13. Hereby is excluded the assertion of those who wish to represent the relationship of Father and Son as a matter of names, inasmuch as every image is similar in species to that of which it is an image. For no one is himself his own image, but it is necessary that the image should demonstrate him of whom it is an image. So an image is the figured and indistinguishable likeness of one thing equated with another. Therefore the Father is, and the Son is, because the Son is the image of the Father: and he who is an image, if he is to be truly an image, must have in himself his original’s species, nature and essence in virtue of the fact that he is an image.
II. “And if any one hearing the Son say, As the Father hath life in Himself, so also hath He given to the Son to have life in Himself8 John v. 26., shall say that He who has received life from the Father, and who also declares, I live by the Father9 Ib. vi. 57., is the same as He who gave life: let him be anathema.”
13. Item alius est, ut accipiens a Patre vitam.---Exclusa est assertio volentium nominibus tantum Patrem et Filium praedicare; cum quando imago omnis, ejus ad quem coimaginetur species indifferens sit. Neque enim ipse sibi quisquam imago est; sed eum, cujus imago est, necesse est ut imago demonstret. Imago itaque est rei ad rem coaequandae imaginata et indiscreta similitudo. Est ergo Pater, est et Filius: quia imago Patris est Filius; et qui imago est, ut rei imago sit, speciem necesse est et naturam 0490C et essentiam, secundum quod imago est, in se habeat auctoris.
0491A II.«Et si quis audiens Filium dicentem, Sicut enim Pater habet vitam in semetipso, sic et Filio dedit vitam habere in semetipso (Joan. V, 26), eumdem dicat, qui accepit a Patre vitam, qui confitetur et hoc idem, Ego vivo propter Patrem (Joan. VI, 57), quod et illum qui dederit: anathema sit.»