52. Therefore, in the discourse we have expounded above, He had borne witness to the unity of His nature with the Father’s: He that hath seen Me, hath seen the Father also542 St. John xiv. 9.: The Father is in Me, and I in the Father543 Ib. x. 38: cf. xiv. 10, 11. These two passages perfectly agree, since Both Persons are of equal nature; to behold the Son is the same as to behold the Father; that the One abides in the One shows that They are inseparable. And, lest they should misunderstand Him, as though when they beheld His body, they beheld the Father in Him, He had added, Believe Me, that I am in the Father and the Father in Me: or else believe Me for the very works’ sake544 Ib. xiv. 11.. His power belonged to His nature, and His working was the exercise of that power; in the exercise of that power, then, they might recognise in Him the unity with the Father’s nature. In proportion as any one recognised Him to be God in the power of His nature, he would come to know God the Father, present in that mighty nature. The Son, Who is equal with the Father, shewed by His works that the Father could be seen in Him: in order that we, perceiving in the Son a nature like the Father’s in its power, might know that in Father and Son there is no distinction of nature.
52. Pater in Filio visus.---Et idcirco in hoc eodem superiore sermone, naturae sibi cum Patre unitatem contestatus dixerat: Qui me vidit, vidit et Patrem (Joan. XIV, 9); et, Pater in me, et ego in Patre (Joan. X, 38). Quae utique differentiam non habent ex aequalitate naturae; cum contemplatio Filii visum compenset et Patrem, et unus in uno manens unum non discernat ab uno. Ac ne per corporalem contemplationem referre ex se paternae contemplationis 0323B visum existimaretur, subjecerat: Credite mihi, quoniam ego in Patre, et Pater in me: sin autem, vel propter opera credite (Joan. XIV, 11 et 12): ut cum virtus naturae res esset, et operatio ipsa virtutis sit potestas; per virtutis potestatem, naturae in se paternae unitas nosceretur: cum in quantum se quisquam Deum cognovisset in virtute naturae, in tantum Deum Patrem cognosceret in potestate naturae: et cum tantus, quantus est Pater, Filius videndum in se Patrem praestaret in gestis, indifferens per id Pater a Filio nosceretur, per intelligentiam indifferentis pro potestate naturae.