SANCTI AMBROSII, MEDIOLANENSIS EPISCOPI, DE SPIRITU SANCTO LIBRI TRES , AD GRATIANUM AUGUSTUM.

 LIBER PRIMUS.

 CAPUT PRIMUM.

 CAPUT II.

 CAPUT III.

 CAPUT IV.

 CAPUT V.

 CAPUT VI.

 617 CAPUT VII.

 CAPUT VIII.

 CAPUT IX.

 CAPUT X.

 CAPUT XI.

 CAPUT XII.

 CAPUT XIII.

 629 CAPUT XIV.

 CAPUT XV.

 CAPUT XVI.

 LIBER SECUNDUS.

 PROLOGUS.

 CAPUT PRIMUM.

 CAPUT II.

 CAPUT III.

 CAPUT IV.

 640 CAPUT V.

 643 CAPUT VI.

 CAPUT VII.

 CAPUT VIII.

 CAPUT IX.

 CAPUT X.

 656 CAPUT XI.

 CAPUT XII.

 CAPUT XIII.

 LIBER TERTIUS.

 665 CAPUT PRIMUM.

 CAPUT II.

 CAPUT III.

 CAPUT IV.

 CAPUT V.

 CAPUT VI.

 CAPUT VII.

 674 CAPUT VIII.

 CAPUT IX.

 CAPUT X.

 679 CAPUT XI.

 683 CAPUT XII.

 CAPUT XIII.

 CAPUT XIV.

 CAPUT XV.

 688 CAPUT XVI.

 690 CAPUT XVII.

 693 CAPUT XVIII.

 CAPUT XIX.

 CAPUT XX.

 CAPUT XXI.

 CAPUT XXII.

Chapter XIII.

Prophecy was not only from the Father and the Son but also from the Spirit; the authority and operation of the latter on the apostles is signified to be the same as Theirs; and so we are to understand that there is unity in the three points of authority, rule, and bounty; yet need no disadvantage be feared from that participation, since such does not arise in human friendship. Lastly, it is established that this is the inheritance of the apostolic faith from the fact that the apostles are described as having obeyed the Holy Spirit.

143. Take, O sacred Emperor, another strong instance in this question, and one known to you: “In many ways and in divers manners, God spake to the fathers in the prophets.”428    Heb. i. 1. And the Wisdom of God said: “I will send prophets and apostles.”429    S. Luke xi. 49. And “To one is given,” as it is written, “through the Spirit, the word of wisdom; to another, the word of knowledge, according to the same Spirit; to another faith, in the same Spirit; to another, the gift of healings, in the one Spirit; to another, the working of miracles; to another, prophecy.”430    1 Cor. xii. 8, 9, 10. Therefore, according to the Apostle, prophecy is not only through the Father and the Son, but also through the Holy Spirit, and therefore the office is one, and the grace one. So you find that the Spirit also is the author of prophecies.

144. The apostles also said: “It seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us.”431    Acts xv. 28. And when they say, “It seemed good,” they point out not only the Worker of the grace, but also the Author of the carrying out of that which was commanded. For as we read of God: “It pleased God;” so, too, when it is said that, “It seemed good to the Holy Spirit,” one who is master of his own power is portrayed.

145. And how should He not be a master Who speaks what He wills, and commands what He wills, as the Father commands and the Son commands? For as Paul heard the voice saying to him, “I am Jesus, Whom thou persecutest,”432    Acts ix. 5. so, too, the Spirit forbade Paul and Silas to go into Bithynia. And as the Father spake through the prophets, so, too, Agabus says concerning the Spirit: “Thus saith the Holy Spirit, Thus shall the Jews in Jerusalem bind the man, whose is this girdle.”433    Acts xxi. 11. And as Wisdom sent the apostles, saying, “Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel,”434    S. Mark xvi. 15. so, too, the Holy Spirit says: “Separate Me Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have called them.”435    Acts xiii. 2. And so being sent forth by the Holy Spirit, as the Scripture points out farther on, they were distinguished in nothing from the other apostles, as though they were sent in one way by God the Father, in another way by Spirit.

146. Lastly, Paul having been sent by the Spirit, was both a vessel of election on Christ’s part, and himself relates that God wrought in him, saying: “For He that wrought for Peter unto the apostleship of the circumcision, wrought for me also unto the Gentiles.”436    Gal. ii. 8. Since, then, the Same wrought in Paul Who wrought in Peter, it is certainly evident that, since the Spirit wrought in Paul, the Holy Spirit wrought also in Peter. But Peter himself testifies that God the Father wrought in him, as it is stated in the Acts of the Apostles that Peter rose up and said to them: “Men and brethren, ye know that a good while ago God made choice amongst us that the Gentiles should hear the word of the Gospel from my mouth.” See, then, in Peter God wrought the grace of preaching. And who would dare to deny the operation of Christ in him, since he was certainly elected and chosen by Christ, when the Lord said: “Feed My lambs.”437    S. John xxi. 15.

147. The operation, then, of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit is one, unless perchance you, who deny the oneness of the same operation upon the Apostle, think this; that the Father and the Spirit wrought in Peter, in whom the Son had wrought, as if the operation of the Son by no means sufficed for him to the attainment of the grace. And so the strength of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit being as it were joined and brought together, the work was manifold, lest the operation of Christ alone should be too weak to establish Peter.

148. And not only in Peter is there found to be one operation of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, but also in all the apostles the unity of the divine operation, and a certain authority over the dispensations of heaven. For the divine operation works by the power of a command, not in the execution of a ministry; for God, when He works, does not fashion anything by toil or art, but “He spake and they were made.”438    Ps. xxxiii. [xxxii.] 9. He said, “Let there be light, and there was light,”439    Gen. i. 3. for the effecting of the work is comprised in the commandment of God.

149. We can, then, easily find, if we will consider, that this royal power is by the witness of the Scriptures attributed to the Holy Spirit; and it will be made clear that all the apostles were not only disciples of Christ, but also ministers of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. As also the teacher of the Gentiles tells us, when he says: “God hath set some in the Church, first apostles, secondarily prophets, thirdly teachers; then miracles, the gift of healings, helps, governments, divers kinds of tongues.”440    1 Cor. xii. 28.

150. See, God set apostles, and set prophets and teachers, gave the gift of healings, which you find above to be given by the Holy Spirit; gave divers kinds of tongues. But yet all are not apostles, all are not prophets, all are not teachers. Not all, says he, have the gift of healings, nor do all, says he, speak with tongues.441    1 Cor. xii. 30. For the whole of the divine gifts cannot exist in each several man; each, according to his capacity, receives that which he either desires or deserves. But the power of the Trinity, which is lavish of all graces, is not like this weakness.

151. Lastly, God set apostles. Those whom God set in the Church, Christ chose and ordained to be apostles, and sent them into the world, saying: “Go ye into all the world, and preach the Gospel to the whole creation. He that shall believe and be baptized shall be saved, but he that believeth not shall be damned. And these signs shall follow them that believe. In My Name shall they cast out devils, they shall speak with new tongues, they shall take up serpents, and if they shall drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them, they shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover.”442    S. Mark xvi. 15 ff. You see the Father and Christ also set teachers in the Churches; and as the Father gives the gift of healings, so, too, does the Son give; as the Father gives the gift of tongues, so, too, has the Son also granted it.

152. In like manner we have heard also above concerning the Holy Spirit, that He too grants the same kinds of graces. For it is said: “To one is given through the Spirit the gift of healings, to another divers kinds of tongues, to another prophecy.”443    1 Cor. xii. 8, 9. So, then, the Spirit gives the same gifts as the Father, and the Son also gives them. Let us now learn more expressly what we have touched upon above, that the Holy Spirit entrusts the same office as the Father and the Son, and appoints the same persons; since Paul said: “Take heed to yourselves, and to all the flock in the which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers to rule the Church of God.”444    Acts xx. 28.

153. There is, then, unity of authority, unity of appointment, unity of giving. For if you separate appointment and power, what cause was there [for maintaining] that those whom Christ appointed as apostles, God the Father appointed, and the Holy Spirit appointed? unless, perhaps, as if sharing a possession or a right, They, like men, were afraid of legal prejudice, and therefore the operation was divided, and the authority distributed.

154. These things are narrow and paltry, even between men, who for the most part, although they do not agree in action, yet agree in will. So that a certain person being asked what a friend is, answered, “A second self.” If, then, a man so defined a friend as to say, he was a second self, that is to say, through a oneness of love and good-will, how much more ought we to esteem the oneness of Majesty, in the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, when by the same operation and divine power, either the unity, or certainly that which is more, the ταυτότης, as it is called in Greek, is expressed, for ταύτο signifies “the same,” so that the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit have the same; so that to have the same will and the same power does not arise from the affection of the will, but inheres in the substance of the Trinity.

155. This is the inheritance of apostolic faith and devotion, which one may observe also in the Acts of the Apostles. Therefore Paul and Barnabas obeyed the commands of the Holy Spirit. And all the apostles obeyed, and forthwith ordained those whom the Spirit had ordered to be separated: “Separate Me,” said He, “Barnabas and Saul.”445    Acts xiii. 2. Do you see the authority of Him Who commands? Consider the merit of those who obey.

156. Paul believed, and because he believed he cast off the zeal of a persecutor, and gained a crown of righteousness. He believed who used to make havoc of the Churches; but being converted to the faith, he preached in the Spirit that which the Spirit commanded.446    Acts ix. 20. The Spirit anointed His champion, and having shaken off the dust of unbelief, presented him as an insuperable conqueror of the unbelievers to various assemblies of the ungodly, and trained him by many sufferings for the prize of his high calling in Christ Jesus.

157. Barnabas also believed, and obeyed because he believed. Therefore, being chosen by the authority of the Holy Spirit, Which came on him abundantly, as a special sign of his merits, he was not unworthy of so great a fellowship. For one grace shone in these whom one Spirit had chosen.

158. Nor was Paul inferior to Peter, though the latter was the foundation of the Church, and the former a wise builder knowing how to make firm the footsteps of the nations who believed; Paul was not, I say, unworthy of the fellowship of the apostles, but is easily comparable with the first, and second to none. For he who knows not that he is inferior makes himself equal.

CAPUT XIII.

Prophetiam fuisse non solum a Patre ac Filio, sed etiam a Spiritu: hujus quoque idem cum eis imperium atque operationem in apostolos significari; et inde in tribus intelligendam imperii, constitutionis largitatisque unitatem: non timendum tamen ex eo consortio praejudicium; cum illud nec in humana amicitia locum habeat. Denique hanc esse apostolicae fidei haereditatem hinc confirmatur, 0773C quod apostoli scribantur Spiritui sancto obtemperasse.

143. Accipe aliud, sancte Imperator, in causa validum exemplum et tibi notum. Multifariam, inquit, et multis modis etiam Deus locutus est patribus in prophetis (Heb. I, 1). Et Sapientia Dei dixit: Mittam prophetas et apostolos. Et, alii datur, sicut scriptum est, per Spiritum sermo sapientiae, alii sermo scientiae secundum eumdem Spiritum, alii fides in eodem Spiritu, alii gratia curationum in uno Spiritu, alii operatio virtutum, alii prophetia (Luc. XI, 49). Ergo secundum Apostolum non solum per Patrem et Filium, sed etiam per Spiritum sanctum prophetia; et ideo unum munus, una est gratia. Habes ergo quia etiam Spiritus auctor est prophetiarum.

144. Apostoli quoque dixerunt: Visum est Spiritui 0773D sancto et nobis (Act. XV, 28). Et cum dicunt, visum, non solum operatorem gratiae, sed etiam auctorem imperatae exsecutionis ostendunt. Sicut enim de Deo legimus: Placuit Deo; ita etiam cum dicitur quia visum est Spiritui sancto, arbiter suae exprimitur potestatis.

145. Et quomodo non arbiter, qui ea quae vult, 0774A loquitur, quae vult, mandat; sicut mandat Pater, mandat et Filius? Sicut enim audivit Paulus 662 vocem dicentem sibi: Ego sum, inquit, Jesus, quem tu persequeris (Act. XVI, 7); ita etiam Spiritus Paulum et Silam vetuit ire in Bithyniam. Et sicut Pater locutus est per prophetas, ita etiam de Spiritu Agabus dicit: Haec dicit Spiritus sanctus: Virum cujus est zona haec, sic alligabunt eum in Hierusalem (Act. XXI, 11). Et sicut misit Sapientia apostolos, dicens: Ite in orbem universum, et praedicate Evangelium (Marc. XVI, 15): sic et Spiritus sanctus dicit: Separate mihi Paulum et Barnabam in opus, quo vocavi eos (Act. XIII, 2). Itaque praemissi a Spiritu sancto, quod infra Scriptura indicat, nullam discretionem inter caeteros habuerunt apostolos, quasi aliter a 0774B Patre Deo, aliter a Spiritu mitterentur (Ibid., 4).

146. Denique cum Paulus missus esset a Spiritu, et vas electionis erat Christi, et Deum in se operatum esse commemorat, dicens: Qui enim operatus est Petro in apostolatum circumcisionis, operatus est et mihi ad gentes (Galat. II, 8). Cum igitur idem si operatus in Paulo, qui est operatus in Petro, hoc utique ostenditur cum Spiritus sit operatus in Paulo, quod etiam in Petro Spiritus sanctus operatus sit. Sed et Deum Patrem in se operatum Petrus ipse testatur, sicut est in Actibus apostolorum, quia surgens Petrus dixit ad eos: Viri fratres, vos scitis quia a diebus antiquis in nobis Deus elegit ex ore meo audire nationes verbum Evangelii (Act. XV, 7). Ecce igitur in Petro Deus gratiam praedicationis operatus 0774C est. In quo utique cum per Christum electus sit et assumptus, operationem Christi quis audeat diffiteri, cum ipse Dominus dicat: Pasce agniculos meos (Joan. XXI, 15)?

147. Una igitur operatio Patris et Filii et Spiritus sancti: nisi forte hoc putetis, qui negatis ejusdem erga apostolos operis unitatem, ideo operatum Patrem, ideo operatum Spiritum in Petro, in quo Filius operatus fuerat, quasi ei Filii operatio minime redundaret ad gratiam. Et ideo velut adjunctis atque collatis viribus Patris et Filii et Spiritus sancti operationem fuisse multiplicem, ne ad confirmandum Petrum Christi solius operatio vacillaret.

148. Nec solum una operatio in Petro Patris et Filii et Spiritus sancti invenitur, sed etiam in omnibus 0774D apostolis divinae operationis unitas revelatur, et quaedam supernae constitutionis auctoritas. Operatio enim divina habet imperium, non habet ministerium; neque enim cum operatur Deus, aut labore aliquid extundit, aut arte: sed dixit, et facta sunt (Psal. XXXII, 9). Dixit, Fiat lux, et facta est lux (Gen. I, 3); in praecepto enim Dei operationis effectus est.

0775A 149. Hanc igitur regalem quamdam etiam sancto Spiritui potestatem Scripturarum testificatione delatam, si velimus advertere, facile possumus reperire; omnesque apostolos non solum Christi fuisse discipulos revelabitur, sed etiam Patris et Filii et Spiritus sancti ministros. Sicut etiam Doctor gentium docet dicens: Quosdam quidem posuit Deus in Ecclesia, primo apostolos, secundo prophetas, tertio doctores: deinde 663 virtutes, gratiam curationem, opitulationes, gubernationes, genera linguarum (I Cor. XII, 28).

150. Ecce Deus posuit apostolos, posuit prophetas atque doctores, dedit curationum gratiam, quam supra habes dari per Spiritum sanctum, dedit genera linguarum. Sed tamen non omnes apostoli, non 0775B omnes prophetae, non omnes doctores. Non omnes, inquit (Ibid., 10), habent gratiam curationum, neque omnes, inquit, linguis loquuntur. In singulis enim hominibus universa dona divina esse non possunt: pro captu unusquisque id accipit, quod aut desiderat, aut meretur. Sed non hujus infirmitatis similis potentia Trinitatis, quae omnium munifica gratiarum est.

151. Denique posuit apostolos Deus. Hos quos Deus posuit in Ecclesia, Christus elegit, et apostolos ordinavit, et in orbem dixerit dicens: Ite in orbem universum, et praedicate Evangelium universae creaturae. Qui crediderit, et baptizatus fuerit, hic salvus erit: qui vero non crediderit, damnabitur. Signa autem credentes ista sequentur: in nomine meo daemonia ejicient, 0775C linguis loquentur novis, serpentes tollent; et si mortiferum quid biberint, non eis nocebit: super aegros manus imponent, et bene habebunt (Marc. XVI, 15 et seq.). Ecce doctores posuit Pater, posuit etiam Christus in Ecclesiis; et sicut Pater dat gratiam curationum, ita dat et Filius; sicut Pater dat dona linguarum, ita largitus est et Filius.

152. Similiter de sancto Spiritu supra accepimus, quia eadem gratiarum genera largiatur. Datur enim, inquit, per Spiritum alii gratia curationum, alii genera linguarum, alii prophetia (I Cor. 12, 9, 10). Ergo eadem dat Spiritus, quae dat Pater, dat etiam Filius. Accipiamus nunc expressius, quod superius praelibavimus, quia idem quod Pater et Filius, etiam Spiritus sanctus mandet officium, eosdemque constituat; 0775D dixit enim Paulus: Attendite vobis, et omni gregi, in quo posuit vos Spiritus sanctus episcopos regere Ecclesiam Dei (Act. XX, 28).

153. Unitas igitur imperii, unitas constitutionis, 0776A unitas largitatis. Nam si constitutionem separes et potestatem, quae erat causa ut quos posuerat apostolos Christus, poneret Deus Pater, poneret et Spiritus sanctus; nisi forte ut homines tamquam in consortio possessionis aut juris praejudicium verebantur? Et ideo dividebatur 664 operatio, distribuebatur imperium.

154. Haec inter ipsos homines angusta sunt et minuta, qui plerumque tamen etiamsi operatione non congruunt, congruunt voluntate. Unde quidam interrogatus quid amicus esset: Alter, inquit, ego. Si ergo homo amicum ita definivit, ut alterum se esse diceret, per unitatem videlicet amoris et gratiae; quanto magis in Patre et Filio et Spiritu sancto unitatem majestatis aestimare debemus, cum per 0776B eamdem operationem ac divinitatem vel unitas, vel certe id quod amplius est, ταυτότης sicut Graece dicitur, exprimatur? ταυτὸ enim idem significat; eo quod idem habeat et Pater et Filius et Spiritus sanctus; ut idem velle, et idem posse non ex affectione sit voluntatis, sed in substantia Trinitatis.

155. Haec est apostolicae fidei et devotionis haereditas, quam licet et ex ipsorum apostolorum considerare Actibus. Paruerunt ergo Paulus et Barnabas sancti Spiritus imperatis. Paruerunt et omnes apostoli, statimque eos quos separari jusserat Spiritus, ordinaverunt: Separate, inquit, mihi Paulum et Barnabam (Act. XIII, 4). Videtis jubentis imperium? Spectate merita servientium?

156. Credidit Paulus; et quia credidit, studia persecutoris 0776C abjecit, coronam justitiae reportavit. Credidit ille qui Ecclesias devastabat: sed conversus ad fidem, praedicabat in Spiritu, quod Spiritus imperabat. Ungebat athletam suum Spiritus, et pulvere impietatis excusso, debellatorem infidelium ineluctabilem variis impiorum congressionibus offerebat, atque ad bravium supernae vocationis in Christo Jesu diversis passionibus erudiebat (Act. IX, 20 et seq.).

157. Barnabas quoque credidit, et quia credidit, paruit. Itaque sancti Spiritus electus imperio, quod ei ad omne redundat insigne meritorum, non fuit tanto indignus collegio. Una enim gratia fulgebat in his, quos Spiritus unus elegerat.

158. Nec Paulus inferior Petro, quamvis ille Ecclesiae fundamentum, et hic sapiens architectus 0776D sciens vestigia credentium fundare populorum: nec Paulus, inquam, indignus apostolorum collegio, cum primo quoque facile conferendus, et nulli secundus. Nam qui se imparem nescit, facit aequalem.