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Chapter XXII.

Establishment of the natural communion of the Spirit from His being, equally with the Father and the Son, unapproachable in thought. 1167

53.  Moreover the surpassing excellence of the nature of the Spirit is to be learned not only from His having the same title as the Father and the Son, and sharing in their operations, but also from His being, like the Father and the Son, unapproachable in thought.  For what our Lord says of the Father as being above and beyond human conception, and what He says of the Son, this same language He uses also of the Holy Ghost.  “O righteous Father,” He says, “the world hath not known Thee,” 1168 meaning here by the world not the complex whole compounded of heaven and earth, but this life of ours subject to death, 1169 and exposed to innumerable vicissitudes.  And when discoursing of Himself He says, “Yet a little while and the world seeth me no more, but ye see me;” 1170 again in this passage, applying the word world to those who being bound down by this material and carnal life, and beholding 1171 the truth by material sight alone, 1172 were ordained, through their unbelief in the resurrection, to see our Lord no more with the eyes of the heart.  And He said the same concerning the Spirit.  “The Spirit of truth,” He says, “whom the world cannot receive, because it seeth Him not, neither knoweth Him:  but ye know Him, for He dwelleth with you.” 1173   For the carnal man, who has never trained his mind to contemplation, 1174 but rather keeps it buried deep in lust of the flesh, 1175 as in mud, is powerless to look up to the spiritual light of the truth.  And so the world, that is life enslaved by the affections of the flesh, can no more receive the grace of the Spirit than a weak eye the light of a sunbeam.  But the Lord, who by His teaching bore witness to purity of life, gives to His disciples the power of now both beholding and contemplating the Spirit.  For “now,” He says, “Ye are clean through the word which I have spoken unto you,” 1176 wherefore “the world cannot receive Him, because it seeth Him not,…but ye know Him; for he dwelleth with you.” 1177   And so says Isaiah;—“He that spread forth the earth and that which cometh out of it; he that giveth breath unto the people upon it, and Spirit to them that trample on it” 1178 ; for they that trample down earthly things and rise above them are borne witness to as worthy of the gift of the Holy Ghost.  What then ought to be thought of Him whom the world cannot receive, and Whom saints alone can contemplate through pureness of heart?  What kind of honours can be deemed adequate to Him?


Footnotes

34:1167

πρὸς θεωρίαν δυσέφικτον.  The Benedictine Latin is “incomprehensibilis,” but this is rather κατάληπτος.  The “incomprehensible” of the Ath. Creed is “immensus.”

34:1168

John xvii. 25.

34:1169

πίκηρος.  The force of the word as applied to this life is illustrated by the 61st Epigram of Callimachus:

Τίς ξένος, ὦ ναυηγέ; Δεόντιχος ἐνθάδε νεκρὸν

εὗρεν ἐπ᾽ αἰγιαλοῖς, χῶσε δὲ τῷδε τάφῳ

δακρύσας ἐπίκηρον εὸν βίον· οὐδὲ γὰρ αὐτὸς

συχος, αἰθυί& 219·ς δ᾽ ἶσα θαλασσοπορεῖ .

34:1170

John xiv. 19.

34:1171

πιβλέποντας , the reading of the Viennese ms. vulgo πιτρέποντας.

34:1172

μόνοις ὀφθαλμοῖς.

34:1173

John xiv. 17.

34:1174

γύμναστον ἔχων τὸν νοῦνcf. Heb. v. 14.

34:1175

τῷ φρονήματι τῆς σαρκόςcf. Rom. viii. 6 τὸ γὰρ φρόνημα τῆς σαρκὸς θάνατος.

34:1176

John xv. 3.

34:1177

John xiv. 17.

34:1178

Is. xlii. 5, LXX. πατοῦσιν αὐτήν.  So St. Basil’s argument requires us to translate the lxx.  The “walk therein” of A.V. would not bear out his meaning.  For this use of πατειν, cf. Soph., Ant. 745. οὐ γὰρ σέβεις τιμάς γε τὰς θεῶν πατῶν.  So in the vulgate we read “et spiritum calcantibus eam,”—calcare bearing the sense of “trample on,” as in Juvenal, Sat. x. 86, “calcemus Cæsaris hostem.”  The Hebrew bears no such meaning.


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