WHY DID GOD BECOME MAN? THE ANSWER OF ST. ATHANASIOS


1INTRODUCTION. “God became man that we may become gods” (St. Athanasios). The Incarnation of God is the foundation of the Christian faith. Christ. is the Son and Logos (Word) of God who became man. He is not a man who became god, nor a man who stands in a unique and perfect relation with God. If the latter were the truth, Christianity would not differ from Judaism or any other religion. Orthodox Christianity believes that in Christ. God himself (God’s Son and Word) became man without ceasing to be God, so that we may be restored and clothed with God’s perfections.
The Orthodox Church keeps as crucial and
essential treasures these classical convictions of the Gospel. There are,
however, many contemporary thinkers who regard them as untenable on the basis
of certain critical syllogistic arguments. They argue that God as a supreme and
absolute power cannot become man, if he is really God; that the eternal and unchangeable
cannot become temporal and changeable, etc. Thoughtful philosophers have been
raising similar points since the early stages of Christian history, both from
within and from without the Church’s context. But the Church has always
regarded such objections as alien to the Christian truth. Those who propounded
them in the past were characterized as heretics, namely who failed to
understand Christ’s truth.
The main problem of the ancient heretics
and the contemporary critics, as far as the Incarnation is concerned, stems
from their assumption that the Church’s faith in this is the result of
thoughtful reflection upon or subjective interpretation of the historic event
of Christ. For the Orthodox Christians and theologians, however, the Incarnation
of the eternal Son and Logos of God is a given truth. Both the apostolic kerygma and the
patristic dogma project the
Incarnation as an objective datum and divine gift.
When the Fathers of the Church wrote
about the Incarnation their aim was not to explain away the event of Christ,
but rather to expound its soteriological (saving) significance for all
humanity. They did not explain the Incarnation from any abstract theoretical
standpoint. They rather attempted to bring out the inner logic of it and to bear
witness to its saving effects.
It is this kind of exposition that this
article is designed to provide. The intention is to lay open the Church’s
understanding of the saving meaning for humanity of the event of the
Incarnation of God in Christ, which occupies the essential place in the witness
of the Gospel, the Apostles and the Fathers. This will be done on the basis of
the most famous work of St. Athanasios “On the Incarnation of the Divine Logos.”
2ST.
ATHANASIUS TREATISE ON THE INCARNATION. St.
Athanasios’ treatise on the Incarnation is still regarded today as the first. thoroughgoing
and profound exposition of the event of Christ. It is a continuation of another
work, which bears the title “Against. Paganism” (Contra Gentes), the subject matter of
which is summarized in the beginning of the work on the Incarnation. This work Against
Paganism deals with the problem of idolatry—man’s worshipful attachment to the
world (what we call today “secularism”)—caused by man’s fall from the knowledge
of his Creator. The substance of the problem is the loss on the part of man of
the self‑consciousness that he is ‘logical’ in the sense that he is “made
in the image of God’s Logos” and that the world does not have an independent
logic of its own apart from the uncreated powers and energies of the Creator
Logos.
The results of this problem pertain to
man’s existence and knowledge. Man’s existence is subjected to corruption and
death and man’s knowledge is alienated from the truth of the world and the
vision of God. St. Athanasios maintains that the Christian reply to this
problem and its fatal consequences is man’s rediscovery of the Creator Logos,
who is the key to the existence of man himself and of the entire world. This is
because through this Logos man will be able once again to find the Image of God
and the reflection of that image in himself. But man does not turn to the
Logos. Hence the Logos’ intervention or turning to man which is achieved
through His Incarnation.
The
treatise on the Incarnation of St. Athanasios is divided into two main parts,
the first one dealing with the meaning of the Incarnation and the second being
a reply to objections raised against it by Jews and Greek philosophers. It is
to the first part that we shall turn our attention here.
3THE EVENT OF THE INCARNATION:
GOD BECAME MAN. The Incarnation is the Event whereby the Logos of God,
through whom God created all and sustains all, has revealed himself to human
beings by becoming a man among them. Yet, says St. Athanasios, the human shape
of this revelation, instead of filling men with gratitude, became the occasion
for the rejection of the Creator Logos. Men thought it impossible and even
irrational that God could become man! They were so used to live without Him
that they found it impossible to believe in Him when He was born as a man among
them! For man to become God and to surpass the weaknesses and limitations of
his created nature was for men a desirable thought, which could be reasonably
maintained. But for God to become man and taste the futility and littleness of
the human predicament was either a logical nonsense or a ridiculous scandal.
And yet the logic of the Gospel, says St.
Athanasios, demands the reverse. What men thought impossible, this God put
forward as possible, and thus the futility and littleness of the human nature
is shown to be honorable and powerful and saving. The true God is not an
indifferent impersonal or ideal God of some kind of metaphysical transcendence.
He is the God who puts on human nature, is nailed on the Cross for the sake of
righteousness, and truly defies human nature through means seemingly futile and
powerless, yet true, natural and human. The aim of the Incarnation was not just
the revelation of God, but also the salvation and deification of fallen man,
God’s creature. The Cross of the Incarnate God, then, became the trophy against
idolatry and superstition, because by such means God unmasked the futility of
man‑made religion and ill‑conceived theology and also justified
and renewed human nature as His own creation.
For St. Athanasios, then, the Incarnation
laid down the right terms of true theology: the deification of man as God wills
it (as His free gift) and not as man aspires to it (as an arbitrary usurpation
of the rights of God). True theology is not made by man, but is given by God
when He becomes man. This is owed to the fact that the right knowledge of God
is tied up with the right knowledge of man. Hence, God’s decision: first. to
reveal the true man in His Incarnation and then to reveal the truth of Himself.
To put it in another way, man becomes a theologian when he becomes true man;
and he becomes true man when he becomes a man in Christ. Far from opposing
humanism Christian theology (and particularly the doctrine of the Incarnation)
is the key to it, except that it is divine humanism, God’s life as man.
How does
this actually take place? And what is the reason or reasons, which prompted God
to follow such a path? What is the deeper meaning of the Incarnation? These are
the questions that St. Athanasios will try to answer in his treatise. And I say
that he will try, because first of all he will examine certain
“presuppositions” to the Incarnation. He will tell us that we must first. understand
why and how man was initially made man and why and how he fell from the
position that God gave him, in order to understand why and how God became man
for our salvation. In other words, man’s creation and fall constitute basic
presuppositions to the understanding of the event of the Incarnation.
4MAN’S
CREATION AND FALL. Man was not created by the world, but by God. God
created both man and the world. The Epicureans, like many modem thinkers,
propounded the view that the world (and therefore man) came to be through an
automatic process out of itself. The Platonists believed that there was a
certain creator (demiourgos) who made man and the
entire universe, but they held that the material from which all things were
made actually pre‑existed the act of creation and was itself eternal. The
Gnostic heretics, who followed ancient oriental religious traditions, spoke
about two cosmic spheres and substances, which belonged to two rival gods (the
good god of spiritual substance and the evil god of matter) and saw man as
being caught up between these two opposing realms.
Against these theories St. Athanasios
expounded the teaching of the Church, which is based on the Bible and on Divine
revelation. God created all things out of nothing with His Divine Logos. Therefore
every form of cosmological monism or dualism must be rejected as false. The
cause of creation was God’s immeasurable goodness, and as a result the world
and man are substantially good. God showed His goodness in a special way in
creating man. Because He knew that, being a creature that came out of nothing,
man could not remain in existence for ever—for every creature that has a
beginning also has an end—He made man in such a way that he may exist. in the
Image and the Likeness of God Himself. In other words, God made man able to
communicate with God and to imitate Him. In this way the iconic relation of
human existence with the ever‑existing and eternal God would render the
former capable of remaining in existence forever.
The commandment, which, according to the
Bible, God gave to the protoplasts in paradise concerning the knowledge of good
and evil, had no other purpose than to safeguard the grace of being in the
Image and Likeness of God, that is man’s free communion with and imitation of his
Creator. By such means the power of immortality and eternal existence that
belongs to God alone would be also secured for man. In the last analysis the most
characteristic element of St. Athanasios’ teaching on man’s creation is not so
much man’s created existence as it is the free co‑ordination of this
existence with the self‑existing Creator, the Divine Logos, through the
grace of being in the Image and Likeness.
Man is not a closed circle of existence
simply regulated from a center existing in him. He is rather an open or free
existence capable of communicating with the transcendent and self‑existing
God. Thus St. Athanasios teaches us that the key to our humanity is the Divine
Logos and our communion with Him. This is precisely the point where our fall
takes place, which incurs the corruption and death of our existence and causes
the drama of human history, which in turn calls out the saving intervention of
the Logos: the Incarnation.
The fall of man, which is so clearly
revealed in his natural corruption and death, is in the last analysis first man’s
denial to appropriate the grace of his Creator Logos, and secondly man’s
turning to the created and limited world as the ultimate purpose of his life.
This means, says St. Athanasios, that in our life we no longer imitate or
communicate with the self‑existing (the One Who Is), but with things that
are not. We are mastered by a demonic envy (the devil’s deceit) that makes us
transgress God’s commandment and leave death and corruption to reign supreme
over our life. The result is that our humanity remains unfulfilled—we never
reach the purpose of our life, which is immortality and deification.
5THE DILEMMA
OF THE CREATOR. This miserable condition of man, says St. Athanasios,
puts God, as it were, in a certain dilemma! If he allows the transgressor to
live, then he runs the risk of being proved a deceiver, because His original
warning about man’s death in the case of his rejection of the Logos would
appear to be false. On the other hand leaving man to be lost in corruption and
death does not measure up with God’s character, especially in view of the fact
that man became communicant of the grace of His Image. His truth asks that man
should be left to his loss because this will not interfere with God’s consistency
to His Logos and will not violate man’s freedom. But God’s goodness wants of
Him to save His creature, whilst. His power is capable to do so. What then
should God do with man who is an arbitrary transgressor?
Perhaps one might consider, St. Athanasios says, that in this case the easiest operation
would be for God to demand man’s repentance. But the fact remains that
repentance does not satisfy the law of existence, which demands death, neither
does it restore the fatal consequences resulting upon the human nature from the
transgression. Repentance simply puts an end to sinning, but does not undo the
incurred consequences of sin. Had sin not had such repercussions, repentance
might have sufficed for man’s salvation. But now, such as sin is, even the
grace of the Image and Likeness cannot operate. Repentance just does not lead
out of the cul‑de‑sac.
After all this the only solution to the
problem of man’s salvation can be the intervention of the Creator Logos, who is
capable of re‑creating the lost man. Only the Divine Logos, St.
Athanasios says, can keep God’s consistency with His Creation, represent all
men, suffer on behalf of all, and re‑create all men and all things:
because He is the key to the Creation of the world and especially of man.
6THE FIRST CAUSE OF THE
INCARNATION: THE DESTRUCTION OF DEATH. It is with His Logos that God acts
again in order to save His creation. He sends His Word (Logos) to the earth out
of infinite love for man, Him who was never far away. And the Logos, who sees
our plight and the loss of our generation, enters Himself into our race and is
identified with us. He does this by taking a body like our own from a pure and
impeccable Virgin and makes it personally His own, Himself becoming a man. With
His own human existence the Logos offers as a man a life of perfect obedience
to God, which concludes with His self‑sacrifice for the sake of all men.
The true self‑sacrifice of Christ is sealed with his death on the Cross
and is vindicated with His resurrection whereby death is destroyed forever.
The death of Christ, says St. Athanasios,
does not occur for the same reason as our own. We die justly because death has
a right over us on account of our sin. But Christ is just and sinless and thus
He does not die for Himself but for us. He does not, of course, die as God—for
this is quite impossible—but as man, inasmuch as He has a human existence
identical with our own. He allows Himself to receive death at the hands of
others, because He wants to enter the ultimate darkness of our fall and
illuminate it with His presence. He dies as man in order to annul the ultimate
strength of death. The death of Christ, of the one who is just and lays down
His life for the unjust, has a universal meaning, value and effectiveness. It
was the death of all men that Christ accomplished through His death, in the
sense that natural death is no longer the ultimate destiny of any man.
Our ultimate destiny is now the
resurrection of our creaturely mortal existence to a new condition of
immortality caused by the Resurrection of Christ. Christ is the first‑fruit
and we shall follow. We no longer die as condemned, but we die in order to rise
again and live eternally with God. This universal significance, value and
effectiveness of Christ’s death is not based simply on the fact that He was the
just and true man who was vindicated by God when He died in the hands of
sinners, but above all on the fact that He is in the last analysis the Creator
Logos who holds the key to the existence of all men (He is the Lordly man). The
Lord’s humanity (His body) is identical with our own, but it has acquired
universal rights for all of us because it is the humanity of the universal Lord
of all (it is the Lordly body).
Christ is ultimately “the true God who is
above all and for all”, who in becoming man has regained our lost rights
especially through His Death and Resurrection. The abolition of death and
corruption as the ultimate conclusion to our destiny and the establishment of
the rights to immortality and incorruptibility for our creaturely human
existence is regarded by St. Athanasios as the first cause
of the Incarnation. The wonder of the whole gift of Christ to us is not just the
return of our humanity from death to life, but the transformation of that
humanity into an external incorruptible and immortal existence which is new and
demands the renewal of the whole world.
7THE SECOND CAUSE OF THE
INCARNATION: MAN’S REGAINING THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD. Apart from
the death of our creaturely existence, our fall has also been the cause of our
ignorance of God. As we saw above, man’s rational existence implies that he
does not simply enjoy life but also knowledge, and indeed the knowledge of God.
According to St. Athanasios and the other fathers and theologians of our Church
the knowledge of man is not restricted to the knowledge of the cosmos or of his
own self, but is ultimately connected with the knowledge and consciousness of
God. Without the last one all other kinds of knowledge can lose their true
meaning and become paradoxically bearers of ignorance.
The knowledge and consciousness of God is
ultimately connected with the grace of the Image and the Likeness of the Divine
Logos given to man at his creation. In the last analysis man’s knowledge of God
is based on his knowledge of the Logos, who is God’s true Image. By perceiving
the Logos men perceive God and thus receive the eternal life, which rests on
His grace. Yet on account of their fall men have neglected this grace, and as a
result they have lost the ability of perceiving the divine Word (Logos) and
through Him perceiving God. This loss has also meant that they cannot any more
understand the truth of the world or the truth of themselves, or even the truth
which God has sent to them through the Prophets and the holy men. It was self‑evident
then that the Logos and true Image of the Father had to be revealed to men once
again and revive in them the grace of the Image that had been darkened.
This is exactly what the Logos did with
His Incarnation. Not only did He revive the mortal body and make it
incorruptible, but He also renewed the grace of the Image of God in man’s soul
and existence. Neither angels nor men, says St. Athanasios, could have achieved
this, but only the very Logos of God who is God’s true Image. Just as an image
which has been printed on a piece of wood requires the prototype in order to be
restored when destroyed, so the grace of the Image of the Logos which had been
engrafted upon the soul of man was required in order to be revived after man’s
fall. This exactly what the Incarnation of the Logos of God actually brought
about: the revival of man’s rationality, which involves the restoration of the
knowledge and consciousness of God in man and constitutes the second and ultimate
cause of the Incarnation.
For St. Athanasios then there are two
basic consequences of the Incarnation, which refer to our salvation and bring
out its inner meaning. First of all the Incarnation has opened the way for the
return of our mortal and corruptible existence from death to life. Secondly it
gives us the possibility for renewal in our inner man through restoring to us
the knowledge and consciousness of God, which constitutes the foundation for
our true knowledge of the world and of ourselves. Christ saves us completely,
because He gives us the immortality of our creaturely nature and makes us
communicants of the eternal life in the light and glory of His Kingdom. The
Church knows these two fundamental gifts of Christ to humanity empirically, and
therefore her faith in the God who became man is not the result of a blind
obedience to some dogma superimposed from above. The Church does not accept the
principle, “believe and do not search,” but the principle, “taste and see that
the Lord is good.”
In the last analysis, and as St. Athanasios
teaches in other writings, the proof of the faith of the Church in the
Incarnate God, Jesus Christ the Savior of the World, is based on the presence
and activity of the Holy Spirit. Both the resurrection of the human nature and
the restoration of the grace of the Image of God in man are the work of the
Father through the Son in the Holy Spirit. The whole salvation of man, which is
achieved and revealed in the Incarnation of the Son and Logos of God is the work
of the one undivided and consubstantial Trinity of the Father, the Son and the
Holy Spirit, to whom belongs all the glory, the honor and the worship now and
for ever and in the ages of the ages.
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