49. It is clearly shewn why the Word, though He was made Flesh, was nevertheless not transformed into Flesh. Though these kinds of suffering affect the infirmity of the flesh, yet God the Word when made Flesh could not change under suffering. Suffering and change are not identical. Suffering of every kind causes all flesh to change through sensitiveness and endurance of pain. But the Word that was made Flesh, although He made Himself subject to suffering, was nevertheless unchanged by the liability to suffer. For He was able to suffer, and yet the Word was not possible. Possibility denotes a nature that is weak; but suffering in itself is the endurance of pains inflicted, and since the Godhead is immutable and yet the Word was made Flesh, such pains found in Him a material which they could affect though the Person of the Word had no infirmity or possibility. And so when He suffered His Nature remained immutable because like His Father, His Person is of an impassible essence, though it is born29 Passibility may not be affirmed of the divine nature of Christ which is incapable of any change or limitation within itself. At the same time the Word may be said to have suffered inasmuch as the suffering affected the flesh which He assumed. This subject was afterwards, carefully developed by St. John of Damascus περὶ ὀρθοδόξου πίστεως, III. 4. In c. 79, Hilary criticises the Arian statement that the Son “jointly suffered,” a word which meant that the divine nature of the Son shared in the sufferings which were endured by His humanity. This phrase, like the statement of Arius that the Logos was “capable of change” implied that the Son only possessed a secondary divinity..
XIII. “If any man says Let us make man30 Gen. i. 26.was not spoken by the Father to the Son, but by God to Himself: let him be anathema.
XIV. “If any man says that the Son did not appear to Abraham31 Ib. xviii. 1., but the Unborn God, or a part of Him: let him be anathema.
XV. “If any man says that the Son did not wrestle with Jacob as a man32 Ib. xxxii. 26., but the Unborn God, or a part of Him: let him be anathema.
XVI. “If any man does not understand The Lord rained from the Lord33 Ib. xix. 24. to be spoken of the Father and the Son, but says that the Father rained from Himself: let him be anathema. For the Lord the Son rained from the Lord the Father.”
49. Passibilitas et passio quid. Filium patribus visum esse.---Absolute ostenditur, cur Verbum, licet caro factum sit, non tamen translatum fuerit in carnem. Cum enim haec passionum genera infirmitatem carnis afficiant, Deus tamen Verbum caro factus non potuit a se demutabilis esse patiendo. Non enim id ipsum est, pati et demutari: quia omnem carnem passio cujusque generis demutet sensu, dolore, tolerantia. Verbum autem, quod caro factum est, licet se passioni subdiderit; 492 non tamen demutatum 0516C est passibilitate patiendi. Nam pati potuit, et passibile esse non potuit: quia passibilitas naturae infirmis significatio est; passio autem est eorum quae sint illata perpessio: quae quia indemutabilis Deus est, cum tamen Verbum caro factum sit, habuerunt in eo passionis materiam sine passibilitatis infirmitate. 0517A Manet itaque indemutabilis etiam in passione natura; quia auctori suo indifferens ex impassibilis essentiae nata substantia est.
XIII. «Si quis, Faciamus hominem (Gen. I, 26), non Patrem ad Filium dixisse, sed ipsum ad semetipsum dicat Deum locutum: anathema sit.»
XIV. «Si quis Filium non dicat Abrahae visum (Gen. XVII, 1), sed Deum innascibilem vel partem ejus: anathema sit.»
XV. «Si quis cum Jacob non Filium, quasi hominem colluctatum (Gen. XXXII, 26), sed Deum innascibilem vel partem ejus dicat: anathema sit.»
XVI. «Si quis, Pluit Dominus a Domino (Gen. XIX, 4), non de Filio et Patre intelligat, sed ipsum a se pluisse dicat: anathema sit. Pluit enim Dominus Filius 0517B a Domino Patre.»