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Werke Athanasius von Alexandrien (295-373) Orationes contra Arianos Four Discourses against the Arians
Discourse III.

39.

If then (as has many times been said) the Word has not become man, then ascribe to the Word, as you would have it, to receive, and to need glory, and to be ignorant; but if He has become man (and He has become), and it is man’s to receive, and to need, and to be ignorant, wherefore do we consider the Giver as receiver, and the Dispenser to others do we suspect to be in need, and divide the Word from the Father as imperfect and needy, while we strip human nature of grace? For if the Word Himself, considered as Word, has received and been glorified for His own sake, and if He according to His Godhead is He who is hallowed and has risen again, what hope is there for men? for they remain as they were, naked, and wretched, and dead, having no interest in the things given to the Son. Why too did the Word come among us, and become flesh? if that He might receive these things, which He says that He has received, He was without them before that, and of necessity will rather owe thanks Himself to the body [^99], because, when He came into it, then He receives these things from the Father, which He had not before His descent into the flesh. For on this shewing He seems rather to be Himself promoted because of the body 1, than the body promoted because of Him. But this notion is Judaic. But if that He might redeem mankind 2, the Word did come among us; and that He might hallow and deify them, the Word became flesh (and for this He did become), who does not see that it follows, that what He says that He received, when He became flesh, that He mentions, not for His own sake, but for the flesh? for to it, in which He was speaking, pertained the gifts given through Him from the Father. But let us see what He asked, and what the things altogether were which He said that He had received, that in this way also they may be brought to feeling. He asked then glory, yet He had said, ‘All things were delivered unto Me 3.’ And after the resurrection, He says that He has received all power; but even before that He had said, ‘All things were delivered unto Me,’ He was Lord of all, for ‘all things were made by Him;’ and ‘there is One Lord by whom are all things 4.’ And when He asked glory, He was as He is, the Lord of glory; as Paul says, ‘If they had known it, they would not have crucified the Lord of glory 5;’ for He had that glory which He asked when He said, ‘the glory which I had with Thee before the world was 6.’

[^99] : Infr.51.


  1. Or.i. 38.  ↩

  2. Redemption aninternalwork. vid.supr.ii. 55, n. 1.  ↩

  3. Luke x. 22 .  ↩

  4. 1 Cor. viii. 6 .  ↩

  5. 1 Cor. ii. 8 .  ↩

  6. Joh. xvii. 5 .  ↩

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Übersetzungen dieses Werks
Four Discourses against the Arians
Vier Reden gegen die Arianer (BKV) vergleichen
Kommentare zu diesem Werk
Einleitung zu den Reden gegen die Arianer (BKV)
Introduction to Four Discourses against the Arians

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Theologische Fakultät, Patristik und Geschichte der alten Kirche
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