Back on December 30, 2015 I published a post that delved into the interpretation of Proverbs 8:22 by a number of Church Fathers (LINK). I opened
the post with the following:
In
the 4th century, one Old Testament text, Proverbs 8:22, became a heated point
of contention during the Arian controversy. Interestingly enough, two of the
factions involved in the debate—the pro-Arians and the pro-Nicene Church
Fathers—introduced interpretations of the text that went against an almost
universal understanding by the pre-Nicene Church Fathers who cited it. Though
all three parties applied the passage to Jesus Christ, each did so differently.
The pro-Arians believed the passage taught that the pre-existent Jesus was
created ex nihilo (out of nothing) by God the Father. Some of
the pro-Nicene Fathers believed that the passage was a reference to Jesus'
human nature only, and had nothing to do with his pre-existence (for an early
example of this interpretation see Athanasius', Expostio Fidei,
circa 328 A.D. - NPNF - Second Series 4.85). Both of these
interpretations ran contrary to the pre-Nicene Fathers who taught that the
passage did in fact refer to Jesus' pre-existent causation by God the Father
(to date, I have found only one explicit exception), while clearly rejecting
the pro-Arian novelty that this causation was ex nihilo.
A
bit later, I cited nine pre-Nicene Church Fathers’ understanding(s) of Proverbs
8:22. All but one of those CFs applied the passage to the pre-existent Jesus
Christ. I would now like to provide one more CF who sided with the eight who constituted the majority—Dionysius of Rome. Athanasius, in his Defence of the Nicene
Definition, provided the following from Dionysius:
“Next, I may reasonably turn to those who divide and cut
to pieces and destroy that most sacred doctrine of the Church of God, the
Divine Monarchy, making it as it were three powers and partitive subsistences
and godheads three. I am told that some among you who are catechists and
teachers of the Divine Word, take the lead in this tenet, who are diametrically
opposed, so to speak, to Sabellius's opinions ; for he blasphemously says that
the Son is the Father, and the Father the Son, but they in some sort preach
three Gods, as dividing the sacred Monad into three subsistences foreign to
each other and utterly separate. For it must needs be that with the God of the
Universe, the Divine Word is united, and the Holy Ghost must repose and
habitate in God ; thus in one as in a summit, I mean the God of the Universe,
must the Divine Triad be gathered up and brought together, For it is the
doctrine of the presumptuous Marcion, to sever and divide the Divine Monarchy
into three origins,—a devil's teaching, not that of Christ's true disciples and
lovers of the Saviour's lessons. For they know well that a Triad is preached by
divine Scripture, but that neither Old Testament nor New preaches three Gods.
Equally must one censure those who hold the Son to be a work, and consider that
the Lord has come into being, as one of things which really came to be; whereas
the divine oracles witness to a generation suitable to Him and becoming, but
not to any fashioning or making. A blasphemy then is it, not ordinary, but even
the highest, to say that the Lord is in any sort a handiwork. For if He came to
be Son, once He was not ; but He was always, if (that is) He be in the Father,
as He says Himself, and if the Christ be Word and Wisdom and Power (which, as
ye know, divine Scripture says), and these attributes be powers of God. If then
the Son came into being, once these attributes were not ; consequently there
was a time, when God was without them ; which is most absurd. And why say more
on these points to you, men full of the Spirit and well aware of the
absurdities which come to view from saying that the Son is a work? Not
attending, as I consider, to this circumstance, the authors of this opinion
have entirely missed the truth, in explaining, contrary to the sense of divine
and prophetic Scripture in the passage, the words, 'The Lord created me a
beginning of His ways unto His works.'
For the sense of 'He created,' as ye know, is not one, for
we must understand 'He created' in this place, as 'He set over the works made
by Him,' that is, ‘made by the Son Himself,’ And 'He created' here must not
be taken for 'made,' for creating differs from making. 'Is not He thy
Father that hath bought thee? hath He not made thee and created thee?' says
Moses in his great song in Deuteronomy. And one may say to them, O reckless
men, is He a work, who is 'the First-born of every creature, who is born from
the womb before the morning star,' who said, as Wisdom, 'Before all the hills He
begets me?' And in many passages of the divine oracles is the Son said to have
been generated, but nowhere to have come into being ; which manifestly
convicts those of misconception about the Lord's generation, who presume to
call His divine and ineffable generation a making'. Neither then may we divide
into three Godheads the wonderful and divine Monad ; nor disparage with the
name of 'work' the dignity and exceeding majesty of the Lord ; but we must
believe in God the Father Almighty, and in Christ Jesus His Son, and in the
Holy Ghost, and hold that to the God of the universe the Word is I united. For
'I,' says He, 'and the Father are one ;' and, 'I in the Father and the Father
in Me.' For thus both the Divine Triad, and the holy preaching of the Monarchy,
will be preserved." (NPNF - Second Series - 4.167, 168, bold emphasis mine
– link to PDF; Migne's Greek text HERE.)
I found Dionysius’ statement that, "'He created'
here must not be taken for 'made,' for creating differs from making” to be
quite interesting…
Grace and peace,
David