#101 Epistle to Diognetus - Part 3
From The Ante-Nicene Fathers, The Epistle to Diognetus
CHAPTER 9. — WHY THE SON WAS SENT SO LATE
While that earlier age lasted, God let us be carried along by our own impulses,
drawn by pleasure and various lusts. Not that He delighted in our sins — He
merely endured them. Not that He approved that age of wickedness, but that He
was forming in us a mind aware of its own unrighteousness, so that, having been
convinced of our unworthiness, we might now receive life as a gift through His
kindness. Having seen plainly that we could not enter the kingdom of God by
ourselves, we might enter it by the power of God (Romans 3:21–26; Romans 5:20;
Galatians 4:4; Acts 17:30).
When our wickedness had reached its full height, and its wages — punishment and
death — were clearly hanging over us, the time came that God had appointed to
show His own kindness and power. Then His one great love did not look on us with
hatred, did not push us away, did not hold our sins against us. He bore with us
in great patience. He took our iniquities upon Himself. He gave His own Son as a
ransom for us — the holy One for the lawless, the blameless One for the wicked,
the righteous One for the unrighteous, the incorruptible One for the
corruptible, the immortal One for the mortal.
For what else could forgive our sins but His righteousness? In whom else could
the wicked and ungodly be justified, but the only Son of God?
O sweet exchange! O unsearchable working! O blessings beyond all expectation!
That the wickedness of many should be hidden in one Righteous One, and that the
righteousness of One should justify many sinners.
Having shown us in the former time that our nature could not reach life by its
own strength, and now having revealed the Savior who can save even what seemed
unsaveable, by these two facts together He has led us to trust His kindness — to
count Him our Nourisher, Father, Teacher, Counsellor, Healer, Wisdom, Light,
Honor, Glory, Power, and Life — and not to be anxious about food and clothing
(Matthew 6:25).
CHAPTER 10. — THE BLESSINGS THAT WILL FLOW FROM FAITH
If you also desire this faith, you will first receive the knowledge of the
Father. For God has loved mankind. He made the world for our sake and subjected
to us all that is in it. He gave us reason and understanding. He alone allowed
us to look upward to Him. He formed us in His own image. He sent His only Son to
us. He has promised a kingdom in heaven, and will give it to those who love Him.
When you have come to this knowledge, what joy will fill you! How will you love
the One who has so loved you first! And if you love Him, you will be an imitator
of His kindness.
Do not be surprised that a man can imitate God. He can, if he is willing.
Imitation of God is not in ruling neighbors, or seeking power over the weaker,
or being rich, or pushing around the poor. None of that is what makes God great.
Rather: he who takes up his neighbor's burden; who, being stronger, willingly
helps the weaker; who freely shares with the needy what he himself has received
from God — that man is an imitator of God, and to those who receive his help,
he becomes a kind of god.
Then, while still on earth, you will see that God truly rules the universe from
the heavens. Then you will begin to speak the mysteries of God. Then you will
love and admire those who suffer punishment rather than deny God. Then you will
condemn the deceit and error of the world. You will know what it is to truly
live in heaven. You will despise what is here called death, and fear what is
truly death — the eternal fire reserved for those condemned to it. And you
will admire those who endure the brief fire here for righteousness' sake, and
count them blessed when you understand the nature of that other fire.
CHAPTER 11. — THESE THINGS ARE WORTHY TO BE KNOWN AND BELIEVED
I am not speaking of things foreign to me, nor pursuing anything contrary to
right reason. Having been a disciple of the Apostles, I am become a teacher of
the Gentiles. What was handed down to me, I hand on to those who prove
themselves worthy disciples of the truth.
For who, having been rightly taught and made a child of the loving Word, would
not seek to know exactly the things the Word has openly shown to His disciples?
The Word, manifested, revealed these things plainly — not understood by
unbelievers, but spoken to disciples whom He counted faithful, and who came to
know the mysteries of the Father.
For this reason He sent the Word: to be made manifest to the world. Despised by
the people of the Jews, when preached by the Apostles He was believed on by the
Gentiles (1 Timothy 3:16). This is He who was from the beginning, who appeared
as new and was found ancient, and who is ever born afresh in the hearts of the
saints. This is He who, being from everlasting, is today called the Son. Through
Him the Church is enriched, and grace, spreading wide, increases in the saints —
giving understanding, opening mysteries, declaring times, rejoicing over the
faithful, granting gifts to those who seek. Through Him the limits of faith are
not broken, nor the boundaries set by the fathers passed over.
Then the fear of the Law is sung, the grace of the Prophets is recognized, the
faith of the Gospels is established, the tradition of the Apostles is preserved,
and the grace of the Church rejoices. If you do not grieve this grace, you will
come to know the things the Word teaches — through whom He wills, when He
pleases. For whatever the Word, by His will, prompts us to say, we share with
you out of love for the truths revealed to us.
CHAPTER 12. — THE IMPORTANCE OF KNOWLEDGE TO TRUE SPIRITUAL LIFE
When you have read these things and listened carefully, you will know what God
gives to those who rightly love Him: you yourselves become a paradise of
delight, bearing within you a tree heavy with every kind of fruit, adorned and
flourishing.
For in this place — in paradise — were planted both the tree of knowledge and
the tree of life. It is not the tree of knowledge that destroys; it was
disobedience that destroyed. The Scripture has meaning when it tells how God
planted the tree of life in the middle of paradise: He was revealing through
knowledge the path to life. The first humans did not use this knowledge rightly,
and through the deceit of the serpent were stripped naked.
For neither can life exist without knowledge, nor is knowledge safe without
life. That is why the two were planted close together. The Apostle saw this, and
condemning the kind of knowledge that influences life apart from sound doctrine,
said: "Knowledge puffs up, but love builds up" (1 Corinthians 8:1). The man
who imagines he knows something without the true knowledge that life itself
confirms knows nothing; he is deceived by the serpent, because he does not love
life. But he who joins knowledge with reverence and seeks life, plants in hope
and looks for fruit.
Let your heart be your wisdom, and let your life be true knowledge inwardly
received. Bearing this tree and showing its fruit, you will always reap what God
desires — what the serpent cannot reach and deceit cannot approach. Eve1 is
no longer corrupted, but is trusted as a virgin. Salvation is shown forth, the
Apostles are filled with understanding, the Lord's Passover advances
(Revelation 5:9; 19:7), the choirs are gathered and set in order (1 Peter
5:3), and the Word rejoices in teaching the saints — by whom the Father is
glorified.
To Him be glory forever. Amen.
1
Eve in the above context symbolizes humanity or the church.