Emmanuel Boston's Reviews > On the Incarnation
On the Incarnation
by Athanasius of Alexandria, C.S. Lewis , Sister Penelope Lawson
by Athanasius of Alexandria, C.S. Lewis , Sister Penelope Lawson
Emmanuel Boston's review
bookshelves: gospelology, of-the-centuries, soteriology
Sep 13, 2013
bookshelves: gospelology, of-the-centuries, soteriology
Read from September 13 to 29, 2013
"And, in a word, the achievements of the Saviour, resulting from his becoming man are of such kind and number, that if one should wish to enumerate them, he may be compared to men who gaze at the expanse of the sea and wish to count its waves. For as one cannot take in the whole of the waves with his eyes, for those which are coming on baffle the sense of him that attempts it; so for him that would take in all the achievements of Christ in the body, it is impossible to take in the whole, even by reckoning them up, as those which go beyond his thought are more than those he thinks he has taken in."
"Let this, then, Christ-loving man, be our offering to you, just for a rudimentary sketch and outline, in a short compass, of the faith of Christ and of his divine appearing to usward. But you, taking occasion by this, if you light upon the text of the Scriptures, by genuinely applying your mind to them, will learn from them more completely and clearly the exact detail of what we have said. For they were spoken and written by God, through men who spoke of God. But we impart of what we have learned from inspired teachers who have been conversant with them, who have also become martyrs for the deity of Christ, to your zeal for learning, in turn."
"Let this, then, Christ-loving man, be our offering to you, just for a rudimentary sketch and outline, in a short compass, of the faith of Christ and of his divine appearing to usward. But you, taking occasion by this, if you light upon the text of the Scriptures, by genuinely applying your mind to them, will learn from them more completely and clearly the exact detail of what we have said. For they were spoken and written by God, through men who spoke of God. But we impart of what we have learned from inspired teachers who have been conversant with them, who have also become martyrs for the deity of Christ, to your zeal for learning, in turn."
Sign into Goodreads to see if any of your friends have read
On the Incarnation.
Sign In »
Reading Progress
| 09/13/2013 | marked as: | currently-reading | ||
| 09/13/2013 | page 7 |
|
5.0% | ""For it were monstrous for God, the Father of truth, to appear a liar for our profit and preservation....For His it was once more both to bring the corruptible to incorruption, and to maintain intact the just claim of the Father upon all, for being the Word of the Father, and above all, He alone of natural fitness was both able to recreate everything, and worthy to suffer on behalf of all and to be ambassador."" |
| 09/17/2013 | page 16 |
|
13.0% |
"Regarding the need for redemption: "For it had been better for him to have been made simply like a brute animal, than, once made rational, for him to live the life of brutes."" |
| 09/19/2013 | page 20 |
|
16.0% | "Jesus' body "being mortal, was to die also, conformably to its peers. But by virtue of the union of the Word with it, it was no longer subject to corruption according to its own nature, but by reason of the Word that was come to dwell in it it was placed out of the reach of corruption."" |
| 09/23/2013 | page 30 |
|
25.0% | ""So something surprising and startling has happened; for the death, which they though to inflict as a disgrace, was actually a monument of victory against death itself....now that the Saviour has raised his body, death is no longer terrible...[believers] know that when they die they are not destroyed, but actually {begin to} live, and become incorruptible through the Resurrection."" |
| 09/29/2013 | marked as: | read | ||
