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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 the same Amphilochius.He could not say what is false Who said “All things that the Father hath are Mine,” 2989but one of the things which the Father hath is knowledge of that day <strong>and</strong> of that hour. Inthe passage in Matthew, then, the Lord made no mention of His own Person, as a matterbeyond controversy, <strong>and</strong> said that the angels knew not <strong>and</strong> that His Father alone knew, tacitlyasserting the knowledge of His Father to be His own knowledge too, because of what Hehad said elsewhere, “as the Father knoweth me even so know I the Father,” 2990 <strong>and</strong> if theFather has complete knowledge of the Son, nothing excepted, so that He knows all knowledgeto dwell in Him, He will clearly be known as fully by the Son with all His inherent wisdom<strong>and</strong> all His knowledge of things to come. This modification, I think, may be given to thewords of Matthew, “but my Father only.” Now as to the words of Mark, who appears distinctlyto exclude the Son from the knowledge, my opinion is this. No man knoweth, neitherthe angels of God; nor yet the Son would have known unless the Father had known: thatis, the cause of the Son’s knowing comes from the Father. To a fair hearer there is no violencein this interpretation, because the word “only” is not added as it is in Matthew. Mark’ssense, then, is as follows: of that day <strong>and</strong> of that hour knoweth no man, nor the angels ofGod; but even the Son would not have known if the Father had not known, for the knowledgenaturally His was given by the Father. This is very decorous <strong>and</strong> becoming the divine natureto say of the Son, because He has, His knowledge <strong>and</strong> His being, beheld in all the wisdom<strong>and</strong> glory which become His Godhead, from Him with Whom He is consubstantial.3. As to Jeconias, whom the prophet Jeremiah declares in these words to have been rejectedfrom the l<strong>and</strong> of Judah, “Jeconias was dishonoured like a vessel for which there is nomore use; <strong>and</strong> because he was cast out he <strong>and</strong> his seed; <strong>and</strong> none shall rise from his seedsitting upon the throne of David <strong>and</strong> ruling in Judah,” 2991 the matter is plain <strong>and</strong> clear. Onthe destruction of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar, the kingdom had been destroyed, <strong>and</strong>there was no longer an hereditary succession of reigns as before. Nevertheless, at that time,the deposed descendants of David were living in captivity. On the return of Salathiel <strong>and</strong>Zerubbabel the supreme government rested to a greater degree with the people, <strong>and</strong> thesovereignty was afterwards transferred to the priesthood, on account of the interminglingof the priestly <strong>and</strong> royal tribes; whence the Lord, in things pertaining to God, is both King<strong>and</strong> High Priest. Moreover, the royal tribe did not fail until the coming of the Christ; nevertheless,the seed of Jeconias sat no longer upon the throne of David. Plainly it is the royaldignity which is described by the term “throne.” You remember the history, how all Judæa,Idumæa, Moab, both the neighbouring regions of Syria <strong>and</strong> the further countries up toMesopotamia, <strong>and</strong> the country on the other side as far as the river of Egypt, were all tributary2989 John xvi. 15.2990 John x. 15.2991 Jer. xxii. 28–30, LXX.769

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