Showing posts with label Resurrection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Resurrection. Show all posts

Friday, June 1, 2018

Cyril of Jerusalem, Lecture 20


Cyril of Jerusalem

Lecture 20


“Don’t you know, that as many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death?  Therefore, we were buried-together in Him by baptism into the death: that just as Christ was raised up from death by the glory of the Father, so also we could have walked in newness of life: for, if we, [the] planted-together, have been begotten[i] in the likeness of His death, moreover also we will be of the resurrection.  Knowing this, that our old man was crucified-together, that the body of sin would be made powerless, that we no longer be slaves in sin: for, the dead, has been justified from sin.  Yet, if we died with Christ, we believe that we will also live-together in Him; seeing that Christ, awakening out of death, no longer dies; death no longer has mastery of Him: for, in that He died in[ii] [our] sin, He died once; yet, in that He lives, He lives in God.  So also you, count yourselves indeed to be dead in sin; yet, alive in God in Christ Jesus our Lord.  [Do] not, therefore, let sin have domination[iii] in your dying body[iv] into submission[v] in her[vi] desires; nor commend[vii] your members as weapons of unrighteousness in sin; but, commend yourselves in God as alive from death, and your members as weapons of righteousness in God:[viii] for, sin will not have mastery of you: for, you are not under law, but under grace. — Romans 6:3-14


Summary: Having laid a foundation in the denouncing of Satan, St. Cyril proceeds to discuss the mysteries of baptism itself; especially that we share in the likeness or similitude of Christ’s death; which he shows from Paul to be far more important than the remission of our sins or our adoption, or even our reception of the Holy Spirit.  We have put off the old man and put on a whole new man.  We were cut from a wild olive tree and grafted into Christ, the true olive tree.  We have died in this similitude and been resurrected from the dead.  Not just once, either; but, fully three times entering into death, and three times being resurrected in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.[ix]


Preview:  1.  “These daily introductions into the Mysteries … are profitable to us; and … to you, who have been renewed from an old state to a new.  Therefore, I … lay before you [yesterday’s] sequel … that you may learn of what those things … in the inner chamber, were symbolic.”  2.  “… as you entered, you put off your tunic; and this was an image of putting off the old man with his deeds.[x]  Having stripped yourselves … imitating Christ, who was stripped naked on the Cross, and by His nakedness put off from Himself the principalities and powers, and openly triumphed over them on the tree.[xi]  For since … [your enemies] made their lair in your members, you may no longer wear that old garment … the old man, which waxes corrupt in the lusts of deceit.[xii]  May the soul which has once put him off, never again put him on, but say with the Spouse of Christ in the Song of Songs, I have put off my garment, how shall I put it on?[xiii]  3.  “Then … you were anointed with exorcised oil, from the very hairs of your head to your feet, and were made partakers of the good olive-tree, Jesus Christ.  For you were cut off from the wild olive-tree, and grafted into the good one, and were made to share the fatness of the true olive-tree.[xiv]  The exorcised oil therefore was a symbol of the participation of the fatness of Christ….”  4.  “[Then] you were led to the holy pool of Divine Baptism, as Christ was carried from the Cross to the Sepulcher….  Each of you was asked, whether he believed in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, and you made that saving confession, and descended three times into the water, and ascended again … hinting … at the three days burial of Christ.”  “And at the self-same moment you were both dying and being born; and that Water of salvation was at once your grave and your mother.  … Solomon … said, in that case, There is a time to bear and a time to die;[xv] but … in the reverse order….”  5.  “O strange and inconceivable thing!  We did not … die, were not … buried, … crucified and raised again; … our imitation was … a figure, [but] our salvation … reality.  Christ was actually crucified, … buried, and … rose again … that we, sharing His sufferings by imitation, might gain salvation in reality.  O surpassing loving-kindness!  Christ received nails in His undefiled hands and feet, and suffered anguish; while on me without pain or toil by the fellowship of His suffering He freely bestows salvation.”  6.  “Let no one … suppose that Baptism is merely the grace of remission of sins, or … of adoption …  whereas we know full well, that as it purges our sins, and ministers to us the gift of the Holy Ghost, so also it is the counterpart of the sufferings of Christ.  … Paul … said, Or are you ignorant that all we who were baptized into Christ Jesus, were baptized into His death?  We were buried therefore with Him by baptism into His death.”[xvi]  7.  “Whatsoever things Christ endured, for us and for our salvation He suffered them in reality and not in appearance, and that we also are made partakers of His sufferings, Paul cried … For if we have been planted together with the likeness of His death, we shall be also with the likeness of His resurrection.[xvii] “He said not, For if we have been planted together with His death, but, with the likeness of His death.  For in Christ’s case there was death in reality … but in your case there was only a likeness of death and sufferings, whereas of salvation there was not a likeness but a reality.  8.  “… keep [these things], I beseech you, in your remembrance; that I also, unworthy though I be, may say of you, Now I love you, because you always remember me, and hold fast the traditions, which I delivered unto you.[xviii]  And God, who has presented you as it were alive from the dead,[xix] is able to grant unto you to walk in newness of life:[xx] because His is the glory and the power, now and forever.  Amen.


[i] Born, born again, created: the new birth is clearly in view.

[ii] dative, His state at death, in our sin, not in His sin.

[iii] Third person imperative or emphatic, sin is the subject.  The Greek idiom does not require a second person imperative.  Do is supplied to make sense in English.

[iv] The force seems to fall just short of, “our dead corpse”: for we are to count ourselves as dead to sin.

[v] substantive infinitive

[vi] This is feminine, because it modifies a feminine noun, desires; so, what is the antecedent, if any?  Sin is the other feminine noun in the sentence: it is sin’s desires that are under discussion.

However, sin is said to reign in the body, which seems to contradict St. Cyril’s idea that the mind and will are the root of sin, the body being the innocent victim.

It is possible that St. Cyril’s concern is pastoral, insofar as he seeks to rouse the will to fight against the fleshly desires of the body: this is certainly necessary to sanctified Christian life; yet, these bodily desires, which seem to act involuntarily and independently of the rational mind or will, are only brought into subjection by decades of discipline: even then, they break out from time to time with surprising ferocity.  It is only through the power of the Spirit that we even hope to make any headway in this battle: it is a raging spiritual battle, which requires the participation of every Christian.  Nevertheless, St. Cyril’s pastoral concerns, if any, seem fully warranted; since Jerusalem was considered to be a licentious and wicked city in his day.  If the will is not aroused to engage in this battle; then, the soul’s war is hopelessly lost before it begins.  If the will is engage in this war; battles may be won or lost: but the Spirit brings the war to its victorious conclusion.

We perceive several possible errors of extremism here: the will has every affect (misnamed Pelagianism); the will has no affect (determinism); the will has power (category error); the body always acts independently of the will (excessive focus on involuntary muscles); the body never acts independently of the will (excessive focus on voluntary muscles).  Augustine’s illustrations concerning the penis are devastating to several of these excesses.

In modern times, John Romanides weighs in against Augustine; Georges Florovsky, and many others, value Augustine by appropriation.

[vii] Take a stand-beside, associate; in the political arena, to stand-beside in a photo-op, would be an implied endorsement of the person and any evil involved.

[viii] The opposing dangers here are: One.  To turn this into and justify physical war, or jihad, which this does not approve; Two.  To treat this lightly, as if no true spiritual battle were taking place.  This is clearly a call for commitment of the will; not a call to take up arms.

[ix] It is a vital matter of interest that St. Cyril gives no instruction about making the sign of the cross; left to right, right to left, or otherwise: he simply insists that we do it.  His descriptions of Baptism, on the other hand, are meticulously scrupulous in every least detail.  The Didache has such detailed instructions for Trine-Baptism; yet, these may be set aside as a superstition coming from an uncertain single witness.  Now, with St. Cyril’s voice also supporting the necessity of Trine-Baptism, there can be little doubt that the practice of Mono-Baptism is to be deplored and rejected in all its forms.  While we accept the persons Baptized by Mono-Baptism, we really wish the practice would stop: we cringe inwardly, in fear, every time we witness it.  Matthew 28:19

[x] Colossians 3:9

[xi] Colossians 2:15; 1 Peter 2:24

[xii] Ephesians 4:22

[xiii] Song of Songs 5:3

[xiv] Romans 11:17-24

[xv] Ecclesiastes 3:2

[xvi] Romans 6:3

[xvii] Romans 6:5

[xviii] 1 Corinthians 11:2; 15:2; 2 Thessalonians 2:15

[xix] Romans 6:13

[xx] Romans 6:4

Thursday, May 24, 2018

Cyril of Jerusalem, Lecture 18, Part B


Cyril of Jerusalem

Lecture 18, Part B


“The hand of the Lord was upon me, and carried me out in the Spirit of the Lord, and set me down in the midst of the valley which was full of bones.” — Ezekiel 37:1


Summary: St. Cyril continues discussion of the resurrection of human beings from the dead as well as its apologetic.  So far, he has limited himself to natural law and Torah; now he turns to all the Prophets and Apostles for authority.  Completing this topic, he concludes with an overview of the Church and its catholicity.


Preview:  13.  “And whence in the beginning came man into being at all…?  Go [Samaritans] to the first book of the Scripture, which even you receive; And God formed man of the dust of the ground.[i]  Is dust transformed into flesh, and shall not flesh be again restored to flesh?  … whence the heavens … earth, and seas?  … sun, and moon, and stars?  … waters … things which fly and swim?  … earth all its living things?  Were so many myriads brought from nothing into being, and shall we men, who bear God’s image, not be raised up?  Truly this course is full of unbelief, and the unbelievers are much to be condemned; when Abraham addresses the Lord as the Judge of all the earth[ii]….”  14.  “These questions, therefore, are for them, the unbelievers: but the words of the Prophets are for us who believe. But since some who have also used the Prophets believe not what is written, and allege against us that passage, The ungodly shall not rise up in judgment,[iii] and, For if man go down to the grave he shall come up no more,[iv] and, The dead shall not praise You, O Lord[v]  … For if it is said, that the ungodly shall not rise up in judgment, this shows that they shall rise, not in judgment, but in condemnation….  And if it is said, The dead shall not praise You, O Lord, this shows, that since in this life only is the appointed time for repentance and pardon….  Therefore the just then offer praise; but they who have died in sins have no further season for confession.”  15.  “Respecting that passage, If a man go down to the grave, he shall come up no more, observe what follows … He shall come up no more, neither shall he return to his own house.[vi] … since the whole world shall pass away….  But they ought to have heard Job, saying, For there is hope of a tree; for if it be cut down, it will sprout again, and the tender branch thereof will not cease.  For though the root thereof wax old in the earth, and the stock thereof die in the rocky ground; yet from the scent of water it will bud, and bring forth a crop like a new plant. But man when he dies, is gone; and when mortal man falls, is he no more?[vii]  … since a tree falls and revives, shall not man, for whom all trees were made, himself revive?  And that you may not suppose that I am forcing the words, read what follows … For if a man die, he shall live againI will wait till I be made again; [viii]Who shall raise up on the earth my skin, which endures these things.[ix]  Esaias … says, The dead men shall rise again, and they that are in the tombs shall awake.[x]  … Ezekiel … says … Behold I will open your graves, and bring you up out of your graves.[xi]  Daniel says, Many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall arise, some to everlasting life, and some to everlasting shame.[xii]  16.  “Many Scriptures … testify of the Resurrection of the dead….”  “We will make a passing mention of the raising of Lazarus … and allude … to the widow’s son … [and] mention the ruler of the synagogue’s daughter, and the rending of the rocks, and how there arose many bodies of the saints which slept[xiii]….  But specially be it remembered that Christ has been raised from the dead.[xiv]  … in passing of Elias, and the widow’s son … of Elisseus also, who raised the dead twice; once in his lifetime, and once after his death.  For when alive he wrought the resurrection by means of his own soul.[xv]  … though [the corpse of Elisseus] gave life, yet continued itself among the dead.”  “And let us not foolishly disbelieve, as though this thing had not happened: for if handkerchiefs and aprons, which are from without, touching the bodies of the diseased, raised up the sick, how much more should the very body of the Prophet raise the dead?”  17.  “We might say [moree] … in detail … of each event: but as you have been already wearied both by the … fast … and by [prayer vigils], let … [this] suffice for a while; … words … were sown thinly, that you, … like richest ground, may in bearing fruit increase them.  But be it remembered, that the Apostles also raised the dead … even though the wonders wrought by each have not all been written.”  “Remember … Paul … How are the dead raised, and with what manner of body do they come?[xvi]  … how he says, For if the dead rise not, then is not Christ raised; how he called them fools, who believed not; … and how he wrote to the Thessalonians, But we would not have you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning them which are asleep, that you sorrow not, even as the rest which have no hope,[xvii] … that, And the dead in Christ shall rise first.[xviii]  18.  For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality.[xix]  “… such as we cannot worthily speak of.  Thenshall the righteous shine forth as the sun,[xx] and the moon, and as the brightness of the firmament.[xxi]  19.  “We shall be raised therefore, all with our bodies eternal [in two companies]”  “God [will] assign this portion to either company; for we do nothing without the body.”  We sin with the body; yet, with the body we also pray, keep chastity, and give alms.  “Since then the body has been our minister in all things, it shall also share with us in the future the fruits of the past.”[xxii]  20.  “Therefore, brethren, let us be careful of our bodies, nor misuse them as though not our own.”[xxiii]  “The past wounds … God heals by Baptism; against future ones let us one and all jointly guard ourselves, that we may keep this vestment of the body pure, and may not … lose the salvation of heaven….”  21.  “Thus much … of the Resurrection of the dead; and now … [continuing] the profession of the faith, and do you with all diligence pronounce it while I speak , and remember it.”  22.  And in one Baptism of repentance for the remission of sins; and in one Holy Catholic Church; and in the resurrection of the flesh; and in eternal life.”  “Now then let me finish what still remains to be said for the Article, In one Holy Catholic Church….”  23.  “It is called Catholic then because it extends over all the world, from one end of the earth to the other; and because it teaches universally and completely one and all the doctrines which ought to come to men’s knowledge, concerning things both visible and invisible, heavenly and earthly; and because it brings into subjection to godliness the whole race of mankind, governors and governed, learned and unlearned; and because it universally treats and heals the whole class of sins, which are committed by soul or body, and possesses in itself every form of virtue which is named, both in deeds and words, and in every kind of spiritual gifts.”[xxiv]  24.  “And it is rightly named (Ecclesia) because it calls forth and assembles together all men … And make an assembly for all the congregation at the door of the tabernacle of witness.[xxv]  … the word assemble, is used for the first time in [Leviticus] at the time when the Lord puts Aaron into the High-priesthood.”  … the Lord [also] says to Moses, Assemble the people unto Me, and let them hear My words, that they may learn to fear Me.[xxvi]  And … concerning the Tables, And on them were written all the words which the Lord spoke with you in the mount out of the midst of the fire in the day of the Assembly[xxvii]….  The Psalmist also says, I will give thanks unto You, O Lord, in the great Congregation; I will praise You among much people.[xxviii]



[i] Genesis 2:7

[ii] Genesis 18:25

[iii] Psalms 1:5

[iv] Job 7:9

[v] Psalms 6:5; 115:17; Isaiah 38:18

[vi] Job 7:9-10

[vii] Job 14:7-10

[viii] Job 14:14 Septuagint

[ix] Job 19:23-27 Septuagint

[x] Isaiah 26:19 Septuagint

[xi] Ezekiel 37:12

[xii] Daniel 12:2

[xiii] Matthew 27:52

[xiv] 1 Corinthians 15:20

[xv] 2 Kings 4:34; 2 Kings 13:21

[xvi] 1 Corinthians 15:35; also 1 Corinthians 15:1-58

[xvii] 1 Thessalonians 4:13

[xviii] 1 Thessalonians 4:14-18

[xix] 1 Corinthians 15:53

[xx] Matthew 13:43

[xxi] Daniel 12:2-3

[xxii] St. Cyril, here seems to deviate from his own rule, to say nothing without proof from Scripture; so, part or all of this section may have been tampered with by others: the voice of speculative theology putting words in St. Cyril’s mouth: words that he may never have said.  The beauty and glory of St. Cyril, thus far, is that he has assiduously avoided speculative theology.  It is strange that 1 Corinthians 3:6-15 was not discussed here to alleviate any confusion.  As far as any assurance of the realities of heaven and hell, St. Cyril has thoroughly discussed these elsewhere.  Whether the just and the reprobate are raised with different kinds of sensate bodies remains unknown: Scripture appears to be silent on the matter.

[xxiii] 1 Corinthians 6:19-20

[xxiv] We quote St. Cyril’s definition of catholicity in its entirety because it seems unlike any definition we should form today.  It is we who have deviated from truth; it is unlikely to be St. Cyril’s error.

[xxv] Leviticus 8:3; Numbers 8:9

[xxvi] Deuteronomy 4:10

[xxvii] Deuteronomy 5:22; 9:10; 10:4

[xxviii] Psalms 18:49; 22:22, 25; 35:18; 57:9; 108:3

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Cyril of Jerusalem, Lecture 18, Part A


Cyril of Jerusalem

Lecture 18, Part A


“The hand of the Lord was upon me, and carried me out in the Spirit of the Lord, and set me down in the midst of the valley which was full of bones.” — Ezekiel 37:1


Summary: St. Cyril discusses apologetic methods for dealing with the Greeks and the Samaritans concerning their unbelief in the resurrection of the dead.  The Greeks must be confounded by their own superstitions.  The Samaritans must be confronted from Torah.  Both err in failing to see God as immeasurably powerful; as well as assuming that God will never judge them: for the judgments of this world lack complete justice.  He mentions several proofs from nature, and from legends, most convincingly from human nature: which, since created, can certainly be recreated.  For God is the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.  Moses did witness several creative, resurrection-like miracles.


Preview:  1.  “The root of all good works is the hope of the Resurrection….”  “… every soul believing in a Resurrection is naturally careful of itself; but, disbelieving it, abandons itself to perdition.”  “Faith therefore in the Resurrection of the dead, is a great commandment and doctrine of the Holy Catholic Church; great and most necessary, though gainsaid by many, yet surely warranted by the truth.  Greeks contradict it, Samaritans disbelieve it, heretics mutilate it; the contradiction is manifold, but the truth is uniform.”  2.  “Now Greeks and Samaritans together argue against us thus.”  All that die decay, some to be spread around the world, by birds, fish, and other wild animals.  “…whence then is the body to be collected?”  “Other[s] … are consumed by fire, and their very ashes scattered by rain or wind; whence is the body to be brought together again?”  3.  To feeble humans the span of earth is great; “but to God, who holds the whole earth in the hollow of His hand,[i] all things are near at hand.  Impute not then weakness to God, from a comparison of your feebleness, but rather dwell on His power.  Does then the sun, a small work of God, by one glance of his beams give warmth to the whole world; does the atmosphere, which God has made, encompass all things in the world; and is God, who is the Creator both of the sun, and of the atmosphere, far off from the world?”  “Can you then [sort] things in your hand, and cannot God separate the things contained in His hand, and restore them to their proper place?”  4.  “But further, attend, I pray, to the very principle of justice … if you are a judge, to the good you award praise, and to the transgressors, punishment.  Is then justice observed by you a mortal man; and with God, the ever changeless King of all, is there no retributive justice?  Nay, to deny it is impious.”  “Unless there is a judgment and a retribution after this world, you charge God with unrighteousness.  Marvel not, however, because of the delay of the judgment; no combatant is crowned or disgraced, till the contest is over; and no president of the games ever crowns men while yet striving, but he waits till all the combatants are finished, that then deciding between them he may dispense the prizes and the chaplets.  Even thus God also, so long as the strife in this world lasts, succors the just but partially, but afterwards He renders to them their rewards fully.”  5.  But if … there is no resurrection of the dead, wherefore do you condemn the robbers of graves?  For if the body perishes, and there is no resurrection … why does the violator of the tomb undergo punishment?  … though you deny it with your lips, there yet abides with you an indestructible instinct of the resurrection.”  6.  “Further, does a tree … cut down blossom again…?”  “Does the grain sown and reaped remain for the threshing floor…?”  “Do shoots of vine or other trees, when … transplanted, come to life and bear fruit…?”  “Shall man, for whose sake all these exist … not rise again?”  Which is easier, to make a new mold or recast an old one?  “Is God then, who created us out of nothing, unable to raise again those who exist and are fallen?”  “Wheat, it may be, or some other kind of grain, is sown; and when the seed has fallen, it dies and rots, and is henceforth useless for food.  But that which has rotted, springs up in verdure; and though small when sown, springs up most beautiful.  … are then the things which were made for us quickened when they die, and do we for whom they were made, not rise again after our death?”  7.  In winter trees and vines are as dead, “but green in spring; and when the season has come, there is restored to them a quickening as it were from a state of death.”  “Flies and bees are often drowned in water, yet after a while revive; and species of dormice, after remaining motionless during the winter, are restored in the summer … and shall He who to irrational and despised creatures grants [resurrection] life supernaturally, not bestow it upon us, for whose sake He made them?  8.  “But the Greeks … say that, even if these creatures are raised, yet they had not utterly moldered away; and they require to see distinctly some creature rise again after complete decay.”  [Yet how reply the Greeks to their own legend of the][ii] “Phoenix.  This bird, as Clement writes … being the only one of its kind, arrives in [Egypt every] … five hundred years … in a notable city … makes itself a coffin of frankincense and myrrh and other spices, and entering into this … dies and molders away.  Then from the decayed flesh of the dead bird a worm is engendered, and this worm when grown large is transformed into a bird … as bees also … [come from] worms, and [birds] from [fluid] eggs … [grow] wings and bones and sinews.”  The Phoenix, “becoming fledged and a full-grown Phoenix … soars up into the air such as it had died, showing forth … resurrection of the dead.”  “Yet [the Phoenix] is irrational … it knows not who is the Only-begotten Son of God.  Has then a resurrection from the dead been given to this irrational creature which knows not its Maker, and to us who ascribe glory to God and keep His commandments, shall there no resurrection be granted?”  9.  “Since the sign of the Phoenix is … uncommon … take … this … every day [proof].  A hundred or two … years ago … where were we?”  “Do you not know how from … elements we are engendered, and … a living man is formed?  And how that weak element being made flesh is changed into strong sinews, and bright eyes, and sensitive nose, and hearing ears, and speaking tongue, and beating heart, and busy hands, and swift feet, and into members of all kinds?  … becomes a shipwright, and a builder, and an architect, and a craftsman of various arts, and a soldier, and a ruler, and a lawgiver, and a king?  Cannot God then, who has made us out of imperfect materials[iii], raise us up when we have fallen into decay?  He who thus [frames] a body out of what is vile, cannot He raise the fallen body again?  And He who fashions that which is not, shall He not raise up that which is and is fallen?”  10.  “Take [another] proof....  The body of the moon vanishes completely, so that no part of it is any more seen, yet it fills again, and is restored to its former state … the moon … suffering eclipse … changed into blood, recovers its luminous body … that you also, … might believe concerning yourself also what you see in respect of the moon.  These … use … as arguments against the Greeks; for with them who receive not what is written fight thou with unwritten weapons, by reasonings only and demonstrations;[iv] for these men know not who Moses is, nor Esaias, nor the Gospels, nor Paul.”  11.  “The Samaritans, who, receiving the Law only, allow not the Prophets.  To them the text just now read from Ezekiel appears of no force, for, as I said, they admit no Prophets; whence then shall we persuade the Samaritans also?”  “Now God says to Moses, I am the God of Abraham, and of Isaac, and of Jacob;[v] this must mean of those who [are still living].  For if Abraham has come to an end, and Isaac and Jacob, then He is the God of those who have no being.”  “Therefore Abraham and Isaac and Jacob must subsist, that God may be the God of those who have being; for He said not, I was their God, but I am.  And that there is a judgment, Abraham shows in saying to the Lord, He who judges all the earth, shall He not execute judgment?[vi]  12.  “But … Samaritans object again, and say that the souls possibly of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob continue, but that their bodies cannot possibly rise again.  Was it then possible that the rod of righteous Moses should become a serpent…?”  “Again, the rod of Aaron … budded, without the scent of waters[vii]….  Did Aaron’s rod rise … and shall not Aaron himself be raised?”  “A woman also was made salt … and shall not flesh be restored to flesh?”  “By what power was Moses’ hand changed, which even within one hour became as snow, and was restored again?  Certainly by God's command.  Was then His command of force then, and has it no force now?”


[i] Isaiah 40:12

[ii] Evidently, St. Cyril and St. Clement both believed that the Phoenix legend was true; or at least they were willing to give its reports the benefit of the doubt.  It is sufficient for the proof only that the Greeks believed this legend.  We, on the other hand, have no evidence to prove that the legend is untrue: still, it is not commonly believed today.

[iii] Note the hint of Greek worldview in that the physical world is imperfect, only the world of forms is perfect.  However, St. Cyril sees this imperfection, not from the perspective of very flawed Greek philosophy, but from the corruption of the fall of man; wherein, the heavenly kingdom is not the creation of perfect imagination; rather, it is a real spiritual realm that parallels the physical.  The spiritual universe of Christianity and the world of forms in Greek philosophy are two entirely different things: the first a tangible reality, the second an imagination.

[iv] Excellent apologetic technique

[v] Jesus Himself provides us with this argument.  Exodus 3:6; Matthew 22:32

[vi] Genesis 18:25; Psalms 96:13; Isaiah 66:16

[vii] Job 14:9