The Creed tells us that Jesus Christ is "the Only Begotten Son of God, born of the Father before all ages. God from God, Light from Light, true God from true God, begotten, not made, consubstantial with the Father."
This theologically dense language was forged in the
crucible of a controversy that is almost completely alien to the modern mind.
The Greco-Roman of late antiquity was a culture that cared passionately about
ideas. It could not have imagined our present timidity, which keeps discussion
of the important things locked safely in the closet while obsessing over sports
and whatever Paris Hilton is doing today!
The question that nearly tore apart the
fourth-century Church was not a trivial one. In plain English, it was Jesus'
question: "Who do you say I am?” Peter's answer—"You are the Christ,
the Son of the Blessed"—has always been the faith of the Church.
Jesus had, after all, claimed to be God, and he had
showed that he wasn’t kidding by rising from the dead. Yet, while he insisted
that he was God, he also did puzzling things like saying, "The Father is
greater than I" (Jn 14:28). What did it all mean?
A fourth-century theologian named Arius was sure he
knew. He declared that Jesus was a sort of godlet, not God with a capital G. He
preached that Jesus was sort of like a super-archangel: greater than all other
creatures (and so "divine" in comparison with the rest of creation),
but not actually God. This seems abstract, but it actually constituted an
assault on the most fundamental basics of the Christian faith, because if Jesus
is not God, he can neither save nor give eternal life (that is, the life of
God) to us.
The Council of
Nicaea, in resolving this "Arian controversy," insists (following St.
John) that Christ is "begotten, not made." Why? For the same reason
we insist that our children are not the same as statues. An artist makes a
statue; he begets a son. To beget is to share your nature with another being. God
made human beings. But God the Father begets the Son eternally. The Son shares
his Father's nature. And since the nature of the Father is to have no
beginning, the Son also has no beginning. He is "born of the Father before
all ages." In him is eternal life from the Father, and, therefore, he can
share that life with us creatures.
The eternity of
Christ is stunning to contemplate: that this manual laborer who stands before
us with dirty feet, calloused hands, and a rough up-country accent is, in fact,
the Being who has existed from all eternity in the blinding light of the heart
of God, sharing completely in his glory and showing forth the express image of
the Holy One who hurled all the galaxies into being. It is rather a lot to take
in. It's no wonder the Son "emptied himself," as Paul says, becoming
human and dimming his splendor so that our mortal eyes could see him.
And yet, even
dimmed, he remains the Light of the World. When you look at the sun, do you see
the sun or the light from the sun? Obviously, to do the one is to do the other.
Christianity says the same thing is happening when you look at Christ. If
you've seen the Son, you've seen the Father, for the Son is the exact
representation of the Father, just as sunlight carries with it the exact
representation of the sun from which it came. That is why the Creed calls Jesus
"Light from Light."
The doctrine of
the Trinity is frequently despised by our post-Christian culture as the
archetype of sterile philosophical disputation. But in reality, it simply means
that God is love. Jesus revealed to his startled hearers that God was most
deeply one in the way a family is one. There exists within God the mystery of
the family, of a Father who begets the Son in perfect self-donating love, of a
Son who mirrors that love back to the Father in perfect adoration, and of a
Holy Spirit who eternally proceeds from this mysterious union of Persons, yet
all the Persons are one God. It was to take us into that eternal dance of glory
that the Son came.
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