Chapter XIII.—Christs Connection with the Creator Shown. Many Quotations Out of the Old Testament Prophetically Bear on Certain Events of the Life of Jesus—Such as His Ascent to Praying on the Mountain; His Selection of Twelve Apostles; His Changing Simons Name to Peter, and Gentiles from Tyre and Sidon Resorting to Him.
Surely to Sion He brings good tidings, and to Jerusalem peace and all blessings; He goes up into a mountain, and there spends a night in prayer, 3904 and He is indeed heard by the Father. Accordingly turn over the prophets, and learn therefrom His entire course. 3905 “Into the high mountain,” says Isaiah, “get Thee up, who bringest good tidings to Sion; lift up Thy voice with strength, who bringest good tidings to Jerusalem.” 3906 “They were mightily 3907 astonished at His doctrine; for He was teaching as one who had power.” 3908 And again: “Therefore, my people shall know my name in that day.” What name does the prophet mean, but Christs? “That I am He that doth speak—even I.” 3909 For it was He who used to speak in the prophets—the Word, the Creators Son. “I am present, while it is the hour, upon the mountains, as one that bringeth glad tidings of peace, as one that publisheth good tidings of good.” 3910 So one of the twelve (minor prophets), Nahum: “For behold upon the mountain the swift feet of Him that bringeth glad tidings of peace.” 3911 Moreover, concerning the voice of His prayer to the Father by night, the psalm manifestly says: “O my God, I will cry in the day-time, and Thou shalt hear; and in the night season, and it shall not be in vain to me.” 3912 In another passage touching the same voice and place, the psalm says: “I cried unto the Lord with my voice, and He heard me out of His holy mountain.” 3913 You have a representation of the name; you have the action of the Evangelizer; you have a mountain for the site; and the night as the time; and the sound of a voice; and the audience of the Father: you have, (in short,) the Christ of the prophets. But why was it that He chose twelve apostles, 3914 and not some other number? In truth, 3915 I might from this very point conclude 3916 of my Christ, that He was foretold not only by the words of prophets, but by the indications of facts. For of this number I find figurative hints up and down the Creators dispensation 3917 in the twelve springs of Elim; 3918 in the twelve gems of Aarons priestly vestment; 3919 and in the twelve stones appointed by Joshua to be taken out of the Jordan, and set up for the ark of the covenant. Now, the same number of apostles was thus portended, as if they were to be fountains and rivers which should water the Gentile world, which was formerly dry and destitute of knowledge (as He says by Isaiah: “I will put streams in the unwatered ground” 3920 ); as if they were to be gems to shed lustre upon the churchs sacred p. 365 robe, which Christ, the High Priest of the Father, puts on; as if, also, they were to be stones massive in their faith, which the true Joshua took out of the laver of the Jordan, and placed in the sanctuary of His covenant. What equally good defence of such a number has Marcions Christ to show? It is impossible that anything can be shown to have been done by him unconnectedly, 3921 which cannot be shown to have been done by my Christ in connection (with preceding types). 3922 To him will appertain the event 3923 in whom is discovered the preparation for the same. 3924 Again, He changes the name of Simon to Peter, 3925 inasmuch as the Creator also altered the names of Abram, and Sarai, and Oshea, by calling the latter Joshua, and adding a syllable to each of the former. But why Peter? If it was because of the vigour of his faith, there were many solid materials which might lend a name from their strength. Was it because Christ was both a rock and a stone? For we read of His being placed “for a stone of stumbling and for a rock of offence.” 3926 I omit the rest of the passage. 3927 Therefore He would fain 3928 impart to the dearest of His disciples a name which was suggested by one of His own especial designations in figure; because it was, I suppose, more peculiarly fit than a name which might have been derived from no figurative description of Himself. 3929 There come to Him from Tyre, and from other districts even, a transmarine multitude. This fact the psalm had in view: “And behold tribes of foreign people, and Tyre, and the people of the Ethiopians; they were there. Sion is my mother, shall a man say; and in her was born a man” (forasmuch as the God-man was born), and He built her by the Fathers will; that you may know how Gentiles then flocked to Him, because He was born the God-man who was to build the church according to the Fathers will—even of other races also. 3930 So says Isaiah too: “Behold, these come from far; and these from the north and from the west; 3931 and these from the land of the Persians.” 3932 Concerning whom He says again: “Lift up thine eyes round about, and behold, all these have gathered themselves together.” 3933 And yet again: “Thou seest these unknown and strange ones; and thou wilt say in thine heart, Who hath begotten me these? But who hath brought me up these? And these, where have they been?” 3934 Will such a Christ not be (the Christ) of the prophets? And what will be the Christ of the Marcionites? Since perversion of truth is their pleasure, he could not be (the Christ) of the prophets.
In vigore. Or this phrase may qualify the noun thus: “They were astonished at His doctrine, in its might.”
364:3908 364:3909 364:3910Our authors reading of Isa. lii. 7.
364:3911 364:3912 364:3913 364:3914 364:3915 364:3916 364:3917 364:3918 364:3919 364:3920 365:3921Simpliciter: i.e., simply or without relation to any types or prophecies.
365:3922 365:3923 365:3924 365:3925Luke vi. 14. [Elucidation III.]
365:3926Isa. 8:14, Rom. 9:33, 1 Pet. 2:8.
365:3927 365:3928 365:3929De non suis; opposed to the de figuris suis peculiariter. [St. Peter was not the dearest of the Apostles though he was the foremost.]
365:3930Ps. 87:4, 5, according to the Septuagint.
365:3931 365:3932 365:3933 365:3934