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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 Sozopolitans.fested ill the flesh, “made of a woman, made under the law, to redeem them that were underthe law, that we might receive the adoption of sons.” 31732. If, then, the sojourn of the Lord in flesh has never taken place, the Redeemer 3174paid not the fine to death on our behalf, nor through Himself destroyed death’s reign. Forif what was reigned over by death was not that which was assumed by the Lord, death wouldnot have ceased working his own ends, nor would the sufferings of the God-bearing fleshhave been made our gain; He would not have killed sin in the flesh: we who had died inAdam should not have been made alive in Christ; the fallen to pieces would not have beenframed again; the shattered would not have been set up again; that which by the serpent’strick had been estranged from God would never have been made once more His own. Allthese boons are undone by those that assert that it was with a heavenly body that the Lordcame among us. And if the God-bearing flesh was not ordained to be assumed of the lumpof Adam, what need was there of the <strong>Holy</strong> Virgin? But who has the hardihood now onceagain to renew by the help of sophistical arguments <strong>and</strong>, of course, by scriptural evidence,that old dogma 3175 of Valentinus, now long ago silenced? For this impious doctrine of theseeming 3176 is no novelty. It was started long ago by the feeble-minded Valentinus, who,after tearing off a few of the Apostle’s statements, constructed for himself this impious fabrication,asserting that the Lord assumed the “form of a servant,” 3177 <strong>and</strong> not the servanthimself, <strong>and</strong> that He was made in the “likeness,” but that actual manhood was not assumedby Him. Similar sentiments are expressed by these men who can only be pitied for bringingnew troubles upon you. 31783173 Gal. iv. 4, 5.3174 Λυτρωτής. cf. Acts vii. 35, where R.V. gives redeemer as marginal rendering. Λυτρωτής=payer of theλύτρον, which is the means of release (λύω). The word is used of Moses in the Acts in a looser sense than hereof the Saviour.3175 On the use of “dogma” for heretical opinion, cf. De Sp. S. note on § 66.3176 δόκησις.3177 Phil. ii. 7.3178 On the Docetism of Valentinus vide Dr. Salmon in D. C. Biog. i. 869. “According to V. (Irenæus i. 7)our Lord’s nature was fourfold: (1) He had a ψυχή or animal soul; (2) He had a πνεῦμα or spiritual principlederived from Achamoth; (3) He had a body, but not a material body, but a heavenly one.…(4) The pre-existentSaviour descended on Him in the form of a dove at His Baptism. When our Lord was brought before Pilate,this Saviour as being incapable of suffering withdrew His power;” (cf. the Gospel of Peter, “The Lord cried, saying,‘My Power, my Power, Thou hast left me.’”) “<strong>and</strong> the spiritual part which was also impassible was likewise dismissed;the animal soul <strong>and</strong> the wonderfully contrived body alone remaining to suffer, <strong>and</strong> to exhibit on thecross on earth a representation of what had previously taken place on the heavenly Stauros. It thus appears thatValentinus was only partially docetic.” But cf. Iren. v. 1, 2, <strong>and</strong> iii. 22.820

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