22. It is the Angel of God Who appeared in the fire from the bush; and it is God Who spoke from the bush amid the fire. He is manifested as Angel; that is His office, not His nature. The name which expresses His nature is given you as God; for the Angel of God is God. But perhaps He is not true God. Is the God of Abraham, then, the God of Isaac, the God of Jacob, not true God? For the Angel Who speaks from the bush is their God eternally. And, lest you insinuate that the name is His only by adoption, it is the absolute God Who speaks to Moses. These are His words:—And the Lord said unto Moses, I Am that I Am; and He said, Thus shalt thou say unto the children of Israel, He that is hath sent me unto you247 Exod. iii. 14.. God’s discourse began as the speech of the Angel, in order to reveal the mystery of human salvation in the Son. Next He appears as the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, that we may know the name which is His by nature. Finally it is the God that is Who sends Moses to Israel, that we may have full assurance that in the absolute sense He is God.
22. Filium de rubo locutum, eumque verum esse Deum.---Angelus Dei est, qui in igne de rubo apparuit: et de rubo in igne Deus loquitur. Habes dispensationem in angelo, quia in angelo officium est, non natura: habes in naturae nomine Deum, quia Angelus Dei Deus est. Sed forte non verus est. Numquid 0144A non verus est Deus Abrahae, et Deus Isaac, et Deus Jacob? Horum enim angelus de rubo loquens Deus in aeternum est. Et ne adoptivi nominis fureris occasionem, loquitur ad Moysen Deus ille, qui est. Ita enim scriptum est: Dixit autem Dominus ad Moysen: Ego sum qui sum. Et dixit: Sic dices filiis Israel: Qui est, misit me ad vos (Exodi III, 14). Coeptus ab angelo Dei sermo est; ut sacramentum intelligatur humanae salutis in Filio: idem Deus Abrahae, et Deus Isaac, et Deus Jacob est; ut ei naturae suae nomen sit: mittit deinde ad Israel Deus, qui est; ut vere intelligeretur esse quod Deus est.