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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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Dogmatic.“If the Son has not authority over the judgment, <strong>and</strong> power to benefit some <strong>and</strong> chastiseothers, how could He say, ‘The Father judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgmentunto the Son’? 453 And in another place, ‘The Son of man hath power on earth to forgivesins;’ 454 <strong>and</strong> again, ‘All power is given unto me in heaven <strong>and</strong> in earth;’ 455 <strong>and</strong> to Peter, ‘Iwill give thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven;’ 456 <strong>and</strong> to the disciples, ‘Verily, I say untoyou that ye which have followed me, in the regeneration,…shall sit upon twelve thrones,judging the twelve tribes of Israel.’ 457 The explanation is clear from the Scripture, since theSaviour said, ‘Then will I reward every man according to his work;’ 458 <strong>and</strong> in another place,‘They that have done good shall come forth unto the resurrection of life, <strong>and</strong> they that havedone evil unto the resurrection of damnation.’ 459 And the Apostle says, ‘We must all appearbefore the judgment seat of Christ, that every one may receive the things done in his body,according to what he hath done, whether it be good or bad.’ 460 It is therefore the part ofthe recipients to make themselves worthy of a seat on the left <strong>and</strong> on the right of the Lord:it is not the part of Him Who is able to give it, even though the request be unjust.” 461On Ps. xviii. 31, LXX. Who is God, save the Lord? Who is God save our God?“It has already been sufficiently demonstrated that the Scriptures employ these expressions<strong>and</strong> others of a similar character not of the Son, but of the so-called gods who werenot really so. I have shewn this from the fact that in both the Old <strong>and</strong> the New Testamentthe son is frequently styled both God <strong>and</strong> Lord. David makes this still clearer when he says,similar error is to be found in both the French <strong>and</strong> German (Luther’s) of Bagster’s polyglot edition. Wiclif hascorrectly, “is not myn to geve to you but to whiche it is made redi of my fadir.” So Tyndale, “is not myne togeve but to them for whom it is prepared of my father.” The gloss begins with Cranmer (1539), “it shall chanceunto them that it is prepared for,” <strong>and</strong> first appears in the Geneva of 1557 as the A.V. has perpetuated it. TheRheims follows the vobis of the Vulgate, but is otherwise correct. cf. note on Theodoret in this edition, p. 169.453 John v. 22.454 Mark ii. 10.455 Matt. xxviii. 18.456 Matt. xvi. 19.457 Matt. xix. 28.458 cf. Matt. xvi. 27.459 John v. 29.460 2 Cor. v. 10.461 These last words are explained by a Scholium to the MS. Reg. II. to be a reference to the unreasonablepetition of James <strong>and</strong> John. It will be seen how totally opposed <strong>Basil</strong>’s interpretation is to that required by thegloss of A.V.73

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