Trinitarian Theology Marius Victorinus
Trinitarian Theology Marius Victorinus
Trinitarian Theology Marius Victorinus
By
A Dissertation submitted
to the Faculty of the Graduate School,
Marquette University,
in Partial Fulfillment
of the Requirement
for the Degree of
Doctor of Philosophy
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
August 2006
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Copyright 2006 by
Voelker, John T.
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ABSTRACT
The Trinitarian Theology of Marius Victorinus: Polemic and Exegesis
In this thesis I will show that Marius Victorinus was a Nicene Christian theologian engaged with
the theology and events of the fourth centurys Trinitarian Controversy. I will challenge the
traditional notion of Marius Victorinus as a brilliant but isolated scholarly figure in the Latin
West of the late 350s and early 360s who, following his conversion, spent his last years writing
incomprehensible trinitarian-Neoplatonist theological treatises, read by virtually no one. On the
contrary, I will show that Marius Victorinus was very familiar with the original Arianism of
Arius, and that he understood later-stage Anti-Nicene theology of the last decade of his life, from
his conversion circa 355 to the approximate date of his death in 365. Victorinus wrote treatises
and Pauline commentaries that engaged Anti-Nicene theology with a Latin Neo-Nicene polemic,
using a tradition of Latin exegesis of Scripture that he had quickly integrated after his
conversion. This exegetical-polemical style has close parallels with Victorinus Latin NeoNicene contemporaries. Victorinus fully engages Anti-Nicene opponents, coming up with some
of the most original Nicene polemic of the controversy to speak about themes of divine
substance, visibility and unity of the Father and the Son. I will examine these themes in
Victorinus trinitarian treatises that are integral to undertanding the Arian-Nicene conflicts of the
Trinitarian controversy, involving Victorinus interpretation of Scripture and Latin theology to
speak of divine substance, divine visibility, and divine unity on behalf of the Neo-Nicenes. I will
show how Victorinus best speaks of the case for divine substance, and how he is the earliest
witness to a 381-era trinitarian formula; how Victorinus uses essential visibility texts of Scripture
to argue for the Sons consubstantiality; and Victorinus best efforts on behalf on Neo-Nicene
orthodoxy, making statements about shared nature, substance and power of the Father and the
Son to prove their unity. Finally, I will point out and discuss the One Substance/One Power
statements in Victorinus treatises, along with his sophisticated arguments that the Spirit
proceeds from the Son as well as from the Father as evidence of the unity of between the Father,
Son and Spirit.
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Table of Contents
Introduction
............................................................................................................. 1
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ii
5
Conclusions..................................................................................................................... 222
Select Bibliography
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229
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242
Introduction
The Context of Marius Victorinus Exegetical Theology
In short, there is no satisfactory evidence that Marius Victorinus had any genuine
knowledge of Arianism as it was in his day.1In this thesis I will challenge this notion of
Marius Victorinus as a brilliant but isolated scholarly figure in the Latin West of the late
350s and early 360s who spent his last years writing incomprehensible trinitarianNeoplatonist theological treatises, read by virtually no one (as Jerome famously said of
him). On the contrary, I will show that Marius Victorinus was very familiar with the
original Arianism of Arius, as he demonstrates in producing Latin versions of two early
Arian documents. I will also show that he understood later-stage Anti-Nicene theology of
the last decade of his life, from his conversion circa 355 to the approximate date of his
death in 365. Victorinus wrote treatises and Pauline commentaries that engaged AntiNicene theology with a Latin Neo-Nicene polemic, using a tradition of Latin exegesis of
Scripture that he had quickly integrated after his conversion. This exegetical-polemical
style has close parallels with Victorinus Latin Neo-Nicene contemporaries, such as
Phoebadius of Agen and Gregory of Elvira. Besides engaging Anti-Nicene opponents
1.
R. P. C. Hanson, The Search fo r the Christian Doctrine o f God: The Arian Controversy 318381
(Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1988), 534. (Hereafter: Hanson, Search.) See chapter 1 below for more
comments on R. P.C. Hanson devoting an entire chapter to Marius Victorinus in his comprehensive
1988 work. And yet if the above comment is truly what Hanson thinks o f Victorinus, why bother with
a chapter on him and his trinitarian treatises. Hanson is unsure o f what to do with Victorinus, and after
carefUlly considering his Nicene treatises and exegesis, he seems to conclude something that is a re
statement o f Jeromes idea that Victorinus was too difficult to understand and read by no one.
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(many of whom he names in Against Arius), Victorinus also shows familiarity with other
Trinitarian Controversy matters, such as the Sirmian 351 council, the Sirmian 358 dossier
of conciliar documents, the unique trinitarian formula of one ousia in three hypostases,
and the Origenian Tractate homilies which summarized Origens thought in the Latin
speaking West. Though the post-conversion Victorinus had only about one decade to take
part in producing Nicene theology against Anti-Nicene forces in his time, he spent that
time fruitfully, writing the four books of Against Arius, four other trinitarian polemical
treatises, three trinitarian hymns, and six Pauline commentaries. His legacy was enduring
enough for Ambrosiaster and Augustine to make use of his writings a generation later,
and his works were consulted into the medieval period in Europe.
I will look at and discuss Victorinus mature Neo-Nicene theology with a close
examination of Against Arius, especially the way in which he uses key scriptural loci and
groups of them as testimonia. He uses these testimonia in ways similar to other NeoNicenes, with a surprising familiarity of the issues at stake in the late 350s stage of the
controversy. I will show that Victorinus understands well what texts can be used and
explicated for the sake of deploying a polemic against Anti-Nicenes, and retrieving and
defending the Neo-Nicene cause of God the Sons consubstantiality with God the Father.
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traditionally has been called the Arian Controversy, generally understood to be within the
era of roughly 318 to 381
A.D.
reassessment of what is now termed the Trinitarian Controversy, acknowledging that this
was not simply a controversy between the subordinationist Arius and his original Arian
followers versus Orthodox Nicenes. The Trinitarian Controversy included various doctrinal
stages and trajectories of subordinationist and Monarchian theologies that gradually
produced creedal documents and theologies that were identifiably Nicene, Anti-Nicene, or
even Non-Nicene. These scholarly reconsiderations have created a latest generation of
scholarship on the Trinitarian Controversy: single monographs (such as Maurice Wiles
grounbreaking reevaluation, In Defence of Arius); larger, comprehensive commentaries
on all the aspects of the controversy (Manlio Simonettis early 1975 work La crisi ariana
nel IVsecolo, Rowan Williams 1987 work, Arius: Heresy and Tradition, and R. P. C.
Hansons lengthy tome from 1988, The Search for the Christian Doctrine o f God: The
Arian Controversy 318-381); and collections {Arianism: Historical and Theological
Reassessments, Arianism after Arius). The titles of these works speak for the reality of
new views and work being done on fourth-century controversy and doctrinal development.2
The subtitle of Hansons 900-page work gives a supposed periodization of the Trinitarian
Controversy for which he gives a rationale, though we could argue for proto-Nicene or
proto-Arian theologies beginning long before 318, or Nicene development even after the
381 Council of Constantinople.
2.
A work such as Hansons especially is useful as both a very detailed and general work to read and
consult as a sort o f atlas o f the course o f the fourth century, including the way he sums up the long
work with a last chapter on The Development o f Doctrine. Cf. also his The Continuity o f Christian
Doctrine (New York: Seabury Press, 1981).
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The decade of the 350s was preceded by a beginning stage of the Trinitarian
Controversy concerning Arius himself and the Eusebians, in the decade after the 325
council, and Arius disagreements with his bishop, Alexander of Alexandria. The
theological issues before the council had to do with doctrines that described what kind
of existence God the Son has versus God the Father, the origin the Son takes from the
Father, and the eternity of the Son versus his creatureliness. After the adoption of
homoousios in the creed of the 325 council (this creed often referred to simply as N)
and the condemnation of Arius, a controversy was starting, rather than ending. It would
not even possess the name of its supposed founder until two decades later, with the
creation of Arianism by Athanasius as a polemical form. With Arius cause continued
after his death by the party of the Eusebiansthat is, Eusebius of Nicomedia and
Eusebius of Caesareathere was an Anti-Nicene party that could be the focus of those
who came to support N as a universal, normative creed in the 350s.
The adoption of N was not without its problems. It had strong modalist connotations
(for example, where it said that the Son was not just of the ousia of the Father, or
one in ousia with the Father, but also the same hypostasis as the Father). One of the
creeds strongest promoters, Marcellus of Ancyra, would become the focus of
condemnation because of his modalist theology, overshadowing Arius and the
identification of Arius with subordinationism. Marcellus, or what came to be identified
as Marcellan theology, would come to represent the other side of the controversy, the
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5
modalism of Marcellus and other supporters of N.3 In the decade following Nicaea,
Marcellus, with his radical modalism, would become a greater problem than Arius.4
In the 330s, the Arian problem did not go away with the death of Arius in 336, right
before his pending reinstatement. Athanasius suffered his first exile in 335 at the Synod
of Tyre, deposed along with Marcellus (though Athanasius first deposition was not for
theological reasons). Whether Athanasius and Marcellus had met at Tyre in 335, they did
meet up at Rome in 339, and in the next two years formed a common cause against their
Eastern opponents. Partly because of his close engagement with Marcellus in Rome,
Athanasius was beginning to develop a polemical form after his first exile. Condemning
the heresy of Arius and his co-conspirators (the same cabal that had worked behind the
scenes at Tyre to depose him for his theology, Athanasius asserted) Athanasius writes his
Orations against the Arians. He identified this group as begotten from the heresy of the
Alexandrian presbyter Arius, and presented himself, Athanasius, as a figure of orthodoxy,
and the Nicene council as an ecumenical council and a standard of orthodoxy.
This new narrative about the conspiracy of his Arian opponents worked well for
Athanasius. Around 33940 he appealed to Julius of Rome with it as a way of slipping
out of the charges he faced back in Alexandria for his conduct. Julius held a small council
in Rome, clearing Athanasius and Marcellus of charges that caused their depositions.
3.
4.
For the best in-depth treatment o f Marcellus and a theology identified with Marcellus, see Joseph T.
Lienhard, S.J., Contra Marcellum: Marcellus o f Ancyra and Fourth-Century Theology (Washington,
D.C.: The Catholic University o f America Press, 1999).
The traditional way o f speaking about the Trinitarian Controversy, when it was formerly called the
Arian Controversy, was to call anything Eastern and subordinationist by the term Arian, though the
only truly Arian theology has to do with Arius himself; otherwise various forms o f subordinationist
theology that exist at other times later in the fourth century can only be called Arian, or more
accurately, Anti-Nicene, in its various trajectories. Similarly, the term Nicene just by itself can
unfortunately refer to the original modalist theology o f Nicaea 325, rather than the trajectories o f NeoNicene and Pro-Nicene doctrinal definition that retrieved the theology o f Nicaea as a standard for
orthodoxy, producing the 381 Niceno-Constantinopolitan creed.
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6
More important for the next years of the controversy was Julius letter in 341 to Eastern
bishops. Having accepting Athanasius version of events, he charged the Eastern bishops
with falling into Arius and the Eusebians heresy, despite the condemnations o f Nicaea.
The Eastern bishops would give their response to this Western attack upon them at their
council held in Antioch in the same year of 341, with synodal documents that included
what came to be known as the Dedication Creed. The synodal letter rejected the
accusation of Julius that they, bishops, were followers of Arius, a mere presbyter. The
341 creed spoke about the trinitarian identity of Father, Son and Holy Spirit in a
particular order as three hypostases that are one in agreement (symphonia), with the
primary intention of being anti-modalist.
This period of the 340s was one of attempts at reconciliation (Hanson) and
confusion and rapprochement (Lewis Ayres). The failed attempt at reconciliation
between Western and Eastern bishops at the council at Serdica in 343 deepened the rift
between what Joseph Lienhard has categorized as a Western miahypostatic tradition
versus Eastern dyohypostatic theological trajectories. The Western bishops condemned
what they had come to categorize as Arianism (especially manifest in their statements
reference to twin adders begotten from the Arian asp) and the Eastern bishops Valens
and Ursacius. In the Westerners condemnatory statement about the Eastern bishops, they
reaffirmed that there is one hypostasis in the Godhead. A creed produced in the East in
345 (the Macrostich creed) and sent West as an attempt at reconciliation was rebuffed.
The 350s would be a decade of clearer distinction of Anti-Nicene parties because of
councils throughout that decade, especially between 357 and 360, right when Marius
Victorinus had familiarized himself with theology and the Western Neo-Nicene cause.
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Another council was held at Sirxnium in 351. It was convened mostly for the purpose of
deposing Photinus and as one action in a series of councils in the 350s where Constantius
could impose his policies, which included key Eastern councils decisions from the
previous few years.5 The creed issued by the council was the same as the Dedication Creed
of 341 (the Fourth Antiochene creed), but also issued with twenty-six more anathemas,
besides the original one anathema from 341. Two of the anathemas condemn a Stoic t o v o q
model of speaking about ousia of the Father and/or the Son as extending or retracting.
(Victorinus shows a working knowledge of the first Sirmian creed of 351 in Against Arius,
because this creed was one of the documents in Basil of Ancyras Ancyran dossier of 358.)
Victorinus conversion probably took place in 355, the same year in which Constantius
called a council in Milan. In these councils called in the West, Valens and Ursacius were
playing a major role in imposing a new Anti-Nicene theology upon a resistant gathering
of bishops. Lucifer of Cagliari, Eusebius of Vercelli and Dionysius of Milan were exiled,
having been condemned at the council in the condemnation of Athanasius. (Hilary of
Poitiers would be condemned and exiled the next year in a council held at Beziers.) The
major turning point would come the next year at the council convened in Sirmium in 357,
engineered by Valens and Urscacius, Eudoxius of Constantinople, and Eunomius of
Cyzicus. This infamous council would issue the radically subordinationist creed that
Hilary would memorably tag the Blasphemy. This creed, probably written by Valens
and Ursacius, forbade use of language of ousia or hypostasis and discussion about the
generation of the Son, and stated that it is certain that the Father is greater than the Son in
honor, dignity, glory and majesty.
5.
Ayres, Nicaea and Its Legacy: An Approach to Fourth-Century Trinitiarian Theology (New York:
Oxford University Press, 2004), 135. Councils held at Arles in 353, Milan in 355, and Beziers in 356.
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Sirmium 357 would energize the Nicene cause and force the West to confront AntiNicene trajectories. In direct response, Phoebadius of Agen would write his Liber
Contra Arrianos, and Hilary his De synodis, Liber adversus Valentem et Ursacius, De
Fide, and De Trinitate. Gregory of Elvira would write his De Fide Orthodoxa Contra
Arianos. Lucifer of Calaris and Eusebius of Vercelli would also pen polemical works.
Probably in the next year of 358 Victorinus began writing his Nicene polemic against
Homoians and Homoiousians. Also in 358 Basil of Ancyra held a small council in his
see as as response to the theology from the Sirmium 357 council that defined the Son as
radically subordinate to the Father. Sirmium 357 was a point of origin for incipient
Homoianism; the twin councils of Rimini and Seleucia in 359, where the Dated Creed
was adopted, defined the Homoians as a definite theological party. Basils
Homoiousian party would define their position more clearly, but important for
Victorinus, Basils small council would produce of dossier of creeds and other texts
that would circulate in the West. Victorinus conversion and period of theological
learning would happen just in time for the Anti-Nicene conciliar events of the late
350s which would bring about a Homoian supremacy for the next several years. Like
Phoebadius and Hilary, Victorinus entered the fray and began producing trinitarian
treatises in his Latin milieu, spending his last years and energies to serve the NeoNicene cause.
The challenge for these Latin-speaking Westerners was considerable. As Mark
Weedman put it, framing this question in order to speak of Hilarys engagement with
Anti-Nicenes in his De Trinitate and other works, the Westerners were trying to come to
terms with Anti-Nicene theology with the resources of their Latin theological tradition:
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9
Like their Eastern counterparts, these Westerners focused a great deal of attention on the Sirmium
357 creed, recognizing in it the hidden theological agenda of that earlier series of councils [of the
earlier 350s]. And they all found this agenda to be incompatible with the Trinitarian theology of
their Latin heritage. Although the Trinitarian theology of Tertullian and Novatian did contain
subordinationist elements, especially by fourth-century, Pro-Nicene standards, it was intended to
affirm the communion of substance between the Father and the Son. Any doctrine that tried to
deny this substantial relationship denied something fundamental to classical Latin Trinitarian
theology. Unfortunately, however, their Latin heritage did not necessarily provide the fourthcentuiy Westerners with the tools to meet this new challenge, and we find all the Latin authors,
even a sophisticated thinker like Marius Victorinus, struggling to find adequate language to
explain why the Homoians are so wrong.6
Although Hilary was the best theological engagement with Anti-Nicenes the Latin West
would produce (making him the Athanasius of the West as Jean Doignon famously
said), Weedman acknowledges that even Hilary at first engaged Anti-Nicenes naively,
only slowly coming to understanding the particularities involved in the controversy.71
will show that Victorinus accomplished a great deal with his Nicene polemic, in spite of
his difficulty addressing Anti-Nicenes with his tradition of Latin theology and exegesis.
But despite his inability to completely leave a Latin miahypostatic milieu in his
speaking of divine substance, that same Latin tradition also enables him to expound on
the important Scripture texts needed to establish arguments for the shared nature,
substance and power of the Son with the Father.
6.
7.
Mark Weedman, The Polemical Context and Background o f H ilarys Trinitarian Theology, PhD diss.,
Marquette University, 2004.
Weedman, 22.
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10
the dating of Victorinus post-conversion works. No other scholar has ever offered a better
explanation of the probable dating (though some claim his dating needs to be redone).
1.
2.
3.
4.
Candidus I
Ad Candidum
Candidus II
Against Arius I
de generatione divina
358-359
LA.: De Trinitate
IB: Quodtrinitasdfioovcriogsit
360
after 362-363
Victorinus is known most either for his four-book treatise, Against Arius, or for his
Pauline commentaries. His first post-conversion work was written circa 358, Candidus I,
or the first letter of Candidus the Arian to Rhetor Marius Victorinus On the Divine
Generation. Hadot and all other Victorine scholars have always understood Candidus to
be a fictional, cut-out figure of a traditional Eusebian Arian, whom Victorinus created as
a foil in order to set up his polemic, especially since Victorinus did answer this epistle
with his Ad Candidum or Marius Victorinus Rhetor o f the City o f Rome to Candidus the
o
Arian. Candidus reply, Candidus II, or Candidus the Arian to Illustrious Gentleman (vir
clarrissimus) Marius Victorinus, was not a reply, but the Latin translation of two early
8.
I still wonder about the possibly overlooked meaning o f Victorinus Candidus: In Adversus Praxean
Tertullian engages an opponent parodically named Praxeas, or Player (or Busybody). Maybe
Victorinus is slyly implying right up front that his interlocutor is a shining intellect with which to
contend, and thus the eponymous name something perhaps obvious to his readers. Candidus may
also be a reference to a real person o f Victorinus acquaintance; his nickname could be a reference to
Candidus being another vir clarissimus o f the Patrician class.
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11
Arian documents: Arius Letter to Eusebius ofNicomedia and Eusebius Letter to
Paulinus o f Tyre (with a paragraph preface Candidus supposedly writes to Victorinus to
introduce these two letters, which will enlighten Victorinus). If Candidus was a creation
of Victorinus, he may have begun with these three short treatises as a way of introducing
his subject of addressing Anti-Nicenes, by showing his familiarity with Arius and the
original theological starting points of the controversy.
Against Arius is a work of some two hundred pages, written in four books. (It seems
likely that the first book of Against Arius was the intended original work, but was then
considered by Victorinus to be insufficient for the task of responding to Latin Homoians
and the Homoiousian party of the 350s.) Book I is divided into Book IA and Book IB in
Mary Clarks translation, because of Hadots belief that it was after the forty-seventh
chapter of Book I that Victorinus had a copy of Basils 358 Sirmian dossier at hand and
addressed the Anti-Nicene theology he sees in the dossier. In the manuscript traditions,
Book LA sometimes has a subtitle of De Trinitate and IB a subtitle of Quod trinitas
oyoovoiog sit. Hadot puts a date of 360 for all of Book I o f Against Arius. Book II was
begun in 361, with its subtitle as De opoovmqo contra haereticos. Books III and IV Hadot
places in 362-63, each of them having a subtitle of De opoovaicp, and Hadot also places
in 362-63 the short summary treatise The Necessity o f Accepting the Homoousios (De
dfioovmq) recipiendo). The subtitles of these works show that there is no mistaking that
Victorinus belonged to the Latin Neo-Nicenes, who were defined by retrieving and
defending the homoousios. The Necessity o f Accepting the Homoousios is a very brief,
six-page summary of the argument of the four books of Against Arius.
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12
Hadot believes Victorinus wrote his three rather long trinitarian hymns, Hymnus I, II
and III, after finishing Against Arius and his short summary treatise The Necessity o f
Accepting the Homoousios. The hymns are extravagant praises of the Trinity, but also
possess Nicene theological content. They almost function as summaries of Victorinus
theology, in the way as The Necessity o f Accepting the Homoousios. The Pauline
commentaries come last in the dating of the works of Victorinus, belonging to the period
after emperor Julians 362 edict over Christians holding public teaching posts in the
empire, after which Victorinus resigned. Only three of the six commentaries survive: the
commentaries on Galatians, Ephesians, and Philippians (the Philippians commentary is
incomplete). The commentaries on Romans, and I and II Corinthians, referred to in the
succeeding commentaries, have never been found.
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14
9.
Cf. below Augustines later remembrance o f Victorinus in D e doctrina Christiana. The irony o f
Victorinus having been a proponent o f even Egyptian idols is that after his conversion he would excel
in spoiling the Egyptians gold, as Augustine praises him for in D e doctrina Christiana 2.40.60-1.
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15
8.2.3
So I visited Simplicianus, father to the then
bishop Ambrose in the receiving of grace.
Ambrose truly loved him as one loves a father. I
told him the story of my wanderings in error. But
when I mentioned that I had read some books of
the Platonists, which had been translated into
Latin by Victorinus, at one time rhetor in the city
of Rome who had, I had heard, died a Christian,
he congratulated me that I had not fallen in with
the writings of other philosophers full of fallacies
and deceptions according to the elements of this
world (Col. 2:8), whereas in all the Platonic
books God and his Word keep slipping in. Then,
to exhort me to the humility of Christ hidden
from the wise and revealed to babes (Matt.
11:25) he recalled his memory of Victorinus
himself whom he had known intimately when he
was at Rome. He told me a story about him
which I will not pass over in silence. For the
story gives occasion for me to confess to you in
great praise for your grace.
Victorinus was extremely learned and most
expert in all the liberal disciplines. He had read
and assessed many philosophers ideas, and was
tutor to numerous noble senators. To mark the
distinguished quality of his teaching he was
offered and accepted a statue in the Roman
forum, an honour which the citizens of this world
think supreme. Until he was of advanced years,
he was a worshipper of idols and took part in
sacrilegious rites. At that time almost all the
Roman nobility was enthusiastic for the cult of
Osiris and Monstrous gods of every kind and
Anubis the barking dog, Monsters who once bore
arms against Neptune and Venus and against
Minerva (Virgil, Aeneid 8.698f.), gods that
Rome once conquered but then implored for aid.
The old Victorinus had defended these cults for
many years with a voice terrifying to opponents.
Yet he was not ashamed to become the servant of
your Christ, and an infant bom at your font, to
bow his head to the yoke of humility and to
submit his forehead to the reproach of the cross.
8.2.3
perrexi ergo ad Simplicianum, pattern in
accipienda gratia tunc episcopi Ambrosii
et quern vere ut pattern diligebat. narravi ei
circuitus erroris mei. ubi autem
commemoravi legisse me quosdam libros
platonicorum, quos Victorinus, quondam
rhetor urbis Romae, quern christianum
defunctum esse audieram, in latinam
linguam transtulisset, gratulatus est mihi
quod non in aliorum philosophorum
scripta incidissem plena fallaciarum et
deceptionum secundum elementa huius
mundi, in istis autem omnibus modis
insinuari deum et eius verbum. deinde, ut
me exhortaretur ad humilitatem Christi
sapientibus absconditam et revelatam
parvulis, Victorinum ipsum recordatus est,
quern Romae cum esset familiarissime
noverat, deque illo mihi narravit quod non
silebo. habet enim magnam laudem gratiae
tuae confitendam tibi, quemadmodum ille
doctissimus senex et omnium liberalium
doctrinarum
peritissimus
quique
philosophorum tarn multa legerat et
diiudicaverat, doctor tot nobilium
senatorum, qui etiam ob insigne praeclari
magisterii, quod cives huius mundi
eximium putant, statuam Romano foro
meruerat et acceperat, usque ad illam
aetatem venerator idolorum sacrorumque
sacrilegorum particeps, quibus tunc tota
fere Romana nobilitas inflata spirabat,
popiliosiam et omnigenum deum monstra
et Anubem latratorem, quae aliquando
contra Neptunum et Venerem contraque
Minervam tela tenuerant et a se victis iam
Roma supplicabat, quae iste senex
Victorinus tot annos ore terricrepo
defensitaverat, non embuerit esse puer
Christi tui et infans fontis tui, subiecto
collo ad humilitatis iugum et edomita
ffonte ad cmcis opprobrium.
8.2.4
Lord God, you have inclined the heavens and
come down, you have touched the mountains and
8.2.4
o domine, domine, qui inclinasti caelos et
descendisti,
tetigisti
montes
et
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16
they have smoked (Ps. 143:5). By what ways
did you make an opening into that heart?
Simplicianus said Victorinus read holy scripture,
and all the Christian books he investigated with
special care. After examining them he said to
Simplicianus, not openly but in the privacy of
friendship, Did you know that I am already a
Christian? Simplicianus replied: I shall not
believe that or count you among the Christians
unless I see you in the Church of Christ.
Victorinus laughed and said: Then do walls
make Christians? He used frequently to say I
am a Christian already, and Simplicianus would
give the same answer, to which he equally often
repeated his joke about walls. He was afraid to
offend his friends, proud devil-worshippers. He
thought that from the height of Babylonish
dignity, as if from the cedars of Lebanon which
the Lord had not yet broken (Ps. 28:5), the full
weight of their hostility would land on him. But
after his reading, he began to feel a longing and
drank in courage. He was afraid he would be
denied by Christ before the holy angels
(Luke 12:9). He would have felt guilty of a grave
crime if he were ashamed of the mysteries of the
humility of your Word and were not ashamed of
the sacrilegious rites of proud demons, whose
pride he imitated when he accepted their
ceremonies. He became ashamed of the
emptiness of those rites and felt respect for the
truth. Suddenly and unexpectedly he said to
Simplicianus (as he told me): Let us go to the
Church; I want to become a Christian.
Simplicianus was unable to contain himself for
joy and went with him. Not long after he had
received his instructions in the first mysteries, he
gave in his name for baptism that he might be
reborn, to the amazement of Rome and the joy of
the Church. The proud saw and were angry.
They gnashed with their teeth and were sick at
heart (Ps. 111:10). But the Lord God was the
hope of his servant; he paid no regard to
vanities and lying follies (Ps. 39:5).
8.2.5
Finally the hour came for him to make the
profession of faith which is expressed in set
form. At Rome these words are memorized and
then by custom recited from an elevated place
before the baptized believers by those who want
to come to your grace. Simplicianus used to say
8.2.5
denique ut ventum est ad horam
profitendae fidei, quae verbis certis
conceptis retentisque memoriter de loco
eminentiore in conspectu populi fidelis
Romae reddi solet ab eis qui accessuri sunt
ad gratiam tuam, oblatum esse dicebat
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17
that the presbyters offered him the opportunity of
affirming the creed in private, as was their
custom to offer to people who felt embarrassed
and afraid. But he preferred to make profession
of his salvation before the holy congregation. For
there was no salvation in die rhetoric which he
taught; yet his profession of that had been public.
How much less should he be afraid in
proclaiming your word, when he used to feel no
fear in using his own words before crowds of
frenzied pagans. When he mounted the steps to
affirm the confession of faith, there was a
murmur of delighted talk as all the people who
knew him spoke his name to one another. And
who there did not know him? A suppressed
sound came from the lips of all as they
rejoiced, Victorinus, Victorinus! As soon as
they saw him, they suddenly murmured in
exaltation and equally suddenly were silent in
concentration to hear him. All of them wanted
to clasp him to their hearts, and the hands
with which they embraced him were their
love and their joy.
8.4.9
Come Lord, stir us up and call us back, kindle
and seize us, be our fire and our sweetness. Let
us love, let us run. Surely many return to you
from a deeper hell of blindness than Victorinus.
They approach and are illuminated as they
receive light. Those who receive it obtain from
you power to become your sons (Jn.
1:9,12)....The enemy suffers a severer defeat
when he is overcome in a man upon whom he
has a greater hold and by whose influence he
dominates many. Pride in aristocratic nobility
enables him to hold sway especially over the
upper class, and by their title and authority he
dominates many more. Special pleasure, therefore,
was felt at the conversion of Victorinus heart in
which the devil had an impregnable fortress, and
of Victorinus tongue which he had used as a
mighty and sharp dart to destroy many. Your
children had good reason to rejoice the more
jubilantly because our king had bound the strong
man (Matt. 12:29), and they saw his vessels
being snatched away to be cleaned and made fit
for your honour to be useful to die Lord for
eveiy good work (2 Tim. 2:21).
8.4.9
age, domine, fac, excita et revoca
nos, accende et rape, fiagra, dulcesce:
amemus, curramus. nonne multi ex
profundiore tartaro caecitatis quam
Victorinus redeunt ad te et accedunt
et inluminantur recipientes lumen?
quod si qui recipiunt, accipiunt a te
potestatem ut filii tui fiant... plus
enim hostis vincitur in eo quern plus tenet
et de quo plures tenet. plus
autem
superbos
tenet
nomine
nobilitatis et de his plures nomine
auctoritatis.
quanto igitur
gratius
cogitabatur Victorini pectus, quod
tamquam inexpugnabile receptaculum
diabolus obtinuerat, Victorini lingua, quo
telo grandi et acuto multos peremerat,
abundantius exultare oportuit filios tuos,
quia rex noster alligavit fortem, et videbant
vasa eius erepta mundari et aptari in
honorem tuum et fieri utilia domino ad
omne opus bonum.
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18
8.5.10
As soon as your servant Simplicianus told me
this story about Victorinus, I was ardent to
follow his example. He had indeed told it to me
with this object in view. Later on, he added, in
the time of the emperor Julian when a law was
promulgated forbidding Christians to teach
literature and rhetoric, Victorinus welcomed the
law and preferred to abandon the school of
loquacious chattering rather than your word...
8.5.10
sed ubi mihi homo tuus Simplicianus de
Victorino ista narravit, exarsi ad
imitandum: ad hoc enim et ille narraverat.
posteaquam vero et illud addidit, quod
imperatoris Iuliani temporibus lege data
prohibiti sunt christiani docere litteraturam
et oratoriam. quam legem ille amplexus,
loquacem scholam deserere maluit quam
verbum tuum.
10. Augustine, Confessions/Saint Augustine, trans. Henry Chadwick (New York: Oxford University Press,
1991), 134-40. Confessions 8.2.38.2.5, 8.4.9, 8.5.10; James J. ODonnell, The Confessions o f
Augustine: An Electronic Edition, based on ODonnells Augustine: Confessions, a Text and
Commentary (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992); henceforth ODonnell, Commentary.
11. ODonnell, Augustine: Confessions, vol. 2 ,413. In the commentary on C onf 8.2.3, ODonnell
succinctly says, The example o f Marius Victorinus was undoubtedly set before Augustine by
Simplicianus with some witting sense o f its possibilities as a model: a rhetorician with philosophical
interests (Augustine, like Victorinus, had even written philosophythe de pulchro et apto) and
prospects o f a worldly career, brought by the Platonic philosophy to the door o f the church, but
hestitating to enter until goaded to the requisite humility. But the presentation here is deliberately
constructed to underline those parallels farther and to prepare us for the conversion to come. The
episode is so useful for those purposes that we must be careful not to assume that we have anything
like a fall account o f any conversation Augustine actually had with Simplicianus.
12. Cf. Pierre Hadot, Marius Victorinus: Recherches sur sa vie et ses ceuvres (Paris: Etudes
Augustiniennes, 1971), 2425; henceforth Hadot, Marius Victorinus. The approximate date o f
Victorinus birth is more difficult to ascertain than the probable year o f his death. Hadot considers the
reference to the time o f life o f Victorinus conversion, referred to by Jerome in his D e viris illustribus
with the simple phrase o f in extrema senectute, meaning somewhere at least seventy years o f age,
maybe as old as ninety. Comparing what this phrase meant in authors such as Cicero, Tacitus, Jerome,
and Cornelius Nepos, Hadot believes it to mean between seventy and eighty, so he concludes that
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19
In Confessions 8.2.4 the timeline is unclear, from when Victorinus first attended
worship publicly, to becoming a catechumen, to the later date (or hour?) at which
Victorinus confessed the Creed and underwent baptism. The notion of Victorinus simply
reading Early Christian writings and undergoing conversion, without other extensive
contacts or conversations with figures like Simplicianus, seems untenable.13
Nevertheless, there came the day when Victorinus related privately to his friend
Simplicianus that he was now a Christian. When challenged on this private profession of
faith, Victorinus apparently confessed to being afraid of offending his many friends who
were still pagan. However, plagued by guilt over feeling that he was denying Christ, he
suddenly told Simplicianus one day that he wished to make public profession of his new
faith.14 His public profession of faith thereafter, and the wild acclamation of the gathered
crowd, would leave the still mostly pagan aristocracy dumbfounded.15
Victorinus was bom between 281-291. F. F. Brace, in his article in honor o f Alexander Souter, puts
the date o f Victorinus birth at rather a late date o f ca. 300. F. F. Bruce, Marius Victorinus and His
Works: In Memory o f Alexander Souter (1872-1948), A Mind fo r What Matters (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1990), 214.
13. Victorinus simply reading his way to conversion, as the bare reference in Conf. VIII suggests,
sounds like an obvious precursor to Augustines sudden reading o f Romans 13 in the Milan garden.
The case for Simplicianus being a presbyter and the baptizer o f Victorinus is compelling but not
conclusive. When Simplicianus refers to the time when he sees Victorinus in church, it does sound
like an authoritative guidance from a cleric, but there is no documentary evidence proving
Simplicianus was a cleric in orders. Cf. D. H. Williams, Ambrose ofM ilan and the End o f the ArianNicene Conflicts (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995), 117-19, in which he argues not only that
Simplicianus was a presbyter, but also that he also was the baptizer o f Ambrose much later in 374.
Despite making an elaborate description o f Simplicianus presiding over the Baptism, Williams admits
that The evidence for this choice is meagre but provocative. (117). Even John Rist, writing in his
masterpiece Augustine: Ancient Thought Baptized (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press: 1994),
remarks in passing about the priest Simplicianus who had baptized Ambrose him self and w as to
succeed him as bishop (3). In Commentary on C onf 8.2.4 (By what ways did you make an opening
into that heart?), ODonnell reasons How did God insinuate himself into the heart o f Victorinus? By
apostolic preaching and by the moral purification that results in confession o f sin. This confirms the
scheme o f presentation here: Victorinus is being adduced not simply as a parallel for Platonic
intellectual difficulties on the threshold o f the church, but as parallel as well for the moral choice that
Augustine thought must accompany entry.
14. ODonnell, Commentary, 8.2.4: It was a late antique invention that cult could be brought under the
influence o f texts and the ideas they contain, that one could not have the cult without the doctrine or
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20
The last mention of Victorinus in Augustines Confessions is in 8.5.10, which
describes how, in response to Julian the Apostates edict, Victorinus resigned his
rhetor post ca. 362. What happened to Victorinus following the year 362 is up for
conjecture, though it is generally believed that he died not too long after, a
reasonable terminus ad quem being 365. After the mid-360s, Victorinus is heard
of only in passing in a few ancient sources.
Before looking at two other salient references to Victorinus by Augustine in
other works, it is important to look at Jerome, removed from Victorinus by one
generation. In centuries following Jeromes passing, his comments on Victorinus
took on a life of their own.
In the Chronicle of Jerome, which we have by way of Eusebius, we learn of
Victorinus renown through Jeromes description of the statue of Victorinus in the Forum
of Trajan.16 (As previously noted, that Victorinus received this honor during his lifetime
is remarkable, though it gives no testimony to Victorinus conversion or Christian
writings after his conversion.) Jeromes work De viris illustribus, written in Bethlehem
around 392/93, gives the most influential opinion (apart from the panegyric of Augustine
in his Confessions) on Victorinus. On Illustrious Men is a series of short biographical
sketches on Christian figures up until the time of Jerome, along with sketches Jerome
the doctrine without the cu lt V[ictorinus] did not quite see this. He wanted to have the Christian
doctrine without taking the cult that went with it.
15. As Augustine relates in 8.2.4, the public reaction was joy (from the Church); amazement and anger
from the rest o f Rome. ODonnell says the same in Commentary on 8.2.4, where Augustine has said
that Victorinus feared offending his proud, daemon-worshipping friends: At the period o f which
S[implicanus] relates (not long before or after 354), entry to the Christian co mmunity at Rome would
have been for a distinguished rhetor a social move drastic enough to give pause.
16. Victorinus rhetor et Donatus grammaticus, praeceptor meus, Romae insignes habentur. E quibus
Victorinus etiam statuam in foro Traiani meruit... The ancient and early mediaeval testimonia on
Victorinus are listed by Hadot in the first chapter o f his Marius Victorinus: Recherches sur s a vie et ses
oeuvres, 1322.
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21
gives of himself and other contemporaries. Jeromes aim is apologetic: he wishes to
demonstrate that the achievements of Christian scholarship and literature are in no way
inferior to those of the pagans.17 In chapter 101 of the work, he gets to Victorinus:
Victorinus, of African nationality, taught rhetoric in Rome under the Emperor Constantius. And at
an advanced age embraced the Christian faith; he wrote extremely obscure books against Arius in
the manner of the dialecticians which are not understood except by the educated, (and he wrote)
commentaries on the epistles of St. Paul.18
This passing comment of Jerome is without doubt the most lasting, if churlish, evaluation
ever given of Victorinus, tending to eclipse even that of Augustine in his Confessions.
This barb of Jeromes is often found where there is comment on Victorinus in secondary
scholarship. Most scholars who reproduce it have not actually read Victorinus even as
Jerome may well have not. The ostensible difficulty of reading Victorinus Latin
notwithstanding, Jeromes comment should be considered suspect: it is widely
understood about Jeromes historiography that he tended to think meanly of others, and
quite generously of himself.19 No other comment about Victorinus has so effectively
discouraged people in later times from reading the Nicene writings of the retired rhetortumed-theologian. It is time, in a new generation of Victorine studies, that Jeromes
invidious assessment of Victorinus be put to rest.
Besides the abundant praise of Victorinus example in his Confessions, Augustine
leaves us one other intriguing reference to Victorinus. The statement comes directly after
17. T. D. Barnes, Tertullian: A Historical and Literary Study (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1971), 4.
18. De viris illustribus, c. 101 Victorinus, natione Afer, Romae sub Constantio principe rhetoricam docuit
et in extrema senectute Christi se tradens fidei scripsit adversus Arium libros more dialectico valde
obscuros, qui nisi ab eruditis non intelleguntur et commentaries in Apostolum. The second-to-last
clause here is often translated too freely with a tendentious intent, as which are not even understood
by the educated...
19. To borrow a phrasing from Jane Austen.
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22
chapter 40 of De doctrina, a well-known locus in Augustines writings, because it
describes his idea of what constitutes the Spoils of Egypt.
For what else have many of our good faithful done? May we not see with how much gold and silver
and clothing bundled up the most sweet teacher and most blessed martyr Cyprian fled from Egypt?
Or how much Lactantius took with him? Or how much Victorinus, Optatus, Hilary carried with
them, not to speak of those still living?20
The content of the statement brings us back to Confessions VIII, in which the lasting
influence of Victorinus conversion upon Augustine, even some thirty years after the
event, was evident; Augustine compares it to his own and remembers its force for him as
a moral exemplar. The most compelling interest here, though, is that Augustine numbers
Victorinus among a list of paragons of Latin theology who seized the Egyptians gold,
posing an antecedent probability of literary influence.21 And, as he already had done in
his Confessions, Augustine sees in Victorinus a model for the abandonment of secular
ambition and the dedication of pagan learning to the service of the heavenly Word of
God.22
20. Augustine, On Christian Doctrine, trans. D. W. Robertson, Jr. (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall,
1958), 7576. D e doctrina Christiana II.XL.61. Nam quid aliud fecerunt multi boni fideles nostri?
Nonne aspicimus quanto auro et argento et veste suffarcinatus exierit de Aegypto Cyprianus et doctor
suavissimus et martyr beatissimus? Quanto Lactantius? Quanto Victorinus, Optatus, Hilarius, ut de
vivis taceam?
21. In Souters chapter on Augustines Pauline commentaries: So far as I have observed, there does not
appear in the commentary on Galatians any clear evidence that Augustine had made use o f
Ambrosiasters commentary on the same Epistle. It would perhaps be hazardous to argue from the
frequent use o f liberator in the sense o f saviour that Augustine had used Victorinus Afer for the
commentary on Galatians, yet nothing is more antecedently probable than that Augustine, w ho knew
and esteemed the works o f his fellow-countryman, consulted his commentaries on the Pauline Epistles
in the course o f his own work. Alexander Souter, The Earliest Latin Commentaries on the Epistles o f
St. Paul (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1927), 199.
22. Eric Plumer, The Influence o f Marius Victorinus on Augustines Commentary on Galatians, Studia
Patristica 33 (1997), 223. Plumer argues that the crucial detail o f this list in D e doctrina is the linking
o f Victorinus with Cyprian. I f Augustine was well read o f Jeromes commentary on Galatians, he
would have encountered Jeromes damning remarks o f Victorinus ability as an exegete, and would not
have wanted to offend Jerome by citing Victorinus as an authority in his own commentary on
Galatians. Aligning him self with Cyprian was important for Augustine in his struggle with Donatists,
but citing Cyprian along with Victorinus, Plumer believes, means that Augustine made use o f
Victorinus Pauline commentaries early in his work as an exegete; he just did not want to admit o f
Victorinus as a strong influence o f his own exegetical work.
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23
There is little evidence of Victorinus surviving very long beyond his resignation in 362,
except for the assumption that it was in his last few years of life that he wrote commentaries
on the Pauline epistles of Roman, I & II Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians and Philippians.23
Apart from Augustines idyllic remembrance of Victorinus thirty years later, there are
two vestigial remarks about Victorinus which seem to point to his enduring fame and
legend. The first comes from Orosius Memorandum to Augustine on the Error o f the
Priscillianists and Origenists. In this epistle, written ca. 415, Orosius reports to
Augustine about two of his cohorts and their engagement with the works of Origen, in the
midst of which one of them had encountered Victorinus:
Then two fellow citizens of mine, Avitus and another Avitus, looked for ideas from abroad,
although the truth alone had by itself already exposed such shameful confusion. One set off for
Jerusalem, the other for Rome. On their return the one brought back Origen, the other Victorinus.
Of these two one yielded to the other. Both, nonetheless, condemned Priscillian. We hardly know
anything of Victorinus, because the follower of Victorinus turned to Origen almost before he had
written anything.24
The Victorinus mentioned here could possibly be the Victorinus of Pettau, martyred ca.
304; the scholarly consensus, however, is in favor of this being a reference to Marius
Victorinus. This is plausible, given the record of Victorinus enduring influence and
legacy in Rome, evident even in the gravestone inscription of his granddaughter.25 This
stones poignant inscription was discovered on June 20,1626, in the course of an
excavation for the enlargement of one of the pontifical gardens in a section named the
23. The commentaries on Romans and I and II Corinthians are lost, but Victorinus makes reference to
them in his later commentaries. Discovery especially o f the Romans commentary would yield a
fantastic bounty to Victorine research.
24. Augustine, The Works o f Saint Augustine: Arianism and Other Heresies, 1/18, trans. Roland J. Teske,
S.J. (New York: N ew City Press, 1995), 98-99. Teske, 101-02, n.22. Hadot, Marius Victorinus, 1920, gives this reference o f Orosius much praise for forceful, precise witness o f Victorinus school o f
disciples, and the generation following Victorinus in Rome, ca. 380-415, which fondly recalled
Victorinus brilliance.
25. Hadot, Marius Victorinus, 16-17.
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24
Quirinal.26 The inscription conies from a book detailing the projects of the Vatican
gardens, Le Sacre Grotte Vaticane (1639).
A c c ia v e l M arla, e s t n o m e n m ih i T ulllana
V ic t o r in u s a v u s q u o t a n t u m r h e t o r e R o m a
E n it u it q u a n t u m n o s t e r s u b o r ig in e s a n g u is
B is n o n a m c a r p t u r a r o s a m m ih i decbdit a e t a s
H e u d o l o r , e t v e r n u m m a c u l a v it f u n u s a pr il e m
N u l l u s in o f f e n so v it a e m ih i tr a m it e l a b s u s
M e n s m o r u m m a t u r a b o n o n il d e b u it a n n is
CONIUGII SCIT CARA FIDES HERESQUE MARITUS
R ite q u o d a e t e r n o m ig r a r im d e d it a C h r ist o
E m e r it a m q u e f e r a t m e l io r m ih i v it a c o r o n a m
H a e c o m n ia f a c t a pie c u r a n t e m a r it o
ARTORIOIULIANOMEGETHIOV.C. D IIII I D
APR.
H a e c p a t e r in s o n t i f il ia e s u p r e m a pereg it
D TULLIANAE lUN. KAL. SEPT.27
26. Hadot, Marins Victorinus, 16 n. 8; something foimd which amazingly turned up after so many
centuries, similar to the 1945 event in Ostia. Cf. Russell M eiggs work, Roman Ostia: A manuscript
copy survived o f a verse epitaph that was said to have been added to Monicas tomb by the consular
Anicius Bassus. In the summer o f 1945 two boys, playing in a small courtyard beside the church o f S.
Aurea in Ostia, began to dig a hole to plant a post for their game. They disturbed a fragment o f marble;
it contained part o f the original inscription. Perhaps Anicius Bassus may be identified with the only
senatorial Christian securely attested in Ostia on a late dedication: Anicius Auchenius Bassus v(ir)
c(larissimus) et Turrenia Honorata c(larissima) f(emina) eius cum filiis Deo sanctisque devoti.
Russell Meiggs, Roman Ostia (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1973), 400.
27. My name is Accia Maria Tulliana. Victorinus was my grandfather. Rome has shown brightly, and our
family also, as he strove as Rhetor o f the city. Only eighteen, my life cut short as a plucked rose. Alas!
My burial stained the vernal time o f April. But there is no fell into oblivion for my life. It is to virtue, not
any age, that my soul owes its maturity. My husband now receives the deposit o f our marital love and
feith; he knew well that it is according to the rite o f the Church, entirely fulfilled in piety to Christ, that I
have now found my new residence unto eternity. I receive the crown o f which I am worthy. A ll this
accomplished by the devout cares o f my husband, Artorius Julianus Megethius, Esquire. Here observed
on the fourth day o f the Ides o f April. My father has also rendered his supreme duties to his daughter in
her young age: The obsequy o f young Tulliana has taken place this day o f the September calends.
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26
you do not recognize what does not belong together. Solve this riddle and you will have
*ya
come a little closer to him who has brought Casall a little closer to Hell. The same
criticism could be leveled at many modem scholars for how so many have sought to
dissect the prodigy of Victorinus, keeping only parts of his work for particular reasons.
There are basically three areas of interest in Victorinus for modem scholars, best
categorized as philosophical, exegetical, and trinitarian. These categories sometimes
overlap; there does not always exist a neat separation when looking at the work o f certain
scholars. The most conspicuous area of interest is Victorinus the Neoplatonist
philosopher: erudite rhetor-philosopher with perfect knowledge of Plotinus and Porphyry;
teacher to senators, so highly esteemed as to be honored with a statue in Trajans Forum;
probable translator of Augustines providential libri platonicorurrr, and scholar highly
valued by Medieval and Renaissance scholars as they continued study of Platos
philosophical progeny, even as he used sophisticated Neoplatonism as a conceptual
matrix for articulating his new-found trinitarian Christian faith. The area of exegetical
interest is clear and certain, given the much-known factum of Victorinus being the first
Western Christian to write commentaries on St. Pauls epistles in the Latin language.
Whether the commentaries are read and mined for their theological worth is another
question, but there is a definite tradition of interest in Victorinus as a Pauline
commentator. Some of this interest takes his theological commentary on Paul seriously,
instead of just categorizing it as an interesting footnote.
Victorinus as a serious, Nicene-trinitarian Christian author is a far different matter, one
that has been received little attention in the past fifty years or so. Reconsiderations of
28. Claudia Gross, D as Scholarium (Munich: Deutscher Taschebuch Verlag, 2002), 30.
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27
Victorinus as the source of anything worth reading have occurred within the context of
scholarly reconsiderations of what was formerly called the Arian Controversy. Was
Jerome on point when he made his memorable comment that Victorinus trinitarian
treatises written in the few years left before his death, were hardly read by anyone, and
hardly readable? Locating Victorinus within the context of the Latin end of the fourthcentury Trinitarian Controversy, aware of events developing in the struggle between
coalescing Nicene orthodoxy and various trajectories of Anti-Nicene theology, and
producing real polemical theology as a tool of response, is something not entirely agreed
upon in current work done on the controversy.
Twentieth-century scholarship on Marius Victorinus began primarily because of
interest generated among German scholars in the late nineteenth century. An examination
of the titles of the published works show that their interest in Victorinus was a product of
Pauline-exegeticai work, as well as philosophical research in Platonism. Werner Karigs
1924 work published in Marburg, Des Caius Marius Victorinus Kommentare zu den
paulinischen Briefen, was a pioneer effort at providing a comprehensive study on
Victorinus Pauline commentaries; Gustavus Koffinanes 1880 work, De Mario Victorino
philosopho christiano, reflected continuing interest in Victorinus the Platonist.29 Karigs
work was the first monograph ever devoted to Victorinus Pauline commentaries,
concentrating at length on Victorinus treatment of two major Pauline themes:
justification and Christology. Pauls treatment of Christs death on the Cross and his
29. As well an 1895 work by Reinhold Schmid, Marius Victorinus Rhetor und seine Beziehungen zu
Augustin (Kiel: Druck von E. Uebermuth: 1895). Karigs work is significant because it was the only
major study o f Victorinus commentaries prior to Hadots work. Part of the motivation to look seriously
at the commentaries in the late twentieth century certainly is because o f the Leipzig German edition,
Marius Victorinus: Commentarii inApostolum, ed. Albrecht Locher, (Leipzig: Teubner Verlag, 1972).
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classic Christus Victor Atonement are, Karig holds, an essential moment of influence
on Victorinus high Christology.
Exegetical work on Victorinus Pauline commentaries was given special impetus with
Alexander Souters seminal 1927 work, The Earliest Latin Commentaries on the Epistles
o f St. Paul, with a lengthy chapter treating Victorinus. Despite its age, Souters work is a
wealth of details he found in Victorinus use of Latin language, which is why a new
edition was issued in 1999, directly lithotyped from the 1927 edition.30 Scholars wishing
to do work on Victorinus commentaries need to include Souters finding in their initial
look at Victorinus. Souter expatiates on the rather recondite manuscript tradition of
Victorinus commentaries, the biblical text he employed, and especially his distinctive
method of commenting on a text of Paul, as compared with commentaries of
Ambrosiaster or Pelagius.31 Despite being possibly too quick to dismiss the austere Latin
style of Victorinus commentary, Souter recognizes in a Character and Method
subsection that there is significant theology to be found in his Pauline exegesis; for
example, the way in which Victorinus expounds on the Philippians 2 Christ Hymn, or in
how Victorinus uses the Pauline theology of the Christi mysterium. Of special interest for
Souter is Victorinus use of Latin, and there follows an eight-page list of Latin words that
30. That is, from the reprint program done through Sandpiper Books Ltd o f London. Souters chapters
involve and are titled: Victorinus, Ambrosiaster, Jerome, Augustine, and Pelagius.
31. The strange thing, o f course, is that one o f the first rhetoricians o f his age should write obscurely at all, but
such is the feet. The style he here employs is what fee rhetoricians themselves called fee toxvov, fee plain,
unvarnished, unadorned style. He himself speaks o f his work in one place as commentatio simplex. Souter,
Earliest Latin Commentaries, 2 8 .1 recognize that there is a tradition o f looking at Victorinus as either
obscure (Jerome), or dry (Jean-Jacques Sirmond, obscuritatem hanc Victorinus... stylus planior et
apertior), but I find his commentaries very readable, wife substantive, but not prolix, detail.
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Victorinus uses in a pioneering manner. Even a cursory glance at this list of preferred
Victorine vocabulary gives one an understanding of the need for a special monograph of
Victorinus Latin, after similar treatments of the Latin of such figures as Tertullian,
Cyprian, Hilary, and Jerome.
The watershed treatment of Marius Victorinus in the twentieth century came in the
unparalleled work of French scholar Pierre Hadot, who serves as one of the best
examples of the fruits of the Catholic Ressourcement scholarship. Along with fellow
scholar Paul Henry, Hadot produced a critical edition of Victorinus trinitarian treatises
for the Sources Chretiennes series in 1960, as well as a companion second volume as a
commentary on the treatises.34 Their rich and painstaking details are invaluable, though
almost forgotten outside the confines of Victorine scholars research. The Sources
Chretiennes volumes preceded an improved critical edition produced by Henry and Hadot
for the Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum series published in 1971.35 It was
also in 1971 that Hadots book on Victorinus came out: Marius Victorinus: Recherches
sur sa vie etses oeuvres, an extension of his 1968 work Porphyre et Victorinus. In line
32. It is an interesting situation to find a highly trained pagan rhetorician face to face with the necessity
for expressing Christian ideas. For this task o f course, he had been prepared by his parallel study o f
philosophy. Souter, Earliest Latin Commentaries, 29.
33. Souter made this observation in 1927; since then this wish has been fulfilled in the work o f such
scholars as Gori, Raspanti, and Cooper. Cf. below: N o one writing in the medium o f English-speaking
scholarship on Victorinus Pauline commentaries has done as thorough a job as Stephen Cooper.
34. Marius Victorinus, Traites Theologiques sur la Trinite, Vol. II Commentaire, ed. Paul Henry; trans.
Pierre Hadot (Paris: Les Editions du Cerf, 1960), 1044-45. (Henceforth Hadot, Traites Theologiques.)
Henry largely was the editor and translator into French o f Volume I, while Volume II is entirely the
work o f Hadot, though Henrys contribution should not be overlooked even if Hadot produced so much
work following. The earliest twentieth century renewal o f interest in Victorinus in Catholic
Ressourcement can be traced to the thorough consideration Henry gave to Victorinus in a 1950 JTS
article: Paul Henry, The Adversus Arium o f Marius Victorinus, The First Systematic Exposition o f the
Doctrine o f the Trinity, Journal o f Theological Studies, ns 1, (1950): 42-55.
35. Marius Victorinus, Opera, ed. Pierre Hadot and Paul Henry, Corpus Scriptourm Ecclesiasticorum
Latinorum vol. 83, pars. 1 (Vienna: Hoelder-Pichler-Tempsky, 1971). (Full Latin title M arii Victorini
Opera. Pars Prior: Opera Theologica; henceforth CSEL 83/1. The second part o f Vol. 83, Opera
Exegetica, was produced and edited by Franco Gori.)
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with that earlier work, Hadot devotes more than half of Marius Victorinus to the rhetors
preconversion philosophical works, including fragments of Victorinus commentary of
Ciceros Topics, retrieved from Capella and Cassiodorus, the entire text of Victorinus
work De definitionibus, and extensive evidence of Victorinus lost works. Out o f
seventeen chapters of Hadots book, only three deal with the Christian Victorinus:
chapter XV comments at length on his conversion; chapter XVI on his controversial
theological works; and chapter XVII on his Pauline commentaries. This is not to say,
however, that Hadots interest in Victorinus is less than theological. Hadots Sources
Chretiennes commentary on Victorinus trinitarian treatises is surprising in its depth of
detail; for example, in the thorough way he compares items in Victorinus to other
Western Latin writers, similarities largely overlooked by people who do not wish to
recognize Victorinus as a serious Nicene.
The exhaustive work of Hadot in Porphyre et Victorinus provided a thorough
reference work which carefully traced and categorized quotations of Porphyry in
X(\
Victorinus works. With his CSEL edition and extensive work on Victorinus pre- and
post-conversion life and works, it was established that anyone doing work on Victorinus
from then on would be working with Hadots material and responding to it. The readiest
example of this is the 1981 Fathers of the Church translation by Mary Clark, Marius
36. Thus reasserting Porphyrys autonomous role in the history o f post-Plotinian philosophy. Mary Clark,
in her translation FOC edition o f Victorinus, includes the Group I, Group II, etc. attributions that Hadot
lists in his work on Porphyry and Victorinus. Marius Victorinus, Theological Treatises on the
Trinity/Marius Victorinus, trans. Mary Clark, vol. 69, Fathers o f the Church (Washington: Catholic
University o f America Press, 1981). Italian Victorinus scholar at University o f Pisa Chiara O.
Tommasi Moreschini, whose own work was begun at the behest o f Hadots guidance, refers to Hadots
1968 book as epoch-making. It cannot be overstressed that everyone doing work on Victorinus in
late twentieth/early twenty-first century is to some extent dependent on Hadot. Claudio Moreschini at
Pisa is currently working on an Italian translation o f Victorinus trinitarian treatises. Its surprising that
this hasnt been done heretofore by any other Italian scholar, though that gives a good indication about
where the interest o f Italian scholars has been with Victorinus Pauline commentaries.
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Victorinus: Theological Treatises on the Trinity. A credible translation with some
commentary, this edition is not without its shortcomings. Clark is a scholar of Classics
and Ancient Philosophy, so her interest in Victorinus reflects that: philosophy is primary,
and in her footnotes she conveys a large portion of Hadots philosophical tracing of
Porphyry in Victorinus. She also uncritically accepts Hadots dated categories o f the
Trinitarian Controversy, referring to all the trajectories of Anti-Nicene theology as
Arians, including references identifying parties as Semi-Aiian/Homoiousian and
Anomoean.37 It is not the case that Clark does not recognize Victorinus as doing
theological reflection, she is just far more interested in his brilliant philosophy, done in
the context of the Latin West.38
An indication of Clarks insufficient understanding of the content and progression of
the Trinitarian Controversy is found in section eight of her Introduction, in which she
mentions the obvious influences on Victorinus for his theology. Within this lengthy list of
Stoics and Platonists, Nicenes and Anti-Nicenes, Clark lists Ambrose of Milan as a figure
of intellectual influenceeven though Ambrose was not even baptized until the year 374,
37. Though the real evidence that Victorinus was actually engaging Heterousians in Against Arius is non
existent. Arianism held that the Son o f God was not eternal but created by the Father from nothing as
an instrument for die creation o f the world; although a changeable creature, the Son was dignified with
the title o f Son because o f his righteousness. The Arians divided into three groups: the Anomoeans
(dissimilar) spoke o f the Son as unlike the Father; the Homoeans (similar) spoke o f the Son as like the
Father in all filings according to the Scriptures; the semi-Arians or Homoiousians (o f similar substance
[with the Father]) thought that similarity rather than consubstantiality left more room for distinction in
the Godhead. Clark, Introduction, 11. Homoians hardly saw themselves as those entrusted with a
legacy from someone o f the likes as Arius; the Dedication Creed o f 341 served as a good example o f
the Greek East disavowing everything that Arius had been perceived to represent.
38. It is unclear whether Clark, during this stage o f her scholarship, believed that theology really mattered
to the post-conversion Victorinus: she gives theology a passing nod for the sake o f Victorinus, nothing
more. During the 1980s her work in Augustine showed the same predeliction, focusing on Augustines
Cassiciacum philosophical dialogues. Yet another example, though from a different source, is the
dissertation written on Gregory o f Nyssa by Harold Chemiss. Chemiss concluded that N yssa was
nothing more than a brilliant Platonist wearing a very thin pallium o f Christian theology, and thereafter
Chemiss never did anything more in Christian theology.
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5Q
and Victorinus most probably had died by 365. The explanation for this lies in her
uncritical acceptance of the whole of Hadots commentary, without understanding
nuances of the controversy. Later in the Introduction (54, n.10), she mentions Eunomius
along with Homoians and Homoiousians as if they are all akin to one another in thought.
In a footnote comment (99, n.70) of Against Arius (AA) IA 8, she speaks of Victorinus
directing his remarks against the Anomoeans of Sirmium (357)... Anomoeans such as
Aetius and Eunomius are not named with Victorinus treatises, as opposed to his normal
habit of naming opponents (such as Marcellus, Photinus, Arius, and others).40 The only
locus with Against Arius that one could possibly see as a reference to Anomoeans is in
the later work De homoousio recipiendo IV, which briefly summarized the case for
homoousios. In it, Victorinus concludes the short treatise with a rationale for God from
God, Light from Light, criticizing anyone who would affirm a similar substance, as
well as those who affirm a dissimilar substance (qui dissimilem dicunt.. .).41
In spite of some minor translation errors and a demonstrably incomplete understanding
of the theological controversy of the fourth century, Clark has produced a good edition
which makes Victorinus accessible to those who want to read this trinitarian theology.42
39. In addition to the obvious influences from Aristotle, Cicero, Plotinus, Porphyry, St. Johns Gospel, St.
Pauls Epistles, we are made aware o f the extent to which Victorinus is indebted to Basil o f Ancyra,
and o f the influence o f Marcellus o f Ancyra, o f Athanasius, o f Phoebadius and o f Gregory o f Elvira, as
well as that o f Origens exegesis as found in Hilary o f Poitiers and Ambrose. Clark, 9-10. Mistakes o f
detail can simply be the result o f missing something in a list; for example, in die Encyclopedia o f Early
Christianity, Clarks entry on Hilary says that the text o f John 14:4 is vital for Hilary: she cites I in
Thee and Thou in me, though that text (important for Victorinus also) is actually John 17:21.
40. E.g., in AA 1 28 there is a polemical periodization o f the fourth-century doctrinal controversy.
Victorinus speaks o f the Arian faction being dealt with at Nicaea forty years ago. The faith that
was reaffirmed there was in opposition to heresies propagated, Victorinus names, by Paul o f Samosata,
Marcellus, Photinus, Valens & Ursacius, and Arius.
41. Clark, 310-11. De. hom. rec. 4 ,1 -3 6 . CSEL 83/1,282-84.
42. Without her FOC volume the interest that generated this dissertation on a Nicene Victorinus would not
have happened.
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In the late twentieth century, the work of German scholars on Victorinus turned from
exegetical interest to philosophical.43 The two works commonly considered fundamental
to this study of Victorinus are the 1972 work of Anton Ziegenaus and the 1990 work of
Werner Steinmann.44 Ziegenaus work can be seen as a product of Hadots works of the
1960s, which acted as a catalyst. Ziegenaus and Steinmann were intellectually succeeded
by Matthias Baltes, a brilliant scholar who was the most thorough in his understanding of
and commentary on Victorinus philosophy. A year before his death in 2003, Baltes
produced a last work that contains an immense amount of detail about Victorinus
osmotic relationship between philosophy and theology, dealing with the main tenets of
Victorinus speculation according to a sort of Platonising hierarchy of beings.45
43. Though another milepost work that must be mentioned is Werner Erdts massive exegetical work,
Marius Victorinus Afer, der erste lateinische Pauluskommentator: Studien zu seinen
Pauluskommentaren im Zusammenhang der Wiederentdeckung des Paulus in der abendlandischen
Theologie des 4. Jahrhunderts (Pieterlen, Switz.: Peter Lang, 1979). Erdts work continues to be
foundational for American (Cooper) and Italian scholars (Raspanti, Cipriani, et al.), producing everincreasing new finds in Victorinus Pauline commentaries. Erdts instincts on Victorinus interest in
Paul cannot be fully trusted, however, in light o f his belief that Victorinus commentaries had little if
any anti-Arian intent and content. Scholars such as Cooper, Raspanti, and Cipriani are correcting this
weakness o f Erdt, acknowledging key portions o f Victorinus Pauline commentaries as having fairly
clear reference to Anti-Nicene exegesis o f Paul.
44. Anton Ziegenaus, D ie trinitarische Ausprdgung der gottlichen Seinsfiille nach Marius Victorinus
(Mflnchen: Max Hueber Verlag, 1972). Werner Steinmann, Die Sedenmetaphysik des Marius
Victorinus (Hamburg: Steinmann & Steinmann, 1990). Steinmann serves as a stronger example o f a
portrayal o f Victorinus the philosopher, commenting on Paul only because o f philosophical issues
arising from his Neoplatonist metaphysics o f the soul; according to Steinmann, any perceived antiArian polemics in the commentaries are o f no significance.
45. Matthias Baltes, Marius Victorinus. Zur Philosophic in seinen theologischen Schriften. (MQnchenLeipzig: K.G. Saur, 2002). Baltes intended this last work as a presentation and further development o f
a seminar held in year 2000 in the Academia Platonica, a cultural institution devoted to the study o f the
Platonic tradition, directed by Baltes himself. He divides his work into six topical sections: the Father;
the Son; the Holy Spirit; the Trinity; the consubstantiality o f die divine hypostases; and the created
realms, with two final sections that outline and sum up such doctrines and a conclusion. There is a
wealth o f texts included with the original Latin, including loci paralleli in the footnotes, m ost o f all
from Plotinus, Porphyry and Proclus. Baltes argument especially concentrates on the influence o f the
controversial anonymous Parmenides commentary on the formation o f Victorinus theological
reasoning in the Trinitarian Controversy. Apart from a tradition o f German scholarly work in
Victorinus Pauline commentaries, it is quite apparent that their interest now is largely what I cited
above with the example o f Chemiss take on Gregory o f Nyssa: Germans, while valuing Victorinus as
a brilliant philosopher worthy o f unending amounts o f prolix attention, fail to acknowledge him as a
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With everything produced in scholarship of various languages in the late twentieth
century, nothing equals the breadth of the work of R. P. C. Hanson in his 1988 opus The
Search for the Christian Doctrine o f God, a new relocating of Marius Victorinus in the
Trinitarian Controversy. Published the same year that he died, Hansons highly detailed
work functions as a kind of comprehensive atlas of the entire fourth-century Trinitarian
Controversy; a good example of this can be seen in the subtitle to the work: The Arian
Controversy 318-381.46 Anyone doing work on the Trinitarian Controversy must have a
familiarity with Hansons work because of its completeness and recent production
(though one must also include as essential in this up-to-date overview of the controversy
Rowan Williams 1987 book on Arius).47 Though no one has produced a work so
complete as Hansons, his work is not without minor problems, especially concerning the
figure of Marius Victorinus. Moreover, it is all the harder to respond to Hanson because
of his death in the year of publication, the wide use of his work, and the near
unquestioned status his work now has in some circles.
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There are four major parts to Hansons Search: I. The Origins (of the controversy);
II. Period of Confusion, which handles the Marcellan, miahyspostatic theology of the
West during the period of councils going right up to 359; III. The Rival Answers
Emerge, dealing with Athanasius as well as the Western Latin Neo-Nicenes;48 and
finally IV. The Controversy Resolved, beginning at the Council of Alexandria 362 and
going through Ambrose in the West and the Cappadocians in the East, to the Council of
Constantinople. Part III of Hanson is of main interest here, because he devotes an entire
chapter to Victorinus in a succession of three chapters on The Western Pro-Nicenes.
Hansons including an entire chapter devoted to Victorinus signals a reconsideration and
reappreciation of Victorinus theology in the late 350s and early 360s. However, his
treatment of Victorinus, while a reappreciation, is also flawed, as I will make clear.
In including a chapter on Marius Victorinus in his vast survey work on the
Trinitarian Controversy, Hanson seems to be selecting Victorinus for a reappraisal as
to whether he had a real role in the theology of the Latin West of the fourth century.
That is why his chapter seems to have an opposite theme and conclusion from other
re-presentations of Victorinus. Hanson presents Victorinus works with the
chronology of Hadot, and the long-held assumption that the Arian named Candidus
was a fictional character made up by Victorinus to afford the appearance of
correspondence in Candida Epistola I and in A d Candidum.49 Hanson then poses the
48. Hanson refers to these theologians as Pro-Nicenes, using the term in the same sense as does D. H.
Williams (e.g., in Ambrose o f Milan and the End ofArian-Nicene Conflicts): meaning those advocating
Nicaea and Nicene orthodoxy, as opposed to Michel Barnes categories o f Neo-Nicene (a category
o f only Western Latins such as Hilary, Phoebadius, Gregory o f Elvira, Victorinus, and others) and
Pro-Nicene, the category o f trihypostatic, One Nature/One Power figures such as Ambrose,
Cappadocians, and uniquely also including Victorinus.
49. Candidi Epistola I begins, My dear Victorinus, every kind o f begetting is some sort o f change. But
whatever is divine, namely God, in unchangeable, pointing to the nature o f the early theology o f Arius.
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question: If we ask how much Marius knew of the Arianism which he attacked in his
works, we must answer that he knew more than all and also less than all about
Arianism.50 The language Victorinus uses, Hanson argues, was not only beyond that
of any known Western Arian writer, but also virtually incomprehensible to the likes
of Hilary, Lucifer of Calaris, Phoebadius of Agen, and Gregory of Elvira. Thus
Victorinus was simply giving an exhibition of his erudition as a set-up to speak about
the subject of Arianism:
In short, there is no satisfactory evidence that Marius Victorinus had any genuine knowledge of
Arianism as it was in his day. He could exercise his intellect more rhetorico in producing
arguments which he was later to refute, and he could reproduce some old Arian documents which
had long become the stock texts for controversy, but that was all. He occasionally refers to
Marcellus and Photinus, but show no close acquaintance with their doctrines.51
This statement by Hanson, when he has hardly even begun his chapter on Victorinus,
seems not only to negate any reasonable rationale for doing a chapter on Victorinus as
part of a Arian-Nicene survey work, but is also fraught with problems. Further, it simply
is not true, especially when compared with the rest of what Hanson will say about
Victorinus. It is correct that the third work of Victorinus, concerning the character of
Candidus, Candidi Epistola II, is nothing more than a brief salutation from Candidus to
Victorinus, with the major part of the text being two other epistles included: the Letter o f
Arius to Eusebius ofNicomedia, and Eusebius Letter to Paulinus o f Tyre. This proves
only that documents of the earliest part of the Trinitarian Controversy, the phase that
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truly can be called Arian rather than Arian, traveled in the Latin West. It does not
disprove that Victorinus had any genuine knowledge of Arianism as it was in his day.
Another troublesome feature of Hansons chapter on Victorinus, as well as other
chapters of Search, is his constant use of the terms Arianism and Western Arianism
without distinguishing between the various parties of Anti-Nicene theology. Basil and his
Homoiousians are mentioned as if they were not an Anti-Nicene party, and there is no
mention at all of Victorinus engaging Western Latin Homoians. Hansons claim that
Victorinus had access to earliest documents of the controversy directly related to Arius
would seem to be in direct contradiction to his claim that Victorinus had no contact with
Arianism as it existed in his own day, especially if there is the working acknowledgment
of Victorinus having access the documents of the Sirmian dossier of 358. As dependent
as Hanson is on Hadot and Clark for this chapter on Victorinus, it seems odd that he
cannot admit to Victorinus clearly engaging Homoians and Homoiousians in his
trinitarian treatises and having a genuine knowledge of Arianism as it was in his day.52
In Hansons valuation, Victorinus makes his best contribution in his arguments for
homoousios, describing the relation of the Father to the Son in detail... ingenious and
original beyond any Western theologian before him.53 But after the twenty-five page
chapter, Hanson has a peculiar, and derivative, final analysis: Victorinus, he essentially
concludes, gets an A for effort:
52. My only conjecture on Hansons initial statement on Victorinus, as comments following that simply
refer to Anti-Nicene theology o f the late 350s as Arianism, is that this chapter reads like an early draft
stage. As this entire work on the controversy was brought to press in the year that Hanson died, with
failing health for several years before that as he battled cancer, this seems a reasonable supposition.
53. Hanson, Search, 539. Another point on which Hanson remarks comes on 544: One remarkable feature
o f his vocabulary here, which has not been sufficiently noticed, even by Hadot, is the persistent and
explicit refusal o f Marius Victorinus to use the word persona in a Trinitarian context. This is quite
true o f Victorinus; one would expect to find him using persona far more in the milieu o f Western Latin
miahypostatic influence, but Victorinus understands this use o f persona as deficient.
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It is customary to point out that the work of Marius Victorinus had virtually no influence upon his
contemporaries, and nobody could deny this fact. It is also customary to deplore this lack of
influence. We must certainly admire the competence, the erudition of the originality of this
writer. He deliberately turns his back on Tertullian. He works out his own theology using his own
resources, which are indeed much greater than those of his contemporaries in the West. But, in
the first place it is highly doubtful if any of his Latin-speaking contemporaries could have
understood him, even had they read his works, and Jerome more than hints at this. And in the
second place Marius Victorinus was completely unacquainted with the work of any contemporary
Eastern theologian (except Basil of Ancyra), skilled in Greek though he undoubtedly was. His
theology might have been rather better balanced if he had had this acquaintance, rather less
rarefied, rather more aware of its weaknesses. One could of course prefer the theory that Marius
knew of the work of Athanasius but that he chose to ignore it. But it comes to much the same
thing. It was for understandable reasons that Marius Victorinus was not read. He was, however,
appreciated. Thirty years after his death Augustine heard the story of his conversion recounted in
Milan with pride. He may not have been understood. He was remembered and honoured, and his
theological works were preserved.54
This assessment of the meaning and importance of Victorinus rich last years sounds
rather like that of Jerome; it has merely been repackaged to sound like a modem review
that still finds Victorinus falling far short of the mark of relevance within the events of
fourth century theology. As I will demonstrate in following chapters, it is untrue to say that
Victorinus deliberately turns his back on Tertullian. There are themes and testimonia of
Scripture within Against Arius that are the product of Victorinus reading Tertullians
works, especially Against Praxeas. The sheer number of Western Latin commonplaces in
Victorinus theological writings actually argues against the idea that everything he
produced was worked out from his own Neoplatonist resources, and nothing else. Further,
it is not highly doubtful that any of his Latin-speaking contemporaries could have
understood Victorinus, had they read him. Despite Hansons claim/assertion that Jerome
hinted at this same idea, Victorinus is not so very difficult to read. Certainly a figure such
as Hilary could have understood and appreciated Victorinus, if he could have had access to
Against Arius in the early 360s, which is not all that implausible. I argue that Jeromes
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rather rebarbative personality gives his estimate of Victorinus a questionable status at best,
and to hang too much upon it would amount to an overreaching of scholarly extrapolation.
If Victorinus had been completely unacquainted with the work of any contemporary
Eastern theologian except for Basil of Ancyra, it raises the question of how he became so
familiar with the Origenian Tractates,55 and how he knew about the Meletian-sourced
trinitarian formula x piag ouaiag xpelg elvai ujioordoeig in such a timely manner,
around 362. Victorinus is conversant with far more than just Neoplatonist schools, and
there is no reason to believe that his fluent Greek was inoperable during his last, very
productive years. It is vital to remember that Augustine had said Victorinus, after his
conversion, had read everything of Christian sources. Current Victorine scholarship clearly
continues to bear this out: the evidence of contemporary scholars is always showing new
evidence of sources, heretofore unnoticed, to which Victorinus had access.56
Ever since Jerome, even in the modem day, the reflexive response to Victorinus is to
follow Jeromes example and see Victorinus as brilliant but isolated and unintelligible.
Hanson attempts to reconsider Victorinus, but still too easily reintroduces Jerome into the
modem view of Victorinus. What is missing in contemporary Nicene scholarship on
Victorinus is a reappreciation of Victorinus as a serious Christian theologian, who
accomplished some extraordinary work in the last decade of his life following his
55. GyOrgy Heidi has done a complex, complete work on the use o f the Origenian Tractates in the Latin
West: O rigens Influence on the Young Augustine: A Chapter in the History o f Origenism (Piscataway,
NJ: Gorgias Press, 2003). He has also produced a Hungarian translation o f Victorinus trinitarian
treatises. Heidi was a co-chair o f the Origen conference, held each decade. Colloquium Origenianum
Nonum: Origen and the Religious Practice o f His Time, was held at the University o f Pecs in Hungary
in September 2005.
56. Stephen Coopers Pauline exegetical work, for example, or Matthias Baltes extensive exam inations o f
Victorinus access to Middle Platonist, Neoplatonist, and even Sethian Gnostic sources.
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conceptual matrix for his Nicene theology. In Victorinus very recognizable NeoNicene theology are features that somewhat transcend the Neo-Nicene category: his
eloquent commentary of the unity of trinitarian being and identity; his One Substance,
One Power statements; his trihypostatic formula (which he maddeningly does not
develop beyond passing commentary and vague attribution); and in general the way in
which he deploys scriptural texts. Current scholarship in Victorinus and other Nicenetrinitarian authors is limited to people who specialize in elements such as Pauline exegesis
or Plotinian-Porphyrian philosophy, but Victorinus as a relevant figure of the Trinitarian
Controversy requires a close rereading of Against Arius, in comparison to other Neo-
57. If even a recent translation and commentary on Nicene anti-Arian treatises summarizes Marius Victorinus
in a footnote reference as someone who was also the author o f several theological works, it is clear that
the time is overdue to consider the Nicene theology within Victorinus post-conversion works.
58. A conceptual matrix which thirty years later will have a significant influence upon the young Augustine.
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Nicenes.59 Despite its many problems, Hansons Search remains in force as the major
comprehensive text about the fourth century Arian-Nicene conflicts. Besides recounting the
contributions of certain Victorinus specialists, a reconsideration of Victorinus must include
an answer to Hansons oversights, as well as many of Clarks, since their works are the two
most likely sources for anyone interested in looking at Victorinus.60
59. The 1998 second edition o f the Encyclopedia o f Early Christianity is yet another typical example o f
how overlooked Victorinus is as a Nicene. The entry for Ambrose (41-44) speaks in detail o f
Ambroses engagement with anti-Nicenes throughout his episcopal career; Victorinus one-paragraph
entry (1159) does not even mention the terms Nicaea or Nicene (or Arian). The most prominent
assessment o f Victorinus importance comes in the terse sentence, He presented the doctrine o f the
Trinity in Neoplatonic terms, with dependence on Porphyry.
60. That is, Hansons Search, with its chapter on Victorinus, and Clarks FOC volume, Marius Victorinus:
Theological Treatises on the Trinity.
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The Classics and Philosophy scholar John Rist begins his work, Augustine: Ancient
Thought Baptized, with Gerald Bonners observation that Augustine has been the subject
of unjustified denunciation by innumerable people who have never read Augustine.61
Rists first chapter, Approaching Augustine, gives his books subject as the
Christianization of ancient philosophy in [Augustines] version which was to be the most
powerful and the most comprehensive, and lists many caveats about basic assumptions
in beginning to understand anything about Augustine. Augustine was in a providentially
kairotic time and place, in which he could sit in judgement on ancient philosophy and
ancient culture. Rists comments about modems attempts to isolate Augustines
philosophy from his theology sound quite familiar, for the commonplace treatments of
Victorinus are the same. To begin with, there are modem authors who wish to speak of
philosophy in Augustine as it would be dealt with by the typical philosophy department
of any Anglo-American college or university, as if there would be nothing in such
discourse that we would style as theology. The opposite treatment of Augustinefor
example, of published works that intend to summarize his theologywould apparently
invite the interests only of clerics or para-clerics, rather than any serious scholar of
ancient philosophy. The problem here, especially with citing only a philosophical
consideration, is a common one:
To call Augustine a philosopher rather than a theologian is not merely to admit a distinction which
he would not have accepted; it is to propose a distinction which he did not know. For while in
antiquity a philosopher is usually someone who tries to live a life governed by reason, a regular
sense of the word theologian (theologos) is someone who talks about the divine, and the
divine is whatever is eternal and unchanging, or, at a cruder level, more long-lasting or just plain
stronger than we are.. .62
61. Rist, Augustine, 1-2. Rists career was spent teaching at Toronto; probably his most noted title was
Plotinus: The R oad to Reality (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1967).
62. Rist, Augustine, 5.
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43
This very notion is also imposed upon Victorinus. Rist notes that what is done to
Augustine is not original: Plato is the first in the ancient world to use the term theologian,
and yet Platos writings and his portrayal of his master Socrates would always be
understood, artificially, as a philosophical canon.
Victorinus, like Augustine, found himself in the position of holding his post as rhetor
post-conversion. His Neoplatonism had served him well in his vocation, and would
continue to serve him well now as a conceptual matrix for continued theological
reflection. He saw his newfound Christian belief as not so much as a replacement but as
an expansion and an enrichment of his earlier views.64 The natural addition to this new
world in which he found himself was the rich repository of Christian Scripture, and
Victorinus immediately pursued scriptural exegesis for responding to current anti-Nicene
forces.65 It is little wonder that Augustine, thirty years later, would see both Victorinus
conversion and the course of his work following his conversion as examples to emulate.
He would pursue the same models as Victorinus:
Augustines philosophical models were, increasingly, theological hypotheses, teased out of the
Scriptures and the belief and practice of the Church. They were like any modem model in that
their purpose was to make sense of what lies around us. It is their continuing success in doing
that, which makes them not only interesting possibilities, but worthy of close and detailed
inspection. To attempt to make sense of Augustines thought without taking such theological
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models at least as seriously as one takes a modem philosophers models is to emasculate the
thought itself, and to deprive Augustine of his philosophical integrity.66
Despite the inherent dangers of which Rist warns in bifurcated treatments of Augustine,
there are innumerable examples produced, and for the same is true of the rare work done
on Victorinus in modem scholarship.
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67. Jean Dani61ou, A History o f Early Christian Doctrine before the Council ofNicaea, Volume III: The
Origins o f Latin Christianity (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1977).
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46
Against Praxeas; however, despite its unequalled eighty-five-page introduction on Latin
theology up to and including Tertullian, it has been out of print for decades.
Latin theology in the Ante-Nicene period is an odd problem of finding points of
reference that define this conceptual world. Lewis Ayres, in his recent work Nicaea and
its Legacy, speaks of a trajectory of the Trinitarian Controversy he calls Western AntiAdoptionism: A Son bom without Division, involving the idea that the Son is truly
bom from the Father and that this birth does not involve a destruction of the divine unity
or monarchy.69 Ayres precedes a description of this Western trajectory by cautioning the
reader about apparent sources for Latin theology:
In actual fact our knowledge of Latin Christology and Trinitarian theology between 250 and 360 is
extremely limited and certainly not such that we can make any certain judgements about its overall
character. It is noticeable that attempts to describe the character of western theology in the early
decades of this crucial century have been few and far between during the recent decades of scholarly
activity on the fourth century; the standard summary accounts frequently ignore the question.70
Ayres concludes that, of the main Latin theologians writing in that period, only Tertullian
and Novatian can be usefully compared to Latin theology of the 350s.71
Another qualifier in speaking about the world of Latin theology concerns the division
between the Latin West, or Western Latin theology, versus the Greek East. Ayres gives
an example of the artificiality of this idea in speaking about fourth-century Trinitarianism.
Traditional accounts of the 340s describe the disastrous council held at Serdica in 343: the
68. Tertullian. Q. Septimii Florentis Tertulliani Adversus Praxean liber (Tertullians Treatise Against
Praxeas): The Text edited, with an Introduction, Translation, and Commentary, ed. Ernest Evans
(London: S.P.C.K., 1948). (Henceforth, Evans, Against Praxeas.) Evans work is the most important
title for any scholar who wants to do work in Against Praxeas, but copies are hard to come by. Bertrand
de Margeries short second volume (only 144 pages) in his An Introduction to the History o f Exegesis,
Volume II: The Latin Fathers, is o f some interest but only focuses on four figures, Tertullian, Hilary,
Ambrose and Jerome, and has far less commentary and analysis o f their works than the title would suggest
69. Ayres, Nicaea, 75.
70. Ayres, Nicaea, 70.
71. And to a lesser extent, Lactantius (74-5). Ayres excludes Cyprian from consideration because o f the
details o f his Trinitarianism remaining unclear (70, n. 22). And the best work from the 350s for
elements o f Latin theology would be Hilarys pre-exile commentary on Matthew, written ca. 350.
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47
party of Western Latin bishops versus the party of Eastern Greek bishops refusing to meet,
each side issuing condemnations of the other. But the Western party was not made up of
exclusively Latin-speaking-only bishops. Of those ninety-five Western bishops, thirty-three
came from Greece, around ten came from Balkan provinces of Moesia, Pannonia and
Dacia, and five others were from provinces further east and south of those provinces:
the largest single block of attendees were the Greek and Balkan bishops. The western council
was as localized as most during this century. The demographics of the council demonstrate the
errors of assuming that Greek-speaking areas of the east divided clearly in theology from the
Latin-speaking west. Just as northern Italy and the area of the former Yugoslavia sustained a
strong anti-Nicene presence through the second half of the century, the are of modern-day Greece
sustained a strong tradition of support for anti-Eusebian theologies. East vs. West is far too
clumsy a tool of analysis for almost anything in the fourth century.72
If we keep our attentions to the specifically Latin-authored theology that preceded
Victorinus conversion in the mid-350s, this is indeed a rather circumscribed body of
theological writings, especially if we wish to see how Latins used scriptural exegesis to
speak of trinitarian relations and identity.
72. Ayres, Nicaea, 123. Michel Bames makes the same sort o f case in speaking about the Western
trinitarian trajectory that included Marcellus and Athanasius: If we talk about an East-West division
in fourth-century trinitarian theology we must include Alexandria with Rome and the West (so that
West cannot equal Latin); We have then at least two models or genres o f pro-Nicene polemic,
namely, the Western Rome-Alexandria genre, and the Eastern, typically Cappadocian, genre. I would
expect that the Cappadocian model o f polemic will be found to be basically characteristic o f Eastern proNicene polemics, especially wherever Athanasius writings have limited (or no) circulation. Michel R.
Bames, The Fourth Century as Trinitarian Canon. In Christian Origins: Theology, Rhetoric and
Community, edited by Lewis Ayres and Gareth Jones (New York: Routledge, 1998), 56,61.
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Christianity show a reality of at least certain parts of the Old and New Testaments
existing in various translations.
The Septuagint was the Scripture for the earliest Christians because it was Israels
Bible. In the Latin West the earliest Christians were Greek-speaking, as evidenced by the
vestigial remains of Greek in the Latin liturgy.73 In the late second century in the West,
when knowledge of Greek was in clear decline, any work in understanding the Bible
necessitated having at least portions of the Septuagint translated into Latin; the same was
true of New Testament writings. The Acts o f the Scillitan Martyrs (ca. 180) mentions the
witness Speratus carrying libri et epistulae Pauli viri iusti. And a Latin translation of at
least parts of the Bible can be discerned behind the earliest texts which could reasonably
be supposed to show knowledge of one.74 The Muratorian Fragment of the late second
century (ca. 170) gives an authoritative canon of New Testament writings that includes
four gospels and epistles; it also mentions a number of apocryphal writings that were read
in churches of the time, very likely with popular Latin translations of them in existence.75
We can assume that an entire Latin translation of the New Testament existed in Rome
dating from the same time as the Muratorian Fragment.
73. The clearest example is the Kyrie section o f the liturgy. George Dragas characterizes the ubiquity o f
Greek language in the Roman empire as Christian Hellenism that replaced the ancient traditions o f
Greece. Even in Rome, the church used the Greek language, as attested by the letter o f Clement o f
Rome (7 Clem.) and its earliest great theologian, Hippolytus (ca. 170-235), who wrote in Greek.
George D. Dragas, Greece, Greek. In Encyclopedia o f Early Christianity: Second Edition, edited by
Everett Ferguson, 486-87. New York & London: Garland Publishing, 1998.
74. T. D. Bames, Tertullian: A H istorical and Literary Study, 27778, in his appendix on African
Christians and their Latin Bible.
75. The reference to the Shepherd ofHermas in lines 73'76 o f the fragment, saying But Hermas wrotethe
Shepherd very recently, in our times, in the city o f Rome, while bishop Pius, his brother, was occupying
the chair o f the church o f the city o f R om e... makes the terminus a quo fairly obvious, since Pius died in
157. pastorem vero nuperrim e temporibus nostris in urbe roma herma conscripsit sedente cathetra urbis
romae aecclesiae pio eps fratre eius The Latin text o f the fragment is commonly believed by scholars to
be a translation from the original Greek, the Latin being a rather rough rendering. Bruce M. Metzger, The
Canon o f the New Testament (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1987), 191-201,305-07.
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It was probably not Western, Latin-speaking Christians who wrote the first Latin
translations of Old Testament writings, but Latin-speaking Jews in the West, as Danielou
observed.76 Even if the official language of Greek lasted at Rome into the early second
century, there were Christians both in Rome and Carthage who spoke nothing but Latin.
Alongside the official language, Greek, which persisted for a long time, there was also a
77
popular form of Christianity using Latin. By the time of the Vulgate of Jerome, there
was a family tree of Latin texts of Old and New Testament (collectively known as the
Old Latin), originating not in the Greek-speaking church at Rome, but in other Christian
fellowships in the rest of Italy, as well as North Africa.78
T e r t u l l i a n : T h e L a t i n L o c u s C o m m u n is
76. Early Christianity in Rome and Africa first developed in a Jewish environment and it is very likely that
these Latin-speaking Jews were able to make use o f Latin translations o f the Old Testament that had been
in existence for a long time. It is well known that the Bible was read in the synagogues first in Hebrew
and then in the language o f die people, that is, Aramaic, Greek and Latin. These translations were, o f
course, at the same time interpretations and often quite free interpretations. We are therefore justified in
asking whether Jewish Latin did not exist before Christian Latin. Chapter 1, The Translations: 1. The
Latin Bible, in Jean Danidlou, History o f Early Christian Doctrine before the Council o f Nicaea, 3-8.
77. Danidlou, The Origins o f Latin Christianity, 3.
78. O f those Old Latin versions felling into African and European types, the latter category comprised
Italian and Gallic sub-categories, but all o f these translations prior to Jerome lacked polish, were
sometimes painfully literal, and often posed a problem for rendering certain words and concepts in
Latin. Bruce M. Metzger, Old Latin Versions, In Encyclopedia o f Early Christianity: Second
Edition, edited by Everett Ferguson, 829-30. New York & London: Garland Publishing, 1998.
Metzger is pointed in calling some o f these early versions o f dubious Latinity.
79. Chapter XIII, A Pagan Education, in T. D. Bames, Tertullian, 187-210.
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Suetonius and Juvenal.80 After this age, the pride of classical achievement was passed to
the Greeks, whom Romans emulated. By the end of the second century, Latin literature
had become unfashionable, and was replaced by Marcus Aurelius Hellenophilism. The
Greek East flourished in the Second Sophistic period and that of Middle Platonism. In
contrast, the Latin West was a paltry competitor.81 The exception to this was North
Africa, particularly in the person and writings of Tertullian.
Tertullian might be too easily dismissed as a crucial foundation for the Latin West for
a variety of reasonshis Montanist period, for example, or his early ante-Nicene context,
or that he wrote in Latin rather than sophisticated Greekbut there is no doubt that he
was the luminary of his age and that he inaugurated the new and living form of
Christian Latin Literature.82 The sheer number of significant Latin authors of Christian
North Africa who wrote after Tertullian weighs as heavy evidence: Minucius Felix,
Cyprian, Pontius, Commodianus, Amobius, and Lactantius either wrote in Africa or were
educated there. Nearly two hundred years later, the academic brilliance of Carthage plays
a key factor for Augustines formation and career. The acknowledged master of all of
these North African figures, however, was TertullianCyprian acknowledged him thus,
and never let a day go by without consulting his writings. Tertullian showed that a
80. Ovid hardly qualifies as part o f this category because o f his infamous adultery manual and the harsh
exile imposed on him.
81. As Bames observes, The historian Tacitus perceived that only an intellectually barren age w ill
produce no historical writing. He himself found no followers before Ammianus Marcellinus in the late
fourth century. The reading public found the present too dull, the recent past too offensive. T. D.
Bames, Tertullian, 191.
82. T. D. Bames, Tertullian, 192.
83. The role o f Africa is clear, and within Africa the role o f Tertullian. It was his powerful example that
inspired Minucius Felix, Cyprian, Amobius and Lactantius. Though his name is studiously avoided
(except once by Lactantius), the debt o f all four writers to him is undeniable. Tertullian had shown that
a Christian could write elegant Latin. Cyprian (the story is revealing) read him every day. T . D.
Bames, Tertullian, 194.
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Christian could write in elegant Latin, and the list of Latin classics found in his writings
is long and impressive. The number of classic Greek and Latin writers is several times
larger than what the average scholar of Rome would have known. He knew a forgotten
period of Latin literature, and his knowledge of Greek literature and philosophy was just
as extensive.84 By using the fruits of his erudition, Tertullian, in his life and work,
reconciled Christianity and classical culture. He gave a full first expression of the
Western mind: In Western Christianity everything seems to commence with Tertullian:
the technical language of Christians, theology, interpretation of scripture and other
manifestations of a religion which is in part already settled and in part still on the move.85
T e r t u l l i a n s L a t i n C l a s s i c A g a in s t P r a x e a s
84. T. D. Bames gives this quite a complex treatment in his chapter A Pagan Education, about how well
anyone in Tertullians day would have known the classics. Bames, Tertullian, 196-210.
85. Eric Osborn, Tertullian: First Theologian o f the West (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997),
255, citing Claudio Moreschini. In his chapter on Tertullians thorough learning, A Pagan Education,
Timothy Bames makes this strong statement: What has Athens to do with Jerusalem? he once
exclaimed or what has the Academy in common with the church? Almost every word he wrote gave
the lie to the answer he implies. Tertullian would have deplored the attempts o f Justin, Clement and
Origen to reconcile Christianity and pagan philosophy. He explicitly rejected a Stoic, Platonic or
dialectical Christianity. But in the wider sense, he had him self reconciled Christianity and classical
culture. For he used the benefits o f a traditional education and the fruits o f his pagan erudition to
defend and to propagate what he considered to be the truth. Bames, Tertullian, 210.
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an angry reaction to an intra-church debate on the Holy Spirit as well as the theology of a
figure named Praxeas.86
Tertullians reaction against Praxeas Monarchian-trinitarian heresy of Modalism
produced the first extended reflection on the Christian doctrine of the Triune God.
Praxeas heresy arose from attempts to insure the unity of God apart from an
acknowledgement of the economy of what is three within God. Tertullian begins the
offensive in Against Praxeas by heralding the double sin of Praxeas, accusing Praxeas of
having brought out of Asia this wrongheaded teaching that it was the Father himself who
R7
came down in the Incarnation, himself suffering in the life and death of Jesus Christ. It
was thus at Rome that Praxeas had, as Tertullian phrased it, brought about two
achievements on behalf of the Devil when he drove out prophecy and introduced heresy:
oo
he put to flight the Paraclete and crucified the Father. The classic argument that
follows this statement warrants a close look at the entire treatises content, especially at
the way Scripture texts are used in Against Praxeashow and where they appear
together, and for what purpose, along with other original themes.
Ernest Evans critical edition of Tertullians Treatise Against Praxeas (1948) is a
masterpiece that has never been equaled. It includes a Latin critical text with a scrupulous
86. The name Praxeas has always been imagined to have been a nickname for someone, as in Greek this
name would mean Player or Busybody. There are no contemporaries o f Tertullian who mention a
figure by this name; the silence o f Hippolytus is especially noteworthy. Allen Brent makes a detailed
and convincing case for Praxeas real identity being Callistus, bishop o f Rome ca. 217-ca. 222. Allen
Brent, Hippolytus & the Roman Church in the Third Century (Leiden: EJ.Brill, 1995), 52529.
87. Moreover, Tertullian says that the bishop o f Rome was on the verge o f recognizing the prophecies o f
Montanus, Prisca and Maximilla, when he was persuaded not to do so by Praxeas false assertions
concerning them, and by Praxeas insistence on the prior decisions o f the bishops predecessors.The
predecessor was most probably Eleutherus (bishop o f Rome 177-192), who condemned the prophets:
Victor, ignorant o f his predecessors policy, or preferring to disregard it, was inclined to approve o f
the movement, until Praxeas arrived in Rome and (a) gave him information discreditable to the
prophets, and (b) reminded him o f his predecessors ruling. Ernest Evans, Against Praxeas, 185.
88. Adversus Praxean I, 31-33. ita duo negotia diaboli Praxeas Romae procuravit, prophetiam expulit et
haeresim intulit, paracletum fogavit et patrem crucifixit. Evans, 89.
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translation, a commentary, and a thorough, eighty-five-page introduction, even down to
very careful work done on the Latin morphology of Tertullians favored theological
terms.89 As outlined by Evans in his introduction, we can summarize Against Praxeas
with five major themes:90
1) Tertullian defends the traditional faith in the Holy Trinity, arguing that the monarchy of God
is not imperiled by the existence of the Son and the Holy Spirit consubstantial with him.
2) Tertullian adduces scriptural testimony to the existence of the Son, who is also the word
and the Wisdom of God, proceeding by generation from the Father, as a second Person
beside the Father.
3) A third line of argument arises from the pronouncement that no man can see Gods face
and live, brought into comparison with those many places in which it is written that God
can been seen, by the patriarchs and others. This theme of divine visibility is the most
obvious portion of Tertullian that makes its way into Victorinus fourth-century Nicenetrinitarian polemic and exegesis 150 years later after Against Praxeas.
4) Tertullian responds to Praxeas Monarchianism, claiming that it rests on a very short
sighted exegesis of only three texts: Isaiah 45:5 (I am God, and beside me there is none
else); John 10:30 (I and the Father are one); and John 14:9 (He who has seen me has
seen the Father). As a response, Tertullian extracts from St. Johns Gospel all the
passages in which our Lord speaks of the Father as other than himself, adding also
summary references to the same teaching in St. Matthew and St. Luke. 91
5) Tertullian attacks the Monarchians positions on the Father and/or the Son being passible,
for Praxeas claim that the Father became the Son. Even if the Son became passible in the
flesh, Tertullian states, he was impassible in his divine nature, and Praxeas holding to
the divine unity to such a degree as to deny the Son and the Holy Spirit means denying
the Father also.
89. This edition by Evans, a life-long C.O.E. parish rector, is the paragon which all critical editions should
emulate, even beginning with the most self-effacing, explanatory sentence, This book was not written
for publication, but as a relaxation from the more exacting duties o f my profession. The thorough
scholarly detail o f this critical edition is typical o f the several other critical editions in Western Latin
Patristics he produced dining his career. Cf. T.D. Bames comments in his 1971 monograph on
editions, commentaries and translations o f Tertullian (Tertullian, 286-91): Normally the 1954 CCSL
edition would be accepted as the most important critical edition, but Bames points out what is well
known among Tertullian scholars, that the CCSL was much amended to accord with the text o f E.
Evans (287). Evans edition is used throughout for this widely acknowledged reason.
90. These five points: Evans, 21-22.
91. Evans, 22.
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Points two and four above hardly begin to describe the rich use of Scripture texts in
Against Praxeas. To be sure, as Evans notes, texts from the Gospel of John are foremost,
buttressed by much appeal to Matthew and Luke. As Hanson observed of the fourthcentury Trinitarian Controversy in his Search fo r the Christian Doctrine o f God., the Fourth
Gospel was the major exegetical battleground. I would add not only of the fourth-century
Trinitarian Controversy, but also in all manner of controversy surrounding trinitarian
definition before that, in the second and third centuries; as it was with Tertullian.92
The controversy with Praxeas and his Monarchian errors defines the opening chapters
of Against Praxeas. Tertullian takes pains to explain the catholic doctrine and rule of the
faith, lecturing on Trinity and Unity, the Divine Economy of Persons within the Godhead,
and the Monarchy of God rightly understood, as opposed to nothing more than a
singularity of the divine mode. After making these ideas clear, Tertullian moves on to
specific commentary on the Son: his identity and the divine names that speak of that
identity, especially Word and Wisdom. Having dealt with these matters over the first
ten chapters (of a total of thirty-one), Tertullians treatise turns into intensive exegesis to
prove his point about the persons of the Son and the Spirit being distinct from the Father.
Two specific sections serve as clear examples of Tertullians method. The first has to do
with a discourse of divine visibility in chapters 14 and 15; the second with the disciple
Philips conversation with Christ and Christs pronouncements on divine visibility and unity.
92. Hanson, Search, 834. In the closing chapter o f Search, titled The Development o f Doctrine, Hanson
includes an excursus on the key scriptural loci o f the controversy, including a summary o f why each
particular text posed certain problems or provided certain doctrinal definition: These passages, and
others like them, were the outer fortifications round which each side skirmished. But there were other
texts which were more crucial than these, the key-points or inner citadels o f the battle. Hanson, Search,
832. This list, at least in this final chapter, considers: Prov. 8:22; Am. 4:12,13; Is. 53:8; Ps. 45:7; Ps.
110:1; Jn. 1:1; Jn. 10:30; Jn. 14:9,10; Jn. 14:28; Jn. 17:3; Jn. 20:17; and I Cor. 15:28(832-38).
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The Face of God is the dominant theme in chapters 14 and 15 of Against Praxeas. The
invisibility of God as expressed in Exodus 33:20 (No one may see my face, and live)
must be explained if God the Son was and is truly visible, for some people in the
Covenant historysuch as Abraham or Jacob, Isaiah or Ezekielsaw God and yet lived.
Tertullian argues, however, that did not see the full glory of the Godhead. They did see
something particular, but it was not the Father they saw. The Father being invisible, what
was visible to them was the Son because of the enumeration of his derivation.
The
Scripture makes this distinction between the Visible and the Invisible; this is why Exodus
can speak of Moses who spoke with God face to face, as with a Mend, or Jacob can say
after his wrestling with God, I have seen God face to face. 94 In archaic time there was
this very qualified vision of God:
It is clear that always aforetime Godthat is, the Son of Godwas seen in a mirror and an
enigma and a vision and a dream, both by prophets and patriarchs and Moses himself till that
time: and if perchance the Lord did speak in visual presence, yet a man would not see his face as
he really is, but only perchance in a mirror and in an enigma.95
There are thus two faces for God: one that is lethal, the Father; and one that is not,
the Son. Appearing in the theophanies, there ought to be, Tertullian says, a face for
God that is lethal, but there is also the natural idea of the Father assigning the Son as his
face, and this points to the unity of the two persons. The face of the Father, Tertullian
reminds us, has the fulness of the Fathers majesty. To see this face would be as
93. Or as Holmes translates it: by reason o f the dispensation o f His derived existence. ANF 3,609.
Adversus Praxean XIV, 6. pro modulo derivationis Evans, 105. So then it will be another who was
seen, for it is impossible for the same one who was seen, to be characterized as invisible: and it will
follow that we must understand the Father as invisible because o f the fullness o f his majesty, but must
acknowledge the Son as visible because o f the enumeration o f his derivation... Evans, 149.
94. Gen. 32:30.
95. Evans, 150. Adversus Praxean XIV, 1-5. apparet retro semper in speculo et aenigmate et visione et
somnio deum (id est filium dei) visum tarn prophetis et patriarchis quam et ipsi adhuc Moysi: et ipse
quidem dominus si forte coram ad faciem loquebatur, non tamen ut est homo faciem eius videret, nisi
forte in speculo et in aenigmate. Evans, 106.
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overwhelming as the rays of the sun: to see the face of the Father would destroy the
human observer as surely as an encounter with the sun in the full amount of its substance
in the heavens.96 That is why Jacob expresses surprise and relief that he had seen God
face-to-face, and had lived to tell of it. Anything visible of God seen by these Old
Testament figures, Tertullian says, was seen through a glass darkly (I Corinthians 13),
in enigmas, visions or dreams. Had God not displayed his visibility in the person of the
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Son, none would have survived the experience. Tertullian argues near the end o f chapter
14 that, besides the Father assigning the Son as his face or vicarius, the unity between
Father and Son is also the reason the Son speaks of the Father as his (the Sons) face:
Or is it that the Son indeed was seenalbeit in face, yet even this in a vision and a dream and a
mirror and an enigma, because Word and Spirit cannot be seen except in imaginary aspectyet
by his face he means the invisible Father? For who is the Father? Shall he be the Sons face, on
account of the authority which he obtains as begotten of the Father? For is it not of some greater
personage that it befits one to say, That man is my face, or He gives me face? The Father, he
says, is greater than I: therefore the Father will be the Sons face. For also what says the
scripture? The spirit of his countenance, Christ the Lord. Therefore if Christ is the spirit of the
Fathers countenance, rightly has the Spirit pronounced him whose the countenance is, namely
his Father, to be his faceevidently because of their unity. Can you be surprised if the Father can
be understood to be the Sons face, when he is his head? For the head of Christ is God.9*
96. For w e find that God was seen, even by many, yet that none o f those who had seen him diedthat
God was seen, o f course, according to mens capacity, not according to the fulness o f his divinity.
Evans, 149. Adversus Praxean XTV, 30-32. invenimus enim et a multis deum visum et neminem
tamen eorum qui eum viderant mortuum: visum quidem deum secundum hominum capacitates, non
secundum plenitudinem divinitatis. Evans, 104.
97. A clever feature o f his reasoning for this in chapter 14 is a reconciliation o f Moses having seen God only
after his Glory had passed, having been told No man may see my face and live, with how Exodus says
otherwise that the intimacy between Moses and God was face-to-face: It was a reference, Tertullian
asserts, to a future time o f face-to-face, when Moses stood on Tabor face-to-face, talking with Jesus.
98. Evans, 150-51. Adversus Praxean XIV ,13-25. aut numquid filius quidem videbatur etsi facie, sed
ipsum hoc in visione et somnio et speculo et aenigmate, quia sermo et spiritus nisi imaginaria forma
videri non potest faciem autem suam dicit invisibilem patrem? quis enim pater? num facies erit filii,
nomine auctoritatis quam genitus a patre consequitur? non enim et de aliqua maiore persona congruit
dicere, Facies mea est ille homo, et, Faciem mihi praestat? Pater, inquit, maior me est: ergo facies erit
filii pater, nam et scriptura quid dicit? Spiritus personae eius Christus dominus. ergo si Christus
personae patemae spiritus est, merito spiritus cuius persona erat, id est patris eius, faciem suam ex
unitate scilicet pronuntiavit. mira res plane an facies filii pater accipi possit qui est caput eius: caput
Christi deus. Evans, 106.
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If the Father begets the Son and is greater than the Son (quoting John 14:28), the Son is
assigning the Father as his face. Tertullian closes his argument by admitting that the
(invisible) Father being the (visible) Sons face is a wondrous thing.
Tertullian further explains Gods visibility in chapter 15, tying Exodus 33:20 to two
key New Testament visibility texts, John 1:18 and I Timothy 6:16." The New Testament
passages, he avers, will provide the clarification for certain Old Testament passages
whose meaning are in question. In the New Testament, both the Gospels and the writings
of the other apostles speak of an invisible and a visible God, with an evident personal
distinction between the two. John 1:18 tells us that no one has ever seen God, at any
time; Timothy 6:16 also says that no one has seen God, or can see God. But it is also
true that the same apostles who say these words also handled Christ; they held
discourse with him visibly. Therefore there are (at least) two persons of God: one
invisible, the other invisible. In order to understand this, Tertullian appeals to John 1:1-2:
that the Word of God was God. This enables the Father to be invisible, unseen by any mere
human creature but seen by the Son, who is the visible God. The Son being from within
the Fathers bosom enables the Son to reveal or declare the Father, whether in temporary
Old Testament theophanies or the full visibility of the New Testament Incarnation:
Our case stands, that from the beginning he always was seen who was seen at the end, and that he
was not seen at the end who from the beginning had not been seen, and that thus there are two,
one seen and one unseen. Therefore it was the Son always who was seen and the Son always who
conversed and the Son always who wrought, by the authority and will of the Father, because The
Son cm do nothing of himself, unless he have seen the Father doing itdoing it, of course, in his
consciousness. For the Father acts by consciousness, whereas the Son sees and accomplishes that
which is in the Fathers consciousness.100
99.
Jn. 1:18, N o one has ever seen God; the only-begotten, who is in the bosom o f the Father, has made
him known; I Tim. 6:16, (God) who alone is immortal and who lives in unapproachable light,
whom no one has seen or can see.
100. Evans, 15253. Adversus Praxean XV, 714. constat eum semper visum ab initio qui visus fuerit in
fine, et eum nec in fine visum qui nec ab initio fait visus, et ita duos esse, visum et invisum. filius
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This is a strong argument by Tertullian, especially striking in that as he sums up chapter 15,
he also connects the texts he has been working onmost importantly Matthew 11:27,
John 1:18, Exodus 33:20, and I Timothy 6:16, among otherswith John 5:19: The Son does
what the Father does, as part of the unity he shares with the Father, of shared nature and
operations, giving effect and form to the Fathers sensus. Tertullian uses a chain of Scripture
texts as a way of making a constructive and polemical statement about the distinction of
persons between the Father and the Son, while maintaining their trinitarian unity.
We can see this methodical building of such a chain of texts elsewhere in Against
Praxeas. A good example is found in chapter 24, where, in an explication of the meaning
of Christs exchange with the disciple Philip in John 14, Tertullian uses a complex chain
of texts to support this distinction between Father and Son. 101
The disciple Philip, Tertullian explains, had laid up a great expectation of seeing the
Father. When he asks to be shown the unseeable Father, however, Christ explains himself
as the vehicle of divine visibility.
ergo visus est semper et filius conversatus est semper et filius operatus est semper, ex auctoritate
patris et voluntate, quia Filius nihil a semetipso potest facere nisi viderit patrem facientem in sensu
scilicet facientem. pater enim sensu agit, filius vero quod in patris sensu est videns perficit. Evans, 108.
101. By speaking o f a chain o f texts I mean the texts themselves, called testimonial not, technically
speaking, a florilegium o f patristic comments on Scripture that we call by the term catena. I would
compare this idea to what I have said about the paucity o f detailed scholarship on Latin theology.
Many assume that there is much scholarship on the topic o f Latin theology, but that hardly proves
true. The same can be said for work done in the use o f Scripture texts in early Christian writings. The
earliest Christian use o f texts had to do with Christians recognizing in Jesus the Messiah foretold by
Old Testament prophets, applying to Jesus those texts from the Septuagint that were thought o f as
messianic, though the majority o f Jews did not accept these applications: We can locate the first
Christian anthologies or Testimonia within this polemical context. The Dead Sea manuscripts have
shown us that the Jews had already been accustomed to making anthologies o f Old Testament
excerpts. The Christians quickly adopted this method to gather together passages which helped to
underline the distinctive character o f their creed, as opposed to the common faith o f the Jews:
messianic texts, passages on the interpretation o f the Law, and so on. Extant anthologies o f this type,
e.g. Cyprians Testimonia a d Quirinum, are very late, but the recurrence o f the same passages,
sometimes in identical combinations, in the books o f the New Testament proves that such collections
had been in use for some time in the early Church. Manlio Simonetti, Biblical Interpretation in the
Early Church: An Historical Introduction to Patristic Exegesis (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1994), 910.
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If that is so, it was not the Father who they did not know had companied so long time with them,
but the Son: and the Lord, upbraiding them for not knowing himself as him whom they had not
known, clearly wished to be recognized as he whom he had upbraided them for not recognizing in
so long a time, namely the Son. And now it can appear in what sense it was said, He that seeth me
seeth the Father also: of course in the same sense as above, I and the Father are one. Why?
Because, I cameforth and am comefrom God', and, I am the way, no one cometh unto the Father
but by me\ and, No one cometh unto me except the Father have drawn him', and, All things hath
the Father delivered to me; and, As the Father quickeneth, so also the Son; and, I f ye know me ye
know the Father also. For according to these [texts] he had revealed himself as the deputy of the
Father, by means of whom the Father was both seen in acts and heard in words and known in the
Son ministering the Fathers acts and words: because the Father is invisible, a fact which Philip
also had learned in the Law and ought to have rememberedNo one shall see God and live. And
consequently he is chidden for desiring to see the Father as though he were visible, and is
informed that he becomes visible in the Son, in consequence of acts of power, not in consequence
of actual manifestation of his Person.102
The chain of Scripture texts used here is exemplary of Tertullians exegesis: John 14:9;
John 10:30; John 16:28; John 14:6; John 6:44; Matthew 11:27; John 5:21; John 14:7;
Exodus 33:20; and, directly after the above passage, Tertullian returns to using John
14:10,11. He marshals all this evidence to speak of the visibility and unity of the Father
and the Son, contrary to Praxeas claim that Father and Son from ancient times have been
the same reality. The Son is the one whom the Father has declared as his beloved Son,
who has been glorified by the Father, and who is the Fathers Vicarius, the visible
Repraesentator of the invisible Father.
103
102. Evans, 167-68. Adversus Praxean XXIV, 4-21. si ita est, ergo non patrem tanto tempore secum
conversatum ignoraverant sed filium: et dominus, eum se ignorari exprobans quern ignoraverant, eum
utique agnosci volebat quem tanto non agnosci tempore exprobraverat, id est filium. et apparere iam
potest quomodo dictum sit, Qui me videt videt et patrem: scilicet quo et supra, Ego et pater unum
sumus. quare? quia, Ego ex deo exivi et veni; et, Ego sum via, nemo ad patrem venit nisi per me; et,
Nemo ad me venit nisi pater eum adduxerit; et, Omnia mihi pater tradidit; et, Sicut pater vivificate, ita
et filius; et, Si me cognovistis et patrem cognovistis. secundum haec enim vicarium se patris
ostenderat, per quem pater et videretur in foctis et audiretur in verbis et cognosceretur in filio facta et
verba patris administrante: quia invisibilis pater, quod et Philippus didicerat in lege et meminisse
debuerat Deum nemo videbit et vivet. et ideo suggillatur patrem videre desiderans quasi visibilem,
et instruitur visibilem eum in filio fieri ex virtutibus non ex personae repraesentatione. Evans, 120.
103. Vicarius above in XXIV,14. Repraesentator in XXIV,32: Therefore he also made manifest the
conjunction o f the two Persons, so that the Father separately might not, as though visible, be asked for
in open view, and that the Son might be accepted as he who makes the Father present. Adversus
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The words, he says, that I speak unto you are not mineevidently because they are the
Fathersbut the Father abiding in me doeth the works. Therefore the Father, abiding in the Son
through works of power and words of doctrine, is seen through those things through which he
abides, and through him in whom he abides: and from this very fact it is apparent that each
Person is himself and none other, while he says, I am in the Father and the Father in me. And so
he says, Believe. What? That I am the Father? I think it is not so written, but, That I am in the
Father and the Father in me, or if not, believe for the very works sakethose works in fact
through which the Father was seen in the Son, not with the eyes but with the mind.104
The unity statements we see here in Tertullians treatise are momentous, in part because
we might not expect such statements in a treatise arguing for distinction of persons, but
also because they come from an early ante-Nicene such as Tertullian.
Besides these two specific sections of Against Praxeas as examples of Latin polemical
exegesis, Tertullians treatise also contains key statements in his argument for the unity
of substance of the Persons of the Trinity. It is even more interesting, then, that,
addressing modalist forms of Monarchianism in Against Praxeas, he makes arguments
that could just as effectively be used against third-century forms of subordinationism.
One of the best known quotes from all of Tertullians works comes in Against Praxeas
XXV, when he refers to the distinction between the Father and the Son and the Spirit and
the properties of each: So the close series of the Father in the Son and the Son in the
Paraclete makes three who cohere, the one attached to the other. And these three are one
[thing], not one [person], in the sense in which it was said, I and the Father are one, in
Praxean XXIV, 29-32. igitur et manifestam fecit duarum personarum coniunctionem, ne pater seorsum
quasi visibilis in conspectus desideraretur et ut filius repraesentator patris haberetur. Evans, 120.
104. Evans, 168-69. Adversus Praxean XXIV, 342. Verba, inquit, quae ego loquor vobis non sunt mea
utique quia patrispater autem manens in me fecit opera, per opera ergo virtutum et verba doctrinae
manens in filio pater, per ea videtur per quae manet et per eum in quo manet, ex hoc ipso apparente
proprietale utriusque personae dum dicit, Ego sum in patre et pater in me. atque adeo Credite ait quid?
me patrem esse? non puto scriptum esse, sed, Quia ego in patre et pater in me, si quo minus v el propter
opera credite, ea utique opera per quae pater in filio non visu sed sensu videbatur. Evans, 120-21.
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respect of unity of substance, not of singularity of number. 105 In chapter 26 Tertullian
brings forth additional arguments for the distinctions of Father and Son; he argues, e.g.,
for their shared power, using Luke 1:35 as his proof (The Spirit of God shall come upon
thee and the Power of the Highest shall overshadow thee...). He points out their separate
realities, especially by Father, Son and Spirit having their separate names, but their
realities refer to each other:
As therefore the Word of God is not [God] himself whose [Word] he is, so the Spirit also, though
he is called God, is yet not [God] himself whose [Spirit] he is called. Nothing in genitive
dependence is that on which it is dependent. Clearly when a thing is from him, and is his in
the sense that it is from him, it can be a thing which is like him from whom it is and whose it is:
and consequently the Spirit is God and the Word is God, because he is from God, yet is not [God]
himself from whom he is. But if the Spirit of God, as being a substantive thing, will not [be found
to] be God himself, but in that sense God as being from the substance of God himself, in that
it is a substantive thing and a certain assignment of the whole.106
Two statements of divine unity in Against Praxeas are possibly the most significant
Tertullian makes on the subject, because in these statements he speaks of unity o f nature
and/or power (and/or substance).
1fi7
which supposes to say that Father, Son, and Spirit can be nothing other than one single person:
105. Evans, 169. Adversus Praxean XXV, 9-12. ita connexus patris in filio et filii in paracleto tres efficit
cohaerentes alterum ex altero. qui tres unum sunt, non unus, quomodo dictum est, Ego et pater unum
sumus, ad substantiae unitatem non ad numeri singularitatem. Evans, 121.
106. Evans, 171 (emphasis added). Adversus Praxean XXVI, 20-28. sicut ergo sermo dei non est ipse
cuius est, ita nec spiritus, etsi deus dictus est, non tamen ipse est cuius est dictus. nulla res alicuius
ipsa est cuius est. plane cum quid ex ipso est, et sic eius est dum ex ipso sit, potest tale quid esse quale
et ipse ex quo est et cuius est: et ideo spiritus deus et sermo deus, quia ex deo, non tamen ipse ex quo
est. quods/ spiritus dei, tamquam substantiva res, non erit ipse deus sed hactenus deus qua ex ipsius
dei substantia, qua et substantiva res est et ut portio aliqua totius Evans, 122.
107. This can mean that Tertullian is a very early example for Nicenes who will later argue that, because
the Father and the Son have the same power as one another, they have the same nature. Cf. chapter 5
One Substance, One Power Statements in Victorinus; also Michel R. Bames, One Nature, One
Power: Consensus Doctrine in Pro-Nicene Polemic, Studia Patristica 29 (1997): 205-223. This
awareness o f the technical sense o f power is what Bames proposes as a characteristic o f Pro-Nicene
theology, where a sophisticated understanding o f power language means understanding that a
connatural union exists between nature (or substance) and power. Thus such statements can be found
in Pro-Nicene polemic and exegesis among such figures as Victorinus, Phoebadius o f Agen, Hilary
o f Poitiers, Ambrose o f Milan, Augustine and Gregory o f Nyssa.
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as though the one [God] were not all [these things] in this way also, that they are all of the one,
namely by unity of substance, while none the less is guarded the mystery of that economy which
disposes the unity into trinity, setting forth Father and Son and Spirit as three, three however not
in quality but in sequence, not in substance but in aspect, not in power but in [its] manifestation,
yet of one substance and one quality and one power. . . 108
This thought is reprised near the end of Against Praxeas in chapter 22, in which
Tertullian says that Praxeas favorite text, John 10:30, does not mean what he says it
does, a divine unity without distinction of persons:
Yet when he says that two, on the masculine gender, are one [thing], in the neuterwhich is not
concerned with singularity but with unity, with similitude, with conjunction, with the love of the
Father who loveth the Son, and with the obedience of the Son who obeys the Fathers willwhen
he says One [thing] are I and the Father, he shows that those that those whom he equates and
conjoins are two... By means of the works, then, the Father will be in the Son and the Son in the
Father, and thus by means of the works we understand that the Father and the Son are one. With
such insistence did he bring all this to light, to the intent that we should believe there are two,
albeit in one act of power, because it would be impossible to believe there is a Son otherwise
than if we believe there were two.109
Common work/works and power define the unity of the Father and Son in Tertullians
theology, placing his work squarely in a tradition of divine unity.110 With regard to power
as a conceptual idiom of the early Common Era, Michel Bames discusses Tertullians
108. Evans, 132 (emphasis added). Adversus Praxean II, 38-5. quasi non sic quoque unus sit omnia dum
ex uno omnia, per substantiae scilicet unitatem, et nihilo minus custodiatur otxovopiag sacramentum
quae unitatem in trinitatem disponit, tres dirigens patrem et filium et spiritum, tres autem non statu
sed gradu, nec substantia sed forma, nec potestate sed specie, unius autem substantiae et unius status
et unius potestatis Evans, 90-91
109. Evans, 164-65 (emphasis added). Adversus Praxean XXII, 11-16,26-30. adhuc cum duo masculini
generic unum dicit neutrali verbo quod non pertinet ad singularitatem, sed ad unitatem, ad
similitudinem, ad coniunctionem, ad dilectionem patris qui filium diligit, et ad obsequium filii qui
voluntati patris obsequitur Unum sumus, dicens, ego et pater, ostendit duos esse quos aequat et
iungit... per opera ergo erit pater in filio et filius in patre, et ita per opera intellegimus unum esse
patrem [et filium]. adeo totum hoc perseverabat inducere, ut duo tamen crederentur in una virtute,
quia aliter filius credi non posset nisi duo crederentur. Evans, 122.
110. At the turn from the second to the third centuries Christians are also using power to describe God,
particularly in a trinitarian or christological context, given the authority o f scriptural passages such as
Luke 1:35, Romans 1:20, 1 Cor. 1:24, and Hebrews 1:3... Among authors like Clement o f
Alexandria, Tertullian, Hippolytus and Origen we find commonly articulated two kinds o f power
based trinitarian theologies. These two doctrines o f divine power will play fundamental roles in the
trinitarian controversies o f the fourth century. Michel Bames, One Nature, One Power, 209-10.
One o f the best examples o f this trinitarian power idiom comes from Athenagoras A Plea Regarding
Christians, ca. 176, chapter 10: And since the Son is in the Father and the Father in the Son by the
unity and power o f the Spirit, the Son o f God is the mind and Word o f the Father. Cyril Richardson,
ed. and trans, Early Christian Fathers (New York: Collier Books, 1970), 309.
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Doctrine of One Power, One Substance and concludes, Those reading Tertullian in
the fourth century who were sympathetic to Nicaea would have found in him a strong
identification of power with nature, so strong in fact that a not quite so sophisticated
reader as Phoebadius might have failed to be able to distinguish power from substance
with any real clarity. 111
T e r t u l l ia n a n d t h e E n d u r i n g R o l e o f E x e g e s is i n L a t in T r i n i t a r ia n T h e o l o g y
I have mentioned the depth and length of Tertullians classical education and the number
of authors he had read and knew quite well. Mirroring this is the extensive list o f Western
Latins who show evidence of having read Tertullian and knowing his works well. 112 One
generation after Tertullian produced the trinitarian reflection of Against Praxeas, the
Latin church father Novatian would reprise the content of that work in his own De
Trinitate, removing the anti-Monarchian polemic for the sake of addressing different
opponents. In the next century, all Latin-speaking patristic writers read Tertullian, the
Master.
The idea that Victorinus, who, as Augustine famously said read everything
111. Michel R. Bames, The Power o f God: Avvaftig in Gregory o fN yssas Trinitarian Theology
(Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University o f America Press, 2001), 106. Entire section titled
Tertullians Doctrine o f One Power, One Substance, 103-06.
112. The question o f who read Tertullian in antiquity is addressed in the Corpus Christianorum Series
Latina Volume I, edited by Dom Eligius Dekkers (Tumhout, Belgium: Brepols, 1953), which contains
a massive listing in tables that cross reference ancient authors and works quoting from the works o f
Tertullian. Though even these three tables are probably not complete, they are the best done up until
now. Most important in this lengthy list are the Latin Neo-Nicene contemporaries o f Victorinus:
Hilary, Phoebaedius o f Agen, Gregory o f Elvira, Lucifer o f Cagliari, Filastrius o f Brixia, and Zeno o f
Verona. The only Neo-Nicene name missing from that list other than Victorinus would be Eusebius o f
Vercelli. Cf. Testimonia, The Tertullian Project, http://www.tertullian.org/witnesses/witnesses.htm.
113. Now finally Tertullian the presbyter is ranked first o f the Latin writers after Victor and Apollonius.
He was from the province o f Africa, from the city o f Carthage where his father was a proconsular
centurion. A man o f impetuous temperament, he was in his prime in the reign o f the emperor Severus
and Antoninus Caracalla, and he wrote many works which I need not name since they are very widely
known. At Concordia, a town in Italy, I saw an old man named Paul, who said that, when he was still
a very young man, he had seen in Rome a very old man who had been secretary o f blessed Cyprian
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by Christians 114 directly following his conversion, did not read Tertullian is
untenable. 115 Marius Victorinus used the resources of third century Latin theology,
particularly Tertullians scriptural exegesis, to produce his own contribution to the
trinitarian-theological challenges of the mid-fourth century. 116 Tertullians works created
Latin exegetical commonplaces, particular texts of Scripture constellated together, that
can be recognized in Latin Nicenes 150 years later.
Lewis Ayres, in his recent work Nicaea and its Legacy, offers a new summary of the
full course and nature of what was formerly called the Arian Controversy. As a central
part of his argument he includes a major theme of Nicenes particular reading o f
Scripture. When he describes how Nicenes read Scripture and why that resolved the
controversy, it sounds as if Ayres has Marius Victorinus in mind, because a mention of
Victorinus in the works introduction seems to indicate that Ayres does see Victorinus as
an important example. 117
and had reported to him that Cyprian was accustomed never to pass a day without reading Tertullian
and would frequently say to him, Hand me the master, meaning, o f course, Tertullian. Jerome, On
Illustrious Men/Saint Jerome, trans. Thomas P. Halton, vol. 100, Fathers o f the Church (Washington,
D.C.: The Catholic University o f America Press, 1999), 745.
114. Confessions VIII.2.4. Cf. in chapter one where I treat the sections o f Confessions Book VIII that deal
with what Augustine specifically tells us o f Victorinus and his conversion.
115. R.P.C. Hansons chapter on Victorinus in his The Search fo r the Christian Doctrine o f G od
acknowledges that Victorinus description o f the relation between the Father and the Son was
ingenious and original beyond any Western theologian before him (539), and yet also concludes
that Victorinus should be regarded as positively anti-Tertullianic in both thought and vocabulary
(545), and that Victorinus deliberately turns his back on Tertullian (555).
116. Cf. D.H. Williams, Defining Orthodoxy in Hilary o f Poitiers Commentarium in Matthaeum,
Journal o f Early Christian Studies 9 (2001): 15171. Written circa 350, Hilarys In Matthaeum has no
apparent understanding o f contemporary anti-Nicene theology, but the subordinationist theology that
Hilary is addressing in the commentary is third and fourth century logos-sarx forms o f
subordinationism in the Latin West. Williams argues that Hilary was addressing this sort o f heresy in
chapter thirty-one o f his commentary, rather than an Arian category o f subordinationism that had
yet to crystallize in the Latin West. Similar to what Hilary inherited from third century Western Latin
theology, Victorinus had a certain Western theology that was crystallizing around the re-definition o f
the homoousios and deployment o f key scriptural exegeses o f the Sons identity, nature and power.
117. Theology and the Reading o f Scripture section in chapter 1, 31-40. In his books introduction Ayres
mentions extended narrative chapters o f the Trinitarian Controversy that the does not mean as
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Ayres is responding to Hansons assessment in Search for the Christian Doctrine o f God
that dismissively concludes that the expounders of the text of the Bible [in the fourth
century] are incompetent and ill-prepared to expound it,
118
replacements for the standard large survey histories o f the Trinitarian Controvery by such scholars as
R. P. C. Hanson (The Search fo r the Christian Doctrine o f God), and Manlio Simonetti (La Crisi
Ariana nel IV secolo); rather, his intention is o f offering a narrative framework for the controversies
that in some measure advances on their texts, and which can form the basis for the consideration o f
pro-Nicene theology. Because o f the close reading o f certain texts, Ayres mentions a list o f figures
who most certainly deserve treatment, but have not been accorded individual treatment in the
interests o f space: I have in mind Marius Victorinus, Eusebius o f Emesa, Epiphanius o f Salamis, and
Didymus the Blind... The first mention o f Victorinus is telling, pointing to scholars reconsideration
o f Victorinus as a serious Nicene figure in the Trinitarian Controversy. Ayres, Nicaea and its Legacy, 5.
118. Hanson, Search, 848.
119. Ayres is taking his cue from a lucid essay by Francis Young that provides a good overview o f patristic
exegesis. Francis Young, The Rhetorical Schools and their Influence on Patristic Exegesis. In The
Making o f Orthodoxy: Essays in Honour o f Henry Chadwick, edited by Rowan D. Williams, 18299.
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989). Figural reading he gets from David Dawson,
Figural Reading and the Fashioning o f Christian Identity in Boyarin, Auerbach and Frei, M odem
Theology 14 (1998): 181-96.
120. Ayres, N icaea and its Legacy, 37.
121. Ayres, N icaea and its Legacy, 277.
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As Ayres points out, Victorinus particular reading of Scripture following his conversion,
and his use of that reading for the sake of Nicene polemic, is best understood within a
context such as the one described by Ayres in Nicaea and its Legacy.
All this could easily apply to anti-Nicene Homoians and their ingenuous efforts at
exegesis of Scripture, but Ayres argues for a distinctive pro-Nicene122 reading o f
Scripture, which
is to be found in subtle twists given to common reading practices, and in links drawn between these
reading practices and the principles of pro-Nicene Trinitarianism... Like almost all early Christian
writers, pro-Nicenes read Scripture as a providentially ordained resource for the Christian
imagination. It is an intrinsic part of Scriptures purpose to enable description of the God who acts
and of the structure of the cosmos within which God acts: the reshaping of the cosmological
imagination is a central aspect of the Incarnate Words mission. Scripture shapes the description of
the journey in the Church and in Christ toward full sight of the divine glory. Within this context
pro-Nicenes continue to make use of the range of grammatical and figural techniques. . . 123
Ayres qualifies that there are two further ways in which pro-Nicenes subtly adapt
previous tradition:
1. Interpretation of Scripture is governed by a pro-Nicene rule of faith. Creeds, pre-existing
rules of faith, and passages of Scripture traditionally used as hermeneutical keys are all
given a pro-Nicene cast. 124
2. Pro-Nicenes offer accounts of Scriptures revelatory ability in which understanding is
incremental and deferment of comprehension endless. 125
122. When Ayres used the term pro-Nicene he is close to Bames Pro-Nicene, but not quite as
determined in meaning (versus also Williams use o f pro-Nicene, meaning any fourth-century
theology sympathetic to an apparent Nicene trajectory): First, I use the term primarily to describe the
full flowering o f this theology in the 380s. Second, I also use the term to refer to the precursors o f that
theology which emerged during the late 350s and 360s and developed during the 370s. Third, I take
this theology to be in continuity with many previous emphases, but not to be simply the continuation
o f a one original Nicene theology surviving unchanged since 325. In some cases pro-Nicene
theologies emerge from older Nicene theologies, in other cases these theologies emerge from
traditions originally opposed to those older Nicene theologies. Ayres, 167-68.
123. Ayres, 335-36.
124. Ayres, 336.
125. Ayres, 339.
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In the four books of Against Arius, Victorinus not only makes impassioned arguments on
behalf of homoousios, he also recalls the wisdom and pronouncements of Nicaea (in
Books I and II) as the standard to which Western Latins must now appeal in their
responses to anti-Nicenes. 126 In the next three chapters I will demonstrate the intricacy of
Victorinus arguments on behalf of homoousios, divine substance, visibility and unity,
using Pro-Nicene understandings and worldviews of the meaning of Scripture far beyond
what might be expected of him. He is not the obscure, incomprehensible Neoplatonist
amateur at theology depicted by Jerome. Victorinus is a newly-arrived, but mature, NeoNicene exegete and theologian.
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Introduction
The use of texts for divine substance during the Trinitarian Controversy suffered for want
of an extended, sophisticated exegesis. There was a dearth of available Scripture texts to
refute the Homoian insistence against using anything not found in the text of the Bible.
Western Neo-Nicenes also suffered from the aforementioned lack of a common,
understood distinction between ousia and hypostasis. There was the added problem of
rendering these into Latin without falling into modalist connotations, as both Victorinus
and Gregory of Elvira did at times. Victorinus attempts at exegesis of divine substance
texts were not his best contribution to the discussion of divine substance. His contribution
lies in the peculiar feature of his familiarity with and passing use of a trinitarian formula
which sounds quite advanced for his time and in his manner of speaking about terms for
divine substance.
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for his simple consideration of substance texts with his limited but impressive
discussions of trinitarian formulae, especially the anomalous use of a formula which
I * \n
(Admittedly, even
190
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is deduced from Scripture. 131 There are certainly other terms, he points out, that are not
read directly in Scripture but are nevertheless drawn or derived from Scripture, such as
God from God, light from light. Victorinus reasoning here is the same as that used
by Nicenes rallying to a near-forgotten creed (325) as a polemical form, while also
arriving at an imperfect understanding of its technical terms, especially homoousios.
With a reference to this name not being found in Scripture, Victorinus is referring to an
anti-Nicene statement all Nicenes would have recognized: specifically, the memorable
statement of the Blasphemy (the creed of Sirmium 357), which forbade substantive
terms not derived from Scripture.
1^7
177
adamantly on the unscriptural uselessness of these terms, so that Nicenes would have
remembered the phrasing of these terms not being found in Scripture as much as they
remembered the characterization of Homoian bishops Valens and Ursacius as the twin
vipers begotten of one Arian asp . 134
This response to Homoian anathemas against unscriptural terms in Book I I 7 is a
perfect example of the most common Neo-Nicene argument of the time:
131. This is the common Neo-Nicene attitude: Athanasius speaks the same in D e Decretis (21.2[18]): even
if you cannot find such terms in the Scripture, they contain the intention o f Scripture.
132. But inasmuch as some or many were troubled about substance (substantia), which in Greek is called
usia, that is, to make it more explicit, homoousion or the term homoeusion, there ought to b e no
mention o f these at all and no one should preach them, for the reason and ground that they are not
contained in inspired Scripture... Kelly, Early Christian Creeds, 285-86.
133. But whereas the term substance has been adopted by the fathers in simplicity (8 ia t o
ajikouoTEpov), but being unknown by the people gives offence, because neither do the Scriptures
contain it, it has seemed good to remove it, and that there should be no further mention o f substance in
regard to God, because the divine Scriptures nowhere refer to the substance o f the Father or the Son.
But we say the Son is like the Father in all things, as the holy Scriptures themselves declare and
teach. Kelly, Early Christian Creeds, 290. For all their criticism o f those who infer that substance is
derived from Scripture, anti-Nicenes were just as ready to derive how the Scriptures taught that the
Son was like the Father, in whatever respects.
134. That is, Valens and Ursacius, as they were condemned and parodied by Western bishops in the
Serdica Creed o f 343.
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But indeed this word itself, homoousion is not read in Scripture. But all truths which we affirm are
found there. I speak to you, because you already confess of God either that he is light or that he is
Spirit; therefore you say: God from God, Spirit from invisible Spirit, and true light from true light,
all of which are the hupostaseis of God. When indeed you affirm that Christ is God from God, light
from light, and such names, where have you so read them in Scripture? Or is it permitted to you to
speak thus, whence the homoousion is better proved, while it is not permitted to us to say homoousion?
Indeed, if for this reason you say light from light5'because God is also called light and Christ is called
light, and likewise also the Father is called God and Christ is called God, this certainly is evident; but
indeed, God from God is not read in Scripture, nor is light from light But it was legitimate to draw
these expressions from Scripture. Therefore it is legitimate to compose from Scripture terms not read
there. You deny that homoousion is read in scripture. But if similar terms or those derived in a similar
way are read in Scripture, we ought to have an equal right to this derivative.135
This arguments form is nearly ad hominem, since those who approve a God from God,
etc. terminology not found in Scripture but deduced from Scripture are the ones who try
to forbid homoousios (and one could argue that X from X ' statements are less easily
found in the text of Scripture). Gregory of Elvira makes the same argument in his De fide,
speaking against anti-Nicene claims that it is not proper to mention by name 6|xooi3atO,
which is not contained in the divine Scripture : 136
Although it is not entirely different from what is written, you would still confess it somewhat, that
is, God from God, and light from light: How does one respond to this? Either totally agree with
this or totally omit its use. But if you thereafter fear to say the term one in substance, which is
not written, you have to continually fear also confessing God from God and light from light. 137
135. Clark, 207-08. A A II 7,1-15. At enim hoc ipsum opootioLov lectum non est. Omnia enim quae dicimus
lecta sunt. Vobis dico, quia iam fatemini de deo vel quod lumen sit vel quod spiritus; dicitis ergo: de deo
deum, de invisibili spiritu spiritum, et verum lumen de vero lumine, quae sunt vjioordoeiq dei. Verum
cum dicitis Christum, deum de deo, lumen de lumine, et talia, ubi sic legistis? An vobis licet sic dicere,
unde magis ogoouoiov probatur, nobis dicere 6poouoiov non licebit? Verum si ideo dicitis lumen de
lumine, quia et deus lumen dictus et Christus lumen, et item et pater deus et Christus deus dictus, id
quidem manifestum; verum deum de deo non lectum, nec lumen de lumine. At licuit sumere. Liceat ergo
de lectis non lecta conponere. 'Opoouoiov lectum negates. Sed si aliqua similia vel similiter denominata
lecta sunt, iure pari et istud denomination accipere debemus. CSEL 83/1,180-81. Hadot, believing that
Victorinus is a perfect example o f what can be found in Neo-Nicenes such as Athanasius, Phoebadius o f
Agen and Gregory o f Elvira, believes AA I I 7,1-21 the best example o f this. Hadot, Marius Victorinus,
282. II 7,15-21 reads: Light is the ousia o f God. This light is life, and this life is knowledge. That God
is this, that Christ is this has been sufficiently shown: The Father lives and I live. The Father has life in
himself and he has given to the Son also to have life in himself All things that the Father has, he has given to
me. By these testimonies and others we often prove that the same things are in the Father and in the Son,
and that this is always and from eternity; and on that account this was called homoousion. Clark, 208
136. D e fid e III, 3 3 ,2 8 3 -8 4 . dpoouoiov nominari non oportere, quia in scripturis diuinis non
contineatur... CCSL 69,228.
137 .D e fid e III, 38, 319325. quamquam (quid quod) et aliud quod scriptum non est, partier profitearis (eris), id est deum ex deo {et} lumen ex lumine: quid ad haec dicis? Aut totum mecum tene aut totum
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This argument, used by Neo-Nicenes such as Victorinus and Gregory of Elvira, may
have had its inspiration in Cicero and rhetorical interpretation, as noted by Hadot in his
commentary on Victorinus treatises. 138 Cicero, in his De inventione II 50,152, speaks of
taking what is read in a text and arriving at what is not written in the text. Victorinus
echoes this sentiment in his commentary on Ciceros rhetoric.
can be carefully, intensively read to reveal things consequently not in the letter o f the
law. This same theological reasoning can be applied in finding Scriptural expressions
which are not in the letter of Scripture.
There exist in Victorinus two conceptual tracks for locating substance texts in Scripture.
The first involves proofs of the use of the word ouaia, or rather derivatives of that
word;140 the second employs scriptural instances of ujtootaatg. Epiousios, or
supersubstantial, appears in Books I and II of Against Arius, coming from Matthew
6:11; whileperiousios, around [Gods] substance, is taken from Titus 2:14, as well as
omitte. Si enim unius substantiae uocabulum inde (ideo) times dicere, quia scriptum non est, timere
identidem debes deum ex deo et lumen ex lumine profited. CCSL 69, 229.
138. Hadot, Traites Theologiques, 91314.
139. in Cicer. Rhet. I l l : Quod etiam iuris periti faciunt qui, si forte id quo de agitur, iure non cautum est,
per interpretationem statuti iuris id etiam quod in eodem iure nominatim non continetur, adfirmant.
Hadot, Traites Theologiques, 913.
140. Meaning Jiepiouoioq and emouoiog.
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from the eucharistic Oblation Prayer. Texts using hypostasis are (in order of importance)
Jeremiah 23:18,22, Hebrews 1:3, Luke 15:12, and Psalm 139:15.141
This term of homoousios has, in Victorinus view, three sources: the Gospel; the
Apostle Paul; and the Oblation Prayer of the fourth century eucharistic liturgy
something familiar to Victorinus, so recently a catechumen. 142 For explanation, he alludes
to Matthew 6:11, the prayer for daily bread in the Lords Prayer, qualifying this with
the statement of Christ in John 6:58 that this is the bread which descends from heaven.
The divine realities of bread, eternal life, and substance all intersect in Victorinus view:
the meaning of (Matthew 6:11) epiousion arton, is
bread from the same substance, 143 that is, consubstantial life coming from the life of God. For
whence would we be sons of God except by participation of eternal life which Christ gave to us,
bringing it to us from the Father? This, therefore, is our petition: boq f||jTv craouoiov apxov, that
is, life from the same substance. Indeed, if what we receive is the body of Christ, and if Christ is
life, we ask for Smouoiov apxov. For the divinity dwells in Christ corporeally. The Greek
Gospel, therefore, has mouaiov, a word derived from substance and clearly referring to the
substance of God. This term, either because they had not understood it or because they could not
render it in their own language, the Latins have not been able to express and they used only
cotidianum, not also emouaiov. Therefore this term is also read in Scripture, and substance is
used in reference to God; the term can be said in Greek, and even if it is not translated into Latin,
it is nevertheless said in Greek because it is understood.144
141. These are the same scriptural loci employed by Athanasius in his A d Afros 4, and in Gregory o f
Elviras D e fid e 4.
142. Thus the prayer o f oblation, understood in that way, is addressed to God: save a people around your
substance, a pursuer o f good works. Clark, 210. AA II 8,34-35. Cf. also AA 1 30,46-48: as it is said
in the oblation prayer: Purify for yourself this people, standing fast in life, zealous for good works,
assembling around your substance. Clark, 139.
143. Interestingly, Victorinus is very specific here, and homoousios is not precise enough: he renders o f
the same substance as ex eadem oiiouy.
144. Clark, 208-09. AA II 8,9-23. ex eadem ouoigt panem, id est de vita dei consubstantialem vitam.
Unde enim filii dei erimus, nisi participatione vitae aetemae, quam nobis Christus a patre adferens
dedit? Hoc ergo est: 6 6 g f|glv e j u o u c j i o v apxov, id est vitam ex eadem substantia. Etenim si quod
accipimus corpus Christi est, ipse autem Christus vita est, quaerimus m onoiov fipxov. Divinitas
enim in Christo corporaliter habitat. Graecum igitur evangelium habet mot>oiov quod denominatum
est a substantia et utique dei substantia. Hoc Latini, vel non intellegentes vel non valentes exprimere,
non potuerunt dicere, et tantummodo cotidianum posuerunt, non et e j u o u o i o v . Est ergo et nomen
lectum et in deo substantia et d id potest graece, quod etiam si latine non exprimitur, dicitur tamen
graece, quia intellegitur. CSEL 83/1,181-82
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Victorinus, calling to mind the Greek text of the New Testament Scripture to bolster his
belief about substance, also quotes Titus 2:14 in Greek as well as Latin: that he might
redeem us from all iniquity and might cleanse to himself a people around his substance
(jiepiouoiov). He mixes this with his favorite conceptual idiom for Christ: Christ as a
viand of divine life. 145 If we are the people who gather around Christ, Victorinus asserts,
and Christ is the life and eternal life of God, then we are associated closely with the
cause and necessity for salvation. 146 This is reflected in the words of the Oblation
Prayer, which quotes Titus 2:14: a people around your substance. 147 These terms being
found in Scripture, such as fmouaioc; from Matthew, or Jtepiouaioc; from Titus, justifies
the use of homoousios
to refer to God and Christ; and this term is not inconsistent with reason. It contains ousian, that is,
substance, as do the terms mentioned above, and it is derived in the same way. And this term
condemns all heretics. It was necessary, therefore, that it be used by the Fathers. It must therefore
be expressed and always used.148
This is much the same as what Victorinus had already done with a justification for using
the homoousios in Book IA, against people who say that the term for substantia is not used
145. Which is why, for example, Victorinus favors Jn. 5:26 so much as a prooftext For as the Father has
life f t himself, so he has granted the Son also to have life in himself. Life as an idiom is not so
important for the Neo-Nicene task o f theological definition, but it remains as a strong m otif in
Victorinus because o f his articulate Neoplatonism.
146. Clark, 209. AA II 8,33-34.
147. Cf. K. Gamber, Em kleines Fragment aus der Liturgie des 4. Jahrhunderts, Revue Benedictine 77
(1967): 148-55. As for why a Greek fragment o f a fourth-century liturgy appears as a text which
Victorinus calls to mind as he argues, Gamber believes that Victorinus, after his conversion, attached
him self to an Egyptian Christian parish in Rome. Hadot believes otherwise: Victorinus, who knew
Greek, was part o f a Christian community still conversant in Greek; this is not proof that Victorinus
acquired aspects o f Athanasius theology through these Greek-speaking Christians in Rome. Hadot,
Marius Victorinus, 25152.
148. Clark, 210. AA n 8,37-41. CSEL 83/1, 183. Victorinus, writing Against Arius ca. 361-63, appeals to
the Fathers, without qualifying who these would be. In 1 2 8 , 15ff., Victorinus recalls how forty
years ago... when, in the city o f Nicaea, the formula o f faith which excommunicated the Arian faction
was approved by more than three hundred bishops. In this synod o f illustrious men there were present
all the luminaries o f the Church and o f the entire world... Clark, 133-34.
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in Scripture. 149 In a possible reference to the Sirmium 357 and 359 creeds, Victorinus uses
the same argument and nearly the same chain of testimonia as in AA II 7-8 (the exception
here being his inclusion of Jeremiah 23:18,22). Citing Matthew 6:11, Titus 2:14 and the
related liturgical Oblation Prayer, and Jeremiah 23:18,22, Victorinus argues that it matters
little that the terms for substance are not clearly found in Scripture, for its derivatives are.
Understanding the meaning of these texts effect an understanding of the Being of God, and
therefore an ability to see the Logos, who is consubstantial with the Father.
The locus of Matthew 6:11, and Victorinus treatment of it, are strikingly similar to
Tertullians summation of the meaning of this petition of the Lords Prayer in his treatise
De Oratione, the earliest surviving exposition of the Lords Prayer in any language. 150
The common belief that Victorinus has never read any work by Tertullian is belied by
this agreement with Tertullian on the full meaning of the petition for daily bread.
Tertullian believes that the Lords Prayer is a tool Christ gives his disciples for instilling
a new meaning into everything in the Old Covenant Scriptures, renewing all things from
carnal realities into new-found spiritual realities (in chapter one of De Oratione).
Included in this superadded sense is the fifth petition of the Lords Prayer:
We may understand, Give us this day our daily bread, spiritually. For Christ is our Bread;
because Christ is Life, and bread is life. I am, saith He, the Bread of Life; and, a little above,
The Bread is the Word of the living God, who came down from the heavens. Then we find, too,
that His body is reckoned in bread: This is my body. And so, in petitioning for daily bread,
we ask for perpetuity in Christ, and indivisibility from His body.151
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Tertullian does not delve into the substantive possibilities in 6 0 5 rjpTv eatiouaiov apxov in
Matthew 6:11, but Victorinus understands it to include the same signified realities of bread,
bread of life, life from God, and participation in eternal life brought by Christ from the Father.
'Yjtooxaotg i n
J e r e m ia h
23:18,22 a n d
T it u s
2:14
Besides Matthew 6:11 and Titus 2:14, already noted for of their use of the word ouoia,
there are two other scriptural loci worth considering in Victorinus coalescing
understanding of divine substance. Victorinus employs these two texts for their use of the
substantial word ujrooraaig. First and foremost is Jeremiah 23:18,22: Who is he who
stands in the substance of the Lord.. .And if they had stood in my substance... Flebrews
1:3 also offers fmocrraaic; for consideration, especially because it stands as the only
reference to Wisdom 7:25 in the text of the New Testament. 152
Jeremiah 23:18,22 sees repeated use throughout Against Arius (especially verse 18).153
With it, Victorinus appeals to the idea that God has a substance, so that he can argue that
Father and Son share the same divine substance. At first glance, these unique verses in
Jeremiah would seem the logical choice to argue on behalf of divine substance. Upon
looking at the verses in the original Septuagint text, however, one sees the semantic
152. The complete RSV text o f these two verses o f Jer. 23:18,22 is For who among them has stood in the
council o f the LORD to perceive and to hear his word, or who has given heed to his word and listened?;
But if they had stood in my council, then they would have proclaimed my words to my people, and they
would have turned them from their evil way, and from the evil o f their doings. What concerns us here is
the LXX use o f the word vnooraoig, used in 23:18 and 22 for substance (Masoretic text: llO,
meaning sitting, session, consultation, talk, counsel.), which the RSV translates as council and the
Latin translations rendered as substantia. See below on Wisdom 7:25(and 26), but it is commonly
understood as a commonplace during all o f the Nicene-trinitarian stages o f the Trinitarian Controversy,
especially having been inspired by Origens intensive use o f it in D e Principiis.
153. Jer. 23:18,22 is the most consistently used locus, appearing once in each book o f Against Arius, as
well as in The Necessity o f Accepting the Homoousios, as Hadot points out in a small chart in his
volume II commentary o f Traites Theologiques, 794.
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problems that make it a poor proof-text for what Victorinus wants to say. In many ways
23:18,22 serves as an illustration of the semantic confusion over divine substance, ousia
and hypostasis, during the fourth century Trinitarian Controversy. Victorinus looks for places
in Scripture, whether Old Testament or New, where substance is spoken of, because he is
speaking of divine substance in his firm Neo-Nicene defense of the consubstantiality of the
Father and Son. The anti-Nicene theology of the 350s had specifically rejected the use of
the terms ousia, hypostasis, and homoousios for the sake of doctrinal definition and
confession, on the basis that those terms were not found in Scripture. 154 In AA IA 30
Victorinus responds to adversaries, especially Homoiousians, of substance.
Looking at the instances of Jeremiah 23:18,22 we can say that Victorinus does prove
his point about substance in Scripture, but he does so in a rather roughshod way which
creates more problems than it solves. After his first several uses of the proof-text in
Against Arius, he seems to come to a new awareness of the import of the text for his
argument. In Book IA 30,36-59 Victorinus rails against those who say that the term
substance is not found in Scripture: perhaps in fact the term substance is not found
there, but derivatives (denominata) from substance are there. 155 Against these
opponents he forges a chain of Scripture texts that do not necessarily prove his argument.
For example, Victorinus quotes Matthew 6:11, Give us this day the epiousion
(supersubstantial) bread, and Titus 2:14, the people periousion (the people close
154. The Creed o f Sirmium 357 states the typical 350s anti-Nicene attitude, for example, But inasmuch as
some or many were troubled about substance (substantia), which in Greek is called usia, that is, to
make it more explicit, homousion or the term homoeusion, there ought to be no mention o f these at all
and no one should preach them, for the reason and ground that they are not contained in inspired
Scripture... Kelly, Early Christian Creeds, 28586. The Latin text o f Sirmium 357 com es from
Hilaiys D e synodis 11; the Greek text from Athanasius De synodis 28.
155. Clark, 138. AA 1 30,36-38. Adversus autem eos qui dicunt nomen substantiae non esse positum in
sanctis scripturis, nomen quidem substantiae forte non est, denominata autem a substantia sunt.
CSEL 83/1, 108.
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to/around the ousia) both of which seemingly prove that ousia is used in Scripture. 156
(We could qualify these two texts as having prefixes before the word ousia, but they still
employ ousia in some sense of divine substance.) Victorinus then continues the chain by
quoting Jeremiah, as he will later on: it seems to me that the same thing is signified (by
23:18 and 22). The obvious problem is that, while the linking of these texts does prove
that substance is used in Scripture, it fails to do so in the clean sense that Victorinus
seems to understand, or clearly wish. The Matthean use of epiousion and Pauline use of
periousion do indeed show the use of substance in Scripture, but quoting the Jeremiah 23
Latin text only reveals the indeterminate use of substantia as the common Latin
translation for both ousia and hypostasis in Victorinus day. The Latin translation to
which Victorinus referred for Jeremiah 23 translated the Septuagint word ujiooraoiq as
substantia, but Victorinus sees this as no different than rendering ousia as substantia. 157
There are places in Against Arius where Victorinus baldly states that ousia and hypostasis
are one and the same realities, contrary to the case to which he has committed his efforts. 158
156. The RSV translates Xadv jrepiouaiov as a people o f his own, rather than trying to explain the difficult
idea o f the people who share in Gods substance. With his appeal to Tit. 2:14 Victorinus also includes
why it is so familiar to him: because it was used as a phrase o f the fourth-century eucharistic liturgy: as
it is said in the oblation prayer: Purify for yourself this people, standing fast in life, zealous for good
works, assembling around your substance. Clark, 139. AA 1 30,46-48.
157. As noted above, Victorinus uses the early Itala text mostly when it suits him, though he sometimes
translates the N ew Testament Greek text for himself. Alexander Souter characterized this as the
generation preceding the Vulgate, a text in character closely related to the Vulgate. Souter, Earliest
Latin Commentaries, 16. Souters work is still essential reading for placing Victorinus within other
early Latin commentators on the Pauline Corpus. Simonetti, in Patrology, describes how Victorinus
would make use o f more than one Latin copy, with occasional references to the Greek original.
Patrology, vol. IV, 74.
158. See modalist-sounding example in 4 4 II 6,12-18 (Clark, 206): it matters not at all whether we
understand hypostasis as riches or as ousia, provided that there is signified by that God himself. In II
6,22-23 (Clark, 207), in commenting on the reality o f the Father in the Son and the Son in the Father,
Victorinus says if is the same hypostasis, they are, therefore, homoousion. But it is the same. In III
14 (Clark, 242-43) Victorinus speaks rather strangely o f the likeness between Jesus and the Holy
Spirit the likeness o f their work and the identity o f their action in some manner (III 14,9-10)
something that is certainly in line with Johannine pneumatology, except that in III 14,10-12 he says
Therefore, he is also Spirit Paraclete, and the Holy Spirit is another Paraclete, and he is sent by the
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Another and more important understanding of Jeremiah 23 is suggested in this same
passage: But if someone understands the meaning exactly, he finds nothing other than
this: if someone stood in that which is the to be of God, that is in substance,
immediately he sees his Logos because the Son is homoousios with him . 159 The
consubstantiality of the Son with the Father will be seen, Victorinus reasons, from
standing in the hypostasis, whence one will see the Word of the Lord. That is,
understanding the substantia of God will reveal the Logos. (We will see Victorinus
further develop this exegesis of Jeremiah 23:18,22 in Book II.)
In Book IB 59,13-29 Victorinus, concluding a section on the consubstantiality of the
Three Persons (beginning several pages back in IB 54), marshals another chain o f texts:
Romans 11:34,1 Corinthians 1:24, Hebrews 1:3, Jeremiah 23:18,22, Matthew 6:11, Luke
15:12-13, and Genesis 1:26.160 This chain is for the sake of explaining divine substance,
albeit in a rather modalist fashion, leading up to Victorinus assertion that from this it is
evident that the Logos itself and the Holy Spirit and Nous and Wisdom are the same
thing. 161 It may be that we do not understand how Victorinus means this. Besides this
apparent collapsing of the Second and Third persons into single, titled realities, it is striking
Father. The Holy Spirit is therefore Jesus. M aybe this reflects Victorinus knowledge o f the Greek
use, using the terms synonymously. He wants to say that God is una substantia, as Father and Son are
thus eadem substantia. Substantia is the Latin term pointing to the one reality that God is.
159. Clark, \ 2 9 . A A l 30,53-56. Sed si quis intellectum certe intellegit, nihil aliud invenit nisi istud: si
quis in eo quod dei est esse steterit, hoc est in substantia, quod in ipsa opoouoiog filius, statim X6yov
eius vidit. CSEL 83/1, 109.
160. Clark, 186-87. As quoted: Rom. 11:34, Who has known the Nous o f the Lord?; I Cor. 1:24, the
Power and Wisdom o f God; Heb. 1:3, Image o f his substance; Jer. 23:18,22, Because the one who
has stood in my substance and has seen my word.. .If they had stood in my substance and had heard
my words; Matt. 6:11, Give us this day our supersubstantial bread; Lk. 15:12-13, The younger
one said to the Father: give me the part o f the substance which belongs to m e... There he wasted his
substance; Gen. 1:26, according to his image and likeness.
161. Clark, 186. AA IB 59,13-14. Ex his apparet quod XdyoQ ipse et spiritus sanctus et voug et sapientia id
ipsum. CSEL 83/1, 159. The movement/procession is a twofold power, but perhaps it makes more
sense if we translate id ipsum here as the same Reality, or the self-same Reality.
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to see Victorinus make use of Hebrews 1:3 in the (possibly) mistranslated, indeterminate
way as he does with Jeremiah 23:18,22: And Paul, writing to the Hebrews, also calls him
substance: Image of his substance; and he spoke likewise of the consubstantial people.162
The train of thought in this chain of texts is this: God is substantia, and Christ is the
image of the divine substance. Within the context of discussing divine being, the image
of a substance is that substance. Therefore, Scripture uses substantia for both God and
Christ (and we are with that substance by adoption). Throughout Book I I 3 Victorinus
will discuss whether or not substance is used in Scripture, including a quotation of this
portion of Hebrews 1:3, but this time quoting it as Qui est character substantiae eius
and linking it with Jeremiah 23:18,22 and Psalm 138(139):15.163
In a lengthy discussion in Book II 3,48-6,26164 Victorinus once again considers the
use of substance in Scripture. In this section he will acknowledge the common substance
of persons in the Trinity while also defining their separate real existences.165 Yet this
discussion, including its use of Jeremiah 23:18,22, is not without its problems. Victorinus
has the semantic problem to address between considering substantia to be the equivalent
of hypostasis (even if among Greeks hypostasis is considered a real separate existence as
Victorinus also acknowledges), and calling it by thei.e., hisLatin equivalent,
subsistentia. The to be of God, he reasons, can be called existence, and substance, and
162. Clark, 186. AA 1 59,17-19. Et ipsum et substantiam dicit et Paulus ad Hebraeos: imago substantiae
eius; et item consubstantialem populum dixit. CSEL 83/1, 159.
163. The Latin text Victorinus cites o f Ps. 138:15 reads Et substantia mea in inferioribus terrae, which
corresponds to the LXX reading o f that verse, f| ujidoxaoig gou t v xoig xaxcoxaxoig xfjg yrjg. This
combination o f Jer. 23:18 with Ps. 138(139): 15 andHeb. 1:3 is the same scriptural chain Victorinus
cites in The Necessity o f Accepting Homoousios (Clark, 306-07, DeHomoousio 2 ,2 -1 4 , CSEL 83/1,
279-80), the only other place Jer. 23:18 is cited in his works.
164. Clark, 202-06. CSEL 83/1, 175-180.
165. Victorinus restates the anti-Nicene objections to using certain words: I I 3 begins with Here some
questions arise: first, in the Holy Scriptures no mention is made o f substance and, above all,
homoousion is not read there. Clark, 200. AA II 3,1-3. CSEL 83/1, 173.
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subsistence. Form is applied to Christ because it is through the Son that the Father is
known (citing for this John 14:9, Whoever has seen me, has seen the Father also), and
form is a subsistence. In the midst of this somewhat aimless discussion of differing terms,
Victorinus quotes a creedal trinitarian formula: And that is why it was said: From one
substance there are three subsistences, so that that itself which is to be subsists in a
triple manner: God himself, and Christ, that is, Logos and Holy Spirit.166 Victorinus
does not explain whence he gets this trinitarian formula, nor does he make much further
use of it. Though the formula one substance, three subsistences would seem a likely
one for him to incorporate further into his argument, it instead appears to be something he
just mentions in passing.167
Far more important to Victorinus is nailing down the exact meaning of hypostasis,
especially whether it has a meaning different from ousia, or from riches and fortune. He
appeals again to Jeremiah 23:18, making it clear that the hypostasis of the Lord of this
verse means God.
I v 'O
166. Clark, 20405. AA II 4,51-53. Et ideo dictum est: de una substantia, tres subsistentias esse, ut id ipsum
quod est esse subsistat tripliciter: ipse deus et Christus, id est Xoyoc, et spiritus sanctus. CSEL 83/1,178.
167. Victorinus is the first witness o f this formula in the Latin West; Hadot believes he encountered it in
Homoiousian documents. Hadot, Traites Theologiques, 911. Victorinus gives no satisfactory
explanation o f source, however: in III 4,38-39 he mentions that the Greeks use the definition x
[nag otiaCaq rpeTg elvai ujtoor&oeig as part o f discussion o f trinitarian persons, but provides no
further explanation or identification. See An Anomalous Trinitarian Formula in this chapter.
168. It is interesting that here he translates Jer. 23:18 as the hypostasis o f the Lord rather than the
substantia o f the Lord.
169. Clark, 205. AA II 5,7-11,14-16. His qui stat, et intellegit: non autem errat qui intellegit; stat ergo.
Intellegens autem deum, intellegit et videt X6yov, dei filium. Manifestum ergo hanc dei esse
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Nous, eternally the self-contemplation of the One, is perfect form and activity. Psyche,
turning back to contemplate Nous, receives its form. The Son alone knows the Father,
whose very substance he images, and thus imparts knowledge to believers. This is the
best interpretation Victorinus renders of Jeremiah 23:18,22; anything beyond this he does
not seem to understand (because of the vague, insufficiently determined meanings for
ousia and hypostasis in both East or West, but especially the Latin West). Psalm 139:15
is quoted (My hypostasis is in the lower regions of the earth) to prove that the
substance of God is everywhere. Luke 15:12-13 is quoted (A father of a family divided
his hypostasis between his two sons...) to prove that hypostasis means fortune and
patrimony, which are depleted as a result of the Prodigal Sons excesses.170 But
Victorinus observation that standing in the divine substance of God will enable one to
see the Logos remains his best exegesis of Jeremiah 23:18,22. He will restate this in Book
I I 12 in considering the formula God in God, Light in Light:
For in you is the source of life; in your light we shall see the light. Do we think that this is
addressed to God, or to Christ, or to both? Because to both, it is rightly addressed: for in the Father
is the Son and in the Son is the Father. But if it is addressed to God the Father, it will be this: If
they had stood in my substance, they would have also seen my Word. But if it is addressed to the
Son, it will be this: Whoever has seen me, has seen the Father also. Therefore, in your light we
shall see the light. Light in light is therefore scriptural; therefore also God in God.171
ujtooraoiv, qua intellecta et verbum intellegitur... Is enim rem intellegit qui in rei substantia stat, id
est in primo fonte rei, ut omnia quae sunt eius intellegat. CSEL 83/1, 178.
170. Dividing up the hypostasis, or substance, o f the Father in this parable gives an uncomfortable modalist
connotation. Hadot says that some Homoians especially wanted to disclaim the ontological
implication o f substantia, so they reduced the word substantia down to the equivalent o f divitiae
(riches), the juridical meaning o f substantia in Latin, and the obvious use o f die word in Luke 15,1213. Victorinus wants to conclude that wherever one can find ousia or hypostasis in Scripture, one can
use that to speak o f God or o f Christ. Hadot, Traites Theologiques, 911-12.
171. Clark, 215-16. AA II 12,5-12. quoniam apud te est fans vitae, in lumine tuo videbimus lumen. Deo
dictum aestimamus an Christo an utrique? Quia cuicumque, recte: in patre enim filius et in filio pater.
Sed si patri deo, hoc erit illud: si in substantia mea stetisse[n]t, et verbum meum audisse[n]t. Si autem
filio, hoc erit illud: qui me vidit, vidit etpatrem . Ergo in lumine tuo videbimus lumen. Est igitur lumen
in lumine-, ergo et deus in d e o CSEL 83/1,189. Victorinus only other use o f Jer. 23:18,22 is in
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passing: in Book IV 4,14-17 he argues for the consubstantiality o f the Spirit with the Father and the Son;
standing in the substance o f God means seeing the Word, but die substance also includes the Spirit.
172. The De fide was written in two versions, the first in 360 and the later revision three or four years later,
according to Simonettis dating. Oddly, Jer. 23:18,22 make no appearance in either Novatian or Tertullian.
173. Or He Who Ispossibly a reference to Ex. 3:14. This opening sentence o f D e fid e 53 sounds much
like language typical o f Victorinus.
174. In the later recension o f D e//tie,that is one o f substance with the Father, was replaced by the
corrected line o f this is one in essence with the Father.
175. De fid e 53,446-69. Ergo ipsum quod est, hoc est (erit) substantia eius (huius) rei, quae esse
defenditur; quod tamen {ut} iam dictum est, quantum et quale sit, nec mente concipi nec sensu
aestimari nec animo definiri potest, dummodo constet esse, quod [esse] creditor, ut de eo ipso, quod
deus est, inde sit filius, ut uerus sit filius et uerus sit pater in filio et filius in patre. Hoc erit 6 [monoiog
(-ov), id est substantiae (hoc est unius essentiael cum patre, sicut ipse dominus ait: Ego in p a tre et
pater in me, et: Ego de {deo} patre exiui, et: Que me uidet, uidet et patrem. Non immerito, quia filius
dei de deo patre natus est; et ideo de imitate substantiae et de maiestate deitatis (diuinitatis) unum
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Gregory quotes a lengthy chain of texts, including John 14:10, John 10:30, John 14:9,
John 16:27, Jeremiah 23:18,22, and Wisdom 16:21, and, finally coming to an argument
about light from light, Psalm 35(36): 10.176 It is possible that this chain was a Latin
commonplace in the late 350s/early 360s among those sympathetic to Nicaea. If so, it
would seem to indicate that Victorinus was not as isolated from Nicene and anti-Nicene
theology as many have contended.177 The witness of Jeremiah 23:18, 22 gives scriptural
testimony of divine substance, along with other texts typically used to prove the
vocabulary of substance.
In late 357 or early 358, Phoebadius of Agen, a Latin deeply indebted to Tertullian,
discusses the unity of divine substance in his work Liber contra Arrianos, written as a
brief, systematic refutation of the Homoian creed of Sirmium 357. He uses texts such as
Psalm 138(139):15, Wisdom 16:21, and Jeremiah 23:22:
I can imagine to ignore these specific names which the Divine Books do not deny as truly
customary and common. For instance, David says of the person of Christ: I am driven to the edge
of the depths and there is no substance. And again: My substance is in the depths o f the earth.
And: My substance is always before you. And: My substance is as nothing before you. And: May
the creditor seize his substance. But also in Solomons opinion: He says Your substance and your
sweetness. And Jeremiah: I f they stood in my substance. And in Proverbs: The substance of the
rich is the strength of the city. And the same: Fathers leave the home and substance to the sons.
sunt, sicuti et Ieremias prophetauit (propheta ait): Quis stabit in substantia domini [e t uidebit uerbum
dominij? et iterum {apud eundem}: Si stetissent in substantia mea [et si audissent uerba mea],
auertissem eos ab studiis eorum pessimis, et apud Salomon (-em): Substantia mea dulcedo mea est.
Cum ergo hanc unitatem substantiae in patre et filio non solum prophetica, sed et euangelica
auctoritate cognoscas, quomodo dicis in scripturis diuinis (d. scr.) opoouoiov non inueniri? quasi
aliud sit dgoouoiov quam quod dicit: Ego de deo patre exiui et: Ego et pater unum sumus uel quod
prophetae ex aperto substantiam dei intimabant (-arunt). CCSL LXEX, 232-33.
176. Jn. 16:27, I came from God the Father; Wis. 16:21, My substance is my sweetness... In D e fide
59, Gregory in his first writing linked Ps. 36:5 (In Thy light we see light...), this light o f the Son
revealing the light o f the Father, with Wis. 7:26; in his later recension he linked it with Col. 1:15.
CCSL LXIX, 234.
177. Cf., for example, Hansons Search, 534: Hanson introduces a chapter on Victorinus as a Nicene with
the declaration, there is no satisfactory evidence that Marius Victorinus had any genuine knowledge
o f Arianism as it was in his day. And yet o f Gregory o f Elvira, Hanson will state (520-21) It is
obvious that Gregory is not simply, like Lucifer, bringing out old and threadbare versions o f Arianism
as an Aunt Sally to aim at, but knows what contemporary Arians were saying.
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But also in Tobit: He says I f it would befor you the substance of abundance. And the same: Son,
give alms from your substance. But also in John: Who, having the substance of the world. And in
the Gospel: He says Behold, I give halfo f my substance.
Therefore in this one example we bring together indeed the discourse that seizes the ignorant,
which functions, on that account, as a witness that nowhere to be found is substance not being
mentioned nowhere in the Divine Scripture.178 Therefore if neither the very term of substance is
new to the sacred text, neither should its interpretation deserve reproach, when we perceive how
this name is justified with certain pretexts. And where we do not perceive that name (of
substance), we still find right cause with the influence of the name. If that influence is seen, we
understand the name by its condition. That will function as the active sense: which, provided that
those of ordinary/impious minds can seek new meanings, when comparing against the Gospels
for correct definitions.179
If Jeremiah 23:18, 22 gives scriptural testimony of divine substance, it seems to have
been less useful than New Testament texts such as Matthew 6:11, Titus 2:14, and
Hebrews 1:3. Hilary of Poitiers perceived this quite clearly, employing Jeremiah 23 only
once in his De Trinitate, and that in the beginning.
1ftfl
178. An allusion to Sirmium 357 almost a direct quotation o f this creed which forbids the use o f a
technical term for substance: there ought to be no mention o f these at all and no one should preach
them, for the reason and ground that they are not contained in inspired Scripture... Kelly, Early
Christian Creeds, 285-86.
179. Contra Arrianos VII,3 ,7 -1 9 . Vsitatum uero et familiare diuinis uoluminibus hos nomen nec ipsos puto
ignorare qui negant Dauid enim ex persona Christi: Infhcus sum in limo profimdis et non est substantia.
Et rursum: Substantia mea in inferioribus terrae. Et: Substantia mea ante te est semper. Et: Substantia
mea tamquam nihilum ante te. Et: Scrutetur fenerator substantiam eius. Sed et Salomonis sententia:
Substantiam, inquit, tuam et dulcedinem tuam. Et Hieremias: Si stetissent in substantia mea. Et in
Prouerbiis: Substantia diuitis ciuitas munita. Et is eodem: Domum et substantiam diuiduntpatres filiis.
Sed in Tobias: Sifuerit, inquit, tibi copiosa substantia. Et idem: Fili, ex substantia tua fa c elymosynam.
Sed et Iohannes: Qui habuerit substantiam mundi. Et in euangelio: Ecce, inquit, dimidium do ex
substantia mea. CCSL 64, 30.
Ideo haec in unum exempla congessimus ne sermo ille caperet indoctos, quod testate sunt idcirco
substantiam non praedicandam quia [in] diuinis Scripturis nusquam inueniretur. Ergo si neque ipsum
uocabulum substantiae sacris litteris nouum est, neque interpretatio eius habet crimen, superest ut
dispiciamus qua ex causa repudietur hoc nomen. Dispicientes autem inueniemus illos non nomen, sed
nominis repudiare uirtutem. Quod si relucebit, erit apud nos intuitus nominis status. Erit et illorum
sensus in uitio: qui, dum nouellas profanae intellegentiae uias quaerunt, a recto euangeliorum limite
recesserunt. CCSL 64, 30. The chain o f texts in VII, 3, 7-19 consists o f Ps. 68:3 (69:2), Ps.
138(139):15, Ps. 38:8(39:7), Ps. 38:6(39:5), Ps. 108(109):11, Wis. 16:21, Jer. 23:22, Prov. 10:15,
Prov. 13:22, Tobit 4:9, Tobit 4 :7 ,1 Jn. 3:17 andLk. 19:8. The term substantia in Phoebadius Latin
OT text is used very loosely: as a battery o f proofs they make a less-than-convincing argument.
180. Hilary o f Poitiers uses Jer. 23:22 only once in his D e trinitate I, 18, 8, when he exhorts the reader to
take up his stand by faith in the substantia o f God, so that when he shall hear about the substantia o f
God, he may direct his mind to the things that are worthy o f God. CCSL 62, 18. At first glance Jer.
23:18,22 may seem a useful text; but, as Hadot has observed, Western Nicenes all used this prooftext, but each only used it at most once or twice: Phoebadius o f Agen, Gregory o f Elvira and Hilary,
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Unfortunately, in considering the significance of standing in the substance of God
more specifically, whether hypostasis signifies something other than ousia(n)
Victorinus has concluded in Book I I 6 that, ultimately, there is no difference between
hypostasis and ousia:
If then the riches of God are wisdom and knowledge, and if wisdom and knowledge are
the power of God, itself, but the power of God is Christ, but Christ is Logos, and Logos
indeed is Son, if the Son is himself in the Father, therefore this Son is the riches of the Father, he
himself is his hypostasis. Henceforth it matters not at all whether we understand hypostasis as
riches or as ousia, provided that there is signified by that God himself.181
In order to consider whether hypostasis really signifies something different than ousia,
Victorinus again appeals to Jeremiah 23, where standing in the substance of a thing
enables one to see and know its reality. Likewise, he says that Davids reference to the
hypostasis of God in the lower regions of the earth is no differently understood as ousia.
Also, he refers to the father of the Prodigal Son dividing his hypostasis between his two
sons, though a check of the Greek text of Luke 15 shows that the father gave his sons
their share of his ousia. Most frustrating of all is Victorinus ending this passage with the
puzzling statement, Henceforth it matters not at all whether we understand hypostasis as
riches or as ousia, provided that there is signified by that God himself. Therefore we read
in Scripture in reference to God either hypostasis or ousia. But this is also understood of
Christ.182 This statement does not remain the final understanding of Victorinus on divine
substance, as I will discuss more below. It is clear that Victorinus uses Jeremiah 23:18,22
already noted; Eusebius o f Vercelli, in his De Trin 5, Ambrose, in his De Fide HI 14 and 15. Hadot,
Traites Theologiques, 912.
181. Clark, 206. II 6,12-18. Si igitur divitiae dei, sapientia et scientia sunt, et si sapientia etscien tia ipsa
virtus dei est, virtus autem dei Christus est, Christus autem X6yog est, Xoyog vero filius, filius autem
in patre ipse est, ipse ergo divitiae patris, ipse tmdoraau; est. Iam igitur nihil interest, utrum
im ooraoiv divitias intellegamus an ouolav, dummodo id significetur quod ipse deus est. CSEL 83/1,
179-80. This explication o f what riches mean far exceeds what the Homoians wanted substantia to
mean in the Latin text o f Scripture; Victorinus turns their weak exegesis back upon them.
182. AA II 6,16-19. CSEL 83/1, 180.
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for the sake of a Nicene definition of the Son being the Logos, homoousios with the
Father. In spite of an inability to understand hypostasis as being distinctly different from
ousia or substantia, Victorinus will use his own Latin vocabulary to distinguish
hypostases within the Godhead.183
'Yjtooraaig
in
H e b r e w s 1:3
The other important text for discussing substance for Victorinus is the New Testament
locus of Hebrews 1:3a: He reflects the glory of God and bears the very stamp o f his
nature.. .184 Hebrews 1:3 was important to earliest Nicenes right from the beginning,
because of its legacy of use by Origen. It saw infrequent use in the early part of
Trinitarian Controversy because it was a text about the Sons reality at a time when there
was no consensus on a distinction in meaning between hypostasis versus ousia.]85
However, Hebrews 1:3 had the value of a radiant gem in the trinitarian debates because it
contained the Greek word hypostasis', also, it stands as the only reference in the New
Testament to the proof-text of Wisdom 7:25,26.
7:25,26 there is the word hypostasis, which occurs in the New Testament text a total of
only five times. Only in Hebrews 1:3 does it convey a theological meaning of Gods
183. For want o f a better term, Godhead is used for unity purposes to mean f| Qeioxng, or God as the One God.
184. qui, cum sit splendor gloriae et figura substantiae eius/5g <ftv d jtauyaopa xfjq 86qg x a i
Xapaxxrip xijg ujiooxdoecog auxou Novum Testamenium Graece etLatine, ed. Eberhard Nestle,
Kurt Aland (Stuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, 1984), 563.
185. Only a nebulous distinction existed for several decades, which, even after the 362 Synod o f
Alexandria, was not resolved overnight.
186. Wis. 7:25,26 (RSV): ^For she is a breath o f the power o f God, and a pure emanation o f the glory o f
the Almighty; therefore nothing defiled gains entrance into her. 26For she is a reflection o f eternal
light, a spotless mirror o f the working o f God, and an image o f his goodness. LXX text: 25dxp.ig
yap fecrriv xfjg xoC Qeou Suvapetflg x a l drcoppoia xfjg xoB jiavxoxpaxopog 86|rig lXtxpivf|g 8 ia
xoBxo oi)8 ev pepiappivov etg auxf|v jiapepjrujrxei. 26d jiad yaap a yap eoxiv qxoxog di6Cou x a i
eaonxpov dxt|VSooxov xfjg xofi 0oB iv ep yd ag x a l elxcbv xfjg dya06xrixog adxou
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88
being or nature.187 Alexander of Alexandria, in his Letter to all Bishops, uses Hebrews
1:3 with a chain of John 1:1,3,18, Psalm 44:2,109:3, Wisdom 7:26, Colossians 1:15, and
Malachi 3:6 to relate the ousia of the Son to the Father, as well as to speak of their
common knowledge and the Sons immutability. The Statement o f Faith ('ExOeoig
jtloTECflg) ostensibly issued by the 325 Council of Antioch, alluded to Hebrews 1:3 in its
crucial definition of the Son:
Because he transcends all thought and conception and argument, we confess that he has been
begotten from the unbegotten Father, God the Word, true Light, righteousness, Jesus Christ, Lord
of all and Saviour. For he is the image not of the will nor of anything except the actual hypostasis
of the Father.188
In spite of the seeming usefulness of Hebrews 1:3, Victorinus makes use of it in a
neophyte manner, further confusing the matter of divine substance by making it a subject
of resolution between the thought-worlds of Greek and Latin philosophical definition. In
Book IB 59 he produces a chain of texts after arguing for consubstantiality of the Father,
Son, and Spirit, but these texts are, strangely, used for the purpose of his claim that it is
evident that the Logos itself and the Holy Spirit and Nous and Wisdom are the same
thing.
1R
Q
In referring to the many names used for the Son, Victorinus brings up
Hebrews 1:3 as a proof-text: And Paul, writing to the Hebrews, also calls him substance:
Image of his substance; and he spoke likewise of the consubstantial people.190
187. At II Cor. 9:4, 11:17 and Heb. 3:14, hypostasis has the meaning o f confidence/psychological support;
at Heb. 11:1 the meaning o f assurance. O f the twenty occurrences o f hypostasis in the Septuagint, it is
only at Wis. 16:21 that hypostasis has the meaning o f Gods nature: For thy sustenance (hypostasis)
manifested thy sweetness toward thy children... Hanson, Search, 182.
188. Hanson (Search, 149) points this out in his section on the Antiochene council as part o f the theology
and events leading to Nicaea.
189. Clark, 186. AA 1 59,13-14. Ex his apparet quod Xoyog ipse et spiritus sanctus et vouq et sapientia id
ipsum. CSEL 83/1,159. The entire section is IB 59,1329, and is treated fully in the section on Jer.
23:18,22.
190. Clark, 186. AA 1 59,17-19. Et ipsum et substantiam dicit et Paulus ad Hebraeos: imago substantiae
eius; et item consubstantialem populum dixit. CSEL 83/1, 159. The consubstantial people is a
reference to Tit. 2:14.
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(Victorinus Latin text translates Hebrews 1:3 as imago substantiae eius versus the
Greek original which said xapaxxrip Trjq ujtoardoetoc; auxou, again showing the
contemporary semantic inadequacy in the Latin West over ousia and hypostasis.191)
He ties Hebrew 1:3 to Jeremiah 23:18,22, which mentions substantia in his Latin text,
and had used hypostasis in the LXX text. Far clearer is his association of these texts with
texts that do employ the word ousia: Matthew 6:11 (Give us this day our supersubstantial
bread) and Luke 15:12-13 (The younger one said to the Father: give me the part of the
substance which belongs to me... and there he wasted his substance).
t Q0
The name of divine substance recurs in Book II. The section begins clearly, with
Victorinus claim that the word substance is used in Scripture of God and of Christ, but
becomes convoluted when he cannot seem to distinguish between hypostasis and ousia,
in spite of defining in II 4,51-52 that from one substance there are three subsistences.
Jeremiah 23:18,22 and Psalm 139:15 (And my substance is in the lower parts o f the
earth) are cited; then, before trying to discuss the relation between hypostasis and ousia,
Victorinus again cites Hebrew 1:3: We read of Christ in Paul to the Hebrews: He who
is the character of his substance.193 Here the Latin text reads character of his
substance, somewhat closer to the Greek text than IB 59 where Victorinus had said
191. The Vulgate text o f Heb. 1:3 renders this phrase as the figura substantiae eius.
192. Clarks translation o f Matt. 6:11 says supersubstantial bread; there are some precedents for this
translation, but Victorinus Latin text says panem nostrum consubstantialem da nobis hodie (with
the Greek text using the term fcjuoi3cnov).
193. Clark, 202-03. AA n 3,59-61. Lectum apud Paulum ad Hebraeos de Christo: Qui est character
substantiae eius. CSEL 83/1, 175. AA I I 4 -6 is an important extended section that stands as a perfect
example o f the semantic confusion in Victorinus, when he discusses whether there is a significant
difference in meaning between hypostasis and ousia. One would assume that, writing when he does,
he could realize the meaningful difference between the two terms, but Victorinus understands the real
existence o f Father and Son (and Spirit) in terms o f the Western Latin subsistence, including giving a
definition formula o f from one substance there are three subsistences (Clark, 205; AA n 4,51-52).
He finally (predictably) concludes at the end o f I I 6 that Jn. 14:10, I am in the Father and the Father
is in me means the Father and Son are not only consubstantial but also o f the same hypostasis.
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image of his substance. Victorinus will repeat this same proof of substance, with the
same proof-texts, in his work The Necessity o f Accepting Homoousios (here also his Latin
text says character of substance). What matters for Victorinus, as he himself admits, is
that the word substance is in Scripture and is used of the substance of God.194 But
precisely what he means by substance remains unclear. There was a miahypostatic
tradition in the Latin West which resisted the confession of three hypostases, including
followers of Marcellus of Ancyra, who held out and refused to use the phrase of three
hypostases in God well up to the time of Constantinople 381. Even writing in this work,
in which he reprises the key arguments from Against Arius, Victorinus has ended up with
the lack of resolution common to the Latin miahypostatic tradition: The Greeks call to
be ousian or hupostasin; we call it in Latin by one term: substance; and a few Greeks use
ousian and rarely; all use hupostasin. Certainly one differs from the other, but for the
moment let us omit this.195 We have here one of the strangest comments Victorinus has
made in his trinitarian treatises, especially in light of his sophistication in stating
trinitarian formulae, whether Latin or Eastern Greek.
If the use of Hebrews 1:3 among Victorinus Latin contemporaries had involved a
more determined meaning it could be argued that the semantic confusion between
substantia and the real individual existence of hypostasis was a distinctive problem only
for Victorinus. Upon examination, however, it is clear that other Latins either saw no
need to use the text of Hebrews 1:3, or, like Victorinus, used it with a collapsed sense of
substantia meaning either ousia or hypostasis. The text does not appear among early
194. Clark, 307. D e Homoousio 2,14. Lectum est quod sit et dicatur dei substantia. CSEL 83/1,280.
195. Clark, 306. D e Homoousio 1,262,1. Esse Graeci oiioiav vel ujiocrraaiv dicunt, nos uno nomine
latine substantiam dicimus; et ou oiav Graeci pauci et raro, ujtdoxaoiv omnes. Distat quidem, verum
nunc omittamus. CSEL 83/1,279.
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Latins such as Tertullian or Novatian. Gregory of Elvira does not appeal to it; Phoebadius
of Agen and Hilary of Poitiers each use it only once.196 In Liber Contra Arrianos XV,2ff
Phoebadius considers the separate existence of Father and Son, listing John 10:30,14:9,10,
Psalm 2:7,109:3, and Proverbs 8:22. Hebrews 1:3 is included in his conclusion: Now, the
Son seems to be the true image of the Father and the distinct form of his substance, that is,
the Word of God. He is not (merely) the sound of his voice, substantive reality, even a
bodily reality throughout his substance.
1Q7
comes in Book III of his De Trinitate when he argues for the unity of the Father and the
Son, including their same nature and same power.
10 R
and the Father are one) and the text John 14:10 (the Father in me and I in the Father) to
claim that the two divine persons should not be separated as to their divine attributes:
But we acknowledge the same similarity of power and the fullness of die divinity in each of them.
The Son received everything from the Father, and He is the form of God and the image of His
substance. The image of His substance merely distinguishes Him from the one who is, in order
that we may believe in His existence and not that we may also assume that there is a dissimilarity
of nature. For the Father to be in the Son and the Son in the Father means that there is a perfect
fullness of the Godhead in each of them. The Son is not a diminution of the Father nor is He an
imperfect Son from the Father. And image is not alone and the likeness is not to itself. Nothing
can be like God unless it is from Him. That which is similar in everything does not originate from
somewhere else, and the similarity of the one to the other does not allow them to be joined
together by anything contradictory.199
196. Gregory o f Elvira had his own distinctive problems, with his originally overlooked modalist theology
necessitating corrections o f his work D e fid e orthodoxa contra Arianos.
197. Videtur enim Patris Filius imago uera et figura expressa substantiae eius, hoc est D ei Sermo, non
sonus uocis, sed res substantiua ac per substantiam corpulentiua. Liber Contra Arrianos X V ,4 ,1 4 16. CCSL 6 4 ,4 8 .
198. It seems both unusual and unexpected that Hilary would use this proof-text only once in his entire work;
though this single use may make sense, since Hilary never uses Wis. 7:25,26 in his De Trinitate.
199. Hilary o f Poitiers, The Trinity, trans. Stephen McKenna, vol. 25, Fathers o f the Church (N ew York:
Catholic University o f America, 1954), 85. (Henceforth McKenna, Hilary o f Poitiers: The Trinity.) D e
trinitate 111,23,10-23. sed eandem in utroque et uirtutis similitudinem et deitatis plenitudinem
confitemur. Omnia enim Filius accepit a Patre, et est Dei forma et imago substantiae eius. Eum enim
qui est ab eo qui est substantiae imago tantum ad subsistendi fidem, non etiam ad aliqnam naturae
dissimilitudinem intellegendam discemit. Patrem autem in Filio et Filium in Patre esse, plenitudo in
utroque diuinitatis perfecta est. Non enim deminutio Patris est Filius, nec Filius inperfectus a Patre
est. Imago sola non est, et similitudo non sibi est. Deo autem simile aliquid esse nisi quod e x se erit
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To prove the Scripture texts revelation concerning the Sons divine origin and nature,
Hilary appeals not so much to the divine substance as to the image of that substance.200
This section concentrates on the unity of the Father and Sons nature (Hilary cites John
10:30 right before this passage) and their complete power and divinity, but still
distinguishes their separate realities of Father and Son.
P h il ip p ia n s 2 : 5 - 8
Philippians 2:5-8 would seem an unlikely locus for discussing divine substance; it is the
New Testament passage most likely to be appealed to for arguments in favor of the divine
identity and qualities of the Son 201 Victorinus knew the pericope of Philippians 2:5-8
intimately. It it is evident from its play and appearances in Against Arius that he also
understood the importance of this text in Christian self-definition. Victorinus two major
uses of the Christ-hymn202 of Philippians 2:5-8 are proving a combined idea o f the
form and image of God, using it as a visibility text almost on a par of importance with the
Gospel of John, and as a divine substance proof-text in order to prove homoousios with
the Father. Though the text appears throughout Against Arius, there are two main
extended sections of exegesis and deployment: at the beginning, in IA 21-23; and at the
non potest. Non enim aliunde est quod in omnibus simile est, neque diuersitatem duobus admisceri
alterius ad alterum similitudo permittit. CCSL 62, 95-6.
200. See next chapter, Divine Visibility in Victorinus, on Victorinus use o f Gen. 1:26 in connection
with Heb. 1:3 to discuss divine visibility.
201. Phil. 2:5-8: Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in
the form o f God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself, taking
the form o f a servant, being bom in the likeness o f men. And being found in human form he humbled
himself and became obedient unto death, even death on a cross.
202. The shorthand term for this passage commonly used by present-day New Testament exegetes.
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end, in IV 29,39-31,53, as a reprise and crescendo of all the points he has been
hammering home in the course of the four books.203
On the surface, the Philippians passage may seem like one Arius and all succeeding
anti-Nicenes would have been attracted to because of the ostensible way in which it
speaks of the Son as rejecting equality with God. (The anti-Nicene mentality was often
drawn to any passage of Scripture that seemed to say God and the Son were two
different things, over passages identifying the Father and the Son.)204 But there is
within the Christ hymn content rather inconvenient for anti-Nicenes, which may have
steered them away from the passage. First, it affirms that the Son was in the form of
God. Second, and even worse to the anti-Nicene way of thinking, is that Philippians
2:7b-8a (.. .being bom in the likeness of men. And being found in human form...)
could be used as a proof-text against the frilly human identity of the Son, rather than for
his frill divinity. In 5:7b Paul describes the Son being bom in the likeness of men (v
6p.ouhp.aTi avGpcojuov vevopevog), using a dative variant of homoios. Homoians would
hardly have favored a proof-text that worked against their idea of the scriptural testimony
of the Sons quasi-divine nature. Meslins comparative tables of Latin anti-Nicene prooftexts attest to this: None of them ever used Philippians 2:5-8.205
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But as noted, the Christ-hymn for Victorinus is that sacred passage full of
mysteries206 which reveals the arcana not only of the Incarnation, but also of his
technical, Pauline term, the Mystery, meaning the divine Economy.207
In contemplating Philippians 2:5-8 Victorinus is sometimes inexact in his argument,
perhaps because the truths revealed by this passage about the necessity of accepting
consubstantiality seem obvious. In Book IA Victorinus comes to considering Philippians
after dealing with the preceding Pauline epistles, extracting what he can from them for
his christological arguments.
908
key passage proves that the Son is Christ, a germane title for the Son; the Son is
homoousios with the Father; and the Son, together with the Father, is powerful.209 After
quoting Philippians 2:5-7, Victorinus will consider what this equality with the Father
means: being equal to the Father means that the Son is of the same power and same
substance as the Father.
Ir\
>
emptying of the Son had to do with substance itself, and if the Son is equal to the Father,
then the self-emptying has to do with divine substance.211
206. Clark, 300. AA IV 32,28-29. in sacro isto ac mysteriis pleno loco CSEL 83/1,274.
207. The Pauline, technical term Mystery, versus merely speaking o f mysteries as appears at 1 10,22; I
22,14-16; 1 26,1416ff; IV 31,47-49; TV 32,14.
208. Clark, 12126. AA 1 21,2723,47. Book I functions as a commentary on the pre-passion chapters o f
the Gospel o f John, followed by his brief glosses on the Synoptic Gospels, then die Pauline epistles
(in this order) o f Romans, I and n Corinthians, Ephesians, Galatians, Philippians, Colossians and I
Timothy. Whatever Victorinus can glean from this survey use o f the New Testament writings he uses.
There is a commonplace o f Victorine scholarship that Victorinus, at this point o f his newly-held
belief, did not yet know the Old Testament very well.
209. Clark, 121.
210. As I have noted, Power is a key trinitarian theme for Victorinus trinitarian theology, which
distinguishes him sharply from most other Neo-Nicenes o f the decade o f the 350s, almost placing him
within the camp o f the Pro-Nicenes such as Ambrose. See Chapter 5 section, One Substance, One
Power Statements in Victorinus.
211. Clark, 122: But that the image is both substance and together with the substance which is called
homoousion, is clear from this: for the Apostle said: He emptied himself, taking the form o f a servant.
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Up to this point, Victorinus arguments are not compelling, but the remainder of this
Book IA gloss on Philippians 2:58 contain two particular and worthwhile comments.
The first comes as a definition of substance and form together:
Therefore the form is substance along w ith the substance in w hich it is form . The substance o f the
form is therefore h om oou sios w ith the principal substance and prior in pow er b ecau se the latter
g iv es to the form to be, to be substance, to b e in substance, to be alw ays together w ith
substance; for w ithout one, the other is not.212
Victorinus understands power sometimes as a single sense within God, and sometimes in
a multiple sense. What is significant here is his identification of substance with the form
of God, and that substance within God is unified. Substance is a reality attested to by
Philippians, because Victorinus is commenting upon the notion of he emptied himself.
It is not until the end of Against Arius that Victorinus uses 2:5-7 for a clear purpose
of demonstrating divine substance and consubstantiality. In AA IV, 29 and 30 he will
end his long polemical and positive treatise by proving once again that the form of God
is the Son o f God, through an intriguing connection of a long string of Scripture prooftexts.
understood to be used for two thematic purposes: divine substance, when he connects
Philippians with other texts for the purpose of homoousios, and divine visibility, when
there is extended commentary on the combined conceptual idiom of form and image.
For arguing homoousios Victorinus begins with an initial text of John 16:15: All
that the Father has, he has given to me, and all that the Father has, I also have. 214 If the
212. Clark, 123. AA 1 22,28-33. Est igitur forma substantia cum substantia in qua est forma. 'O goouoiog
igitur formae substantia substantiae principali et potentialiter priori, quod ista praestat formae esse et
substantiam esse et in substantia esse et semper simul esse; sine enim altero alterum non est. CSEL
83/1, 91-2.
213. Gen. 1:26,Matt. 11:27,ICor. 1:24, Jn. 1:1,Phil. 2 :6 ,Ex. 33:20, and Col. 1:15, among others.
214. Clark, 295. AA IV 29,39-41.
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Father has given all, Victorinus argues, that means the Son is consubstantial with the
Father; and not only consubstantial, but identical; and if identical, equal.215 One
paragraph after this identical claim there is a qualification: that the Father and the
Son are identical, that is, having the same realities, but each one through his own
existence. That is why they are both the same and different.216 That equality is proven
by a reference to Pauls assertion in Philippians 2:6, that though the Son was in the
form of God, he did not count his equality with the Father. As Victorinus argues that
the Form of God is the Son, divine visibility is more at issue than arguing for divine
substance.
From the importance Victorinus placed on the Christ-hymn passage of Philippians 2,
one could assume that this passage saw just as extensive ante-Nicene use. Surprisingly,
this is not so. Of the few, brief mentions of Philippians 2 in his works, Tertullian
employs it only once to speak of divine substance. In chapter 7 of Against Praxeas,
when he speaks of the real distinction of the Son, Tertullian begins the chapter with
the Word himself assumes his own form and glorious garb, namely his own sound and
917
voice...
To prove his point about the Sons being begotten of the Father, he
expounds on a long chain of texts, including Psalm 45:1 (My heart hath emitted my
most excellent Word.), Colossians 1:15, John 1:3, John 1:1 and Philippians 2:6. In
215. Victorinus says they are the same (idem ergo), AA IV 29,42. This brief slip toward Modalism is
made by Victorinus at other times; for example, in Book IV 33, when he makes a confusing statement
about the identity o f the Second and Third Persons: As to the Holy Spirit, we have already set forth
in many books that he is Jesus Christ himself but in another mode (alio quodam modo).
216. Clark, 296. AA IV 30,14-15. idem autem, hoc est eadem habens, exsistentia sua propria. Unde et
idem et alter. CSEL 83/1,270.
217. Evans, Against Praxeas. Adversus Praxean 7,3334. Tunc igitur etiam ipse sermo speciem et
omatum suum sumit, sonum et vocem ... Evans, 94.
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linking Philippians 2:6 to John 1:1, Tertullian concludes that the Son has been sent
forth from the substance of God, and that he is a distinct person:
And the Word was with God and the Word was God. It is written, Thou shalt not take the name of
God for an empty thing. Certainly this is he who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery
to be equal with God. In what form of God? Evidently in some form, not in none: for who will
deny that God is body, although God is a spirit? For spirit is body, of its own kind, in its own
form. Moreover if those invisible things, whatever they are, have in Gods presence both their
own body and their own shape by which they are visible to God alone, how much more will that
which has been sent forth from his substance not be devoid of substance. Whatever therefore the
substance of the Word was, that I call a Person, and for it I claim the name of Son: and while I
acknowledge him as Son I maintain he is another beside the Father.218
Granted, Tertullian means something sui generis when he speaks of the Son having the
substance of God. What he particularly tries to prove is the prolation of the Son219 from
the Father, the Sons reality, and his name.
No Neo-Nicene uses the Philippians passage in arguments for substance except
Phoebadius of Agen, who uses the passage only in one paragraph of his work Contra
Arrianos. In it he gives a partial quotation twice in the same paragraph, making the
passingthough importantobservation of the Father and Son having a singularity of
dual substance: Therefore if someone wishes thus to know the rank of the Lord from
the Apostle, explained briefly, it is a single duality of substance, which is conjoined
through the nature of its authorities...
Phoebadius continues his discussion of the identity of the Word of God, having human
218. Evans, Against Praxeas, 138. Adversus Praxean 7,415. Et sermo erat apud deum et deus erat
sermo? scriptum est, Non sumes nomen dei in vanum. hie certe est qui in effigie dei constitutus non
rapinam existimavit esse se aequalem deo. in qua effigie dei? utique in aliqua, non tamen in nulla:
quis enim negabit deum corpus esse, etsi deus spiritus est? spiritus enim corpus sui generis in sua
effigie. sed et si invisibilia ilia, quaecunque sunt, habent apud deum et suum corpus et suam formam
per quae soli de visibilia sunt, quanto magis quod ex ipsius substantia sermonis fuit, illam dico
personam et illi nomen filii vindico, et dum filium agnosco secundum a patre defendo. Evans, 96.
219. Prolation, meaning the bringing forth o f words, an utterance, a production.
220. Si quis igitur adhuc et de apostolo requirit dominicum statum, id est singularis substantiae
dualitatem, quae per naturam auctori suo iungitur, audiat ad compendium... Liber Contra Arrianos
XXVI, 3, 6 -1 0 . CCSL 6 4,49.
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flesh and human nature.221 It is the Word which was in the form o f God (appealing to
Philippians 2:6), and thus this Word constitutes Wisdom, Reason, Spirit of Reason and
Spirit of Power, possessing the total Power (vis) of God. However, Phoebadius asserts,
he did not count equality with God, but taking the form of a servant he humiliated himself
unto death. This taking a form of a servant involved being possessed by death, certainly
human death which was prominently displayed to heaven, in order to reinstate a second
Adam, which the first transgression had lost. But, as mentioned above, the rank of the
Son is still something that involves unity with the Father in a single duality of substance
another way of saying homoousios. The Apostle Paul speaking in this way of the Son with
God the Father is a further matter of the divine inscrutable ways (Romans 11:33) and the
mysteries formerly concealed (Ephesians 3:9). Phoebadius focus on the Philippians
passage is as an argument for consubstantiality. Despite the Son assuming the form of a
servant, he possesses the total Power of God, and the same substance as the Father.
As mentioned above, the Philippians passage is not easy to categorize as simply a
locus for divine substance or divine visibility or divine unity. This may explain why
Nicenes and ante-Nicenes saw such a scriptural locus as vitally significant proof of the
Incarnation of the Son or his kenosis as part of the Atonement, while not recognizing its
value as proof of Nicene consubstantial identity of the Son and the Father.
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polemic, there is an unusual appearance of a trinitarian formula. In Book III 4, Victorinus
mentions in passing that these three are one in substance, three in subsistence.222 It is
essential to discuss this trinitarian formula; in light of its later importance, I also want to
consider its significance to Victorinus, as well as his possible sources for it. This
trinitarian formula, extraordinarily defined and determined for circa 360, might sound
familiar to the reader of Against Arius. In Book II 4, during a discussion about divine
substance, Victorinus states, that is why it was said: From one substance there are three
subsistences...
Only one sentence later, he repeats his formula, telling the reader he got it elsewhere:
This is expressed by the Greeks in this way: ex piag ouoiac; tpeTg elvai tmoordoEic;224
This is the only appearance of this Greek trinitarian formula in Against Arius. Though he
restates in Book III 9 that die trinitarian persons are one sole substance, while being three
subsistences,225 he never explains who, specifically, the Greeks are, nor will he ever
again use such a trinitarian formula, in Latin or Greek, in either the remaining sections of
Against Arius or in his other extant treatises and commentaries.
The trinitarian formula of ex piag ouotag xprlg elvai tmoordaeu; has often been
referred to as the Cappadocian Settlement of 381 (even though it comes from
somewhere around 360). Its unusual and anachronistic appearance in AA III 4 has been
noticed by innumerable patristic scholars, many of whom remember Victorinus only for
this early Latin attestation of the so-called 381 formula. The importance of this formula
222. AA III 4,3435. substantia unum, subsistentia tria sunt ista Clark, 227. Victorinus also uses the
Greek equivalent o f subsistentia in Against Arius, when he says u Jiap|iq.
223. AA II 4,51-52. de una substantia, tres subsistentias esse Clark, 205.
224. there are three hypostases from one substance AA in 4,38-39 Idque a Graecis ita dicitur: ex piag
oucriag xpeTg elvai ujtoardoeiq. Clark, 228.
225. AA III 9, 3 -4 . unam esse substantiam, subsistentias tres Clark, 234.
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for Victorinus cannot be overstated. Before a discussion of its significance, however, I
want to consider the context of its use in Against Arius II and III.
In Book II of Against Arius, the formula of one substance, three subsistences
appears within a discussion of divine substance, the point of which is to maintain that
substance is used in Scripture, in such proof-texts as Jeremiah 23:18,22 and Hebrews
1 :3 226
Victorinus larger argument, concerned with proving the triple manner of divine being:
But to be which has a form is God, because God is also Father, likewise the Son, since he is
Logos and Son. Therefore, subsistence is more properly said of these two than is substance, since
that which is original to be with a form is called substance. But this is also called substance. And
that is why it was said: From one substance there are three subsistences, so that that itself which
is to be subsists in a triple manner: God himself, and Christ, that is, Logos and Holy Spirit.9 9 7
Victorinus unfortunately concludes, echoing the theology of Nicaea 325 and Serdica 343,
not only that the Father and Son are consubstantial, but that they are also of the same
hypostasis?2* It does not matter, Victorinus avers, as long as one acknowledges that
hypostasis and/or ousia (and hyparxis) signify divine being and substance.229
The formula occurs again in Book III 4 and III 9. In III 4 we hear this formula in
Victorinus Latin transpositionone in substance, three in subsistenceand also in the
Greek originalx ptag oucriag xpetg elvai ujtocrrdaeig:
226. Jer. 23:18,22: Who has stood in the substance o f the Lord and has seen his Word?... And if they had
stood in my substance, they would have heard my words..
Heb. 1:3, . . .He who is the character o f
his substance; and other proof-texts for substance such as Ps. 138(139):15, Luke 15:12-13. Clark,
202-06.
227. Clark, 204-05. AA II 4,46-53. formatum autem (esse) est deus, quod deus est et pater; sic et filius,
quod et koyog et filius. Subsistentia ergo proprie dicitur de ambobus, quod est substantia, quoniam
quod est esse principale cum forma subsistentia dicitur. Haec autem et substantia dicitur. Et ideo
dictum est: de una substantia, tres subsistentias esse, ut id ipsum quod est esse subsistat tripliciter:
ipse deus et Christus, id est koyoq et spiritus sanctus. CSEL 83/1,177-78.
228. Cf., for example, Clark, 207 (AA I I 6), in which Victorinus cites Jn. 14:10 and says so that we may
understand that the fullness o f the two and the self-sameness o f each is in each one. But if it is the
same hypostasis, they are therefore, homoousiori'
229. Cf. Clark, 206-07.
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I f to live and to understand are one, and since to be w hich is to live and to understand is one, these
three are one in substance, three in subsistence. For since they have their ow n power and signification
and they also are as they are named, necessarily they are both three and nevertheless on e, since the
three constitute together each unity that each one is singly. This is expressed b y the Greeks in this
way: i x p ia g o u a ia g xpeu; d v a i u jiooxd oeig (there are three hypostases from one substance).230
But again, the occurrences of this formula also are only in passing, within a larger,
repetitive discussion of the reality of unity versus the concomitant reality of distinct
singularity. Almost all this discussion takes place within the intellectual matrix o f
Victorinus noetic triad, or psychological analogy, of the Trinity:
in te llig e r e .
e s s e , v iv e r e ,
Victorinus relates Being itself to the Father, life to the Son, and understanding to the
Spirit.
Even the way Victorinus concludes the discussion of the contemplation of God
in Book III reemphasizes this triad. It also includes the fourth and last mention o f the
trinitarian formulabut again, only in passing:
This w ill then m ake it clear enough that to be w hich is the Father, that life w hich is th e Son, that
know ledge w h ich is the H oly Spirit, are one so le substance, w hile bein g three su bsisten ces,
because, com in g from to be w hich is substance, and being itself substance, as w e h ave taught,
m ovem ent is effective as a tw ofold pow er, that both o f vitality and o f w isdom and understanding so
that evidently in each one are the three. Therefore, the H oly Spirit is know ledge and w isd om .232
230. Clark, 227-28. AA III 4,32-39 Quod si ita est, ut unum sit vivere et intellegere, et, cum unum sit esse
quod est vivere atque intellegere, substantia unum, subsistentia tria sunt ista. Cum enim vim ac
significantiam suam habeant atque ut dicuntur et sint, necessario et sunt tria et tamen unum, cum
omne, quod singulum est unum, tria sint. Idque a Graecis ita dicitur: ex giaq ouoCaq xpeu; elvai
{iJCOcrrdoEiq. CSEL 83/1, 198.
231. Besides texts proffered to prove divine visibility in the Son, and divine unity with the Father,
Victorinus heavily favored text for the Son corresponding to the image o f the Son as Life is Jn.
5:26: The Father, inasmuch as he has life from himself, so has he given to the Son to have life from
himself.
232. Clark, 2 3 4 -3 5 A A III 9,1-8. Hoc igitur satis clarum faciet esse quod pater est et vitam quod est filius
et cognoscentiam quod est spiritus sanctus unum esse et unam esse substantiam, subsistentias tres,
quia ab eo quod est esse quae substantia est, motus, quia et ipse, ut docuimus, ipsa substantia est,
gemina potentia valet et vitalitatis et sapientiae atque intellegentiae, ita scilicet, ut in omnibus singulis
tema sint. Ergo spiritus sanctus scientia est et sapientia. CSEL 83/1, 206. This one passage could
serve as the briefest, most precise summary o f everything that Victorinus is about in his treatises,
except that missing from it is any argument on behalf o f consubstantiality.
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After this mention in III 9, Victorinus leaves this formula behind, evidently with no
further need of it.
Though the formula is used in four instances, Victorinus puts it to no use beyond
adding to the triadic theme of the discussion of triune identity and relationsraising the
question of why he quoted it at all. Perhaps he did so to show how current he was with
Eastern dyohypostatic theological circles; perhaps to prove that his trinitarian theology
fits accepted formulae.
In considering the instances of Victorinus use of a trinitarian formula (whether in the
Greek he quotes or in his Latin rendering), it is necessary to remember that the terms
trinitarian formula and particularly 381 Cappadocian Settlement are pieces of modem
theological shorthand, as Joseph Lienhard pointed out in his article on the Cappadocian
Settlement.233 There are surprisingly few instances of any sort of the one ousia three
hypostases formula in the writings of the Cappadocians, nor did this formula appear in the
381 Creed. More typical of Cappadocian thought was a letter from the Synod of
Constantinople to Western bishops in 382, which used three terms for what was one in God
(divinity, power, and essence) and two terms for what was three (hypostases and persons):
[The 318 Fathers of Nicaea] teach us to believe in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of
the Holy Spirit: clearly, to believe in one divinity and power and essence [ouota] of the Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit; in their dignity of equal honour and in their coetemal reign, in three most
perfect hypostases [tmooxaaetg] or three perfect persons [jipdacoiia].234
233. Joseph T. Lienhard, Ousia and Hypostasis'. The Cappadocian Settlement and the Theology o f One
Hypostasis, In The Trinity: An Interdisciplinary Symposium on the Trinity, ed. Stephen T. Davis,
Daniel Kendall, and Gerald OCollins (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999), 99-121.
234. Lienhard, The Cappadocian Settlement, 100
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The Cappadocians used a range of three or four terms to speak of what is one in God,
and what is three,235 but Lienhard reminds us that the acceptance of a trinitarian formula
specifically including three hypostases was not swift. The hammering out of a
trinitarian formula was especially difficult because of the dispute regarding whether the
term hypostasis applied to what was singular or plural within God. There was a persistent
difficulty with how each word ousia or hypostasiscould mean something that subsists.
To discover when the final determination of the exact meaning of the word hypostasis
came about in the late fourth century is a complex problem.
Even now, it remains a problem to portray the origins of this Cappadocian
settlement trinitarian formula coming about even earlier, in the decades of the 350s and
360s. The earliest approximation of a formula of multiple hypostases would be the
statement from the Dedication Creed of 341, that each person of the Trinity is named so
that they are three in hypostasis, and one in agreement.236 But even the Synod of
Alexandria in the year 362 should not have this formula imposed upon it. We do not
know whether the result of the synod, according to Athanasius Tome to the Antiochenes,
was to produce such a formula, even if some Meletians (we think), when questioned,
confessed a belief in Father, Son and Spirit, each subsisting (uraoTtoxa) distinctly, but
recognizing a single ultimate principle and a Son consubstantial with the Father.. .and a
Holy Spirit belonging to and inseparable from the ousia of the Son and of the Father.237
That statement almost, but not quite, reaches the level of the trinitarian formula.
235. Cf. Lienhard, 120: More commonly, several terms, usually physis (nature) and theotes ( deity), as
well as ousia, designate what is one in God; and idiotetes (properties) and prosopa (persons),
along with hypostasis, are common designations for what is three in God.
236. Kelly, Early Christian Creeds, 269. (bg elvai rfj ptv im oordaei xpia, tt} 61 crupqwovig v
237. Hanson, Search, 64041.
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However, the Tome to the Antiochenes, when it was circulated, did convey the indication
that ousia and hypostasis could be used in different senses, and that it was possible to speak
of three hypostases in an orthodox sense. What possibly came out of the Tome, most
importantly, is what R.P.C. Hanson described as a way opened for a younger generation
of theologians to establish a clear distinction in the use of these terms.
None of this answers the question, however, of the source or sources from which
Victorinus quotes this formula in AA III 4. There have been various conclusions among
scholars who have noticed this anomalous trinitarian formula in AA III 4. For example,
with little evidencebut considerable conjecturesome scholars have located this
trinitarian formula from vague, nascent Nicene circles as a watchword against extreme
Marcellan teachings.239 Others have located this formula within Homoiousian circles. Chief
among this second group is Pierre Hadot, in his Sources Chretiennes commentary on
Victorinus trinitarian treatises.240 Neither he nor others, however, can give any evidence
for their belief, in spite of the fact that Victorinus shows in his writings that he has access
not only to early Arian documents, but also the Sirmian dossier of 358.
A recent scholar who takes Victorinus seriously is Jorg Ulrich, in his 1994 work, The
Beginnings o f the Western Reception ofNicaea?41 Ulrich devotes an entire chapter of his
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work to Victorinus, in line with his argument that the West was slow and reluctant to leave
behind a Serdican miahypostatic theology, even up until approximately 370. In considering
Victorinus trinitarian formula in a chapter subsection,242 he concludes confidently that the
Greek trinitarian formula in AA III 4, and its Latin translation in II 4, come from neither
theological nor ecclesial circles, but from a Neoplatonist-philosophical source.243 Ulrich is
taking his cue from a brief article published by Manlio Simonetti in 1974,244 in which
Simonetti noted a reference to a triune statement of Porphyry quoted in Didymus the
Blinds De Trinitate: Axpt yap xpuov tjiooraoECOV etpq nXdxtov x f|V xou Geiou
jipoeXOeTv ouoiav (For Plato said that the ousia of the Divine Reality proceeds as far
as three hypostases...). Oddly, Ulrich does not mention the dating of Didymus De
Trinitateit is commonly agreed upon by scholars as being from the 380sbut he
believes that Victorinus, himself obviously much indebted to Porphyrian influence, could
well have known this same reference. He further claims that Eastern theologians, in
taking this formula of three hypostases from Neoplatonist sources, arrived at what he
terms a fruitful misunderstanding which provided the basis for the Christian language
of hypostasis and ousia. Even with the blatant problem of the wildly inaccurate dating,
this quote from Didymus quoting Porphyry is not much of an explanation for Victorinus
century, almost half a century after the first ecumenical council in A.D. 325, when Latin speaking
theologians entered into the debates about the theology ofN icaea and then started to become more
independent and more constructive partners in the search for the Christian doctrine o f God, such as
Marius Victorinus, Ambrose o f M ilan... Victorinus was most probably dead by the time o f well
into the sixties o f the fourth century, and Victorinus was just one example o f vigorous Western Latin
Neo-Nicene retrieval ofN icaea in the 350s. Contemporary German scholarship o f the fourth century
sees some dire need to push Western Latin isolation from the current trinitarian debates up to the
decade o f the late 360s/early 370s, for no apparent or convincing reasons.
242. Die neunizanische Losung bei Marius Victorinus, 254-261.
243. Ulrich, Anfdnge, 257.
244. Manlio Simonetti, A llorigine della formula teologica una essenza/tre ipostasi, Augustinianum 14
(1974): 17375.
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formula. Victorinus, Ulrich concludes, somehow got this formula, but did not exert any
influence upon anyone else; besides, his chief interest was the defense of the homoousios.
Yet Ulrichs dating even of Victorinus is mistaken. Ulrich depends heavily on Hadots
works on Victorinus, but is certain that Books II and III of Against Arius come from the
years 359/360, even though Hadot, in his complete 1971 work on Marius Victorinus,
gives Books II and III a dating of 361/362.245
Not to be overlooked is the scholarly explanation of Hanns Christof Brennecke.
Brenneke opts for a derivation of Victorinus formula from the Homoian circles of the
exiled Meletius of Antioch, who took a sharp turn against the miahypostatic tradition.246
The chief difficulty with this is Meletius having been an ex-Homoian from early on;
rather, his theology is mostly a Homoiousian one couched in cautious Homoian
terms247 (his inaugural homily of late 361 in Antioch proved that he was not very good
at being an Homoian248). Also, there is very little that we have of Meletius. Further, we
know that we cannot easily equate Meletius with his Meletian followers, who seem to be
represented in Athanasius Tome to the Antiochenes. But we do know that Meletius
represents a trajectory of Nicene and Pro-Nicene theology which eventually traveled
closely with Basil of Caesarea, even to the point of Meletius presiding at the 381 Council,
and dying there, with Gregory of Nyssa to do his funeral oration.
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The defined, post-381 nature of the Greek trinitarian formula Marius Victorinus
tells of in AA III 4 is striking, making it understandable why so many would wish to
find a source beyond Victorinus own frustratingly terse statement, as the Greeks
say... However, no scholar has ever produced a document for quotation that could
prove conclusively the source of the formula. It is useful to remind ourselves that this
formula cannot be so easily labeled as was the somewhat inaccurate Cappadocian
Settlement; additionally, the notion of a trinitarian formula is a piece modem
theological shorthand used mostly in apologetic and polemical works. As Lienhard
has cautioned:
Creeds, for example, contain a confession of the one God who is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, but
generally do not include the word Trinity, or dwell on abstract terms like ousia or hypostasis.
The Church prays to almighty God through Jesus Christ his Son in the Holy Spirit. The formula
one ousia in three hypostases was crafted on the workbench of theologians; and even for them,
it is more of a convenient abbreviation than the last word that might be uttered.249
It is also true that a trinitarian formula may add clarity, but diminish theological
reflection on some names for the Second Person, such as Power and Wisdom.
In spite of Victorinus knowing this trinitarian formula, the fact that he was still
withinor in the process of leavinga Latin Neo-Nicene miahypostatic milieu is clear
in his semantic confusion over terms such as ousia and hypostasis. (This confusion
appears even in a work dated after Against Arius, The Necessity o f Accepting the
Homoousion.250) Further, in arguing for the homoousios of the Father and the Son and for
the homoousios of the Son and the Spirit, Victorinus often has a hard time distinguishing
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between the Son and the Spirit, sometimes even equating them. My own conjecture as to
his source for the nascent trinitarian formula of Books I I 4 and III 4 favors Meletius
and/or Antiochene-Meletian circles post-360, especially since Victorinus was fluent in
Greek, and some contact with Meletian trihypostatic theology was certainly possible.
Victorinus might have done far more work and reflection on this trinitarian formula had
he not had his own formula within which to work in his trinitarian treatises: the formula
of to be, to live, to understand as corresponding to Father, Son and Holy Spirit.251
Conclusion
Victorinus never fully left the conceptual world of Neo-Nicenes in speaking of divine
substance; however, he managed to produce a Cappadocian Settlement/381-sounding
formula distinguishing substantive divine being from real separate, hypostatic
existencesomething no other Neo-Nicene was quite able to do.
to his credit: he got it from somewhere else and he did not know what to do with it, even
though he compared this one ousia in three hypostases formula (probably from Meletian
sources
subsistences. Unfortunately, substantia had long been for Latins the common translation
not only of ousia but also hypostasis, so Victorinus was unable to escape entirely the
semantic problems that were a handicap to Latins, including his falling at times into
251. The reason for Victorinus idiosyncratic Neo-Platonic formulation is that it expresses the real
distinctions o f the persons o f the Trinity.
252. See Chapter Five, Divine Unity in Victorinus, where Victorinus understanding and use o f
connatural unity in his one substance, one power statements put him unexpectedly in the very advanced
Pro-Nicene cam
253. Again, this contact, probably because o f his skill with Greek, refutes the notion o f Victorinus isolated
from theological currents o f his specific time in the late 350s/early 360s.
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modalist presentations of trinitarian persons. One could argue that even this semimodalist tendency shows a close similarity to other Neo-Nicenes, who were seeking to
redefine what Nicaea 325 had achieved, settling on the meaning of key texts in NiceneArian debates, and groping with their own polemical form.
Few scholars have clearly identified the Scripture texts which easily defined all stages
of the Trinitarian Controversy and its groups, both Nicene and various anti-Nicene. I
have shown how Victorinus treatment of substance texts is often no different than that of
other Neo-Nicenes such as Phoebadius of Agen and Gregory of Elvira. In addition to
knowing about Homoian and Homoiousian exegeses of his day from a dossier o f AntiNicene creedal documents, Victorinus understood, and used, commonplace Nicene
responses.
Victorinus put forth great effort with the most immediate tool at hand in the years right
after his conversion, the text of the Scriptures. The issue of divine substance is something
he had to address, if he is going to argue on behalf of the Nicene ideal of homoousios.
But Victorinus is taking up this case for substance at a nascent stage of Nicene
development, and his attempts to locate words for divine substance in the text of
Scripture produce mixed results. Contrary to Anti-Nicenes at the time reflexively
claiming that the words for substance are not to be found in Scripture (such as in the
Sirmium 357 creed and in subsequent Homoian creeds), there are words to work with in
the text of Scripture, including the words ousia and hypostasis, but Victorinus shows that
even he remains rather unconvinced to the clear meaning of either word. The weak
frequency with which the words appear in either Old or New Testament provides a
meagre resource for Victorinus task. What he ends up producing for a defense o f divine
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substance reflects the indeterminate status of the question in the Latin West of the 350s. It
is only when he has contact with Greek sources that define one ousia against three
hypostases that he seems to be able to make sense of the Latin one substantia versus three
subsistentiae; but even then he does not appear to grasp its importance for speaking about
the identity of trinitarian persons. Victorinus theological reflection depends upon
revealed titles of the Father, Son and Spirit, and what scriptural sources can tell him of
the nature, identity and operations of these persons. In order to defend the homoousios,
Victorinus will have more success in arguing divine visibility and especially divine unity,
as I will show in succeeding chapters.
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Ill
254. It was a received Latin trinitarian commonplace and tradition that taught that the distinction between
the Father and the Son was understood in the Fathers invisible nature, with such a vital text as I Tim.
6:16awho alone has immortality and dwells in un approachable light, whom no man has ever seen
or can see and in the Sons visible nature, with texts such as Col. 1:15 He is the image o f the
invisible God giving the Son a subordinate status, for the sake o f combating modalism. M ichel R.
Barnes, The Visible Christ and the Invisible Trinity: Mt. 5:8 in Augustines Trinitarian Theology o f
400, Modern n e o lo g y 19 (2003):329-355.
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arguing on behalf of the homoousios as part of the Latin Neo-Nicene theological trajectory.
Victorinus will use a battery of these testimonia texts because he knows of this Latin
tradition of speaking of the Sons visibility, and he applies it to his own specific needs in
debates of his stage of the Trinitarian Controversy.
T h e D iv in e Im a g e : G e n e s is
1:26
Genesis 1:26, which speaks of the creation of humanity after the divine image (Let us
make man in our image, after our likeness...), makes it possible to consider the reality
of the divine image.
255. Complete text o f Gen. 1:26 (RSV): Then God said, Let us make man in our image, after our
likeness; and let them have dominion over the fish o f the sea, and over the birds o f the air, and over
the cattle and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps upon the earth. Usually the
text o f 1:26 quoted in patristic writings is only 1:26a.
256. Michel Meslin, LesAriens d Occident 335430, Patristica Sorbonensia, 8 (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1967),
231. Meslin holds the outdated notion that these two works were penned by the late Homoian Maximinus.
257. That is, let u s.. . meaning a conversation o f the Father with the Son; not the one creator God
holding court and speaking only with demi-gods and celestial intermediaries.
258. Col. 1:15: He is the image o f the invisible God, the first-born o f all creation.
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homoousios with the Father (the use which concerns us most); and expressing an
anthropology. (The latter use is not necessarily Nicene in its theology but is nonetheless
quite important for reasons which will be made clear). The first Nicene use of Genesis
1:26 is in Book IA. In it, Victorinus addresses the notion of image within the context
of II Corinthians, in order to convey the vital truth that if Christ is the image o f God,
then Christ is from God.259 Within this discussion Victorinus appeals to Genesis 1:26:
Let us make, he says, is God the Father speaking to Christ, a cooperator.
According to the image means according to the only one, Christ, who is the Image of
Godmaking man an image of the Image. From according to our image, Victorinus
concludes that therefore both Father and Son are one image. If the image of the Father
is the Son and if the image itself is the Father, they are therefore homoousioi in respect
to image. For the image itself is substance.260 Genesis 1:26 possesses a simple
meaning for Victorinus in speaking of christological identity: if Father and Son are one
image, they are also the same substance.
Substance is also at issue when Victorinus comes to an in-depth explication o f divine
substance in Book II.
substance. If God is truly Being itself, and the first, universal substance (substance
before substance, as he also describes), then he is hyperousios (or, as he further explains,
some have thus reasoned then that God is anousios, or without substance). Victorinus
concludes this line of reasoning with a quasi-creedal statement that employs Genesis 1:26:
259. The Gen. 1:26 discussion within the I Cor. section is 1 2 0 ,1 -6 7 .120,1-23 employs Gen. 1:26 for
christological purposes; the rest o f the section uses Gen. 1:26 for anthropology, in discussing the
creation o f the human soul.
260. Clark, 117-18. AA 1 20,7-10. Ergo et pater et filius imago una. Si imago patris filius est et ipsa
imago pater, imagine ergo 6pooi3oioi. Ipsa enim imago substantia est. CSEL 83/1,85-86.
261. Clark, 196-97.
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Let us adore God, therefore, and affirm that he is, that is, that he is enousion, who has
created all things, heaven and earth, world, spirit (sic), angels, souls, animals, and man
according to the image and likeness of the image of those on high.
The following
section asserts the truth of the Son being begotten from the substance of God, who is
Father, Victorinus says, because he is enousios.
again in the rest of this section in AA I I 1, though it is a text that would serve as an
apologetic for the Son being from the substance of the Father. Instead, Victorinus
employs John 1:1-3, and ends the section with a statement condemning the early Arian
views of the Son being created from nothing and the Son being merely chief among the
creatures created by God the Father.264
The most thoughtful use of Genesis 1:26 comes in Book IV of Against Arius, in
which Victorinus argues for consubstantiality of Father and Son
262. Clark, 197. Clark follows the word enousion with her translation, substance, in parentheses; I have
omitted this as it is an inaccurate translation o f that word. AA II 1,34-37. Veneremur ergo deum et
esse dicamus, id est Ivo vo io v, qui constituit omnia, caelum et terram, mundum, spiritus, angelos,
animas, animalia ethominem a d imaginem et similitudinem imaginis eorum. CSEL 83/1,169. The
progressive comparison here between God and the created order sounds similar to Victorinus
description in 1 33 (Clark, 145): For we believe in a God who acts, as for example: In the beginning
God made heaven and earth, and he made the angels, man, and all things in the heavens and on
earth.
263. Another quasi-creedal statement opens this short section: Thus we confess him to be also Father o f
the only begotten Son; this is the feith o f a ll... Clark, 197.
264. Clark, 197. For i f God is the Father o f all things through creation, in what way is he the Father o f the
only begotten i f not be another way than he is Father o f creatures, begetting from substance, not from
nothing. But there was no other substance before all things than the substance o f the Father.
Therefore, Christ is from the substance o f the Father. AA II 1,48-52.
265. Hadot points out that in Book IV 29,39-33,25. Victorinus is using a collection o f texts correspondent
with the ideas he articulates about the Son: the identity o f the form o f God as the Son, the identity o f
the Son as Logos and the identity o f the Logos as Jesus. This is especially important for Victorinus
because o f the general problem o f addressing what exactly is the form o f God: La form e
primitivement confondue avec Dieu s engendre, done devient Fils et, dans son mouvement
dexteriorisation, done Logos qui tend k sabaisser vers les inferieurs, a sincamer; elle devient done
Jesus et VEsprit Saint. Cest la manifestation visible de la former cachee en Dieu. Et tout ceci est le
commentaire de Phil. 2,6. Hadot, Traites Theologiques, 1044-45.
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They are therefore homoousion in all things, in to be, and to live, and to understand;
likewise, insofar as both are khorema (receptacle)266 and pleromcr, likewise, insofar as they are
image and image; for it was said: According to our image; and insofar as light and light;
and insofar as true light and true light; and insofar as Spirit and Spirit; and insofar as
movement and movement, but the Father is movement in repose, that is, interior movement and
nothing other than movement, not movement in movement; but the Son is movement in
movement; both are, nevertheless, movement; likewise, both are action and operation; both are
life and both having life from themselves; will and the same will; virtue, wisdom, word; God and
God; living God and living God; eternal and eternal; invisible and invisible; for it was said by
Matthew: No one has known the Son except the Father, nor the Father, except the Son. They
are both together; for this is what homoousion signifies, beyond the same ousian 267
Within this dense passage Victorinus makes a statement about the consubstantiality of
the Father and the Son, using a chain of proof-texts, creedal language, and
philosophical terms. Both Father and Son, he states, are receptacle (xcoptuia) and
fullness (jtA.rjpa>pa, or pleroma), having explained at length in the previous
paragraph that the Father is the pleroma, who has begotten his infinite, and identical,
receptacle. In IV 29,24-38 Victorinus continues the pleroma/receptacle idea, linking
it with X from X statements to describe Father and Son: the pleroma/receptacle is the
all from all, light from light, true light from true light, and God from God.268
There is distinction between them, Victorinus notes; for example, the Father is
movement in repose and the Son is movement in movement. But same produces same:
266. Another instance o f Clark translating a technical term in parentheses, just as each o f Victorinus uses o f
homoousios is followed by (consubstantial). Unless a term is rare I leave out these parenthetical additions.
267. Clark, 294-95. AA IV 29,2438. 'O goouoiov ergo in omnibus, in eo quod est esse et vivere et
intellegere; item in eo quod uterque xpr||ia et JiX.1)pp.a est; item in eo quod imago et imago;
dictum est enim: ad imaginem nostram; et in eo quod lumen et lumen; et in eo quod verum lumen et
verum lumen; et in eo quod spiritus et spiritus; et in eo quod motus et motus; sed pater motus
quiescens, id est interior et nihil aliud quam motus, non motione motus, filius autem motione motus
est, uterque tamen motus; item uterque actio et opera; uterque vita et uterque a se habens vitam;
voluntas et voluntas eadem; virtus; sapientia; verbum; deus et deus; deus vivus et deus vivus; ex
aetemo et ex aetemo; invisibilis et invisibilis; nam dictum a Mattheo: nemo novit filium nisi pater,
neque patrem nisi filius. Simul ambo; et hoc enim significat opoouoiov, praeter eandem o u oiav.
CSEL 83/1,268-69. The quotation from Matthew, for it was said by Matthew, is Matt. 11:27: All
things have been delivered to me by my Father; and no one knows the Father except the Son and any
one to whom the Son chooses to reveal him.
268. Clark, 294-95.
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not only will and the same will, but also same power (virtus), wisdom, and word269; same
God and God, living God and living God; same eternal and eternal; same invisible and
invisible. These X from A statements can be made because Father and Son are image
and image, for which Victorinus quotes Genesis 1:26according to our imageas his
proof. He then follows this up with a quotation from Matthew 11:27: No one has known
the Son except the Father, nor the Father, except the Son. I will comment more on
Matthew 11:27 below; what is important here is that Genesis 1:26 appears as part of a
chain of texts that includes as proof-texts I Corinthians 1:24 (the Son is the Power and
Wisdom of the Father) and Matthew 11:27 (that only the Father and the Son truly
know/have full knowledge of each other).270
The last appearance of Genesis 1:26 in Against Arius is in the next paragraph, where
Victorinus uses it to speak of Christ as the Form of God, placing it at the end of another
chain to texts 271 (Wherever Genesis 1:26 appears in Against Arius as part of Victorinus
argument for the Son being homoousios, it will be constellated with other significant
Victorine loci for speaking of divine visibility.) The chain begins with the remainder of
Matthew 11:27272: All that the Father has, he has given to me, and all that the Father has, I
also have. Victorinus restates that the Father and Son are identical and equal and appeals
to the precise Forma Dei text, Philippians 2:6: .. .and if equal, Paul rightly said o f the Son,
of Jesus Christ: Who, although he was in the form of God, did not consider it robbery to
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be equal to God. Many divine and magnificent mysteries are contained here.
To say
that Christ is the Form of God means, for Victorinus, that Christ is the Form o f God in
whom one sees that he has all that God has.274 This Form of God is the Image of God,
who is the same as God. To make his point, Victorinus begins this passage with Matthew
11:27, then connects it to Philippians 2:6, Exodus 33:20ff (No one has ever seen my
face...), and finally Genesis 1:26.
As noted already, other appearances of Genesis 1:26 in Against Arius are for the sake
of Victorinus anthropology, to speak of the creation of man and the origin of the human
soul. It is significant, however, that two sections dealing with Genesis 1:26 in Against
Arius are not merely anthropological considerations. Victorinus discusses the creation of
man according the image and likeness of God, but as part of proving the Son as
homoousios with the Father. We get a brief hint of this in Book IA 20 when Victorinus
concedes that let us make man according to our image refers to the soul of man.275 The
human soul is according to the image and likeness of God, and the human soul is rational,
just as Christ is the Image of God and is the Logos. The soul is not the equivalent of the
Logos, he says, but is rational; and as the soul lives, and Christ is life, it proves itself to
be according to the image of God. But Christ is the Image of God, to which the soul
corresponds accordingly, as the handiwork of a creation shows its creator.
Victorinus most extended discussion of the human soul, and Christ as homoousios,
comes in a section of AA IB. He begins by introducing again the question of what the
273. Clark, 295. AA IV 29,42-30,2. et si par, recte Paulus de filio, de Iesu Christo dixit: qui, cum esset in
dei forma, non rapinam arbitratus est, ut esset aequalis deo. Multa hie divina et magnifie s mysteria
continentur. CSEL 83/1,269.
274. Clark, 295. AA IV 30,24. Primum quod Christas form a dei est in quo ostenditur omnia habere quae
deus habetP CSEL 83/1,269. This is the first paragraph o f the section o f extended comment on Phil.
2:5-7 in AA TV 30.
275. The entire discussion is in Clark, 118-19. AA 1 20,24-67. CSEL 83/1, 86-88.
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soul is, if Scripture says let us make man according to our image and likeness.276
The human soul is an image of the Image and lives because the Image, Christ, is Life.
The human soul also has a nous that comes from the Nous. This soul is capable o f union
with the Nous if it looks toward that Nous, rather than looking downward and becoming
mere intellect. As one reads this passage about the souls creation, fall, and possible
redemption, it is hard not to hear echoes of Origen. This becomes even more striking
when Victorinus mentions different theories about the composition of the human soul,
based on an interpretation of Genesis 1:26. He admits that his understanding is o f a
twofold soul and a twofold nous, based on the mystical interpretation of Matthew 24:3941 and Lukes addition in Luke 17:3439. 277 Reading this section strongly suggests that
Victorinus did not just glean some of Origens exegetical ideas from someone like Hilary
of Poitiers, but read Origens commentaries himself.278 That would explain why this
section of Against Arius reads like a passage from commentary on Genesis by Origen.
276. The entire discussion isA A lB 61,1-64,30, which ends Book I. Clark, 188-93.
277. Clark, 190-91. As for the twofold nous and the twofold soul, the Gospel according to Matthew and
the Gospel according to Luke explain this. Indeed they express it thus: It will be thus also at the
coming o f the Son o f Man; then two men will be in the field; one will be taken, and one w ill be left;
two women w ill be at the mill, one will be take and one will be left. Luke, however, added something
about the twofold body: That night there will be two in one bed, one will be taken, the other left. But
there are others, similarly expressed. Therefore the two in the field are the two logoi or the two
nouses: the heavenly logos and the other, material; the two women occupied in grinding are the two
souls, the heavenly soul and the material soul. Therefore, the heavenly nous or logos and the heavenly
soul will be taken. But the material logos and the soul will be left.AA 162,11-25. CSEL 83/1, 163-64
278. Others have noticed this, with not enough investigation done. See the brief discussion in Hadot,
Marius Victorinus, 282-83; also the exhaustive, masterful article o f GyOrgy Heidi, Some Traces o f
an Ancient Latin Compilation o f Origens Commentary on Genesis, Appendix 3 in O rigens
influence on the young Augustine: A chapter in the history o f Origenism, Eastern Christian Studies
(Piscataway, NJ: Gorgias Press LLC, 2003), 23773. This article argues that the so-called Tractatus
Origenis, a collection o f twenty Latin homilies attributed to Gregory o f Elvira, owes its Qrigenian
interpretations to Novatians translation o f various sections o f Origens works for his own personal
use, which thereafter made its way into the hands o f other Latins who could not read Origens works
in the original Greek. (Origenian here means an ostensible influence from and familiarity with
Origen, as opposed to the other fourth-century Evagrian category o f Origenist.) Far more common
is the supposition that Victorinus lack o f reading Origen is just another feature o f Victorinus the
isolated, unread Latin. Those who think so should be reminded o f how fluent Victorinus was in
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In his commentary on Genesis 1:26 Victorinus has already said that our soul is created
after the image of the heavenly nous and logos; i.e., according to the image of God and of
Christ. Christ, he says further, is life and Logos and image of God, the image in which
God the Father is seen,279 and living equivalent of God the Father who is to be and the
Holy Spirit who is to understand. The human soul, then, bears witness to the true nature
of God and to Christ being homoousios with the Father. All of this Victorinus extracts
from Genesis 1:26:
If then the soul as soul is at once to be of soul, to live and to understand, if it is therefore
three, the soul is as the image of the image of the Triad on High. For the soul as soul in its to
be, giving both life and knowledge, possessing these three together, homoousia in unity, before
understanding and yet these three are individuated as in their own substances, without being
separated by sectioning, by division, by overflow, by extension or reproduction, but they are
always three, each one existing really in the other which really exists also, and this substantially.
Therefore the soul is according to the image.280
The use and doctrinal exegesis of Genesis 1:26 among other, earlier Latins is not so
extensive as one might imagine. Tertullian employs it only for a few timesthough one
of these instances is in a significant section of Against Praxeas in which he is pondering
the need of Scripture citations to prove a plurality of persons within the Godhead. If the
number of persons within the Trinity is found to be scandalous, Tertullian opines, then
Greek. Cf. also Simonettis assumption that Victorinus could not have consulted Origen's Pauline
commentaries when composing his own. Manlio Simonetti, Biblical Interpretation in the E arly
Church, 9 1 -5 . Because o f scholarly consensus it suffices here to assume that the author o f the
Origenian tractates was Gregory o f Elvira.
279. Clark, 191-92. As already noted, in AA IV 30,5-11 Victorinus ties Phil.2:6 to Gen. 1:26 and Ex.
33:20,23: Therefore, God also has his image, and the Son is the image o f God. And indeed, if it
was said: N o one has ever seen my face, and it was said: You will see me from behind, there is
without doubt a fa c e fo r God, there is through the Son an image o f God, or rather the Son is also the
image o f God, as was said: Who was in the form o f God. Whence it was rightly said: Let us make
man according to our image and likeness.
280. Clark, 192. AA IB 63,16-24. Si igitur anima, secundum quod anima est, et animae esse est et vivere
et intellegere, tria ergo, superioris triados anima est, ut imago imaginis. Est enim, iuxta quod anima
est, in eo quod est esse, et vitam dans et intellegentiam, ante intellegere simul habens ista o p o o u o ia
in uno, et sunt singula ut sua substantia, non scissione, non divisione, non effusione, nec protentione,
neque partu praecisa, sed sempitema tria, aliud exsistens in alio exsistente et ista substantialiter. Iuxta
imaginem ergo. CSEL 83/1, 165.
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why do verses such as Genesis 1:26 and 3:22 (Behold the man is become as one of
us..
speak in the first-person plural? It was not, he explains, merely the angels who
were being addressed, as Jews had intrepreted; rather, the Son was being addressed:
Nay rather, because there already was attached to him the Son, a second Person, his Word, and a
third Person, the Spirit in the Word, for that reason he spoke in the plural, Let its make, and Our,
and Of us. For in whose company was he making man, and like whom was he making him? He
was speaking with the Son who was to assume manhood, and the Spirit who was to sanctify man,
as with ministers and mediators in consequence of the unity of the Trinity.... But there was one in
whose image he was making him, the Sons in fact, who because he was to be the surer and truer
man caused that man to be called his image who at that time had to be formed of clay, as the
image and similitude of the true.281
Tertullian, in his argument for Genesis 1:26 speaking of the Son, is on the cusp o f
sounding like Victorinus. At the end of this chapter in Against Praxeas he reemphasizes
the distinction of persons: Yet although I always maintain one substance in three who
cohere, I must still, as a necessary consequence of the meaning (of the passage), say that
he who commands is other than he who makes.
Another germane use of Genesis 1:26 comes from Novatian in his work De trinitate,
written sometime in the 240s. It appears in chapter 1 as a text to confirm the reality and
order of God creating human beings, but in chapter 17 we suddenly see that Genesis 1:26,
for Novatian, is obviously and intimately connected with the Son of God and his presence
with the Father at the creation. He rallies texts such as John 1:3,14 and Psalm 44(45):2.283
281. Evans, Against Praxeas, 145. Adverstts Praxean 12,29-35,1-4. immo quia iam adhaerebat illi filius
secunda persona, sermo ipsius, et tertia, spiritus in sermone, ideo pluraliter pronuntiavit Faciamus et
Nostram et Nobis, cum quibus enim faciebat hominem, et quibus faciebat similem? filio quidem qui
erat induturus hominem, spiritu vero qui erat sanctificaturus hominem, quasi cum ministris et arbitris
ex unitate trinitatis loquebatur.... erat autem ad cuius imaginem faciebat, ad filii scilicet, qui homo
futurus certior et verior imaginem suam fecerat dici hominem qui tunc de limo formari habebat,
imago veri et similitudo. Evans, 101-02.
282. Evans, Against Praxeas, 146. Adversus Praxean 12,1720. ceterum (etsi) ubique teneo unam
substantiam in tribus cohaerentibus, tamen alium dicam oportet ex necessitate sensus eum qui iubet et
eum qui facit. Evans, 102.
283. My heart has uttered a good word. Specifically, the part o f Jn. 1:14 that says the Word was made
flesh and dwelt among us.
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No one else was present with God at creation, and it was through the Son and upon the
Son that the works of creation were brought about. This argument stands alongside
Novatians other crucial point about Genesis 1:26: that Let us make man to our image
and likeness means man was made through Christ, through the Son of God. If God
made man to the image of God, then he who made man to the image of God must be
God. Therefore Christ is God.
OStA
which Novatian sets forth an extended consideration of the meaning of the Christ-hymn
of Philippians 2:5-7. As he does so, he carefully distinguishes between the two concepts
of form of God and image of God. It is not important here, as in chapter 17, to state
that Christ is present with the Father at creation and that Christ was the generative agent
of creation. What matters is the difference between man and Christ: man is made
according to the image of God (Genesis 1:26) but not according to the form of God.
Christ is in the form of God the Father, and, as Novatian mentions further, is the
Imitator of all His Fathers works. Inasmuch as He also works as His Father does...
(John 5:17 and 5:19).285
It is clear to Novatian that Genesis 1:26 is a text that speaks both of the distinct
existence of the Son and the relationship between the Father and the Son. At the
beginning of chapter 26 he begins a long list of texts meant to counter patripassian
284. Novatian, The Trinity, The spectacles, Jewish foods, In praise ofpurity, Letters, [b y] Novatian, trans.
Russell J. DeSimone, O.S.A., Fathers o f the Church, vol. 67, (Washington, D.C.: CUA Press, 1974),
66. (Henceforth DeSimone, The Trinity.) Novatian, D e trinitate, Chap. XVH.5.33-37 Per Christum
igitur homo factus est, ut per Dei Filium. Sed Deus hominem ad imaginem D ei fecit. Deus est ergo
qui fecit hominem ad imaginem Dei. Deus ergo Christus est, CCSL, Vol. IV, 4 2 - 3 .1 have mentioned
above that Victorinus treatment o f Gen. 1:26 in Against Arius involves the creation o f man according
die image and likeness o f God as part o f proving the Son as homoousios with the Father.
285. DeSimone, The Trinity, 81. The theme o f the grand summary o f Against Arius IV 30 is that Christ is
the Form and Image o f God, with the chain o f texts Matthew 11:27, Philippians 2:6, Col. 1:15, Ex.
33:20 and Gen. 1:26. It seems rather compelling to believe that Victorinus, when writing AA IV 30,
was thinking o f Novatians D e Trinitate 22.
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modalist claims that the Son is the Father by first mentioning the meaning and
importance of Genesis 1:26:
For they want Him not to be the Second Person after the Father, but the Father Himself. Since we
can readily refute them, we shall say just a few words. For who does not acknowledge that the
Second Person after the Father is the Son, when he reads what was said by the Father to the Son
in view of this relationship: Let us make men to Our image and likeness.. .286
Contemporaries of Victorinus, such as Phoebadius of Agen and Gregory of Elvira,
hardly used Genesis 1:26, and did not use it for creating arguments on behalf of
consubstantiality. Genesis 1:26 appears in two of Gregorys Origenian tractates, but only
for the purpose of discussing the creation of man.
non
Victorinus, appears to understand the need for using Genesis 1:26 in arguments on behalf
of the Sons divine identity and nature. Most of Hilarys uses of Genesis 1:26 in his De
Trinitate are to prove that God the Father was not the only one present at creation.288 The
presence of the Son with the Father is an easy entree into discussing the nature and the
identity of the Son; this Hilary does in Book III, his first use of Genesis 1:26 in the work.
In Book III, 23 Hilary argues for the unity of Father and Son, and the full divinity of
each, using John 10:30 and 14:10 and Hebrews 1:3.
referring to Hebrews 1:3 and the image of his substance, a perfect fullness of divinity
286. DeSimone, The Trinity, 90. D e Trinitate XXVI,2,10-3,15. noluntenim ilium secundam esse
personam post Patrem, sed ipsum Patrem. Quibus quia facile respondetur, pauca dicentur. Quis enim
non secundam Filii post Patrem agnoscat esse personam, cum legat dictum a Patre consequenter ad
Filium: Faciamus hominem ad imaginem et similitudinem nostram... CCSL Vol. 4 ,6 2 .
287. Cf. above, GyOrgy Heidis opinion on the authorship o f the tractates. For purposes o f Victorine
contemporaries I refer to the author o f the tractates as Gregory o f Elvira, partly because not enough
work has been done on the question o f their authorship, plus the CCSL editor assumes no other author
than Gregory. Gen. 1:26 appear in tractates 1 ,45/46,161/163; XIV,185/186. Gregory ofElvira,
Gregorii Iliberritani Episcopi, ed. Vincenius Bulhart, CCSL Vol. 64 (Tumholt: Brepols, 1967).
288. The use o f Gen. 1:26 in Hilarys D e Trinitate occurs in Books III,IV and V. The most significant uses
are at 111,23 and IV, 18; o f secondary importance are the instances in IV, 17, IV ,19 and V ,7 -9 .
289. Before moving on to the mention o f Heb. 1:3 Hilary makes the confession, we acknowledge the
same similarity o f power and the fullness o f the divinity in each o f them. McKenna, H ilary o f
Poitiers. The Trinity, 85. D e trinitate 111,23,11-12. sed eandem in utroque et uirtutis similtudinem et
deitatis plenitudinem confitemur. CCSL, Vol. 62,95.
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in each of the Father and the Son, so that the Son is neither a diminution of the Father nor
an imperfect Son from the Father:
An image is not alone and the likeness is not to itself. Nothing can be like God unless it is from
Him. That which is similar in everything does not originate from somewhere else, and the
similarity of the one to the other does not allow them to be joined together by anything
contradictory. Do not change similar things and do not separate things that are not distinct from
each other! He who said: Let us make mankind in our image and likeness reveals the mutual
similarity between them from the fact that He uses the phrase our likeness.290
With each use of Genesis 1:26, Hilary stresses that God is not solitary, because the text of
the verse reads owr image and likeness (emphasis added). When he uses 1:26 in IV, 18,
he refers again to a common nature and common operations:
Therefore, when we read the words: Let us make mankind in our image and likeness, because
both expressions signify that He does not live only by Himself and that one is not different from
the other, we must also profess our belief in the teaching that He does not live by Himself and
that one is not different from the other, while we know that both of them possess the property of
the one nature, because He says our image and not our images. It is not enough merely to
explain the meaning of the words if the understanding of them is not also followed by the
performance of the actions.291
Hilary, finishing his De Trinitate in the early 360s, uses Genesis 1:26 for the same
purposes as Victorinus: to establish the common and fully divine nature between the Son
and the Father. Though a few other contemporary Latins use Genesis 1:26 as a cogent
proof-text for arguing on behalf of the renewed cause of homoousios, it is Victorinus and
Hilary who have this text in common as an important witness.
290. McKenna, Hilary o f Poitiers: The Trinity, 85. De trinitate 111,23,19-27. Imago sola non est, et
similitudo non sibi est. Deo autem simile aliquid esse nisi quod ex se erit non potest. Non enim
aliunde est quod in omnibus simile est, neque diuersitatem duobus admisceri alterius ad alterum
similitudo permittit. N e similia permutes, neque sibi ex ueritate indiscreta disiungas: quia qui dixit:
Faciamus hominem a d imaginem et similitudinem nostram, inuicem esse sui similes in eo quod
similitudinem nostram dicat ostendit. CCSL, Vol. 6 2 ,9 5 -6 .
291. McKenna, Hilary o f Poitiers: The Trinity, 108. D e trinitate IV,18,1-9. Cum itaque legimus:
Faciamus hominem a d imaginem et similitudinem nostram, quia sermo uterque ut non solitarium
tantum ita neque differentem esse significat, nobis quoque nec solitarius tantum nec diuersus est
confitendus, cognita per id quod nostram imaginem dicit, non etiam imagines nostras, unius in
utroque proprietate naturae. Non sufficit autem solam uerborum adtulisse rationem, nisi dictorum
intellegentiam etiam rerum operatio consequatur. CCSL, Vol. 62,121.
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K n o w in g G o d : J o h n 1:18
Seeing God is a primary means of knowing him, so John 1:18 (No one has ever seen
God; the only-begotten Son, who is in the bosom of the Father, he had made him
known...) has obvious importance in the consideration of divine visibility and
invisibility.292 The testimony of John 1:18 received attention during the Trinitarian
Controversy because it is a visibility text about the revelation of God, the ontological
unity the Son has with the Father, and the Sons role in revealing the Fathermuch akin
to a proof-text such as Matthew 11:27. But for early Arians, the text was key also because
it gave them a unique title for the Son: the only-begotten (unigenitus) Son or onlybegotten God, therefore God the Father is the God of God the Son, who can be
effectively treated as a second God. From God the Son as the only-begotten second
God it is only a short step to an inferior, reduced God who even himself attests that the
Father is greater than he (John 14:28).
Victorinus makes frequent use John 1:18 in his writings, most often connecting it with
other texts. He appeals to it shortly after the beginning of Book I of Against Arius, and
then near the end of Book IV. This text remains close to the surface of his conscious
reflection in writing against anti-Nicene claims about Christ. In his Letter to Candidas,
292. The Greek text o f Jn. 1:18 introduces intriguing problems for both Nicenes and anti-Nicenes. The
most ancient witnesses such as Papyrus 66, Original Sinaiticus, Vaticanus and Ephraemi read 0 e o v
oubeig ccopaxev h c o j i o t e povoyevfis Qzdq 6 <bv eig t o v x o X j i o v t o o narpog e|TiYhaTo. But the
Majority text readings, including Alexandrinus and Third Corrector Ephraemi read 6 povoyevfig
ul6g The earlier non-majority reading o f what was taken as a title for the Son was rendered in Latin
translations as unigenitus Deus, and otherwise as unigentius Filius. Kenneth Steinhausers
unconvincing theory is that the use o f this title o f John 1:18, only-begotten God, in the Dedication
Creed o f 341 proves what he calls an unbroken Latin Lucianic tradition, from the Arianism o f
Lucian o f Antioch (who, he claims, wrote the 341 creed), straight to the Latin Homoians o f the 350s
and beyond. The rather long reach o f his theory depends heavily on Gustave Bardys 1936 monograph
on Lucian, though Steinhauser never mentions that. It is untenable that Latin Homoians, as
Steinhauser claimed, saw themselves as the direct theological descendents o f Lucians theology.
Kenneth B. Steinhauser, Unigenitus deus in western Arian literature (paper presented at the
Thirteenth International Conference on Patristic Studies, Oxford, UK, August, 1999).
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written shortly before his treatise Against Arius, Victorinus presents scriptural arguments
for the Sons consubstantiality, along with long, complex philosophical arguments. In
spite of the labyrinthine philosophical discourse on the place of the Father and the Son in the
existents and nonexistents of the universe, the Letter to Ccmdidus has a theme about the Sons
essential identity and proximity to the Father, and an obvious scriptural locus: John 1:18.
The Letter to Candidus appeals to the authority of Scripture to prove the sonship of
Jesus.
Victorinus also provides a refutation of classic Arian arguments, such as the Son
coming from nothingness or being created. But what especially concerns Victorinus in
this lengthy holding-forth with his interlocutor is the issue of God, existents, and non
existents, in order to show that the Son, who is both Being and Logos, cannot come from
nothing. The scriptural capstone of this argument, Victorinus argues, comes from the
qualities and conditions of the Son found in Colossians 1:15-18 and John 1:1. The Son is
before all things, through whom and in whom are all things, and was with
God. ..in the beginning. Most of all, the Son is in the bosom of the Father (John 1:18),
proving the unity of the Son and the Father.
The importance of John 1:18 is readily apparent in the opening address to Candidus
the probably fictitious character of anti-Nicene oppositionin Book IA of Against
Arius, in which Victorinus briefly summarizes early Arian and orthodox positions on the
Son. John 1:18 already has been placed on the staging area for the opening arguments of
the treatise, since in the Second Letter o f Candidus Victorinus has reproduced the text of
Arius letter to Eusebius of Nicomedia, wherein Eusebius quotes the title for the Son
293. The essential loci o f Scripture for this argument are Jn. 10:30, 14:9 and 14:10.
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taken from John 1:18, only-begotten.294 After his brief, pro-forma address to Candidus
near the beginning of Book IA, Victorinus explains that, contra Eusebius, he will prove
that the Son is bom, and substantially Son, by the use of all of Scripture.. .if the Spirit of
God permits and according to our power.295 He proposes that it is possible to know God
and the Son of God, and that one is the Father and the other the Son.
Victorinus proceeds to cite John 1:18 as proof for knowing God, and this justifies
speaking about God as well as the Son of God. From John 1:18 Victorinus retrieves a rich
amount of evidence:
It is therefore possible to speak of God and consequently of the Son also. For who has declared
the Father? The Son. Who is he? He who is in the bosom. Therefore not only did he come
forth, but the Son is always in the bosom, as the capable teacher about the Father. What did he
tell? There there is a God? But Jews and pagans had previously said this. What therefore did he
say? That God is Father, but that he is Son, and he is of the same substance and that he has come
forth from the Father.296
The Son reveals the Father, being always in the Father in spite of also having gone forth
from the Father. The Son is identified as the sufficiens doctor, or capable teacher of
the Father. The Son has not only told people about God, but about himself as Son of God,
that he has come from God his Father and is of the same substance.297 To prove this,
Victorinus cites John 8:19: If you had known me, you would have known my Father.
This he would never have said if he were not the Son and the Son substantially. It is
intriguing that this passage connects John 1:18, a visibility text, with a knowledge text,
294. The second half o f the Second Letter to Candidus is part o f the text o f the Letter o f Eusebius to Paulinus.
295. Clark, 91.
296. Clark, 92. AA 1 2,23-30. Possibile igitur dicere de deo et idcirco et de filio. Quis enim de patre
exposuit? Filius. Quis iste? Qui est in gremio. Non solum igitur processit, sed et in gremio semper est
filius, sufficiens doctor de patre. Quid enarravit? Quoniam deus? Et Iudaei ante hoc et ethnici
enarrarunt. Quid ergo enarravit? Patrem deum, se autem filium, et quod ex eadem substantia et quod a
patre exierit. CSEL 83/1, 57.
297. In the exordium o f Against Arius, Book 1 2,6-42, the two sources o f the knowledge o f God are the Son
and the Holy Spirit, sometimes cast somewhat differently by Victorinus, as Scripture and inspiration
o f the Spirit.
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John 8:19. One might have expected Victorinus to tie John 1:18 in with another visibility
text such as John 14:9: If you have seen me you have seen the Father. But here John
8:19 functions as a surrogate text for one like John 14:9, because Victorinus is equating
seeing with knowing: they are almost the same, because one leads to the other. This is
why he proceeds to the third link in his chain of texts, Romans 1:20: For if he were a
creation, the Father would not be known through him, but the power of God and the Divinity,
as Paul said: For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world, are clearly seen,
being understood by the things that are made; his eternal power also, and divinity.298
Instead of looking at the Son and discerning only attributes (such the power and divinity
of God) that could be found any part of creation, in the only-begotten Son we see the
Father. That is, the creation reveals a creator; thus, in looking at the Son we must be able
to discern the reality of a Father.299 Beyond the Son revealing the Father, Victorinus
concludes, the Holy Spirit reveals the Son, for which he cites John 14:26.300
Book IA has one more use of the concept of John 1:18 in the form of a companion,
surrogate verse, John 6:46: Not that any one has seen the Father except him who is from
God; he has seen the Father. This text restates what has already been heard in John 1.
Victorinus uses it in IA 6, where he dwells on the titles of the Son and the realities those
298. Clark, 92. A A 1 2,33-37. Figmentum enim si esset, non ex ipso pater nosceretur, sed potentia dei et
divinitas, ut Paulus dixit: invisibilia enim eius a creatura mundi p e r ea quae fa cta sunt, intellecta
noscuntur, aeterna quoque eius virtus ac divinitas. CSEL 83/1, 57.
299. Hadot sees this as a primary refutation o f Arianism, though this seems hardly at odds with antiNicene theologys easy but qualified acknowledging o f the Son and Father. Still it is an interesting
distinction between the order o f nature and the order o f persons which Victorinus did not exploit as
being between the willing creature and the divine substance. Hadot says that Ici est en germe la
distinction entre les operations divines ad extra et la vie intime de Dieu, qui apparaitra clairement chez
saint Augustin. Hadot, Traites Theologiques, 736.
300. But the Counselor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, he will teach you all
things, and bring to your remembrance all that I have said to you.
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titles reveal to us.301 In IA 6, Victorinus uses a Johannine proof-text in nearly every
sentence, and makes claims for titles such as Logos and life. He also assertsbut in
passing, as if it is already implicitly understoodthat the Son is from God.302
But it is the ability to see God for which Victorinus will use John 1:18 again and again
in his arguments for the revelation given in the Son, and the Sons consubstantiality,
which alone are what allow for a true knowledge of God. In Book IB 53, Victorinus
argues for the Father and Son being in each other, and the divine life being a reality that
is both interior (Father) and exterior (Son). He again equates knowing and seeing:
Since the Father is in the Son, when you will see and know the Son, you will see and know
the Father. If anyone sees me, he also sees the Father. Indeed for that reason it was said
that the Son is form of the Father. But here the form is not understood as outside the
substance, nor as with us, as an appearance added to substance; but this form is a certain
subsisting substance in which there appears and is shown that which is hidden and veiled in
another. But God is as something veiled. For No one sees God. Therefore the Son is the
form in which God is seen.303
In addition to that passing reference to John 1:18 (the mostly likely attribution of the
statement that no one sees God), there is the quotation of John 14:9. The mention of
form of God is a possible allusion to Philippians 2:6. We will see the inclusion of
Philippians 2:6 as part of the chain used to prove the consubstantial Son revealing the
Father later, in other books of Against Arius. For example, in Book III 6 there is an
invocation prayer, which Clark, using Hadots outline-analysis subheading from the
301. This extended discussion o f titles begins in A A 1 5 and goes into chapter 7, with titles introduced
constantly with the same formula to continue the reflection: that the Son is G od ...life...ligh t...
Savior... Son o f God and so on.
302. Clark, 97. That he is from God: N o one has seen the Father except him who is from the Father. AA
I 6,12-13. Quod ex deo: non vidit patrem aliquis, nisi qui est a patre. CSEL 83/1,62.
303. Clark, 177-78. AA IB 53,6-15. quoniam in filio pater, cum videritis filium et intellexeritis, videbitis
et intellegetis patrem. Si quis me vidit, vidit et patrem. Propter hoc enim dictum est, quoniam filius
form a est patris. Non autem nunc forma foris extra substantiam intellegitur, neque ut in nobis adiacens
substantiae facies, sed substantia quaedam subsistens, in qua apparet et demonstratur, quod
occultatum et velatum est in alio. Deus autem ut velatum quiddam est. Nemo enim videt deum. Forma
igitur filius, in qua videtur deus. CSEL 83/1, 150.
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Sources Chretiennes edition, calls Elevation towards the Contemplation of God.304 In
the beginning portion of the invocation there appears to be a use of Romans 1:20,305
Colossians 1:15 (image), and Philippians 2:6 (form), all cogent visibility texts.
From the image of knowing and understanding God the prayer proceeds to the idea of
seeing God:
Certainly, after the coming of the Savior, since in the Savior we see God himself, since by him
we are taught and instructed, since we have received from him the Holy Spirit, master of
understanding, what else will such a master of understanding give us except to know, to
understand, to confess God? Our ancestors also asked what God is or who he is. And this is the
answer given them by the one who is always in the bosom of the Father. You see me and
you seek my Father? I have been with you a long time. Whoever has seen me, has seen the
Father. I am in the Father and the Father is in me.3
The reality here of the Sons identity, attested to by John 1:18, gives credence to the
Sons other claim (in John 14:9,10) to reveal the Father; the true knowledge of God is
given in the faith of the consubstantial Son and Holy Spirit, together with the Father,
the consubstantiality which alone permits of true knowledge of God.
The linking of the two visibility texts, John 1:18 and 14:9, is even more explicit at
the beginning of Book III, when Victorinus connects the notion of seeing God to his
favorite Old Testament visibility text, Exodus 33:20:
And because by radiance light is revealed, or by action power is revealed, for this reason:
Whoever has seen me, has seen the Father. And because no one sees the power itself alone:
No one has ever seen God. And since power is life in repose and knowledge in repose, but life
and knowledge are actions, if someone were to see God he must die, because the life and
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knowledge of God remain in themselves and are not in act, but every act is exterior: indeed, for us
to live is to live externally; to see God is therefore a death. No one, says the Scripture, has
ever seen God and lived. Indeed, like is seen by like. External life therefore must be forgotten,
knowledge must be forgotten, if we wish to see God, and this for us is death.307
This is explained even more explicitly in the next paragraph with another reference to
John 14:9:
We therefore, if we are in Christ, see God through Christ, that is, through the true life, that is,
through the true Image. And through an image which, because it is true, is therefore of the same
substance, because the power is also in the action. There we see God, therefore, and hence this:
Whoever has seen me, has seen God.308
The arguments for consubstantiality of Father and Son are repeated at the beginning of
Book III before Victorinus moves on to arguing the main concept of Book III, the
consubstantiality of all three hypostases of the Trinity.
So we know the importance Victorinus attaches to John 1:18as a visibility text, and
what text he will use to explain it (John 14:9, along with other ancillary visibility texts).
The best example of a passage rich with these proofs comes in Book IV when Victorinus
again asserts that the Son is the Life and the Form of the Father:
Whoever has seen me, has also seen the Father. Indeed, the Son of God is the form of God, that
is, life which is the form of living. For it was said by Paul to the Philippians: Who although he
was in the form of God, did not think it robbery to be equal to God. Likewise to the Colossians:
He who is the image of the invisible God. Therefore, Jesus Christ is both the image and the
form of God. But we have said that in the form one sees that of which it is form; and, in the same
way, through the image also, one sees the one of which it is the image, above all if the one whose
image it is, invisible, as it was said here: Image of the invisible God; and in the same way it
was said in the Gospel according to John: No one has at any time seen God, except the only
begotten Son who went forth from his bosom. And likewise the following was said to Moses:
You will not see my face. For who has seen my face and has lived? Nevertheless, he promised
307. Clark, 221. AA III 1,36-48. Et quia effulgentia declaratur lumen vel actio(ne) declaratur potentia,
idcirco: qui me vidit, vidit patrem. Et quia potentiam ipsam solam nemo videt: deum nemo vid it
umquam. Et quoniam potentia cessans vita est et cessans intellegentia, haec autem vita et intellegentia
actio est, si quis deum viderit, moriatur necesse est, quia dei vita et intellegentia in semet ipsa est, non
in actu, omnis autem actus foris est, hoc vero est nostrum vivere quod foris est vivere, ergo est mors
deum videre. Nemo, inquit, umquam deum vidit et vixit. Simili enim simile videtur. Omittenda igitur
vita foris, omittenda intellegentia, si deum videre volumus, et hoc nobis mors e st CSEL 83/1,192-93.
308. Clark, 221.AA III 2,4-8. N os ergo, si sumus in Christo, deum per Christum videmus, id est per vitam
veram, hoc est per imaginem veram. Et quia veram, ergo eiusdem substantiae, quia et in actione
potentia est. Ibi ergo deum videmus, et hinc illud: qui me vidit, vidit deum. CSEL 83/1, 193.
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to let himself be seen from the rear, that is, the back and the rest of the body with the exception of
the face. How many mysteries there are here, how many kinds of questions, how many signs to
declare that God and Jesus Christ are substance, and that they are both one substance, and that
they are both together one substance, and that substance is from the Father to the Son.309
Victorinus even ends his work in Book IV with the elements of this same chain, when he
gives a final commentary on the Incarnation as the Form of God and on the
consubstantial Trinity. Texts such as Philippians 2:5-7, John 1:18, and John 14:9 prove to
us that Jesus Christ is the Form, the Logos and the Son of God.310
The use of visibility texts in Victorinus leads one to consider the prior use of such
texts in Latin theology. Tertullian, in his work Against Praxeas, understands the
importance of visibility texts in arguing for the Sons real and separate existence versus
the Father. In chapter 8 of his work he makes a passing comment that links Matthew
11:27 and John 1:18: But with us the Son alone knows the Father, and himself has
309. Clark, 264-65. AA IV 8,43-9,5. qui me vidit, vidit et patrem. Filius enim dei forma dei est, id est vita
quae est forma viventis. Dictum enim a Paulo ad Philippenses: qui, cum in form a dei constitutus esset,
non rapinam arbitratus est ut esset aequalis deo. Item ad Colossenses: qui est imago invisibilis dei.
Ergo Iesus Christos et imago et forma dei. Diximus autem quod in forma videtur id cuius forma; et
eodem pacto et imagine videtur is cuius imago est, maxime si is, cuius imago est, invisibilis, sicut hie
dictum: imago dei invisibilis; eodem modo dictum in evangelio cata Iohannem: deum nemo umquam
vidit, nisi unigenitus filius qui de sinu eius exivit. Et item sic Moysi dictum: faciem meam non videbis.
Quis enim faciem meam vidit et vixit? Promisit tamen posterganea sua videri, id est dorsum ceteraque
praeter faciem. 9....Q uot hie mysteria, quot genera quaestionum, quot signa ad declarandum et deum
et Iesum Christum et substantiam esse et unam ambo esse substantiam et simul utrumque unam esse
substantiam et a patre filio esse substantiam! CSEL 83/1,236-37.
310. AA IV 32,14-33,25. Other important texts used at the ending include Jn 1:1, 1:3,1:9 and 1:14. Jn 1:18
and Phil. 2:6 seem to be the texts behind two stanzas o f Victorinus trinitarian Hymn III, where the
Logos is the manifest form and substance o f the otherwise hidden God; here seeing the Incarnate
Form is also equated with knowing God the Father:
O God, you are substance secret and hidden; O God, you are form secret and hidden; O God, you
are knowledge secret and hidden; Therefore the Proon (Preexistent) o f the onta (Existents), you are, O
God O Blessed Trinity.
O Logos, you are the already public and manifest substance; and because public and manifest, you
are form, and because form o f the Father, for yourself you are substance; Therefore the Father is in
you because toe Father is substance; but you are o f identical substance, for there is not any other
substance; I f therefore toe Logos is manifest form, and form is substance itse lf if toe manifest form
and toe manifest substance are knowledge, you are also, O Logos, both God and Holy Spirit; O
Blessed Trinity. Clark 331-32. Hymnus HI,200-213. CSEL 83/1,302.
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declared the bosom of the Father.
o i l
contrasts the Sons visibility with the Fathers invisibility, making use of John 1:18 along
with a foundational visibility text that will take on increasing importance with Latin
Homoians and Nicenes, I Timothy 6:16:
Evidently the Father, in whose presence the Word, the only-begotten Son, who himself hath
declared the bosom of the Father, was God... He also presents as visible the Son of God, that is,
the Word of God, because he who was made flesh is called Christ. But of the Father (he says) to
Timothy, Whom no man hath seen nor can see: and he piles it up even more, Who alone hath
immortality and dwelleth in light unapproachable: and of him he had previously said, To the king
eternal, immortal, invisible, the only God, so that to the Son we might ourselves also ascribe the
contrary, mortality and approachability.312
Novatian, writing only some thirty years later than Tertullian, in his work De trinitate,
uses the same chain Victorinus will later use, for nearly the same argument:
Please note that the same Moses says in another passage that God appeared to Abraham. Yet the
same Moses hears from God that no man can see God and live. If God cannot be seen, how did
God appear? If He appeared, how is it that He cannot be seen? For John says in like manner: No
one has ever seen God. And the apostle Paul says: Whom no man has seen or can see. But
certainly, Scripture does not lie; therefore, God was really seen. Accordingly, this can only mean
that it was not the Father, who never has been seen, that was seen, but the Son, who is wont both
to descend and to be seen, for the simple reason that He has descended. In fact, He is the image
of the invisible God...313
311. Evans, Against Praxeas, 139. Adv. Prax. 8 ,2 8 -2 9 . apud nos autem solus filius patrem novit, et sinum
patris ipse exposuit. Evans, 96.
312. Evans, Against Praxeas, 152. Adv. Prax. 15,26-27; 321. scilicet patrem, apud quem deus erat
sermo unigenitus filius, qui sinum patris ipse disseruit... ostendit et ipse visibilem dei filium, id est
sermonem dei, quia qui caro factus est Christus dictus est. de patre autem ad Timotheum: Quem nemo
vidit hominum, sed nec videre potest; exaggerans amplius: Qui solus habet immortalitatem et lucem
habitat inaccessibilem; de quo et supra dixerat: Regi autem saeculorum immortali invisibili soli deo;
ut et contraria ipsi filio adscriberemus, mortalitatem accessibilitatem. Evans, 107-08.
313. DeSimone, The Trinity, FoC 67. D e Trinitate. XVIII. 1.1-3.11. Ecce idem M oyses refert alio in loco
quod Abrahae uisus sit Deus. Atquin idem M oyses audit a Deo quod nemo hominum Deum uideat et
uiuat. Si uideri non potest Deus, quomodo uisus est Deus? Aut si uisus est, quomodo uideri non
potest? Nam et Ioannes Deum nemo, inquit, uidit umquam, et apostolus Paulus: Quem uidit hominum
nemo nec uidere potest. Sed non utique scriptura mentitur. Ergo uere uisus est Deus. Ex quo intellegi
potest quod non Pater uisus sit, qui numquam uisus est, sed Filius, qui et descendere solitus est et
uideri, quia descenderit. Imago est enim inuisibilis Dei. CCSL, Vol. IV, 44. For Novatian the Sons
visibility is not for something such as his eventual crucifixion and atonement for human sin, a theme
absent from his work. Instead through the Incarnation the Son leads fallen humanity back to God. The
above passage continues, thus, with that thought: For He is the image o f the invisible God, as the
imperfection and frailty o f the human condition was accustomed sometimes even then to see God the
Father in the image o f God, that is, in the Son o f God. For gradually and by progression human frailty
was to be strengthened by the image to that glory o f being able one day to see God the Father.
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Novatian uses the chain here of Genesis 12:7, Exodus 33:20, John 1:18,1 Timothy 6:16,
and Colossians 1:15.
Phoebadius of Agen, writing at the same time as Victorinus, also associates John 1:18
with other visibility texts. In his Liber contra Arrianos X,3, he associates it with Matthew
11 :27.314 Just as intriguing is his use of John 1:18 in another section of his same work,
XII,2-5, specifically addressed to the Blasphemy of Sirmium 357:
Those wanting, then, to separate the Son from the Father and to place him below God, as the Gospel
has taught: The Father, he says, is greater than I. And in what way greater? Right away they
define it with the presumption of heretics: in honor, in distinction, in dignity, in majesty. But if it
is thus, why is it prescribed that all may honor the Son even as they honor the Father? But if it is
thus, we consequently blaspheme daily by services of deeds and sacrifices of offerings, confessing
this relation of Father to the Son, because certainly the Son is not able not to have all that the Father
has, with himself being whole in relation to the Father. John says this precisely: No one has ever
seen God except the only-begotten Son who is in the bosom of the Father. And therefore he says:
All that are mine are yours and yours are mine. And: The Son can do nothing of himself. And:
I have not come to do my will but rather that of the one who sent me. But the confession is
especially not a weak one, but a declaration of unity. For it had spoken not only against unsurety but
also in favor of unity: He who sent me is with me. And: The Father, who dwells in me does his
works. And: The words which I speak are not mine but the Fathers.315
The radically subordinationist Homoian creed of 357 quoted John 14:28 (the Father is
greater than I) in order to make its statement, There is no question that the Father is
greater. For it can be doubtful to none that the Father is greater than the Son in honour,
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q i/"
Phoebadius responds to
the Homoianswhom he calls teachers of evilwho want to separate the Son from
the Father and set him beneath the level of divinity, quoting the superior attributes of the
Father that Homoians had blasphemously confessed at Sirmium in 357: honor, dignity,
glory, and majesty. They blaspheme daily, Phoebadius asserts, because they refuse to
honor the Son even as they honor the Father (John 5:23); the Son, if he truly is entirely
in the Father, is not able not to have all that the Father has.317 The evidence that
Phoebadius arranges against the Homoians is a series of proof-texts from John the
Evangelist:318 No one has ever seen God except the only-begotten Son who is in the
bosom of the Father (John 1:18); all that are mine are yours, and yours are mine (John
17:10); the Son can do nothing of himself (John 5:19); and I have not come to do my
will, but the will of him who sent me (Jn 6:38). These do not reveal a feeble relationship
between the Father and the Son, but proves their solid unity: He who sent me is with
me (John 8:29); the Father who dwells in me does his works (John 14:10); and the
words which I speak are not mine but the Fathers (John 14:10).
The citation of John 1:18 here in Phoebadius is significant because it is treated as a
unity text rather a visibility text, as Phoebadius himself says. In X,3 he explains John
1:18 with another text, Matthew 11:27, but in this instance these texts are used together to
speak of the knowledge the Son has of the Father, and the divine generation of the Son.
316. Kelly, Early Christian Creeds, 286. Hilary, De synodis 11 (PL 1 0 ,489a): Patrem honore, dignitate,
claritate, maiestate et ipso nomine Patris maiorem esse filio; Athanasius, D e synodis 28,7 (PG 26,
741c): xov TcaT^pa xipfj x al a|Cg x ai 0i6xrixi x ai auxtp xcp 6vogcm xcp Jtaxpcxcp peova etvai.
317. An allusion to Jn. 16:15, which also happens to be a favorite text for Victorinus.
318. Another typical example o f how the Fourth Gospel was the exegetical platform for Nicene definition
and polemics. Hanson, in Search, 834, gives the succinct observation: The Gospel according to St.
John was the major battlefield in the N ew Testament during the Arian controversy. It was the chief
resource o f the (Nicenes) but was by no means free o f difficulties and pitfalls even for them. It is
generally true that the Arians scored heavily in using the the Synoptic gospels.
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The author of the Origenian Tractates uses John 1:18 twice in his homilies. In Tractate
IX, a homily based on Exodus 12:2, he cites John 1:18 in passing to state that the Father
is the head of Christ, who is [the Fathers] true interior Word, because Christ is in the
Fathers bosom.319 But in Tractate XVI, a homily on Isaiah 1:1, Gregory explains Gods
pronouncement to Moses in Exodus 33:20 (It is not possible to see my faceno one
sees my face and lives) with John 1:18: the visibility of God is not the result of Israels
merit, but of the unique identity of Christ.
explains Exodus 33:20 with John 1:18. Hilary of Poitiers uses John 1:18 in Books II-VI
of his De Trinitate, but we do not generally see him constellating John 1:18 with the texts
typical of Victorinus. Hilary puts John 1:18 to the obvious use of arguing for the full
divinity of the Son, with the name only-begotten God taking on extreme importance:
No other one, therefore, shall be compared to this one. For these things are proper to the onlybegotten God alone, and this one alone has been bom from Him in the peculiar beatitude of His
own powers. No other God will be likened to Him, for He does not come from a different
substance, but is God from God. Accordingly, in Him there is nothing new, nothing strange,
nothing of recent origin. For, when Israel hears that its God is one, and no other God will made
equal to God, the Son of God, so that He is truly God, it is revealed that God the Father and God
the Son are clearly one, not by a union of person, but by the unity of nature. The Prophet does not
permit God the Son of God to be likened to a second God, because he is God.321
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In De Trinitate IV,8,49-55 Hilary conceptually links John 4:24,1 Timothy 6:16, John
1:18, and Exodus 3:14 as he argues for the attributes of the Father: they prove that the
Father is incorporeal, immortal and invisible, and unborn.322
As already noted, Hilary is not alone in seeing the prefabricated argument built into a
text such as John 1:18 on behalf of the divine generation of the Son. It would be listed,
for example, later in the Trinitarian Controversy, in the list of proof-texts in Gregory of
Nazianzus Third Theological Oration for proving Nicene claims of the Sons identity.323
R e n d e r in g V is ib l e
t h e I n v is ib l e : E x o d u s
33:20
Within the entire Old Testament Scripture the most memorable of visibility texts, recalled
continually in Israels history in an almost creedal fashion, was the statement of Yahweh
to Moses in Exodus 33:20: The L o r d said, You cannot see my face; for no one shall
not see me and live. In the time of the Old Covenant, the problem was not that one
could not see God; it was that the glory of Gods presence and divine visage was of such
might that it was lethal.324
arises our faith in His love and benevolence, that He has offered His Son, His own Son, His onlybegotten God for the salvation o f the world. McKenna, Hilary o f Poitiers :The Trinity, 21011.
322. McKenna, Hilary o f Poitiers: The Trinity, 98. CCSL, Vol. 62, 109.
323. The Scripture loci o f the Third Oration read like an arsenal o f the best Nicene texts you would want
for the real identity and existence o f the Son, texts such as Ex. 3:14, Jn. 1:1,1:18, 5:19, 6:27, 10:18
(... I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again...), 10:30,14:6, Phil. 2 : 5 - 8 ,1
Cor. 1:24, Heb. 1:3, besides numerous others that Nazianzus uses to speak o f the titles for the Son.
324. Divine visibility in Exodus is set against the infidelity o f the Israelites as they wait for M oses as the
foot o f Mount Sinai (Ex. 32). Wishing to have visible objects o f worship, they appeal to Aaron, who
makes out o f their gold jewelry a golden calf (a common Near Eastern fertility symbol), to which all
the people offer sacrifices and ecstatic worship, while they proclaim These are your gods, O Israel,
who brought you up out o f the land o f Egypt! (Ex. 32:4). Ex. 33:11 describes the closeness o f
M oses relationship with God, when it says that the Lord used to speak to Moses face to face, as a
man speaks to a friend. But otherwise Moses was only allowed to see the posterior end o f G ods
fleeting glory in Ex. 33:23, not Gods face. It was a very unusual claim, then, in Isaiahs call narrative
(Is. 6) that Isaiah clearly sees Yahweh; naturally, he believes that he is about to perish.
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Victorinus has this visibility- versus-lethality idiom in mind in Book III 1 when he
argues for the Logos being light and life, the consubstantial revelation of the Father:
A n d b e c a u se b y radiance lig h t is r ev e a led , or b y a c tio n p ow er is r ev ea led , for t h is reason:
W h o e v e r h a s se e n m e, h a s se e n th e F ather. A n d b ec a u se no o n e s e e s th e p o w e r it s e lf
alone: N o o n e has ev er se e n G o d . A n d sin c e p o w er is life in re p o se and k n o w le d g e in
r ep o se, but life and k n o w le d g e are a ctio n s, i f so m e o n e w ere to se e G od h e m u st d ie,
b eca u se th e life and k n o w le d g e o f G od rem ain in th e m se lv e s and are n o t in act, but ev ery
act is exterior; in d eed , fo r us to liv e is to liv e extern ally; to se e G od is th ere fo re a death.
N o o n e , sa y s th e Scripture, h as ev er se e n G od and liv e d . In d eed , lik e is s e e n b y lik e.
E xtern al lif e th erefo re m u st b e fo rg o tten , k n o w le d g e m u st be forgotten , i f w e w is h to se e
G od , and th is fo r u s is d eath.325
This philosophical language used to explain the visibility of God here is typical of
Victorinus, though the reasoning may be rather obscure. He is trying to come up with
an explanation for why we cannot see God, apart from Moses simply being told he
could not. Light is revealed by its radiance, Victorinus says, and power by its action.
The radiance and the action are made intelligible by statements of Christ (such as those
in John 1:18 and 14:9), but without such an external manifestation there remains the
promisedthreatenedlethality of seeing God, as proved by Exodus 33:20. If seeing
God is a deathi.e., the death of our perceivable, external lifethen this present life
and knowledge must be renounced if we wish to see God, for to see him will for us be
death, or a certain kind of death. The only reality that can see the deadly glory of the
internal life of God will be a like that can see like, a reality that can be external, and
eternal life for us; by this Victorinus means Christ:
325. Clark, 221. AA III 1,36-48. Et quia effulgentia declaratur lumen vel actio(ne) declaratur potentia,
idcirco: qui me vidit, vidit patrem. Et quia potentiam ipsam solam nemo videt: deum nemo vidit
umquam. Et quoniam potentia cessans vita est et cessans intellegentia, haec autem vita et intellegentia
actio est, si quis deum viderit, moriatur necesse est, quia dei vita et intellegentia in semet ipsa est, non
in actu, omnis autem actus foris est, hoc vero est nostrum vivere quod foris est vivere, ergo est mors
deum videre. Nemo, inquit, umquam deum vidit et vixit. Simili enim simile videtur. Omittenda igitur vita
foris, omittenda intellegentia, si deum videre volumus, et hoc nobis mors est. CSEL 83/1,192-93.
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We therefore, if we are in Christ, see God through Christ, that is, through the true life, that is,
through the true Image. And through an image which, because it is true, is therefore of the same
substance, because the power is also in the action. There we see God, therefore, and hence this:
Whoever has seen me, has seen God.326
Christ is understood here in titular fashion as the true life and the true Image which is
of the same substance as the Father.327 His conclusion is that God actually is visible;
therefore, Christ can claim that whoever sees him, sees God.
For Victorinus, the divine invisibility of Exodus 33:20 is rendered visible through
Christ, and through Christs assertions in John 1:18 and 14:9. As noted above,328
Victorinus sees the New Testament divine visibility texts (John 1:18,14:9, Philippians
2:6, and Colossians 1:15) as explaining Old Testament divine invisibility statements in
Exodus 33:20,23. He will do this one last time in Book IV o f Against Arius: in possibly
the richest section in the work he reprises his arguments for the consubstantiality of the
Father and the Son, repeating his most meaningful Scripture loci329 and recalling the
divine and magnificent mysteries contained within a text such as Philippians 2:6, which
above all tells us that Christ is the Form of God.
In Book IV 30, then, Victorinus uses Exodus 33:20 in making a unique argument for
the Son being the manifest and visible of divine realities:
...Christ is the form of God, in whom one sees that he has all that God has. For this is the
form which is also called image, as it was said of him who is the image of God. Therefore,
God also has his image, and the Son is the image of God. And indeed, if it was said: No one
has ever seen my face, and it was said: You will see me from behind, there is without doubt a
326. Clark, 221. AA III 2,4-8. Nos ergo, si sumus in Christo, deum per Christum videmus, id est per vitam
veram, hoc est per imaginem veram. Et quia veram, ergo eiusdem substantiae, quia et in actione
potentia est. Ibi ergo deum videmus, et hinc illud: qui me vidit, vidit deum CSEL 83/1,193.
327. With Victorinus possibly implying with his phrase because the power is also in the action that
Christ is o f the same power also.
328. See above in section on Victorinus treatment o f John 1:18 in AA IV 8,43-9,5. The interesting aspect
o f Jn. 1:18, when one considers its full import, is that it can easily function as a conflation o f Ex.
33:20 and Jn. 14:9, explaining divine invisibility with divine visibility.
329. This runs for most o f AA IV 2931, and does seem to be a summary o f most o f what he argues
throughout all four books o f the work.
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face for God, there is through the Son an image of God, or rather the Son is also the image of
God, as was said: Who was in the form of God. Whence it was rightly said: Let us make man
according to our image and likeness. Therefore the Son is, and if he is, he is different. For Father
is not the same as Son, Son is not the same as Father; yet through those realities that I treated
above,330 they are identical; identical, that is, having the same realities, but each one through his
own existence. That is why they are both the same and different... And certainly God also has a
form, but the Son of God is the manifested form, while the form of God is a hidden form. Such is
the case for all the rest: existence, life, knowledge, insofar as they are Gods, they are hidden
within, but insofar as they are the Sons, they are manifested; so for the rest: khorema (receptacle)
and pleroma, image, true light, truth, Spirit, movement, action, operation, life,
and life from himself, will, power, wisdom, word, God, living God, and all the other
names. But these latter realities are, as it were, external and manifested, while the former realities
are within the Father and included in the veiy existence or rather they are that same reality which
is existence, whereas in the Son they are in the act, acting in the open.331
Christ is the form of God because it has been said in Scripture that he has all that the
Father has. Victorinus provides a running commentary of texts that motivate his
reasoningPhilippians 2:6, Matthew 11:27, John 16:15, Colossians 1:15. He includes
Exodus 33:20, because in spite of what God had said to Moses, the form of God is visible
and involves manifested realities of God. There is a relation between the all things of
Matthew 11:27 and John 16:15 and the form of Philippians 2:6: everything that the
Father has given the Son is hidden in the Father and manifested in the Son. The Son of
God, he states, is the manifested form, while there is also a hidden form of God. Both
330. Near the very end o f Book IV 29 Victorinus conflates Mt. 11:27 with Jn. 16:15 All that the Father
has, he has given to me, and all that the Father has, I also have concluding that all means
consubstantial, and that they are therefore identical, and if identical, they are equal. Clark, 295.
331. Clark, 29597. AA IV 30,215;2837 quod Christus form a dei est in quo ostenditur omnia habere
quae deus habet. Hoc enim est form a quae et imago dicitur, sicuti de ipso dictum, qui est imago dei.
Habet igitur et deus imaginem suam et filius imago dei est. Etenim si dictum: faciem dei nemo
umquam vidit, et dictum: posterganea mea videbis, est sine dubio facies deo, est filio, vel potius est et
filius imago dei, ut dictum est: qui, cum in form a dei fiiisset. Unde iure dictum: faciamus hominem ad
imaginem et similitudinem nostram. Est ergo filius et, si est, alter est. Non enim idem pater, idem
filius, illis rebus omnibus supra a me positis idem; idem autem, hoc est eadem habens, exsistentia sua
propria. Unde et idem et alter... Et est quidem deo forma, sed filius dei forma in manifesto, dei vero
in occulto. Sic enim omnia et exsistentia et vita et cognoscentia, dei intus in occulto, filio in
manifesto; sic cetera: x<hpT|(j.a, JtX,fiptopa, imago, lumen verum, veritas, spiritus, motus, actio,
operatio, vita, et a semet ipso vita, voluntas, virtus, sapientia, verbum, deus, deus vivus et cetera alia
omnia. Sed haec veluti foris et in manifesto, ilia in se atque circa exsistentiam vel ipsa(m) potius quod
est exsistentia, haec autem in actu agente quod est in manifesto. CSEL 83/1,269-71.
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forms involve the triad Victorinus constantly speaks of:332 when existence, life and
knowledge are spoken of as belonging to God, they are hidden realities, but whenever
they are used to speak of the Son, they are manifest realities. (It would serve as a more
exact presentation here if Victorinus were to take care to define Father versus Son in
speaking of hidden versus manifest realities of Godespecially since to conceptually set
God against Son in an argument is, ironically, a characteristic element of Homoian
exegesis.333) These two realities, one hidden and the other manifest, are the defining way
in which Victorinus interprets Exodus 33:20: there is a hidden form of God, the Father;
and a manifested form of God, the Son of God.
This Victorine understanding is impossible to consider without also considering the
strikingly similar understanding in Tertullians Against Praxeas and other sources of
earlier Latin theology. In chapters 14 and 15 of Tertullians Against Praxeas we find the
same preoccupation with the visibility and the invisibility of God, with considerations of
some of the same texts Victorinus will use. In AA IV 30 Victorinus makes the memorable
statement that there is without doubt a face for God, there is through the Son an image
of God, or rather the Son is also the image of God. This is much akin to the Tertullians
preoccupation with what Victorinus terms the face of God: For we find that God was
seen, even by many, yet that none of those who had seen him diedthat God was seen, of
332. The Divine Triad o f Esse, Vivere, Intellegere. Hadot calls this triad the ensemble o f the Divine Names
which constitute the Form o f God. Hadot, Traites Theologiques, 1045-46.
333. Examples o f this view can be seen in Mk. 10:18 (And Jesus said to him, Why do you call me good?
No one is good but God alone) and I Cor. 8:6 (Yet for us there is one God, the Father, from whom
are all things and for whom we exist, and one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom are all things and
through whom we exist). Homoians favored texts such as these for their clear implication o f a
definite subordination, believing themselves to be faithful to the witness o f Scripture.
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course, according to mens capacity, not according to the fulness of his divinity.334 It is
true that many had seen God: Tertullian points out patriarchs Abraham and Jacob, and
prophets Isaiah and Ezekiel, none of whom had perished because of what they saw. And
yet the Scripture says that if a human being sees Gods face, that person will surely die.
Tertullian concludes,
So then it will be another who was seen, for it is impossible for the same one who was seen, to be
characterised as invisible: and it will follow that we must understand the Father as invisible
because of the fulness of his majesty, but must acknowledge the Son as visible because of the
enumeration of his derivation...33
This difference is advocated by Scripture by the distinction it makes between visible
and invisible.
Tertullian considers two categories of God having a face. The first has to do with
invisibility, especially focused on understanding If a man see my face, he shall not live:
This face of God is the person of the Father, and is lethal. The second category is the
visible face of God, seen in the Old Testament theophanies such as Jacobs declaration, I
have seen God face to face: This face is the person of the Son, and is non-lethal. Both
exist and are divine realities: For both in the gospels and in the apostles I discover God
visible and invisible, with an evident personal distinction between these two qualities.336
334. Evans, Against Praxeas, 149. Adversus Praxean 14,30-32. invenimus enim et a multis deum visum
et neminem tamen eorum qui eum viderant mortuum: visum quidem deum secundum hominum
capacitates, non secundum plenitudinem divinitatis. Evans, 104.
335. Evans, Against Praxeas, 149. Adversus Praxean 14,3-6. iam ergo alius erit qui videbatur, quia non
potest idem invisibilis definiri qui videbatur: et consequens erit ut invisibilem patrem intellegamus pro
plenitudine maiestatis, visibilem vero filium agnoscamus pro modulo derivationis... Evans, 105.
336. Evans, Against Praxeas, 151. Adversus Praxean 15,2931. ecce enim et in evangeliis et in apostolis
visibilem et invisibilem deum deprehendo sub manifesta et personali distinctione condicionis
utriusque. Evans, 106.
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Most of the texts that Tertullian looks to in chapters 14 and 15 relate to divine
invisibility: primarily Exodus 33:20, John 1:18, and I Timothy 6:16.337 But there will be a
reprise of the themes of invisibility and visibility later in chapter 24 of Against Praxeas,
where Tertullian dwells on Christs conversation with Philip in the first part of John 14.
In this lengthy anti-modalist explanation of Christs statement to Philip, Tertullian argues
for the real, defined existence of each of the Father and the Son. He also speaks o f divine
invisibility, citing Exodus 33:20 and, like Victorinus, explaining it with John 14:9.
It was not the Father who they did not know had companied so long time with them, but the Son:
and the Lord, upbraiding them for not knowing himself as him whom they had not known, clearly
wished to be recognised as he whom he had upbraided them for not recognising in so long a time,
namely the Son. And now it can appear in what sense it was said, He that seeth me seeth the
Father also... For according to these [texts] he had revealed himself as the deputy of the Father,
by means of whom the Father was both seen in acts and heard in words and known in the Son
ministering the Fathers acts and words: because the Father is invisible, a fact which Philip also
had learned in the law and ought to have rememberedNo one shall see God and live. And
consequently he is chidden for desiring to see the Father as though he were visible, and is
informed that he becomes visible in the Son, in consequence of acts of power, not in consequence
of actual manifestation of his Person.338
A few decades after Tertullian, Novatian employs similar texts to explain divine
invisibility with the revealed visibility of the Son. In his De Trinitate, Novatian offers the
explanation that Abraham was able to see God because he actually saw Christ, who was
acting as an angel of the Father:
337. I Timothy 6:16awho alone has immortality and dwells in un approachable light, whom no man has
ever seen or can see is a divine invisibility text that will take on importance for fourth-century
Nicenes such as Phoebadius o f Agen and Hilary o f Poitiers. See below Phoebadius understanding o f
divine invisibility and visibility, in the same terms as Tertullian.
338. Evans, Against Praxeas, 167-68, emphasis original. Adv. Prax. 2 4 ,5 9,14-21. ergo non patrem tanto
tempore secum conversatum ignoraverant sed filium: et dominus, eum se ignorari exprobans quem
ignoraverant, eum utique agnosci volebat quem tanto non agnosci tempore exprobraverat, id est
filium. Et apparere iam potest quomodo dictum sit, Qui me videt videt et patrem... secundum haec
enim vicarium se patris ostenderat, per quem pater et videretur in factis et audiretur in verbis et
cognosceretur in filio facta et verba patris administrante: quia invisibilis pater, quod et Philippus
didicerat in lege et meminisse debuerat Deum nemo videbit et vivet. et ideo suggillatur patrem
videre desiderans quasi visibilem, et instruitur visibilem eum in filio fieri ex virtutibus non ex
personae repraesentatione. Evans, 120.
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Please note that the same Moses says in another passage that God appeared to Abraham. Yet the same
Moses hears from God that no man can see God and live. If God cannot be seen, how did God
appear? If He appeared, how is it that He cannot be seen? For John says in like manner: No one has
ever seen God. And the apostle Paul says: Whom no man has seen or can see. But certainly,
Scripture does not lie; therefore, God was really seen. Accordingly, this can only mean that it was not
the Father, who never has been seen, that was seen, but the Son, who is wont both to descend and to
be seen, for the simple reason that He has descended. In fact, He is the image of the invisible God,
that our limited human nature and frailty might in time grow accustomed to see God the Father in Him
who is the Image of God, that is, in die Son of God. Gradually and by degrees human frailty had to be
strengthened by means of the Image for the glory of being able one day to see God the Father.339
Novatian uses Exodus 33:20, combined with John 1:18 and I Timothy 6:16, similar to the
chain of texts used by Tertullian in chapters 14 and 15 of Against Praxeas.
These texts remained standard loci even one hundred years later, for Phoebadius of
Agen. In his work Liber Contra Arrianos Phoebadius understands that God was invisible
in the Old Covenant, yet visible in his Word, the Son:
The Father, it says, is invisible.340We find it almost true almost anywhere for the Son to have
been visible even without transfiguration, for he existed bodily from eternity before being
obedient to the Father. No matter how, for instance, the vision not only of Abraham would be but
also Jacob and of Moses, Isaiah and Ezekiel, nevertheless the quality of that vision was
interpreted. No doubt the vision is related in a dream and in a mirror and in an enigma. Of course
Moses was demanding how to recognize him he would see: No one is able, he says, to see my
face, for no one who sees it, lives. Therefore they hold either the Father to have been speaking in
this place who he says himself to be invisible, or if they do not deny the Son as the one speaking,
they even know that invisible One by his name to have been as the Word, as the Spirit. How
precisely the Invisible God would be seen, is attested by the same Scripture. It represents God
speaking to him just as if to a friend, face to face. Moreover, after that he accedes to Moses
requesting that he see his face, whom if he had absolutely seen, instantly would not be expected
to be living. Indeed Jacob says: I have seen the Lord face to face and my soul is preserved.341
339. DeSimon, The Trinity, FoC 67. D e Trinitate XVIII 1,1-3,15. Ecce idem M oyses refert alio in loco
quod Abrahae uisus sit Deus. Atquin idem Moyses audit a Deo quod nemo hominum Deum uideat et
uiuat. Si uideri non potest Deus, quomodo uisus est Deus? Aut si uisus est, quomodo uideri non
potest? Nam et Ioannes Deum nemo, inquit, uidit umquam, et apostolus Paulus: Quem uidit hominum
nemo nec uidere potest. Sed non utique scriptura mentitur. Ergo uere uisus est Deus. Ex quo intellegi
potest quod non Pater uisus sit, qui numquam uisus est, sed Filius, qui et descendere solitus est et
uideri, quia descenderit. Imago est enim irmisibilis Dei, ut mediocritas et fragilitas condicionis
humanae Deum Patrem uidere aliquando iam tunc assuesceret in imagine Dei, hoc est in Filio Dei.
Gradatim enim et per incrementa fragilitas humana nutriri debuit per imaginem ad istam gloriam, ut
Deum Patrem uidere posset aliquando. CCSL 4 ,4 4 .
340. A quotation from the Blasphemy o f Sirmium 357 creed: And no one is ignorant that it is Catholic
doctrine that... the Father has no beginning and in invisible, immortal and impassible... Kelly, Early
Christian Creeds, 286.
341. Phoebadius o f Agen, Liber Contra Arrianos, XX, 1 ,1 - XXI,2,6. INTVISIBILEM, inquit, PATREM
ESSE. Quasi uero usquam inueniamus uel Filium sine transfiguratione fuisse uisibilem, antequam
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The ideas behind this statement are the same as Tertullians, demonstrating Phoebadius
indebtedness to Tertullian. The various figures in the Old Covenant who, at least in some
way, saw GodAbraham, Jacob, Moses, Isaiah and Ezekielare also mentioned as
examples of this in Tertullians Against Praxeas. But these people saw God in their sleep,
or saw Gods reflection, or saw some sort of visible riddle. Phoebadius, like Tertullian,
discusses the invisibility of God with an obvious text such as Exodus 33:20, but the
visibility of God with one such as Genesis 32:30. Gregory of Elvira does the same thing
in his sixteenth Origenian tractate (an exposition on the prophet Isaiah). In a section in
Tractatus XVI dealing with the burden of Israels sins and their lack of merit for being
allowed to see God, Gregory considers how God can been seen:
As a matter of fact, the man Israel seeing God is interpreted from the Hebrew language into Latin
discourse; and what man is it who sees God, as it would be written to Moses: It is not allowed to
see my face, for no one sees God and lives? Also the Savior says it in the Gospel: No one sees
God ever except the only Son, who is in the bosom of the Father. Therefore because no one sees
God except the only Son, rightly it is the Son himself Israel sees, who is not only man according to
the natural flesh but also is one himself with God the Father, who is the Son of God, and Israel lives.
This is the man that Israel sees as God, whom they have stirred to anger for not believing him.342
Patri oboediens fieret ex aetemitate corporeus. Quamuis enim et Abrahae uisus sit et Iacob et Moysi et
Esaiae et Ezechieli, tamen uisionis illius qualitas explicatur. In somno enim et in speculo et in
enigmate uisus refertur. Denique Moysi postulanti ut cognoscenter eum uideret: Nemo potest, inquit,
faciem meam uidere, quia nemo qui earn uiderit, uiuet. Eigo hoc loco aut Patrem locutum fiiisse
contendant qui inuisibilem esse se dicit, aut si Filium non negant tunc locutum, sciant et ilium suo
nomine inuisibilem fuisse ut Sermonem, ut Spiritum. Inuisibilis Deus denique quomodo uisus sit,
eadem Scriptura testatur. Refert enim locutum cum eo Deum tamquam ad amicum, facie ad faciem.
Ac deinceps subiungit postulasse Moysen ut faciem eius uideret, quam utique si uiderat, non statim
postulasset uidendam. Ait quidem Iacob: Vidi Dominum facie a d faciem et salua fa cta est anima
mea. CCSL, Vol. 6 4 ,4 4 .
342. Gregory o f Elvira, Tractatus Origenis XVI, 25,193-26,204. Israhel etenim homo uidens deum ex
Ebrea lingua in Latino sermone interpretatur; et quis homo est qui deum uidet (-it), cum scriptum sit
ad Moysen: Non poteris faciem meam uidere, nemo enim uidit deum et uixif! Saluator quoque in
euangelio: Deum, inquid, nemo uidit umquam nisi unicus filius, qui est in sinum (-u) patris. Ergo quia
deum nemo uidit nisi unicus filios (-us), merito ipse est Israel, que (qui) et homo secundum camem
naturae (natus) est et deum patrem solus ipsi (-e), qui filius dei est, uidit et uidet. Hoc est Israel homo
uidens deum, quem ad iracundia (-am) non ei credendo prouocauerunt. CCSL Vol. 69, 121-22.
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Gregory explains the invisibility of God in Exodus 33:20 with the same visibility text,
John 1:18, used by Victorinus whenever discussing the visibility of the Son.
T h e Im a g e
o f t h e In v is ib l e
G o d : C o l o s s ia n s
1:15
The Pauline text of Colossians 1:15, He is the image of the invisible God, the first-bom
of all creation, easily took the stage as a commonplace in the Trinitarian Controversy for
both Nicenes and non-Nicenes.343 Alexander of Alexandria introduced its use early in the
Trinitarian Controversy in his Letter to all Bishops, in which he denounces the views of
Arius while setting forth his own arguments that the Son is like in ousia to the Father, is
unchanging in his nature, and knows the Father perfectly.344 In Colossians 1:15 all
Nicenes could see that the Son was the image of the invisible God. Non- and antiNicenes could use the statement that the Son was the first-bom of all creation to argue for
the Son being a superior creature but only quasi-divine.345 For Victorinus the realities of the
Son being the form and image of God are presuppositions to which he will make
frequent reference throughout Against Arius. Though he employs Colossians 1:15 as a clear
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quotation in only a few key passages, these passages are well worth a brief overview,
especially in light of their use of Colossians 1:15 as a visibility and divine generation text.
In AA IA, Victorinus is concerned with proving the divine, consubstantial identity of
the Son through a consideration of the Sons names and titles and their corresponding
proof-texts in the New Testament. From this he turns to considering divine substance and
the Logos as the image of God, with consubstantiality of the Son and Father remaining
the overarching concern. As Victorinus provides his running commentary of the Gospel
of John and Pauline epistles, he turns lastly to a brief exposition of the epistle to the
Colossians (and I Timothy).346 If, as Paul explains to the Colossians, Jesus is the image of
God, then Jesus is consubstantial with the Father:
If Jesus is the image of God, he is homoousios. For the image is substance with the substance
from which and in which it is image. And because the image is substance begotten by the
substance of which it is image, in which it is or subsists, to reveal the power within, hence the
Father is within, the Son is exterior.347
Colossians 1:15, to Victorinus thinking, is not simply a divine visibility text: divine
visibility is connected to divine substance, and proves consubstantiality.
The whole mystery is expressed in this exposition. That he is homoousios he says according to
this: He is the image of the invisible God. That he is the Son: the first-bom. That he is not
created: before all creatures, he said. For if he himself had been created, he would not have said
before all creatures. And he properly said: first-bom, which is said of a son. Let us therefore
put together the meaning: The first-born before all creatures. Therefore this one is begotten as a
Son, the creation as that which is created. Not that there was begotten another after him, but
because he was the first-bom before all creatures. Moreover, it says all creatures, both of
heaven and earth, visible and invisible. Without a creation therefore, the Son is. Therefore by
nature and by begetting, he is Son.348
346. Book I after this final exegetical section contains further doctrinal discussion, especially against
Homoiousians.
347. Clark, 126-27. AA 124,9-13. Si imago dei Iesus, opxxnxnoq est. Imago enim substantia cum substantia
cuius est et in qua est imago. Et quod imago substantia a substantia eius in qua est vel substitit genitia in
declarationem intus potentiae, hinc pater qui intus, hinc filius qui foris. CSEL 83/1,95.
348. Clark, 128. AA 1 24,29-41. Totum mysterium in ista expositione dictum est Quod oqoobcrux;, dicit ex
isto: qui est imago invisibilis dei. Quod filius: primigenitus. Quod non creams: ante omnem creaturam
dixit. Si enim et ipse creatus esset, non diceret ante omnem creaturam. Et proprie dixit: primigenitus, quod
est de filio. lungamus ergo sensum: primigenitus ante omnem creaturam. Ergo hie genitus ut filius, ilia
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The image of the invisible God means homoousios. Victorinus sneaks away from the
obvious and incovenient interpretation of Christ as the first-born of creation by quickly
claiming that first-bom means that the Son is begotten, and not simply the first Creature
among all later creatures. We know that the generation of the Son was a crucial issue within
anti-Nicene and Nicene theologies throughout most of the Trinitarian Controversy, and
Victorinus understands the importance of defining the Son as begotten.349
At Book IA 35, begottenness in Colossians 1:15 plays a key role for Victorinus
articulation that the Son who as from Mary was also the Son who was before he came from
Mary.350 This means, Victorinus asserts, the image of God; specifically, he who is the
image of God.351 But not only the image of God: the text Victorinus dwells on tells of the
image of God being the firstborn of all creation, who is also, he says, the Logos. He
concludes of this text that the Son is that same Logos, and is also the Son of Maiy:
It is necessary therefore that this be he same one: the Son, and the image, and he who is from Mary. For
how would the Son be the image of God if he were not the firstborn of the whole creation? And how
would he be the image of God, he who was the Son of Mary, if he were bom after all things were
created? Therefore it is evident that he himself is the firstborn. What hen? Is he one bom of Mary not
a creature? But if he Son of God, he image of God, was bom before every creature, he was also bom
before hat one who was bom of Mary. Therefore, he who was bom before all creation, he is in he one
who was bom of Mary. Therefore, it is evident that he is he only begotten Son.352
creatura ut quae creata sit. Non autem quod et alium postea genuit, sed quod ante omnem creaturam
primigenitus. Est autem omnis creatura et eorum quae in caelis et eorum quae in terris, visibilium et
invisibilium. Sine creatura ergo filius. Natura igitur et generatione filius. CSEL 83/1,96-7.
349. Strangely, the text most employed by Homoians to try to forbid discussion o f h e Sons begottenness,
Is. 53:8, does not make any appearance in Against Arius, hough Victorinus responds to anti-Nicene
use o f it in his summary work The Necessity o f Accepting Homoousios (Clark, 309-10. De
Homoousio 4,1-14. CSEL 83/1, 282-83.)
350. Clark, 147. AA 135,10.
351. This commentary on h e image o f God can be compared with Victorinus handling o f Gen. 1:26. In I
20, in discussing Gen. 1:26, Victorinus must be mentally comparing h a t text to Col. 1:15, because he
concludes h a t For Jesus alone is image o f God, but man according to h e image, h a t is, image o f
h e image. But he says: according to our image. Therefore both Father and Son are one image. I f the
image o f the Father is the Son and i f the image itself is the Father, they are therefore consubstantial
in respect to image. Clark, 117.
352. Clark, 148. AA 1 35,29-39. Necesse est ergo eundem ipsum esse filium et imaginem et eum qui de
Maria. Quomodo enim imago dei filius, si non primigenitus totius creaturael Et quomodo imago dei,
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We have already seen how important titles are for Victorinus. In the earlier portion of
Book IA, there is an extended discourse about all the titles of the Son and Victorinus
proofs for these realities; here he distinguishes the eternal image of God from the Son of
Mary. Victorinus explicates Colossians 1:15, explaining the importance of the concepts
of the firstborn of all creation and the image of God and relating this text only to John
1:1-3 and not to other texts. But it is unusual that he uses a title for the SonSon of
Marywhich does not come from a quotation of Scripture. He even claims, with
somewhat odd phrasing, that the texts he cites show how the Logos is image and how
the Son is Logos, the Son who is Son of Mary, but especially the Son who is in the Son of
Mary...
ISO
Victorinus does not wish to say that the Son of Mary is not the Son of God;
rather, he wishes to prove the opposite: He wants to emphasize that the Son of Mary is
not the Son of God solely at the moment he is conceived within Mary; he is the eternal
Son of God formed with the Son of Mary, united in one indissoluble union.354 It is
enough for Victorinus that the Son is the firstborn of all creation and that he is the Logos,
and these twin realities of the Son are confirmed when the first Apostle and the
preeminent Evangelist agree in what they have said.355
qui filius de Maria post omnia facta natus est? Manifestum ergo quod ipse primigenitus. Quid vero?
Quod natum est de Maria non creatura est? Sed si filius dei, imago dei, ante omnium creaturam natus
est, et ante istum, qui ex Maria, natus est. Qui igitur ante omnem creaturam natus est, ipse est in eo
qui de Maria natus est. Manifestum igitur quod ipse unigenitus. CSEL 83/1, 119-20.
353. Clark, 148. AA 1 35,2425. Quomodo imago X6yoq est et 'koyoq filius et ipse qui de Maria, magis
autem qui in eo qui de Maria... CSEL 83/1,119.
354. The First Sirmian Creed o f 351, from which Victorinus takes so much as a theological model,
included Anathema 27, condemning the view i f anyone denies that Christ God, Son o f God, is before
the age (jtpoairim ov) and ministers to the Father for the creation o f the world, but (declares) that he
was bom o f Mary and thenceforward is called Christ and Son and took his beginnings from G od...
Hanson, Search, 328.
355. I.e., the Apostle Paul and the Evangelist John. Clark, 149. AA 1 36,16-17. CSEL 83/1, 121.
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Colossians 1:15, the image of the invisible God, figures prominently as part of a
chain in Book IV 8,42-9,5, where Victorinus returns to the definition of the Son as both
the image and the form of God.356 The Son, according to Victorinus favorite theological
image, is the divine life that is revealed for humanity to look upon, recognize, and
understand. This is what is meant, he avers, by seeing the Son and thus seeing the Father
(John 14:9). Additionally, the Son is the living form of God, as Victorinus shows with the
texts of Philippians 2:6, Colossians 1:15, John 1:18 and Exodus 33:20, and of which he
finally concludes, How many mysteries there are here, how many kinds of questions,
how many signs to declare that God and Jesus Christ are substance, and that they are both
one substance, and that they are both together one substance, and that substance is from
the Father to the Son.357Victorinus uses the chain of visibility texts, which includes
Colossians 1:15, to answer the claim of the Homoians who try to forbid language about
divine substance (substance and at the same time one substance), as well as the
Homoiousians who try to claim the Father and the Son come from a substance which
preexists God (that substance is from the Father to the Son).358 The invisibility of the
Father is remedied by the visibility of the consubstantial Son.
Victorinus will do this again at the end of Book IV. In a section that is part of IV 2933, he will for one last time in the entire work of Against Arius sum up his major
arguments about the divinity and consubstantiality of the Son. At the end of IV 29,
Victorinus uses a chain of Scripture texts to prove the consubstantiality of the Son,
356. See section on John 1:18 above for full quotation o f this section.
357. Clark, 265. AA IV 9,1-5. Quot hie mysteria, quot genera quaestionum, quot signa ad declarandum et
deum et Iesum Christum et substantiam esse et unam ambo esse substantiam et simul utrumque unam
esse substantiam et a patre filio esse substantiam! CSEL 83/1,237.
358. The same argument Victorinus makes in 1 29,7-33.
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employing Genesis 1:26, Matthew 11:27,1 Corinthians 1:24, and John 1:1, to which he
also adds John 16:15 and Philippians 2:6.359 From there he jumps into a summary of the
divine and magnificent mysteries that are contained within such a passage as
Philippians 2:6; the first of which, he claims, is that
Christ is the form of God, in whom one sees that he has all that God has, For this is the
form which is also called image, as it was said of him who is the image of God. Therefore,
God also has his image, and the Son is the image of God. And indeed, if it was said: No one
has ever seen my face, and it was said: You will see me from behind, there is without doubt a
face for God, there is through the Son an image of God, or rather the Son is also the image of
God, as was said: Who was in the form of God.360
It is no surprise that Victorinus has combined the visibility texts of Philippians 2:6 (die
form of God) and Colossians 1:15 (the image of God) with Exodus 33:20(23); he has
typically done this throughout Against Arius when looking to Scripture for proof of his
arguments on the Son.
An image text upon which one would expect more comment from Victorinus is II
Corinthians 4:4, That they should not see the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ
who is the image of God (dxtov 0eou). In AA I, when Victorinus is giving his glosses
on the first half of the books of the New Testament canon, he cites this text from II
Corinthians as indicating that that Christ is from God, not from nonexistents. He adds
to this an extended discussion along the lines that the Father entails hidden realities, the
Son the manifest realities.
359. See chapter 5 section, Uses o f Matthew 11:27 by Early Latins for a flail quotation o f this section. Jn.
16:15 reads All that the Father has, he has given to me, and all that the Father has, I also have, a
pronouncement text that is the same as Matt. 11:27.
360. Clark, 295. AA IV 30,210. quod Cbristus form a dei est in quo ostenditur omnia habere quae deus
habet. Hoc enim est form a quae et imago dicitur, sicuti de ipso dictum, qui est imago dei. Habet igitur
et deus imaginem suam et filius imago dei est. Etenim si dictum: faciem dei nemo umquam vidit, et
dictum: posterganea mea videbis, est sine dubio facies deo, est filio, vel potius est et filius im ago dei,
ut dictum est: qui, cum in form a dei fuisset. CSEL 83/1,26970.
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If Christ is the image of God Christ is from God. For an image is an image of what is
manifested; but God is manifested; Christ is therefore the image. But an image is an image of
what is manifested, and what is manifested is the original; but the image is second and different in
substance from that which is manifested. But we do not conceive the image up there as it is in
sensible things. For here we do not conceive the image to be a substance. For it is a sort of
shadow in air or in water through a sort of corporeal emanation. By itself it is nothing nor has it
movement of its ownonly what is manifested by it is a substance; and it has neither body, nor
senses, nor understaning. And when that in which it is reflected is removed or disturbed, it is no
longer anything or anywhere. Therefore in a different way we say that Chrsit is the image of
God. We say that the image is, first, through itself and so that it is knowing, that it is both living
and life-giving and the seed of all existents. For it is the Logos through whom are all things and
without this, nothing. But all these things are also attributed to God. Therefore God and the
Logos are homoousion.m
The comment on this continues through all of AA 1 19; in 20, Victorinus links his
discussion of image with comment on Genesis 1:26. If the Father and the Son are the
same substance, that means that they have to be the same image: If the image o f the
Father is the Son and if the image itself is the Father, they are therefore homoousioi in
respect to image.
'ifsy
comes to the Form of God shortly in Book 121, when he takes up Philippians 2.
The use of Colossians 1:15 is not so extensive among Latins as one might assume
from such an explicit statement of divine invisibility versus visibility. Tertullian, in
chapter 19 of Book V of his work Against Marcion, uses Colossians 1:15 in passing to
speak about the image of God, combining it with Exodus 33:20, John 1:3 and other
texts. In chapter 20 of that same work, in his attack against the Marcionite denial of
361. Clark, 115-16. AA 1 19,5-22. Si imago dei Christos, de deo Christos. Imago enim imaginalis imago;
imaginalis autem deus, imago ergo Christas. Sed imago imaginalis imago est, et quod imaginale est
principale; imago autem secunda, et aliud secundum substantiam ab eo quod imaginale est. Sed non
sic intellegimus ibi imaginem, sicuti in sensibilibus. Hie enim nec substantiam intellegimus
imaginem. Umbra enim quaedam est in aere aut in aqua per quoddam corporate lumen, corporalis
effluentiae per reflexionem figurata, ipsa per semet nihil, nec proprii motas imaginalis solum
substantia neque corpus neque sensum neque intellegentiam habens et ablato aut turbato in quo
figuratum est omnino nihil et nusquam est. Alio igitur modo dicimus Christum imaginem d e i esse:
primum esse et per semet esse et quae sit intellegens esse et viventum dicimus imaginem et
vivefacientem et semen omnium quae sunt; koyoq enim p e r quem omnia et sine isto nihil. Sed ista
omnia etiam deo adtributa sunt. Ergo 6|iooi3oiov deus et koYog. CSEL 83/1, 83-84.
362. Clark, U l . A A l 20,8-10.
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Christs true bodily flesh, Tertullian uses Colossians 1:15 in tandem with Philippians
2:6-8 in much the same way that Victorinus does, most of all in his preoccupation with
the categories of image and form:
Evidently here too the Marcionites suppose that in respect of Christs substance the apostle
expresses agreement with them, (suggesting) that there was in Christ a phantasm of flesh, when
he says that b ein g e sta b lish e d in the fo r m o f G o d he thought it n ot ro b b e ry to b e m ade e q u a l w ith
G od, b u t e m p tie d h im se lf b y ta k in g up the fo r m o f a serva n t not the trutha n d (w a s) in the
likeness o f m an not in a mana n d w a s fo u n d in fa sh io n a s a m an not in substance, that
is, not in flesh: as though fashion and likeness and form were not attributes of substance as well.
But it is well that in another place also he calls Christ the im age o f the in visible G od. So then here
too where he says he is in the form of God, Christ will have to be not really and truly God, if he was
not really man when established in the form of man. For that really and truly must of necessity be
ruled out on both sides if form and likeness and fashion are to be claimed as meaning phantasm. 63
Apart from the polemical anti-Marcionite context of this passage, we see Tertullian using
the exegetical idiom of combining the image of God with the form of God. Even if this is
a hapax legomenon within Tertullians work, Victorinus will employ the same idiom in
Against Arius in speaking about the visibility of God. Though the combination o f
Colossians 1:15 and Philippians 2:6 seems a natural one, this chain (with other visibility
texts) does not see use among other contemporary Latins except for Hilary of Poitiers.
Throughout the books of De trinitate Hilary uses quotations from, and often allusions
to, Colossians 1:15 to identify the Sons origin, true identity, and ontological unity with
the Father. In De trinitate II, 8, for example, the definition of the Son from Colossians
1:15 is included in Hilarys pronouncement of the Sons reality: He is the offspring of
363. Tertullian, Adversus Marcionem, trans. Ernest Evans (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1972), 637, 639.
(Henceforth Evans, Adversus Marcionem.) Adversus Marcionem V,20,3, 1-4,7. Plane de substantia
Christi putant et hie Marcionitae suffragari apostolum sibi, quod phantasma camis fuerit in Christo,
cum dicit quod in effigie dei constitutus non rapinam existimavit pariari deo, sed exhausit semetipsum
accepta effigie servi, non veritate, et in similitudine hominis, non in homine, et figura inventus homo,
non substantia, id est non came; quasi non et figura et similitudo et effigies substantiae quoque
accedant. Bene autem quod et alibi Christum imaginem dei invisibilis appellat. Numquid ergo et hie,
qua in effigie eum dei collocat, aeque non erit deus Christus vere, si nec homo vere fuit in effigie
hominis constitutus? Utrobique enim veritas necesse habebit excludi, si effigies et similitudo et figura
phantasmati vindicabitur. Evans, 636, 638.
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153
the unbegotten, the one from the one, the true from the true, the living from the living, the
perfect from the perfect, the power of power, the wisdom of wisdom, the glory o f glory,
the image of the invisible God, the form of the unbegotten Father.364 This is immediately
followed by another quotation of Colossians 1:15 that is combined with John 14:9, 14:10,
5:26 (As the Father has life in himself, even so he has given to the Son to have life in
himself),365 and 16:15 (All things that the Father has are mine). It is not unusual for
Hilary to group texts such as these with Colossians 1:15 throughout the twelve books of
his work. In Book VIII he discusses how Christian belief has multiple, sometimes
apparently contradictory things to which one gives assent. For example, the evangelist
John records Christ as saying He who has seen me has seen the Father(John 14:9),
while Paul the teacher of the Gentiles pronounces that Christ is the image of the
invisible God(Colossians 1:15):
I ask whether there is a visible image of the invisible God, and whether the infinite God can be
brought together in an image so that He is visible through the image of a limited form? An image
must express the form of Him whose image it is. Let those who wish the Son to have a different
kind of nature decide upon what kind of an image they wish the Son to be of the invisible Father.366
364. McKenna, Hilary o f Poitiers: The Trinity, 42. D e trinitate 11,8,69. Est enim progenies ingeniti, unus
ex uno, uerus a uero, uiuus a uiuo, perfectus a perfecto, uirtutis uirtus, sapientiae sapientia, gloria
gloriae, imago inuisibilis Dei, forma Patris ingeniti. CCSL 62,45.
365. Jn. 5:26 is, as already noted, without doubt the most important Johannine text for Victorinus way o f
thinking, because the Son as the christological category o f life neatly fits into Victorinus divine
triad o f esse, vivere, intelligere.
366. McKenna, Hilary o f Poitiers: The Trinity, 313. De trinitate VIII,48, 510. Et interrogo, utrum uisibilis
imago est inuisibilis Dei, et utrum infinitus Deus per formae imaginem coimaginari possit ad speciem?
Imago enim formam necesse est eius reddat, cuius et imago est. Qui uolunt autem alterius generis in
Filio esse naturam, constituant cuiusmodi Filium imaginem esse inuisibilis Dei uelint. CCSL 62A, 360.
Hilary must qualify his assertion about Christ as image and form o f God according to divine power and
nature in the next chapter o f Book VIII, when he says Certainly, the creator o f invisible things is not
compelled by any necessity o f nature to be the visible image o f the invisible God. And in order that we
might not regard Him as the image o f the form rather than o f the nature, He is therefore the image o f the
invisible God, because by the power o f His nature we are to understand that in Him there is not an
invisible attribute but the nature o f God. McKenna, Hilary o f Poitiers .The Trinity, 314.
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Like Victorinus, in Hilary we see the exegetical idiom of combining the image o f God
with the form of God, of combining a common visibility text such as Colossians 1:15
with other convincing visibility texts. Hilary clearly understands the importance of a text
such as Colossians 1:15, and as he sums up everything he has argued for in De trinitate in
Book XII, he makes one last form-and-image statement of the Son: Since the onlybegotten God contains in Himself the form and the image of the invisible God, He is
made equal to Him in all these attributes that are proper to God the Father, through the
fullness of the Godhead in Himself.
j/rn
values the text of the first three chapters of Colossians enough to use it throughout his
work, especially Colossians 2:9 (For in him the whole fullness of deity dwells bodily).
Curiously, Victorinus uses this only twice in all of Against Arms?
The Fo rm
of
G o d : P h il ip p ia n s C h r is t H y m n
The grandest, most elaborate use of Philippians 2:5-8369 in Against Arius is as a visibility
proof-text. Victorinus uses it especially to prove the combined idea of form and
image of God while linking it to other key texts and ideas, foreshadowing what
Augustine will do to speak of divine visibility one generation later.370 In Book IA 21
367. McKenna, Hilary ofPoitiers.The Trinity, 517. D e trinitate XII,2 4 ,1 3. Formam itaque adque
imaginem inuisibilis D ei unigenitus in se Deus continens, in omnibus his quae propria D eo Patri sunt
per plenitudinem uerae in se diuinitatis aequatur. CCSL 62A, 597.
368. In Book 1 25,27-28 and Book II 3,32-34, though each involves how Jesus must be homoousios with
the Father if the fullness o f Deity dwells within him. One would expect Victorinus to make much
more mention o f this text.
369. ll5Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, 6who, though he was in the form
o f God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, 7but emptied him self taking the form
o f a servant, being bom in the likeness o f m en .8And being found in human form he humbled himself
and became obedient unto death, even death on a cross. (RSV)
370. Victorinus also uses Phil. 2 as divine unity text, combining form and image o f God with substance and
power. Cf. chapter 5, One Substance, One Power Statements in Victorinus. Barnes writes o f
Augustine using Matt. 5:8 (Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God) as a visibility text
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Victorinus turns to the idea of Christ the Form of God, taking his cue from the
Philippians passage, and immediately naming Photinus and Photinians after him as his
targets.371 The famous passage, in Victorinus consideration, proves that the Son is
Christ, consubstantial with the Father, and, together with the Father, powerful. He
reiterates then that they are of the same power and same substance, and beyond this lies
the reality that the form of God is not only substantial, but identical to the image: If
therefore Christ is the form of God but the form is substancefor form and image are
identicalbut the form and image of God is the Logos and the Logos is always with
God, the Logos is homoousion with God, with whom both in the principle and
always he is Logos.372 This proves to be a good, if simple, argument: If Christ is the
Form of God, then he must be the substance of God. The other nature of Christ is
apparent from his taking the form of a slave, being bom in human likeness, and found in
the human schema.
The full human nature is also absolutely proven from the Philippians
passage.374 Even though Victorinus sees so much meaning within Philippians 2:5-7, he
371.
372.
373.
374.
that combats subordationist understandings o f the Son, used with other visibility texts such as Phil. 2
and Jn. 14:9: Augustine thinks o f this vision o f the Form o f God as a Trinitarian event. The
testimony o f Christs words to Philip in John 14 about the sight o f the Son being the sight o f the
Father, and vice versa, as well as the creedal-type testimony regarding the common substance and
unity o f operations shared by the Father, Son and Holy Spirit provide the basis for Augustine to assert
that the vision o f the Son as Form o f God will itself become a vision o f the Father and o f the Trinity.
Michel Barnes, Visible Christ, 335.
Clark, 121ff.
Clark, 122. AA 122,6-10. Si igitur Christus form a est dei, forma autem substantia est idipsum enim
forma et imago est autem forma et imago dei Xoyoq et semper Xoyog ad deum, 6pooixnov Xoyog deo
ad quem et in principio et semper est Xoyoq. CSEL 83/1,90-1. Hadot describes it as The two names o f
Christ are read henceforth in a constant maimer by Victorinus. Hadot, Traites Theologiques, 770-71.
The key terms in the Pauline passage, according to the Greek and Latin texts are 2:6, in the form o f
God (ev poptpfj eou/in forma Dei); 2:7, taking the form o f a slave (poptpfiv Soukou
XaPcov/formam servi accipiens); bom in human likeness (ev 6poubpcm dvOptimcov yevdpevog/in
similitudinem hominum foetus); and 2:8, found in human form (oxppaxi evpeGek; (be; av9pa)Jiog/et
habitu inventus ut homo).
As Victorinus says it in 1 2 2 ,1 3 -1 6 : Did he take only the form o f man but not the substance o f man?
For he has also put on flesh and was in the flesh and suffered in the flesh, and this is the mystery, and
this is what saves us. Clark, 122.
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does not link it with other texts, except for a passing reference to Genesis 1:26 and a
quotation from Porphyrys Isagoge. It is in Book IV that he uses a combined idiom of
form and image, using Philippians, and also linking it extensively with other key texts.
In IV 8 Victorinus takes up again the theme that the Son is the Life and Form o f the
Father, opening with his typical philosophical discourse, and his distinctive noetic triad
paradigm of the persons of the Godhead as Being, Life, and Understanding. This
discussion of the significance of each subsistence of the triad leads to an appraisal of the
idea that the knowledge of a thing reveals what it is the form of. Victorinus tries here to
reconcile two initial texts, John 1:18 and 14:9. That no one has even seen God may be
true without the life that is revealed in the Son, but with that life the Son can be a referent
to the First Person, thus whoever has seen me, has also seen the Father.375 Therefore,
Victorinus asserts, the Son of God is the form of God, that is, life which is the form of
living, after which he cites Philippians 2:6 (who although he was in the form of God,
did not think it robbery to be equal to God). The chain of Scripture continues right after
this with a quotation of Colossian 1:15, He who is the image of the invisible God.
These texts together suffice for Victorinus that the Father is invisible, but the Son is
manifestly visible, as he concludes, Therefore, Jesus Christ is both the image and the
form of God. But we have said that in the form one sees that of which it is form; and, in
the same way, through the image also, one sees the one of which it is the image, above all
if the one whose image it is, is invisible. 376After this pronouncement, Victorinus
completes his thought by completing the chain, with the authorities, as he says
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John.. .and Moses, when he quotes John 1:18 and Exodus 33:20.
-377
paragraph we see a neat Scripture chain of divine visibility, with the combined idea of
Form and Image of God, beginning with John 14:9, to Philippians 2:6, to Colossians
1:15, finally to John 1:18 and Exodus 33:20.
Combined Form and Image will appear once more in AA IV, at the end of which
Victorinus gives the most important reprise of all his apologetic for consubstantiality of
the Father and the Son. Victorinus began his work of four books with this combined
form/image idea; he will also end with it, because in his trinitarian reflection,
consubstantiality must include acknowledgement of Form and Image.378 Starting at the
end of IV 29, Victorinus takes up Form and Image again in speaking about the Sons
equality with the Father, citing Philippians 2:6, of which there will be a running
commentary in the last seven or eight pages of Book IV.379 In IV 30, Victorinus explains
what Form of God means:
First, that Christ is the form of God, in whom one sees that he has all that God has. For this
is the form which is also called image, as it was said of him who is the image of God.
Therefore, God also has his image, and the Son is the image of God. And indeed, if it was said:
No one has ever seen my face, and it was said: You will see me from behind, there is without
doubt a face for God, there is through the Son an image of God, or rather the Son is also the
image of God, as was said: Who was in the form of God. Whence it was rightly said: Let us
make man according to our image and likeness.
Therefore the Son is, and if he is, he is different. For Father is not the same as Son, Son is not
the same as Father, yet through those realities that I treated above, they are identical; identical,
that is, having the same realities, but each one through his own existence. That is why they are
both the same and different.380
377. Jn. 1:18, N o one has at any time seen God except the only begotten Son who went forth from his
bosom; Ex. 33:20, You will not see my face. For who has seen my face and lived?
378. InAA 1 22,6-10, for example.
379. It begins in IV 29,39 with a quotation o f John 16:15 All that the Father has, he has given to me,
and all that the Father has, I also have then quoting Phil. 2:6 as further proof o f equality.
380. Clark, 2 95-96. AA IV 30,2-15. Primum quod Christus form a dei est in quo ostenditur omnia habere
quae deus habet. Hoc enim est form a quae et imago dicitur, sicuti de ipso dictum, qui est imago dei.
Habet igitur et deus imaginem suam et filius imago dei est. Etenim si dictum: faciem dei nemo
umquam vidit, et dictum: posterganea mea videbis, est sine dubio facies deo, est filio, vel potius est et
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The Father and Son are realities: the Father is a matter of hidden realities; the Son is a
matter of manifest realities.381 They are identical, Victorinus assures us, only insofar as
they share the same reality, but each possesses his own defined existence.
Or, as
Victorinus will restate in the same paragraph (when referring again to He did not
consider it robbery to be equal to God): Only someone possessing his own existence
believes himself or speaks of himself as equal to another.
The motif of robbery is again the occasion for contemplating the visible form of God
in IV 32, when Victorinus refers to Philippians as that sacred passage full of mysteries
in a discussion about the verity of the Son being enfleshed.384 Christ, he asserts, was in
the form of God.. .before he was in the flesh. His quality and his grandeur385 were
being in the form of God. This form is being identical to the Father, and it is that in
which the Father is contemplated, with the added quotation of John 14:9. But being the
form was not insofar as he was visible, but insofar as he is himself, God, divine
substance, Logos, life; this, therefore, he was before taking flesh.
381.
382.
383.
384.
385.
filius imago dei, ut dictum est: qui, cum in form a dei juisset. Unde iure dictum: faciamus hominem ad
imaginem et similitudinem nostram.
Est ergo filius et, si est, alter est. Non enim idem pater, idem filius, illis rebus omnibus supra a me positis
idem; idem autem, hoc est eadem habens, exsistentia sua propria. Unde et idem et alter. CSEL 83/1,
269-70. An excellent passage to allay uneasiness about Victorinus occasional slips into modalism.
TaAA IV 30,28-31 Victorinus states his idea again: And certainly God also has a form, but the Son o f
God is the manifested form, while the form o f God is a hidden form. Such is the case for all the rest:
existence, life, knowledge, insofar as they are Gods, they are hidden within, but insofar as they are
the Sons they are manifested. Clark, 296. It would be better for Victorinus to maintain the
distinction between Father and Son, rather than voicing God versus Son, which sounds antiNicene in itself.
An important qualification in light o f other times when Victorinus treads the edge o f Modalism in his
insistence upon identical (idem) statements between Father/Son and Son/Spirit.
AA IV 30,20-21. In sua exsistentia positi est se cum altero credere vel dicere aequalem. CSEL 83/1,270.
JnAA 32,1453.
qualis et quantus AA TV 32,33
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Conclusion
The issue of visibility, for Victorinus, is something far different than what it was for
Latins who preceded him, such as Tertullian and Novatian. The Latin tradition o f
understanding the Father as invisible but the Son as visible, and there being an
understood problem of this meaning a certain subordination of the Son, is something
Victorinus totally ignores. Texts in Scripture which speak of the Fathers invisibility are
explained constantly by texts which speaks of the Sons visibility, such as the words of
God to Moses in Exodus 33:20, No one may see my face and live... explained by the
Son making a pronouncement about visibility, such as John 14:9, If you have seen me
you have seen the Father. Invisibility and visibility together mean for Victorinus that
the Father and the Son share a divine unity, with a constant theme of X from X
causality, each feature of the Fathers nature producing that same nature for the Son.
The Son being the combined Image and Form of God, means for Victorinus that the Son
manifests hidden realities, enabling one to see and fully know all that the Father has. And
all of this is for the purpose of serving the Neo-Nicene cause: to retrieve, defend and
clearly define the homoousios in later Nicene trajectories. Victorinus defense o f the
homoousios is relentless; something easily noticed in reading just a few pages o f Against
Arius.
With this new Neo-Nicene cause Victorinus has used the typical scriptural testimonia
chains of his Latin forebears, for this new purpose. And beyond the work of those who
preceded him, Victorinus, like other Nicenes of his day, sees the high-end value of
holding forth on a classic locus such as Philippians chapter 2: It holds a prominent place
in Book I of Against Arius, and he will come back to it as a reprise of his whole work in
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Book IV of Against Arius, tying it with other texts such John 14:9, John 1:18, Colossians
1:15, Exodus 33:20, which are absolutely vital for arguing that the Father and the Son
share the same nature and essence.
Victorinus achieves a complex exegesis with speaking of divine visibility that he was
not quite able to accomplish with speaking of the theme of divine substance; he has far
more to work with for visibility texts than he had with those for substance. He also has a
Latin tradition for speaking of divine visibility that he understands and uses to articulate a
Nicene case for homoousios. He will take the force of Neo-Nicene argument even further
in what he accomplishes with speaking of divine unity of Father, Son and Spirit.
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386. The Synoptic parallel to Matt. 11:27 is Lk. 10:22, though whenever this verse appears in Ante-Nicene
and Nicene writers it is usually identified as Matt. 11:27, possibly because o f theories o f Matthean
authorship preceding that o f Luke.
387. AA 1 2,3-5.
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Jesus. He begins his brief, three-page consideration of Matthew with the proof o f the
testimony of Satan, who knew of Christs identity, followed by a tremendous
consideration of Christs own testimony of himself in Matthew 11:27 and John 1:18:388
That the Son has everything the Father has: All things have been given to me by the Father; and
no one knows the Son except the Father; nor does anyone know the Father except the Son, and
him to whom the Son chooses to reveal him. What is the reason that only the Son knows the
Father and only the Father knows the Son except that no one has his substance? For all who know
the Father in his glory and his divinity, in his power, in his very act, also adore him. But since to
know this is to know the very to be of God himself, that is, his substance, for that reason no one
knows God except the Son having the same substance and having it from God. For no one can see
in any other way Gods to be, as it is said: The only begotten Son who is in the bosom of the
Father, he has declared what is Gods to be. For he is in the bosom and in the metra (matrix)
of substance. Each one of the two is homoousios oun (consubstantial therefore), each one being,
both by substance and by divinity, in the other, and each one knowing each other.389
That the Son has everything the Father has means, for Victorinus, that the Son has
the same substance as the Father, because the Son knows the Father. This may seem
initially like Victorinus reflexive, Neoplatonist association that ontology and
epistemology flow into one another. However, Christs statement in Matthew 11:27 sets
up the connection between knowing and being the same as when it connects All
things have been given to me by the Father with no one knows the Son except the
Father, nor does anyone know the Father except the Son. No one knows the Father,
inasmuch as no one else has his substance, but there is One who knows the Father in his
glory and his divinity, in his power, in his very act. To know the Father in this way is to
388. ...the only begotten Son, who is in the bosom o f the Father, he has made him known
389. Clark, 110. AA 1 15,3449. Quod omnia patris filius habet: omnia mihi tradita sunt a p a tre et nullus
cognoscitfilium nisi p a ter nec patrem nisifilius cognoscit et cui vultfilius revelare. Quae causa solum
filium scire patrem aut patrem, ut cognoscat filium, nisi quod nullus habet substantiam eius? Omnia
enim quae in claritudine et in divinitate, in potentia, in ipsa actione et cognoscunt patrem et colunt.
Sed quoniam cognoscere hoc est scire ipsius dei ipsum quod est ei esse, hoc est substantiam eius,
idcirco nullus cognoscit deum, nisi substantiam eandem habens filius et habens ab ipso. A lio enim
modo nullus potuit videre, sicuti dictum est: unigenitus filius, qui est in gremio patris, ille enarravit,
quid est esse deum. In gremio enim est et in pf|Tpg substantiae. 'Opoouoiog ouv uterque, et substantia
et divinitate consistens uterque in utroque, et cognoscit uterque utrumque. CSEL 83/1,76-7.
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know God as he is in himself, in his substance; therefore, only the consubstantial Son
knows the Father.
According to Hadot, the probable background to Victorinus assertions and choice of
texts in IA 15,3439 is the Homoian Creed of Sirmium 357,390 which understands there
to be a connection between knowledge and being as:
But inasmuch as some or many were troubled about substance {substantia), which in Greek is
called usia, that is, to make it more explicit, homousion or the term homoeusion, there ought to be
no mention of these at all and no one should preach them, for the reason and ground that they are
not contained in inspired Scripture, and because the subject is beyond the knowledge of man, and
no one can explain the nativity of the Son, regarding Whom it is written, Who shall explain His
generation?391 For it is plain that only the Father knows how He begat the Son, and the Son how
He was begotten by the Father.392
Hadot argues that Victorinus defense of substance arises from the condemnation of
substantive language at Sirmium in 357. He can reasonably suggest this because Sirmium
357 is the first, among all the synodal and conciliar documents of the 340s and 350s up to
that time, that attacked substance-based trinitarian language, including the watchword of
Nicaea, homoousios. Creeds before 357 were simply non-Nicene; Sirmium 357,
2Q3
It was a turning-point in
390. 15,39. Encore une fois les bona divinitatis, cf. 7,1824 n., vestige de la reaction contre Sirmium
357. Cette fois 1Enumeration se rapporte aux manifestations exterieures de la substance divine et doit
etre rapprochEe de Rom. 1,20 citE 2,35-37: Aetema...virtus ac divinitas. Les creatures ne peuvent
connaitre de Dieu le Pere que sa glorie, sa puissance, son action extErieure et sa divinitE.
Reconnaissant cette divinitE et cette puissance du Dieu crEateur, elles ladorent. Seul le Fils, parce
quil est en elle, connait la substance, cf. adv. Ar. n 5,14. Cette idEe rejoint ainsi le thEme bien connu:
Dieu nest pas connu en son ousia, mais en ses oeuvres qui manifestent son existence. Hadot, Traites
Theologiques, 755.
391. Is. 53:8, die favorite proof-text o f various anti-Nicenes for forbidding any consideration o f the manner
o f the Sons generation.
392. Kelly, Early Christian Creeds, 285-86.
393. Hilarys memorable term for the creed, exemplum blasphemiae apudSirmium, from his D esynodis 11.
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164
subordinationist statements394 (There is no question that the Father is greater. For it can
be doubtful to none that the Father is greater than the Son in honour, dignity, splendour,
majesty, and in the very name of Father.. .).395 Victorinus responds with his own
statement of the Sons divine origin and identity: For all who know the Father in his
glory (claritudo) and his divinity (divinitas), in his power (potentia), in his very act
(actione), also adore him.396 Victorinus makes another link in his argument for the
consubstantiality of the Son by selecting Matthew 11:27 as a key text to prove
consubstantiality and then connecting that text to John 1:18 (the only begotten Son who
is in the bosom of the Father, he has made him known). Victorinus has already cited
John 1:18 twice so far in Against Arius (IA 2,21-23 and LA. 8,16) to regard the concept of
in the bosom as equivalent to being the to be of God; that is, the same substance. In
the bosom of the Father means not only to be in gremio, in the lap of the Father, but in
the inner being, in the metra, the womb or matrix. Victorinus constellating of these
texts appears to be close within the Latin context of the 350s, the confuting of the
subordinationist theology surrounding the Blasphemy of Sirmium 357.
394. Hanson observes that In spite of, indeed because o f its extreme character, the Second Creed o f
Sirmium o f 357 constituted a landmark. It is not a compromising nor reconciling creed. It makes no
concessions at all to the pro-Nicenes. It is certainly not meant to take the place o f N , but it attacks N ,
no longer covertly, but directly and openly, as it also attacks the Dedication Creed o f 341. It is the
m anifesto o f a party, o f the party that stood in the tradition o f Arius though it did not precisely
reproduce his doctrine. And as a m anifesto it was also a catalyst. It enabled everybody to see where
they stood. At last the confusion which caused Westerners to regard Easterners as Arians can be
cleared up. This is an Arian creed. Those who support it are Arians. Those who are repelled by it are
not. Hanson, Search, 347. Hanson is too quick to claim that Homoians were the genetic descendants
o f the anti-Nicene tradition o f Arius. We should remember that Homoians them selves vociferously
denied that they had anything to do with the heritage o f Arius.
395. K elly, Early Christian Creeds, 286. Hilary, D e synodis 11 (PL 1 0 ,489a): Patrem honore, dignitate,
claritate, maiestate et ipso nomine Patris maiorem esse filio; Athanasius, D e synodis 28,7 (PG 26,
741c): t o v ncrtepa Tigfj x a i
x a i Seioxiyn. x a i auxqj -rip d v o g c ra -rip Jtaxpixcp pd ^ ova e lv a i.
396. Clark, 110. AA 1 15,39-41. Omnia enim quae in claritudine et in divinitate, in potentia, in ipsa
actione et cognoscunt patrem et colunt. CSEL 83/1, 76 -7 .
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Within a few years, when writing Book IV of Against Arius, Victorinus again makes
use of Matthew 11:27 to argue for the consubstantiality of the Son. It appears within a
rich chain of texts (one that, surprisingly, makes no use of John 1:18) that contain creedal
languageGod and God; living God and living God; eternal and eternal; invisible and
invisible397including Victorinus typical noetic triad of to be, to live, to understand.
The Sons knowledge of the Father is key here again, proving consubstantiality. If the
Son states all that the Father has..
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But it is in Against Praxeas that the most effective, recognizable uses of this locus can
be seena veritable gold mine of text constellations. In chapter 8 of Against Praxeas
Tertullian describes the prolation of the Son, while also arguing (against Valentinus, for
example) on behalf of the still-guaranteed unity of the Son and Spirit with the Father and
the Sons full knowledge with the Father. Matthew 11:27 appears along with John 1:18,
attesting to the Sons M l presence within the Godhead; he also cites John 10:30 and
14:11 for other proofs of this reality:
But with us the Son alone knows the Father, and himself has declared the bosom of the Father,
and has both heard and seen all things in the Fathers presence: and whatsoever things he has
been commanded by the Father, those he also speaks: and has accomplished not his own will but
the Fathers, which he knew intimately, yea from the beginning. For who knows the things which
be in God, except the Spirit who is in him? But the Word consists of spirit, and (so to speak) spirit
is the body of the Word. Therefore the Word is always in the Father, as he says, I am in the
Father: and always with God, as it is written, And the Word was with God: and never separate
from the Father or other than the Father, because, I and the Father are one.399
In chapters 22 through 24 of Against Praxeas, Tertullians extended exposition of the
Gospel of John returns to this point, underscoring both divine unity between Father and
Son and the distinct reality of each.400 Tertullian rails against Praxeas and his fallacious
understanding of certain texts supposedly showing a conflation of, rather than distinction
between, the Father and the Son.
The dispensation between the Father and the Son is illuminated through numerous
examples in John of the Son referring to the Father, especially speaking about the mission
given the Son by the Father. In Against Praxeas chapter 24, Matthew 11:27 appears
399. Evans, Against Praxeas, 139. Adversus Praxean 8 ,2 8 -1 . apudnos autem solus filius patrem novit, et
sinum patris ipse exposuit, et om nia apud patrem audivit et vidit, et quae mandatus est a patre ea et
loquitur, nec suam sed patris perfecit voluntatem, quam de proximo immo de initio noverat. quis enim
scit quae sint in deo nisi spiritus qui in ipso est? sermo autem spiritu structus est, et ut ita dixerim
sermonis corpus est spiritus. sermo ergo et in patre semper, sicut dicit, Ego in patre: et apud deum
semper, sicut scriptum est, Et sermo erat apud deum: et nunquam separatus a patre aut alius a patre,
quia Ego et pater unum sumus. Evans, 96-97.
400. When reading this section o f Against Praxeas, it is difficult not to think o f Victorinus extended
treatment o f Johannine proof-texts near the very beginning o f Against Arius I, chapters 3 -1 5 .
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167
within the commentary on the exchange between Christ and the disciple Philip in John
14, in which Philip and the other disciples request to see (and therefore know) the Father.
The true meaning of this passage, Tertullian asserts, is the opposite of the modaiist sense
in which Praxeas would cast it; Tertullian argues that it really has to do with the
distinction of the persons of Father and Son.
It was not the Father who they did not know had companied so long time with them, but the Son:
and the Lord, upbraiding them for not knowing himself as him whom they had not known, clearly
wished to be recognized as he whom he had upbraided them for not recognizing in so long a time,
namely the Son. And now it can appear in what sense it was said, H e th at seeth m e seeth the F ather
a lso : of course in the same sense as above, I a n d the F ath er a re one. Why? Because, I ca m e fo r th
a n d am com e fr o m G o d ; and, I am the way, no one com eth unto the F ather but b y me; and, N o one
com eth unto m e ex cep t the F ath er h ave draw n him; and, A ll things hath the F ather d e liv e re d to me;
and, A s the F ath er quickeneth, s o a lso the Son; and, I f y e know m e y e know the F a th er also. For
according to these <texts> he had revealed himself as the deputy of the Father, by means of whom
the Father was both seen in acts and heard in words and known in the Son ministering the Fathers
acts and words: because the Father is invisible, a fact which Philip also had learned in the Law and
ought to have rememberedN o one sh a ll see G o d a n d live. And consequently he is chidden for
desiring to see the Father as though he were visible, and is informed that he become visible in the
Son, in consequence of acts of power, not in consequence of actual manifestation of his Person.401
There is at this point a constellation of texts pointing to the distinct realities of Father and
Son: Matthew 11:27 is inserted into a testimonium of Johannine loci, quoted with John 14:9,
John 10:30, John 16:28, John 14:6, John 6:44, John 5:21, John 14:7, and finally, Exodus
33:20.402 All are texts which will be directly at hand for Victorinus in his work Against Arius.
401. Evans, Against Praxeas, 165-66. Adversus Praxean 2 4,5-2 1. ergo non patrem tanto tem pore secum
conversatum ignoraverant sed filium: et dominus, eum se ignorari exprobans quern ignoraverant, eum
utique agnosci volebat quern tanto non agnosci tempore exprobraverat, id est filium. et apparere iam
potest quomodo dictum sit, Qui me videt videt et patrem: scilicet quo et supra, Ego et pater unum
sumus. quare? quia, Ego ex deo exivi et veni; et, Ego sum via, nemo ad patrem venit nisi per me; et,
Nemo ad me venit nisi pater eum adduxerit; et, Omnia mihi pater tradidit; et, Sicut pater vivificat, ita
et filius; et, Si me cognovistis et patrem cognovistis. secundum haec enim vicarium se patris
ostenderat, per quem pater et videretur in factis et audiretur in verbis et cognosceretur in filio facta et
verba patris administrante: quia invisibilis pater, quod et Philippus didicerat in lege et m em inisse
debuerat Deum nemo videbit et vivet. et ideo suggillatur patrem videre desiderans quasi visibilem ,
et instruitur visibilem eum in filio fieri ex virtutibus non ex personae repraesentatione. Evans, 120.
402. Jn. 16:28, I came forth from the Father, and am com e into the world; Jn. 6:44, N o man can com e to
me, except the Father draw him; Jn. 5:21, As the Father vivifies (the dead), so also does the Son;
Jn. 14:7, I f you had known m e, you would have known the Father also.
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Tertullian makes one more use of Matthew 11:27 in Against Praxeas. To speak further
of the distinct persons of the Father and the Son, he uses the Gospels of Matthew and
Luke for a series of examples of references to the Father and Son. And in Against
Praxeas 26, 27 Tertullian speaks at length about the procession of the Spirit and the Son,
proving that they are from the Father, while in this long statement he makes the point by
saying that they are from the very substance of the Father:
And consequently the Spirit is God and the Word is God, because he is from God, yet is not
(God) himself from whom he is. But if the Spirit of God, as being a substantive thing, will not (be
found to) be God himself, but in that sense God as being from the substance of God himself, in
that it is a substantive thing and a certain assignment of the whole.. .403
Novatian, less than a half-century later, mentions Matthew 11:27 in his work De
Trinitate, in three rather loose quotations, as portions of other texts strung together. But
the use of a unity text such as Matthew 11:27 by Novatian is highly significant, since his
trinitarian treatise, a premier work of the Latin West until the mid-fourth century,
concentrates on the defined identities of the Father and the Son, especially their unity. In
chapter 11 of De Trinitate, the notion of all things being given to the Son by the Father
means for Novatian that the Son has the powers of divinity in addition to the qualities of
his humanity. In chapter 26 Novatian addresses the claims of patripassian modalists who
want to claim that the Son is the Father. In response he cites a battery of mostly
Johannine texts, meant to underscore the distinct separate existence of the Son as God,
the Second Person after the Father.404 In chapter 31 Novatian includes Matthew 11:27 as
403. Evans, Against Praxeas, 171. Adversus Praxean 26,2428. et ideo spiritus deus et sermo deus, quia ex
deo, non tamen ipse ex quo e st quods/ spiritus dei, tamquam substantiva res, non erit ipse deus sed
hactenus deus qua ex ipsius dei substantia, qua et substantiva res est et ut portio aliqua totius Evans, 122.
404. DeSim one, The Trinity, 90-92. Cf. especially his concluding statement in XXVI, 2 0 -2 1 , after a
lengthy commentary on these texts: For throughout the D ivine Scripture o f the Old, as w ell as the
New Testam ent He is shown to us as bom o f the Father, one through whom all things were made,
and without whom nothing was made, who has ever been obedient to the Father and still obeys. He is
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a reference to why the Son acts in accordance with his Fathers will and being: the Son is
a separate person, but their divine union is still assured. The Son truly knows the Father,
and thus they are unified:
There is, then, God the Father, the Founder and Creator of all things, who alone is without origin,
invisible, immense, immortal, eternal, the one God. Nothing whatever, I will not say can be
preferred, but can even be compared to His greatness, His majesty, and His power. Of Him when
He will, the Word, who is the Son, was bom. The Word is to be understood here not as a sound that
strikes the air nor the tone of the voice forced from the lungs, but rather is discerned in the
substance of a power proceeding from God. Apostle has never ascertained, prophet has not
discovered, angel has not fathomed, nor has any creature known the hallowed secrets of His sacred
and divine birth. They are known to the Son alone, who has known the secrets of the Father.405
In his work Contra Arrianos, Phoebadius of Agen cites Matthew 11:27 only once, but
it occurs in a passage that also employs John 1:18, in order to speak against the creed of
Sirmium 357s disavowal of any language on the divine generation of the Son:
No one, he said, but the Father alone knows how the Son was generated. What does he wish to
say. with that statement? The Lord, not wishing us to be ignorant of that, said: I went out from
the Father and from the bosom of the Father. Such sadness! Why, he does not wish us to be
ignorant, following the darkness of ignorance while the Creator is known to us! And so for this
reason he does not wish that the question of his origin be set aside while the Creator is known to
us. For there was no one who should seek out in what way and how he was, since we know from
whence he was. But if in this passage the opinion of the Lord is set forth as confirmed, namely
saying: No one except the Son knows the Father nor does anyone know the Son except the
Father. Then they will hear from us so that they may not err regarding the divine definition.406
also revealed to us as have power over all things, power, however, that has been given, that has been
granted and conferred upon Him by His own Father. What could make it more evident that He is not
die Father but the Son than the fact that He is set before us as obedient to God the Father? I f w e were
to believe otherwise that He is the Fatherthen w e would have to say that Christ is subject to
another God the Father.
405. DeSim one, The Trinity, 108. D e Trinitate XXXI, 1-11. Est ergo Deus Pater omnium institutor et
creator, solus originem nesciens, inuisibilis, immensus, immortalis, aetemus, unus Deus, cuius neque
magnitudini neque maiestali neque uirtuti quicquam non dixerim praeferri, sed nec comparari potest.
Ex quo, quando ipse uoluit, sermo Filius natus est, qui non in sono percussi aeris aut tono coactae de
uisceribus uocis accipitur, sed in substantia prolatae a D eo uirtutis agnoscitur, cuius sacrae et diuinae
natiuitatis arcana nec apostolus didicit nec prophetes comperit nec angelus sciuit nec creatura
cognouit; F ilio soli nota sunt, qui Patris secreta cognouit. CCSL 4, 75.
406. Phoebadius o f Agen, Contra Arrianos X ,3,12-4,21 Nemo SCIT, inquit, QUOMODOGENITUS SITFILIUS
nisi Pater solus. Quid ergo sibi uult ilia sententia? Quia hoc Dominus ignorare nos nolens: Ego,
inquit, de Patre exiui et de sinu Patris. Pro dolor! cur sectantes ignorantiae tenebras ignorare nos
noluit! Et utique ideo noluit, ut, auctore nobis cognito, status sui quaestio tolleretur. N on enim erat
quaerendum quis, quomodo uel qualis esset, cum unde esset nosceremus. Sed si hoc loco ipsius
Domini sententia id confirmatum esse proponitur, dicentis scilicet: Nemo nouit Patrem n isi Filius,
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Phoebadius description of the Sons sole knowledge of the arcana of the Father sounds
like it was taken from Novatians treatise.
In De Trinitate 11.10, Hilary of Poitiers uses a chain of Scripture texts to prove the
unity of the Father and the Son, conceptually linking John 1:18, 10:30, 14:9, 14:28, and
Matthew 11:27: for Hilary a virtual summary of orthodox trinitarian theology.407
For this reason, pay attention to the unbegotten Father, listen to the only-begotten Son: The
Father is greater than I, Hear: I and the Father are one; hear: He who sees me sees also the
Father; hear: The Father is in me and I in the Father. Hear: I came forth from the Father, and
He who is in the bosom of the Father, and All things that the Father has He has delivered to
the Son, and The Son has life in Himself, as the Father also has life in Himself. Hear about the
Son, the image, the wisdom, the power, and the glory of God, and understand the Holy Spirit who
declares: Who shall proclaim his generation? And criticize the Lord as He testifies: No one
knows the Son except the Father; nor does anyone know the Father except the Son, and him to
whom the Son chooses to reveal him. Force yourself into this secret, and amid the one
unbegotten God and the one only-begotten God immerse yourself in the mystery of the
inconceivable birth. Begin, go forward, persevere. Even though I know that you will never reach
your goal, I will congratulate you for having gone ahead. Whoever seeks after infinite things with
nec Filium quis nouit nisi Pater, audient a nobis ne fraudem faciant diuinae definitioni. CCSL 64,
34-5.
407. A constellation o f texts similar to this appears also, for example, in Hilarys D e Trin. II, 20 ,1 5 -2 4
(CCSL 64, 56), which reads, He did not becom e aware o f His birth only later on, but recognized
Himse lf as God by the very fact that He was bom from God. This, the only begotten from the
unbegotten; this: I and the Father are one; this, the one God in the confession o f the Father and the
Son; this, the Father in the Son and the Son in the Father. Hence: He who sees me sees also the
Father. Hence: A ll things that the Father has he has given to the Son. Hence: As the Father has life
in him self, even so has he given to die Son to have life in him self. Hence: No one knows the Son
except the Father; nor the Father except the Son. Hence: In him dw ells all the fullness o f the
Godhead bodily. McKenna, Hilary o f Poitiers: The Trinity, 51. In VI, 26 there appears a gloss on
Matt. 11:27 as a way o f emphasizing the divine names o f Father and Son, their divine nature, and full
knowledge o f each other: in order that the Sons name may not be one o f adoption, or the Fathers
name one o f honor, let us see what attributes are attached to the name o f son by the Son. H e says: A ll
things have been delivered to me by my Father; and no one knows the Son except the Father; nor does
anyone know the Father except the Son, and him to whom the Son w ills to reveal him . D o not the
words already cited This is m y Son and M y Father, agree with N o one knows the Son except the
Father nor does anyone know the Father except the Son? For, it is only by a mutual attestation that the
Son could be known by the Father or the Father by the Son. The voice comes from heaven and the
statement com es from the Son. The Son is just as unknown as the Father. A ll things have been delivered
to Him, and by all is meant that nothing is excepted. If they are equal in power and in the secret o f
knowledge, if the nature is in the names, I ask in what way are they not what they are called, when in
regard to the strength o f their omnipotence (ius in potestate) and to the difficulty in being known there is
no distinction? DeSimone, The Trinity, 19495. D e Trin. VI, 26,4-18. CCSL 6 4 ,2 2 6-27 .
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a pious mind, although he never overtakes them, will still advance by pressing forward. Your
power of comprehension comes to a standstill at this boundary line of the words.4 8
Hilarys use of Matthew 11:27 involves what we have already seen in ante-Nicenes such
as Novatian: the Father and Son clearly united, from Christs pronouncement in Matthew
11:27; however, they are nonetheless real and distinct identities.
Ontological Unity
The primacy of John 10:30 as a unity text is obvious from its simple but clear statement
of unity: I and the Father are one409in spite of the efforts of anti-Nicene theology to
denature the text of its ontological implications by claiming that the Father and Son are
united merely in non- or quasi-divine aspects.410 Indeed, in all of the developmental
408. McKenna, Hilary o f Poitiers: The Trinity, 4 4 -4 5 . D e trinitate 11,10,1-17. Audi igitur Patrem
ingenitum, audi unigenitum Filium. Audi: Pater maior me est. Audi: Ego et Pater unum sumus. Audi:
Qui me uid.it, uidit et Patrem. Audi: Pater in me et ego in Patre. Audi: Ego de Patre exiui. Et: Omnia
quae habet tradidit. Et: Vitam Filius in sem etipso habet, sicut et Pater habet in sem etipso. A udi Filium
imaginem sapientiam uirtutem gloriam D ei. Et intellege proclamantem Spiritum sanctum:
Generationem eius quis enarrabit? Et obiurga Dominum testantem: Nemo nouit Filium nisi Pater,
neque Patrem quis nouit nisi Filius et cui uoluerit Filius reuelare. Et insere te in hoc secretum, et
inter unum ingenitum natiuitatis inmerge. Incipe, procurre, persiste. Etsi non peruenturum sciam ,
tamen gratulor profecturum. Qui enim pie infinita persequitur, etsi non contingat aliquando, tamen
proficiet prodeundo. Stat in hoc intellegentia fine uerborum. CCSL 6 2 ,4 7 -8
409. A remarkably short verse, but one that com es as the pronouncement at the end o f a statement Christ
makes to Jews who had rejected him at the Feast o f die Dedication in Jerusalem. Verse 29 precedes
his delcaration, when he says M y Father, who has given them (the sheep who hear his voice) to me,
is greater than all, and no one is able to snatch them out o f the Fathers hand.
410. The readiest example o f anti-Nicene interpretations o f Jn. 10:30 comes from early in the Trinitarian
Controversy from the learned Eusebian apologist Asterius. Among the surviving fragments o f his
writings, in Fragment XIII, Asterius speaks o f the Sons role as that which presents identity o f
doctrines and a consistent and exact correspondence with the Fathers teaching, for this reason he and
the Father are one; in Fragment XXXII Asterius said that the Father and the Son are one and the
same thing in that they agree (oupqxovovai) in eveiything. I and the Father are one (Jn. 10:30)
refers to their exact agreement in all ideas and activities. Hanson, The Search, 3 5 ,3 7 . A century later
a similar trajectory o f anti-Nicene theology would hold to the same arrested interpretation o f Jn.
10:30. In his debate with Augustine ca. 427/28, the Homoian bishop Maximinus asserts that Jn. 10:30
means that the Father and the Son are one in harmony and agreement, citing this verse four tim es
during the debate. Augustine, Debate with M aximinus, in Arianism and Other Heresies, trans.
Roland J. Teske,S.J., 190,194,21617. This Arian reading o f the text as pointing to an agreement
between the Father and the Son in various things was the best anti-Nicene theology could ever
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stages of Nicene theology in the fourth century, it is difficult to imagine any other text so
powerful in defending the homoousios, with the possible exception of John 14:910.
Especially in the later stages of the Trinitarian Controversy, John 10:30 would come
to take on a clear importance as a locus for the divine unity and consubstantiality of
the Father and the Son. As Hanson has pointed out, however, it should not be
assumed that John 10:30 is a straightforwardly Nicene or pro-Nicene text.411 It is
slightly a surprise that Victorinus does not use this text far more in Against Arius,
since so much of the work is devoted to arguing for consubstantiality, but that
notwithstanding it appears that Victorinus understands this unity text to be important,
especially in light of other key texts that will appear alongside John 10:30 in the
instances of its use.
InAA IA 5-15 there is the running commentary on the Gospel of John, where
Victorinus repeatedly gives his own glosses to consider the titles and realities of
Christs identity.412 Of particular interest in his discussion is how to explain the
equality and consubstantiality of the Father and the Son if there exist also the
traditional proof-texts such as Philippians 2:6-8 and John 14:28, which can be used to
cite the Sons inferiority to the Father. The answer for Victorinus is obvious: The Son
is both inferior and equal. (The Philippians passage makes the same dual claim;
everyone reading this passage can see the twin tracks of the Sons identity according
accom plish with its difficult challenge. M eslin does not even include Jn. 10:30 in his chart o f the
arsenal o f Scripture used by anti-Nicenes. M eslin, Les Ariens d Occident, 233.
411. For example, Hanson mentions that Alexander used it before Nicaea to show that Christ here is neither
calling him self the Father nor indicating that natures which are two in hypostases were one
... M arcellus... applied it to the ontological unity, indeed identity, o f the Father and his Logos (the Son
not appearing till the Incarnation), and to deny the existence o f two hypostases. Hanson, Search, 835.
412. This section is a continuous series o f propositions about Christ, most o f which begin with Q uod..
There are a total o f four instances o f Jn. 10:30 in Against Arius; interestingly, three appear in AA I,
then the fourth is in Book III.
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to his two natures.) John 10:30 makes its first appearance in all of Against Arius here,
when Victorinus makes the first of his One Substance, One Power declarations:413
That they are from the same substance and power: I and the Father are one. And again: The
Father is in me and I in Him. Whence it is said in Paul: Who being in the form of God did not
consider it robbery to be equal to God. These texts therefore signify both that they are one
substance and one power. For how is it said: I and the Father are one, and The father in me
and I in the Father, if he did not have from the Father substance and power, wholly begotten
from the All. And how explain: He did not consider it robbery to be equal to the Father. For he
did not say: he did not think that he was equal, but: he did not think it robbery. Therefore he
willed to be inferior, not wishing his equality to be considered robbery. For among those who are
equal, to be equal is considered or is not considered robbery. But we think that equality according
to power is spoken of here.
First, such is not the opinion of Arius, namely, that the Father is greater in honor, power,
glory, divinity, action; for Paul did say: equal. And if they are equal in all these things, this is
impossible without their being also of the same substance. For in God there is complete identity
between power, substance, divinity, and act. For in him all is unity and simple unity. In addition:
if the Son was from another substance and especially if he was from nothing, what must that
substance be that is capable of receiving such divine power? For equal is joined to equal and like
to like. Therefore Father and Son are equal and on account of that also the Son is in the Father
and the Father in the Son, and both are one.414
John 10:30 here figures as a divine unity statement, traveling with another obvious divine
unity text, John 14:10 (the Father in me and I in the Father), as well as with a divine
visibility text, Philippians 2:6 415 The unity of the Father and Son lies in the quod...
413. See chapter section below on One Substance, One Power statements in Victorinus.
414. Clark, 100-01. AA 1 8,369,24. Quod ex eadem substantia et potentia: ego et pater unum sumus. Et
rursus: p a ter in me et ego in ipso. Unde dictum in Paulo: qui in form a dei exsistens non rapinam
arbitratus est esse se aequalia deo. Ista igitur significant et unam esse substantiam et unam potentiam.
Quomodo enim: ego et p a ter unum sumus et quomodo: p ater in me et ego in patre, si non a patre
substantiam habuisset et potentiam, genitus de toto totus? Et quomodo: non rapinam arbitratus est
aequalia essepatrP. Non enim dixit: non arbitratus est aequalia esse, sed: non arbitratus est rapinam.
Vult ergo inferior esse non volens rapinam arbitrari aequalia esse. In istis enim arbitrari est aut non
arbitrari rapinam esse aequalia, qui sunt aequalia. Sed putavimus aequalia secundum potentiam
dictum esse. Primum non est illud Arii dogma, quod maior est pater dignitate, potentia, claritate,
divinitate, actione; aequalia enim dixit. Et si secundum istud aequalia, inpossibile secundum istud
aequalia esse, si non et substantia eadem; dei enim idem ipsum est et potentia et substantia et divinitas
et actio; omnia enim unum et unum sim plex. Hue accedit: si ab alia substantia erat filius et si maxime
ex nihilo, quae ilia substantia recipere valens istas divinitates et potentias? Aequali enim aequale
conectitur et sim ile sim ili. Aequalis igitur filius et pater et propterea et filius in patre et pater in filio et
ambo unum. CSEL 83/1,66-67.
415. Prior to writing Against Arius, Victorinus has grouped unity and visibility texts in the First Letter o f
Candidas and Letter to Candidas. In Candida Epistola 1 10,1415 (Clark, 56), when arguing for the divine
sonship o f Jesus, Victorinus cites John 14:10 and 10:30 together; in A d Candidum 1,25-27 (Clark, 60-1),
when arguing again for divine sonship, Victorinus groups John 10:30 with John 14:9 and 14:10.
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claim of Victorinus that they are of one substance and one power. For Victorinus, this
claim is both unusual, since he often speaks of multiple powers within God, and
remarkably prescient, in light of the role of one nature/substance, one power theology
later in Nicene theology in the 360s through the 380s.416
Later, in an anti-Marcellan passage of AA LA. 13, John 10:30 will be cited to argue for
the equality with the Father:
That the Logos, that is, Jesus or Christ, is both equal and inferior to the Father: I go to the Father
because the Father is greater than I. Likewise, Paul said: He did not consider it robbery to be
equal to God, and that which has been said: I and the Father are one, because both Father and
Son are also act, and because he would not say: The Father is greater than F unless he had been
equal to him. There is also added: if he is the whole from the whole as light from light, if the
Father has given to the Son all that he hasbut all includes substance and power and dignity
the Son is equal to the Father. But the Father is greater because he gave all to the Son and is cause
of the Sons being and mode of being. But he is also greater because he is inactive action; such
act has more happiness because it is without effort; it is unsuffering, the source of all existents,
dwelling in repose, self-sufficient and with no need. But the Son receives being and advancing by
action toward act, comes into perfection by achieving fullness by movement, having made all
things which exist. But since in him, for him, through him are created all things, he is always
the fullness and always the receptacle; for this reason he is both impassible and passible.
Therefore he is both equal and unequal. Hence the Father is greater.417
The citation of John 14:28the Father is greater than Iis set alongside the
Philippians 2 text, which speaks of both equality and inferiority with God the Father.
John 14:28 could be a problematic text because of its use in anti-Nicene theology to
prove subordinationist claims, but Philippians 2 can serve as a near synecdoche o f John
416. Though at other tim es Victorinus speaks o f one Power: the Son is the same Power as the Father.
417. Clark, 105. AA 1 13,120. Maior Pater and aequalis Filius seen together mean a total sharing o f
dignity and power, and more than that, substance, contrary to Sirmium 357. Quod 'koyoq, hoc est
Iesus vel Christos, et aequalis est patri et inferior: eo a d patrem, quoniam pater maior est me; item
dixit Paulus: non rapinam arbitratus est aequalia esse deo; et id quod dictum est: ego et p a te r unum
sumus, et quod operatio et pater et filius et quod non diceret: me maior est pater, nisi fuisset aequalis.
Accedit etiam: si totus ex toto et lumen ex lumine et si omnia, quae habet pater, dedit filio omnia
autem sunt et substantia et potestas et dignitas , aequalis patri. Sed maior pater, quod ipse dedit ipsi
omnia et causa est ipsi filio, ut sit et isto modo sit. Adhuc autem maior, quod actio inactoosa; beatior
enim, quod sine m olestia et inpassibilis et fons omnium quae sunt, requiescens, a se perfecta et nullius
egens. Filius autem, et esset, accepit et in id quod est agere ab actione procedens in perfectionem
veniens, moto efficitur plenitodo, factus omnia quae sunt. Sed quoniam in ipso et in ipsum e t p e r
ipsum gignuntur omnia, semper plenitodo et semper receptaculum est; qua ratione et inpassibilis et
passibilis. Ergo et aequalis et inaequalis. Maior igitur pater. CSEL 83/1, 71-72.
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10:30 and John 14:28. The simultaneous affirmation that the Father is greater and that
the Son is equal to the Father may be in answer to the Homoian Formula of Sirmium
357, which insisted upon the point that the Father is greater. The response is that there is
a total sharing not only of dignity or power, but of substance. The equality of the Son is a
point taken from Homoiousians, but not merely a similitude of substance, as Basil of
Ancyra had argued. In the discussion that follows the Father is cast in terms of cause and
the Son as effect, including X from X causality, as well as language borrowed from
Sirmium 351. Victorinus even adds Colossians 1:16-17 (in him, for him, through him
are created all things) to speak of the divine fullness which dwells in the Son. The Son,
he concludes, is both impassible and passible, both equal and unequal; nevertheless, the
Father is greater.418
The language of the whole from the whole as light from light echoes Nicaea 325.
The X from X genetic production receives the same sort of treatment in The Necessity o f
418. AA 1 13,18-20. qua ratione et inpassibilis et passibilis. Ergo et aequalis et inaequalis. M aior igitur
pater. CSEL 83/1, 72. These Johannine and Pauline texts used together to explain the working o f the
two natures o f Christ seemed to have continued as commonplaces. The best example o f such com es
from Augutines dealing with the anonymous Arian Sermon and his debate with the H om oian
M aximinus. In Augustines Answer to the Arian Sermon VUI, written ca. 419, Augustine uses
Philippians 2 :5-8 to explain Christs two natures, at the end o f which he adds the other tw o texts o f
John 10:30 and 14:28 (all three o f which Victorinus uses inAA 1 13), concluding that Thus w e have
the same Christ, a twin-substanced giant (gem inae gigas substantiae), in the one obedient, in the
other equal to God, in the one the Son o f Man, in the other the Son o f God. In the one he says, The
Father is greater than I (Jn 14:28); in the other he says, The Father and I are one (Jn 10:30). In the
one he does not do his own w ill, but the w ill o f the one who sent him; in the other, he says, A s the
Father raises the dead and gives them life, so the Son also gives life to those he wants (Jn 5:21).
Teske, Arianism and Other Heresies, 146-47. Elsewhere in his Answer to the Arian Sermon,
Augustine always explains the two natures o f Christ with John 14:28 and John 10:30. Cf. also, for
example, his Debate with Maximinus (Arianism and Other Heresies, 198-99). Augustine carefully
explains to Maximinus how Christ displays the characteristics o f both o f his natures, em ploying I
Timothy 6:16, John 10:30, John 1:14, Philippians 2:6 -7. Maxminus explains John 10:30 by taking a
tack typical o f Homoians: why should we not say that the Father and die Son and the H oly Spirit are
one in agreement, in harmony, in charity, in unanimity?...It is clear that they are one in harmony and
agreement. (Debate with M aximinus, Arianism and Other Heresies, 194.) Maximinus not only
assumes an honest, innocent gloss on Scripture, but also echoes the Dedication Creed o f 341, which
said that Father, Son, and Spirit were three in hypostasis but one in harmony.
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Accepting the Homoousion chapter 3. For the Father and the Son, whatever they produce
is of their own nature,419 so Christ is God. There is a distinct difference between saying
that Christ is by God and Christ is from God:
For you say: God from God, light from light. Is this from nothing when you name the source?
Therefore Christ is from God, he is not, therefore, from nothing, he is from light, not from
nothing. For from God signifies from Gods substance. Indeed, by God signifies something
different. Indeed, all is by God, but Christ alone is from God.420
The divine unity of John 10:30 is explained again with divine visibility in the third
appearance of this text in Book IA, in a section in which Victorinus argues for
homoousios against the claims of the Homoiousians.421 The Son is the same substance as
the Father, the Fathers form and image and character; otherwise, God could not be
known. But God is known, signified in I and the Father are one, The Father is in me
and I am in the Father, and Whoever sees me, sees the Father.422 We have already
seen earlier in Book LA. the importance of titles for Victorinus in arguing on behalf of the
consubstantiality of the Son. The use of the titles form, image, and character may be
Victorinus way of referring to the form of Philippians 2:6, the image of Colossians
1:15, and the character of Hebrews 1:3. He does not cite these verses, however, but
419. Clark, 309. D e homoousio recipiendo 3, 16-17. qualia ipsa sunt, talia emittunt. CSEL 83/1,282
420. Clark, 309. D e homoousio recipiendo 3 ,2 3 -2 7 . D icitis enim deum de deo, lumen de lumine. Hoc de
nihilo est, cum dicatis unde? Ergo de deo Christus, non ergo de nihilo, de lumine, non de nihilo. De
deo enim, de ipsius substantia intellegitur. Nam aliud est quod a deo est. Nam omnia a deo, Christus
autem de deo. CSEL 83/1,282. There is the similar line o f reasoning m A A N 29 ,12-23, where
Victorinus argues again that the Son is begotten as all from all. And because knowledge
understands knowledge, since knowledge is true light, this understanding knowledge is light from
light, and because both are knowledge, this is true light from true light. And likew ise sin ce the
interior knowledge is God, this knowledge which is knowledge by self-understanding is G od from
God. Clark, 294. CSEL 83/1,268.
421. AA 1 28,8-32,15. CSEL 83/1, 103-12. Victorinus is responding to the Homoiousian dossier o f
Sirmium 358 with various telling comments. One is that he refers to the ancient orthodox doctrine
handed down forty years ago at Nicaea, a synod o f illustrious men and luminaries o f the Church and
entire world (1 28,18-20: in qua cruv65(u istorum virorum ecclesiae totius orbis lumina fuerunt).
The Hom oiousians, he writes, are as much in error as Paul o f Samosata, M arcellus, Photinus and
Valens and Ursacius (the dregs o f Arius). AA 1 28,32-41.
422. AA 1 29,23-25. CSEL 83/1, 106.
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only uses the titles. The occasion for divine unity requires a last use of John 10:30 at the
end of Book III when Victorinus reprises the unity of Father and Son (and Holy Spirit).
With piety, Victorinus offers, the names of Father and Son are used to express that
without any conjoining they are one and without multiplicity they are simple, different only by
their own act of existingbut by strength and power, since never is there one without the other,
they are identically one; they are different only by their acts, since, while the act which exterior
advances even to the experiencing of suffering, the other act remains always interior and eternal,
being original and substantial, and for that reason always being Father so that, for the same
reason, the other is always Son. Paul in all his letters says: Grace and peace to you from God our
Father and from our Lord Jesus Christ. Likewise: Not by men, nor through a man, but through
Jesus Christ, and through God the Father. Likewise in the Gospel: I and the Father are one. I
am in the Father and the Father is in me. We also, with piety, always use the names of the Father
and Son, and rightly so, according to the reasoning expressed above.423
The names of Father and Son are justified by the common addresses Paul makes in his
letters which offer grace and peace from God our Father and from our Lord Jesus
Christ, the claim made by Paul in Galatians 1 that he is an apostle through Jesus Christ
and through God the Father, and John 10:30 and 14:10.424
Long before Victorinus, Latin theology had used divine visibility texts to explain
divine unity. Tertullian, in his work Against Praxeas, cites and uses John 10:30 in his
argument. Praxeas could view John 10:30 as a prooftext for his modalist confession of
the Trinity; Tertullian argues in his polemic response that, though the divine monarchy is
never disturbed, there is nonetheless a divine economy that is always guarded. In chapter
423. Clark, 25 0-51 . AA III 17,17-18,3. Eadem enim haec inter se sine coniunctione unum sunt et sine
geminatione sim plex, suo ut proprio exsistendi (di)versum vi autem potentiaque, quia numquam
sine altero alterum, unum atque idem tantum actu, sed qui foris est, in passiones incedente, alio
autem interiore semper manente atque aetem o, quippe originali et substantiali, et idcirco sem per patre,
qua ratiocinatione, et semper filio. Paulus in omnibus epistolis: gratia vobis et pax a deo p a tre nostro
et domino nostro lesu Christo. Item: non ab hominibus, neque p e r hominem, se d p e r Iesum Christum
et p e r deum patrem. Item in evangelio: ego et p a ter unum sumus. Ego in patre et pater in me. N os
quoque patrem et filium religiose semper usurpamus et recte secundum rationem supra dictam .
CSEL 83/1, 222-23.
424. Victorinus last mention o f a reason for the titles in this passage sounds like the Rule o f Piety found in
Origens On First Principles. After listing his proof-texts, Victorinus says, We also, with piety, always use
the names o f Father and Son, and rightly so, according to the reasoning expressed above. Clark, 251 .AA
HI 18,1-3.
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8 o f Against Praxeas, Tertullian cites John 10:30, along with John 1:1 and 14:10, as a
guarantee that the Son is always in the Father and always with God.425 In chapter 20
Tertullian claims that the heresy of Praxeas and his lot lies in their idiosyncratic
interpretation of John 10:30 and other unity texts: They do not follow the rule of faith
correctly, because they only look at, consider and retain Scripture texts that safeguard the
divine unity and the impressiveness of the monarchy, such as Isaiah 45:5 (I am God and
there is no other besides me), John 10:30,14:9 and 14:10.426
In chapter 24 of Against Praxeas, speaking of Philips conversation with Christ in John
14, Tertullian explains the correct way in which to understand these passages (also explaining
the divine invisibility of Exodus 33:20 with Christs statement to Philip in John 14:9):
it was not the Father who they did not know had companied so long time with them, but the Son:
and the Lord, upbraiding diem for not knowing himself as him whom they had not known, clearly
wished to be recognised as he whom he had upbraided them for not recognising in so long a time,
namely the Son. And now it can appear in what sense it was said, He that seeth me seeth the
Father also... For according to these (texts) he had revealed himself as the deputy of the Father,
by means of whom the Father was both seen in acts and heard in words and known in the Son
ministering the Fathers acts and words: because the Father is invisible, a fact which Philip also
had learned in the law and ought to have rememberedNo one shall see God and live. And
consequently he is chidden for desiring to see the Father as though he were visible, and is
informed that he becomes visible in the Son, in consequence of acts of power, not in consequence
of actual manifestation of his Person.427
425. Evans, Against Praxeas, 139. Therefore the Word is always in the Father, as he says, I am in the
Father: and always with God, as it is written, And the Word was with God: and never separate from the
Father or other than the Father, because, I and the Father are one." Adv. Prax. 8,34-1. sermo ergo et in
patre semper, sicut dicit, Ego in patre: et apud deum semper, sicut scriptum est, Et sermo erat apud
deum: et nunquam separatus a patre ant alius a patre, quia Ego et pater unum sumus. Evans, 9 6 -7 .
426. Tertullians assessm ent o f them is that To these three citations they wish the w hole appurtenance o f
both testaments to yield, though the smaller number ought to be understood in accordance w ith the
greater. But this is the characteristic o f all heretics. Evans, Against Praxeas, 159.
427. Evans, Against Praxeas, 167-68. Adv. Prax. 24, 5 -9 ,1 4 -2 1 . ergo non patrem tanto tem pore secum
conversatum ignoraverant sed filium: et dominus, eum se ignorari exprobans quern ignorverant, eum
utique agnosci volebat quern tanto non agnosci tempore exprobraverat, id est filium . Et apparere iam
potest quomodo dictum sit, Qui me videt videt et patrem ... secundum haec enim vicarium se patris
ostenderat, per quern pater et videretur in fectis et audiretur in verbis et cognosceretur in filio facta et
verba patris administrante: quia invisibilis pater, quod et Philippus didicerat in lege et m em inisse
debuerat Deum nemo videbit et vivet. et ideo suggillatur patrem videre desiderans quasi visibilem ,
et instruitur visibilem eum in filio fieri ex virtutibus non ex personae repraesentatione. Evans, 120.
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Tertullian poses the question of how Christ can claim that I and my Father are one
while Philip and the other disciples fail to understand If you have seen me you have seen
the Father. The answer lies in recognizing the Son as the Fathers vicarius, who speaks
the Fathers words and works the Fathers deeds.
Therefore the Father, abiding in the Son through the works of power and words of doctrine, is
seen through those things through which he abides, and through him in whom he abides: and
from this very fact it is apparent that each Person is himself and none other, while he says, I am in
th e F ath er a n d th e F ath er in m e. And so he says, B elieve. What? That I am the Father? I think it
is not so written, but, That I am in th e F ath er a n d the F a th er in me, o r i f not, b e lieve f o r the v e ry
w orks sake those works in fact through which the Father was seen in the Son, not with the eyes
but with the mind.428
This idea is repeated in the well-known trinitarian passage of chapter 25, with John 10:30
appearing in the middle of the statement:
So the close series of the Father in the Son and the Son in the Paraclete makes three who
cohere, the one attached to the other. And these three are one (thing), not one (person), in the
sense in which it was said, I a n d the F a th e r a re on e, in respect of unity of substance, not of
singularity of number 429
Even with all the statements of unity we find in Scripture, Tertullian maintains the Sons
distinction from the Father by defining the properties of each. But for present purposes,
we see Tertullian explain this text with the same other texts employed by Victorinus.430
428. Evans, Against Praxeas, 168-69. Adv. Prax. 2 4 ,3 5 -2 . per opera ergo virtutum et verba doctrinae
manens in filio pater, per ea videtur per quae manet et per eum in quo manet, ex hoc ipso apparente
proprietate utriusque personae dum dicit, Ego sum in patre et pater in me. atque adeo Credite a it quid?
me patrem esse? non puto scriptum esse, sed, Quia ego in patre et pater in me, si quo minus vel propter
opera credite, ea utique opera per quae pater in filio non visu sed sensu videbatur. Evans, 120-21.
429. Evans, Against Praxeas, 169. Adv. Prax. 25,9-12. ita connexus patris in filio et filii in paracleto tres
efficit cohaerentes alterum ex altero. qui tres unum sunt, non unus, quomodo dictum e s t E go et pater
unum sumus, ad substantiae unitatem non ad numeri singularitatem. Evans, 121.
430. Novatian, writing his D e trinitate some thirty or more years after Tertullians Against Praxeas, w ill
use Jn. 10:30 only three tim es without associating it with other texts. Its ch ief use for him is to prove
the Sons distinct divinity against Sabellius M odalism, when he says Since the heretics frequently
place before us that passage which states: I and the Father are one, we shall refute them again with
equal facility also on this count. For if Christ were the Father, as the heretics think, He should have
said: I, the Father, am one. But when He says I and then introduces the Father, by saying: I and
the Father, He thereby distinguishes and separates the individuality o f His own Person, v iz. that o f
the Son, from the authority o f the Father, not only as regards the mere sound o f the name but also in
regard to the order o f power in the divine econom y. DeSim one, The Trinity, 9 2 -3 .
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Phoebadius of Agen, writing around the same time as Victorinus was writing his
Against Arius, uses John 10:30 in chapter 15 of his work Liber Contra Arrianos to argue
for consubstantiality of the Son; for example, to tie the unity of the Father and the Son of
10:30 to John 5:19:
But what work of proof is it, which the Lord pronounces by the very definite conclusion: All that
the Father does the Son does also? How are they the same, if it is not possible to attain the greatest
degree of the Fathers glory? Rather because he is able to, John correctly says: Without him, he
says, nothing was made. And the Lord himself says: I and the Father are one. They are one in
particular by nature, because that which was in the Son of Man, remained in the bosom of the
Father. Just so: Neither do you know me, he says, nor do you know whence I am, and that I come
not of my own accord, but he who sent me is true, him you do not know. I know him because I
come from him, and he sent me. And: It is, he says, not I alone (that judges), but I and the
Father who sent me. And: As the Father has known me and I have known the Father.431
They are united in their nature, Phoebadius explains, while the Son took on human nature
and yet remained in the bosom of the Father (John 1:18). This common nature means
that the Son does the same works as the Father, and cannot do anything by himself. Later,
in chapter 17, Phoebadius will speak of the Sons eternity while considering the formula
from Sirmium 357, the Father has no beginning. In response to this he implies that the
Son does have a beginning:
THE FATHER, it is said, HAS NO BEGINNING. That is to say: the Son does have a beginning. In
that case it is necessary to assert whatever of the Father is known, unless you take into account
the presumption of all that is created by the Son? T h e F a t h e r , it is said, HAS NO b e g in n in g .
Who denies that? But, I consider, both die Image of the Invisible and Ingenerate God is not able
to begin after God. Quite appropriately Moses questioned He who would be, who said to him:
I am who I am always. He was therefore always, he who is and who will be always. Of him
John says: That which was from the beginning, which our eyes have seen. And again: We
announce to you the eternal life which was with the Father, particularly in the Father. It is
certain that he was from himself, to be outside of himself was not possible. And with that it is
431. Contra Arrianos XV, 1,1-3,11 Sed quid argumentis opus est, cum ipse Dominus pronuntiauerit
definitiua sententia: Quaecumque Pater facit, eadem et Filius? Quomodo eadem, si adspirare ad
summam patemae illius gloriae non potest? Immo quia potest, recte Iohannes: Sine ipso, inquit,
factum est nihil. Et ipse Dominus: Ego, inquit, et Pater unum sumus. Vnum utique per naturam, quia
quod erat in Filio hominis, et in Patris sinu manebat. Denique: N ec me, inquit, nostis et nescitis unde
sim et non ueni a me, sed est uerus qui me misit, quern uos nescitis. Ego noui eum quia apud ilium
sum, et ille me misit. Et: Solus, inquit, non sum, sed ego et qui me misit Pater. Et: Sicut nouit me Pater
et ego noui Patrem. CCSL 64, 39
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certainly said: Time was in himself, though he is not declared to have been in time. Indeed the
Power of eternal substance is not created from God, rather it proceeds from God. Therefore: I,
he says, am come from the Father. And: I and the Father are one. And: Whoever sees me,
sees also the Father. And: I am in the Father and the Father is in me. And: He who sent me is
with me. Therefore David also says: The beginning is with you on the day of your Power.
Certainly the Word of God, this is the Son of God, before all time with him who is from him and
in him, to be the beginning.432
The Son is not created from God, but proceeds from God. For proof, Phoebadius tenders
four Johannine texts: John 10:30,14:9,14:10,16:27 (I came from the Father), and 8:29
(he who sent me is with me). He will use the chain of John 10:30,14:9 and 14:10 again in
chapter XXV when discussing the distinction between the persons of the Father and the Son.
I and the Father are one, as two to be professed in one Power. Indeed he does not speak as from
one person of the Father and the Son, almost as if the Son is confirming the Father himself: I am
my Son. And: The Lord created me at the beginning of his ways, before ages he created me.
And: I and the Father are one. But ascribing the knowledge of the distinction of sacraments and
not the division of persons: I, he says, am in the Father and the Father is in me. And: I and the
Father are one. And: Whoever sees me sees also the Father. Certainly the Son is to be seen as
the true image and exact figure of his substance, this is the Word of God, not the sound of a voice,
but a substantive thing, moreover through bodily substance. Indeed he does not establish without
substance, that which he makes of such great substance, (substance proceeds, and beyond).433
432. Contra Arrianos X V II,1,1-6,16. Patrem, inquit, INITIVMNON HABERE. Hoc est dicere: Filium
habere. Nam quae necessitas id de Patre adseuerare quod noctum est, nisi praeiudicium eiu s opinionis
quae de F ilio paria suscepit? Patrem, inquit, iNmvMNON habere. Quis negat? Sed, puto, et imago
inuisibilis et ingeniti D ei non potest coepisse post Deum. Denique interroganti M oysi quis esset,
respondit: Ego sum qui sum semper. Erat enim semper, qui est et erit semper. D e quo Iohannes: Quod
erat ab initio, oculis nostris uidimus. Et rursum: Adnuntiauimus uobis uitam aeternam quae erat apud
Patrem, utique et in Patre. Nam quod ex ipso erat, extra ipsum esse non poterat. Et sane cum dicitur:
Erat in ipso tempos, non ipse fuisse in tempore nuntiatur. Aetem ae enim substantiae uis non facta est
a D eo, sed egressa a Deo. Ideo: Ego, inquit, a Patre exiui. Et: Ego et Pater unum sumus. Et: Qui me
uidit, uidit et Patrem. Et: Ego in Patre et Pater in me. Et: Qui me misit, mecum est. Ideo et Dauid:
Tecum principium in die uirtutis tuae. D ei enim Verbum, hoc est D ei Filius, ante omne principium
cum eo qui ex eo et in eo, cui nullum potest esse principium. CCSL 6 4 ,4 1 -4 2 .
433. Phoebadius has an eloquent conclusion after proffering these proof-texts. Liber Contra Arrianos
XXV,4 ,1 4 -1 8. Ego et Pater unum sumus, ut duo crederentur in una uirtute. Non enim dixit tamquam
ex una persona Patris et Filii, quasi Filius Patrem se confirmans: Filius m eus sum. Et: Dom inus
condidi me initium uiarum mearum, ante saecula fundaui m e. Et: Ego et Pater unus sum. Sed
reddens notitiam sacramenti distinctione non diuisione personarum: Ego, inquit, in Patre et Pater in
me. Et: Ego et Pater unum sumus. Et: Qui me uidit, uidit et Patrem. Videtur enim Patris F ilius imago
uera et figura expressa substantiae eius, hoc est D ei Sermo, non sonus uocis, sed res substantia ac per
substantiam corpulentiua. Non enim sine substantia constitit, quod de tanta (substantia processit, et
tantas) substantias fecit. CCSL 6 4 ,4 8 .
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By far the most elaborate and eloquent use of John 10:30 is as a key loci in Hilary of
Poitiers De trinitate (written between 356 and 360, and combining the best elements of
Nicene theology of the Latin West and the theological riches of the Greek East).434 In
Books I-XI of the 12 books of De trinitate there is a continual appeal to John 10:30 to
prove the ontological unity of the Father and Son: it is Hilarys most frequently cited
Scripture proof-text, with thirty-six explicit quotes and numerous other allusions. Book
VII,25 offers a typical example of the theological import of John 10:30 for Hilary:
There is no longer any reason to doubt, I believe, that the words, I and the Father are one, were
spoken in reference to the birth. For, since the Jews had based their accusation against Him on
these words, that He Himself, who was a man, made Himself God, His reply corroborates the
revelation of Himself as the Son of God from the fact that I and the Father are one, first by the
name, then by the nature, and finally by the birth. For, I and the Father are the names of things,
but one is the acknowledgment of a nature, because the two of them do not differ in that in
which they are, but are does not permit a union. And where there is no union, because they are
one, it is the birth that has caused them to be one. All this proceeds from the fact that He who
was sanctified by the Father confesses that He is the Son of God, and this assertion of the Son of
God is ratified by the words, I and the Father are one, because birth cannot bring any other
nature with it except that from which it subsists.435
Within Hilary we see concurrent uses of similar polemically-driven Scripture texts as are
used by Victorinus in Against Arius. Hilary used many of the same texts with John 10:30
that Victorinus did: most often John 14:9 and 14:10; also Matthew 11:27 and John 1:18,
434. Specifically Hilarys exile in the East led to the well-known transfer o f Eastern theological documents
to the W est, and especially in Hilarys case led to Hilarys engagement with H om oiousians, and
Hilarys borrowing o f their christological name and birth language for his own Nicene-trinitarian
theology. For the m ost current and extensive treatment o f Hilary and this aspect o f his trinitarian
theology, see the work o f Mark E. Weedman, The Polem ical Context and Background o f H ilarys
Trinitarian Theology. Ph.D. diss. Marquette University, 2004.
435. McKenna, Hilary o f Poitiers:The Trinity, 253. D e trinitate V IL25,1-14. Non est relictus, ut arbitror,
ambigendi locus, quin de natura natiuitatis dictum est Ego et Pater unum sumus. Nam cum Iudaei
arguissent, quod per hoc dictum homo ipse cum esset sese Deum faceret, responsio eius confirm at
quod D ei se Filium per id quo Ego et Pater unum sumus ostenderit, primum nom ine, deinde natura,
postremo natiuitate. Nam Ego et Pater rerum nomina sunt; unum uero naturae professio est, quia in eo
quod est uterque non differat; sumus autem non patitur unionem. Et ubi quod unum sumus unio non
est, unum eos efficit esse natiuitatis. Hoc enim totum ex eo quod D ei se Filium sanctificatus a Patre
profitetur, et profession D ei Fili hoc quod Ego et Pater unum sumus confirmat, quia natiiiitas non
aliam possit, nisi earn ex qua subsistit adferre naturam. CCSL 62 ,29 0-9 1. This is also a perfect
example o f the importance o f the name and birth language in Hilarys trinitarian theology.
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5:17,16:28. The only proviso is that Hilarys use of these texts seems far more determined,
within the context of a much longer trinitarian treatise, and shows the sophistication of
intensive interaction and Nicene distillation of Eastern trinitarian theology.
Gregory of Elvira, in three instances in his De fide orthodoxa contra arianos, cites
John 10:30 to counter Arian claims about the Son. One of those involves a section
arguing for consubstantiality, and again travelling with 14:9,14:10 and 16:28 (I have
gone forth from the Father...:
So he is that Reality Which Is, namely, the substance of that reality, which reality - the divine to
be - is [here] being defended. Because, however, it has already been stated how great and what
kind of reality this is, it cannot be grasped by the intellect, or fathomed by the senses, or defined
by the mind - with the proviso that the existence of this to be is accepted as common
knowledge, because it is believed to exist to the effect that from this very reality which is God,
from there exists the Son such that he would be a true son, and the true Father would be in the
Son, and the Son in the Father. This will be the implication of homoousion which means of one
substance that is, of one essence with the Father, just as the Lord himself says: I am in the Father
and the Father in me, and: I and the Father are one, and: I came from (God) the Father, and:
whoever sees me, sees also the Father.436
436. Gregory o f Elvira, D e fid e orthodoxa contra arianos, 53,446-456. Ergo ipsum quod est, hoc est
(erit) substantia eius (huius) rei, quae esse defenditur; quod tamen (ut) iam dictum est, quantum et
quale sit, nec mente concipi nec sensu aestimari nec animo definiri potest, dummodo constet esse,
quod esse creditur, ut de eo ipso, quod deus est, inde sit filius, ut uerus sit filius et uerus sit pater in
filio et filius in patre. Hoc erit opoobm os (-ov), id est unius substantiae hoc est unius essentiae
cum patre, sicut ipse dominus ait: Ego in patre et pater in me, et: Ego et pater unum sumus, et: Ego de
(deo) p a tre exiui, et: Qui me uidet, uidet et patrem." He is the Reality Which Is, a reference to Ex.
3:14, which has just been quoted in the paragraph before this section, in speaking about the Father
Who Is, who sends the Son, who is clearly God being begotten o f God. CCSL 69, 232-33. Spaces in
quotation denote lacunae in the extant mss.
437. [Victorinus] enthusiasm for the term 6pooboiog is breathless if compared to B asils or Gregory o f
N yssas polem ics, yet like Hilary his contemporary, as w ell as Ambrose and Gregory, V ictorinus
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unity is as important to Victorinus as his in-depth treatment of the Son as Logos
throughout Against Arius. Victorinus favorite image of the Son may be the philosophical
paradigm of life; for a scriptural locus for unity, however, he overwhelmingly favors
power. Because of this preference, one would expect Victorinus to be drawn to Luke 1:35
(.. .the Power of the Most High will overshadow you), which speaks of divine power
and connects that specific Power with the Second Person.438 Luke 1:35 is mentioned only
twice (both in Book IB of his work and close to each other)especially strange in light
of how much play this text received among certain Latins prior to Victorinus in the mid
fourth century. Though Victorinus employs this proof only two times because of his key
Power text of I Corinthians 1:24, his understanding of Luke 1:35 is of great significance,
because he stands in a clear line with his Latin predecessors.
Both uses of Luke 1:35 are typical for Victorinus, but typical in different ways. His
first typical use of the text is connected with John 1:14, and occurs in Book IB 56, in a
discussion of the Logos in relation to the entire Trinity and its Incarnation:
Through itself, however, life was infinite, and this is what And the Logos was made flesh
signifies. For by infinite movement life descended towards inferiors and vivified corruption; for
that reason the universal Logos and power of life was made flesh, as the angel said: The Holy
Spirit shall come upon you, and the power of the Most High shall overshadow you. Jesus Christ
is therefore bom, according to the flesh, of Mary, and from the Holy Spirit, power of the Most
High. Christ our Lord is therefore all things: flesh, Holy Spirit, power of the Most High, Logos.
He accomplished the mystery, so that all life with flesh, filled with eternal light, may return, away
from all corruption, into the heavens. Thus, he is not only flesh, not only Holy Spirit, not only
Spirit, nor only Logos, but he is simultaneously all things, our Lord Jesus.439
argues for die essential unity o f the Father and the Son based on an exegesis o f 1 Cor. 1:24. M ichel
Bam es, The Power o f God, 153.
438. The common proof text from 1:35 is only the middle portion o f the verse, which in entirety reads,
And the angel said to her The H oly Spirit w ill come upon you, and the power o f the M ost High w ill
overshadow you; therefore the child to be bom w ill be called holy, the Son o f God.
439. Clark, 18283. AA IB 56,36-57,6. Ipsa autem per sem et ipsam infinita fuit et hoc significat: et Xdyoq
caro factus est. Infrnito enim motu inferiora vita descendit et vivefecit corruptionem, cuius causa
universalis Xoyoq et potentia vitae caro factus est, ut dixit Angelus: spiritus scmctus adveniet in te et
virtus altissimi inumhrabit tibi. Natus est igitur Iesus Christus secundum camem de Maria e t ex sancto
spiritu, virtute altissimi. 57. ...O m nia igitur Christus dominus noster, caro, sanctus spiritus, altissim i
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When speaking about the Holy Spirit, Victorinus often makes a common mistake of
falling into modalist statements;440 but here there is the identified distinction between the
Holy Spirit, which comes upon Mary, and the Power of the Most High which overshadows
her, i.e., the Logos which proceeds from the unity with the Father. Hadot looks on this
passage as Victorinus reprising a masculine-feminine theme, since the passage considers
the distinction between the Logos and the Holy Spirit: that is, for Victorinus, the distinction
between Life and Wisdom.441 Besides the content of this passage, the most important
aspect of it may be that it sounds strikingly like a quick summary of chapter 24 of de
Trinitate, in which Novatian, using the same texts of John 1:14 and Luke 1:35, describes
the krasis of Christs divine and human origins in his conception and birth.
Victorinus second use of Luke 1:35 comes only a couple pages later. Continuing to
speak of the Incarnation, he qualifies Luke 1:35 with a chain of texts to define the
Incarnation and the divine overshadowing:
Therefore, the angel replied to Mary and said to her: The Holy Spirit shall come upon you and
the power of the Most High shall overshadow you. These two, the L o gos and the Holy Spirit, in
one sole movement came in order that Mary might conceive so that there might be constituted
flesh from flesh, the temple and the dwelling of God: the Holy Spirit is, indeed, power in
movement; for the principle of begetting is movement, but the power of the Most High is the
Logos: for the L o g o s, Jesus, is the power and wisdom of God. And of the L o g o s, that is, of the
Son, he said: He will overshadow you. For human nature does not receive within it the divine
virtus, Xoyoq. Ipse com plevit mysterium, ut omnis vita cum cam e, adimpleta lumine aetem o, recurrat
ab omni corruptione in caelos. Neque igitur solum caro, neque solum sanctus spiritus, neque solum
spiritus, nec X6yoq solum, sed simul omnia dominus noster Iesus. CSEL 83/1, 155.
440. Cf. the bizarre statement the Victorinus makes in the final portion o f Book IV: A s to the H oly Spirit, we
have already set forth in many books that he is Jesus Christ him self but in another mode, Jesus Christ
hidden, interior, dialoguing with souls, teaching these filings and giving these insights. Clark, 302. AA
IV 33,20-22. Iam vero spiritum sanctum alio quodam modo ipsum esse Iesum Christum, occultum ,
interiorem, cum animis fabulantem, docentem ista intellegentiasque tribuentem. CSEL 83/1, 276.
441. Hadot sees this as an exegesis similar to Hilarys treatment o f Lk. 1:35 in D e trin. I I 24, w hen Hilary
states, For the sake o f the human race, the Son o f God is bom o f the Virgin and the H oly Spirit, and
in this work He rendered service to him self. D e trin. II 24,35 Humani enim generis causa, dei
filius, natus ex virgine est et spiritu sancto, ipso sibi in hac operationefamulante." CCSL 6 2 , 60. Cf.
Hadot, Traites Theologiques, 870-71.
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in its perfection and according to all its splendor, as is clear; And the Logos was made flesh
signifies this. But the statement: He emptied himself signifies far better the overshadowing.442
The significance of this section lies both in the unique claims represented and how, in the
chain of texts used, Victorinus reasons over the two componentsdivine and humanof
the Incarnation. The dual advent of the Logos and the Holy Spirit occurred in one single
movement, such a movement being the philosophical concept Victorinus often discusses
when speaking of the operations of the Father and the Son.443 It becomes apparent when
reading this statement that the Logos and the Holy Spirit are identified as two powers,
possibly two different powers (though Victorinus is most likely speaking about one
power). Victorinus describes this one sole movement in a creedal-type sentence (in
order that Mary might conceive so that there might be constituted flesh from flesh, the
temple and the dwelling of God.. .444), in which Holy Spirit is power in movement, but
the Logos-Son is the Power of the Most High and, as St. Paul says, the Power and
Wisdom of God (I Corinthians 1:24). So the Holy Spirit is the principle of generation;
the Logos is that which overshadows Mary, hiding the divine glory in a kenotic event,
the Incarnation. Without explaining it clearly, Victorinus is making a claim for some sort
of direct relationship between the Holy Spirit and Mary, who acts in this event as a
pneumatophor.445 After briefly commenting that the Johannine text (and the Logos
442. Clark, 185. AA IB 58,24-36. Respondit igitur angelus Mariae et dixit ipsi: spiritus adveniet in te et
virtus altissimi inumbrabit tibi. Haec duo in motu quae sunt Loyoq et sanctus spiritus, ad id ut gravida
esset Maria, ut aedificaretur caro a cam e, dei templum et domicilium, advenerunt, sanctus quidem
spiritus potentia in motu: generationis enim principium motus, virtus autem altissimi ipse \6 y o q est:
virtus enim et sapientia dei 'kbyoq Iesus. Sed de Xdytn, hoc est de filio, obumbrabit tibi dixit.
Perfectum enim divinum et splendide, ut est clarum, non capit humana natura, et hoc signficat: et
Koyoq caro factus est. M agis autem obumbrationem significat, quod dictum est: exinanivit sem et
ipsum." CSEL 83/1, 158.
443. That is, that the Father is action in repose, the Son is action in movement.
444. The image sounds like a reference to Rev. 21:3.
445. An observation and comparison made by Hadot, Traites Theologiques, 875. He considers that
Victorinus, in distinguishing between the Holy Spirit and the Power o f the M ost High , articulates a
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was made flesh) means that human nature does not receive the divine in all of its
fullness, he then returns to his subject, concluding that the overshadowing of Luke 1:35
can only be explained by the kenotic pronouncement of Philippians 2:7: He emptied
himself. Thus Victorinus explains Luke 1:35 by tying it to I Corinthians 1:24, John 1:14,
and Philippians 2:7. In this passage, Victorinus does distinguish between the Logos and
the Holy Spirit. The Son acts as the agent of his Incarnation, as he would typically claim
in saying the Son is power in act, but the Son is Logos, and the power of the Most
High, and the (same) power of the Father, since the Son is the power and wisdom of
God (I Corinthians 1:24).
The most familiar, classic locus in Latin theology with which to compare this use of
Luke 1:35 is found in Tertullians Against Praxeas. Throughout two chapters, Tertullian
appeals to Luke 1:35 to argue for the distinct, separate existence of the Son and the Holy
Spirit apart from the Father, the distinction of two natures without confusion in the Son,
and, the definite distinction between the Father and the Son notwithstanding, their real
unity. Tertullian quotes the Annunciation to Mary as proof that God the Word, the
Second Person, came upon Mary and was the agent of his own Incarnation. One section
that immediately stands out in this extended discussion is the text which Tertullian ties to
Luke 1:35 in order to explain the Incarnation, John 1:14:
This Spirit of God will be the same as the Word. For as, when John says The Word was made
flesh, we understand also Spirit at the mention of the Word, so also here we recognise also the
masculine and feminine correspondence, which we can see again at AA IB 64,22-27: If God made man
according to the image, the Father made him according to the image o f the Son. But if he also says this:
He made him m ale-fem ale, and it was previously said: He made man according to the im age o f God,
it is evident that also according to the body and the flesh, extremely m ystically, he made him according
to the image o f God, the Logos being him self both male and fem ale.. Clark, 193.
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Word under the name of the Spirit For spirit is the substance of the Word, and word is an
operation of the Spirit, and the two are onefthing).446
Tertullian pronounces that the Spirit is the substance of the Word, and the Word is the
operation of the Spirit and the Two are one, while in the section ofAA IB 58,24-36
Victorinus phrases this reality as in one sole movement... in order that Mary might
conceive.... There even seems to be an allusion to I Corinthians 1:24 by Tertullian to
explain Luke 1:35:
Much more so the power of the Most High will not be the Most High himself, because it is not
even a substantive thing as the Spirit is, any more than wisdom or providence: for these are not
substances, but attributes of each several substance Power is an attribute of spirit, and will not
itself be spirit. Since then these, whatever they are, the Spirit of God and his Word and his power,
were conferred upon the virgin, that which is bom of her is the Son of God.447
Tertullian is careful to explain that the Son, while separate from the Father, is
nevertheless from and of the Father. He says a few lines before this, but so far God as
He is of the same substance as God Himself, and as being an actually existing thing, and
as a portion of the Whole. In this section of Against Praxeas we can see a use o f I
Corinthians 1:24 and John 1:14 to explicate Luke L35.448
Michel Barnes understands Tertullians use of Luke 1:35 to be most significant in its
description of the Son as the Power of God, the same Power of the Father, and therefore the
446. Ernest Evans, Against Praxeas, 170-71. Adversus Praxean 26,13-18. hie spiritus dei idem erit
sermo. sicut enim Ioanne dicente, Sermo caro factus est, spiritum quoque intellegim us in m entione
sermonis, ita et hie sermonem quoque agnoscimus in nomine spiritus. nam et spiritus substantia est
sermonis et sermo operatio spiritus, et duo unum sunt. Evans, 122.
447. Evans, Against Praxeas, 171. Adv. Prax. 2 6 ,2 8 -3 4 . multo m agis virtus altissim i non erit ipse
altissim us, quia nec substantiva res est quod est spiritus, sicut nec sapientia nec providentia: et haec
enim substantiae non sunt sed accidentia uniuscuiusque substantiae. Virtus spiritui accidit, nec ipsa
erit spiritus. His itaque rebus, quodcunque sunt, spiritu dei et sermone et virtute, conlatis in virginem,
quod de ea nascitur filius dei est. Evans, 122.
448. I have pointed out that Victorinus uses Lk. 1:35 only a couple o f tim es. Tertullian has only a handful
o f brief references to Lk. 1:35 spread throughout his works, hardly seem ing to understand its
importance, but in chapters 26 and 27 o f Against Praxeas Tertullian w ill quote Lk. 1:35 six tim es to
speak o f the Sons real existence.
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same substance.449 Tertullian uses power with various words, mostly potestas and virtus,
in order to make doctrinal formulations in which the sense is one power, one substance:
Tertullian understands Luke 1:35 to be a description of the entrance of divinity into human nature.
The Lucan passage is as much a first description of the Incarnation as John 1:14. The Spirit of
God that comes over Mary, and the Power of the Most High that overshadows her, are each
identified by Tertullian as the Word Himself. Luke is not here describing the impregnation of Mary
by the Father (via the Holy Spirit) but the Sons arrival into humanity. The Son is the Spirit of
God, and the Son is the Power of the Most High. (The Most High is God, the Father.)450
In insisting upon the distinction of the persons of the Trinity, Tertullian draws back to
affirm their essential unity, most famously with his classic statement in chapter 2 of
Against Praxeas:
...they are all of the one, namely by unity of substance, while none the less is guarded the
mystery of that economy which disposes the unity into trinity, setting forth Father and Son and
Spirit as three, three however not in quality but in sequence, not in substance but in aspect, not in
power but in (its) manifestation, yet of one substance and one quality and one power, seeing it is
one God from whom those sequences and aspects and manifestations are reckoned out in the
name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit.451
The same formula appears later in Against Praxeas when Tertullian speaks of one power
but two definite persons: With such insistence did he bring all this to light, to the intent
that we should believe there are two, albeit in one act of power, because it would be
impossible to believe there is a Son otherwise than if we believe there were two.452 This
identification of power with essence/nature would have central play two centuries after
Tertullian, as the inchoate Nicene cause in the Latin West remembered Tertullians
449. M ichel Bam es, The Power o f God, his chapter section Tertullians Doctrine o f One Power, One
Substance, 103-06.
450. Bames, The Power o f God, 104.
451. Evans, Against Praxeas, 132. Adv. Prax. 2. 38 -7 . quasi non sic quoque unus sit omnia dum ex uno
omnia, per substantiae scilicet unitatem, et nihilo minus custodiatur obcovopXaq sacramentum quae
unitatem in trinitatem disponit, tres dirigens patrem et filium et spiritum, tres autem non statu sed
gradu, nec substantia sed forma, nec potestate sed specie, unius autem substantiae et unius status et
unius potestatis, quia unus deus ex quo et gradus isti et fonnae et species in nomine patris et filii et
spiritus sancti deputantur. Evans, 90-91.
452. Evans, Against Praxeas, 164-65. Adv. Prax. 2 2 ,2 8 -3 0 adeo totum hoc perseverabat inducere, ut duo
tamen crederentur in una virtute, quia aliter filius credi non posset nisi duo crederentur. Evans, 117.
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strong identification of power with essence and nature. In his chapter subsection on the
importance of Luke 1:35 to Tertullian, Bames describes how part of his argument is X
from X causality:
Amid the Luke 1:35 inspired argument in Against Praxeas that Son, Power, Word and Spirit are
all synonymous titles for the second Person, Tertullian offers a delicately phrased articulation of
the X from X doctrine. The argument runs so: Any product of God that is from Himself has the
same quality as He it is produced from and to whom it belongs. Therefore Spirit and Word are
God because each is from God but is not exactly the same as Who each is from. Whatever is from
God is God, and, although existing in itself, is not God Himself but as God because from the
same substance as God Himself.... Tertullian is expressing a genetic understanding of an X
from X causality as finely as he can: the Son is what the Father is but not as the Father is (and so,
not the Father). 53
Tertullian, we should remember, explains Luke 1:35 with John 1:14 to counter the
modalist claim that it was the Father who became incarnate. Evans point out that this
conflation of Luke and John appears in On the Flesh o f Christ for somewhat different
reasons, as Tertullian argues on behalf of the human substance of Christ, against Marcionites.454
Novatians uses Luke 1:35 in his work De Trinitate for the purpose of speaking about
divine power, but divine power in the context of an extended diatribe about Christs
distinct dual natures; this is in response to those who would see the two natures as so
intermingled as to be no difference between the two. Novatians work is a perfect forest
of texts for speaking about the Sons full divinity, all the more impressive as a third
century, ante-Nicene work. It was most probably the most important trinitarian work of
that century, reappropriating all of the valuable work of Tertullian (a fact pointed out by
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191
Jerome).455 In Novatians work you can see the very testimonia of proof-texts so precious
to Tertullian; for example, as Novatian expounds on the Son as the visible God in chapter
18, using Exodus 33:20, John 1:18, and I Timothy 6:16; or attesting to the Sons visibility
in chapter 28, employing John 14:9; or asserting that the Son is God as much as God the
Father, commenting at length on Philippians 2 and John 5:19 in chapters 20 through 22.
But with regard to Luke 1:35 in De Trinitate, it is vital for Novatian to refute his
opponents use of this text to claim lessened divinity for the Sonas if that text could
prove only Christ as Son of Man and not also Son of God. In chapter 24 of his work,
Novatian connects Luke 1:35 with Matthew 1:23 (You shall call his name
Emmanuel...) and John 1:14, in order to make a clear distinction between Christs two
natures. This is a long discussion which owes much to Tertullian.456 His opponents, he
rues, use Matthew 1:23 and John 1:14 to claim that divine and human reside in Christ
totally mixed together. To add to it, they cite Luke 1:35 to further support that argument.
But for Novatian those very texts prove the opposite. He responds strongly that Christ has
the two natures in a full and even balance (Novatians thematic motif of the x p a c ig ):
This is the genuine Son of God, who is of God Himself. Inasmuch as He assumes that holy things
and joins to Himself the Son of Man, He not only seizes Him and draws Him over to Himself but
also bestows upon Him and makes Him by His connection and associated permixtion the Son of
God, which He was not by nature. Thus, the pre-eminence of that name, Son of God, resides in
the Spirit of the Lord who descended and came; whereas the sequela of that name is to be found
in the Son of God and Man. In consequence (of such a union) this Son of Man rightly became the
Son of God, although He is not primarily the Son of God. Accordingly, the angel, aware of that
arrangement and making known the providential order of the mystery, did not confuse everything
so as not to leave any vestige of a distinction. He made that distinction when he announced:
455. In his critical edition o f Tertullians Against Praxeas, Ernest Evans states it well: Novatian combines
in one volum e the results o f Tertullians dispersed discussions. This is substantially true. The first
section o f this work, on God the Father, the Creator, undoubtedly ow es som ething to passages in
Tertullians Apology, w hile the second section, on God the Son, though largely occupied in combating
an opposite heresy, shows evident acquaintance with the treatise Against Praxeas. Only in the third
section, on the Holy Spirit, does Novatian strike a line o f his own, and here he is expository, almost
encom iastic, rather than controversial or theological. Evans, Against Praxeas, 2 5-26 .
456. Evans observation. Evans, 67.
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Therefore also that holy thing to be bom of thee shall be called the Son of God. For if he had
not allotted that partition (of natures) with its due balance but had left it in hazy confusion, he
would have undoubtedly given the heretics an opportunity to declare that the Son of Man, as man,
is the same Son both of God and Man. However, he explained things in detail and clearly made
known the providential order and meaning of so great a mystery when he said: And that holy
thing to be bom of thee shall be called the Son of God; hence he proved that the Son of God
descended and took to Himself the Son of Man and made Him, in consequence (of that union),
the Son of God. For the Son of God associated and joined the Son of Man to Himself so that,
while the Son of Man adheres in His Nativity to the Son of God, by that very permixtion He hold
that as pledged and secured which of His own nature He could not possess. And thus by the voice
of an angel a distinction which the heretics reject was made between the Son of God and the Son
of Man. This distinction maintains, however, the proper association (of the two) and constrains
them to understand that Christ, the Man, the Son of Man, is also the Son of God and to accept as
Man die Son of Godthat is, the Word of God who is God, according to the Scriptures.
Therefore let them acknowledge that Christ Jesus the Lord, fastened together from both, so to
speak, woven and worked together from both, and associated in the same agreement of both
natures in the clasp of a mutual bond, is God and Man, as the truth of Scripture itself declares.457
The frequent appearance of John 1:14 alongside any commentary mention of Luke
1:35 may well have become an exegetical commonplace among Latins. In the twentieth
homily of the Tractatus Origenis, which speaks of the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the
early Apostles on the day of Pentecost, it is no coincidence that John 1:14 and Luke 1:35
appear alongside each other:
457. DeSim one, The Trinity, 87-88. D e Trinitate XXIV, 8,43-11,77 Hie est legitim us D ei F ilius qui ex
ipso D eo est, qui, dum sanctum istud assumit et sibi filium hominis annectit et ilium ad se rapit atque
transducit, connexione sua et permixtione sociata praestat et Filium ilium D ei facit, quod ille
naturaliter non fuit, ut principalitas nom inis istius Filius D ei in spiritu sit Dom ini, qui descendit et
uenit, ut sequela nom inis istius in F ilio D ei et hom inis sit et merito consequenter hie Filius D ei factus
sit, dum non principaliter Filius D ei est. Atque ideo dispositionem istam angelus uidens et ordinem
istum sacramenti expediens, non sic cuncta confundens ut nullum uestigium distinctionis collocarit,
distinctionem posuit dicendo: Propterea et quod nascetur ex te sanctum uocabitur Filius D ei, ne si
distributionem istam cum libramentis suis non dispensasset, sed in confuse permixtam reliquisset, uere
occasionem haereticis contulisset, ut hominis filium , qua homo est, eundem et D ei et hom inis filium
pronuntiare deberent Nunc autem particulatim exponens tarn magni sacramenti ordinem atque rationem
euidentur expressit, ut diceret: Et quod ex te nascetur sanctum uocabitur Filius D ei, probans quoniam
Filius D ei descendit, qui dum filium hom inis in se suscepit, consequenter ilium Filium D ei fecit,
quoniam ilium Filius sibi D ei sociauit et iunxit, ut deum filius hom inis adhaeret in natiuitatem Filio
Dei, ipsa permixtione feneratum et mutuatum teneret, quod ex natura propria possidere non posset. Ac
sic facta est angeli uoce, quod nolunt haeretici, inter Filium D ei hominisque cum sua tamen sociatione
distinctio, urgendo illos uti Christum, hom inis filium hominem, intellegant quoque D ei Filium et
hominem D ei Filium, id est D ei uerbum, sicut scriptum est, Deum accipiant atque ideo Christum
Iesum Dominum ex utroque connexum, ut ita dixerim, ex utroque contextum atque concretum et in
eadem utriusque substantiae concordia mutui ad inuicem foederis confibulatione sociatum hom inem
et Deum scripturae hoc ipsum dicentis ueritate cognoscant. CCSL 4 ,5 9 -6 0 .
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But perhaps someone may say: If the Spirit of the Lord descends upon the virgin and the Word
became flesh and dwelled among us, just as it is written: The Spirit of God shall come upon
you and the power of the Almighty shall overshadow you, why, on the other hand, does he arrive
to the Lord in the form of a doveT58
Besides this section of the Tractatus Origenis XX, one can find a parallel passage in
Gregory of Elviras De fide orthodoxa contra Arianos, except that Luke 1:35 is
illuminated by a use of John 3:6:
For the virgin has clearly conceived from the Spirit of God; and what she conceived, this she gave
birth to, that is, a God, who - as I already have said - has been joined to a human being, to flesh
and its [accompanying] soul, i.e., [she gave birth to a God] who has been joined - as I already said
- to a human being in the unity of a [single] person, just as he himself says: That which is bom
of the flesh, is flesh: and that which is bom of the Spirit, is Spirit, because God is Spirit and he
is bom of God, just as the angel says to the Virgin Maiy: The Spirit of God shall come upon you
and the power of the Almighty shall overshadow you. Therefore that which will be bom from you
is the Holy One, to be called the Son of God.459
This use of Luke 1:35 in this section of Gregorys De fide not only corresponds closely to
Tractatus Origenis XX, 62-66, but also Tertullians Against Praxeas 27,5.
458. Tractatus Origenis XX, 7 ,6 2-6 6. Sed fortasis aliquis dicat: si spiritus domini discendit ad uirginem
et uerbum caro factum est et habitauit in nobis, sicut scriptum est: Spiritus dei ueniet in te e t uirtus
Altissimi obumbrabit tibi, quur rursus in sim ilitudine columbae aduenit ad dominum? CCSL, V ol.
LXIX, 143. The CCSL editor Vincent Bulhart includes the Tractatus within the works o f Gregory o f
Elvira (ca. 3 2 0 - ca. 392), which would put its dating within the last one or two decades o f the fourth
century. There is nonetheless considerable difficulty with concluding that Gregory is the author o f this
collection o f Latin hom ilies. H eidi, Som e Traces, points out that Gregory applied an accurate
Nicene Latin term inology in his D e fid e orthodoxa contra Arianos, repeatedly using such expressions
as homoousios, trinitas unius substantiae, tres personae unius substantiae, substantiae unitas, pater et
filius unius substantiae, etc., but apart from some allusions to Nicene dogma, none o f these type o f
expressions appear in the Tractatus.
459. De fid e orthodoxa contra Arianos 91,905-915. Nempe enim de spiritu dei uirgo concepit, et quod
concepit, hoc peperit, id est, deum hom ini suo ut iam dixi sociatum, cami et animae suae, id est
homini ut iam dbd personae unitate sociatum sicut ipse dixit: Quod nascitur de came, caro est: et quod
nascitur de spiritu, spiritus est, quia deus spiritus est [et] de (ex) deo natus est, sicut et angelus ad
Mariam uirginem dixit: Spiritus dei ueniet in te et uirtus A ltissim i obumbrabit te. Propterea quod
nascetur ex te sanctum, uocabitur filius dei. CCSL 6 4 ,2 4 5 .
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It is necessary to know and to say that the power of God is within the life of the Father,
that is, the Father is in the Son.460 Victorinus does not see I Corinthians 1:24, Christ as
the Power and Wisdom of God, as nothing more than an extra gloss on the meaning
and content of a text like Luke 1:35. This verse from I Corinthians 1:24 is Victorinus
key proof-text in speaking about the Sons consubstantial unity with the Father (and
the Spirit). As such, it is vital to see what exegesis Victorinus offers of it, especially
with which other Scripture texts of power and unity he associates it. The importance of
I Corinthians 1:24 did not seem at the forefront o f Victorinus thinking as he began the
first book of Against Arius: it receives no mention and no treatment in his initial section
on I Corinthians. As he gets further into Book I it is clear that the locus strikes him as
important; however, if the text had occurred to him as vital from the beginning, he
would have included it in the extended discussion of titles for the Sons reality that
spans Book I 3,1 through I 28,7, especially the section of I 18,7-18,57 in which he
discusses I Corinthians as part of his running commentary on key New Testament
texts.461 But the significance of I Corinthians, at least here, is in talking about the mode
of the Sons begetting, singling out the Patripassians as opponents. Just as important,
he uses I Corinthians 12:3-6 to speak about the Father, Son, and Spirit as all spirit, the
same Spirit, and therefore consubstantial.462 The action of each Person of the Trinity in
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this discussion serves Victorinus as a distinction principle; the substance of the Trinity
serves as the unity principle.
This lack is more than made up for in the rest of Book I, as Victorinus uses I
Corinthians 1:24 to full effect, just as he will in Books II, III and IV. In Book 137
Victorinus carries on his argument for why the Father and the Logos are consubstantial;
dominating this discussion of consubstantiality is divine power. As mentioned above,
Victorinus matches a thorough consideration of Johannine texts with Pauline epistles; in I
36, as he argues that the Image of God is the Son of Mary, Son of God, and also Logos,
he makes a clear statement as to why these are essential authorities:
After that, we must be attentive to how this same one, both image and Son, is the Logos. It is
evident that the Son is image. For Paul said: The Son of God is the image of God. I say
therefore that he is the Logos, of whom it was said: In the principle was the Logos, For Paul
says how the Son is the firstborn of the whole creation, because in him all things have been
created, those which are in the heavens and which are on earth, which are visible and invisible,
whether Thrones or Dominations or Principalities or Powers; all things have been created through
him and in him, and he himself is before all, and in him all things hold together. You see what
he said of the Son: that because all things have been created in him and through him and for
him, on that account, he is the firstborn. He says, therefore, three things. Among them is this
one: All through himto whom has this always been attributed? As it is in the confession of
faith: to the Logos. If then Paul attributes through him to the Son, but the him which is through
him John attributes to the Logos, the first Apostle and the preeminent Evangelist agree in what
they have said. One must not doubt that the Logos is Son.463
The authorities of Paul and John are the forces enabling Victorinus to make sense of the
texts on which he offers his glosses.
Lord; and there are varieties o f working (vep Y eia), but it is the same God who inspires them all in
every one.
463. Clark, 148-49. AA 1 36,1-17. Post istud perspciendum quomodo idem ipse et im ago et filiu s Xoyoq
est. In confesso est quod imago filius est. D ixit enim Paulus: filius dei imago est dei. D ico igitur
ipsum esse Xoyov, de quo dictum est: in pricipio erat Xoyoq. D icit enim Paulus, quomodo filiu s
primigenitus totius creaturae, quod in ipso creata sunt omnia, quae in caelis et quae in terra, quae
visibilia et quae invisibilia, sive tkroni sive dominationes sive principatus sive potestates, omnia p e r
ipsum et in ipsum creata sunt et ipse est ante omnia et omnia in ipso consistent. Vides quae dixerit de
filio, quod ideo primigenitus quia omnia creata sunt in ipso et p e r ipsum et in ipsum. Tria ergo d icit
Ex quibus, quod dictum est: omnia p e r ipsum, cui datum est semper? Quod in confessione est,
X6ycj>. Si igitur Paulus filio dedit p e r ipsum, ipsum autem quod est p e r ipsum dedit Iohannes tcB Xoyco,
primus apostolus et evangelistes ante omnes, consonant dicta. Quid erit dubitandum, ut non sit filius
Msyocfi CSEL 83/1,120-21.
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Victorinus extended discussion of unity in this part of Book I contains many
noticeable points of illumination as he argues for unity between Father and Son. In I 34
the Son is the image of the Father because the Father is light and the Son is the reflection
of the light: This is what is called the reflection of the light, having everything from the
light, but not as receiving it from without; nor has it come from the outside but is
connatural, and therefore always existing homoousios with the light.464 What stands out
is something that could be easily overlooked in this page-long paragraph about the Logos
being the Image of God. In a sentence that is a combined allusion and gloss on the allimportant Nicene proof-text of Wisdom 7:26(Wisdom) is a reflection of eternal light,
a spotless mirror of the working of God.. .Victorinus says the Father and the Son are
the same natureconnaturalis. For a Latin writing in late 359, this assertion, made in
passing as part of an entire argument, is nothing short of amazing. It also serves well as
an introduction to what Victorinus will say further on.
In 135 the argument for consubstantiality continues, especially informed by Colossians
1. If the Logos is the one through whom are all things (Colossians 1:17), then he has to
be consubstantial with the Father. Further, this Logos is the Son, and Jesus bom o f Mary.465
Throughout 135 and 36 Victorinus maintains the language of power, crucial here because
he is making assertions of momentous importance. In Book 137 and 38 he will make a case
for the Father and Son being of one substance, therefore of one power 466 Surprisingly, the
text to which Victorinus turns his attentions for several paragraphs is I Corinthians 15:28, a
464. Clark, 146. A A 1 34,33-35. (emphasis added) Et istud luminis refulgentia dicitur, omnia lum inis habens,
sed non accipiens, neque enata, sed connaturalis, et 6pooi3oiog semper exsistens. CSEL 83/1,117.
465. I treat this extended commentary on Col. 1:15-17 above under the subject o f D ivine V isibility.
466. Victorinus statements o f One Substance, One Power are o f such import to his N icene polem ical
form that all these instances o f these statements are handled below in a separate section.
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text most closely associated with Marcellus of Ancyra in his earliest, hardest stage of
modalist theology. The Son, Victorinus holds, subjects all things by the same power with
which the Father does, especially since the Son is the Power and Wisdom of God. He
interprets I Corinthians 15:28 through a mention of I Corinthians 1:24, repeating within this
same lengthy paragraph his point that the Son is consubstantial with the Father both by
very substance and by very power.
argument for the Sons consubstantiality with the Father until he reemphasizes the intent of
the Apostle Paul, so in speaking about what the Father accomplishes in the Son there is a
quotation of John 5:19 (what the Father does, die Son does). There is one divine power
here, Victorinus contends, so that God may be all in all.
But even after speaking of I Corinthians 15, the One Substance/One Power, Christ the
Power and Wisdom of God, and the Son doing the same as the Father, as in John 5:19,
Victorinus is still not finished with his point. In Book 141 Victorinus begins a new
argument for the Sons consubstantiality based on his favorite uiological image: the Son
as Life. But the aforementioned section, Book 137-39, is completed by a final gloss in all
of Book 140 on I Corinthians 1:24.
Victorinus reiterates that the Son consubstantial with the Father because the names,
as he says, of the Gospel say that the Son is the Power and Wisdom of God.468 Set
alongside this idiom of the Power and Wisdom of God in this section is also the idiom of
the vision and its power:
467. A A 1 38,27-28.
468. This is right at the beginning o f Book 1 40, in 1 40,14. Victorinus begins with a combined quotation
o f Paul, when he says Let us speak o f other names, For I am not ashamed o f the Gospel: the power
and wisdom o f God; Paul says this o f Jesus Christ; for he is the G ospel. He says also concerning
this: Christ, therefore, is both the wisdom and power o f G od. He combines Pauls Rom. 1:16 with
I Cor. 1:24.
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What then? The wisdom and power of God, is that not God himself? For with God things are
not as they are in bodies or in bodily things where the eye is one thing, sight another, or as they
are in fire, where fire is one thing, its light another. For both eye and fire have need of something
other: the eye, of a light different from itself so that from it and through it vision can take place,
and the fire has need of air so that light might come from it. But the power and wisdom of God
are like vision: the power of vision has vision within it. This vision is externalized when the
power of vision is in action; then vision is begotten by the power of vision and is itself its only
begotten, for nothing else is begotten by it.469
Victorinus exegesis of I Corinthians 1:24 changes over to his philosophical speculation
of his typical trinitarian analogy of Father being repose, Son movement and action. He
still closes his section with his point about power and wisdom: power and wisdom are
within the Godhead, so to say that Christ is the power and wisdom of God is the same
as saying that he, too, is truly God. Before he will proceed to speak at length about Christ
being life, Victorinus repeats his holy names for the Sons reality: In this way, whether
the Logos is Jesus, or light, or reflection, or form, or image, or power and
wisdom, or character, or life, it will be clear that the Logos and God, the Father and
the Son, the Spirit and Christ are homoousion.410 Victorinus includes his distinctive
language of Father/Son and Son/Spirit copulae; he reprises the names he has just dealt
with and echoes the statements of Sirmium 351 and the Dedication 341, using titles
specifically from vital proof-texts. This sentence above not only quotes I Corinthians
1:24 (power and wisdom), but also gives titles from John \:\(Logos), Hebrews 1:3
469. Clark, 15455. AA 1 40,412. Quid deinde? Sapientia et virtus dei non ipse deus? N on enim ut in
coporibus aut in corporalibus, aliud est oculus, aliud visio, aut in igne, aliud ignis, aliud lum en eius.
Eget enim et oculus et ignis, alterius alicuius, et oculus alterius luminis, ut sit et ex ipso et in ipso
visio, et ignis aeris, ut sit ex ipso lumen. Sed sicuti visionis potentia in se habet visionem , tunc foris
exsistentem , cum operator potentia visionis, et generator a potentia visionis visio unigenita ea ipsa
nihil enim aliud ab ea gignitur CSEL 83/1, 126-27.
470. Clark, 155. AA 1 40,32-35. Isto modo, sive Xoyoq est Iesus sive lumen sive refulgentia sive form a
sive imago sive virtus et sapientia sive character sive vita, opootioiov apparebit Xoyog et deus, pater
et filius, spiritus et Christus. CSEL 83/1,127-28.
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(character),Wisdom 7:26 (light, reflection), Philippians 2:6 (form), Colossians 1:15
(image), and John 14:6 (life).471
A similarly rich chain of titles and texts comes in the conclusion to Book I, when
Victorinus reiterates the consubstantiality of Father, Son and Spirit472 In speaking o f divine
substance in chapter 3especially his treatment of Jeremiah 23:18,22this passage is noted:
From this it is evident that the Logos itself and the Holy Spirit and Nous and Wisdom are the
same thing. Indeed, Paul also said by divine inspiration: Who has known the Nous of the Lord?
And again concerning him: The power and wisdom of God. Solomon also uses the word
wisdom of him. And many names are referred to the Son. And Paul, writing to the Hebrews,
also calls him substance: Image of his substance; and he spoke likewise of the consubstantial
people. And Jeremiah: Because the one who has stood in my substance and has seen my word;
and again: If they had stood in my substance and had heard my words. And the Gospel
according to Matthew: Give us this day our supersubstantial bread. In the parable Luke says:
The younger one said to the Father: give me the part of the substance which belongs to me;
and again: There he wasted his substance. For in descending here below, it did not keep its
powers. These things are said of the soul, but I have cited this text against those who deny that the
term usia is used in the Holy Scriptures.473
Romans 11:34 (Who has known the Nous of the Lord?) is useful for Victorinus because
of the Greek word nous; Luke 15 because of the idiosyncratic use of substantia in the
471. We hear a similar statement o f the proper names o f the Son not too much later, 1 56, though more
philosophical: The Son is therefore both word and voice, he is life, he is Logos, he is m ovem ent, he
is Nous, he is wisdom , he is existence and first substance, he is the action o f power, he is the first on
(ov -Existent), the true on (Existent) from whom, through whom, in whom are all onta (existents); he
is the m id-angle o f the Trinity; he reveals the preexisting Father and sends forth the Holy Spirit for the
sake o f perfection. For, as blessed Paul said: The Gospel is the power and wisdom o f God ; by
power he is designating the Son, because all is through him . For by the Word o f pow er all
things have been made, and by the wisdom o f the H oly Spirit everything attains perfection. Clark,
181-81. AA 1 56,15-24. CSEL 83/1,154. The Son, qui est medius in angulo trinitatis, is quite a
distinctive yet understandable figure o f speech for Victorinus, but what is even more surprising is that
the Son sends forth the H oly Spirit o f perfection, a type o f Filioque claim.
472. Though not a very direct and quick conclusion; it takes him quite a while, with eight rather recondite
paragraphs.
473. Clark, 186-87. AA 1 59,13-28. Ex his apparet quod Xoyog ipse et spiritus sanctus et vovg et sapientia
id ipsum. Etenim et Paulus dixit divine: quis cognovit vovv domini? Et rursus de ipso: virtus et
sapientia dei. Salomon etiam sapientiam de ipso dicit. Et multa nomina in filium revocantur. Et ipsum
et substantiam dicit et Paulus ad Hebraeos: imago substantiae eius; et item consubstantialem populum
dixit. Et Hieremias: quia qui stetit in substantia mea et vidit verbum meum; et rursus: si stetissent in
substantia mea et audissent verba mea. Et evangelium secundum Matthaeum: panem nostrum
consubstantialem da nobis hodie. In parabola Lucas: dixit iunior de filiis patri: da mihi congruam
partem substantiae; et rursus: ibi dissipavit substantiam suam. Quo enim inde descendit, potentias
suas non tenuit. Ista animae sunt, sed dixi istud adversum negantes usiae nomen positum esse in sacris
scripturis. CSEL 83/1,159-60.
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parable of the Prodigal Son, for the life of his father which he demands and wastes. But
the connection of I Corinthians 1:24 with Hebrews 1:3, Jeremiah 23 and Matthew 6:11
shows that I Corinthians 1:24 is at the forefront of Victorinus reflection for proving
Father, Son and Spirit to be consubstantial. It should not be missed that right after I
Corinthians 1:24, Victorinus reminds us that Solomon also uses the word wisdom of
(the Son). We can assume this to be a reference to Wisdom 7:25,26, since after this
allusion to Solomon, the next text Victorinus cites is Paul writing to the Hebrews,
calling the Son the Image of his substance.
The usual adversaries are addressed again in Book II of Against Arius, but most of all
the Latin Homoians, when Victorinus begins this book with a creedal statement (one of
two explicit creedal statements in this book, just as Book I also has two creedal-type
statements). Hadot points out that AA Book II is the best and clearest response to Latin
Homoians in all of his work. This is possibly true, though it is at the very least the
putative creed that begins Book II on-point.474 Directly after paragraphs directed at
original Arianism, then against Marcellus and Photinus, Power and Wisdom from I
Corinthians 1:24 recurs fairly soon in his diatribe against Homoiousians and Homoians.
What these opponents are able to affirm is noteworthy, since they confess an only-
474. Hadot, Marius Victorinus, 308. This creed in AA II 1,5-13 (Clark, 195) is intriguing: W e a ll confess
an all-powerful God; w e alone for the moment confess Christ Jesus; yet soon all w ill confess him We
who have faith in Christ confess both because they are both together and individuals (ambo et
singuli) as certainly as God is Father, so certainly is his Son Jesus Christ, so that our w hole religion
and whole hope is faith in Christ. But although w e confess tw o individuals, nevertheless w e affirm
one God and that both are one God, because both the Father is in the Son and the Son is in the
Father. CSEL 83/1,168.
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begotten Son.. .Son from the Father, God from God, true light from true light,475 but
even with these creedal affirmations they refuse to speak about substance:
Some refuse to mention substance here; others mention it but wish to call it similar, not identical. It
should first of all be considered by the latter what the prophet Isaiah said: There was no God before
me and after me there will be no God like unto me. If Christ is son, Christ is certainly after God. But
after God there is nothing like unto him. Christ is therefore not like unto God; or if he is not after God,
certainly he is with God; for in no way can he be before God; therefore he is homoousion,476
The substance of the Father and the Son are homogeneous substance; even if it is in two
or more individuals, it would be identical substance, not similar (as Homoians would
term it). And if the Son has received substance from the Father, the same substance
guarantees unity and power, and that the Logos is the form of the Father
by a certain divine origin, the Son, having received substance from the Father, with him and in
him the Son always is, as different and identical, of the same substance, not that the substance of
the Father diminishes nor that the substance of the Son is received from an outside source, but by
a consubstantial and perfect unity, the Son is God and power of God who has always been and
always existed. This is God and the Logos, God and his form, Father and Son, God and Jesus
Christ, God and his power and wisdom; therefore, homoousion.*11
Victorinus defines the Father and the Son in I I 2 as homoousion/consubstantialis, but
also particularly as eiusdem substantiae. This means he can define the case for same
substance without only using the Nicene definition, though this certainly stands out as
one of the few times Victorinus does not reflexively invoke the Nicene homoousios, one
475. That is, categories from the First Sirmian Creed o f 351. Anathema VI o f that council condemned any
that taught That the ousia o f God is extended or retracted; Anathema VII condemned That the Son is
the ousia o f God extended, or the extension o f his ousia. Cf. Hanson, Search, 325-29. Victorinus, in his
statement about the Son in II 2,43-49, carefully avoids these dated notions: The Son is the same
substance o f the Father, and the Fathers substance does not diminish, because they are in perfect unity
476. Clark, 199. AA II 2,27-34. A lii substantiam hie nominandam negant, alii nominant, sed sim ilem
volunt, non eandem dicere. Quibus illud primum perspiciendum est quod propheta Esaias dixit: Nullus
fu it ante me deus, et p o st me nullus erit similes deus. Si filius Christus, utique post deum Christus.
Nullus autem sim iles post deum. Christus ergo non sim iles deo; aut si non post deum, certe cum deo;
nam ante deum nullo modo; ergo 6p oo6oiov. CSEL 83/1, 171-72.
477. Clark, 199. AA II 2,4349. (emphasis added) divino quodam ortu, filius, a patre accepta substantia,
semper cum eo et in eo, ut alter atque idem, eiusdem substantiae, nulla vel illius dim inutione vel
huius acceptione, consubstantiali et com pletiva unalitate, deus atque virtus eius semper qui fiierit et
semper extiterit; hoc est deus et XAyoq, deus et forma eius, pater et filius, deus et Iesus Christus, deus
et virtus et sapientia', opoovotov ergo. CSEL 83/1, 172.
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of the clear standards under which he writes.478 The distinctions he makes between Father
and Son, however, seem to make rather ambiguous what power the Son is. Victorinus
posits, God and the Logos, God and his form, Father and Son, God and Jesus Christ, God
and his power and wisdom, which seems to say that the Son is the power of God (the
Father) rather than the same power. Worse, using God with the title of Father only implied
makes for a somewhat inattentive argument that could easily pass for Homoian-sounding
discourse (Speaking of God and Jesus Christ is language Homoians would be perfectly
comfortable using). But Father and Son as one power, or same power, is a point Victorinus
reiterates before he goes on to consider whether the word ousia can truly be found in
Scripture. Victorinus asks, What do we actually mean by the word homoousion?: it
signifies cosubstantial [sic], that which is cosubstantiated, without composition or
separation, but always together with regard to the power of being (rerum virtutibus) and
distinguished by actions.479 The actions of the persons of the Trinity is classic Victorinus.
He makes a statement here at the end of II2 that the Father and Sons being/ousia is always
united in regard to powers, seemingly sharing common power (and nature).
Victorinus takes this too far in II 6, as I have discussed above with Divine Substance
loci in Against Arius. Still writing under the vestigial Latin influence of miahypostatic
478. As I have commented above, Victorinus has an idyllic memory o f N icaea passed on to him, to which
he refers in Books I and II o f his work. The inclusion o f eiusdem substantiae right alongside
consubstantialis can be found in Augustine in his D e Trinitate I. M ichel Barnes mentions this, that
Augustine understands from John 1:1-2 that the Son is not a creature, and if not a creature then he is
o f the same substance with die Fathera deduction offered in language rem iniscent o f N icaea but not
in the exact technical language H ills translation might lead an unwary reader to assume: Augustine
says eiusdem substantiae not consubstantialis or even una natura. It is, in any case, important to
note that Augustine does not sim ply cite Nicaea: he makes an argument in language which seem s to
belong within N icene circles, but there is no invocation o f N icaea. M ichel R. Barnes, E xegesis and
Polem ic in Augustines D e Trinitate I, Augustinian Studies 30: 1 (1999): 4 8-49.
479. Clark, 200. AA II 2,52-55. Hie vero 6poouoiov significant consubstantiale, simul substantiatum,
sine conposito vel discretione, sed simul semper quod sit rerum virtutibus actionibusque discretum.
CSEL 83/1, 172.
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theology, he has difficulty at times distinguishing between hypostasis and ousia
(though, as described above in chapter 3, An Anomalous Trinitarian Formula, there
are other instances in Against Arius where he does not). In II 5 and 6, he considers
whether the word substance is truly found in Scripture, this right after I I 4, in which he
takes pains to distinguish subsistentia, stating,it is said: From one substance there are
three subsistences..
More than any other, the Jeremiah 23:18,22 text mentions the substance of God, but in
II 6 Victorinus speaks of Lukes Parable of the Prodigal Son (Luke 15), in which a father
divided his hypostasis between his two sons.480 Hypostasis, he argues, should also be
understood as total power and virtue; this and more can be said of the Son:
If then the riches of God are wisdom and knowledge(Romans 11:33), and if wisdom and
knowledge are the power of God, itself but the power of God is Christ, but Christ is Logos, and
Logos indeed is Son, if die Son is himself in the Father, therefore this Son is the riches of die Father,
he himself is his hupostasis [sic]. Henceforth it matters not at all whether we understand hupostasis as
riches or as ousia, provided that there is signified by that God himself. Therefore we read in Scripture
in reference to God either hupostasis or ousia. But this is also understood of Christ481
This convoluted paragraph speaks on behalf of the strong wish to prove divine unity, at
the cost of making a quasi-modalist construction. We can see this inchoate sort o f
modalist expression in the opening lines of Book III 4, where he speaks of the Logos as
the act of God, in power, but this power is the power of the Father, and it sounds as if
there is little distinction between the Father and the Son:
480. Victorinus creates an immediate problem o f textual criticism for what Greek version o f Lk. 15:12 he
has in front o f him in the Latin W est, in which he can find and read hypostasis. N estle-A land 27th
edition text has ousia as the property o f which the Prodigal Son wants his share of; no variant
readings are listed that would have hypostasis.
481. Clark, 206 AA n 6,12-19. Si igitur divitiae dei, sapientia et scientia sunt, et si sapientia et scientia
ipsa virtus dei est, virtus autem dei Christus est, Christus autem koyog est, X6yoq vero filiu s, filius
autem in patre ipse est, ipse ergo divitiae patris, ipse im ooraatc; est. Iam igitur nihil interest, utrum
u itooraoiv divitias intellegam us an o iio ia v , dummodo id significetur quod ipse deus est. Ergo lectum
est de deo vel im doraou; vel ou ala. H oc autem et de Christo intellegitur. CSEL 83/1,1 79 -80 .
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Therefore the Logos who is like the seed and the power of the existing of those things which are
and of those things which can be or which could have been, the Logos who is the wisdom and
the power of all substances, the Logos which reaches from God to all acts, this Logos is God
through the power of the Father and one sole God with the Father, by the veiy act by which he
constitutes himself as Son.482
This use of I Corinthians 1:24 in Book III, for describing unity, may be because of
Victorinus efforts to define the dyads of Father-Son and Son-Spirit, as well as the
consubstantiality of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
A Son-Spirit dyad of sorts appears in Book IV, with Victorinus again describing the
Son as the power and wisdom of God, from I Corinthians 1:24. He connects his
observation on the Son and Holy Spirit with texts from Sirach 1:1 and 1:4:
And so that it may appear clearly that Jesus and the Holy Spirit are identical, let us pay attention
to this. The Holy Spirit is, is he not, teaching, understanding, and wisdom itself; but wisdom is
attributed also to Christ and to God, and Christ is called by that name, because it is Gospel that
is the Son of God, because Gospel is defined: Power and wisdom of God, as Paul says to the
Romans. Likewise Solomon: All Wisdom comes from God and has always been with him,
before all time. Behold homoousion is evident since wisdom is given by God and from God to
Christ and to the Holy Spirit. And since it was said that wisdom has always been with God it is
evident that homoousion also signifies: together with the Father. Next, since it was said: Before
all time, we see that Christ does not begin then when he is in the flesh. Likewise: First of all
things wisdom was brought forth. If Christ is firstborn, Christ is wisdom. That which
follows next designates the Holy Spirit: And the understanding of pmdence is from everlasting.
If the Holy Spirit is prudence and understanding and knowledge and teaching, he is without
doubt Christ, since Christ himself is from everlasting, that is, from eternity, and the firstborn,
and, what is more, the only begotten.
These texts and others that I have commented upon in numerous other books well prove that
not only are God and Christ homoousion, but also the Holy Spirit.483
482. Clark, 226. AA III 4,15 Aoyoc; igitur,quae sunt quaeque esse possunt quaeve esse potuerunt veluti
semen ac potentia exsistendi, sapientia ac virtus omnium substantiarum, de deo ad actiones omnes,
deus potentia patris, actuque quo filius ipse cum patre unus deus est. CSEL 83/1,197.
483. Clark, 278. AA IV 18,2444. Atque ut idem manifestetur lesus et spiritus sanctus, adtendamus istum.
Nempe spiritus sanctus doctrina est, intellegentia ipsaque sapientia et Christo et deo sapientia datur
atque hoc Christus nomine nuncupatur, quod est evangelium Christum esse dei filinm ; quod
evangelium definitur: dei virtus atque sapientia, ut Paulus ad Romanos. Item Salomon: omnis
sapientia a deo est et cum eo ju it semper ante aevum. Ecce 6poouoiov apparet, cum sapientia et de
deo datur et a deo datur, utique Christo et spiritui sancto. Et cum dictum est quod cum deo semper
fuerit, quod dpoouoiov est ostenditur sim ul cum patre. Deinde, cum dictum: ante aevum, non ergo
cum in cam e, tunc Christus. Item: prior omnium creata est sapientia. Si primogenitus Christus,
sapientia Christus. Deinde quod sequitur, spiritus sanctus: et intellectus prudentiae ab aevo. Si
spiritus sanctus prudentia est et intellectus et scientia et doctrina, Christus est sine dubio, quia ipse est
ab aevo, id est aetem o, et primigenitus et, quod et amplius, unigenitus. Haec et alia in m ultis tractata
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Christ and the Holy Spirit are homoousion, Victorinus argues; yet he seems to go too
far with this also, ostensibly stating that there is little or no difference between Christ and
the Holy Spirit. This portion of IV 18 concludes a section begun in IV 17, in which he
comments at length on the definite difference between Christ and the Holy Spirit, as well
as how they are nevertheless the same, the Holy Spirit somehow being identical to
Jesus.484 Christ lies in Victorinus triadic category of life, the Holy Spirit is the
understanding of that life (and wisdom) of God. Wisdom and understanding both spring
eternally from God the Father, as Sirach 1:1 and 1:4 state,485 so Son and Spirit together
proceed from the Father and are homoousios with the Father. The proof texts here are I
Corinthians 1:24, Sirach 1:1 and 1:4, and possibly Colossians 1:15, as the text whence he
uses the title Firstborn for Christ.
Something nearly overlooked is Victorinus conflation of two power texts. It is the
Gospel, he says, to assert that Christ is the Son of God, because the Gospel is the power
and wisdom of God, as Paul says to the Romans. Power and wisdom refers to I
Corinthians 1:24, and is not a statement of Paul to the Romans. But Christ being the
Gospel, and Gospel as the power of God, is from Paul to the Romans (Romans 1:16,
where Paul says that the Gospel.. .is the power of God unto salvation for everyone who
believes...). Another feature of the titles and realities about the Son versus Spirit is the
libris a me 6goou oiov probant non solum deum et Christum, sed etiam spiritum sanctum. CSEL
83/1,251-52.
484. AA IV 18,14; 18,19: Idem tam en... Ex hoc ostenditur quodammodo idem Iesus, idem spiritus
sanctus. CSEL 83/1,251.
485. A ll wisdom com es from the Lord and is with him for ever.. ,4Wisdom was created before all things,
and prudent understanding from eternity. The value in using these verses lies in the mention o f unto
eternity and from eternity but otherwise Victorinus should steer clear o f 1:4 which speaks o f Wisdom
as something nonetheless created (Wisdom was created before all things in LXX reads jipoxpa
Tt&VTCDV E X T io r a i oocpla), sounding dangerously similar to the early Arian locus o f Prov. 8:22.
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interplay between sapientia versus prudentia in his using of Sirach: If the Son is wisdom,
then the Spirit can be a prudential understanding (which is also eternal). This matches
with the vivere-intelligere of the Son-Spirit characteristics.486
I Corinthians 1:24 is the key text for Victorinus arguments for consubstantiality of the
Son and the Father, for the Father and the Son having the same divine power and
wisdom, and for the Son therefore to be as much true God as the Father. There remains
within Against Arius, however, one more substantive theme with which Victorinus can
confirm this point of his arguments for consubstantiality: that of One Substance, One
Power. This theme is not anomalous, since he uses it many times, but its use in the Latin
West of the early 360s is rather anachronistic, and shows Victorinus in his brief
theological career as among the most brilliant and prescient of Latin Neo-Nicenes.
486. In Book IV there are two places where power and wisdom as the realities o f the Son are com bined in
lists with others, in these two instance in the same list o f w ill, power, wisdom , word. In IV 30,
where Victorinus speaks o f the form o f God being a hidden form, but the Son o f God being a m anifest
form, the Son m anifests existence, life, knowledge, and, besides other realities, w ill, power, wisdom,
word... In IV 29, in describing movement and movement in repose, both Father and Son have w ill
and the same w ill, power, wisdom, word.
487. Cf. John Voelker, Marius Victorinus Exegetical Arguments for N icene D efinition m A dversus
Arium," Studia Patristica 38 (2001): 496-502. After the 1999 13th International Conference on
Patristic Studies in Oxford was when I first thought o f writing on this subject; that paper turned out to
be a very useful think-piece on the crucial importance o f this theme in Victorinus.
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because it asserts that a single power is the principle of unity in the divine nature, has
been termed a consensus doctrine of the category termed Pro-Nicene. Pro-Nicene
is not a theology merely sympathetic to the condemnations of Arius at Nicaea 325, or on
the side of what develops into Nicene orthodoxy in the decades immediately following
Nicaea, such as the Western Rome-Alexandria category of Neo-Nicene. Pro-Nicene
is a stage beyond Nicene and Neo-Nicene that appears first in the middle and late 350s,
reaching back to older precedents to argue that, because the Father and the Son have the
same power as one another, they have the same nature.
iOO
488. M ichel R. Barnes, One Nature, One Power. The stages o f N icene development in the fourth century
have not taken on agreed on m eanings, versus the variant trajectories o f anti-Nicene or Arian
theology that scholars have agreed on for their meanings. Som e scholars say N icene to m ean
sympathetic to N icaea, w hile others say Pro-Nicene to mean the same thing. I believe it absolutely
vital to adopt the distinction Bam es makes for a far more determined sense o f Pro-Nicene in the
technical vocabulary o f the Trinitarian Controversy.
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The first of the One Substance, One Power statements comes shortly after the
prologue of AA IA, where Victorinus begins his extended commentary on the Gospel of
John, selecting his favorite Johannine proof-texts to prove such things as the common
identity of the Logos, the Son of God and the Christ.489 The Johannine proof-texts are
brought up to substantiate Victorinus repeated assertions of christological identity
according to the titles that are assigned to the Second Personfor example,that the Son
is God..., that the Son is life..
that he is light..
and
that he is the Son of God.. ..490 After citing these titles, Victorinus cites John 5:19,
What the Father does, I also do. The Son does not act of himself unless he sees the
Father acting. John 5:19 will be cited only three times in Against Arius, but the
passages in which it does appear are crucial, like the one here. The exegetical
understanding of John 5:19 was crucial in the late fourth century to the consensus
doctrine Barnes has called One Nature, One Power.491 Victorinus then returns to
titles, matched with appropriate Johannine texts, after which he proceeds to a
discussion of the Son as life just as the Father is life. He then moves on to statements of
the Father and the Son being within each other, and finally to statements about the Son
being the substance of the Father inAA IA 7: Christ is therefore God, not coming from
any other substance; The Father is living and I live because of the Father, and : I am
the bread of life, the one who eats this will live for all time. All these statements
489. This begins in AA 1 3 and runs through half o f A A H S , where Victorinus then takes up the Synoptics
(briefly) and then Pauline texts.
490. AA 15ff.
491. The developed understanding o f Jn. 5:19 becomes the mature Nicene category o f Pro-Nicene. Barnes,
One Nature, One Power, 221. Cf. also his comment on 220: If I were to speculate on what it is that
turns power theology doctrine from its Nicene to its pro-Nicene understandings I would say that it was
the new, late 350s, anti-Nicene appropriation o f Jn. 5:19, an exegesis which is common to Latin and
Greek anti-Nicenes, and which focuses upon the question o f activity as revelatory o f nature.
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signify one substance.492 A few sentences later Victorinus will restate the assertion
that Christ is the substance of the Father: I in the Father and the Father in me. And
this is not through rank alone, but through substance.493 But these statements are just
hints of a more clear and firm statement in IA 8 about the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit
being consubstantial, and the Father and the Son sharing the same substance and same
power 494 In the last sentence of AA IA 8 Victorinus begins to make his first statement
about one substance, one power:
That they are from the same substance and power: I and the Father are one. And again:
The Father is in me and I in Him. Whence it is said in Paul: Who being in die form of God
did not consider it robbery to be equal to God. These texts therefore signify both that they
are one substance and one power. For how is it said: I and the Father are one, and The
Father in me and I in the Father, if he did not have from the Father substance and power,
wholly begotten from the All... For in God there is complete identity between power,
substance, divinity, and act... For equal is joined to equal and like to like. Therefore the Father
and Son are equal and on account of that also the Son is in the Father and the Father in the Son,
and both are one.495
In this section Victorinus, in the midst of his running commentary on John 1-17,
speaks of the common substance and power of the Son and the Father, using as his proof
two Johannine texts (John 10:30 and 14:10) with the all-important Pauline text of
Philippians 2:6 (He did not consider it robbery to be equal with God...). Any statement
492. Clark, 98. AA 1 7,6-9. Christus ergo deus, non ab alia substantia; vivens pater et ego vivo propter
patrem, et: panis vitae sum ego, qui istum manducat vivet in saeculum; cuncta ista unam substantiam
significant CSEL 83/1,63.
493. Clark, 98. AA 1 7,18-19. Quod substantia patris Christus: ego in patre et pater in me. Hoc non per
dignitatem solum , sed per substantiam. CSEL 83/1, 64.
494. This early section is a good example to cite for Victorinus pneumatology. I.e., Victorinus did not
merely wait until he wrote Book III o f Against Arius to argue for the consubstantiality o f the Spirit.
Cf., for example, 1 8,17-18, where he says The three are therefore homoousioi and on that account in
all there is one God. A bold statement that not even the Creed o f Constantinople 381 could make
about the consubstantiality o f the Spirit, in spite o f Gregory o f Nazianzus protestations.
495. Clark, 100-01. AA 1 8,37-9,7; 9,1719; 9,2224. (emphasis added) Quod ex eadem substantia et
potentia; ego et p a te unum sumus. Et rursus: p a te in me et ego in ipso. Unde dictum in Paulo: qui in
forma dei exsistens non rapinam arbitratus est esse se aequalia deo. Ista igitur significant et unam esse
substantiam et unam potentiam. Quomodo enim: ego et p a te unum sumus et quomodo: p a te in me et
ego in patre, si non apatre substantiam habuisset et potentiam, genitus de toto totus?.. .dei enim idem
ipsum est et potentia et substantia et divinitas et actio... Aequali enim aequale conectitur et sim ile simili.
Aequalis igitur filius et pater et propteea et filius in patre et p a te in filio et ambo unum. CSEL 83/1,66-67.
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of one substance, one power would be significant in and of itself for what it claims for
trinitarian identity, but Victorinus statement is all the more remarkable for the
marshalling of such polemically-burdened proof-texts of the Trinitarian Controversy.
Victorinus will substantiate his other one substance, one power statements in Against
Arius with key Nicene texts of Scripture.
After his Johannine exposition in Book IA Victorinus proceeds to the Synoptics, and
then to Paul, employing the same method of posing the titles of Christ as indicative of his
identity, and proving so from relevant portions of the titles scriptural record.
To the Philippians. That he is Christ: And in the support of die Spirit of Jesus Christ That the Son
is homoousios and together with the Father, powerful: Tor, feel that in you which was also in
Christ who, existing in the form of God, did not consider it robbery to be equal to God, but emptied
himself taking the form of a slave, made in the likeness of man and found with the shape of a man.
First of all the Photinians and those after Photinus and before him who say that Jesus is mere
man and also made from man recognize the blasphemy as impious. In Christ who existing in the
form of God. Existing when? Before he came into the body. For he said that he had emptied
himself and taken the form of a slave. Therefore he also existed before he became man. And what
was he? The Logos of God, the form of God.
What is this: existing equal to God? That he is of the same power and substance of God.
For he said: being equal.496
When he gets to the Epistle to the Philippians in Book 121, the key, immediate text to
comment on is Philippians 2:5-7, in which we find Victorinus second mention in Against
Arius of one substance, one power.497 For Victorinus, Pauls witness proves that the Son
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is homoonsios and together with the Father powerful.498 And Pauls witness, Victorinus
mentions, disproves Photinus, and all before or after Photinus who believed his blasphemy of
Jesus being a mere man and being made merely from man. Christ, Victorinus asserts, existed
before he became man, and was therefore the Logos of God, i.e., the form of God.499 The
meaning of existing equal to God, according to Victorinus asks, is that he is of the same
power and substance of God.. .500 He further qualifies the meaning by specifying that divine
substance is different than the substance which makes up the human person, besides also the
obvious meaning that equal to God cannot be construed as meaning like to God. Except
for a passing reference to Ephesians 3:18,
498.
499.
500.
501.
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has attributed both to the Father and the Son the same things, but not precisely the same, for the
sake of homoousion. First, there were three prepositions for one, and three for the other. Then the
same prepositions were used for both Father and Son. But this: Through whom are all things is
attributed to both the Father and the Son since the Son who is the Logos of all existents is the actual
power in existents, and because the Father is in the Son, the Father also exists in him as actual
power. For at the same time die Son is in the Father, and die Father in the Son. Therefore, there is
one power, that is, one substance, for there, power is substance; for power is nothing else, other
than substance. Therefore, this is the same for Father and for Son.503
For the sake of defending the homoousios, Victorinus brings together a chain of texts,
beginning with I Cor. 15:24-28, proceeding to I Cor. 1:24, to John 5:19, and ending by
returning to I Cor. 1:24. Rather uniquely, this passage begins with a homoousios
commentary on what the apostle Paul intended in Rom. 11:34-36, when he said since
from him and through him and for him are all things. Victorinus interprets this as Pauls
way of saying that whatever is attributed to the Son is also attributed to the Father;
therefore, they are one divinity. For the sake of homoousios the same things are attributed
to both Father and Son, especially what Victorinus terms actual power.504 This leads
into the most striking aspect of all of IA 37-39: not the way Victorinus interprets what
Paul intended, but his assertion which immediately follows the mention of actual power:
For at the same time the Son is in the Father, and the Father in the Son. Therefore,
there is one power, that is, one substance; for there, power is substance; for power is
503. Clark, 150. AA 1 3 7 ,4 -2 1 . (emphasis added) Esse autem et deum et Xoyov 6p.oovotov, hoc est
patrem et filium , ex istis manifestum. Quae dedit filio Paulus, eadem dedit et patri, tria ista cum
dignitate patema in uno, ut appareret et divinitas una et substantia et potentia paterna. Ad
Colossenses istuc dixit de filio. Ad Romanos autem de patre eadem: quis enim cognovit mentem
domini, aut quis fu it eius, aut quis prius dedit et reddetur ei, quoniam ex ipso et p e r ipsum e t in ipsum
omnia V ides quemadmodum eadem et non sic eadem dedit et patri et filio, in 6poovonov. Primum
tria et tria. Deinde eadem et patri et filio. H oc autem p e r quern omnia et patri et filio datum est,
quoniam filius, Xoyoq qui est omnium quae sunt, potentia actuosa in ea quae sunt, et quod in filio
pater est, in ipso et pater actuosa potentia ex sistit Sim ul enim et filius et in patre et pater in filio. Una
ergo potentia hoc est una substantia exsistit; ibi enim potentia, substantia; non enim aliud potentia,
aliud substantia. Idem ergo ipsum est et patri et filio. CSEL 83/1,121-22.
504. potentia actuosa AA 1 37,16.
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nothing else, other than substance.505 The acknowledgment of attributes common to both
Father and Son becomes even more intriguing when Victorinus speaks of things being
made subject, citing, of all texts, I Corinthians 15:28.5061 Corinthians 15:24-28 is a text
to which one could appeal for radical unity, but Victorinus does not argue, like
Marcellus, for I Corinthians 15 being merely an explanation of the history of salvation
and the eventual collapse of the Logos into the Father. Victorinus uses this text for
speaking of divine unity as well as diversity, when he shifts from one power language
to speaking, as he does at times, of multiple powers in God (such as the paternal power
and the the Sons own power), and the Son as Wisdom, through whom, one day, all
things will be subjected.507 1 Corinthians 15:2428 is given meaning here by an appeal to
I Corinthians 1:24: Christ, the Power and the Wisdom of God. Because of this
subjection of all things one day, both the Fathers enemies and the Sons enemies,
Victorinus restates that each is in the other and therefore they are homoousioi. Before he
entirely finishes with I Corinthians 15:2428, Victorinus will point out that the final
subjection of all things will also involve the destruction of death by Jesus who is life. He
fits this into his psychological analogy of the Trinity as Being, Life, and Understanding,
505. Clark, 150. AA 1 37,1820. (emphasis added) Simul enim et filius et in patre et pater in filio . Una
ergo potentia hos est una substantia exsistit; ibi enim potentia, substantia; non enim aliud potentia,
aliud substantia. CSEL 83/1, 122.
506. A text which since the fourth century has been identified m ost o f all with the theology o f M arcellus o f
Ancyra and the extreme modalist connotations attributed to it, especially his theory o f the reunion o f
the Logos with God after the end o f the Economy.
507. It is, admittedly, a problem in Victorinus that he m ost often has a xpibuvapig /tripotens idea o f
multiple powers versus his discussion o f one power in God, influenced by the Stoic tensile m odel o f
expanding and contracting power. See M ichel R. Barnes, Christ, the W isdom and Faculty o f God:
Victorinus and the Psychological M odel. (paper presented at the annual m eeting o f the North
American Patristics Society, 1990).
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while also returning to a statement confirming that Jesus is homoousios with the Father
by very substance and by very power.508
The question is still at hand over what exactly Victorinus believes the apostle Paul
wishes us to understand, where the final link in the Scripture chain of this passage is
complete, with Victorinus citing the most important text of Scripture for late-Nicene
definition. Continuing with his power language, Victorinus speaks of the Father
accomplishing all things that the Son accomplishes, citing as his proof John 5:19the
Son can do nothing by himself; he can do only what he sees his Father doing, because
whatever the Father does the Son also does.... Therefore, he maintains, all things done
by either are attributed indifferently to either, because each of them is in the other. The
qualifier on that idea is Victorinus added assertion that the Father is by his own
subsistence, the Son by his own subsistence, from the one substance which is from the
Father.509 This framing of attribution to Father and/or Son by emphasizing that there are
different subsistences//zy/?o5,t oe^ but one substance precludes a Marcellan reading of
what Victorinus says about the shared power and substance of the Father and the Son.510
The remainder of this section (IA 37-39) involves a repeated statement of Christ
triumphing through, not surprisingly, the Power of the Father. From this section,
508. Clark, 152 .AA 1 38,2728: Sed quoniam opooijoiog p a tri et ipsa substantia et ipsa p o te n tia ...
CSEL 83/1, 124. Hanson merely claim s that Victorinus characteristically plunges into an esoteric
philosophical explanation, proving again that it is typical to read Victorinus as an unintelligible
philosopher rather than an adept exegete. Hanson, Search, 838.
509. Clark, 153. AA 1 39,8-10: s e d subsistentia propria et pa ter etfilius est ab una ex patre substantia
CSEL 83/1,125.
510. This is the late 350s/early 360s Latin language Victorinus uses for distinctions within the Trinity such as
in AA II 4,51-52, where he defines from one substance there are three subsistences (de una
substantia, tres subsistentias esse), or in AA III 4,38-39 where Victorinus quotes how the Greeks say
tln piag ouatag xpeig elvai unoordoEig inAA III 4,38-39. Specifically where Victorinus acquired
this Greek trinitarian formula for definition is a major point o f contention in Victorine scholarship Like
other Neo-Nicenes Victorinus retains some semantic confusion over the distinction between ousia and
hypostasis', numerous examples o f this can be seen especially in Book II o f Against Arius.
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Victorinus continues his defense of consubstantiality through discussing Power according
to I Corinthians 1:24, Christ.. .the Power and Wisdom of God, and this reality
compared to the analogy of vision.
One Substance, One Power serves a very different purpose when Victorinus uses it
next as a definition of trinitarian identity in Book III by means of describing a double
dyad in the Trinity of Father-Son and Son-Spirit.511 He begins Book III, a book devoted
to arguing for the consubstantiality of the Holy Spirit, with a summary of what he has
already detailed in Books I and II. Victorinus then describes the double dyads, speaks of
the unity of divine substance in three subsistences, including his triad of Being, Life and
Understanding, especially with emphasizing Christ as Life given to humanity as the
Mystery, or Economy, of Redemption. Divine unity in the sense of circumincessio is
what Victorinus will largely describe near the end of Book III. The unity of Father and
Son are justified by mentions of John 10:30, the Father and I are one, and 14:10, I am
in the Father and the Father is in me. Before speaking about one power for describing
one divine substance, however, he falls back into his other mode of speaking about
multiple powers in God: Since it has therefore been proved that these three powers, both
by their common and their proper acts, and by the identity of their substance, constitute
the unity of divinity, it is not illogical to reduce them to two: to the Son and to the
Father.
511. Victorinus description o f the Son-Spirit dyad has modalist overtones to it, which is why Hanson
accused Victorinus o f finding it difficult to distinguish the precise o f mode o f proper existence o f the
Holy Spirit and he appears at times to identify Christ and the Holy Spirit Hanson, Search, 554. Cf., for
example, AA HI 14, where Victorinus says, Therefore, he (Christ) is also Spirit Paraclete, and die Holy
Spirit is another Paraclete, and he is sent by the Father. The H oly Spirit is therefore Jesus. Clark, 242-43.
512. Clark, 250. AA III 17,10-13. Cum igitur adprobatum sittres istas potentias et communi et proprio
actu et substantia eadem unitatem deitatemque conficere, non sine ratione rerum in duo ista
revocantur: in filium ac patrem. CSEL 83/1,222.
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In spite of this divine unity coupled with multiple powers, Victorinus will still restate
the reality of the dyads in the Trinity, while also adding another salient feature:
Since this is so, if God and Christ are one, while Christ and the Spirit are one, one can rightly say
that the three are one in power and substance. Nevertheless the first two are one yet differ
insofar as the Father is actual existence, that is, substantiality, while the Son is existential act. But
the two remaining ones are two in such a way that Christ and the Holy Spirit are two in one, that
is, in movement, and thus they are two as a unity is two. But the first two are as a two which is
one. Thus, since there are two in one and two which are one, the Trinity is one.513
This One Substance, One Power statement is embedded in Victorinus intentions to prove
the double dyad of Father-Son and Son-Spirit. Little Scripture is marshalled for the
purpose, except for two quotations of Paul two paragraphs before one in substance and
power... to prove the Father-Son dyad/unity, as well as John 10:30 (I and the Father
are one) and John 14:10 (I am in the Father and the Father is in me). This is not the
best use of exegesis for arguing trinitarian identity, since the Scripture texts appear to be
simply add-ons. Victorinus is far more concerned with discussing the Father, Son and
Spirit in terms of their interior versus exterior acts, aspects and movements.514
There exist two One Substance, One Power statements in Book IV of Against Arius,
though like the occurrence in Book III, they do not seem to fall within the occasion of
Victorinus defining such a statement by means of Scriptural exegesis. Book IV begins
with a discussion of The Son, Consubstantial Form of the Father, as Life is Form of to
live.515 According to his trinitarian model, the Father is to live, but the Son as the
513. Clark, 25152. AA III 18,1118. (emphasis added) Quod cum ita sit, si deus et Christus unum, cum
Christus et spiritus unum, iure tria unum , v i et substantia. Prima tamen duo unum diversa hoc, ut sit
pater actualis exsistentia, id est substantialitas, filius vero actus exsistentialis. Duo autem reliqua ita duo,
ut Christus et spiritus sanctus in uno duo sint, id est in motu, atque ita duo, ut unum duo. Prima autem
duo, ut duo unum. Sic, cum in uno duo et cum duo unum, trinitas exsistit unum. CSEL 83/1,223-24.
514. The last paragraph o f Book III (AA IE 18,18-28) contains the definition o f the H oly Spirit where
Victorinus repeatedly uses his particular technical term Christ in the Flesh.
515. Clark, 253. Again, Clark is follow ing the structural summary o f Hadot and a conceptual m atrix o f her
translation (and footnotes o f philosophical commentary).
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action of the Father is Life. These two persons of the Trinity are two, and yet they are
one; they are united. So shortly into this discussion in Book IV 3, Victorinus affirms,
almost in passing, that
If there is no difference between to live and life, if it suffices to posit the to be of life to have
to live inherent in it, we shall justly and rightly say their to be which joins them to existence
is one and not two.
But if, first of all, to live is other than life, if there is, besides, between them this difference,
that at one time life is cause of to live, and at another time to live is the cause that there is
life, then they are two, but redoubled one in the other and thus absolutely united in themselves. It
matters indeed that they are double under the relationship of the Power and of his own divine
L ogos, double in such a way that the one who is produced by the other has the same nature and
power as the one from which he proceeds.516
The Form of God, as indicative of the of the triad of existence, life and knowledge,
recurs in IV 26. Book IV concentrates largely on the Christ-Spirit dyad, with relentless
philosophical reflection on the meaning of Victorinus triad of being, life and
understanding; IV becomes far more interesting at its end, in IV 29-33, as Victorinus
gives his last, articulate attempt at arguing for the Son as consubstantial with the Father
and as the Form of God. But Form of God receives a distinctive mention in IV 26, where
speaks about his triad, relates the three persons to three powers, and repeats his argument
about how the attributes of God become manifest in the Son and Spirit. The Son is the
Form of God, and is in the Father, and has the same substance as the Father. Victorinus
concludes at the end of IV 26 that
since in God the mode of to be and to be are identical as to their power, it necessarily results
that there is in God only one Logos, the form having the same power as the substance.
Therefore, if the form of this substance has the same power and is the same as substance
516. Clark, 25556. AA IV 3,614. (emphasis added) Si nihil interest vivere et vita, sit et vitam esse ut
insit et vivere, iure ac merito unam istorum, non geminam, copulam ad exsistentiam sui esse dicemus.
Sin autem primum aliud est vivere, aliud vitam esse, et item , si distantia est, ut nunc vita causa sit ad
vi[v]endum , nunc ipsum vivere causa sit ut vita sit, duo sunt ista, sed gemina inter se atque apud se
sim pliciter unita; potentia enim Xoycpque suo atque divino refert ista geminari, ut eiusdem naturae
ac potentiae alteram cuius sit id a quo hoc alteram. CSEL 83/1,227.
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itselffor it is substantial formthe Son will be the same as the Father, or there is neither
Father nor Son before the going forth externally, but only one itself.517
One can gaze upon this statement for a long time to decide whether it is One Substance,
One Power. I say that One Substance, One Power, or in this case Same Substance, Same
Power, lies behind a rather recondite reasoning for the unity of Father and Son.
Substance and Power are dominant themes in Victorinus trinitarian Hymn I in desribing
the relations of the Father and the Son. Among many images, Christ is described as die
Power of God and the whole Power of God. Included in the hymn is a description of
the Son and Father being in each other, as well as a One Substance, One Power
statement: There are therefore two singulars since they are always within each other/ For
both therefore, one is the power, one is the substance.518
Readers of Victorinus might assume that this expression of his Nicene sophistication
would be limited to what have been named his trinitarian treatises, but this is a
mistaken notion. If we accept that his Pauline commentaries were the latest production of
his long career, after his forced resignation from his rhetor post circa 362, One Power,
One Substance, continues even in his commentaries. Victorinus Ephesians commentary,
for example, does not read merely as a commentarius simplex, with an austere Latin tone
of exegesis. It is a majestic meditation on the meaning of Pauls exhortation to the
Ephesians to comprehend the meaning of the Son. In discussing Ephesians 2:3 (And we
were natural sons of wrath, just as the others were) he gets into language that
517. Clark, 292. AA IV 26,21-27. quia eadem vi valet quomodo et quidque sit, necessario fit unus Xoyoq,
idem valente forma quod substantia. Ergo si idem valet et idem est forma, istius tamen substantiae,
quod ipsa substantiasu b stan tia l enim forma est idem erit filius quod pater, aut neque pater neque
filius ante egressum foras, sed unum ipsum solum. CSEL 83/1,266.
518. Clark, 317. (emphasis added.) Hymnus 1 29-30: Sunt ergo singuli atque, in semet semper cum sint
singuli/ Hinc duobus una virtus, hinc una substantia est. CSEL 83/1,286.
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distinguishes generate from ingenerate. It is here that the ingenerate realities are cast in
familiar language:
Whereas on the other hand in regard to the eternal realities, they are spoken of as if they were
generated for this reason: because whatever these divine things are, they begin to appear by a
certain process of division as it were. Nevertheless, because they exist by the same power and
the same substance by which they existed previously, they are not like generated beings. For of
course since God made all things, God made things eternal out of eternal realities, just as He had
them; in fact God merely separated them, so to speak, and established them as individuals. In
other books we think through these matters, how many and of what sort of beings there are. As it
is, we take Christ, angels, souls and all other beings that are eternal to have been begotten in a
certain way in the eternal realmsthough this begetting or generation is a far cry from what
constitutes begetting in the world.519
Victorinus speaks of divine versus worldly natures: higher realities that are
unbegotten, and lesser, worldly beings that are begotten according to the natural order.
Generation speaks of things that are from the created order, but divine, eternal realities
that are unbegotten are defined by inherent power and divine substance. He does not
name the Son solely as the matter on which he comments here, since the object o f his
thoughts at this moment is the notion of fallen human creatures, begotten of this world,
being objects of Gods wrath. But the notion of same power and same substance for that
which is begotten of the higher ingenitus reality: that is the notion Victorinus has
identified as having to do with the Sons unity with the Father.
There is another single observation like this in Victorinus Galatians commentary.
Though Victorinus primarily speaks in depth about the function of Gods Law and of
519. Cooper, Ephesians, 65. In Epistulam Pauli adEphesios 1 2,3 2 1-31. (emphasis added.) at vero in
aetem is, quoniam quaecumque ilia divina sunt, quasi quadam discretione apparere incipient, ideo
veluti generata dicuntur. Q uoniam tam en eadem virtute sunt et eadem substantia, qua fuerunt,
idcirco ut generata non sunt, neque enim cum deus om nia fecerit, non ea, quae aetema, fecit ex
aetem is, ut habuit, sed tantummodo veluti separavit et singula constituit, quae quanta et qualia sint,
aliis libris intellegim us. nunc vel Christum vel angelos vel animas ceteraque omnia, quae aetem a sunt,
in aetem is quasi genita accipim us, cum longe aliter generatio sit, quae in mundo est. Marius
Victorinus, M arii Victorinini Afri: Commentarii in Epistulas Pauli a d Galatas a d Philippenses ad
Ephesios, ed. Albrecht Locher (Leipzig: Teubner Verlag, 1972), 150.
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220
faith in Christ, the threefold mention of Father, Son and Spirit in Galatians 4:6 provides
the chance for his seminal observation:
But as you are Gods sons, God sent the Spirit of the Son into your hearts (4:6). Behold: the entire
array of these three powers operating through their one power and one godhead. For God
says PaulGod, who is the Father, sent the Son, who is Christ. Christ in turn, who being the power
of God is also himself God, Christ as God sentsays Paul, for now God and Christ are conjoined,
especially with Christs having been sanctified after the Mysterysent the Spirit o f the Son, says
Paul, the Holy Spirit, who descending into our hearts easily makes the Father known.520
The speech about the three persons being Three powers can be ignored, since the
sentence continues as Victorinus asserts these three are one power and one deitas,
operating through this reality. The divine unity expressed here has to do with Christian
believers being made sons of God through the Son of God, besides the theology of
sending Victorinus describes: The Father sends the Son. Christ, being the power of God
and conjoined with the Father, sends the Holy Spirit, who descends into human hearts
and makes the Father known. This eloquent, if passing, statement expresses Victorinus
confirmed notion of divine unity, with Father, Son and Spirit sharing the same power and
nature. It also reads as something rather remarkable because here again we see a
Victorine notion of Filioque, existing in the Latin West of the early 360s.521
Conclusion
520. In Epistuiam Pauli a d Galatas. II 4,6 338. (emphasis added) Sed quoniam filii estis dei, m isit deus
spiritum filii sui in corda vestra. ecce totus ordo trium istarum potentiarum per unam virtutem
unam que deitatem . nam deus, inquit, qui pater est, m isit filium suum, qui Christus est, rursusque
Christus, qui ipse, cum est dei virtus, et ipse deus est, m isit deus, inquit, iam enim iunctus est et deus
et Christus et maxime post mysterium sanctificatus, m isit, inquit, spiritum filii sui, qui est spiritus
sanctus, qui in corda nostra descendens facile cognoscit patrem. Locher, M arii Victorini Afri, 4 4 -4 5 .
521. Though in the sentence which directly follow s this passage the Spirit com es from the Father:
Therefore the Son Jesus Christ, in whom believers believe and are made sons o f God, was sent by
God. To them is sent, also from God, the Spirit o f the Sonthat is, the H oly Spiritthat they might
hasten, hurry to the Father, and cry out with a kind o f inner sanctification, with an inner voice.
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The unity between the Father and the Son proves the case for homoousios most fully.
Victorinus argues for divine unity in his treatises and realizes that texts which describe
full knowledge and ontological unity between the Father, Son and Spirit are the best texts
of Scripture which will argue for the Neo-Nicene cause of consubstantiality texts such
as Matthew 11:27 and John 10:30. Beyond these texts for divine unity, however,
Victorinus also understands the need to speak of divine power as a conceptual idiom and
trinitarian model.
Power as a trinitarian reality in Victorinus is possibly the best example that shows
various strands of his theological thought coming together for the sake of Neo-Nicene
definition. Victorinus theology includes an anachronistic, Porphyrian portrayal o f the
Trinity as being three-powers, as well as an older, Nicene model of Power, where the Son
is the one power of God. But even with these older models, he also has an incipient, ProNicene, technical sense of the One Power of God: of the Father and the Son (and the
Spirit) sharing the same nature and substance. Victorinus understands and uses
polemically-weighted texts about power such as Luke 1:35 and I Corinthians 1:24 (Christ
the Power and Wisdom of God), in his regular discussion surrounding One Substance
One Power statements throughout his works.522 He also uses unity texts such as John
5:19,10:30,14:10 and Philippians 2 to argue for divine unity, substance and power. And
it is in these arguments for divine unity, arguing from same substance, power and
operations, that Victorinus makes his very best contribution as a Neo-Nicene theologian
of Scripture.
522
It is too sim plistic to view Victorinus as having life as his dominant conceptual idiom in his
theology. Power is just as common and constant in his work as life.
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222
Conclusions
In this thesis I have shown that the person and thought of Marius Victorinus was not so
isolated from and ignored on the scene of Western Latin Nicene-trinitarian theology in
the decades of the 350s and 360s as hitherto assumed in scholarship on the Arian
Controversy. Reconsiderations of the entire scope of the Trinitarian Controversy in
recent decades, combined with the thorough textual scholarship of fourth-century
patristic scholars such as Pierre Hadot, have reignited interest in Marius Victorinus and
other Western Latin Nicenes. A detailed reading of Victorinus post-conversion
trinitarian treatises, especially the four books that comprise Against Arius, shows a
brilliant rhetorical-philosophical scholar who quickly became conversant in the Nicene
and Anti-Nicene theological currents of the 350s; who was familiar with early Arianism
from documents circulating in the Latin West; and who understood Homoian,
Homoiousian and Western modalist Anti-Nicene trajectories in his sophisticated Nicene
reading and exegesis of Scripture. All of this he carried out in only the last ten years of
his life, including his penning of the first Latin commentaries ever on Pauline epistles. In
the space of only a few years (ca. 359 to 362 or 363), Victorinus wrote elaborate,
densely-argued Nicene-trinitarian treatises, employing a rich exegesis, for the sake of
engaging Anti-Nicenes who were briefly holding a certain ascendancy in the official
creedal theology of the Western and Eastern Church.
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223
Much has been made in constant, passing remarks about Victorinus being too obscure
and difficult to read, being read by virtually no one, and having no real contact or
engagement with Arianism as it existed in his day (Hanson). Such a shallow
understanding of Victorinus can be made only by those who have not read through his
treatises, and have unquestioningly accepted Jeromes remarks of Victorinus. Victorinus
may well have used a fictional character, Candidus, in his first attempts at beginning to
form a polemic against Anti-Nicene theology, and giving a brief look at original
Arianism to frame out the later issues of the controversy. But once he began writing
Against Arius, he addressed Anti-Nicenes as they had defined themselves in later stages
of the controversy, especially in the conciliar events of 357 through 359. This close
engagement with Anti-Nicenes is a clear component of his treatises: Victorinus explicitly
names many figures involved in his period of the Trinitarian Controversy, except for
Neo-Arian figures such as Eunomius and Aetius. Opponents mentioned by name include
Paxil of Samosata, Patripassians, Arius, Eusebius, Marcellus, Photinus, Basil o f Ancyra,
Valens and Ursacius, and even a curious list of four characters that sounds like an
intentioned polemical device, when Victorinus rails in Book 143 against a category he
names as Arians, Lucianists, Eusebians, and Illyrians.
M l
something lumped in with Arius and Eusebius of Nicomedia is predictable, based on the
Letter o f Arius to Eusebius, but the interesting, nuanced way Victorinus throws in a
geographical slur such as Illyrian shows how versed Victorinus is with his Anti-Nicene
523
This com es nearly at the end o f Book I, where he is summing up condemnations o f various heresies;
in Book 1 43 he is summing up against those w ho argue for homoiousios: There are Arians, there are
Lucianists, there are Eusebians, there are Illyrians but in adding, subtracting and changing, a ll are o f
diverse and heretical opinions. Clark, 159. A A 1 4 3 , 1 1-14. Isti Arriani, isti Lucianistae, isti
Eusebiani, isti Illyriciani, sed adicientes aliqua, auferentes aliqua et mutantes, omnes diversae
opinionis et haeretici. CSEL 83/1, 132.
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224
opponents Valens and Ursacius, whose Anti-Nicene efforts in the 350s had concentrated
so much from a base of operations in this geographical region of the empire. Victorinus
clearly does know of his Anti-Nicene opponents especially Marcellus, Homoians and
Homoiousians and he engages them relentlessly throughout his works as he argues for
the consubstantiality of Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
Victorinus was reborn from his conversion circa 355 into a rich Latin scholarly legacy
of theology that had flourished most of all under the Master of the Latin West,
Tertullian. I have shown that there are clear instances in Victorinus works where he
harks back to Tertullians reading of Scripture, including in his use of specific trinitarian
Scripture texts and commonplaces (the same can be said about his familiarity and use of
Novatian). Victorinus conversion took place in an epochal moment of nascent Homoian
and Homoiousian definition in the late 350s, when the need for a polemical form would
be immediate. This is the same time period when a distinct group of Latin theologians,
such as Hilary of Poitiers, Marius Victorinus, Phoebadius of Agen and Gregory o f Elvira,
were set to engage Anti-Nicene theology with a retrieval and defense of the doctrine of
homoousios. We can especially see this theme treated relentlessly by Victorinus in the
four books o f Against Arius, and in the short reprise summary he penned afterwards, The
Necessity o f Accepting Homoousios. Against Arius, looked at as a total work, improves
measurably as Victorinus continues through the four books. There are even unexpected
gems that are the by-product of his exegesis deployed as a polemic against Anti-Nicenes,
such as the anomalous trinitarian formula of Book III, ex \Liaq ovoiaq xpeTg elvai
ujtocrcdaeig, the brilliant explanation of divine visibility texts in Scripture, his One
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Substance One Power theology of divine unity, and the Nicene Pneumatology employing
a filioque element.
In speaking of divine substance, Victorinus never fully left the conceptual world of
Neo-Nicenes. He did, however, surprisingly manage to produce a Cappadocian
Settlement/3 81-sounding formula which distinguished substantive divine being from
real separate, hypostatic existence, something which no other Neo-Nicene was quite able
to do.524 This is obviously not solely to his credit, as he got it from somewhere else.
Further, he did not quite entirely know what to do with it, even though he compared this
one ousia in three hypostases formula, probably from Meletian sources,525 to his
rendering of it into a Latin formula of one substantia in three subsistences, in Books II
and III of Against Arius.526 Unfortunately, substantia had long been for Latins the
common translation not only of ousia but also hypostasis, so Victorinus could not quite
escape the semantic problems that were a handicap to Western Latins, including his clear
falling at times into modalist presentations of trinitarian persons.
One could argue that even this semi-modalist tendency shows a close similarity to other
Neo-Nicenes, who were seeking to redefine what Nicaea 325 had achieved, settling on
the meaning of key texts in Nicene-Arian debates, and groping toward their own
polemical form. Few scholars have clearly identified the Scripture texts that easily
defined all stages of the Trinitarian Controversy and its groups, both Nicene and various
524. See chapter 5, Divine Unity in Victorinus: Victorinus understanding and use o f connatural unity in his
one substance, one power statements put him unexpectedly in die very advanced Pro-Nicene camp.
525. Again, this contact, probably because o f his skill with Greek, refutes the notion o f Victorinus isolated
from theological currents o f his specific tim e in the late 350s/early 360s.
526. de una substantia, tres subsistentias esse in AA II 4,51-52; ex p.iag obalag Tpag elvat
ujtooraaeie inAA III 4,38-39; substantia unum, subsistentia tria sunt ista in AA III 4,3435; and
unam esse substantiam, subsistentias tres in AA III 9 ,3 -4 .
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226
anti-Nicene.527 1 have shown how Victorinus treatment of substance texts is closely
related to that of other Neo-Nicenes such as Phoebadius of Agen and Gregory of Elvira,
or Western Latins who preceded him, such as Tertullian and Novatian. Besides knowing
about Homoian and Homoiousian exegeses of his day, from Anti-Nicene creeds in an
extent dossier, Victorinus understood, and used, commonplace Nicene responses. Any
further development of his exegesis was stopped by his leaving his public teaching post
in 362 because of the Emperor Julians edict, and his probable death ca. 365, when he
departed from the late Neo-Nicene stage with very few clues as to his demise. If
Victorinus did have contact with Meletian sources ca. 362 to quote his Greek trinitarian
formula, he is especially unique for his witness to such a moment of turning, with
specific Meletian solutions to the problem of defining unity and distinction in divine
substance and being.
It is readily apparent that divine visibility is better understood and presented by
Victorinus than his attempts at attempts at exegesis of divine substance texts in Scripture,
especially for the sake of an apologetic retrieval of the Nicene homoousios. The way in
which he arranges texts for visibility, and the chains of texts he uses, are marvelous. One
question that remains unanswered, though, is why there is so little use of Philippians 2:58 by Western Latin exegetes before Victorinus and Hilary of Poitiers. The paucity of their
use of Philippians 2 is inexplicable, and its non-use was possibly occasioned by other
concerns prior to the fourth century. The Nicene search for the Christian doctrine of
527. M ichel Barnes has given the clearest examples o f exegetical loci that N icenes favored, compared to,
for example, the texts favored by Anti-Nicenes as outlined by M ichel M eslin, in his 1967 work, Les
Ariens d Occident, 231-34. Cf. also D.H. W illiam s, D efining Orthodoxy in Hilary o f Poitiers
Commentarium in Matthaeum. W illiams sees the most central N icene texts Hilary could appeal to in
his Matthew commentary as being only made up o f Jn. 6:38,10:30,10:38 and 14:11, with no mention
o f other texts, such as Jn. 5:19,14:9 and others that were clearly more important in the exegetical
polem ics o f the Trinitarian Controversy.
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227
God during the fourth century certainly required a text such as Philippians 2 to be placed
within the arsenal of divine sonship texts, but prior to the fourth century there does not
seem to be sufficient use of such a salient text. Years before he would write a
commentary on Pauls Epistle to the Philippians, Victorinus made full use of the
Philippians 2 Christ Hymn to argue for the Son being the Image and Form of God. He
also linked this combined Image/Form of God to divine substance and power, and to
other vital visibility texts such as Colossians 1:15, John 14:9, Exodus 33:20, Matthew
11:27, John 1:18 and I Timothy 6:16. Victorinus uses Philippians 2 mostly as a visibility
text, and somewhat as a unity text, and it is apparent to him that this is a Pauline locus
that deserves attention and exegesis.
Victorinus arguments for and commentary on divine unity make use of classic unity
texts, expressing a Nicene theology of full unity and consubstantiality between Father,
Son and Holy Spirit. Most of all, the late-stage, Pro-Nicene, One Substance, One
Power theologystatements of which appear at regular intervals throughout his
writings, including in his three surviving Pauline commentariesplace Victorinus
slightly ahead of his time, almost into a Pro-Nicene camp of Western Latins that included
Hilary, Ambrose, and Augustine. But only almost: Victorinus obviously understood One
Substance, One Power/Nature as key to expressing the full divinity of the Son, but his
Nicene exegesis and theology does not equal that of Hilary. Also, Victorinus, while
working on a coalescing polemical form, never fully frees himself from Western Latin
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228
miahypostatic theology, which influenced the West even into the 360s, around the time
when Victorinus is about to depart from the theological scene.528
The world of Victorine scholarship is a small one within current theological
reconsiderations of fourth-century Anti-Nicene and Nicene-trinitarian theologies. Interest
in Victorinus is strong, but the actual number of scholars who do Victorine research is
rather circumscribed. There well may still remain a reflexive idea that Victorinus is too
difficult to delve into. This reality, combined with a decline in work being done in Latin
Patristics, makes for a dearth of Victorine scholarship.
528. There are further qualifications I can make about Victorinus surprisingly N icene exegesis, such as his
brief exegesis o f Jn. 5:19 in Against Arius I and III, using it as the premier proof-text to speak o f the
connatural power between the Father and the Son.
529. Peter Gemeinhardt o f the University o f Jena observed to me after the 2003 Oxford International
Conference on Patristic Studies that Western Latin trinitarian theology papers were far few er than at
the Oxford conference four years before in 1999, and that this whole subject area seem s to be on
holiday.
530. Stephen Coopers m ost recent work on Victorinus Galatians commentary complements w ell other
work on Victorinus Ephesians commentary. In fourth-century Nicene-Trinitarian scholarship there
has been little attention paid any clear Nicene theological content in Victorinus Pauline
commentaries. Stephen A. Cooper, Marius Victorinus Commentary on Galatians: Introduction,
Translation, A nd Notes (N ew York: Oxford University Press, 2005). There is still reasonable hope
that Victorinus lost commentaries on Romans, I Corinthians and n Corinthians may still turn up
somewhere someday.
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229
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Gruyter, 1994.
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Voelker, John. Marius Victorinus Exegetical Arguments for Nicene Definition in Adversus
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Appendix A: The Spirits Procession As Evidence Of Unity
In the four books of Against Arius, there is an intense effort to argue for the shared nature
of Father and Son, and of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Victorinus theology of the Holy
Spirit may have a secondary role within his entire treatise, but he makes it quite clear that
Father, Son, and Holy Spiritnot just the Father and the Sonare consubstantial.
Victorinus makes this point relentlessly throughout Against Arius, as well as in a smaller,
summary treatise that followed, The Necessity o f Accepting the Homousios and in three
trinitarian hymns written around the same time.
It is not only the consubstantiality of the Spirit that marks Victorinus reflection on the
Trinity; he also comments upon the source of the Spirits procession in three of the four
books o f Against Arius.
In Book I, Victorinus rallies the scriptural evidence for the begetting of the Son of
God, with extended exegesis and commentary on the Gospels and the Pauline Epistles. In
Book I Victorinus argues for consubstantiality of the Father, Son and Spirit immediately
after introductory remarks. In Book I 8, for example, Victorinus nearly equates Son and
Spirit as being almost the same distinct reality from the Father, commenting on the Son
being from within the bosom of the Father (John 1:18). Victorinus says that since just
as the Son is from the bosom of the Father and in the bosom of the Father, so the Spirit
is from within the Son. The three are therefore homoousioi.. .531
Various passing comments of Victorinus speak of the Spirits identity in relation to the
Son as Victorinus continues his discussion of the divine identity of the Son: He says
531. Clark, 99100. AA 1 8,16-18. Sicuti enim a gremio patris et in gremio filius, sic a ventre filii spiritus.
'0 |io o tjo io l ergo tres et idcirco in omnibus unus deus. CSEL 83/1, 65.
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That the Paraclete is the power of Christ..
as Christ is from God...That the Paraclete is from the Son... and that Christ is
Paraclete and the Holy Spirit is Paraclete as he comments on the sending language in
John 14.
532. Clark, 103. AA 11,2728 Quod potentia Christi sit paraclitus: vos autem cognoscitis ipsum, quoniam
apud vos manet. CSEL 83/1,69.
533. Clark, 104. AA 1 12,3-4,7,10-12. Quod a Christo sanctus spiritus, sicuti Christus a deo...Q uod a filio
paraclitus... paraclitus Christus, paraclitus sanctus spiritus. CSEL 83/1, 70.
534. Clark, 106. AA 1 13,2330. Quod duplex potentia t o o Xoyov a d deum, una in m anifesto, Christus in
came, alia in occulto, spiritus sanctus in praesentia ergo cum erat k6yoq, hoc est Christus, non
poterat venire X6yoq in occulto, hoc est spiritus sanctus : etenim si non discedo, paraclitus non
veniet a d vos. Duo ergo et isti, ex alio alius, ex filio spiritus sanctus, secuti ex deo filius, et
conrationaliter et spiritus sanctus ex patre. CSEL 83/1,72.
535. Clark, 181-82. AA 1 56,15-20. Verbum igitur et vox filius est, ipse vita, ispe hSyoq, ipse m otus, ipse
vouq, ipse sapientia, ipse exsistentia et substantia prima, ipse actio potentialis, ipse ov primum, vere 6
v ex quo omnia 6vxa et p e r quern et in quo, qui est medius in angulo trinitatis, patrem declarat
praeexsistentem et conplet sanctum spiritum in perfectionem. CSEL 83/1, 154.
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Victorinus also speaks of the consubstantiality of the Son and the Spirit. In speaking of
the Logos as the act, or movement, or existence, Victorinus sees the Logos as being
twofold (III 8). For example, he states that there are two existences: that of Christ, that
of the Holy Spirit, in one movement which is Son, but he adds that the Holy Spirit is
also from the Father.536
The unity of Son and Spirit exists in life, and in knowledge, Victorinus describes; and
Father and Son are one, just as Son and Spirit are one. In order to speak of the unity of Son
and Spirit, Victorinus takes up John 14 again, to consider the identity of Jesus and the Holy
Spirit, and specifically the title of Paraclete in Book III 14.537 The Paraclete is
Someone near the Father who defends and upholds all faithful and believing men. Who is this? Is
it the Holy Spirit alone? Or is he also identical with Christ? Indeed, Christ himself said: God will
give you another Paraclete. Insofar as he said another, he spoke of one other than himself.
Insofar as he said Paraclete, he expressed the likeness of their work and the identity of their
actions in some manner. Therefore, he is also Spirit Paraclete, and the Holy Spirit is another
Paraclete, and he is sent by the Father. The Holy Spirit is therefore Jesus.538
This passage is clarified in the following paragraph, where Victorinus emphasizes that
the Holy Spirit is movement, just as Jesus Christ is a movement of God. Victorinus
speaks of the Son and the Spirit by their acts of exterior manifestation and movement:
Jesus and the Holy Spirit are movement, movement which is truly in movement, therefore a
movement acting externally; but Jesus is manifested Spirit, since he is in the flesh; the Holy Spirit
is Jesus hidden, since he is Jesus infusing knowledge, no longer Jesus performing miracles or
536. Clark, 234. AA III 8 ,4 1 -4 2 ,4 3 . ut sint exsistentiae duae, Christi et spiritus sancti, in uno m otu qui
filius e st...e t spiritus sanctus etiam ipse apatre. CSEL 83/1,205.
537. AA III 14 begins with Victorinus quoting John 14:15-16, I f indeed you love me, keep my
commandments. And I shall ask the Father and he w ill give you another Paraclete, to dw ell with you
forever. It is good that w e are reminded that Christ in John 14 says another Paraclete when he
speaks o f the H oly Spirit, because it makes sense then to refer to Christ as a Paraclete from the Father,
and not just the H oly Spirit.
538. Clark, 2 4 2 -43 . AA in 14,4-12. (emphasis added) Quid est paraclitus? Qui adserat adstruatque apud
patrem hom ines omnes fideles atque credentes. Qui iste est? Unusne solus spiritus sanctus? An idem
et Christus? Etenim ipse dixit: alium paraclitum dabit vobis dens. Dum dixit alium, se dixit alium.
Dum dixit paraclitum, operam sim ilem declaravit et eandem quodam m odo actionem . Ergo et
spiritus paraclitus et spiritus sanctus alius paraclitus et ipse a patre mittitur. Iesus ergo spiritus
sanctus. CSEL 83/1,214.
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speaking in parables. That the Spirit is Jesus himself, Jesus himself teaches thus: I will not leave
you orphans, I will come to you. That he is himself hidden in the Holy Spirit, he teaches thus:
The world will see me no longer...539
Movement and act are the unity language on which Victorinus expatiates, as well as an
involved exegesis of the Spirit statements of Jesus to his disciples in the last chapters of
the Gospel of John. In Book III this unity language Victorinus uses between the Son and
the Spirit is a consequence of his rather involved work at describing the Son-Holy Spirit
dyad. It also sounds dangerously modalistic, a small problem evident throughout the four
books of Against Arius. As previously mentioned, this is the result of Victorinus, as a
Neo-Nicene, coming out of a tradition of a miahypostatic milieu, in which the Latin
understanding of speaking about three subsistences in God was a tool for trinitarian
reflection still rather new.
Victorinus includes sending language in Book III 15 that usually involves the Father
sending the Son and the Son sending the Spirit. At times, however, he qualifies this to say
that they are all three linked together: The Spirit is sent from the Father, but also Jesus
himself sends the Spirit. (More of this sending language appears in Book IV.) He
concludes Book III with another statement that reiterates the unity of Son and Spirit:
From him Christ in the flesh is conceived; from him Christ in the flesh is sanctified in baptism; he
himself is Christ in the flesh; he is given to the apostles by Christ in the flesh, so that they may
baptize in the name of God, of Christ, and of the Holy Spirit; he is the one whom Christ in the
flesh promised would come; with a certain difference of acting, die same one is both Christ and
the Holy Spirit, and because Spirit, on that account also God, because Christ insofar as he is Spirit
is therefore God. That is why the Father and the Son and the Spirit are not only one reality, but
also one God.540
539. Clark, 243. AA in 14,20-27. A t vero Iesus et spiritus sanctus m otio, vere mota m otio, unde foris
operans, sed Iesus spiritus apertus, quippe et in cam e, spiritus autem sanctus occultus Iesus, quippe
qui intellegentias infundat, non iam qui signa faciat aut per parabolas loquatur. Ipsum autem se esse
ipse sic docet: non vos dimittam orfanos, veniam a d vos. Ipse autem in spiritu sancto esse occultum
sic docet: mundus me iam non videbit. .. CSEL 83/1,215.
540. Clark, 252. AA III 18,20-28. Ex ipso concipitur Christus in came; ex ipso sanctificatur in baptism o
Christus in came; ipse est in Christo qui in came; ipse datur apostolis a Christo qui in cam e est, ut
baptizent in deo et in Christo et spiritu sancto; ipse est quem Christus in cam e promittit esse
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The unity language of this passageversus its language of distinctionis almost side
tracked by the economical term Christ in the flesh which Victorinus uses, a term that
appears elsewhere in this work and in his Pauline commentaries. But Victorinus here
asserts that Christ and the Holy Spirit are both act and movement, though of different
kinds. I would compare it to Book IV 18, when Victorinus cautions that even though the
Holy Spirit is somehow identical of Jesus.. .they are different through the proper
movement of their action.541 Interestingly, in the paragraph before this one in Book III
there appears one of Victorinus statements of shared nature/shared operations in the
Trinity: the three are one in power and substance.542 This theme of connaturality is key
for Victorinus arguments on behalf of the consubstantiality of the hypostases o f the
Trinity, an advanced feature of his theology that somehow pushes him out of the NeoNicenes of the Latins to the Pro-Nicene camp of a decade or so later.
Book IV of Against Arius concentrates on the Son-Holy Spirit dyad, resumes sending
language of Father and Son and Spirit, and sums up the argument of all four books in its
last several pages. The statements of sending may speak, for example, that all that the
Holy Spirit possesses he has received from Christ, and Christ from the Father.543 Or it
may be reversed, as in IV 18, when Victorinus recalls Johannine language of Christ
having all things the Father has, Victorinus says that from the Father comes the Son,
venturum; quadam agendi distantia idem ipse et Christus et spiritus sanctus et, quia spiritus, idcirco et
deus, quia Christus, quod spiritus, ideo deus. Unde pater et filius et spiritus, non solum unum, sed et
unus deus. CSEL 83/1,224.
541. Clark, 277. AA IV 18,19-20. quodammodo idem Iesus, idem spiritus sanctus, actu scilicet agendi
diversi CSEL 83/1, 251.
542. Clark, 251. Since this is so, if God and Christ are one, while Christ and the Spirit are one, one can
rightly say that the three are one in power and substance. AA in 18,11-12. CSEL 83/1, 223.
543. Clark, 275. AA IV 16,2628. omnia tamen spiritus sanctus quae habet a Christo accepit, Christus a
patre. CSEL 83/1,249.
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and from the Son, the Holy Spirit.544 This is also comparable to Victorinus trinitarian
Hymn I (Hence Christ has all from the Father, hence the Spirit has all from
Christ.. .),545 Hymn III (the Father sent Christ, Christ sent the Paraclete. That Christ
might appear by the Paraclete/That the Father might appear by Christ.. .),546 and, also in
Hymn III (the supreme Father sends the Logos as sent, he creates and serves all/Taking
a body unto himself for our salvation, as well as the holy cross/Retuming to the Father as
victor, he sent another self to save us).547
In summation of Book IV Victorinus closes with the theme of hidden versus
manifested realities in speaking of the Spirit:
As to the Holy Spirit, we have already set forth in many books that he is Jesus Christ himself but
in another mode, Jesus Christ hidden, interior, dialoguing with souls, teaching these things and
giving these insights; he has been begotten by the Father through the mediation of Christ and in
Christ since Christ is the only begotten Son. We have explained this in many books and it is quite
clear that we have proved it by many examples.. .548
The presence of what might be called a Latin Neo-Nicene Filioque pneumatology of
the late 350s and early 360s may be as hard to explain as it is to fit Victorinus into a
category with other Latin Neo-Nicenes. This simple but striking pneumatology o f
Victorinus can find an easy explanation in the Son-Spirit dyad of his theology. Victorinus
is carrying out a close exegesis of key texts for the sake of deploying a Neo-Nicene
polemic against Anti-Nicenes. For him there is an obvious need to argue for the
544. Clark, 277. AA IV 18,910. id est de patre filius, de filio spiritus sanctus. CSEL 83/1,251.
545. Clark, 318. Hymnus Primus: De Trinitate 1 62 Hinc patris cuncta Christus, hinc habet Christi cuncta
spiritus. CSEL 83/1,288.
546. Clark, 331. Hymnus Tertius 196-98. Hinc Christum m isit pater, Christus paraclitum, Christus ut
paraclito, Christo ut appareret pater CSEL 83/1, 302.
547. Clark, 333. Hymnus Tertius 252-57. Hinc pater summus mittit
ov; m issus creat et ministrat
omnia, Portans in salutem nobis camem, simul et sanctam crucem, Remeans victor ad patrem,
salvandis nobis [se]se m isit alterum CSEL 83/1,304.
548. Clark, 302. AA TV 33,20-25. Iam vero spin turn sanctum alio quodam modo ipsum esse Iesum
Christum, occultum, interiorem, cum animis fabulantem, docentem ista intellegentiasque tribuentem,
et a patre per Christum genitum et in Christo, quippe cum unigenitus filius Christus sit, m ultis nos
libris exposuimus, et quod exem plis plurimis adprobavimus satis clarum est. CSEL 83/1,276.
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consubstantiality not only of Father and Son but of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit Key texts
from the Fourth Gospel that speak of unity of persons in the Trinity, especially the
Paraclete statements of the latter chapters of that Gospel, are tempered with Victorinus
important theme one substance one power statements about the hypostases of the Godhead.
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Appendix B: Recalling the Nicene Council
As a Neo-Nicene who takes up the cause of the homoousios and tries to defend the cause
of Nicaea in the late 350s against coalescing parties of Anti-Nicenes theology, we would
expect Marius Victorinus to know the details of the 325 council, and to reproduce the 325
creed of Nicaea somewhere within the lengthy four books of Against Arius. But we do
not find it anywhere within Against Arius or his other trinitarian treatises, making us
wonder whether or not he has it at hand.
In the four books of Against Arius, Victorinus strenously defends and explains the
homoousios of Father, Son and Holy Spirit, and in Against Arius Book I this takes the
form of a lengthy exegesis of New Testament books that engages all of his opponents
who represent Non-Nicene and Anti-Nicene trajectories, especially in 121-23 where he
discusses the meaning of the Christ Hymn of Philippians 2. Besides Arius and those
originally sympathetic with Arius theology, the list comprehensively names all o f the
opponents of the 350s, and just few pages later in 128, when Victorinus again addresses
Homoiousians, Victorinus appeals to the memory of the Nicene council:
But then, forty years ago, where was it hidden, where was it dormant when, in the city of Nicaea,
the formula of faith which excommunicated the Arian faction was approved by more than three
hundred bishops? In this synod of illustrious men there were present all the luminaries of the
Church and the of the entire world. Where then had this ancient doctrine fled? But if it did not
exist, it was not condemned, and then it must be a recent doctrine! If it already existed, either it
escaped discussion or it was put to flight by right thinking and true opinion. And perchance then
you, the defender of this doctrine, were not only alive but already a bishop! You kept silence,
you as well as your colleagues, disciples and fellowteachers! And during the whole time that
followed, as long as the Emperor was in Rome, you heard said in your presence many things
contrary to this doctrine, living in communion with those men whom now you anathematize.
Furious either that without you they wrote their confession of faith, or constrained by imperial
agents you have come as a legate to defend treachery. But what difference where there are thirty
or seventy participants, or more; what difference whether it is more or less often! The same faith
has been established for the annihilation of all haireseon, one because it both originates from the
One and has been effective until now. You, however, you write and say this: that Paul of
Samosata and Marcellus and Photinus, and now Valens and Ursacius and others of this kind who
were found impious in heresy have been refuted. Were they not saying homoousionl No. But then
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how were they blasphemous? Like Arius Paul of Samosata held: The Son comes from nothing;
there was a time when he was not; the Son is a creature; he is in every way totally unlike the
Father. What did Marcellus and Photinus hold? That Jesus is merely a man from a man and
Jesus is outside the Trinity. And now, Valens and Ursacius, the dregs of Arius. Therefore each
had his own blasphemy for which he was excommunicated. But you, for this reason have you
conquered them, because you say homoiousiorrt Indeed they have not said homoousion and thus
they have been conquered!
The memory of the Nicene council was all-important, but Victorinus can actually
describe no details of it apart from commonplaces remembered about it, that it was a
gathering of important bishops in the city of Nicaea some forty years ago. This council
involved more than three hundred bishops, he cites, but like others who wrote about
Nicaea during the decades of the fourth century, Victorinus actually does not know the
traditional number of bishops present.550 Victorinus knows Nicene theology that speaks
549. Clark, 133-35. AA 1 28, 14-43. Ubi latuit, ubi dormiit, ante quadraginta annos, cum N icea civitate
fides confirmata per trecentos et plures episcopos, Arrionitas excludens, in qua truv68(p istorum
virorum ecclesiae totius orbis lumina faerunt? Vetus igitur dogma quo fagerat? Si non fuit, non
victum est et nunc coepit. Si fuit, aut contentione siluit, aut cognitionis et veritatis sententia fagatum
est. Forte et tunc tu, patrone dogmatis, non solum in vita, sed episcopus fuisti. Tacuisti et tu et socii et
discipuli et condoctores. Et toto tempore postea, usquequo imperator Romae fait, praesens audisti
multa contraria, conviva exsistens istorum hominum quos nunc anathematizas, iratus vel quod sine te
fidem scripserunt, an coactus a magistris legatus venisti in defensionem proditionis. Sed quid differt
sive triginta sive septuaginta sive amplius et sive saepius! Eadem fides in destructionem aliarum
alpeaecov effecta est, una cum sit et ab uno incipiens et operata usque rnmc. Tu autem scribis ista et
dicis quod Samosateus Paulus et Marcellus et Photinus et nunc Valens et Ursacius et alii istius modi
in haeresi inreligiosi inventi destructi sunt. Numquid dpoovoiov dicentes? Non. Quomodo autem
blasphemantes? Samosateus sicuti Arrius: ex nihilo et quod fu it quando non fu it et quod factu ra filius
et omnino omnimodis dissim ilis patri. Quid Marcellus et Photinus? Tantum hominem ex homine
Iesiun et esse triadem extra Iesum. Et nunc, Valens et Ursatius (sic), reliquiae Arrii. Propria ergo
blasphemia, propter quam eiecti sunt Tu autem idcirco vicisti eos, quod 6poioi3oiov dicis? N on enim
dixerunt dpoouoiov et sic victi sunt! CSEL 83/1,103-05.
550. We cannot calculate the number o f bishops present at the Council with complete accuracy, because die
earliest witnesses give us only round figures and it is the later ones who provide factitious accuracy. One
o f the earliest w itnesses must be the statement o f Eustathius o f Antioch given to us in its original form
by Theodoret... Eustathius says that about 270 bishops were present, though he could not calculate
the exact numbers. A version o f the Creed o f N icaea was attached to the Letter o f the Council o f
Nicaea to the Church o f Alexandria, and a short introductory sentence to this Creed describes the
number o f bishops present as nearly 300. Eusebius o f Caesarea in his Vita Constantini (III.8) says
more than 2 50. Athanasius in his Historia Arianorum 66 says about 300 attended, though in his
later Letter to the Bishops o f Africa he gives the number as 318. Hilary in his Collectio Antiariana says
three hundred or more. B y about 370 the conventional number o f 318, the same number as the men o f
Abrahams household whom he led out to rescue Lot (G en.l4:14), had been accepted everywhere, and
this became traditional. Several other legends accumulated round this Council in course o f tim e.
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of X from X causality, and he makes statements of the Son being such things as God
from God, light from light, but the only ways in which he reproduces the original 325
creed is when he quotes the commonplace condemnations of Arius, where Arius was
accused of saying that there was a time when the Son did not exist, or the Father created
the Son out of nothing. Victorinus apparently does not know the 325 creed, but he does
know a tradition of harking back to the Nicene council as a standard for orthodoxy. The
extended comments about Nicaea in 128 as part of an attack against Homoiousians says
far more what Victorinus knew about events of 358 in Ancyra and Sirmium: Victorinus
depicts Nicaea as an ancient doctrine, as opposed to an innovation, that annihilates all
heresy, and his description of Nicaea as a universal standard for orthodoxy in 128
becomes a tirade against Basil of Ancyra and his party, where he addresses Basil about
the events of Basils local Ancyran council of 358 and subsequent delegation to the
emperor at Sirmium in the same year.551 The memory of Nicaea here is a tool for
Victorinus to condemn not just Arius, but contemporary Anti-Nicenes such as Marcellus
and Photinus (and their ostensible forerunner in heresy, Paul of Samosata), as well as
Valens and Ursacius. The other mention Victorinus makes in Book I of Against Arius is
just in passing, but here again it is part of a series of condemnations he repeats o f these
Ambrose (loc. c it) already calls it an oracle (oraculum) ... A ll that we can say is that the number o f
bishops at the Council o f Nicaea probably fell between 250 and 300. Hanson, Search, 155-56.
551. W hile it was still winter in 358 B asil summoned a council o f bishops to m eet in Ancyra, and the
statement that emerged from that council marked the appearance o f a new and coherent Hom oiousian
theology. B asil and his companions follow ed this up by forming a delegation the emperors court in
Sirmium just few months later, where the emperor was persuaded to support B asils theology o f the
Son as xaxouoiav bpoiog xffi jiaxpl, and to call a council in the city o f Sirmium that summer that
would issue a creed supporting the temporary ascendancy o f that theology (though that creed, the
Third Creed o f Sirmium, does not survive). Cf. Hanson, Search, 348-62.
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same opponents, after which he makes his positive creedal statement For we affirm the
homoousion both because of truth and because of the synod of Nicaea.552
In Book II Victorinus appeals to Nicaea again, and the accusation that the homoousios
is a recent innovation, as he defends the notions of ousia and hypostasis as part o f
defending the homoousios:
This term which has been used by our Fathers as a wall and rampart? But it was used only
recently. That is because only recently the poinsonous pack of heretics has been let loose. And yet
it was established in conformity with die ancient faithfor it had also been taught previously
established then by many bishops (three hundred and fifteen) of the world, in the city of Nicaea,
who afterwards, sending to all the churches across the entire world the profession of faith that
they had defined, kept thousands of bishops both in those days and in succeeding years in one
same faith. Moreover, this term was approved by the emperor, the father of our emperor.
Book II of Against Arius was written possibly as much as two years after 1 28, ca. 361 or
362. This time Victorinus has a better estimate of the number of bishops attending the
325 council (315), but still he shows little other knowledge of what really happened at the
council, and what statement of faith it issued. Nicaea as a standard of orthodoxy is
reiterated in the final profession of faith in Book II, a book where Victorinus concentrates
on responding to Latin Homoians insistence that unscriptural terms such as ousia and
hypostasis never be employed:
Let one persevere in using it in speaking of God and of Our Lord! But, in truth, may homoousion
be more and more maintained, written, affirmed, explained, announced in all the Churches. For
this is the faith of Nicaea, this the faith of the Apostles, this is the Catholic faith. In this way the
Arians, in this way all heretics are vanquished.5 4
552 Clark, 163. AA 1 4 5,23 -2 4. N os enim bpooucnov dicimus et veritate et iuxta synodum in N iceapoli.
CSEL 83/1, 137.
553 Clark, 212. AA I I 9,43-51 Quod a maioribus positum, ut mums et propugnaculum? Sed nuper est
positum. Quia nuper erupit venenata cohors haereticorum. Quod tamen conditum iuxta veterem
fidemnam et ante tractatuma multis orbis episcopis trecentis quindecim in civitate N icea qui per
totum orbem decretam fidem mittentes, episcoporum m ilia in eadem habuerunt vel illius tem poris vel
sequentium annorum; probatum autem ab imperatore imperatoris nostri patre. CSEL 83/1, 185.
554 Clark, 216-17. AA II 12,30-35. placet manere, de deo et domino nostro perseveret, op o o u oio v vero
magis ac m agis teneatur, scribatur, dicatur, tractetur, in ecclesiis omnibus praedicetur. H aec enim
fides apud Niceam , haec fides apostolorum, haec fides catholica. Hinc Arriani, hinc haeretici
vincuntur universi. CSEL 8 3/1,190.
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246
Here the cause of Nicaea is equated with the faith of Christs Apostles that is the
universal, Catholic, faith. Nicaea has assumed its greatest proportions as a universal
standard of faith, something that was unheard of in the 330s and 340s, even into the 350s,
where Hilary said that he had never heard of the creed of Nicaea until he was about to go
into exile in 356. But the Neo-Nicene cause existed to retrieve Nicaea, after it had shed
its modalist connotations in saying that the Son was even of the same hypostasis as the
Father, and make it into a universal rallying standard.
Victorinus has the ideal of Nicaea in his historical memory. Possibly he even
possessed the text of the 325 creed, if he could quote the condemnations of Arius
mentioned in the creed that had become commonplaces. But to quote a creed that had an
embarassing modalist element would certainly serve against his interest, especially when
among his stated opponents in arguing for the Neo-Nicene cause in the 350s are old
Nicene figures such as Marcellus and Photinus. It was better to recreate a certain memory
of Nicaea as a rallying standard of orthodoxy in the trinitarian definition finally emerging
after the high-handed Anti-Nicene efforts that culminated in the brief Homoian
supremacy of the last years of the 350s decade.
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MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY
Dr. Rail
Del Colie
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