The Word Made Flesh Makes Us Divine
Our faith is
not founded upon empty words; nor are we carried away by mere caprice or
beguiled by specious arguments. On the contrary, we put our faith in words
spoken by the power of God, spoken by the Word himself at God’s command. God
wished to win men back from disobedience, not by using force to reduce him to
slavery but by addressing to his free will a call to liberty.
The Word spoke
first of all through the prophets, but because the message was couched in such
obscure language that it could be only dimly apprehended, in the last days the
Father sent the Word in person, commanding him to show himself openly so that
the world could see him and be saved.
We know that
by taking a body from the Virgin he re-fashioned our fallen nature. We know
that his manhood was of the same clay as our own; if this were not so, he would
hardly have been a teacher who could expect to be imitated. If he were of a
different substance from me, he would surely not have ordered me to do as he
did, when by my very nature I am so weak. Such a demand could not be reconciled
with his goodness and justice.
When we have
come to know the true God, both our bodies and our souls will be immortal and
incorruptible. We shall enter the kingdom of heaven, because while we lived on
earth we acknowledged heaven’s King. Friends of God and co-heirs with Christ,
we shall be subject to no evil desires or inclinations, or to any affliction of
body or soul, for we shall have become divine.
Whatever evil
you may have suffered, being man, it is God that sent it to you, precisely
because you are man; but equally, when you have been deified, God has promised
you a share in every one of his own attributes. The saying Know
yourself means therefore
that we should recognise and acknowledge in ourselves the God who made us in
his own image, for if we do this, we in turn will be recognised and
acknowledged by our Maker.
So let us not
be at enmity with ourselves, but change our way of life without delay. For
Christ who is God, exalted above all creation, has taken away man’s sin and has
re-fashioned our fallen nature. In the beginning God made man in his image and
so gave proof of his love for us. If we obey his holy commands and learn to
imitate his goodness, we shall be like him and he will honour us. God is not
beggarly, and for the sake of his own glory he has given us a share in his
divinity.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of
Readings
From the treatise of St Hippolytus On the Refutation of
All Heresies
Image taken from Wikimedia Commons
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