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NPNF2-08. Basil: Letters and Select Works - Holy Bible Institute

NPNF2-08. Basil: Letters and Select Works - Holy Bible Institute

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To his Brother Gregory, concerning the difference between <strong>and</strong> .Father? For if the hypostasis is the sign of several existence, <strong>and</strong> the property of the Fatheris confined to the unbegotten being, <strong>and</strong> the Son is fashioned according to His Father’sproperties, then the term unbegotten can no longer be predicated exclusively of the Father,the existence of the Only-begotten being denoted by the distinctive note of the Father.7. My opinion is, however, that in this passage the Apostle’s argument is directed to adifferent end; <strong>and</strong> it is looking to this that he uses the terms “brightness of glory,” <strong>and</strong> “expressimage of person.” Whoever keeps this carefully in view will find nothing that clasheswith what I have said, but that the argument is conducted in a special <strong>and</strong> peculiar sense.For the object of the apostolic argument is not the distinction of the hypostases from oneanother by means of the apparent notes; it is rather the apprehension of the natural, inseparable,<strong>and</strong> close relationship of the Son to the Father. He does not say “Who being theglory of the Father” (although in truth He is); he omits this as admitted, <strong>and</strong> then in theendeavour to teach that we must not think of one form of glory in the case of the Father<strong>and</strong> of another in that of the Son, He defines the glory of the Only-begotten as the brightnessof the glory of the Father, <strong>and</strong>, by the use of the example of the light, causes the Son to bethought of in indissoluble association with the Father. For just as the brightness is emittedby the flame, <strong>and</strong> the brightness is not after the flame, but at one <strong>and</strong> the same moment theflame shines <strong>and</strong> the light beams brightly, so does the Apostle mean the Son to be thoughtof as deriving existence from the Father, <strong>and</strong> yet the Only-begotten not to be divided fromthe existence of the Father by any intervening extension in space, but the caused to be alwaysconceived of together with the cause. Precisely in the same manner, as though by way ofinterpretation of the meaning of the preceding cause, <strong>and</strong> with the object of guiding us tothe conception of the invisible by means of material examples, he speaks also of “expressimage of person.” For as the body is wholly in form, <strong>and</strong> yet the definition of the body <strong>and</strong>the definition of the form are distinct, <strong>and</strong> no one wishing to give the definition of the onewould be found in agreement with that of the other; <strong>and</strong> yet, even if in theory you separatethe form from the body, nature does not admit of the distinction, <strong>and</strong> both are inseparablyapprehended; just so the Apostle thinks that even if the doctrine of the faith represents thedifference of the hypostases as unconfounded <strong>and</strong> distinct, he is bound by his language toset forth also the continuous <strong>and</strong> as it were concrete relation of the Only-begotten to theFather. And this he states, not as though the Only-begotten had not also a hypostatic being,but in that the union does not admit of anything intervening between the Son <strong>and</strong> theFather, with the result that he, who with his soul’s eyes fixes his gaze earnestly on the expressimage of the Only-begotten, is made perceptive also of the hypostasis of the Father. Yet theproper quality contemplated in them is not subject to change, nor yet to commixture, insuch wise as that we should attribute either an origin of generation to the Father or an originwithout generation to the Son, but so that if we could compass the impossibility of detachingone from the other, that one might be apprehended severally <strong>and</strong> alone, for, since the mere141432

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