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Works Alexander of Alexandria (250-328) Epistula ad Alexandrum Thessalonicensem? To Alexander, Bishop of the City of Constantinople

9.

And though I could say much more, brethren beloved, I purposely omit to do so, as deeming it to be burdensome at great length to call these things to the remembrance of teachers who are of the same mind with myself. For ye yourselves are taught of God, nor are ye ignorant that this doctrine, which hath lately raised its head against the piety of the Church, is that of Ebion and Artemas; nor is it aught else but an imitation of Paul of Samosata, bishop of Antioch, who, by the judgment and counsel of all the bishops, and in every place, was separated from the Church. 1 To whom Lucian succeeding, remained for many years separate from the communion of three bishops. 2 And now lately having drained the dregs of their impiety, there have arisen amongst us those who teach this doctrine of a creation from things which are not, 3 their hidden sprouts, Arius and Achilles, and the gathering of those who join in their wickedness. And three bishops in Syria, having been, in some manner, consecrated on account of their agreement with them, incite them to worse things. But let the judgment concerning these be reserved for your trial. For they, retaining in their memory the words which came to be used with respect to His saving Passion, and abasement, and examination, and what they call His poverty, and in short of all those things to which the Saviour submitted for our sakes, bring them forward to refute His supreme and eternal Godhead. But of those words which signify His natural glory and nobility, and abiding with the Father, they have become unmindful. Such as this: "I and My Father are one," 4 which indeed the Lord says, not as proclaiming Himself to be the Father, nor to demonstrate that two persons are one; but that the Son of the Father most exactly preserves the expressed likeness of the Father, inasmuch as He has by nature impressed upon Him His similitude in every respect, and is the image of the Father in no way discrepant, and the expressed figure of the primitive exemplar. Whence, also, to Philip, who then was desirous to see Him, the Lord shows this abundantly. For when he said, "Show us the Father," 5 He answered: "He that hath seen Me, hath seen the Father," since the Father was Himself seen through the spotless and living mirror of the divine image. Similar to which is what the saints say in the Psalms: "In Thy light shall we see light." 6 Wherefore he that honoureth the Son, honoureth the Father also;" 7 and with reason, for every impious word which they dare to speak against the Son, has reference to the Father.


  1. [a.d. 269.] ↩

  2. [By the canons three bishops were necessary to ordain one to the episcopate, nor was communion with fewer than these Catholic.] ↩

  3. [See p. 292, note 3, supra.] ↩

  4. John x. 30. ↩

  5. John xiv. 8, 9. ↩

  6. Ps. xxxvi. 9. ↩

  7. Ps. xxxvi. 9. ↩

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To Alexander, Bishop of the City of Constantinople
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Notes and Elucidations to Alexander of Alexandria

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Faculty of Theology, Patristics and History of the Early Church
Miséricorde, Av. Europe 20, CH 1700 Fribourg

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