How
can the Godhead be in the flesh? And why? For the eleventh day of Christmas,
here is Basil of Caesarea’s (330-379) answer:
God is on earth, God is among us, not now as
lawgiver–there is no fire, no trumpet blast, no smoke-wreathed mountain, dense cloud,
or storm to terrify, whoever hears him–but as one gently and kindly conversing
in a human body with his fellow men and women. God is in the flesh. Now he is
not acting intermittently as he did through the prophets. He is bringing back
to himself the whole human race, which he has taken possession of and united to
himself. By his flesh he has made the human race his own kin.
But how can glory come to all through only
one? How can the Godhead be in the flesh? In the same way as fire can be in
iron: not by moving from place to place but by the one imparting to the other
its own properties. Fire does not speed toward iron, but without itself
undergoing any change it causes the iron to share in its own natural
attributes. The fire is not diminished and yet it completely fills whatever
shares in its nature. So it is also with God the Word. He did not relinquish
his own nature and yet he dwelt among us.
He did not undergo any change and yet the
Word became flesh. Earth received him from heaven, yet heaven as not
deserted by him who holds the universe in being.
Let us strive to comprehend the mystery. The
reason God is in the flesh is to kill the death that lurks there. As diseases
are cured by medicines assimilated by the body, and as darkness in a house is dispelled
by the coming of light, so death, which held sway over human nature, is done
away with the coming of God. And as ice formed on water covers its surface as
long as night and darkness last but melts under the warmth of the sun, so death
reigned until the coming of Christ; but when the grace of God our savior
appeared and the Sun of Justice rose, death was swallowed up in victory, unable
to bear the presence of true life. How great is God’s goodness, how deep his
love for us.
(Homily
on Christ’s Ancestry)
The
Twelfth Day of Christmas: Radiant Leaven in the Dough
The
First Day of Christmas: How God Brings His Love to Bear
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