{139}

Chapter 2.

§. 12.

1. NOW the Bishop Alexander of blessed memory cast Arius out of the Church for holding and maintaining the following sentiments [Note 1]: "God was not always a Father: The Son was not always: But whereas all things were made out of nothing, the Son of God also was made out of nothing: And since all things are creatures, He also is a creature and a production [Note 2]: And since all things once were not, but were afterwards made, there was a time when the Word of God Himself was not; and He was not before He was begotten [Note 3], but He had a beginning [Note 4] of existence: For He was then begotten when God determined to produce [Note 5] Him: For He also is one among the rest of His works. And since He is by nature changeable [Note 6], and only continues good because He chooses by his own free will, He is capable of being changed, as are all other things, whenever he wishes. And therefore God, as foreknowing that He would be good, gave Him by anticipation that glory which He would have obtained afterwards by His virtue; and He is now become good by His works which God foreknew." Accordingly they say, that Christ is not truly God, but that He is called God on account of His participation in God's nature, as are all other creatures. And they add, that He is not that Word which is by nature in the Father, and is proper to His Substance, nor is He His proper wisdom by which He made this world; but that there is another Word [Note 7] which is properly [Note 8] in the Father, and another Wisdom which is properly in the Father, by which Wisdom also He made this Word; and that the Lord Himself is called the Word by a fiction [Note 9] in regard of things endued with reason [Note 10], and is called the Wisdom fictitiously in regard of things endued with wisdom. Nay, they say that as all things are in substance {140} separate and alien from the Father, so He also is in all respects separate and alien from the substance of the Father, and properly belongs to things made and created, and is one of them; for He is a creature, and a production, and a work.

2. Again, they say that God did not create us for His sake, but Him for our sakes. For they say, "God was alone, and the Word was not with Him, but afterwards when He would create us [Note 11], then He made Him; and from the time He was made, He called Him the Word, and the Son, and the Wisdom, in order that He might create us by Him. And as all things subsisted by the will of God, and did not exist before; so He also was made by the will of God, and did not exist before. For the Word is not the proper and natural Offspring of the Father, but was Himself made by grace: for God who existed before made by His will the Son who did not exist, by which will also He made all things, and produced, and created, and willed them to be." [Note 12] Moreover they say also, that Christ is not the natural and true power of God ; but as the locust and the cankerworm [Joel ii. 25.] are called a power [Note 13], so also He is called the power of the Father. Furthermore he said, that the Father cannot be described by the Son, and that the Son can neither see nor know the Father perfectly and exactly [Note 14]. For having a beginning of existence, He cannot know Him that is without beginning; but what He knows and sees, He knows and sees in a measure proportionate to His capacity [Note 15], as we also know and see in proportion to our powers. And he added also, that the Son not only does not know His own Father exactly, but that He does not even know His own nature [Note 16].

§. 13.

3. For maintaining these and the like opinions Arius was declared a heretic; for myself, while I have merely been writing them down, I have been cleansing myself [Note 17] by thinking of the contrary doctrines, and by possessing my mind with the idea of the true faith. For the Bishops who all assembled from all parts at the Council of Nicæa, stopped their ears when they heard these statements, and all with one voice condemned this heresy on account of them, and anathematized it, declaring it to be alien and estranged from the faith of the Church. It was no necessity which led the {141} judges to this decision, but they all by free choice vindicated the truth [Note A]: and they did so justly and rightly. For infidelity is coming in through these men, or rather a Judaism beside the Scriptures, which has close upon it Gentile superstition, so that he who holds these opinions can no longer be called a Christian, for they are all contrary to the Scriptures.

4. John, for instance, saith, In the beginning was the Word [John i. 1.]; but these men say, "He was not, before He was begotten." And again he has written, And we are in Him that is true, even in His Son Jesus Christ; this is the true God, and eternal life [1 John v. 20.]; but these men, as if in contradiction to this, allege that Christ is not the true God, but that He is only called God, as are other creatures, in regard of his participation in the divine nature. And the Apostle blames the Gentiles, because they worship creatures, saying, They served the creature more than God the Creator [Rom. i. 25.] [Note 18]. But if these men say that the Lord is a creature, and worship Him as a creature, how do they differ from the Gentiles? If they hold this opinion, is not this passage also against them; and does not the blessed Paul write as blaming them? The Lord also says, I and the Father are One: and He that hath seen Me, hath seen the Father [John x. 30; xiv. 9.] [Note 19]; and the Apostle who was sent by Him to preach, writes, Who being the Brightness of His glory, and the express Image of His Person [Heb. i. 3.]. But these men dare to separate them, and to say that He is alien from the substance and eternity of the Father; and impiously to represent Him as changeable, not perceiving, that by speaking thus, they make Him to be, not one with the Father, but one with created things. Who does not see, that the brightness cannot be separated from the light [Note 20], but that it is by nature proper to it, and co-existent with it, and is not {142} produced after it? Again, when the Father says, This is My beloved Son [Mat. xvii. 5.], and when the Scriptures say that He is the Word of the Father, by whom the heavens were established [Ps. xxxiii. 6.], and in short, All things were made by Him [John i. 3.]; these inventors of new doctrines and fables represent that there is another Word, and another Wisdom of the Father, and that He is only called the Word and the Wisdom by a fiction in regard of things endued with reason, while they perceive not the absurdity of this [Note 21].

§. 14.

5. But if He be styled the Word and the Wisdom by a fiction on our account, what He really is they cannot tell [Note 22]. For if the Scriptures affirm that the Lord is both these, and yet these men will not allow Him to be so, it is plain that in their impious opposition to the Scriptures they would deny His existence altogether. The faithful are able to conclude this truth both from the voice of the Father Himself; and from the Angels that worshipped Him, and from the Saints that have written concerning Him; but these men, as they have not a pure mind, and cannot bear to hear the words of holy men who teach of God, may be able to learn something even from the devils who resemble them, for they spoke of Him, not as if there were many beside, but, as knowing Him alone, they said, Thou art the Holy One of God [Mark i. 24.], and the Son of God [Mat. viii. 29.]. He also who suggested to them this heresy [Note 23], while tempting Him in the mount, said not, 'If thou also be a Son of God,' as though there were others beside Him, but, If Thou be the Son of God [Luke iv. 3.], as being the only one. But as the Gentiles, having renounced the notion of one God, have sunk into polytheism, so these wonderful men, not believing that the Word of the Father is one, have come to adopt the idea of many words, and they deny Him that is really God and the true Word, and have dared to conceive of Him as a creature, not perceiving how full of impiety is such an opinion. For if He be a creature, how is He at the same time the Creator of creatures? or how the Son and the Wisdom and the Word? For the Word is not created, but begotten; and a creature is not a Son, but a production. And if all creatures were made by Him, and He is also a creature, then by whom was He made? Productions must of necessity proceed from some one; as in fact they proceeded {143} from the Word; because He was not Himself a production, but the Word of the Father. And again, if the Wisdom in the Father be beside the Lord, then there is a Wisdom in a Wisdom: and if the Word of God be the Wisdom of God, then there is a Word in a Word: and if the Word of God be the Son of God, then there is a Son produced in the Son.

§. 15.

6. How is it that the Lord has said, I am in the Father, and the Father in Me [John xiv. 10.], if there be another in the Father, by whom the Lord Himself also was made? And how is it that John, passing over that other, relates of this One, saying, All things were made by Him; and without Him was not any thing made [John i. 3.] [Note 24]? If all things that were made by the will of God were made by Him, how can He be Himself one of the things that were made? And when the Apostle says, For whom are all things, and by whom are all things [Heb. ii. 10.], how can these men say, that we were not made for Him, but He for us? If it be so, He ought to have said, "For whom the Word was made;" but He saith not so, but, For whom are all things, and by whom are all things, thus proving these men to be heretical and false.

7. But further, as they have had the boldness to say that there is another Word in God, and since they cannot bring any clear proof of this from the Scriptures, let them but shew one work of His, or one work of the Father that was made without this Word; so that they may seem to have some ground at least for this their imagination [Note 25]. The works of the true Word are manifest to all, and according to the evidence they afford is He known by them. For as, when we see the creation, we conceive of God as the Creator of it; so when we see that nothing is without order therein, but that all things move and continue with order and design, we have an idea of a Word of God who is over all and governs all. This too the holy Scriptures testify, declaring that He is the Word of God, and that all things were made by Him, and without Him was not any thing made [John i. 3.]. But of that other Word, of whom they speak, there is neither word nor work that they have to shew. Nay, even the Father Himself when He says, This is My beloved Son [Mat. xvii. 5.], signifies that besides Him there is none other. {144}

§. 16.

8. It appears then that so far as these doctrines are concerned, these wonderful men have now joined themselves to the Manichees. For these also confess the existence of a good God, so far as the mere name goes, but they are unable to point out any of His works either visible or invisible. But inasmuch as they deny Him who is truly and indeed God, the Maker of heaven and earth, and of all things invisible, they are mere inventors of fables. And this appears to me to be the case with these evil-minded men. They see the works of the true Word who alone is in the Father, and yet they deny Him, and make to themselves another Word [Note 26], whose existence they are unable to prove either by His works or by the testimony of others. Unless it be that they have adopted a fabulous notion of God, that He is a compound being like man, speaking and then changing His words, and as a man exercising understanding and wisdom; not perceiving to what absurdities [Note 27] they are reduced by such an opinion. For if God has a succession of words [Note 28], they certainly must consider Him as a man. And if those words proceed from Him and then vanish away, they are guilty of a greater impiety, because they resolve into nothing what proceeds from the self-existent God. If they conceive that God doth at all beget, it were surely better and more religious to say that He is the Father of One Word, who is the fulness of His Godhead, in whom are hidden the treasures of all knowledge, and that He is co-existent with His Father, and that all things were made by Him; rather than to suppose God to be the Father of many words which are no where to be found, or to represent Him who is simple in His nature as compounded of many [Note 29], and as being subject to human passions [Note 30] and variable.

9. Next, whereas the Apostle says, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God [1 Cor. i. 24.], these men reckon Him but as one among many powers; nay, worse than this, they compare Him, transgressors as they are, with the cankerworm and other irrational creatures which are sent by Him for the punishment of men. Next, whereas the Lord says, No one knoweth the Father, save the Son [Mat. xi. 27.]; and again, Not that any man hath seen the Father, save He which is of the Father [John vi. 46.]; are not these indeed enemies of God [Note 31] which say that the Father {145} is neither seen nor known of the Son perfectly? If the Lord says, As the Father knoweth Me, even so know I the Father [John x. 15.], and if the Father knoweth not the Son partially, are they not mad to pretend that the Son knoweth the Father only partially, and not fully? Next, if the Son has a beginning of existence, and all things likewise have a beginning, let them say, which is prior to the other. But indeed they have nothing to say, neither can they with all their craft prove such a beginning of the Word. For He is the true and proper Offspring of the Father, and in the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God [John i. 1.]. With regard to their assertion, that the Son knows not His own nature [Note 32], it is superfluous to reply to it, except only so far as to condemn their madness; for how does not the Son know Himself; when He imparts to all men the knowledge of His Father and of Himself and blames those who know Them not?

§. 17.

10. But it is written [Note 33], say they, The Lord created Me in the beginning of His ways for His works [Prov. viii. 22.]. O untaught and insensate that ye are! He is called also in the Scriptures, servant, and son of a handmaid, and lamb, and sheep [Ps. cxvi. 16. &c.], and it is said that He suffered toil, and thirst, and was beaten, and endured pain. But there is plainly a reasonable ground and cause [Note 34], why such representations as these are given of Him in the Scriptures; and it is because He became man and the Son of man, and took upon Him the form of a servant, which is the human flesh: for the Word, says John, was made flesh [John i. 14.]. And since He became man, no one ought to be offended at such expressions; for it is proper to man to be created, and born, and formed, to suffer toil and pain, to die and to rise again from the dead. And as, being the Word and Wisdom of the Father, He has all the attributes of the Father, His eternity, and His unchangeableness, and is like Him in all respects and in all things [Note 35], and is neither before nor after, but co-existent with the Father, and is the very form [Note 36] of the Godhead, and is the Creator, and is not created: (for since He is in substance like [Note 37] the Father, He cannot be a creature, but must be the Creator, as Himself hath said, My Father worketh hitherto, and I work [John v. 17.]:) so being made man, and bearing our flesh, {146} He is necessarily said to be created and made, and to have all the attributes of the flesh; howsoever these men, like Jewish vintners, who mix their wine with water [Note 38], debase the Word, and subject His Godhead to their notions of created things.

11. Wherefore the Fathers were with reason and justice indignant, and anathematized this most impious heresy which these persons are now cautious of and keep back, as being easy to be disproved and unsound [Note 39] in every part of it. These that I have set down are but a few of the arguments which go to condemn their doctrines; but if any one desires to enter more at large into the proof against them, he will find that this heresy is not far removed from the Gentile superstitions, and that it is the lowest and the very dregs of all the other heresies. These last are in error either concerning the body or the incarnation of the Lord, falsifying the truth, some in one way and some in another, or else they deny that the Lord has come at all, as the Jews erroneously suppose. But this alone more madly than the rest has dared to assail the very Godhead, and to assert that the Word is not at all [Note 40], and that the Father was not always a father; so that one might reasonably say that that Psalm was written against them; The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God [Note 41]. Corrupt are they, and become abominable in their doings [Ps. liii. 1.].

§. 18.

12. "But," say they, "we are strong, and are able to defend our heresy by our many devices." They would have a better answer to give, if they were able to defend it, not by artifice nor by Gentile sophisms, but by the simplicity of the faith. If however they have confidence in it, and know it to be in accordance with the doctrines of the Church, let them openly express their sentiments; for no man when he hath lighted a candle putteth it under a bushel [Note 42], but on a candlestick, and so it gives light to all that come in. If therefore they are able to defend it, let them record in writing the opinions above imputed to them, and expose their heresy bare to the view of all men, as they would a candle, and let them openly accuse the Bishop Alexander, of blessed memory, as having unjustly ejected [Note 43] Arius for professing these opinions; and let them blame the {147} Council of Nicæa for putting forth a written confession of the true faith in opposition to their impiety. But they will not do this, I am sure, for they are not so ignorant of the evil nature of those notions which they have invented and are ambitious of spreading abroad; but they know well enough, that although they may at first lead astray the simple by vain deceit, yet their imaginations will soon be extinguished, as the light of the ungodly [Job xviii. 5.] [Note 44], and themselves branded every where as enemies of the Truth.

13. Therefore although they do all things foolishly, and speak as fools, yet in this at least they have acted wisely, as children of this world [Luke xvi. 8.], hiding their candle under a bushel, that it may be supposed to give light, and lest, if it appear, it be condemned and extinguished. Thus when Arius himself, the author of the heresy, and the associate of Eusebius, was summoned through the interest of the Eusebians to appear before Constantine Augustus of blessed memory [Note 45], and was required to present a written declaration of his faith, the wily man wrote one, but kept out of sight the peculiar expressions of his impiety, and pretended, as the Devil did, to quote the simple words of Scripture, just as they are written. And when the blessed Constantine said to him, "If thou holdest no other opinions in thy mind besides these, take the Truth to witness for thee; the Lord will repay thee if thou swear falsely:" the wretched man swore that he held no other, and that he had never either spoken or thought otherwise than as he had now written. But as soon as he went out he dropped down, as if paying the penalty of his crime, and falling headlong burst asunder in the midst [Acts i. 18.].

§. 19.

14. Death, it is true, is the common end of all men, and we ought not to insult the dead, though he be an enemy, for it is uncertain whether the same event may not happen to ourselves before evening. But the end of Arius was not after an ordinary manner, and therefore it deserves to be related. The Eusebians threatening to bring him into the Church, Alexander the Bishop of Constantinople resisted them; but Arius trusted to the violence and menaces of Eusebius. It was the Sabbath, and he expected to join communion [Note 46] on the following day. There was therefore a {148} great struggle between them; the Eusebians threatening, Alexander praying. But the Lord, being judge of the case, decided against the unjust party; for the sun had not set, when the necessities of nature compelled him to that place, where he fell down, and was forthwith deprived of communion with the Church and of his life together. The blessed [Note 47] Constantine hearing of this soon after, was struck with wonder to find him thus convicted of perjury. And indeed it was then evident to all that the threats of the Eusebians had proved of no avail, and the hope of Arius had become vain. It was shewn too that the Arian fanaticism was rejected from communion [Note 48] by our Saviour both here and in the Church of the first-born in heaven.

15. Now who will not wonder to see the unrighteous ambition of these men, whom the Lord has condemned;—to see them vindicating the heresy which the Lord has pronounced excommunicate, (since He did not suffer its author to enter into the Church,) and not fearing that which is written, but attempting impossible timings? For the Lord of hosts hath purposed, and who shall disannul it? [Is. xiv. 27.] and whom the Lord hath condemned, who shall justify? Let them however in defence of their own imaginations write what they please; but do you, brethren, as bearing the vessels of the Lord [Is. lii. 11.], and vindicating the doctrines of the Church, examine this matter, I beseech you; and if they write in other terms than those above recorded as the language of Arius, then condemn them as hypocrites, who hide the poison of their opinions, and like the serpent flatter with the words of their lips. For, though they thus write, they have associated with them those who were formerly rejected [Note 49] with Arius. Such as Secundus [Note 50] of Pentapolis, and the Clergy who were convicted at Alexandria; and they write to them in Alexandria. But, what is most astonishing, they have caused us and our friends to be persecuted, although the most religious Emperor Constantine sent us back in peace to our country and Church, and shewed his concern for the harmony of the people. But now they have caused the Churches to be given up to these men, thus proving to all that for the sake of the Arians the whole conspiracy against us and the rest has been carried on from the beginning. {149}

§. 20.

16. Now while such is their conduct, how can they claim credit for what they write? Had the opinions they have put in writing been orthodox, they would have expunged from their list of books the Thalia of Arius, and have rejected the scions of the heresy, viz. those disciples of Arius, and the partners of his impiety and his punishment. But since they have not renounced these [Note 51], it is manifest to all that their sentiments are not orthodox, though they write them over ten thousand times [Note 52]. Wherefore it becomes us to watch, lest some deception be conveyed under the clothing of their phrases, and they lead away certain from the true faith. And if they venture to advance the opinions of Arius, when they see themselves proceeding in a prosperous course, nothing remains for us but to use great boldness of speech, remembering the predictions of the Apostle, which he wrote to forewarn us of such like heresies, and which it becomes us to repeat.

17. For we know that, as it is written, in the latter times some shall depart from the sound faith [Note 53], giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils, that turn from the truth [1 Tim. iv. 1.]; and, as many as will live godly in Christ shall suffer persecution. But evil men and seducers shall wax worse and worse, deceiving and being deceived [Tit. i. 14. 2 Tim. iii. 12.]. But none of these things shall prevail over us, nor separate us from the love of Christ [Rom. viii. 35.], though the heretics threaten us with death. For we are Christians, not Arians [Note 54]; would that they too, who have written these things, had not embraced the doctrines of Arius! Yea, brethren, there is need now of such boldness of speech; for we have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear, but God hath called us to liberty [v. 15. Gal. v. 13.]. And it were indeed disgraceful to us, most disgraceful, were we, on account of Arius or of those who embrace and advocate his sentiments, to lose the faith which we have received from our Saviour through His Apostles. Already very many in these parts, perceiving the craftiness of these writers, are ready even unto blood to oppose their wiles, especially since they have heard of your firmness. And seeing that the refutation of the heresy hath gone forth from you [Note 55], and it has been drawn forth from its concealment, like a serpent from {150} his hole, the Child that Herod sought to destroy is preserved among you, and the Truth lives in you, and the Faith thrives among you.

§. 21.

18. Wherefore I exhort you, having always in your hands the confession which was framed by the Fathers at Nicæa, and defending it with great zeal and confidence in the Lord, be ensamples to the brethren every where, and shew them that a struggle is now before us in support of the Truth against heresy, and that the wiles of the enemy are various. For a martyr's token lies [Note 56], not only in refusing to burn incense to idols; but to refuse to deny the Faith is also an illustrious testimony [Note 57] of a good conscience. And not only those who turned aside unto idols were condemned as aliens, but those also who betrayed the Truth. Thus Judas was degraded from the Apostolical office, not because he sacrificed to idols, but because he was a traitor; and Hymenæus and Alexander fell away not by betaking themselves to the service of idols, but because they made shipwreck concerning the faith [1 Tim. i. 19.]. On the other hand, the Patriarch Abraham received the crown, not because he suffered death, but because he was faithful unto God; and the other Saints, of whom Paul speaks, Gedeon, Barak, Samson, Jephtha, David, and Samuel, and the rest, were not made perfect by the shedding of their blood, but by faith they were justified; and to this day they are the objects of our admiration, as being ready even to suffer death for piety towards the Lord.

19. And if one may add an instance from our own times, ye know how the blessed Alexander contended even unto death against this heresy, and what great afflictions and labours, old man as he was, he sustained, until in extreme age he also was gathered to his fathers. And how many beside have undergone great toil, in their teachings against this impiety, and now enjoy in Christ the glorious reward of their confession! Wherefore, let us also, considering that this struggle is for our all, and that the choice is now before us, either to deny or to preserve the faith, let us also make it our earnest care and aim to guard what we have received, taking as our instruction the Confession framed at Nicæa, and let us turn away from novelties, and teach our people not to give heed {151} to seducing spirits [1 Tim. iv. 1.] [Note 58], but altogether to withdraw from the impiety of the Arian fanatics, and from the coalition which the Meletians have made with them.

§. 22.

20. For you perceive how, though they were formerly at variance with one another, they have now, like Herod and Pontius, agreed together in order to blaspheme our Lord Jesus Christ. And for this, they truly deserve the hatred of every man, because they were at enmity with one another on private grounds, but have now become friends and join hands, in their hostility to the Truth and their impiety towards God. Nay, they are content to do or suffer any thing, however contrary to their principles, for the satisfaction of securing their several objects; the Meletians for the sake of preeminence and the mad [Note 59] love of money, and the Arian fanatics for their own impiety. And thus by this coalition they are able to assist one another in their malicious designs, while the Meletians pretend to the impiety of the Arians, and the Arians from their own wickedness concur in their baseness, so that by thus mingling together their respective crimes, like the cup of Babylon, they may carry on their plots against the orthodox worshippers of our Lord Jesus Christ. The wickedness and falsehood of the Meletians were indeed even before this evident unto all men; so too the impiety and godless heresy of the Arians have long been known every where and to all; for the period of their existence has not been a short one. The former became schismatics five and fifty years ago, and it is thirty-six years since the latter were pronounced heretics [Note A], and they were rejected from the Church by the judgment of the whole Ecumenic Council. But by their present proceedings they have proved at length, even to those who seem openly to favour them, that they have carried on their designs against me and the rest of the orthodox Bishops from the very first solely for the sake of advancing their own impious heresy.

For observe, that which was long ago the great object of {152} the Eusebians is now brought about. They have caused the Churches to be snatched out of our hands, they have banished, as they pleased, the Bishops and Presbyters who refused to communicate with them; and the laity who withdrew from them they have excluded from the Churches, which they have given up into the hands of the Arians who were condemned so long ago, so that with the assistance of the hypocrisy of the Meletians they can without fear pour forth in them their impious language, and make ready, as they think, the way of deceit for Antichrist [Note 60], who sowed among them the seeds [Note 61] of this heresy.

§. 23.

Let them however dream and imagine vain things. We know that when our gracious Emperor shall hear of it, he will put a stop to their wickedness, and they will not continue long, but according to the words of Scripture, the hearts of the impious shall quickly fail them [Prov. x. 20. Sept.]. But let us, as it is written, put on the words of holy Scripture [2 Kings xvii. 9.], and resist them as apostates who would set up fanaticism [Note 62] in the house of the Lord. And let us not fear the death of the body, nor let us emulate their ways; but let the word of Truth be preferred before all things. I also, as you all know, was formerly required [Note 63] by the Eusebians either to make pretence of their impiety, or to expect their hostility; but I would not engage myself with them, but chose rather to be persecuted by them, than to imitate the conduct of Judas. And assuredly they have done what they threatened; for after the manner of Jezebel, they engaged the treacherous Meletians to assist them, knowing how the latter resisted the blessed [Note 64] martyr Peter, and after him the great Achillas, and then Alexander, of blessed memory [Note 65], in order that, as being practised in such matters, the Meletians might pretend against me also whatever might be suggested to them, while the Eusebians gave them an opening for persecuting and for seeking to kill me. For this is what they thirst after; and they continue to this day to desire to shed my blood.

21. But of these things I have no care; for I know and am persuaded that they who endure shall receive a reward from our Saviour; and that ye also, if ye endure as the Fathers did, and shew yourselves examples to the people, and {153} overthrow these strange and alien devices of impious men, shall be able to glory, and say, "We have kept the Faith [2 Tim. iv. 7.];" and ye shall receive the crown of life, which God hath promised to them that love Him [James i. 12.]. And God grant that I also together with you may inherit the promises, which were given, not to Paul only, but also to all them that have loved the appearing of our Lord, and Saviour, and God, and universal King, Jesus Christ; through whom to the Father be glory and dominion in the Holy Spirit, both now and for ever, world without end. Amen.

Top | Contents | Works | Home


Notes

A. "Know," says St. Athan. to Jovian, "that these things have been preached from the beginning, and this Creed the Fathers who assembled at Nicæa confessed, and to these have been awarded the suffrages of all the Churches every where in their respective places … And thou knowest that, should there be some few who are in opposition to this faith, they cannot create any prejudice against it, the whole world maintaining the Apostolical Creed." Athan. Ep. ad Jov. §. 2. "Whether it be persecutions or afflictions or threats from our sovereign, or cruelties from persons in office, … we endured it on behalf of the Apostolical faith, &c." Theod. Hist. v. 9. vid. Keble on Primitive Trad. p. 122. 10. "Let each boldly set down his faith in writing, having the fear of God before his eyes." Conc. Chalced. Sess. 1. Hard. t. 2. p. 273. "Give diligence without fear, favour, or dislike, to set out the faith in its purity." ibid. p. 285.
Return to text

A. This [apodeixis] or declaration is ascribed to S. Alexander, (as Montfaucon would explain it, supr. p. 125.) supr. p. 43. p. 146, r. 5. p. 148, r. 3. p. 149, r. 5. vid. also p. 150. It should be observed that an additional reason for assigning this Letter to the year 356, is its resemblance in parts to the Orations which were written not long after.
Return to text

Top | Contents | Works | Home


Margin Notes

1. vol. 8. pp. 10, 94, 185.
Return to text

2. [poiema].
Return to text

3. [gennethenai], vol. 8, p. 272.
Return to text

4. [archen].
Return to text

5. [demiourgesai]
Return to text

6. [treptos], vid. vol. 8. p. 230, note a.
Return to text

7. ibid. p. 101.
Return to text

8. [idios].
Return to text

9. [kat' epinoian].
Return to text

10. Orat. ii. 38.
Return to text

11. vol. 8. p. 12.
Return to text

12. [genesthai].
Return to text

13. ibid. p. 100.
Return to text

14. ibid. p. 96.
Return to text

15. ibid. p. 95.
Return to text

16. [ousian].
Return to text

17. p. 138, r. 1.
Return to text

18. supr. p. 129, vol. 8. p. 191, note d.
Return to text

19. ibid. p. 229, note g.
Return to text

20. ibid. p. 48.
Return to text

21. p. 139.
Return to text

22. vol. 8. p. 11, note u.
Return to text

23. supr. p. 129, r. 5.
Return to text

24. vol. 8. p. 208, note a.
Return to text

25. [epinoias].
Return to text

26. vid. passage in Orat. ii. 39 fin.
Return to text

27. [alogian].
Return to text

28. vol. 8. p. 26, note g.
Return to text

29. ibid. p. 37, note y.
Return to text

30. [anthropopathe], ibid. p. 16, r. 1.
Return to text

31. supr. p. 135, r. 3.
Return to text

32. [ousian].
Return to text

33. Orat. ii. 18-72.
Return to text

34. vol. 8. p. 22.
Return to text

35. vol. 8. p. 115, note e.
Return to text

36. [eidos], ibid. p. 154, note e.
Return to text

37. ibid. p. 210, note e.
Return to text

38. Orat. iii. §. 35. also vol. 8. p. 17.
Return to text

39. [sathran].
Return to text

40. vol. 8, p. 3, note f.
Return to text

41. ibid. p. 184, note k.
Return to text

42. vol. 8. p. 193, r. 4.
Return to text

43. infr. p. 151, note B.
Return to text

44. vol. 8. p. 193.
Return to text

45. vid. Ep. ad Serap. infr.
Return to text

46. [sunagesthai].
Return to text

47. [makarites].
Return to text

48. [akoinonetos].
Return to text

49. p. 151, note B.
Return to text

50. supr. p. 14. vol. 8. p. 88.
Return to text

51. vol. 8. p. 84, note b.
Return to text

52. ibid. p. 2, note c. p. 81, note t.
Return to text

53. ibid. p. 191, r. 3.
Return to text

54. ibid. p. 180, note f. p. 194 fin.
Return to text

55. vid. infr. p. 151, note B.
Return to text

56. vid. Suicer. Thes. in voc. [mart]. iii.
Return to text

57. [martyrion].
Return to text

58. supr. p. 149.
Return to text

59. [manian].
Return to text

60. vol. 8. p. 79, note q.
Return to text

61. ibid. p. 5, note k.
Return to text

62. [manian].
Return to text

63. supr. p. 89.
Return to text

64. [makariou].
Return to text

65. [makaritou], infr. p. 161, r. 4.
Return to text

Top | Contents | Works | Home


Newman Reader — Works of John Henry Newman
Copyright © 2007 by The National Institute for Newman Studies. All rights reserved.