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The Power of One
The Very Rev’d
Canon Robert S. Munday, Ph.D.
The Church today would be a different kind of place if it
were not for a short, dark-skinned, red-bearded, half hermit who
single-handedly fought an empire for the truth of the Gospel. For much of the
fourth century, A.D., it was Athanasius contra mundum—“Athanasius
against the world”—and Athanasius won.
One letter. To some historians his was a battle not
worth fighting. His argument hung on the stroke of a pen, a single letter, one
iota—the Greek letter “i.” But embedded in that slender distinction was
the essence of the Christian faith, and Athanasius would defend it with his
life. “We are contending,” he wrote, “for our all.”
Up to this point, the Church’s major threats had all come
from outside—Roman emperors who sought to work their will on Christians who
steadfastly maintained that Jesus is Lord and not Caesar, and Greek
philosophers who presented questions that the Church, in time, developed the
ability to answer.
Bishops, who led God’s people after the death of the
apostles, and whose chief duty is to guard the deposit of faith entrusted to
the Church, shed much ink—and much blood—defending the ideals and ideas of
Christian faith against the heavy tide of a hostile and haughty world.
But by the early 300s, egos and ambitions had begun drawing
battle lines within the Church. Christians were fighting Christians over
theological positions. Most of the differences formed around explanations of
the Trinity: Did Christians worship one God, or three? Was the Father greater
than the Son and Spirit, or equal?
Then around 318 came an upstart church leader named Arius,
asking the question to rattle all questions: Was Jesus even God at all?
One word. The distinction boiled down to a single
word, distinguished by the single Greek iota we have just mentioned.
Was the Son of the same substance (homoousios) as the Father, or was he
merely of a similar substance (homoiousios) as the Father? It
was a controversy that not only occupied the minds of scholars but also the
marketplace banter of everyday folk. It demanded the attention of the Emperor
Constantine, who summoned bishops from East and West to an unprecedented
gathering in the city of Nicea, in A.D. 325.
When their two month meeting had ended, the resulting creed
accurately declared Jesus Christ to be “very God of very God, begotten not
made, of one substance (homoousios) with the Father. Arius was declared
a heretic, deposed and disgraced, and everyone assumed that the matter was
closed.
Yet the matter continued to confuse and divide.
Constantine, who, like many leaders, valued unity of their institutions over the
truth of the Gospel, ordered the new bishop of Alexandria to reinstate Arius as
a member in good standing, a sharer in the Church’s communion.
One man. But the new bishop was a man named
Athanasius, who promptly told the Emperor that he could forget it. According
to one story, Athanasius stopped the Emperor’s procession through the streets
one day, grabbing the horses of the Emperor’s carriage by the reins—an act that
could have gotten him instantly killed by the Emperor’s guards—in order to warn
the great Constantine that these matters of the Christian faith were even
greater than he was.
The consequences were that important, and this is why:
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If the Son is a created being, not of the same substance as God, then
the Son is not God.
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If the Son is not God, then his birth in the person of Jesus is
not the incarnation of God.
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If God is not truly incarnate in the person of Jesus, then his
atoning death is worthless.
“For he alone,” Athanasius wrote, “being Word of the Father
and above all, was able to re-create all, and was worthy to suffer on behalf of
all and to be an ambassador for all with the Father. For this purpose the
incorruptible word of God entered our world. The Word is God from God; for
‘the Word was God’” (John 1:1).
In other words, if Jesus is anything less than God—whether
angel, or exalted teacher, or new age cosmic avatar, his death and resurrection
cannot be the atoning sacrifice that breaks the curse of human sin. We can say
that Jesus is our Savior, but if that reality does not undergird our faith, we
are just engaging in wishful thinking.
Naturally, Athansius’ defiance did not win him any friends
at the imperial palace. Constantine’s opinion of the young bishop took such a
turn for the worse that he banished him to the uttermost western part of the
Empire, sending him from Egypt to Gaul (modern France) in the dead of winter.
It was the first of five exiles he would endure throughout his 45 years as
bishop, as he resisted imperial pressure for the sake of the Gospel.
Several emperors came and went during Athanasius’ lifetime,
and he would be allowed to return—always to the delight of the people of
Alexandria. But then imperial pressure would heat up again, Athanasius would
take his place in the fire, and no one who flinched from the truth of the
Gospel would be allowed a moment’s rest in his presence.
Athanasius recognized that the Incarnation is a mystery. No
one could fully understand it. But there are those whose pride, arrogance, and
self-interest would not allow them to believe. And Athanasius would not keep
silent while they robbed God of his power and the Gospel of its truth. “We
take divine Scripture and set it up as a light upon its candlestick, saying:
very Son of the Father, natural and genuine, proper to His essence, very and
only Word of God is He… But let them learn that ‘the Word became flesh;’ and
let us, retaining the general scope of the faith, acknowledge that what they
interpret wrongly has a right interpretation.”
Other bishops, fearing a church split on their hands,
pressed the compromise of the homoiousios—that Christ was of similar,
and not the same, substance as the Father. The change in the Greek word was so
small that one would hardly notice it, a change in pronunciation so small that
those reciting the creed could ignore it. But to Athanasius it was the
difference between life and death.
“God Himself made the decision to take on flesh and to
become man and to undergo the death of the Cross, that by faith in Him, all who
believe may obtain salvation…. Only so is our salvation fully realized and
guaranteed.”
He would die, in 373, before
the fruit of his labor could be seen. But, in 381, bishops at the Council of
Constantinople would uphold the doctrine of the deity of Christ that Athanasius
taught. The Nicene Creed would survive as the accepted understanding of the
Trinity and of the Person of Christ. The Church would go on, by the power of
the Holy Spirit, to proclaim a pure Gospel to this day—because of the power of
one letter, one word, and one man to demonstrate that the truth matters.
The Very Rev’d Canon Robert S. Munday, Ph.D., is Dean and
President of Nashotah House Theological Seminary and Canon Theologian of the
Diocese of Quincy.
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