truth.” If then God is known to be in the prophets by the prophesying that is
                  acting according to the distribution of the gifts of the Spirit, let our
                  adversaries consider what kind of place they will attribute to the Holy Spirit.
                  Let them say whether it is more proper to rank Him with God or to thrust Him
                  forth to the place' of the creature. Peter’s words to Sapphira, “How is it that
                  ye have agreed together to tempt the Spirit of the Lord? Ye have not lied unto men,
                  but unto God,” show that sins against the Saint Spirit and against God are the
                  same; and thus you might learn that in every operation the Saint Spirit is closely
                  conjoined with, and inseparable from, the Father and the Son. God works the
                  differences of operations, and the Lord the diversities of administrations, but
                  all the while the Saint Spirit is present too of His own will, dispensing
                  distribution of the gifts according to each recipient’s worth. For, it is said,
                  “there are diversities of gifts, but the same Saint Spirit; and differences of
                  administrations, but the same Lord; and there are diversities of operations,
                  but it is the same God which worketh all in all.”  “But all these,” it is said, “worketh that
                  one and the self-same Saint Spirit, dividing to everyman severally as He will.” It
                  must not however be supposed because in this passage the apostle names in the
                  first place the Saint Spirit, in the second the Son, and in the third God the Father,
                  that therefore their rank is reversed. The apostle has only started in accordance
                  with our habits of thought; for when we receive gifts, the first that occurs to
                  us is the distributer, next we think of the sender, and then we lift out
                  thoughts to the fountain and cause of the boons.
                   Moreover, from the things created at the beginning may
                  be learnt the fellowship of the Saint Spirit with the Father and the Son. The pure,
                  intelligent, and supermundane powers are and are styled holy, because they have
                  their holiness of the grace given by the Saint Spirit. Accordingly the mode of
                  the creation of the heavenly powers is passed over in silence, for the
                  historian of the cosmogony has revealed to us only the creation of things
                  perceptible by sense. But do thou, who hast power from the things that are seen
                  to form an analogy of the unseen, glorify the Maker by whom all things were
                  made, visible and invisible, principalities and powers, authorities, thrones,
                  and dominions, and all other reasonable natures whom we cannot name. And in the
                  creation bethink thee first, I pray thee, of the original cause of all things
                  that are made, the Father; of the creative cause, the Son; of the perfecting
                  cause, the Spirit; so that the ministering spirits subsist by the will of the
                  Father, are brought into being by the operation of the Son, and perfected by
                  the presence of the Spirit. Moreover, the perfection of angels is
                  sanctification and continuance in it. And let no one imagine me either to
                  affirm that there are three original hypostases or to allege the operation of
                  the Son to be imperfect. For the first principle of existing things is One,
                  creating through the Son and perfecting through the Spirit. The operation of
                  the Father who worketh all in all is not imperfect, neither is the creating
                  work of the Son incomplete if not perfected by the Spirit. The Father, who creates
                  by His sole will, could not stand in any need of the Son, but nevertheless He
                  wills through the Son ; nor could the Son, who works according to the likeness
                  of the Father, need co-operation, but the Son too wills to make perfect through
                  the Spirit. “For by the word of the Lord were theheavens made, and all the host of them by the breath [the Spirit] of His mouth.” The
                  Word then is not a mere significant impression on the air, borne by the organs
                  of speech ; nor is the Spirit of His mouth a vapour, emitted by the organs of
                  respiration; but the Word is He who “was with God in the beginning” and “was
                  God,” and the Spirit of the mouth of God is “the Spirit of truth which proceedeth from the Father.” You are therefore to perceive
                  three, the Lord who gives the order, the Word who Creates, and the Saint Spirit who
                  confirms. And what other thing could confirmation be than the perfecting
                  according to holiness? This perfecting expresses the confirmation’s firmness, unchangeableness, and fixity in good. But there is no sanctification
                  without the Saint Spirit. The powers of the heavens are not holy by nature; were it
                  so there would in this respect be no difference between them and the Saint Spirit. It is in proportion to their relative excellence that they have their meed of holiness from the Spirit. The branding-iron is
                  conceived of together with the fire; and yet the material and the fire are
                  distinct. Thus too in the case of the heavenly powers; their substance is,
                  peradventure, an aerial spirit, or an immaterial fire, as it is written, “Who maketh his angels spirits and his ministers a flame of fire”;
                  wherefore they exist in space and become visible, and appear in their proper
                  bodily form to them that are worthy. But their sanctification, being external
                  to their substance, superinduces their perfection through the communion of the
                  Spirit. They keep their rank by their abiding in the good and true, and while
                  they retain their freedom of will, never fall away from their patient
                  attendance on Him who is truly good. It results that, if by your argument you
                  do away with the Spirit, the hosts of the angels are disbanded, the dominions
                  of archangels are destroyed, all is thrown into confusion, and their life loses
                  law, order, and distinctness. For how are angels to cry “Glory to God in the
                  highest” without being empowered by the Saint Spirit? For “No man can say that Jesus
                  is the Lord but by the Saint Spirit, and no man speaking by the Spirit of God
                  calleth Jesus accursed”; as might be said by wicked and hostile spirits, whose
                  fall establishes our statement of the freedom of the will of the invisible
                  powers; being, as they are, in a condition of equipoise between virtue and
                  vice, and on this account needing the succour of the Saint Spirit. I indeed maintain
                  that even Gabriel in no other way foretells events to come than by the
                  foreknowledge of the Saint Spirit, by reason of the fact that one of the boons
                  distributed by the Spirit is prophecy. And whence did he who was ordained to
                  announce the mysteries of the vision to the Man of Desires derive the wisdom whereby
                  he was enabled to teach hidden things, if not from the Holy Spirit? The
                  revelation of mysteries is indeed the peculiar function of the Spirit, as it is
                  written, “God hath revealed them unto us by His Saint Spirit.” And how could
                  “thrones, dominions, principalities and powers” live their blessed life, did
                  they not “behold the face of the Father which is in heaven?” But to behold it
                  is impossible without the Saint Spirit! Just as at night, if you withdraw the light
                  from the house, the eyes fall blind and their faculties become inactive, and
                  the worth of objects cannot be discerned, and gold is trodden on in ignorance
                  as though it were iron, so in the order of the intellectual world it is
                  impossible for the high life of Law to abide without the Spirit. For it so to
                  abide were as likely as that an army should maintain its discipline in the
                  absence of its commander, or a chorus its harmony without the guidance of the
                  coryphaeus. How could the Seraphim Cry  Holy, Holy, Holy,” were they not taught by the Spirit how often true
                  religion requires them to lift their voice in this ascription of glory? Do “all
                  His angels” and “all His hosts” praise God? It is through the co-operation of
                  the Saint Spirit. Do “thousand thousand” of angels stand
                  before Him, and “ten thousand times ten thousand ” ministering spirits ? They
                  are blamelessly doing their proper work by the power of the Spirit. All the
                  glorious and unspeakable harmony of the highest heavens both in the service of
                  God, and in the mutual concord of the celestial powers, can therefore only be
                  preserved by the direction of the Spirit. Thus with those beings who are not
                  gradually perfected by increase and advance,10 but are perfect from the moment
                  of the creation, there is in creation the presence of the Holy Spirit, who confers
                  on them the grace that flows from Him for the completion and perfection of
                  their essence.
                   But when we speak of the dispensations made for man by
                  our great God and Saviour Jesus Christ, who will gainsay their having been
                  accomplished through the grace of the Saint Spirit? Whether you wish to examine
                  ancient evidence;—the blessings of the patriarchs, the succour given through
                  the legislation, the types, the prophecies, the valorous feats in war, the
                  signs wrought through just men;—or on the other hand the things done in the
                  dispensation of the coming of our Lord in the flesh;—all is through the Spirit.
                  In the first place He was made an unction, and being inseparably present was
                  with the very flesh of the Lord, according to that which is written, “Upon whom
                  thou shalt see the Spirit descending and remaining on Him”, the same is “my
                  beloved Son;” and “Jesus of Nazareth” whom “God anointed with the Saint Spirit.”
                  After this every operation was wrought with the co-operation of the Spirit. He
                  was present when the Lord was being tempted by the devil; for, it is said,
                  “Jesus was led up of the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted.” He was
                  inseparably with Him while working His wonderful works; for, it is said, “If I
                  by the Spirit of God cast out devils.” And He did not leave Him when He had
                  risen from the dead; for when renewing man, and, by breathing on the face of
                  the disciples, restoring the grace, that came of the inbreathing of God, which
                  man had lost, what did the Lord say? “Receive ye the Saint Spirit: whose soever
                  sins ye remit, they are remitted unto them; and whose soever ye retain, they
                  are retained.” And is it not plain and incontestable that the ordering of the
                  Church is effected through the Spirit? For He gave, it is said, “in the church,
                  first Apostles, secondarily prophets, thirdly teachers, after that miracles,
                  then gifts of healing, helps, governments, diversities of tongues,” for this
                  order is ordained in accordance with the division of the gifts that are of the
                  Saint Spirit.
                       Moreover by anyone who carefully uses his reason it
                  will be found that even at the moment of the expected appearance of the Lord
                  from heaven the Saint Spirit will not, as some suppose, have no functions to
                  discharge: on the contrary, even in the day of His revelation, in which the blessed
                  and only potentate will judge the world in righteousness, the Saint Spirit will
                  be present with Him. For who is so ignorant of the good things prepared by God
                  for them that are worthy, as not to know that the crown of the righteous is the
                  grace of the Spirit, bestowed in more abundant and perfect measure in that day,
                  when spiritual glory shall be distributed to each in proportion as he shall
                  have nobly played the man? For among the glories of the saints are “many
                  mansions” in the Father’s house, that is differences of dignities: for as “star differeth from star in glory, so also is the
                  resurrection of the dead.” They, then, that were sealed by the Spirit unto the
                  day of redemption, and preserve pure and undiminished the first fruits which
                  they received of the Spirit, are they that shall hear the words “well done thou
                  good and faithful servant; thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will
                  make thee ruler over many things.” In like manner they which have grieved the
                  Saint Spirit by the wickedness of their ways, or have not wrought for Him that
                  gave to them, shall be deprived of what they have received, their grace being
                  transferred to others; or, according to one of the evangelists, they shall even
                  be wholly cut asunder,—the cutting asunder meaning complete separation from the
                  Spirit. The body is not divided, part being delivered to chastisement, and part
                  let off; for when a whole has sinned it were like the old fables, and unworthy
                  of a righteous judge, for only the half to suffer chastisement. Nor is the soul
                  cut in two,—that soul the whole of which possesses the sinful affection
                  throughout, and works the wickedness in co-operation with the body. The cutting
                  asunder, as I have observed, is the separation for aye of the soul from the
                  Spirit. For now, although the Spirit does not suffer admixture with the
                  unworthy, He nevertheless does seem in a manner to be present with them that
                  have once been sealed, awaiting the salvation which follows on their
                  conversion; but then He will be wholly cut off from the soul that has defiled
                  His grace. For this reason “In Hell there is none that maketh confession; in death none that remembereth God,”  because the succour of the Spirit is no
                  longer present. How then is it possible to conceive that the judgment is
                  accomplished without the Holy Spirit, wherein the word points out that He is
                  Himself the prize of the righteous, when instead of the earnest is given that
                  which is perfect, and the first condemnation of sinners, when they are deprived
                  of that which they seem to have ? But the greatest proof of the conjunction of
                  the Spirit with the Father and the Son is that He is said to have the same
                  relation to God which the spirit in us has to each of us. “For what man” it is
                  said, “knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit
                  of man which is in him? even so the things of God knoweth no man but the Spirit of God.”
                   On this point I have said enough.
                       
                   CHAPTER XVII.
                       Against those who say that the Saint Spiritt is not to be
                  numbered with, but numbered under, the Father and the Son. Wherein moreover
                  there is a summary notice of the faith concerning right sub-numeration.
                         What, however, they call subnumeration,
                  and in what sense they use this word, cannot even be imagined without
                  difficulty. It is well known that it was imported into our language from the
                  “wisdom of the world”; “but a point for our present consideration will be
                  whether it has any immediate, relation to the subject under discussion. Those
                  who are adepts in vain investigations tell us that, while some nouns are common
                  and of widely extended denotation, others are more specific, and that the force
                  of some is more limited than that of others. Essence, for instance, is a common
                  noun, predicable of all things both animate and inanimate; while animal is more
                  specific, being predicated of fewer subjects than the former, though of more
                  than those which are considered under it, as it embraces both rational and
                  irrational nature. Again, human is more specific than animal, and man than
                  human, and than man the individua, Peter, Paul or
                  John. Do they then mean by subnumeration the division
                  of the common into its subordinate parts? But I should hesitate to believe they
                  have reached such a pitch of infatuation as to assert that the God of the
                  universe, like some common quality conceivable only by reason and without
                  actual existence in any hypostasis, is divided into subordinate divisions, and
                  that then this subdivision is called subnumeration.
                  This would hardly be said even by men melancholy mad, for, besides its impiety,
                  they are establishing the very opposite argument to their own contention. For
                  the subdivisions are of the same essence as that from which they have been
                  divided. The very obviousness of the absurdity makes it difficult for us to
                  find arguments to confute their unreasonableness; so that really their folly
                  looks like an advantage to them; just as soft and yielding bodies offer no
                  resistance, and therefore cannot be struck a stout blow. It is impossible to
                  bring a vigorous confutation to bear on a palpable absurdity. The only course open
                  to us is to pass by their abominable impiety in silence. Yet our love for the
                  brethren and the importunity of our opponents makes silence impossible.
                   What is it that they maintain? Look at the terms of
                  their imposture. We assert that connumeration is appropriate to subjects of
                  equal dignity, and subnumeration to those which vary
                  in the direction of inferiority.” “Why,” I rejoined,
                  “do you say this? I fail to understand your extraordinary wisdom. Do you mean
                  that gold is numbered with gold, and that lead is unworthy of the
                  connumeration, but, because of the cheapness of the material, is subnumerated to gold? And do you attribute so much
                  importance to number as that it can either exalt the value of what is cheap, or
                  destroy the dignity of what is valuable? Therefore, again, you will number gold
                  under precious stones, and such precious stones as are smaller and without
                  lustre under those which are larger and brighter in colour. But what will not
                  be said by men who spend their time in nothing else but either to tell or to
                  hear some new thing? Let these supporters of impiety be classed for the future
                  with Stoics and Epicureans. What subnumeration is
                  even possible of things less valuable in relation to things very valuable? How
                  is a brass obol to be numbered under a golden stater?
                  “Because,” they reply, “we do not speak of possessing two coins, but one and
                  one.” But which of these is subnumerated to the
                  other? Each is similarly mentioned. If then you number each by itself, you cause an equality of value by numbering them in the
                  same way; but, if you join them, you make their value one by numbering them one
                  with the other. But if the subnumeration belongs to
                  the one which is numbered second, then it is in the power of the counter to
                  begin by counting the brass coin. Let us, however, pass over the confutation of
                  their ignorance, and turn our argument to the main topic.
                   Do you maintain that the Son is numbered under the
                  Father, and the Saint Spirit under the Son, or do you confine your subnumeration to the Saint Spirit alone? If, on the other hand,
                  you apply this subnumeration also to the Son, you
                  revive what is the same impious doctrine, the unlikeness of the substance, the
                  lowliness of rank, the coming into being in later time, and once for all, by
                  this one term, you will plainly again set circling all the blasphemies against
                  the Only-begotten. To controvert these blasphemies would be a longer task than
                  my present purpose admits of; and I am the less bound to undertake it because
                  the impiety has been refuted elsewhere to the best of my ability. If on the
                  other hand they suppose the subnumeration to benefit
                  the Spirit alone, they must be taught that the Spirit is spoken of together
                  with the Lord in precisely the same manner in which the Son is spoken of with
                  the Father. “The name of the Father and of the Son and of the Saint Spirit” is
                  delivered in like manner, and, according to the co-ordination of words
                  delivered in baptism, the relation of the Spirit to the Son is the same as that
                  of the Son to the Father. And if the Saint Spirit is co-ordinate with the Son, and
                  the Son with the Father, it is obvious that the Spirit is also co-ordinate with
                  the Father. When then the names are ranked in one and the same co-ordinate
                  series, what room is there for speaking on the one hand of connumeration, and
                  on the other of subnumeration? Nay, without
                  exception, what thing ever lost its own nature by being numbered? Is it not
                  the fact that things when numbered remain what they naturally and originally
                  were, while number is adopted among us as a sign indicative of the plurality of
                  subjects? For some bodies we count, some we measure, and some we weigh; those
                  which are by nature continuous we apprehend by measure; to those which are
                  divided we apply number (with the exception of those which on account of their
                  fineness are measured); while heavy objects are distinguished by the
                  inclination of the balance. It does not however follow that, because we have
                  invented for our convenience symbols to help us to arrive at the knowledge of
                  quantity, we have therefore changed the nature of the things signified. We do
                  not speak of “weighing under” one another things which are weighed, even though
                  one be gold and the other tin; nor yet do we “measure under” things that are
                  measured; and so in the same way we will not “number under” things which are
                  numbered. And if none of the rest of things admits of subnumeration how can they allege that the Spirit ought to be subnumerated?
                  Labouring as they do under heathen unsoundness, they imagine that things which
                  are inferior, either by grade of rank or subjection of substance, ought to be subnumerated.
                   
                   CHAPTER XVIII.
                       In what manner in the confession of the three
                  hypostases we preserve the pious dogma of the Monarchia.
                  Wherein also is the refutation of them that allege that the Saint Spirit is subnumerated?
                   In delivering the formula of the Father, the Son, and
                  the Saint Spirit,  our Lord did not connect the gift with
                  number. He did not say ‘‘into First, Second, and Third,” nor yet “into one,
                  two, and three, but He gave us the boon of the knowledge of the faith which
                  leads to salvation, by means of holy names. So that what saves us is our faith.
                  Number has been devised as a symbol indicative of the quantity of objects. But
                  these men, who bring ruin on themselves from every possible source, have turned
                  even the capacity for counting against the faith. Nothing else undergoes any
                  change in consequence of the addition of number, and yet these men in the case
                  of the divine nature pay reverence to number, lest they should exceed the
                  limits of the honour due to the Paraclete. But, O wisest sirs, let the
                  unapproachable be altogether above and beyond number, as the ancient reverence
                  of the Hebrews wrote the unutterable name of God in peculiar characters, thus
                  endeavouring to set forth its infinite excellence. Count, if you must; but you
                  must not by counting do damage to the faith. Either let the ineffable be
                  honoured by silence; or let holy things be counted consistently with true
                  religion. There is one God and Father, one Only-begotten, and one Saint Spirit.
                  We proclaim each of the hypostases singly; and, when count we must, we do not
                  let an ignorant arithmetic carry us away to the idea of a plurality of Gods.
                       For we do not count by way of addition, gradually
                  making increase from unity to multitude, and saying one, two, and three,—nor
                  yet first, second, and third. For “I,” God, “am the first, and I am the last.”
                  And hitherto we have never, even at the present time, heard of a second God.
                  Worshipping as we do God of God, we both confess the distinction of the
                  Persons, and at the same time abide by the Monarchy. We do not fritter away the
                  theology in a divided plurality, because one Form, so to say, united in the
                  invariableness of the Godhead, is beheld in God the Father, and in God the
                  Only begotten. For the Son is in the Father and the Father in the Son; since
                  such as is the latter, such is the former, and such as is the former, such is
                  the latter; and herein is the Unity. So that according to the distinction of
                  Persons, both are one and one, and according to the community of Nature, one.
                  How, then, if one and one, are there not two Gods? Because we speak of a king,
                  and of the king’s image, and not of two kings. The majesty is not cloven in
                  two, nor the glory divided. The sovereignty and authority over us is one, and
                  so the doxology ascribed by us is not plural but one; because the honour paid
                  to the image passes on to the prototype. Now what in the one case the image is
                  by reason of imitation, that in the other case the Son is by nature; and as in
                  works of art the likeness is dependent on the form, so in the case 01 the
                  divine and uncompounded nature the union consists in the communion of the
                  Godhead. One, moreover, is the Saint Spirit, and we speak of Him singly, conjoined
                  as He is to the one Father through the one Son, and through Himself completing
                  the adorable and blessed Trinity. Of Him the intimate relationship to the
                  Father and the Son is sufficiently declared by the fact of His not being ranked
                  in the plurality of the creation, but being spoken of singly; for he is not one
                  of many, but One. For as there is one Father and one Son, so is there one Spirit.
                  He is consequently as far removed from created Nature as reason requires the
                  singular to be removed from compound and plural bodies; and He is in such wise
                  united to the Father and to the Son as unit has affinity with unit.
                       And it is not from this source alone that our proofs
                  of the natural communion are derived, but from the fact that He is moreover
                  said to be “of God”; not indeed in the sense in which “all things are of God,”
                  but in the sense of proceeding out of God, not by generation, like the Son, but
                  as Breath of His mouth. But in no way is the “mouth” a member, nor the Saint Spirit
                  breath that is dissolved; but the word “mouth” is used so far as it can be
                  appropriate to God, and the Saint Spirit is a Substance having life, gifted with
                  supreme power of sanctification. Thus the close relation is made plain, while
                  the mode of the ineffable existence is safeguarded. He is moreover styled ‘Spirit
                  of Christ’, as being by nature closely related to Him. Wherefore “If any man
                  have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of His.” Hence He alone worthily
                  glorifies the Lord, for, it is said, “He shall glorify me,” not as the
                  creature, but as “Spirit of truth,” clearly showing forth the truth in Himself,
                  and, as Spirit of wisdom, in His own greatness revealing “Christ the power of
                  God and the wisdom of God.” “And as Paraclete He expresses in Himself the
                  goodness of the Paraclete who sent Him, and in His own dignity manifests the
                  majesty of Him from whom He proceeded. There is then on the one hand a natural
                  glory, as light is the glory of the sun; and on the other a glory bestowed
                  judicially and of free will ‘ab extra’ on them that are worthy. The latter is
                  twofold. “A son,” it is said, “honoureth his father,
                  and a servant his master.” Of these two the one, the servile, is given by the
                  creature; the other, which may be called the intimate, is fulfilled by the
                  Spirit. For, as our Lord said of Himself, “I have glorified Thee on the earth :
                  I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do”;
                  so of the Paraclete He says “He shall glorify me: for He shall receive of mine,
                  and shall show it unto you.” And as the Son is glorified of the Father when He
                  says “I have both glorified it and will glorify it again,” so is the Spirit
                  glorified through His communion with both Father and Son, and through the
                  testimony of the Only-begotten when He says “All manner of sin and blasphemy
                  shall be forgiven unto men: but the blasphemy against the Saint Spirit shall not
                  be forgiven unto men.”
                   And when, by means of the power that enlightens us, we
                  fix our eyes on the beauty of the image of the invisible God, and through the
                  image are led up to the supreme beauty of the spectacle of the archetype, then,
                  I ween, is with us inseparably the Spirit of knowledge, in Himself bestowing on
                  them that love the vision of the truth the power of beholding the Image, not
                  making the exhibition from without, but in Himself leading on to the full
                  knowledge. “No man knoweth the Father save the Son.”
                  And so “no man can say that Jesus is the Lord but by the Spirit.”  For it is not said through the Spirit, but by
                  the Spirit, and “God is a spirit, and they that worship Him must worship Him in
                  spirit and in truth,” as it is written “in thy light shall we see light,”
                  namely by the illumination of the Spirit, “the true light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world.” It results
                  that in Himself He shows the glory of the Only begotten, and on true
                  worshippers He in Himself bestows the knowledge of God. Thus the way of the
                  knowledge of God lies from One Spirit through the One Son to the One Father,
                  and conversely the natural Goodness and the inherent Holiness and the royal
                  Dignity extend from the Father through the Only-begotten to the Spirit. Thus
                  there is both acknowedgment of the hypostases and
                  the true dogma of the Monarchy is not lost. They on the other hand who support
                  their subnumeration by talking of first and second
                  and third ought to be informed that into the undefiled theology of Christians
                  they are importing the polytheism of heathen error. No other result can be
                  achieved by the fell device of subnumeration than the
                  confession of a first, a second, and a third God. For us is sufficient the
                  order prescribed by the Lord. He who confuses this order will be no less guilty
                  of transgressing the law than are the impious heathen.
                   Enough has been now said to prove, in contravention of
                  their error, that the communion of Nature is in no wise dissolved by the manner
                  of subnumeration. Let us, however, make a concession
                  to our contentious and feeble minded adversary, and grant that what is second
                  to anything is spoken of in subnumeration to it. Now
                  let us see what follows. “The first man” it is said “is of the earth earthy,
                  the second man is the Lord from heaven.” Again “that was not first which is
                  spiritual but that which is natural and afterward that which is spiritual.” If
                  then the second is subnumerated to the first, and the subnumerated is inferior in dignity to that to which
                  it was subnumerated, acording to you the spiritual is inferior in honour to the natural, and the heavenly man
                  to the earthy.
                   
                   CHAPTER XIX.
                       Against those who assert that the Saint Spirit ought not to
                  be glorified.
                          “Be it so,” it
                  is rejoined, “but glory is by no means so absolutely
                  due to the Saint Spirit as to require His exaltation by us in doxologies.” Whence
                  then could we get our demonstrations of the dignity of the Saint Spirit, “passing all
                  understanding,” if His communion with the Father and the Son were not reckoned
                  by our opponents as good for testimony of His rank? It is, at all events,
                  possible for us to arrive to a certain extent at intelligent apprehension of
                  the sublimity of His nature and of His unapproachable power, by looking at the
                  meaning of His title, and at the magnitude of His operations, and by His good
                  gifts bestowed on us or rather on all creation. He is called Saint Spirit, as “God is
                  a Spirit,” and “the breath of our nostrils, the anointed of the Lord.” He is
                  called holy, as the Father is holy, and the Son is holy, for to the creature
                  holiness was brought in from without, but to the Spirit holiness is the
                  fulfilment of nature, and it is for this reason that He is described not as
                  being sanctified, but as sanctifying. He is called good, as the Father is good,
                  and He who was begotten of the Good is good, and to the Saint Spirit His goodness is
                  essence. He is called upright, as “the Lord is upright,” in that He is Himself
                  truth, and is Himself Righteousness, having no divergence nor leaning to one
                  side or to the other, on account of the immutability of His substance. He is
                  called Paraclete, like the Only begotten, as He Himself says, “I will ask the
                  Father, and He will give you another comforter.” Thus names are borne by the
                  Spirit in common with the Father and the Son, and He gets these titles from His
                  natural and close relationship. From what other source could they be derived?
                  Again He is called royal, Spirit of truth," and Spirit of wisdom. “The
                  Spirit of God,” it is said “hath made me,” and God filled Bezaleel with “the divine Spirit of wisdom and understanding and knowledge.” Such names
                  as these are supereminent and mighty, but they do not transcend His glory.
                   And His operations, what are they? For majesty
                  ineffable, and for numbers innumerable. How shall we form a conception of what
                  extends beyond the ages? What were His operations before that creation whereof
                  we can conceive? How great the grace which He conferred on creation ? What the
                  power exercised by Him over the ages to come? He existed; He pre-existed; He
                  co-existed with the Father and the Son before the ages. It follows that, even
                  if you can conceive of anything beyond the ages, you will find the Spirit yet
                  further above and beyond. And if you think of the creation, the powers of the
                  heavens were established by the Spirit, the establishment being understood to
                  refer to disability to fall away from good. For it is from the Spirit that the
                  powers derive their close relationship to God, their inability to change to
                  evil, and their continuance in blessedness. Is it Christ’s advent? The Spirit
                  is forerunner. Is there the incarnate presence? The Spirit is inseparable.
                  Working of miracles, and gifts of healing are through the Holy Spirit. Demons
                  were driven out by the Spirit of God. The devil was brought to naught by the
                  presence of the Spirit. Remission of sins was by the gift of the Spirit, for “ye
                  were washed, ye were sanctified, ... in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, and
                  in the Saint Spirit of our God.” There is close relationship with God through
                  the Spirit, for “God hath sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your hearts,
                  crying Abba, Father.” The resurrection from the dead is effected by the
                  operation of the Saint Spirit, for “Thou sendest forth thy
                  spirit, they are created  and Thou renewest the face
                  of the earth.” If here creation may be taken to mean the bringing of the
                  departed to life again, how mighty is not the operation of the Saint Spirit, Who is
                  to us the dispenser of the life that follows on the resurrection, and attunes
                  our souls to the spiritual life beyond ? Or if here by creation is meant the
                  change to a better condition of those who in this life have fallen into sin,
                  (for it is so understood according to the usage of Scripture, as in the words
                  of Paul “if any man be in Christ he is a new creature”), the renewal which
                  takes place in this life, and the transmutation from our earthly and sensuous
                  life to the heavenly conversation which takes place in us through the Spirit,
                  then our souls are exalted to the highest pitch of admiration. With these
                  thoughts before us are we to be afraid of going beyond due bounds in the
                  extravagance of the honour we pay? Shall we not rather fear lest, even though
                  we seem to give Him the highest names which the thoughts of man can conceive
                  fir man’s tongue utter, we let our thoughts about Him fall too low ?
                   It is the Spirit which says, as the Lord says. “Get
                  thee down, and go with them, doubting nothing: for I have sent them.” Are these
                  the words of an inferior, or of one in dread? “Separate me Barnabas and Saul
                  for the work whereunto I have called them.” Does a slave speak thus? And
                  Isaiah, “The Lord God and His Spirit hath sent me,” and “the Spirit came down
                  from the Lord and guided them.” And pray do not again understand by this
                  guidance some humble service, for the Word witnesses that it was the work of
                  God;— “Thou leddest thy people,” it is said “like a
                  flock,” and “ Thou that leadest Joseph like a flock,”
                  and “He led them on safely, so that they feared not.” Thus when you hear that
                  when the Comforter is come, He will put you in remembrance, and “guide you into
                  all truth.” do not misrepresent the meaning.
                   But, it is said that “He maketh intercession for us.” It follows then that, as the suppliant is inferior to the
                  benefactor, so far is the Spirit inferior in dignity to God. But have you never
                  heard concerning the Only-begotten that He “is at the right hand of God, who
                  also maketh intercession for us”? Do not, then,
                  because the Saint Spirit is in you,—if indeed He is at all in you,—nor yet because He
                  teaches us who were blinded, and guides us to the choice of what profits us,—do
                  not for this reason allow yourself to be deprived of the right and holy
                  opinion concerning Him. For to make the loving kindness of your benefactor a
                  ground of ingratitude were indeed a very extravagance of unfairness. “Grieve
                  not the Holy Spirit”; hear the words of Stephen, the first fruits of the
                  martyrs, when he reproaches the people for their rebellion and disobedience;
                  “you do always,” he says, “resist the Saint  Spirit”; and again Isaiah,— “They vexed His
                  Holy Spirit, therefore He was turned to be their enemy”; and in another passage,
                  “the house of Jacob angered the Spirit of the Lord.”  Are not these passages indicative of
                  authoritative power? I leave it to the judgment of my readers to determine what
                  opinions we ought to hold when we hear these passages; whether we are to regard
                  the Spirit as an instrument, a subject, of equal rank with the creature, and a
                  fellow servant of ourselves, or whether, on the contrary, to the ears of the
                  pious the mere whisper of this blasphemy is not most grievous. Do you call the
                  Spirit a servant? But, it is said, “the servant knoweth not what his Lord doeth,” and yet the Spirit knoweth the things of God, as “he spirit of man that is in
                  him.”
                   
                   CHAPTER XX.
                       Against those who maintain that the Saint Spirit is in the
                  rank, neither of a servant nor of a master, but in that of the free.
                         He is not a slave, it is said; not a master, but free.
                  Oh the terrible insensibility, the pitiable audacity, of them that maintain
                  this! Shall I rather lament in them their ignorance or their blasphemy? They
                  try to insult the doctrines that concern the divine nature by comparing them
                  with the human, and endeavour to apply to the ineffable nature of God that
                  common custom of human life whereby the difference of degrees is variable, not
                  perceiving that among men no one is a slave by nature. For men arc cither
                  brought under a yoke of slavery by conquest, as when prisoners are taken in
                  war; or they are enslaved on account of poverty, as the Egyptians were
                  oppressed by Pharaoh; or, by a wise and mysterious dispensation, the worst
                  children are by their fathers’ order condemned to serve the wiser and the
                  better; and this any righteous enquirer into the circumstances would declare
                  to be not a sentence of condemnation but a benefit. For it is more profitable
                  that the man who, through lack of intelligence, has no natural principle of
                  rule within himself, should become the chattel of another, to the end that,
                  being guided by the reason of his master, he may be like a chariot with a
                  charioteer, or a boat with a steersman seated at the tiller. For this reason
                  Jacob by his father’s blessing became lord of Esau, in order that the foolish
                  son, who had not intelligence, his proper guardian, might, even though he
                  wished it not, be benefited by his prudent brother. So Canaan shall be a
                  servant unto his brethren because, since his father Ham was unwise, he was uninstructed
                  in virtue. In this world, then, it is thus that men are made slaves, but they
                  who have escaped poverty or war, or do not require the tutelage of others, are
                  free. It follows that even though one man be called master and another servant,
                  nevertheless, both in view of our mutual equality of rank and as chattels of
                  our Creator, we are all fellow slaves. But in that other world what can you
                  bring out of bondage? For no sooner were they created than bondage was
                  commenced. The heavenly bodies exercise no rule over one another, for they are
                  unmoved by ambition, but all bow down to God, and render to Him alike the awe
                  which is due to Him as Master and the glory which falls to Him as Creator. For
                  “a son honoureth his father and a servant his
                  master,” and from all God asks one of these two things; for “if I then be a
                  Father where is my honour? and if I be a Master where is my fear?” Otherwise
                  the life of all men, if it were not under the oversight of a master, would be
                  most pitiable; as is the condition of the apostate powers who, because they
                  stiffen their neck against God Almighty, fling off the reins of their bondage,—not
                  that their natural constitution is different, but the cause is in their
                  disobedient disposition to their Creator. Whom then do you call free? Him who
                  has no King? Him who has neither power to rule another nor willingness to be
                  ruled ? Among all existent beings no such nature is to be found. To entertain
                  such a conception of the Saint Spirit is obvious blasphemy. If He is a creature of
                  course He serves with all the rest, for “all things,” it is said “are thy
                  servants,” but if He is above Creation, then He shares in royalty.
                   
 CHAPTER XXI.
                       Proof from Scripture that the Saint Spirit is called Lord.
                         But why get an unfair victory for our argument by
                  fighting over these undignified questions, when it is within our power to prove
                  that the excellence of the glory is beyond dispute by adducing more lofty considerations?
                  If, indeed, we repeat what we have been taught by Scripture, every one of the Pneumatomachi will peradventure raise a loud and vehement
                  outcry, stop their ears, pick up stones or anything else that comes to hand for
                  a weapon, and charge against us. But our own security must not be regarded by
                  us before the truth. We have learnt from the Apostle, “the Lord direct your
                  hearts into the love of God and into the patient waiting for Christ” for our
                    tribulations. Who is the Lord that directs into the love of God and into
                  the patient waiting for Christ for tribulations? Let those men answer us who
                  are for making a slave of the Holy Spirit. For if the argument had been about
                  God the Father, it would certainly have said, ‘the Lord direct you into His own
                  love,’ or if about the Son, it would have added ‘into His own patience.’ Let
                  them then seek what other Person there is who is worthy to be honoured with the
                  title of Lord. And parallel with this is that other passage, “and the Lord make
                  you to increase and abound in love one toward another, and toward all men, even
                  as we do towards you; to the end He may establish your hearts unblamable in holiness before God, even our Father, at the
                  coming of our Lord Jesus Christ with all His saints.”  Now what Lord does he entreat to stablish the
                  hearts of the faithful at d Thessalonica, unblamable in holiness before God even our Father, at the coming of our Lord? Let those
                  answer who place the Saint Spirit among the ministering spirits that are sent
                  forth on service. They cannot. Wherefore let them hear yet another testimony
                  which distinctly calls the Spirit Lord. “The Lord,” it is said, “is that
                  Spirit;” and again “even as from the Lord the Spirit.” But to leave no ground
                  for objection, I will quote the actual words of the Apostle;—“For even unto
                  this day remaineth the same veil untaken away in the
                  reading of the Old Testament, which veil is done away in Christ ... Nevertheless,
                  when it shall turn to the Lord, the veil shall be taken away. Now the Lord is
                  that Saint Spirit.”  Why does he speak thus? Because
                  he who abides in the bare sense of the. letter, and in it busies himself with
                  the observances of the Law, has, as it were, got his own heart enveloped in the
                  Jewish acceptance of the letter, like a veil; and this befalls him because of
                  his ignorance that the bodily observance of the Law is done away by the
                  presence of Christ, in that for the future the types are transferred to the
                  reality. Lamps are made needless by the advent of the sun; and, on the
                  appearance of the truth, the occupation of the Law is gone, and prophecy is
                  hushed into silence. He, on the contrary, who has been empowered to look down
                  into the depth of the meaning of the Law, and, after passing through the obscurity
                  of the letter, as through a veil, to arrive within things unspeakable, is like
                  Moses taking off the veil when he spoke with God. He, too, turns from the
                  letter to the Spirit. So with the veil on the face of Moses corresponds the
                  obscurity of the teaching of the Law, and spiritual contemplation with the
                  turning to the Lord. He, then, who in the reading of the Law takes away the
                  letter and turns to the Lord,—and the Lord is now called the Saint Spirit,—becomes
                  moreover like Moses, who had his face glorified by the manifestation of God.
                  For just as objects which lie near brilliant colours are themselves tinted by
                  the brightness which is shed around, so is he who fixes his gaze firmly on the
                  Spirit by the Spirit’s glory somehow transfigured into greater splendour,
                  having his heart lighted up, as it were, by some light streaming from the truth
                  of the Spirit. And this is “being changed from the glory” of the Spirit “into” His own “glory,” not in niggard degree, nor dimly and indistinctly, but as
                  we might expect any one to be who is enlightened by the Spirit. Do you not, O
                  man, fear the Apostle when he says “Ye are the temple of God, and the Spirit of
                  God dwelleth in you”?  Could he ever have
                  brooked to honour with the title of “ temple” the quarters of a slave? How can
                  he who calls Scripture “ God-inspired,” because it was written through the
                  inspiration of the Spirit, use the language of one who insults and belittles
                  Him?
                   
                   CHAPTER XXII.
                       Establishment of the natural communion of the Saint Spirit
                  from His being, equally with the Father and the Son, unapproachable in thought
                         Moreover the surpassing excellence of the nature of
                  the Saint Spirit is to be learned not only from His having the same title as the
                  Father and the Son, and sharing in their operations, but also from His being,
                  like the Father and the Son, unapproachable in thought. For what our Lord says
                  of the Father as being above and beyond human conception, and what He says of
                  the Son, this same language He uses also of the Saint Spirit. “O righteous
                  Father,” He says, “the world hath not known Thee,” meaning here by the world
                  not the complex whole compounded of heaven and earth, but this life of ours
                  subject to death, and exposed to innumerable vicissitudes. And when discoursing
                  of Himself He says, “Yet a little while and the world seeth me no more, but ye see me”; again in this passage, applying the word world to
                  those who being bound down by this material and carnal life, and beholding the
                  truth by material sight alone, were ordained, through their unbelief in the
                  resurrection, to see our Lord no more with the eyes of the heart. And He said
                  the same concerning the Saint Spirit. “The Spirit of truth,” He says, “whom the world
                  cannot receive, because it seeth Him not, neither knoweth Him: but ye know Him, for He dwelleth with you.” For
                  the carnal man, who has never trained his mind to contemplation, but rather
                  keeps it buried deep in the lust of the flesh, as in mud, is powerless to look
                  up to the spiritual light of the truth. And so the world, that is life enslaved
                  by the affections of the flesh, can no more receive the grace of the Spirit
                  than a weak eye the light of a sunbeam. But the Lord, who by His teaching bore
                  witness to purity of life, gives to His disciples the power of now both
                  beholding and contemplating the Spirit. For “now,” He says, “Ye are clean
                  through the word which I have spoken unto you,” wherefore  the world cannot receive Him, because it seeth Him not, but ye know Him; for he dwelleth with
                  you.”  And so says Isaiah: — “He that spread forth the earth and that which
                  cometh out of it; he that giveth breath unto the people upon it, and Spirit to
                  them that trample on it”; for they that trample down earthly things and rise
                  above them are borne witness to as worthy of the gift of the Holy Ghost. What
                  then ought to be thought of Him whom the world cannot receive, and Whom saints
                  alone can contemplate through pureness of heart? What kind of honours can be
                  deemed adequate to Him?
                   
                   CHAPTER XXIII.
                       The glorifying of the Saint Spirit is the enumeration of His
                  attributes.
                         Now of the rest of the Powers each is believed to be
                  in a circumscribed place. The angel who stood by Cornelius was not at one and
                  the same moment with Philip; nor yet did the angel who spoke with Zacharias
                  from the altar at the same time occupy his own post in heaven. But the Spirit
                  is believed to have been operating at the same time in Habakkuk and in Daniel
                  at Babylon, and to have been at the prison with Jeremiah, and with Ezekiel at
                  the Chebar. For the Saint Spirit of the Lord filleth the world,0 and “whither shall I go from thy
                  spirit? or whither shall I flee from thy presence?” And, in the words of the
                  Prophet, “For I am with you, saith the Lord ... and my spirit remaineth among you.” But what nature is it becoming to
                  assign to Him who is omnipresent, and exists together with God? The nature
                  which is all-embracing, or one which is confined to particular places, like
                  that which our argument shews the nature of angels to be? No one would so say.
                  Shall we not then highly exalt Him who is in His nature divine, in His
                  greatness infinite, in His operations powerful, in the blessings He confers,
                  good? Shall we not give Him glory? And I understand glory to mean nothing else
                  than the enumeration of the wonders which are His own. It follows then that
                  either we are forbidden by our antagonists even to mention the good things
                  which flow to us from Him, or on the other hand that the mere recapitulation of
                  His attributes is the fullest possible attribution of glory. For not even in
                  the case of the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ and of the Only
                  begotten Son, are we capable of giving Them glory otherwise than by
                  recounting, to the extent of our powers, all the wonders that belong to Them.
                   
                   CHAPTER XXIV.
                       Proof of the absurdity of the refusal to glorify the
                  Saint Spirit, from the comparison of things glorified in creation.
                         Furthermore man is “crowned with glory and honour,”
                  and “glory, honour and peace” are laid up by promise “to every man that worketh
                  good.” There is moreover a special and peculiar glory for Israelites “to whom,”
                  it is said “pertaineth the adoption and the glory and the service,” and the Psalmist speaks of a certain glory of his own, “that
                  my glory may sing praise to Thee”; and again “Awake up my glory” and according
                  to the Apostle there is a certain glory of sun and moon and stars, and “the
                  ministration of condemnation is glorious.” While then so many things are
                  glorified, do you wish the Saint Spirit alone of all things to be unglorified? Yet
                  the Apostle says “the ministration of the Saint Spirit is glorious.” How then can He
                  Himself be unworthy of glory? How according to the Psalmist can the glory of
                  the just man be great and according to you the glory
                  of the Saint Spirit none? How is there not a plain peril from such arguments of our
                  bringing on ourselves the sin from which there is no escape? If the man who is
                  being saved by works of righteousness glorifies even them that fear the Lord
                  much less would he deprive the Spirit of the glory which is His due.
                   Grant, they say, that He is to be glorified, but not
                  with the Father and the Son. But what reason is there in giving up the place
                  appointed by the Lord for the Saint Spirit, and inventing some other? What reason is
                  there for robbing of His share of glory Him Who is everywhere associated with
                  the Godhead; in the confession of the Faith, in the baptism of redemption, in
                  the working of miracles, in the indwelling of the saints, in the graces
                  bestowed on obedience? For there is not even one single gift which reaches
                  creation without the Saint Spirit; when not even a single word can be spoken in
                  defence of Christ except by them that are aided by the Saint Spirit, as we have
                  learnt in the Gospels from our Lord and Saviour. And I know not whether anyone
                  who has been partaker of the Saint Spirit will consent that we should overlook
                  all this, forget His fellowship in all things, and tear the Spirit asunder from
                  the Father and the Son. Where then are we to take Him and rank Him? With the
                  creature? Yet all the creature is in bondage, but the Spirit maketh free. “And where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is
                  liberty.”  Many arguments might be adduced
                  to them that it is unseemly to coordinate the Saint Spirit with created nature,
                  but for the present I will pass them by. Were I
                  indeed to bring forward, in a manner befitting the dignity of the discussion,
                  all the proofs always available on our side, and so overthrow the objections of
                  our opponents, a lengthy dissertation would be required, and my readers might
                  be worn out by my prolixity. I therefore propose to reserve this matter for a
                  special treatise, and to apply myself to the points now more immediately before
                  us.
                   Let us then examine the points one by one. He is good
                  by nature, in the same way as the Father is good, and the Son is good; the
                  creature on the other hand shares in goodness by choosing the good. He knows
                  “The deep things of God”; the creature receives the manifestation of ineffable
                  things through the Saint Spirit. He quickens together with God, who produces and
                  preserves all things alive, and together with the Son, who gives life. “He
                  that raised up Christ from the dead,” it is said, “shall also quicken your
                  mortal bodies by the spirit that dwelleth in you”; and again “my sheep hear my
                  voice, ... and I give unto them eternal life”; but “the Saint Spirit” also, it is
                  said, “giveth life,”  and again “the
                  Saint Spirit,” it is said, “is life, because of righteousness.” And the Lord bears
                  witness that “it is the Saint Spirit that quickeneth; the
                  flesh profiteth nothing.”  How then shall we alienate the Saint Spirit from His
                  quickening power, and make Him belong to lifeless nature? Who is so contentious,
                  who is so utterly without the heavenly gift, and unfed by God’s good words, who
                  is so devoid of part and lot in eternal hopes, as to sever the Saint Spirit from the
                  Godhead and rank Him with the creature?
                   Now it is urged that the Saint Spirit is in us as a gift
                  from God, and that the gift is not reverenced with the same honour as that
                  which is attributed to the giver. The Saint Spirit is a gift of God, but a gift of
                  life, for the law of “the Spirit of life,” it is said, “hath made ” us “free;”
                  and a gift of power, for “ye shall receive power after that the Saint Spirit is
                  come upon you.”  Is He on this account to be lightly esteemed? Did not God
                  also bestow His Son as a free gift to mankind? “He that spared not His own
                  Son,” it is said, “but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him
                  also freely give us all things?” And in another place, “that we might truly
                  know the things that are freely given us of God,” in reference to the mystery
                  of the Incarnation. It follows then that the maintainers of such arguments, in
                  making the greatness of God’s loving kindness an occasion of blasphemy, have
                  really surpassed the ingratitude of the Jews. They find fault with the Spirit
                  because He gives us freedom to call God our Father. “For God hath sent forth
                  the Spirit of His Son into” our “hearts crying Abba, Father,” that the voice of
                  the Spirit may become the very voice of them that have received him.
                       
                   CHAPTER XXV.
                       That Scripture uses the words “ in ” or “ by," ev, cf. note on p. p, in place of “ with." Wherein
                  also it is proved that the word “and" has the same force as “with."
                   It is, however, asked by our opponents, how it is that
                  Scripture nowhere describes the Saint Spirit as glorified together with the Father
                  and the Son, but carefully avoids the use of the expression “with the Saint Spirit,”
                  while it everywhere prefers to ascribe glory “in Him” as being the fitter
                  phrase. I should, for my own part, deny that the word in [or by] implies lower
                  dignity than the word “with”; I should maintain on the contrary that, rightly
                  understood, it leads us up to the highest possible meaning. This is the case
                  where, as we have observed, it often stands instead of with; as for instance, “I
                  will go into thy house in burnt offerings,” instead of with burnt offerings and
                  “he brought them forth also by silver and gold,”0 that is to say with silver
                  and gold and “thou goest not forth in our armies”
                  instead of with our armies, and innumerable similar passages. In short I should
                  very much like to learn from this newfangled philosophy what kind of glory the Apostle ascribed by the word in, according to
                  the interpretation which our opponents proffer as derived from Scripture, for I
                  have nowhere found the formula “To Thee, O Father, be honour and glory, through
                  Thy only begotten Son, by [or in the Holy Spirit,”—a form which to our
                  opponents comes, so to say, as naturally as the air they breathe. You may
                  indeed find each of these clauses separately, but they will nowhere be able to
                  show them to us arranged in this conjunction. If, then, they want exact conformity
                  to what is written, let them give us exact references. If, on the other hand,
                  they make concession to custom, they must not make us an exception to such a
                  privilege.
                   As we find both expressions in use among the faithful,
                  we use both; in the belief that full glory is equally given to the Saint Spirit by
                  both. The mouths, however, of revilers of the truth
                  may best be stopped by the preposition which, while it has the same meaning as
                  that of the Scriptures, is not so wieldy a weapon for our opponents, (indeed it
                  is now an object of their attack) and is used instead of the conjunction and.
                  For to say “Paul and Silvanus and Timothy” is precisely the same thing as to
                  say Paul with Timothy and Silvanus; for the connexion of the names is preserved
                  by either mode of expression. The Lord says “The Father, the Son and the Saint
                  Spirit.” If I say the Father and the Son with the Saint Spirit shall I make any
                  difference in the sense? Of the connexion of names by means of the conjunction
                  and the instances are many. We read “The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the
                  love of God and the fellowship of the Saint Spirit”, and again “I beseech you
                  for the Lord Jesus Christ’s sake, and for the love of the Saint Spirit.” Now if we
                  wish to use with instead of and, what difference shall we have made? I do not
                  see; unless any one according to hard and fast grammatical rules might prefer
                  the conjunction as copulative and making the union stronger, and reject the
                  preposition as of inferior force. But if we had to defend ourselves on these
                  points I do not suppose we should require a defence of many words. As it is,
                  their argument is not about syllables nor yet about this or that sound of a
                  word, but about things differing most widely in power and in truth. It is for this
                  reason that, while the use of the syllables is really a matter of no importance
                  whatever, our opponents are making the endeavour to authorise some syllables,
                  and hunt out others from the Church. For my own part, although the usefulness
                  of the word is obvious as soon as it is heard, I will nevertheless set forth
                  the arguments which led our fathers to adopt the reasonable course of employing
                  the preposition “with.’' It does indeed, equally well with the preposition “and” confute the mischief of Sabellius;  and it sets forth quite as well as "and”
                  the distinction of the hypostases, as in the words “I and my Father will
                  come,”  and “I and my Father are one.” In
                  addition to this the proof it contains of the eternal fellowship and
                  uninterrupted conjunction is excellent. For to say that the Son is with the
                  Father is to exhibit at once the distinction of the hypostases, and the
                  inseparability of the fellowship. The same thing is observable even in mere
                  human matters, for the conjunction ''and” intimates that there is a common
                  element in an action, while the preposition "with” declares in some sense
                  as well the communion in action. As, for instance; — Paul and Timothy sailed to
                  Macedonia, but both Tychicus and Onesimus were sent to the Colossians. Hence we
                  learn that they did the same thing. But suppose we are told that they sailed
                  with, and were sent with? Then we are informed in addition that they carried
                  out the action in company with one another. Thus while the word “with” upsets
                  the error of Sabellius as no other word can, it routs
                  also sinners who err in the very opposite direction; those, I mean, who
                  separate the Son from the Father and the Spirit from the Son, by intervals of
                  time.
                   As compared with “in” there is this difference, that
                  while ''with” sets forth the mutual conjunction of the parties associated, —as,
                  for example, of those who sail with, or dwell with, or do anything else in
                  common, “ in ” shows their relation to that matter in which they happen to be
                  acting. For we no sooner hear the words “ sail in ” or “dwell in” than we form
                  the idea of the boat or the house. Such is the distinction between these words
                  in ordinary usage; and laborious investigation might discover further
                  illustrations. I have no time to examine into the nature of the syllables.
                  Since then it has been shown that “ with ” most clearly gives the sense of
                  conjunction, let it be declared, if you will, to be under safe-conduct, and
                  cease to wage your savage and truceless war against it. Nevertheless, though
                  the word is naturally thus auspicious, yet if any one likes, in the ascription
                  of praise, to couple the names by the syllable “and,” and to give glory, as we
                  have taught in the Gospel, in the formula of baptism, Father and Son and Saint Spirit, be it so: no one will make any objection. On these conditions, if you
                  will, let us come to terms. But our foes would rather surrender their tongues
                  than accept this word. It is this that rouses against us their implacable and
                  truceless war. We must offer the ascription of glory to God, it is contended,
                  in the Saint Spirit, and not and to the Saint Spirit, and they passionately cling to
                  this word in, as though it lowered the Spirit. It will therefore be not
                  unprofitable to speak at greater length about it; and I shall be astonished if
                  they do not, when they have heard what we have to urge, reject the in as itself
                  a traitor to their cause, and a deserter to the side of the glory of the
                  Spirit.
                   
                   CHAPTER XXVI.
                       That the word “in,” in as many senses as it bears, is
                  understood of the Saint Spirit.
                         Now, short and simple as this utterance is, it
                  appears to me, as I consider it, that its meanings are many and various. For of
                  the senses in which “ in" is used, we find that all help our conceptions
                  of the Spirit. Form is said to be in Matter; Power to be
                  in what is capable of it; Habit to be in him who is affected by it; and
                  so on. Therefore, inasmuch as the Saint Spiritt perfects rational beings,
                  completing their excellence, He is analogous to Form. For he, who no longer
                  “lives after the flesh,” but, being “led by the Spirit of God, is called a Son
                  of God, being conformed to the image of the Son of God,” is described as
                  spiritual. And as is the power of seeing in the healthy eye, so is the
                  operation of the Spirit in the purified soul. Wherefore also Paul prays for the Ephesians that they
                    may have their “eyes enlightened” by “the Spirit of wisdom.” And as the art in
                    him who has acquired it, so is the grace of the Spirit in the recipient ever
                    present, though not continuously in operation. For as the art is potentially in
                    the artist, but only in operation when he is working in accordance with it; so
                    also the Spirit is ever present with those that are worthy, but works, as need
                    requires, in prophecies, or in healings, or in some other actual carrying into
                    effect of His potential action. Furthermore as in our bodies is health, or
                    heat, or, generally, their variable conditions, so, very frequently is the
                    Spirit in the soul; since He does not abide with those who, on account of the
                    instability of their will, easily reject the grace which they have received. An
                    instance of this is seen in Saul, and the seventy elders of the children of
                    Israel, except Eldad and Medad, with whom alone the Spirit appears to have
                    remained, and, generally, any one similar to these in character. And like
                    reason in the soul, which is at one time the thought in the heart, and at
                    another speech uttered by the tongue, so is the Saint Spirit, as when He “beareth witness with our spirit,” and when He “cries in our
                    hearts, Abba, Father,” or when He speaks on our behalf, as it is said, “It is
                    not ye that speak, but the Spirit of your Father which speaketh in you.” Again, Saint Spirit is conceived of, in relation to the distribution of
                    gifts, as a whole in parts. For we all are “members one of another, having
                    gifts differing according to the grace that is given us.” Wherefore “the eye
                    cannot say to the hand, I have no need of thee; nor again the head to the
                    feet, I have no need of you,” but all together complete the Body of Christ in
                    the Unity of the Saint Spirit, and render to one another the needful aid that comes
                    of the gifts. “But God hath set the members in the body, every one of them, as
                    it hath pleased Him.” But  the members have the same care for one another,”  according to the inborn spiritual communion
                    of their sympathy. Wherefore, “whether one member suffer, all the members
                    suffer with it; or one member be honoured, all the members rejoice with it.” And
                    as parts in the whole so are we individually in the Spirit, because we all “were
                    baptized in one body into one Saint Spirit.”
                     It is an extraordinary statement, but it is none the
                  less true, that the Saint Spirit is frequently spoken of as the place of them
                  that are being sanctified, and it will become evident that even by this figure
                  the Saint Spirit, so far from being degraded, is rather glorified. For words
                  applicable to the body are, for the sake of clearness, frequently transferred
                  in scripture to spiritual conceptions. Accordingly we find the Psalmist, even
                  in reference to God, saying “Be Thou to me a champion God and a strong place
                  to save me” and concerning the Saint Spirit “behold there is a place by me, and
                  stand upon a rock.” Plainly meaning the place or contemplation in the Spirit
                  wherein, after Moses had entered thither, he was able to see God intelligibly
                  manifested to him. This is the special and peculiar place of true worship; for
                  it is said “Take heed to thyself that thou offer not thy burnt offerings in
                  every place ... but in the place the Lord thy God shall choose.” Now what is a
                  spiritual burnt offering? “The sacrifice of praise.” And in what place do we
                  offer it? In the Holy Spirit. Where have we learnt this? From the Lord himself
                  in the words “The true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in
                  truth.” This place Jacob saw and said “The Lord is in this place.” It follows
                  that the Spirit is verily the place of the saints and the saint is the proper
                  place for the Spirit, offering himself as he does for the indwelling of God,
                  and called God’s Temple. So Paul speaks in Christ, saying “In the sight of God
                  we speak in Christ,”  and Christ in Paul,
                  as he himself says “Since ye seek a proof of Christ speaking in me.” So also
                  in the Saint Spirit he speaketh mysteries, and; again the
                  Saint Spirit speaks in him.
                   In relation to the originate, then, the Spirit is said
                  to be in them “in divers portions and in divers manners,” while in relation to
                  the Father and the Son it is more consistent with true religion to assert Him
                  not to be in but to be with. For the grace flowing from Him when He dwells in
                  those that are worthy, and carries out His own operations, is well described as
                  existing in those that are able to receive Him. On the other hand His essential
                  existence before the ages, and His ceaseless abiding with Son and Father,
                  cannot be contemplated without requiring titles expressive of eternal conjunction.
                  For absolute and real co-existence is predicated in the case of things which
                  are mutually inseparable. We say, for instance, that heat exists in the hot
                  iron, but in the case of the actual fire it co-exists; and, similarly, that
                  health exists in the body, but that life co-exists with the soul. It follows
                  that wherever the fellowship is intimate, congenital, and inseparable, the word
                  with is more expressive, suggesting, as it does, the idea of inseparable
                  fellowship. Where on the other hand the grace flowing from the Spirit naturally
                  comes and goes, it is properly and truly said to exist in, even if on
                  account of the firmness of the recipients’ disposition to good the grace abides
                  with them continually. Thus whenever we have in mind the Spirit’s proper rank,
                  we contemplate Him as being with the Father and the Son, but when we think of
                  the grace that flows from Him operating on those who participate in it, we say
                  that the Spirit is in us. And the doxology which we offer “in the Saint Spirit” is
                  not an acknowledgment of His rank; it is rather a confession of our own
                  weakness, while we shew that we are not sufficient to glorify Him of ourselves,
                  but our sufficiency 1 is in the Holy Spirit. Enabled in, [or by,] Him we render
                  thanks to our God for the benefits we have received, according to the measure
                  of our purification from evil, as we receive one a larger and another a smaller
                  share of the aid of the Spirit, that we may offer “the sacrifice of praise to
                  God.” According to one use, then, it is thus that we offer our thanksgiving, as
                  the true religion requires, in the Spirit; although it is not quite
                  unobjectionable that any one should testify of himself “the Spirit of God is
                  in me, and I offer glory after being made wise through the grace that flows
                  from Him.” For to a Paul it is becoming to say “I think also that I have the
                  Spirit of God,” and again, “that good thing which was committed to thee keep by
                  the Holy Ghost which dwelleth in us.” And of Daniel it is fitting to say that “the Saint Spirit of God is in him,” and similarly of men who are like these in
                  virtue.
                   Another sense may however be given to the phrase, that
                  just as the Father is seen in the Son, so is the Son in the Spirit. The “worship
                  in the Spirit” suggests the idea of the operation of our intelligence being
                  carried on in the light, as may be learned from the words spoken to the woman
                  of Samaria. Deceived as she was by the customs of her country into the belief
                  that worship was local, our Lord, with the object of giving her better
                  instruction, said that worship ought to be offered “in Spirit and in Truth,”
                  plainly meaning by the Truth, Himself. As then we speak of the worship offered
                  in the Image of God the Father as worship in the Son, so too do we speak of
                  worship in the Spirit as shewing in Himself the Godhead of the Lord. Wherefore
                  even in our worship the Holy Spirit is inseparable from the Father and the Son.
                  If you remain outside the Spirit you will not be able even to worship at all;
                  and on your becoming in Him you will in no wise be able to dissever Him from
                  God;—any more than you will divorce light from visible objects. For it is
                  impossible to behold the Image of the invisible God except by the enlightenment
                  of the Saint Spirit, and impracticable for him to fix his gaze on the Image to
                  dissever the light from the Image, because the cause of vision is of necessity
                  seen at the same time as the visible objects. Thus fitly and consistently do we
                  behold the “Brightness of the glory” of God by means of the illumination of the
                  Spirit, and by means of the “Express Image” we are led up to Him of whom He
                  is the Express Image and Seal, graven to the like.
                       
                   CHAPTER XXVII.
                       Of the origin of the word “with,” and what force it
                  has. Also concerning the unwritten laws of the church.
                         The word “in,” say our opponents, “is exactly
                  appropriate to the Saint Spirit, and sufficient for every thought concerning Him. Why
                  then, they ask, have we introduced this new phrase, saying, “ with the Spirit”
                  instead of  “in the Holy Spirit,” thus
                  employing an expression which is quite unnecessary, and sanctioned by no usage
                  in the churches? Now it has been asserted in the previous portion of this
                  treatise that the word “ in ” has not been specially allotted to the Holy
                  Spirit, but is common to the Father and the Son. It has also been, in my opinion,
                  sufficiently demonstrated that, so far from detracting anything from the
                  dignity of the Spirit, it leads all, but those whose thoughts are wholly
                  perverted, to the sublimest height. It remains for me
                  to trace the origin of the word “with;” to explain what force it has, and to
                  show that it is in harmony with Scripture.
                   Of the beliefs and practices whether generally
                  accepted or publicly enjoined which are preserved in the Church some we
                  possess derived from written teaching; others we have received delivered to us
                  “in a mystery” by the tradition of the apostles; and both of these in relation
                  to true religion have the same force. And these no one will gainsay; —no one,
                  at all events, who is even moderately versed in the institutions of the Church.
                  For were we to attempt to reject such customs as have no written authority, on
                  the ground that the importance they possess is small, we should unintentionally
                  injure the Gospel in its very vitals ; or, rather, should make our public
                  definition a mere phrase and nothing more. For instance, to take the first and
                  most general example, who is there who has taught us in writing to sign with
                  the sign of the cross those who have trusted in the name of our Lord Jesus
                  Christ ? What writing has taught us to turn to the East at the prayer? Which of
                  the saints has left us in writing the words of the invocation at the displaying
                  of the bread of the Eucharist and the cup of blessing? For we are not, as is
                  well known, content with what the apostle or the Gospel has recorded, but both
                  in preface and conclusion we add other words as being of great importance to
                  the validity of the ministry, and these we derive from unwritten teaching. Moreover
                  we bless the water of baptism and the oil of the chrism, and besides this the
                  catechumen who is being baptized. On what written authority do we do this? Is
                  not our authority silent and mystical tradition? Nay, by what written word is
                  the anointing of oil1 itself taught? And whence comes the custom of baptizing
                  thrice? And as to the other customs of baptism from what Scripture do we derive
                  the renunciation of Satan and his angels? Does not this come from that
                  unpublished and secret teaching which our fathers guarded in a silence out of
                  the reach of curious meddling and inquisitive investigation? Well had they
                  learnt the lesson that the awful dignity of the mysteries is best preserved by
                  silence. What the uninitiated are not even allowed to look at was hardly likely
                  to be publicly paraded about in written documents. What was the meaning of the
                  mighty Moses in not making all the parts of the tabernacle open to everyone ?
                  The profane he stationed without the sacred barriers; the first courts he
                  conceded to the purer; the Levites alone he judged worthy of being servants of
                  the Deity; sacrifices and burnt offerings and the rest of the priestly
                  functions he allotted to the priests ; one chosen out of all he admitted to the
                  shrine, and even this one not always but on only one day in the year, and of
                  this one day a time was fixed for his entry so that he might gaze on the Holy
                  of Holies amazed at the strangeness and novelty of the sight. Moses was wise
                  enough to know that contempt attaches to the trite and to the obvious, while a
                  keen interest is naturally associated with the unusual and the unfamiliar. In
                  the same manner the Apostles and Fathers who laid down laws for the Church
                  from the beginning thus guarded the awful dignity of the mysteries in secrecy
                  and silence, for what is bruited abroad at random among the common folk is no
                  mystery at all. This is the reason for our tradition of unwritten precepts
                  and practices, that the knowledge of our dogmas may not become neglected and
                  contemned by the multitude through familiarity. “Dogma” and “Kerugma” are two
                  distinct things; the former is observed in silence ; the latter is proclaimed
                  to all the world. One form of this silence is the obscurity employed in
                  Scripture, which makes the meaning of “dogmas ” difficult to be understood for the
                  very advantage of the reader: Thus we all look to the East at our prayers, but
                  few of us know that we are seeking our own old country, Paradise, which God
                  planted in Eden. in the East. We pray standing, on the first day of the week,
                  but we do not all know the reason. On the day of the resurrection (or “standing
                  again”) we remind ourselves of the grace given to us by standing at prayer, not only because we rose with Christ, and are bound to “seek those things which are
                  above,” but because the day seems to us to be in some sense an image of the age
                  which we expect, wherefore, though it is the beginning of days, it is not
                  called by Moses first, but one. For he says “There was evening, and there was
                  morning, one day,” as though the same day often recurred. Now “one” and
                  “eighth’’ are the same, in itself distinctly indicating that really “one” and “
                  eighth ” of which the Psalmist makes mention in certain titles of the Psalms,
                  the state which follows after this present time, the day which knows no waning
                  or eventide, and no successor, that age which endeth not or groweth old. Of necessity, then, the church
                  teaches her own foster children to offer their prayers on that day standing, to
                  the end that through continual reminder of the endless life we may not neglect
                  to make provision for our removal thither. Moreover all Pentecost is a reminder
                  of the resurrection expected in the age to come. For that one and first day,
                  if seven times multiplied by seven, completes the seven weeks of the holy
                  Pentecost; for, beginning at the first, Pentecost ends with the same, making
                  fifty revolutions through the like intervening days. And so it is a likeness of
                  eternity, beginning as it does and ending, as in a circling course, at the same
                  point. On this day the rules of the church have educated us to prefer the
                  upright attitude of prayer, for by their plain reminder they, as it were, make
                  our mind to dwell no longer in the present but in the future. Moreover every
                  time we fall upon our knees and rise from off them we show by the very deed
                  that by our sin we fell down to earth, and by the loving kindness of our
                  Creator were called back to heaven.
                   Time will fail me if I attempt to recount the
                  unwritten mysteries of the Church. Of the rest I say nothing; but of the very
                  confession of our faith in Father, Son, and Saint Spirit, what is the written
                  source? If it be granted that, as we are baptized, so also under the obligation
                  to believe, we make our confession in like terms as our baptism, in accordance
                  with the tradition of our baptism and in conformity with the principles of
                  true religion, let our opponents grant us too the
                  right to be as consistent in our ascription of glory as in our confession of
                  faith. If they deprecate our doxology on the ground that it lacks written
                  authority, let them give us the written evidence for the confession of our
                  faith and the other matters which we have enumerated. While the unwritten
                  traditions are so many, and their bearing on “the mystery of godliness is so
                  important, can they refuse to allow us a single word which has come down to us
                  from the Fathers;—which we found, derived from untutored custom, abiding in unperverted churches;—a word for which the arguments are
                  strong, and which contributes in no small degree to the completeness of the
                  force of the mystery?
                   The force of both expressions has now been explained.
                  I will proceed to state once more wherein they agree and wherein they differ
                  from one another;—not that they are opposed in mutual antagonism, but that each
                  contributes its own meaning to true religion. The preposition “-in” states the
                  truth rather relatively to ourselves; while “ with” proclaims the fellowship of
                  the Saint Spirit with God. Wherefore we use both words, by the one expressing the
                  dignity of the Spirit; by the other announcing the grace that is with us. Thus
                  we ascribe glory to God both “ in” the Spirit, and “ with” the Spirit; and
                  herein it is not our word that we use, but we follow the teaching of the Lord
                  as we might a fixed rule, and transfer His word to things connected and closely
                  related, and of which the conjunction in the mysteries is necessary. We have
                  deemed ourselves under a necessary obligation to combine in our confession of
                  the faith Him who is numbered with Them at Baptism, and we have treated the
                  confession of the faith as the origin and parent of the doxology. What, then,
                  is to be done ? They must now instruct us either not to baptize as we have
                  received, or not to believe as we were baptized, or not to ascribe glory as we
                  have believed. Let any man prove if he can that the relation of sequence in
                  these acts is not necessary and unbroken; or let any man deny if he can that
                  innovation here must mean ruin everywhere. Yet they never stop dinning in our ears
                  that the ascription of glory “with” the Holy Spirit is unauthorized and unscriptural and the like. We have stated
                    that so far as the sense goes it is the same to say “glory be to the
                      Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit,” and glory be to
                        the Father and to the Son with the Saint Spirit.” It is impossible
                          for any one to reject or cancel the syllable “and,” which is
                            derived from the very words of our Lord, and there is nothing to hinder the
                            acceptance of its equivalent. What amount of difference and similarity there is
                            between the two we have already shewn. And our argument is confirmed by the
                            fact that the Apostle uses either word indifferently,—saying at one time “in
                            the name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God;” at another “ when
                            ye are gathered together, and my Spirit, with the power of our Lord Jesus,”  with no idea that it makes any difference to
                            the connexion of the names whether he use the conjunction or the preposition.
                             
                   CHAPTER XXVIII.
                       That our opponents refuse to concede in the case of
                  the Saint Spirit the terms which Scripture uses in the case of men, as reigning
                  together with Christ.
                         But let us see if we can bethink us of any defence of
                  this usage of our fathers; for they who first originated the expression are more
                  open to blame than we ourselves. Paul in his Letter to the Colossians says,
                  “And you, being dead in your sins and the uncircumcision ... hath
                  He quickened together with” Christ. Did then God give to a whole people and to
                  the Church the boon of the life with Christ, and yet the life with Christ does
                  not belong to the Holy Spirit? But if this is impious even to think of, is it
                  not rightly reverent so to make our confession, as They are by nature in close
                  conjunction? Furthermore what boundless lack of sensibility does it not show in
                  these men to confess that the Saints are with Christ, (if, as we know is the
                  case, Paul, on becoming absent from the body, is present with the Lord, and,
                  after departing, is with Christ) and, so far as lies in their power, to refuse
                  to allow to the Saint Spirit to be with Christ even to the same extent as men? And
                  Paul calls himself a “labourer together with God” in the dispensation of the
                  Gospel; will they bring an indictment for impiety against us, if we apply the
                  term “fellow-labourer” to the Saint Spirit, through whom in every creature
                  under heaven the Gospel bringeth forth fruit? The life of them that have
                  trusted in the Lord “ is hidden,” it would seem, “with Christ in God, and when
                  Christ, who is our life, shall appear, then shall” they themselves also
                  “appear with Him in glory;” and is the Spirit of life Himself, “ Who made us
                  free from the law of sin,” not with Christ, both in the secret and hidden life
                  with Him, and in the manifestation of the glory which we expect to be
                  manifested in the saints? We are “heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ,”
                  and is the Saint Spirit without part or lot in the fellowship of God and of His
                  Christ? “The Saint Spirit itself beareth witness with our
                  spirit that we are the sons of God;” and are we not to allow to the Spirit
                  even that testimony of His fellowship with God which we have learnt from the
                  Lord? For the height of folly is reached if we through the faith in Christ
                  which is in the Spirit hope that we shall be raised together with Him and sit
                  together in heavenly places,10 whenever He shall change our vile body from the
                  natural to the spiritual,11 and yet refuse to assign to the Spirit any share in
                  the sitting together, or in the glory, or anything else which we have received
                  from Him. Of all the boons of which, in accordance with the indefeasible grant
                  of Him who has promised them, we have believed ourselves worthy, are we to
                  allow none to the Saint Spirit, as though they were all above His dignity? It is
                  yours according to your merit to be “ever with the Lord,” and you expect to be
                  caught up “ in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air and to be ever with the
                  Lord.” You declare the man who numbers and ranks the Saint Spirit with the Father and
                  the Son to be guilty of intolerable impiety. Can you really now deny that the
                  Saint Spirit is with Christ?
                   I am ashamed to add the rest. You expect to be
                  glorified together with Christ; (“if so be that we suffer with him that we may
                  be also glorified together”;) but you do not glorify the “Spirit of holiness” together
                  with Christ, as though He were not worthy to receive equal honour even with
                  you. You hope to “ reign with ” Christ; but you “ do despite unto the Spirit of
                  grace” by assigning Him the rank of a slave and a subordinate. And I say this
                  not to demonstrate that so much is due to the Spirit in the ascription of
                  glory, but to prove the unfairness of those who will not ever give so much as
                  this, and shrink from the fellowship of the Spirit with Son and Father as from
                  impiety. Who could touch on these things without a sigh? Is it not so plain as
                  to be within the perception even of a child that this present state of things
                  preludes the threatened eclipse of the faith? The undeniable has become the
                  uncertain. We profess belief in the Spirit, and then we quarrel with our own
                  confessions. We are baptized, and begin to fight again. We call upon Him as the
                  Prince of Life, and then despise Him as a slave like ourselves. We received Him
                  with the Father and the Son, and we dishonour Him as a part of creation. Those
                  who “know not what they ought to pray for,” even though they be induced to
                  utter a word of the Saint Spirit with awe, as though coming near His dignity, yet
                  prune down all that exceeds the exact proportion of their speech. They ought
                  rather to bewail their weakness, in that we are powerless to express in words
                  our gratitude for the benefits which we are actually receiving ; for He “passes all understanding,” and convicts speech of its natural inability even to
                  approach His dignity in the least degree; as it is written in the Book of
                  Wisdom, “Exalt Him as much as you can, for even yet will He far exceed; and
                  when you exalt Him put forth all your strength, and be not weary, for you can
                  never go far enough.” Verily terrible is the account to be given for words of
                  this kind by you who have heard from God who cannot lie that for blasphemy
                  against the Saint Spirit there is no forgiveness.
                       
                   CHAPTER XXIX.
                       Enumeration of the illustrious men in the Church who
                  in their writings have used the word “ with ”.
                       In answer to the objection that the doxology in the
                  form “with the Saint Spirit” has no written authority, we maintain that if there is no
                  other instance of that which is unwritten, then this must not be received. But
                  if the greater number of our mysteries are admitted into our constitution
                  without written authority, then, in company with the many others, let us
                  receive this one. For I hold it apostolic to abide also by the unwritten
                  traditions. “I praise you,” it is said, “that ye remember me in all things, and
                  keep the ordinances as I delivered them to you”; and “Hold fast the traditions
                  which ye have been taught whether by word, or our Epistle.” One of these
                  traditions is the practice which is now before us, which they who ordained from
                  the beginning, rooted firmly in the churches, delivering it to their
                  successors, and its use through long custom advances pace by pace with time.
                  If, as in a Court of Law, we were at a loss for documentary evidence, but were
                  able to bring before you a large number of witnesses, would you not give your
                  vote for our acquittal? I think so; for “at the mouth of two or, three
                  witnesses shall the matter be established.” And if we could prove clearly to
                  you that a long period of time was in our favour, should we not have seemed to
                  you to urge with reason that this suit ought not to be brought into court
                  against us? For ancient dogmas inspire a certain sense of awe, venerable as
                  they are with a hoary antiquity. I will therefore give you a list of the
                  supporters of the word (and the time too must be taken into account in relation
                  to what passes unquestioned). For it did not originate with us. How could it?
                  We, in comparison with the time during which this word has been in vogue, are,
                  to use the words of Job, “but of yesterday.” I myself, if I must speak of what
                  concerns me individually, cherish this phrase as a legacy left me by my
                  fathers. It was delivered to me by one who spent a long life in the service of
                  God, and by him I was both baptized, and admitted to the ministry of the
                  church. While examining, so far as I could, if any of the blessed men of old
                  used the words to which objection is now made, I found many worthy of credit
                  both on account of their early date, and also—a characteristic in which they
                  are unlike the men of today—because of the exactness of their knowledge. Of
                  these some coupled the word in the doxology by the preposition, others by the
                  conjunction, but were in no case supposed to be acting divergently,—at least so
                  far as the right sense of true religion is concerned.
                       There is the famous Irenaeus and Clement of Rome; a
                  Dionysius of Rome, and, strange to say, Dionysius of Alexandria, in his second
                  Letter to his namesake, on “Conviction and Defence,” so concludes. I will give
                  you his very words. “Following all these, we, too, since we have received from
                  the presbyters who were before us a form and rule, offering thanksgiving in the
                  same terms with them, thus conclude our Letter to you. To God the Father and
                  the Son our Lord Jesus Christ, with the Saint Spiritt, glory and might for ever
                  and' ever; amen.” And no one can say that this passage has been altered. He
                  would not have so persistently stated that he had received a form and rule if
                  he had said “in the Saint Spirit.” For of this phrase the use is abundant: it was
                  the use of “with” which required defence. Dionysius moreover in the middle of
                  his treatise thus writes in opposition to the Sabellians, “If by the hypostases
                  being three they say that they are divided, there are three, though they like
                  it not. Else let them destroy the divine Trinity altogether.” And again: “most divine on this account after the Unity is the Trinity.” Clement, in more
                  primitive fashion, writes, “God lives, and the Lord Jesus Christ, and the Saint Spirit.” And now let us hear how Irenaeus, who lived near the times of the
                  Apostles, mentions the Spirit in his work “Against the Heresies.” “The
                  Apostle rightly calls carnal them that are unbridled and carried away to their
                  own desires, having no desire for the Saint Spirit,” and in another passage
                  Irenaeus says, “ The Apostle exclaimed that flesh and blood cannot inherit the
                  kingdom of the heavens lest we, being without share in the divine Spirit, fall
                  short of the kingdom of the heavens.” If any one thinks Eusebius of Palestine worthy of credit on account of his wide
                  experience, I point further to the very words he uses in discussing questions
                  concerning the polygamy of the ancients. Stirring up himself to his work, he
                  writes “ invoking the holy God of the Prophets, the Author of light, through
                  our Saviour Jesus Christ, with the Saint Spirit.”
                   Origen, too, in many of his expositions of the Psalms,
                  we find using the form of doxology “with the Saint Spirit”. The opinions which
                  he held concerning the Spirit were not always and everywhere sound;
                  nevertheless in many passages even he himself reverently recognises the force
                  of established usage, and expresses himself concerning the Spirit in terms
                  consistent with true religion. It is, if I am not mistaken, in the Sixth Book
                  of his Commentary on the Gospel of St. John that he distinctly makes the Saint Spirit
                  a subject of worship. His words are:—“The washing of water is a symbol of the
                  cleaning of the soul which is washed clean of all filth that comes of
                  wickedness;  but none the less is it also
                  by itself, to him who yields himself to the Godhead of the adorable Trinity,
                  through the power of the invocations, the origin and source of blessings.” And
                  again, in his Exposition of the Epistle to the Romans “the holy powers,” he
                  says “are able to receive the Only-begotten, and the Godhead of the Saint Spirit.”
                  Thus I apprehend, the powerful influence of tradition frequently impels the men
                  to express themselves in terms contradictory to their own opinions. Moreover
                  this form of the doxology was not unknown even to Africanus the historian. In
                  the Fifth Book of his Epitome of the Times he says “we who know the weight of
                  those terms, and are not ignorant of the grace of faith, render thanks to the
                  Father, who bestowed on us His own creatures, Jesus Christ, the Saviour of the
                  world and our Lord, to whom be glory and majesty with the Saint Spirit, for
                  ever.”  The rest of the passages may
                  peradventure be viewed with suspicion; or may really have been altered, and the
                  fact of their having been tampered with will be difficult to detect because
                  the difference consists in a single syllable. Those however which I have quoted
                  at length are out of the reach of any dishonest manipulation, and can easily be
                  verified from the actual works.
                   I will now adduce another piece of evidence which
                  might perhaps seem insignificant, but because of its antiquity must in nowise
                  be omitted by a defendant who is indicted on a charge of innovation. It seemed
                  fitting to our fathers not to receive the gift of the light at eventide in
                  silence, but, on its appearing, immediately to give thanks. Who was the author
                  of these words of thanksgiving at the lighting of the lamps, we are not able to
                  say. The people, however, utter the ancient form, and no one has ever reckoned
                  guilty of impiety those who say “We praise Father, Son, and God’s Saint Spirit.”
                  And if any one knows the Hymn of Athenogenes,
                  which, as he was hurrying on to his perfecting by fire, he left as a kind of
                  farewell gift to his friends, he knows the mind of the martyrs as to the
                  Spirit. On this head I shall say no more.
                   But where shall I rank the great Gregory, and the
                  words uttered by him ? Shall we not place among Apostles and Prophets a man who
                  walked by the same Saint Spirit as they; who never through all his days diverged from
                  the footprints of the saints; who maintained, as long as he lived, the exact
                  principles of evangelical citizenship? I am sure that we shall do the truth a
                  wrong if we refuse to number that soul with the people of God, shining as it
                  did like a beacon in the Church of God; for by the fellow-working of the
                  Saint Spirit the power which he had over demons was tremendous, and so gifted was he
                  with the grace of the word “for obedience to the faith among the
                  nations,”  that, although only seventeen
                  Christians were handed over to him, he brought the whole people alike in town
                  and country through knowledge to God. He too by Christ’s mighty name commanded
                  even rivers to change their course, and caused a lake, which afforded a ground
                  of quarrel to some covetous brethren, to dry up. Moreover his predictions of
                  things to come were such as in no wise to fall short of those of the great
                  prophets. To recount all his wonderful works in detail would be too long a
                  task. By the superabundance of gifts, wrought in him by the Saint Spirit in all power
                  and in signs and in marvels, he was styled a second Moses by the very enemies
                  of the Church. Thus in all that he through grace accomplished, alike byword and deed, a light seemed ever to be shining, token
                  of the heavenly power from the unseen which followed him. To this day he is a
                  great object of admiration to the people of his own neighbourhood, and his
                  memory, established in the churches ever fresh and green, is not dulled by
                  length of time. Thus not a practice, not a word, not a mystic rite has been
                  added to the Church besides what he bequeathed to it. Hence truly on account of
                  the antiquity of their institution many of their ceremonies appear to be
                  defective. For his successors in the administration of the Churches could not
                  endure to accept any subsequent discovery in addition to what had had his
                  sanction. Now one of the institutions of Gregory is the very form of the
                  doxology to which objection is now made, preserved by the Church on the
                  authority of his tradition; a statement which may be verified without much
                  trouble by any one who likes to make a short journey.
                  That our Firmilian held this belief is testified by
                  the writings which he has left. The contemporaries also of the illustrious Meletius say that he was of this opinion. But why quote
                  ancient authorities? Now in the East are not the maintainers of true religion
                  known chiefly by this one term, and separated from their adversaries as by a
                  watchword? I have heard from a certain Mesopotamian, a man at once well skilled
                  in the language and of unperverted opinions, that by
                  the usage of his country it is impossible for any one,
                  even though he may wish to do so, to express himself in any other way, and that
                  they are compelled by the idiom of their mother tongue to offer the doxology by
                  the syllable “and,” or, I should more accurately say, by their equivalent expressions.
                  We Cappadocians, too, so speak in the dialect of our country, the Spirit having
                  so early as the division of tongues foreseen the utility of the phrase. And
                  what of the whole West, almost from Illyricum to the boundaries of our world?
                  Does it not support this word?
                   How then can I be an innovator and creator of new
                  terms, when I adduce as originators and champions of the word whole nations,
                  cities, custom going back beyond the memory of man, men who were pillars of the
                  church and conspicuous for all knowledge and spiritual power? For this cause
                  this banded array of foes is set in motion against me, and town and village and
                  remotest regions are full of my calumniators. Sad and painful are these things
                  to them that seek for peace, but great is the reward of patience for sufferings
                  endured for the Faith’s sake. So besides these let sword flash, let axe be
                  whetted, let fire burn fiercer than that of Babylon, let every instrument of
                  torture be set in motion against me. To me nothing is more fearful than failure
                  to fear the threats which the Lord has directed against them that blaspheme the
                  Saint Spirit. Kindly readers will find a satisfactory defence in what I have said,
                  that I accept a phrase so dear and so familiar to the saints, and confirmed by
                  usage so long, inasmuch as, from the day when the Gospel was first preached up
                  to our own time, it is shown to have been admitted to all full rights within
                  the churches, and, what is of greatest moment, to have been accepted as bearing
                  a sense in accordance with holiness and true religion. But before the great
                  tribunal what have I prepared to say in my defence? This; that I was in the
                  first place led to the glory of the Spirit by the honour conferred by the Lord in
                  associating Him with Himself and with His Father at baptism;  and secondly by the introduction of each of us
                  to the knowledge of God by such an initiation; and above all by the fear of the
                  threatened punishment shutting out the thought of all indignity and unworthy
                  conception. But our opponents, what will they say? After showing neither
                  reverence for the Lord’s honour nor fear of His threats, what kind of defence
                  will they have for their blasphemy? It is for them to make up their mind about
                  their own action or even now to change it. For my own part I would pray most
                  earnestly that the good God will make His peace rule in the hearts of all, so
                  that these men who are swollen with pride and set in battle array against us
                  may be calmed by the Spirit of meekness and of love; and that if they have
                  become utterly savage, and are in an untamable state,
                  He will grant to us at least to bear with long suffering all that we have to
                  bear at their hands. In short “to them that have in themselves the sentence of death,”
                  it is not suffering for the sake of the Faith which is painful; what is hard to
                  bear is to fail to fight its battle. The athlete does not so much complain of
                  being wounded in the struggle as of not being able even to secure admission
                  into the stadium. Or perhaps this was the time for silence spoken of by Solomon
                  the wise. For, when life is buffeted by so fierce a storm that all the intelligence
                  of those who are instructed in the word is filled with the deceit of false
                  reasoning and confounded, like an eye filled with dust, when men are stunned
                  by strange and awful noises, when all the world is shaken and everything
                  tottering to its fall, what profits it to cry, as I am really crying, to the
                  wind?
                   
                   CHAPTER XXX.
                       Exposition of the present state of the Churches.
                         To what then shall I liken our present condition? It
                  may be compared, I think, to some naval battle which has arisen out of time old
                  quarrels, and is fought by men who cherish a deadly hate against one another,
                  of long experience in naval warfare, and eager for the fight. Look, I beg you,
                  at the picture thus raised before your eyes. See the rival fleets rushing in
                  dread array to the attack. With a burst of uncontrollable fury they engage and
                  fight it out. Fancy, if you like, the ships driven to and fro by a raging tempest, while thick darkness falls from the clouds and blackens
                  all the scene, so that watchwords are indistinguishable in the confusion, and
                  all distinction between friend and foe is lost. To fill up the details of the
                  imaginary picture, suppose the sea swollen with billows and whirled up from the
                  deep, while a vehement torrent of rain pours down from the clouds and the
                  terrible waves rise high. From every quarter of heaven the winds beat upon one
                  point, where both the fleets are dashed one against the other. Of the
                  combatants some are turning traitors; some are deserting in the very thick of
                  the fight; some have at one and the same moment to urge on their boats, all
                  beaten by the gale, and to advance against their assailants. Jealousy of
                  authority and the lust of individual mastery splits the sailors into parties
                  which deal mutual death to one another. Think, besides all this, of the
                  confused and unmeaning roar sounding over all the sea, from howling winds, from
                  crashing vessels, from boiling surf, from the yells of the combatants as they
                  express their varying emotions in every kind of noise, so that not a word from
                  admiral or pilot can be heard. The disorder and confusion is tremendous, for
                  the extremity of misfortune, when life is despaired of, gives men license for
                  every kind of wickedness. Suppose, too, that the men are all smitten with the
                  incurable plague of mad love of glory, so that they do not cease from their
                  struggle each to get the better of the other, while .their ship is actually
                  settling down into the deep.
                   Turn now I beg you from this figurative description to
                  the unhappy reality. Did it not at one time appear that the Arian schism,
                  after its separation into a sect opposed to the Church of God, stood itself
                  alone in hostile array? But when the attitude of our foes against us was
                  changed from one of long standing and bitter strife to one of open warfare,
                  then, as is well known, the war was split up in more ways than I can tell into
                  many subdivisions, so that all men were stirred to a state of inveterate hatred
                  alike by common party spirit and individual suspicion. But what storm at sea
                  was ever so fierce and wild as this tempest of the Churches? In it every
                  landmark of the Fathers has been moved; every foundation, every bulwark of
                  opinion has been shaken; everything buoyed up on the unsound is dashed about
                  and shaken down. We attack one another. We are overthrown by one another. If
                  our enemy is not the first to strike us, we are wounded by the comrade at our
                  side. If a foeman is stricken and falls, his fellow
                  soldier tramples him down. There is at least this bond of union between us that
                  we hate our common foes, but no sooner have the enemy gone by than we find
                  enemies in one another. And who could make a complete list of all the wrecks ? Some
                  have gone to the bottom on the attack of the enemy, some through the
                  unsuspected treachery of their allies, some from the blundering of their own
                  officers. We see, as it were, whole churches, crews and all, dashed and
                  shattered upon the sunken reefs of disingenuous heresy, while others of the
                  enemies of the Spirit1 of Salvation have seized the helm and made shipwreck of
                  the faith. And then the disturbances wrought by the princes of the world have
                  caused the downfall of the people with a violence unmatched by that of
                  hurricane or whirlwind. The luminaries of the world, which God set to give
                  light to the souls of the people, have been driven from their homes, and a
                  darkness verily gloomy and disheartening has settled on the Churches. The
                  terror of universal ruin is already imminent, and yet their mutual rivalry is
                  so unbounded as to blunt all sense of danger. Individual hatred is of more
                  importance than the general and common warfare, for men by whom the immediate gratification
                  of ambition is esteemed more highly than the rewards that await us in a time to
                  come, prefer the glory of getting the better of their opponents to securing the
                  common welfare of mankind. So all men alike, each as best he can, lift the hand
                  of murder against one another. Harsh rises the cry of the combatants
                  encountering one another in dispute; already all the Church is almost full of
                  the inarticulate screams, the unintelligible noises, rising from the ceaseless
                  agitations that divert the right rule of the doctrine of true religion, now in
                  the direction of excess, now in that of defect. On the one hand are they who
                  confound the Persons and are carried away into Judaism; on the other hand are
                  they that, through the opposition of the natures, pass into heathenism. Between
                  these opposite parties inspired Scripture is powerless to mediate; the traditions
                  of the apostles cannot suggest terms of arbitration. Plain speaking is fatal to
                  friendship, and disagreement in opinion all the ground that is wanted for a
                  quarrel. No oaths of confederacy are so efficacious in keeping men true to
                  sedition as their likeness in error. Everyone is a theologue though he have his
                  soul branded with more spots than can be counted. The result is that innovators
                  find a plentiful supply of men ripe for faction, while self-appointed scions of
                  the house of place-hunters  reject the
                  government of theSaint Spirit and divide the chief dignities of the Churches.
                  The institutions of the Gospel have now everywhere been thrown into confusion
                  by want of discipline; there is an indescribable pushing for the chief places
                  while every self-advertiser tries to force himself into high office. The result
                  of this lust for ordering is that our people are in a state of wild confusion
                  for lack of being ordered; the exhortations of those in authority are rendered
                  wholly purposeless and void, because there is not a man but, out of his
                  ignorant impudence, thinks that it is just as much his duty to give orders to
                  other people, as it is to obey anyone else.
                   So, since no human voice is strong enough to be heard
                  in such a disturbance, I reckon silence more profitable than speech, for if
                  there is any truth in the words of the Preacher, “The words of wise men are
                  heard in quiet,” in the present condition of things any discussion of them must
                  be anything but becoming. I am moreover restrained by the Prophet’s saying,
                  “Therefore the prudent shall keep silence in that time, for it is an evil
                  time,” a time when some trip up their neighbours’ heels, some stamp on a man
                  when he is down, and others clap their hands with joy, but there is not one to
                  feel for the fallen and hold out a helping hand, although according to the
                  ancient law he is not uncondemned, who passes by even
                  his enemy’s beast of burden fallen under his load. This is not the state of
                  things now. Why not? The love of many has waxed cold; brotherly concord is
                  destroyed, the very name of unity is ignored, brotherly admonitions are heard
                  no more, nowhere is there Christian pity, nowhere falls the tear of sympathy.
                  Now there is no one to receive “the weak in faith,” but mutual hatred has
                  blazed so high among fellow clansmen that they are more delighted at a
                  neighbour’s fall than at their own success. Just as in a plague, men of the
                  most regular lives suffer from the same sickness as the rest, because they
                  catch the disease by communication with the infected, so nowadays by the evil
                  rivalry which possesses our souls we are carried away to an emulation in
                  wickedness, and are all of 11s each as bad as the others. Hence merciless and
                  sour sit the judges of the erring; unfeeling and hostile are the critics of the well disposed. And to such a depth is this evil
                  rooted among us that we have become more brutish than the brutes; they do at
                  least herd with their fellows, but our most savage warfare is with our own
                  people.
                   For all these reasons I ought to have kept silence, but I was drawn in the other direction by love, which “seeketh not her own,” and desires to overcome every difficulty put in her way by time and circumstance. I was taught too by the children at Babylon, that, when there is no one to support the cause of true religion, we ought alone and all unaided to do our duty. They from out of the midst of the flame lifted up their voices in hymns and praise to God, recking not of the host that set the truth at naught, but sufficient, three only that they were, with one another. Wherefore we too are undismayed at the cloud of our enemies, and, resting our hope on the aid of the Spirit, have, with all boldness, proclaimed the truth. Had I not so done, it would truly have been terrible that the blasphemers of the Spirit should so easily be emboldened in their attack upon true religion, and that we, with so mighty an ally and supporter at our side, should shrink from the service of that doctrine, which by the tradition of the Fathers has been preserved by an unbroken sequence of memory to our own day. A further powerful incentive to my undertaking was the warm fervour of your “love unfeigned,” and the seriousness and taciturnity of your disposition; a guarantee that you would not publish what I was about to say to all the world,—not because it would not be worth making known, but to avoid casting pearls before swine. My task is now done. If you find what I have said satisfactory, let this make an end to our discussion of these matters. If you think any point requires further elucidation, pray do not hesitate to pursue the investigation with all diligence, and to add to your information by putting any uncontroversial question. Either through me or through others the Lord will grant full explanation on matters which have yet to be made clear, according to the knowledge supplied to the worthy by the Saint Spirit. Amen.
                   
                   
 
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