SANCTI HILARII PICTAVENSIS EPISCOPI DE TRINITATE LIBRI DUODECIM.
14. Christi fides et mortis metum et vitae tollit taedium. 0036A
15. Haereticorum ingenium. ---Sed inter haec emerserunt 0036B supple,
36. Liber XII quae de Spiritu sancto confitenda sunt aperit. 0048C
28. Christus gestis Deum egit. ---Par etiam reliquae 0069A
7. Vox HOMOUSION qua necessitate suscepta. 0100C
10. Filii honor nil detrahit Patri. ---Dicturi autem 0103A
19. Jacob in lucta Deum vidit, non oculis corporis 0141B sed fidei. 0141C 0142A
8. Quid jam sibi tractandum proponat Hilarius. --- 0162A 0162B
19. Quid Scripturis de Deo edoctus sit Hilarius. --- 0171B 0171C 0172A al.
4. Quod natus homo Deus maneat, sensus jam non 0283B refugit. 0283C 0284A
262 6. Alia sunt dicta Christi nondum nati, alia 0285A nati et morituri, alia aeterni. 0285B
37. Unitas Patris et Filii non humano more cogitanda. 0308C Filii nativitas. 0309A
52. Fides vera haereticae adversa. ---Sed inter 0384B 0384C
10. Dictum est EX UTERO ad verae nativitatis ostensionem. 0439C 0440A
21. Filius etsi natus, semper tamen est, quia de 0446A Patre qui semper est. 0446B 0446C
27. De nato ante tempora dici nequit, ANTE QUAM NATUS EST, nec 0450B
32. Semper natus, semper esse animo sentitur. --- 0452C 0453A
40. Mundum Deus ab aeterno simul ac semet praeparavit. 0458B 0458C 0459A
55. Spiritus sanctus non est creatura. ---Et mihi quidem 0469A 0469B
74. So the nature of Christ needed no change, or question, or answer, that it should advance from ignorance to knowledge, or ask of One Who had continued in silence, and wait to receive His answer: but, abiding perfectly in mysterious unity with Him, it received of God its whole being as it derived from Him its origin. And, further, it received all that belonged to the whole being of God, namely, His knowledge and His will. What the Father knows, the Son does not learn by question and answer; what the Father wills, the Son does not will by command. Since all that the Father has, is His, it is the property of His nature to will and know, exactly as the Father wills and knows. But to prove His birth He often expounds the doctrine of His Person, as when He says, I came not to do Mine own will, but the will of Him that sent Me.583 St. John vi. 38. Hilary means that by the mention of two wills, our Lord teaches the personal distinction of the Father and the Son: cf. cc. 49, 50. He does the Father’s will, not His own, and by the will of Him that sent Me, He means His Father. But that He Himself wills the same, is unmistakeably declared in the words, Father, those whom Thou hast given Me, I will, that, where I am, they also may be with Me584 St. John xvii. 24.. The Father wills that we should be with Christ, in Whom, according to the Apostle, He chose us before the foundation of the world585 Eph. i. 4., and the Son wills the same, namely that we should be with Him. His will is, therefore, the same in nature as the Father’s will, though to make plain the fact of the birth it is distinguished from the Father’s.
74. Cui voluntas, adeoque scientia, cum Patre eadem.---Haec igitur natura non eguit vel demutatione, vel interrogatione, vel allocutione, ut post ignorantiam sciat, post silentium interroget, post interrogationem audiat: sed perfecta in sacramento unitatis suae manens, ut habuit de Deo nativitatem, ita habuit et universitatem. Universitatem autem habens, non etiam non quae universitatis sunt tenuit, scientiam scilicet, aut voluntatem: ne quod scit Pater, per interrogationem 316 Filius sciret; 0340C vel quod vult Pater, per significationem Filius vellet. Sed cum omnia, quae Patris sunt, sua essent; in ea fuit proprietate naturae, ne aliud aliquid, quam Pater, aut vellet, aut sciret. Ad demonstrationem 0341A vero nativitatis plerumque demonstratio est adhibita personae, cum dicitur: Non veni voluntatem meam facere, sed voluntatem ejus qui me misit (Joan. VI, 38). Patris voluntatem, non suam facit: dum per voluntatem ejus, qui se misit, significat et Patrem. Quod autem id ipsum velit, non ambigue ostendit dicens: Pater, quos mihi dedisti, volo ut ubi ego sum, et illi sint mecum (Joan. XVII, 24). Cum ergo Pater velit nos cum Christo esse, in quo secundum Apostolum elegit nos ante constitutionem mundi, et ipsum illud Filius velit, scilicet esse nos secum (Ephes. I, 4); voluntas ad naturam eadem est, quae ad nativitatis significationem distinguitur in voluntate.