57. Though we condemn a plurality of gods and declare that God is only one, we cannot deny that the Son of God is God. Nay, the true character of His nature causes the name that is denied to a plurality to be the privilege of His essence. The words, Beside Me there is no God, cannot rob the Son of His divinity: because beside Him who is of God there is no other God. And these words of God the Father cannot annul the divinity of Him who was born of Himself with an essence in no way different from His own nature. The Jews interpret this passage as proving the bare unity of God, because they are ignorant of the Only-begotten God. But we, while we deny that there are two Gods, abhor the idea of a diversity of natural essence in the Father and the Son. The words, Beside Me there is no God, take away an impious belief in false gods. In confessing that God is One, and also saying that the Son is God, our use of the same name affirms that there is no difference of substance between the two Persons.
XXIV. “If any man says that the Son was made by the will of God, like any object in creation: let him be anathema.”
57. Illud, non est Deus praeter me, Filium non negat Deum.---Deorum numerositate damnata, et Deo tantum uno praedicato, negari Deus filius Dei non potest. Verum naturae istud praestat genuina proprietas, ut nomen, quod negatur ad numerum, debeatur essentiae; et id, quod non est Deus praeter me, non possit Filio auferre quod Deus est: quia Deus alius, 0520B praeter quam qui est ex Deo, nullus est. Et per hanc vocem Dei patris non potest non Deus esse, qui ex se indifferenti ad naturam suam est natus essentia. Quod idcirco Judaei ad unionem Dei referunt, quia unigenitum Deum nesciunt. Sed nos cum duos deos negamus, diversitatem in Patre et Filio naturalis abominamur essentiae: quia id, quod non est Deus praeter me, impiam de falsis diis perimit opinionem. Cum vero unum Deum confitentes, Filium quoque Deum dicimus; nihil diversum per substantiam in utroque sub uno nomine praedicamus.
XXIV. «Si quis voluntate Dei tamquam unum aliquid de creatura Filium factum dicat: anathema sit.»