A Treatise of Novatian Concerning the Trinity.

 A Treatise of Novatian Concerning the Trinity.

 The Rule of truth requires that we should first of all things believe on God the Father and Lord Omnipotent that is, the absolutely perfect Founder o

 And over all these things He Himself, containing all things, having nothing vacant beyond Himself, has left room for no superior God, such as some peo

 Him, then, we acknowledge and know to be God, the Creator of all things—Lord on account of His power, Parent on account of His discipline—Him, I say,

 Him alone the Lord rightly declares good, of whose goodness the whole world is witness which world He would not have ordained if He had not been good

 Moreover, if we read of His wrath, and consider certain descriptions of His indignation, and learn that hatred is asserted of Him, yet we are not to u

 And although the heavenly Scripture often turns the divine appearance into a human form,—as when it says, “The eyes of the Lord are over the righteous

 But when the Lord says that God is a Spirit, I think that Christ spoke thus of the Father, as wishing that something still more should be understood t

 This God, then, setting aside the fables and figments of heretics, the Church knows and worships, to whom the universal and entire nature of things as

 The same rule of truth teaches us to believe, after the Father, also on the Son of God, Christ Jesus, the Lord our God, but the Son of God—of that God

 But of this I remind you , that Christ was not to be expected in the Gospel in any other wise than as He was promised before by the Creator, in the Sc

 Chapter XI.—And Indeed that Christ Was Not Only Man, But God Also That Even as He Was the Son of Man, So Also He Was the Son of God.

 Why, then, should we hesitate to say what Scripture does not shrink from declaring? Why shall the truth of faith hesitate in that wherein the authorit

 And thus also John, describing the nativity of Christ, says: “The Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, and we saw His glory, the glory as of the o

 And yet the heretic still shrinks from urging that Christ is God, whom he perceives to be proved God by so many words as well as facts. If Christ is o

 If Christ is only man, how is it that He says, “Though I bear record of myself, yet my record is true:  because I know whence I came, and whither I go

 If Christ was only man, how is it that He Himself says, “And every one that believeth in me shall not die for evermore?” And yet he who believes in ma

 What if Moses pursues this same rule of truth, and delivers to us in the beginning of his sacred writings, this principle by which we may learn that a

 Behold, the same Moses tells us in another place that “God was seen of Abraham.” And yet the same Moses hears from God, that “no man can see God and l

 What if in another place also we read in like manner that God was described as an angel? For when, to his wives Leah and Rachel, Jacob complained of t

 But if some heretic, obstinately struggling against the truth, should persist in all these instances either in understanding that Christ was properly

 And indeed I could set forth the treatment of this subject by all heavenly Scriptures, and set in motion, so to speak, a perfect forest of texts conce

 But why, although we appear to hasten to another branch of the argument, should we pass over that passage in the apostle: “Who, although He was in the

 In this place I may be permitted also to collect arguments from the side of other heretics. It is a substantial kind of proof which is gathered even f

 But the material of that heretical error has arisen, as I judge, from this, that they think that there is no distinction between the Son of God and th

 Therefore, say they, if Christ is not man only, but God also—and Scripture tells us that He died for us, and was raised again—then Scripture teaches u

 But from this occasion of Christ being proved from the sacred authority of the divine writings not man only, but God also, other heretics, breaking fo

 But since they frequently urge upon us the passage where it is said, “I and the Father are one,” in this also we shall overcome them with equal facili

 Hereto also I will add that view wherein the heretic, while he rejoices as if at the loss of some power of seeing special truth and light, acknowledge

 Moreover, the order of reason, and the authority of the faith in the disposition of the words and in the Scriptures of the Lord, admonish us after the

 And now, indeed, concerning the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit, let it be sufficient to have briefly said thus much, and to have laid down t

 Thus God the Father, the Founder and Creator of all things, who only knows no beginning, invisible, infinite, immortal, eternal, is one God to whose

Chapter XXI.165    According to Pamelius, ch. xvi.  Argument.—That the Same Divine Majesty is Again Confirmed in Christ by Other Scriptures.

And indeed I could set forth the treatment of this subject by all heavenly Scriptures, and set in motion, so to speak, a perfect forest of texts concerning that manifestation of the divinity of Christ, except that I have not so much undertaken to speak against this special form of heresy, as to expound the rule of truth concerning the person of Christ. Although, however, I must hasten to other matters, I do not think that I must pass over this point, that in the Gospel the Lord declared, by way of signifying His majesty, saying, “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will build it up again.”166    John ii. 19. Or when, in another passage, and on another subject, He declares, “I have power to lay down my life, and again to take it up; for this commandment I have received of my Father.”167    John x. 18. Now who is it who says that He can lay down His life, or can Himself recover His life again, because He has received it of His Father? Or who says that He can again resuscitate and rebuild the destroyed temple of His body, except because He is the Word who is from the Father, who is with the Father, “by whom all things were made, and without whom nothing was made;”168    John i. 3. the imitator169    [John v. 19. The infirmities of language are such that cunning men like Petavius can construct anti-Nicene doctrine out of Scripture itself; and the marvel is, that the Christian Fathers before the Council of Nicæa generally use such precision of language, although they lacked the synodical definitions.] of His Father’s works and powers, “the image of the invisible God;”170    Col. i. 15. “who came down from heaven;”171    John iii. 31, 32. who testified what things he had seen and heard; who “came not to do His own will, but rather to do the will of the Father,”172    John iv. 38. by whom He had been sent for this very purpose, that being made the “Messenger of Great Counsel,”173    Isa. ix. 6. He might unfold to us the laws of the heavenly mysteries; and who as the Word made flesh dwelt among us, of us this Christ is proved to be not man only, because He was the son of man, but also God, because He is the Son of God? And if by the apostle Christ is called “the first-born of every creature,”174    Col. i. 15. [But not a creature, for the apostle immediately subjoins that He is the Creator and final Cause of the universe. Moreover, the first-born here seems to mean the heir of all creation, for such is the logical force of the verse following. So, πρωτοτοκεῖα (in the Seventy) = heirship. Gen. xxv. 31.] how could He be the first-born of every creature, unless because according to His divinity the Word proceeded from the Father before every creature? And unless the heretics receive it thus, they will be constrained to show that Christ the man was the first-born of every creature; which they will not be able to do. Either, therefore, He is before every creature, that He may be the first-born of every creature, and He is not man only, because man is after every creature; or He is man only, and He is after every creature. And how is He the first-born of every creature, except because being that Word which is before every creature; and therefore, the first-born of every creature, He becomes flesh and dwells in us, that is, assumes that man’s nature which is after every creature, and so dwells with him and in him, in us, that neither is humanity taken away from Christ, nor His divinity denied? For if He is only before every creature, humanity is taken away from Him; but if He is only man, the divinity which is before every creature is interfered with. Both of these, therefore, are leagued together in Christ, and both are conjoined, and both are linked with one another. And rightly, as there is in Him something which excels the creature, the agreement of the divinity and the humanity seems to be pledged in Him: for which reason He who is declared as made the “Mediator between God and man”175    1 Tim. ii. 5. is revealed to have associated in Himself God and man. And if the same apostle says of Christ, that “having put off the flesh, He spoiled powers, they being openly triumphed over in Himself,”176    Col. ii. 15. he certainly did not without a meaning propound that the flesh was put off, unless because he wished it to be understood that it was again put on also at the resurrection. Who, therefore, is He that thus put off and put on the flesh? Let the heretics seek out. For we know that the Word of God was invested with the substance of flesh, and that He again was divested of the same bodily material, which again He took up in the resurrection and resumed as a garment. And yet Christ could neither have been divested of nor invested with manhood, had He been only man: for man is never either deprived of nor invested with himself. For that must be something else, whatever it may be, which by any other is either taken away or put on. Whence, reasonably, it was the Word of God who put off the flesh, and again in the resurrection put it on, since He put it off because at His birth He had been invested with it. Therefore in Christ it is God who is invested, and moreover must be divested, because He who is invested must also likewise be He who is divested; whereas, as man, He is invested with and divested of, as it were, a certain tunic of the compacted body.177    Perhaps the emendation homine instead of homo is right. “He puts on and puts off humanity, as if it were a kind of tunic for a compacted body.” And therefore by consequence He was, as we have said, the Word of God, who is revealed to be at one time invested, at another time divested of the flesh. For this, moreover, He before predicted in blessings: “He shall wash His garment in wine, and His clothing in the blood of the grape.”178    Gen. xlix. 11. If the garment in Christ be the flesh, and the clothing itself be the body, let it be asked who is He whose body is clothing, and garment flesh? For to us it is evident that the flesh is the garment, and the body the clothing of the Word; and He washed His bodily substance, and purified the material of the flesh in blood, that is, in wine, by His passion, in the human character that He had undertaken. Whence, if indeed He is washed, He is man, because the garment which is washed is the flesh; but He who washes is the Word of God, who, in order that He might wash the garment, was made the taker-up of the garment. Rightly, from that substance which is taken that it might be washed, He is revealed as a man, even as from the authority of the Word who washed it He is manifested to be God.

CAPUT XXI, al. XVI. Eamdem divinam majestatem in Christo aliis iterum Scripturis confirmari.

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Et poteram quidem omnium Scripturarum coelestium eventilare tractatus, et ingentem circa istam speciem Christi divinitatis, ut ita dixerim, silvam commovere: nisi quoniam non tam mihi contra hanc haeresim propositum est dicere, quam breviter, circa personam Christi Regulam veritatis aperire. Quamvis tamen ad alia festinem, illud non arbitror praetermittendum, quod in Evangelio Dominus ad significantiam suae majestatis expressit dicendo: Solvite templum hoc, et ego in triduo suscitabo illud (Joan. II, 19). Aut quando in alio loco, et alia parte pronuntiat: Potestatem habeo animam meam ponendi et rursusrecipere eam: hoc enim mandatum accepi a Patre (Joan. X, 18). Quis est enim qui dicit animam 0927C suam se posse ponere, aut animam suam posse se rursum recuperare, quia hoc mandatum acceperit a Patre? Aut quis dicit, destructum corporis sui templum resuscitare rursum et reaedificare se posse: nisi quoniam Sermo ille, qui ex Patre, qui apud Patrem, per quem facta sunt omnia, et sine quo factum est nihil (Joan. I, 3), imitator paternorum operum atque virtutum, imago invisibilis Dei (Coloss. I, 15), qui descendit de coelo (Joan. III, 31, 32), qui quae vidit et audivit testificatus est, qui non venit ut faceret suam voluntatem (Joan. VI, 38), sed potius ut faciat Patris voluntatem, a quo missus ad hoc ipsum fuerat, ut magni consilii Angelus factus (Isa. IX, 6) arcanorum coelestium nobis jura reseraret, quique 0927DVerbum caro factus habitavit in nobis (Joan. I, 14), ex nobis hic Christus non homo tantum, quia hominis Filius; sed etiam Deus, quia Dei Filius, comprobatur? Quod si et primogenitus omnis creaturae ab Apostolo dictus sit Christus (Coloss. I, 15); quomodo omnis creaturae primogenitus esse potuit, nisi quoniam 0928A secundum divinitatem ante omnem creaturam ex Patre Deo Sermo processit? Quod nisi ita haeretici acceperint, Christum hominem primogenitum omnis creaturae monstrare cogentur; quod facere non poterunt. Aut igitur ante omnem est creaturam ut primogenitus sit omnis creaturae, et non homo est tantum, quia homo post omnem creaturam est; aut homo tantum est, et est post omnem creaturam. Et quomodo primogenitus est omnis creaturae, nisi quoniam dum Verbum illud quod est ante omnem creaturam, et ideo primogenitus omnis creaturae, caro fit et habitat in nobis, hoc est, assumit hunc hominem qui est post omnem creaturam, et sic cum illo et in illo habitat in nobis, ut neque homo Christo subtrahatur, neque divinitas negetur? Nam si tantummodo ante 0928B omnem creaturam est, homo in illo subtractus est: si autem tantummodo homo est, divinitas quae ante omnem creaturam est, intercepta est. Utrumque ergo in Christo confoederatum est, et utrumque conjunctum est, et utrumque connexum est. Et merito dum est in illo aliquid quod superat creaturam, pignerata in illo divinitatis et humanitatis videtur esse concordia. Propter quam causam, qui mediator Dei et hominum effectus exprimitur (I Tim. II, 5), in se Deum et hominem sociasse reperitur. Ac si idem Apostolus de Christo refert, ut exutus carnem potestates dehonestavit, palam triumphatis illis in semetipso (Coloss. II, 15): non utique otiose exutum carne proposuit, nisi quoniam et in resurrectione rursum indutum voluit intelligi. Quis est ergo iste exutus et 0928C rursus indutus, requirant haeretici. Nos enim Sermonem Dei scimus indutum carnis substantiam, eumdemque rursum exutum eadem corporis materia, quam rursus in resurrectione suscepit et quasi indumentum resumpsit. Sed enim neque exutus neque indutus hominem Christus fuisset, si homo tantum fuisset. Nemo enim umquam se ipso aut spoliatur aut induitur. Sit enim necesse est aliud, quidquid aliunde aut spoliatur aut induitur. Ex quo merito Sermo Dei fuit, qui exutus est carnem et in resurrectione rursus indutus. Exutus autem, quoniam et in nativitate fuerat indutus. Itaque in Christo Deus est qui induitur, atque etiam exutus sit oportet: propterea is qui induitur, pariter et exuatur necesse est. Induitur autem et exuitur homo, quasi quadam contexti corporis 0928D tunica. Ac propterea consequenter Sermo fuit, ut diximus, Dei; qui modo indutus, modo exutus esse reperitur. Hoc enim etiam in benedictionibus ante praedixit: Lavabit stolam suam in vino, et in sanguine urae amictum suum (Gen. XLIX, 11). Si stola in Christo caro 0929A est, et amictum ipsum corpus est, requiratur quisquis est ille cujus corpus amictum est, et stola caro. Nobis enim manifestum est carnem stolam et corpus amictum Verbi fuisse , quique sanguine, id est vino, lavit substantiam corporis, et materiam carnis abluens, ex parte suscepti hominis passione. Ex quo siquidem lavatur, homo est; quia amictum quod lavatur, caro est: qui autem lavat, Verbum Dei est; qui ut lavaret amictum, amicti susceptor effectus est. Merito ex ea substantia, quae recepta est ut lavaretur, homo exprimitur ; sicut ex Verbi auctoritate qui lavit, Deus esse monstratur.