The Image of the Infant Jesus in Ephrem the Syrian
Paul S.
Russell
Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute
George A. Kiraz
James E. Walters
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Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute
2002
Vol. 5, No. 1
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https://hugoye.bethmardutho.org/article/hv5n1russell
Paul S. RUSSELL
The Image of the Infant Jesus in Ephrem the Syrian
https://hugoye.bethmardutho.org/pdf/vol5/HV5N1Russell.pdf
Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies
Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute, 2002
vol 5
issue 1
Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies is an electronic journal dedicated to the study
of the Syriac tradition, published semi-annually (in January and July) by Beth
Mardutho: The Syriac Institute. Published since 1998, Hugoye seeks to offer the
best scholarship available in the field of Syriac studies.
Syriac Studies
Ephrem the Syrian
Infant Jesus
Christology
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This paper examines passages in which
St. Ephrem the Syrian makes use of the image of Jesus Christ as
an infant child. It demonstrates that he uses this tool to
support his full picture of the Incarnation, including both a
stress on a fully divine Divinity and on a fully human
humanity. This study also makes clear that Ephrem imagines that
the experience of the Divine Word in being incarnate has close
affinities with the common human experience we all share. This
has an interesting effect on his picture of how the incarnation
figures in the working out of human salvation. Ephrem's view of
the Incarnation is shown to be imaginatively full, making use
of the subjective as well as the objective elements in human
life and nature.
Introduction
[1]
Christology is an area of Christian teaching that can be most
clearly evaluated at certain critical points. A careful
examination of a thinker's presentation of the Crucifixion, the
Incarnation or the miracle working of Jesus in the Gospels
serves to cast into high relief his treatment of the
difficulties inherent in constructing a coherent theological
treatment of Jesus. Whether it is by historical accident or
because of the shock of meeting the Divine face-to-face as a
human among humans, the history of Christian christological
thinking is one of writers either proclaiming and defending a
picture of Jesus that credits Him with an internal duality of
nature or of their denying that duality in some particular.
Since this contrasting pair of tendencies helps locate where
the fault lines in Christian theological treatments of Jesus
will be found, it is not surprising that so much attention has
been paid to how patristic authors treat these cruces.
An opportunity for making paradigmatic choices confronts the
theologian in the infancy of Jesus, which provides a vivid
moment for contrasting the two natures of Christ, since human
nature at this time of life is at its most passive and
dependent, rendering the gulf between Creator and created in
Jesus even wider than it usually appears. It is that strand:
the infancy, in Ephrem the Syrian's discussions of Jesus that I
would like to attempt to trace in this essay.
[2] While
many writers, especially of our own age, seem to skate lightly
over this period in the life of Jesus, those from any period of
Christian history who tackle it head-on often reveal the true
tenor of their convictions. I have never forgotten the shock I
felt on reading for the first time Cyril of Alexandria's
aggressive treatment of the nativity scene:
Cyril of Alexandria, Epistle XVII (Third Letter to
Nestorius) 70 a-b. Translation on page 302 in Creeds,
Councils and Controversies Documents illustrating the
history of the Church, AD 337-461, J. Stevenson (new edition
revised by W.H.C. Frend) London: SPCK 1989. The Greek
text of the letter is found at PG LXXVII.105-122.
Neither do we say that the flesh was converted into the
divine nature, nor surely that the ineffable nature of God
the Word was debased and perverted into the nature of flesh,
for he is unchangeable and unalterable, ever continuing
altogether the same according to the Scriptures: but we say
that the Son of God, while visible to the eyes, and a babe
and in swaddling clothes, and still at the breast of his
Virgin Mother, filled all creation as God, and was seated
with his Father. For the divinity is without quantity and
without magnitude and without limit.
[3] There
are few writers in the history of Christian thought who are as
clear and combative as Cyril, and few who know their own minds
as well. Still, his use of the juxtaposition of the infant
human child with unlimited divinity to make the incarnational
paradox as acute as possible shows us how the infant Jesus can
serve as a window into the mind of a Christian theologian
treating that Gospel scene.
[4] As part
of an on-going examination of Ephrem's christological
construct, I would like to see what tracing this theme in his
writings will show us about his christological convictions and
the manner in which he chooses to express them. We have no
treatise, hymn or sermon of Ephrem's to read that focuses
directly on this topic.
As one of the anonymous readers for Hugoye
noted, many of the passages this paper discusses come from the
collection called Hymns on the Nativity. These
works do not, however, focus on the image of the infant
Jesus. They seem to me to be a group of hymns that center
on discussion of the Incarnation, which explains the appearance
in them of Nativity scenes pertinent to this paper.
The Hymns on the Nativity, as McVey says, are
characterized by their theological focus: “The central
theological theme of the Hymns on the Nativity is
Ephrem’s understanding of the incarnation as the
miraculous and paradoxical self-abasement of God out of love
for humankind.” (Hymns, 30)
In the writings that survive, and have been
identified as being his, Ephrem makes use of the infant Jesus
only as a support or parallel to other points he wishes to put
forward. Because of the scattered and brief character of his
comments on this theme, I think it best to treat them
systematically according to the following three headings:
1. passages describing the infant Jesus as a human being.
2. passages describing the infant Jesus as Divine.
I have argued elsewhere for Ephrem’s
insistence on the reality of the two natures, so I will treat
that point as a settled fact. cf. Paul S. Russell,
“A First Look at the Christology of Ephraem the
Syrian” Symposium Syriacum VII, ed. René
Lavenant, SJ, Orientalia Christiana Analecta 256 Roma:
Pontificio Istituto Orientale 1998, 107-115.
3. passages focusing directly on the theological meaning of the
infant Jesus.
I am well aware of the danger we court in systematizing the
works of early Christian authors anachronistically, but if we
keep that pitfall in mind, I think this approach will prove to
be helpful as we attempt to pull together the scattered pieces
that express a picture in Ephrem's mind that is never fully
articulated in any single place.
[5] It is
worthy of note that Ephrem makes theological use of the infancy
of Jesus any time he refers to it in his writings. I have found
no appearance of the infant Jesus in Ephrem's works that does
not use that image to make a point. This seems to indicate a
belief on his part that this image of Jesus is one that not
only has the power to figure in a theological argument, but is
even an image that has such strong inherent theological weight
that it cannot be passed over in silence.
The Infant Jesus as a Human Being
[6] Here,
the image of the infant Jesus is emphatic, in that the passage
depends on the picture of Jesus living as an infant child for
its effect.
Hymns on the Nativity 5.4. Translation
found on page 106 in Ephrem the Syrian Hymns, translated
and introduced by Kathleen E. McVey New York: Paulist Press
1989 (hereafter called “McVey”). Syriac text
at Des Heiligen Ephraem des Syrers Hymnen de Nativitate
(Epiphania), herausgegeben von Edmund Beck Louvain: 1959
CSCO 186, page 46. See Sebastian Brock, “Clothing
Metaphors as a means of theological expression in Syriac
tradition”, XI in Studies in Syriac Christianity
Brookfield, Vermont: Ashgate Publishing Company 1992, for a
discussion of this image of the “robe of glory” in
Syriac Christian writers. cf. also Sebastian Brock,
“The robe of glory: A biblical image in the Syriac
tradition,” The Way, vol. 39 no. 3 (July 1999),
247-259.
The Lord of David
and Son of David hid His glory
in swaddling clothes. His swaddling clothes gave
a robe of glory to human beings.
The opening contrast of "Lord of David" with "Son of David"
sets up the dual meaning of the swaddling clothes in these
lines. Just as the same child is both a descendent of the great
king of Israel and is his Lord, so are the swaddling clothes
both a sign of helpless infancy and a means for the infant's
active saving of the human race. What might have been merely
evidence of weakness and passivity has become, instead, a means
of active salvific action on the part of the Son. The infant
Jesus thus shows us the saving paradox of the Incarnation in a
clear and striking manner: the presence of the Divine nature
makes the helplessness of the baby active in the salvation of
humans while still leaving the helplessness unchanged. The
careful reader will notice, too, that by making the focus of
the contrast of nature the swaddling clothes, Ephrem has turned
the attention of the listener to the detail that will serve to
set up the starkest disjunction possible between the human and
the Divine in Jesus.
[7] This
same gulf is emphasized again in the following passage, which
describes the presentation of Christ in the Temple in The
Gospel according to St. Luke.
Luke 2:25-35.
Because Simeon was able to carry in his weak arms the very
majesty that created things cannot endure, he knew that his
weakness was strengthened by the power he carried. At the
same time Simeon, with all creatures, was invisibly being
lifted up by the all-prevailing power of the Son Himself.
This is amazing, that while a weak man was visibly carrying
the power that gave him strength, that power was invisibly
carrying the one who carried it. Majesty made itself small so
that those who held it could endure it.
Homily on Our Lord, sec. 51.
Translation found on page 327 in St. Ephrem the Syrian
Selected Prose Works, translated by Edward G. Mathews, Jr.
and Joseph P. Amar, Washington, DC: The Catholic University of
America Press 1994 (hereafter called
“Mathews”). Syriac text at pages 48-49 in
Des Heiligen Ephraem des Syrers Sermo de Domino Nostro,
herausgegeben von Edmund Beck Louvain: 1966 CSCO 270.
This meditation on the Bearer-of-All being small enough to
be carried by Simeon shows Ephrem again playing on the
passivity of the powerful and the paradox of Incarnation.
Ephrem's centering the listener's attention on the most
powerful aspect of the Son vis á vis the created world:
His identity as its Creator and Sustainer, makes the care
Simeon seems to exercise for, and the control he wields over,
the baby Jesus as incongruous as possible. As with the
swaddling clothes of the manger scene, this passage shows
Ephrem plucking a detail out of a scriptural infancy scene and
building his theological point and paradoxical contrast upon
it. It should be clear how effective an interpretive method
this is for the thinker who chooses his scriptural passages
with care. The theological point flows out of and, in the mind
of the listener, becomes integrated with the details that
Ephrem uses. Surely, many of his audience must have had his
interpretation recur to their minds when they had these scenes
recalled to their attention in the future. It is reasonable to
think that Ephrem fully intended his interpretation to take its
place as part of the scriptural scene in the memories of his
listeners.
[8] In the
next passage, Ephrem centers his use of the image on a more
abstract quality of the incarnate Son: His identity as God's
word.
Blessed is the Babe who rules Majesty with His
silence
Because the speech-endowed had angered Him.
Hymns on the Nativity 21.10, translation on
page 175 in McVey, (altered by the present author).
Syriac on page 106 in CSCO 186. Also, Hymns on the
Nativity 4.146-155. McVey, 100; Syriac pp 38-39 in
CSCO 186. I have altered McVey’s version to make
clear that the creatures with speech have angered the Babe Who
rules with silence.
The unusual character of Jesus' infancy is shown
here in two ways: one relating to His human nature and the
other to His divine nature. His human nature is clearly out of
the ordinary in Ephrem's mind, in that Jesus' silence does not
render Him helpless, as one might expect. Instead, it is the
beings created with the power of speech who have gotten their
talkative selves in trouble by misusing that ability for
speech.
Hymns on Faith 15 discusses this theme,
which is quite prominent in Ephrem. cf. Paul S. Russell,
St. Ephraem the Syrian and St. Gregory the Theologian
Confront the Arians Kottayam, India: St. Ephrem Ecumenical
Research Institute 1994, 22-29, for a brief discussion of where
he thinks the proper bounds of theological speaking and silence
lie. cf. also Paul S. Russell, “Ephraem the Syrian
on the Utility of Language and the Place of Silence”
Journal of Early Christian Studies 8.1 (Spring 2000),
21-37.
The silent baby wields power over His talkative
elders through the very means of His silence. The divine nature
of Jesus experiences the Incarnation by entering that silent
state that might seem to be the exact opposite of His nature as
the Logos. This contrast of the silent baby with the creatures
who are endowed with speech serves to remind Ephrem's listener
that the incarnate Son is stepping completely out of His realm
when He becomes one of us: from being the One Who is the source
of all speech and thought, He must now be subjected to the
inappropriate chattering of His own creations, which does not
always please Him. The Divine Son's birth as a human being
carries with it inconveniences that Ephrem is quick to point
out as evidence of the absurdity of such an event.
[9] The
Divine action credited to the human baby Jesus in the above
citation is reinforced by Ephrem in the next stanza (11), where
he says:
translation McVey 175, Syriac at 107.
Put to shame was the Evil One who became king and plaited
a diadem of deceit.
Like God, he set his throne on the inhabited earth.
The Babe in a manger cast him from his power.
The baby is lying in the manger (surely a reminder
of His humble station in life) yet He still can quash the
Devil's pretensions without leaving His appointed place. The
humble baby acts as Divine Ruler. Powerlessness exercises power
over the Evil One whom humans struggle in vain to drive away.
Both the humanity and uniqueness of Christ are emphasized in
this contrast.
[10] In
addition to that quotation from Hymns on the Nativity
21.10, which shows that Ephrem thought of Jesus as being,
literally, an "infant", that is, a child too young to speak,
there are also passages in which Ephrem speaks of Jesus as a
suckling baby,
Hymns on the Nativity 18.12, 161 in
McVey, 93 in CSCO 186. Also, Hymns on the Nativity
4.149, 153, 184, 185, McVey pp 100 + 102, CSCO 186, 39 + 42.
a weaned child,
Carmina Nisibena 4.4,
translation by Rev. J.T. Sarsfield Stopford, B.A. at 172 in
NPNF (sec. ser.) Vol. 13 Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans
Publishing Company 1989 (reprint). Syriac text, at 14 in
Des Heiligen Ephraem des Syrers Carmina Nisibena,
herausgegeben von Edmund Beck Louvain: CSCO 218 1961.
in which he speaks of
Jesus' small physical size
Hymns on Faith 32.14. Syriac
text page 109 in Des Heiligen Ephraem des Syrers Hymnen de
Fide, herausgegeben von Edmund Beck Louvain: CSCO 154
1955. Translation in Paul S. Russell, Eighty Hymns on
Faith of St. Ephraem the Syrian forthcoming from Peeters
Press: Louvain.
and talks of His relations with
Mary as paralleling those of Eve with Adam. This last point
holds a special interest, since it shows his willingness to
consider Jesus as a human being, that is, a participant in the
category of human beings: a member of the human race. As Ephrem
himself puts it:
Hymns on the Nativity 4.197, McVey
103, CSCO 186, 43, and Hymns on Virginity 32.4, 404 in
McVey, 118 in CSCO 223.
He was cheerful among the infants as a baby;
and, perhaps more strikingly:
Behold the Lord of Joseph on a humble lap.
Ephrem is perfectly willing to imagine Jesus as a child
among children, which might have been precisely the aspect of
His childhood to upset a Nicene thinker who wished to support
the idea of Jesus' natural uniqueness among human beings. It is
interesting to see that Ephrem shows no signs of finding Jesus'
status as a small child threatening to his ideas of Jesus'
uniqueness. This degree of comfort with placing Jesus among
children as one of them argues for Ephrem's acceptance of a
broad view of the Incarnation, one that is not limited to the
abstract questions of "nature" and "person" but also extends to
the mundane details of human life.
Some argued against the Council of Nicea by
holding that the Son must be less than equal in Divinity to the
Father because no fully Divine being could enter the created
world. Defenders of Nicea sometimes chose to counter this
by striving to protect the Divine Son while incarnate by
limiting the degree to which He was said to be affected by
contact with the world [“he was in the crucified flesh
impassibly making his own the sufferings of his own
flesh”, as Cyril of Alexandria asserts in his Third
Letter to Nestorius (Translation found at 351 in
Hardy, Christology) or, more crudely, in
Athanasius’ extended treatment of the Incarnation and the
scriptural passages illuminating it in his Third Oration
against the Arians, sec. 31, where he notoriously used the
metaphor of a worker and his tool to describe the relation of
God the Son to His human nature: “...afterwards, for our
sakes He became man, and ‘bodily’, as the Apostle
says, the Godhead dwelt in the flesh; as much as to say,
‘Being God, He had His own body, and using this as an
instrument, He became man for our sakes.’” (trans.
at 410 in NPNF IV, sec.ser.). Nicenes might also choose
to stress the uniqueness among human beings of the relationship
of the physical self (the humanity) of the Son to His spiritual
self (the Divinity), as Athanasius does in his On the
Incarnation: “For being himself mighty, and artificer
of everything, he prepares the body in the virgin as a temple
unto himself, and makes it his very own as an instrument, in it
manifested, and in it dwelling.” (Sec. 8, translation at
62-63 in Hardy, Christology)]. While none of these
ideas necessarily diminishes what its author allows as far as
the fullness of the Incarnation is concerned, I think that they
are instructive as indicators of philosophical, theological
and, possibly, devotional qualms about speaking of the Divine
as taking Its place in the created realm. Against this
backdrop of what seems, to me, to be quite general reluctance
to place the incarnate Christ in the midst of ordinary human
life, Ephrem’s willingness to speak cheerfully of the
ordinariness of the incarnate Christ’s infancy makes me
think that his acceptance of the idea of Incarnation has seeped
very far down into his mind. This openness to intimacy
between the Divine and the created world seems, to me, to argue
for a level of comfort with incarnation that was quite unusual
among early Christian authors whose works survive. (I
would also place alongside this reluctance Arius’ desire
to protect the inviolability of the fully Divine Father and
Nestorius’ desire to keep ontological distance between
the Divine Son and the human experiences of Jesus–though
that is material for two monographs in itself and cannot be
pursued here.)
[11] It
would be wrong, however, to think that the picture of the
contrast inherent in Jesus' nature is limited, in Ephrem's
mind, to one involving that of an unremarkable humanity with a
full divinity. Ephrem regards Jesus' human characteristics as
evincing His special character as well. In the Carmina
Nisibena, Ephrem speaks of Jesus' exceptional human qualities
as being present from His birth:
Carmina Nisibena 35.13.
Translation at 194-195 in NPNF (sec.ser.) 13, Syriac at 5 in
CSCO 240.
Even while He was an infant, He was a teacher of the sons
of men, by the splendour that was upon Him...He was a help in
His childhood, to every one that saw Him; He was a prophet to
them that knew Him, from the day when He entered into the
world, He was a helper of mankind by His excellencies.
Two aspects of this picture interest
me:
a christological picture that makes explicit mention of
extraordinary human capabilities in Jesus offers its holder a
kind of flexibility that a straight Divine/human contrast
does not.
Leo’s Tome has always seemed to
me an unsuccessful attempt to express his position because of
the constraints inherent in his trying to set up a contrast too
starkly along the lines of the distinction of the natures in
Christ. My wider reading in Leo’s works, by no
means yet complete, has reinforced the impression that this
idea that he should attribute anything out of the ordinary in
Jesus’ life to His divine nature is the source of some
degree of christological awkwardness for Leo.
That is, a Nicene thinker who holds this
view, confronted by a theological problem or a perplexing
passage in a gospel, is not left with a stark choice between
explaining how Jesus figures at that moment as the fully
divine Son of God or the completely normal human Jesus, he
also has left himself the freedom to argue that Jesus is
showing signs of enjoying extraordinary human
characteristics. Thus, he has a larger selection of
exegetical and christological tools in his belt than others
of his conviction might possess. I hope that further study
will reveal examples of how Ephrem imagines this human
capacity of Jesus can be seen at work.
The explicit crediting of Jesus with unusual human
abilities seems to me to be evidence of confidence on
Ephrem's part in the possibility of speaking freely of Jesus'
humanity as having special qualities without that serving to
inhibit his insistence on the presence of a real divine
nature, also. I think this is evidence of the fact that
Ephrem feels no competition between the human and divine
natures in Jesus. He is willing to evaluate each as seems
best to him without being afraid that too much credit offered
to one might threaten the fullness or reality of the
other.
[12] The
resultant combination of mundane human characteristics, unusual
(but still wholly human) qualities and true Divinity would seem
to be a fruitful starting point for a Nicene exegete
approaching the task of explaining the gospel stories. Ephrem's
long-time activity as a commentor on, and teacher of, biblical
literature may well be one source of this conscious
open-mindedness.
[13]
These references to the infant Jesus are not elaborate,
certainly, most of them arising in passing rather than serving
as the focus of a full exposition of their content, but I would
suggest that they are adequate to show that Ephrem imagines the
infant Jesus as living the normal human life of an infant
child, at least as far as outward appearances and
sensible
I mean this in the Platonic sense of all
experiences that are available to any of the human senses, as
opposed to those of a purely spiritual or intellectual nature.
experiences are concerned. Ephrem's mixing
Jesus in with other children as he speaks of Him shows this, to
my mind. I also think that the mention of Jesus in the lap of
Joseph is indicative of a degree of comfort with Jesus'
babyhood unusual in a Patristic author. For a writer to make
many references to Jesus in the arms of Mary, His especially
venerated Virgin Mother, would not have the impact of one
reference to Jesus bouncing in the lap of Joseph, His pious and
exemplary, but comparatively ordinary, step-father. Since the
New Testament never speaks of Joseph holding Jesus, this
picture, unlike Ephrem's mention of Simeon in the Temple, is
the product of Ephrem's own mind. His willingness to imagine
Jesus being treated as an infant child by more humans than
comprise the short list of those mandated by Scripture, and
apart from the insulating touch of the Blessed Virgin Mary,
surely argues for real acceptance of the reality of Jesus'
infancy.
To my ears, the continuing elevation of the
status of Mary in the minds of many during the course of the
history of the Church seems like an unconscious attempt to
insulate the passive, infant Jesus from the world into which He
was born. However that may be, Ephrem shows no urge to
soften the incarnational paradox in that way.
[14]
Against the background of that human reality, we must recall
Ephrem's picture of the silent infant ruling the heavenly hosts
and the baby in the manger casting down the Devil.
Hymns on the Nativity 21. 10 + 11.
This
same person who was "among the infants as a baby" was also, as
a baby, exercising divine powers no human could enjoy. The
contrast of these two pictures is deepened by Ephrem's
attribution of both categories of action to the same Babe
rather than to different natures or spheres of action of the
same person. In other words, Ephrem has spoken of the infant
Jesus as a human being in a manner designed to heighten the
incarnational paradox rather than to lessen it. Habitual
readers of Ephrem will not be surprised by this conclusion.
The Infant Jesus as Divine
[15] An
examination of the passages in which Ephrem describes the
infant Jesus while emphasizing His divine nature makes clear
one of his central christological convictions. The manner in
which Ephrem's ideas about the infant Jesus are expressed in
these lines shows, in my opinion, that Ephrem wishes to
emphasize that the Divine Son was present in a personal way in
Jesus. I mean "personal" here in the sense of 'as an
individual' or 'in a way that involves Him personally'. This is
shown clearly, for example, in Ephrem's assertion that, while
Simeon goes through the motions of presenting the baby Jesus to
God in the Temple according to the Jewish Law (Luke 2:21-35),
it is, in actuality, Jesus Who is presenting Simeon to
God.
Homily on Our Lord, sec 50, trans.
325 in Mathews, Syriac at 47 in CSCO 270.
The point is stressed by being made again in
the following section of the same work, and the passage there,
which was quoted above in paragraph 7, clearly envisions
personal presence and personal divine action by the Divine Son
as Jesus, rather than a vaguer idea of a divine presence in, or
divine involvement with, the human baby. Jesus, a human person,
is presenting Simeon, his fellow. The two of them are present
together in the Temple before the face of God.
[16] The
same idea of the Divine Son being Himself involved as an
individual seems to be present in the next section of The
Homily on Our Lord, already quoted above, as this brief excerpt
shows:
see note 5 above.
... while a weak man was visibly carrying the power that
gave him strength, that power was invisibly carrying the one
who carried it.
[17]
Ephrem makes full use of the shock value of attributing to the
helpless human infant, Jesus, powers and actions completely out
of step with that passive stage of human life in order to
bolster and highlight his conviction of Jesus' unique person
and nature as containing both full human and full divine
realities.
cf. also Hymns on the Nativity 21.10
+ 11, quoted above.
Only if both these things were true of Jesus
could Simeon carry Jesus while Jesus also, in another sense,
carries him. Thus, Ephrem usually introduces the divine nature
of Jesus into a scene involving the infant Christ in order to
set up a contrast with His humanity. The introduction of
thoughts of the divine nature of Christ into Ephrem's mind when
he is considering the infant Jesus seems to call forth these
emphatic contrasts. Thus, in one hymn, he says
In a manger the Lord of the universe reclined for the sake
of the universe.
Hymns on the Nativity 5.3, McVey 106,
46 in CSCO 186.
This tendency even displays itself in the words coming from
the mouths of characters in the scriptural scenes, as when
Ephrem has the shepherds in the stable, in a strikingly
paradoxical comment, say to Jesus:
Hymns on the Nativity 7.7, McVey 116,
57 in CSCO 186.
You are the newborn Who is older than Noah and younger
than Noah, who pacified all in the ark.
The second article of the Nicene Creed, that
concerning the Son, shows this trait of offering a string of
facts about the same person (the incarnate Son) linked by the
pronouns that begin the different clauses. Athanasius,
Against the Arians III.29 shows this tendency (and also
quotes Phil 2:6-8, a prominent scriptural support for this way
of speaking). Gregory Nazianzen Ep. 101.177b (PG XXXVII),
Hilary of Poitiers, On the Trinity 9.14, and Leo I Ep.
28 (The Tome) sec 4, all take this approach.
Examples could be multiplied ad infinitum.
In his following this train of thought, Ephrem's delight in
placing together things that normally would oppose each other
and in finding outrageous ways to express the duality of Jesus
is clear. This is not evidence merely of a desire to shock his
listeners, however, but rather marks the first step in the
development of an important theme in Ephrem's work. Ephrem
focuses on the contrast between humanity and divinity, between
the extreme helplessness of the new-born human and the
limitless power of the fully Divine Son of God, in order to
impress that duality of natures in Christ on the mind of his
listener. Ephrem is not delighting in apparent absurdities for
their own sakes, but is providing, instead, a building block
for the final and most important aspect of his use of this
image. It is the religious or practical meaning of this
juxtaposition of natures that most strongly appeals to Ephrem's
imagination and explains his interest in the infant Jesus.
Ephrem is not nearly as interested in talking about what the
infant Jesus is in the abstract as he is in talking about how
the image of the infant Jesus can shed light in practical ways
on the life of the believer.
The Meaning of the Infant Jesus
[18] The
primary result of the presence in the created world of God the
Son as the infant Jesus, in Ephrem's mind, was to make the
Divine present to human beings in a new way. This is clearly
indicated in the passage from The Homily on Our Lord,
section 51, quoted above in paragraph 7. When Ephrem says:
"Majesty made itself small so that those who held it could
endure it.", we can hear not only his idea of the result of the
Incarnation, but also of its purpose. The gulf which had
existed between God and Creation, which is a strong theme in
Ephrem's writings and which he believed to be clearly described
in Scripture,
Exod 33:20, in the words of God, no less,
seems to rule out direct personal contact between Himself and
human beings. For Ephrem’s ideas about the
ontological gulf between the Divine and all else, see Thomas
Koonammakkal, “Ephrem’s Imagery of Chasm”
175-183 in Lavenant, Symposium Syriacum VII. See
also Paul S. Russell, St. Ephraem and St. Gregory,
121-144. This gulf is a recurrent theme in the
theologically rich collections called The Hymns on Faith
and The Sermons on Faith.
has been bridged so effectively by the Son's
Incarnation that, not only can humans come into the direct
presence of God, but they can even pick the Son up and carry
Him around!
Homily on Our Lord, sec 51, quoted
above.
This is not only true of Jesus after His human
birth. Ephrem also speaks of Jesus, while He is still in the
womb of Mary, in a way that emphasizes this new close contact
and what it means for Divine-human relations and
proximity.
Hymns on the Nativity 21.6-7, McVey
174-175, 105-106 in CSCO 186. Hymns on the
Nativity 12, McVey 133-135, also speaks of Jesus in
Mary’s womb.
The Power that governs all dwelt in a small womb.
While dwelling there, He was holding the reins of the
universe.
His Parent was ready for His will to be fulfilled.
The heavens and all the creation were filled by Him.
The Sun entered the womb, and in the height and depth
His rays were dwelling.
He dwelt in the vast wombs of all creation.
They were too small to contain the greatness of the
First-Born.
How indeed did that small womb of Mary suffice for Him?
It is a wonder if...sufficed for Him.
Of all the wombs that contained Him, one womb sufficed:
[the womb] of the Great One Who begot Him.
The image here is clearly one of the Divine
Person entering into the created world and taking up residence
in it, instead of merely suffusing it with His presence or
presiding over it, as the Divine had done before that change.
This dwelling in the midst of Creation, as a part of it, makes
God the Son close to, and available to, the surrounding
creatures in a way that was not possible before. The presence
of the Son here is a "personal" one that involves Him as a
complete whole. The contrast between the insight this expresses
and that expressed by, for example, Theodore of Mopsuestia when
he speaks of the divine nature in Christ indwelling the
humanity by "good pleasure" (eudokia)
This famous passage is available in English
in J. Stevenson (ed.), Creeds, Councils and
Controversies, 291-294 and Documents in Early Christian
Thought, M. Wiles and M. Santer Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press 1975, 57-61. The original text can be
found at Theodore of Mopsuestia On the Incarnation, VII,
1293-1297 in H.B. Swete (ed.), The Minor Epistles of
St. Paul, vol. 2.
is very great.
Ephrem imagines the Son entering into the created world as a
person in it, while Theodore's idea seems to be that the Son
has drawn close enough to creation to associate Himself with
it, but not in a manner that commits Him to it holistically,
beyond what He desires at any moment. This new situation is a
radical departure from what Ephrem understood to have been the
previous relationship between God and Creation, and Ephrem is
convinced that this Divine entry into Creation has begun a new
era as far as the breadth of the horizon open to human beings
is concerned. The infancy of Jesus provides a starting point
for Ephrem's discussion of these new possibilities because it
offers such striking evidence of this new closeness.
[19]
Ephrem holds that the Son's birth reveals truths about
Him.
Hymns on Virginity 31.1, 398 in
McVey, 113 in CSCO 223.
The different births that He underwent during
His existence mark and make possible the different categories
of existence in which He participates and the different roles
that He is able to play. When Ephrem says that Jesus
dazzled understanding by [His] birth that shone forth from
eternity from the hidden womb (31.1)
and that He has
given life to the creation by [His] birth that took place
openly from a womb of flesh (31.1),
he is making clear that these different births
inaugurate, or connect to, different spheres of activity
appropriate to Jesus' different natures. Thus, in Ephrem's
mind, His human birth from Mary is one of a pair with Adam's
generation in important ways,
Commentary on the Diatessaron II.2
+3, 60 + 61 in McCarthy.
and Jesus' birth can also
be twinned with His death on the Cross.
Hymns on Faith 4.2.
Both of these
connections require that Ephrem imagines that the humanity
Jesus displays is at least congruent with that displayed by the
rest of humankind. More than just throwing up contrasts between
Jesus and the rest of human nature to make theological points,
Ephrem also wants to make use of the fact that Jesus is a man
among His own kind and can fittingly be classed with the rest
of us. This multi-directional use of Jesus' humanity (that is,
both to connect Him to us as one of us, as well as to connect
human nature and the created world to the Divine) is further
evidence of Ephrem's ready acceptance of the full reality of
Jesus' human nature that we noted above.
[20]
Thus, some of the meaning of the image of the infant Jesus for
Ephrem lies in its ability to shed light on the larger history
of the life of Christ among human beings and of the history of
God's relations with human beings. In that sense, the infant
Jesus could properly be described as 'typical' or 'iconic' in
the mind of Ephrem. Rather than viewing this stage of Jesus'
life as something awkward over which he would like to skate
lightly, Ephrem sees in the image of the infant Jesus support
for some of his most central christological convictions. The
infant Jesus, then, takes His place toward the center of
Ephrem's christological understanding rather than on its
periphery.
[21] An
indication of this is found in Ephrem's speaking of salvation
as stemming from the infant Jesus as well as the adult. Ephrem
does not only speak of Christ on the Cross as being the Savior;
in his mind, it is also appropriate to say this of the baby
Jesus.
Carmina Nisibena 4.7, 172 in NPNF
(sec.ser.) 13, Syriac at 15 in CSCO 218.
It was He, the Infant of days, that could appease, O Lord,
the Ancient of Days.
The contrast of "the Infant of days" with "the
Ancient of Days" may distract us from this fact of the infant
being described as mediator. This role must hinge, logically,
on Jesus' enjoyment of the duality of natures and His
consequent ability to serve as a bridge over the gulf between
God and the world. Because the bridge is created only by the
Son's incarnation, the infant Jesus would naturally attract
this sort of comment from Ephrem. He would be likely to reflect
on that aspect of the Incarnation with reference to the Christ
child since the gulf being bridged is a prominent piece of
Ephrem's mental furniture, so bypassing it is an important
change in the ontological order of things. This way of speaking
should make us aware of the fact that Ephrem's christological
thought is very strongly incarnation-centered, to the point
that he is able to see salvation in the Incarnation itself as
well as in the work of Christ on the Cross.
This is an idea he shares with Athanasius,
cf. On the Incarnation, sec. 54, e.g.
[22] An
interesting example of Ephrem both placing Jesus in the midst
of humans for our consideration and of his desire to point out
that that same Jesus is more than merely human can be found in
his contrasting Jesus with Augustus Caesar, a savior of a more
mundane sort. Ephrem describes the difference between the gifts
of Augustus to the world and those Jesus offered, as
follows:
Hymns on the Nativity 18.1-2, 159 in
McVey, Syriac at 91 in CSCO 186.
In the years of that king, who is called
"Radiance", our Lord shown forth
among the Hebrews, and "Radiance" and "Dawn"
came to rule: a king on earth
and the son on high. Blessed be His power!
In the days of the king who enrolled people
for the poll tax, our Savior descended
and enrolled people in the Book of Life.
He enrolled [them], and they enrolled Him. On high He
enrolled us;
on earth they enrolled Him. Glory to His name!
Ephrem's decision to pluck details out of the
birth narrative that allow him to contrast Christ enrolling
people in the Book of Life with Caesar's taxation bureaucracy
is another example of his preference for the most extreme
contrasts between the Divine and human elements in the life of
Jesus, even beyond those relating to Jesus' own duality. The
strength of Ephrem's identification of Christ's salvific role
with the infant Jesus is shown in the fact that, not only does
he step back to look at the larger picture of salvation history
when considering the newborn child, but he also is willing to
delve into the humble details of the manger scene and find
salvation expressed in them. That is, Ephrem does not step out
of the story of the infant Jesus to make his theological
points; he makes use of that tale in a way that shows that he
finds it supportive of his christological convictions rather
than embarrassing to them.
[23]
Ephrem draws from these scenes centering on the infant Jesus
both high and abstract theological points (Hymns on the
Nativity 5.3, quoted above in paragraph 17) as well as
grasping at background details of the stories to set forth the
same duality in Christ he wishes to stress (as in his use of
the Roman census as a counterpoint to the Book of Life in
Heaven). The starting point of his interpretation is the
contrast of the humanity of Jesus with His divine nature. This
is true with all these scriptural passages, and of his use of
the moments in the life of the baby Jesus that he conjures up
out of his mind, as he does with Jesus sitting in Joseph's lap.
This emphasis is clear in the following passage, where Ephrem
speaks of the swaddling clothes of the baby in the manger as
the means of offering salvation to human beings.
Hymns on the Nativity 5.4, 106 in
McVey, Syriac at 46 in CSCO 186.
Behold of Bethlehem, David the king
clothes himself in fine white linen. The Lord of David
and Son of David hid His glory
in swaddling clothes. His swaddling clothes gave
a robe of glory to human beings.
Later in the same hymn
5.8, 107 in McVey, Syriac at 47 in CSCO 186.
Ephrem shows again how he values
the human birth of Jesus as a moment of salvific
importance.
This one day,
The [most] perfect in the year, alone opens
this treasure house.
This reinforces the importance of the act of Incarnation in
Ephrem's theological schema, which we have noted before,
placing emphasis again on its salvific nature. These lines help
the reader understand, also, the theological valuation Ephrem
places on the new connections the Incarnation opens between God
and the world. This connection does not only offer comforting
closeness to God for creatures or an easy flow of information
from God to the world, it is a link that makes divine salvation
available to us. The Incarnation is, then, a connection with
the most important practical results of any that a religious
view of life could imagine. If Ephrem wishes to stress the
importance of the Divine/human connection, the infancy of Jesus
provides a particularly attractive opportunity: it contains all
of the potential for a discussion of the union of Divine and
human that any stage of the life of Christ would provide, but,
because Jesus is physically inactive during His infancy, that
period helps the writer avoid being distracted by the problem
of explaining actions that seem to contain both Divine and
human elements. The field is clear to focus directly on the
union of God and the Creation. Ephrem takes full
advantage of this chance to speak of the effects of the union,
itself, on the human predicament. Elsewhere, he is happy to
dwell specifically on the saving actions of
Jesus,
The healing of the woman with an issue of
blood (Luke 8:41-48 and parallels) is the spur for an extended
reflection on Jesus’ natures and His healing abilities
and how these two things are intertwined. English
translation at 129-144 in Saint Ephrem’s Commentary on
the Diatessaron. An English Translation of Chester
Beatty Syriac MS 709 with Introduction and Notes by Carmel
McCarthy Oxford University Press for the University of
Manchester 1993; Syriac (with facing Latin translation) at
88-111 in Saint Éphrem Commentaire de
l’Évangile Concordant Texte Syriaque
(Manuscrit Chester Beatty 709) Folios Additionels, Dom Louis
Leloir, OSB Louvain: Peeters Press 1990. Though this work
is not universally agreed to come from Ephrem himself, it is
considered to come from a near associate, at least, and this
treatment is so involved and extended that it seems all but
certain that it must come from Ephrem’s teaching if not
from his pen.
but in his use of this image he wishes to make
clear the impact the entry of God in the world has, in
itself.
[24] The
following passages deserve careful consideration as examples of
Ephrem's desire to stress the dual nature of Jesus, since they
make clear that Ephrem appreciates the utility of the infant
Jesus as a tool for teaching this point of Christian thought to
Christian congregations.
Hymns on the Nativity 4.146-156,
100-101 in McVey, Syriac at 38-39 in CSCO 186. Hymns
on the Nativity 4, 5 + 11 provide much material of interest
along these lines and would repay reading in full with this
question in mind.
Mary bore a mute Babe
though in Him were hidden all our tongues.
Joseph carried Him, yet hidden in Him was
a silent nature older than everything.
The Lofty One became like a little child, yet hidden in Him
was
a treasure of Wisdom that suffices for all.
He was lofty but He sucked Mary's milk,
and from His blessings all creation sucks.
He is the Living Breast of living breath;
by His life the dead were suckled, and they revived.
Without the breath of air no one can live;
without the power of the Son no one can rise.
Upon the living breath of the One Who vivifies all
depend the living beings above and below.
As indeed He sucked Mary's milk,
He has given suck—life to the universe.
As again He dwelt in His mother's womb,
in His womb dwells all creation.
Mute He was as a babe, yet He gave
to all creation all His commands.
For without the First-Born no one is able
to approach Being, for He alone is capable of it.
The homely details of a baby's life, particularly
that most obvious and recurrent one: feeding at the breast, are
used to make clear to the listeners how each moment of Jesus'
babyhood contains its own odd duality. The baby Jesus appears
to be dependent on those around Him, yet the truer dependence
is that which they have on Him. Every time we care for a baby
each day, Ephrem wants this image of the dependent Creator to
recur to our minds so we can remember again what the
Incarnation really means and the anomalies it produced.
[25] The
reactions of Jesus' human parents are also put forward by
Ephrem as showing us important theological truths.
Hymns on the Nativity 5. 16 + 19, 108
in McVey, Syriac at 48 + 49 in CSCO 186. These lines are
characteristic of the Syriac tradition’s expansion of
biblical scenes to include more detail than the text
provides. This may be the result of the influence of
Jewish Targumic and Midrashic traditions of exegesis.
Susan Ashbrook Harvey, “Spoken Words, Voiced Silence:
Biblical Women in Syriac Tradition” Journal of Early
Christian Studies 9.1 (Spring 2001), 105-131, contains many
examples of this. (Note 9, p 106, provides references to
writings that deal with this tendency.)
Joseph caressed the Son
as a babe. He served Him
as God. He rejoiced in Him
as in a blessing, and he was attentive to Him
as to the Just One—a great paradox!
With rival tones Mary was aglow.
She, too, sang: "Who has granted
to the barren one to conceive and give birth
to the One [Who is also] many, to the small [Who is also]
great,
Who is fully present in me yet fully present in the
universe.
This is a touchingly human family scene,
centered, as human families are, around the new born child.
Only in the valuation of the child expressed by the parents
does this family betray its unique quality, and only in that
aspect does its theological message lie. Here, the Divine Son
is truly shown living as a human baby with His parents, while
still being, and being known as, the Creator and Sustainer of
the world.
[26]
Perhaps the most striking aspect of Ephrem's understanding of
the meaning of the infancy of Jesus is the fact that he takes
the personal presence of the Son so seriously. Far from
approaching the question of the manner of the Son's identity
with Jesus as a philosophical problem or a doctrinal crux, he
seems to view it as an experience that was deeply (and
holistically) personal for the Son, and one that has deeply
personal effects for God's own sense of His connection with
human beings.
Carmina Nisibena 4.10, 172 in NPNF
(sec.ser.) 13, Syriac at 15 in CSCO 218.
So Ephrem can say to the Son:
Have mercy, O Lord, on my children! In my children call to
mind Thy childhood, Thou Who wast a child! Let them that are
like Thy childhood, be saved by Thy grace!
Thoughtful consideration of this passage makes
clear that Ephrem understands the infancy (and Incarnation) of
the Savior not as mechanically working out the necessary steps
toward our salvation, nor as a pleasingly clear case-study of
christological truths, but as a real break-through in the
inter-personal relations of God with humans. After the
childhood of Jesus, Ephrem finds that he can appeal to God for
mercy on the basis of their shared experience of childhood!
Nothing could be more complete or holistically personal than
this effect of the idea of God becoming a human being.
[27] This
must be the fullest understanding of the Incarnation possible,
for it goes far beyond insisting that God the Son be understood
to have entered personally into the created realm and speaks of
Him as having gone through the experiences of human life in a
way comparable to our own. In other words, Ephrem does not just
insist that God the Son made Himself present for the normal
events of a human life, he also believes that these experiences
drew forth from Him the same sort of reactions that they do
from us. How else could he call on the Son's memory of
childhood in the hopes of awakening mercy through stirring up
nostalgia? This is, indeed, an understanding of Jesus that
proclaims His real humanity, for it envisions a humanity that
is both external and formal, as well as internal and
experiential. Jesus, on this pattern, not only enjoys both
divine and human nature, but His divine nature experiences the
human nature as a human experiences it, not just in the
midst of human beings.
A possible analogue would be that of an
adult playing a game with children, participating with them and
following the same rules, while inwardly thinking of other
things and engaging in an adult interior life, as opposed to
the picture Ephrem seems to support, according to which the
adult would experience the game as the children do, with
complete self-involvement and no thought for anything else.
[28] So,
in the end, it seems that Ephrem finds in the image of the
infant Jesus two principal lessons.
Since the bridging of the gulf between God and the world
was the making of the salvation of mankind, the Incarnation
itself can be called salvific, and since the gulf was bridged
most spectacularly and completely during the infancy of Jesus
when, even among human beings, Jesus was naturally humble and
passive, the infancy of Jesus provides a special opportunity
for emphasizing and meditating on this miraculous
self-humiliation. Thence does the manger become a place of
salvation in Ephrem's mind along with the Cross on
Calvary.
If the involvement of God in the world is the result of
the Incarnation, then the more complete and absorbing that
involvement was, the more complete and effective was its
result. Because of this, Ephrem's interest in the idea of the
Son's holistic, personal involvement in the human life of
Jesus can be seen as more than just an enjoyment in playing
with striking images, but an attempt to show that, if at the
time of Judgement, the Son could look back on His human youth
with something akin to human nostalgia, His judgement would
be affected and our fates possibly altered.
[29] The
full, personal involvement of the Divine Son in human
experience thus offers a very special kind of bridging of the
gulf between Creator and creature: one that reaches beyond mere
presence, or even ontological identification, to the more
mysterious, but perhaps more unifying, level of personal
empathy. If God the Son, after His human life as Jesus, can
look back on that time in the world in a manner congruous with
our own reminiscences, that, perhaps more than anything else,
puts Him among us as one of us human beings. This is the point
at which Ephrem's christological use of the image of the infant
Jesus moves beyond supporting a Nicene conviction in the full
divinity of the Son and His full human nature, and begins to
depict the Incarnation in a way that imagines a human
experience of life for the Son much like our own. Since this
possibility was one that Nicene Christians seemed to have shied
away from imagining,
e.g., Cyril of Alexandria, with whom we
began, speaks thus: (Third Letter to Nestorius, 72a,
translation at 304 in Stevenson, Creeds) “We
confess also that the very Son, which was begotten of God the
Father, and is the only-begotten God, though being in his own
nature impassible, suffered for us in the flesh, according to
the scriptures, and was in his Crucified Body impassibly
appropriating and making his own the sufferings of his own
flesh.”, which, whatever else it may be, is not a
description of the experience of being incarnate that accords
much with the common human experience of life, at least as I
have lived it.
Ephrem's happy embrace of it is unusual,
at least. It seems to show some parallel between his thoughts
and those of modern Christians who speak of Jesus' significance
as stemming from His own human experience.
This must be the instinct lying behind
reflections such as: “Can a male savior save
women?”, the Antoinette Brown lecture for women in
ministry, delivered by Kwok Pui-lan of Harvard Divinity School
at the Vanderbilt Divinity School Chapel, March, 2001. . Many
other examples of the same concern could be discovered.
[30]
Ephrem sees in the infant Jesus both clear evidence of the two
natures coexisting in one Person, as the Nicene writers were
coming to speak of, but also another, deeper understanding of
what the Incarnation must have meant to Him Who experienced it.
Turning those two points over in his mind will help the modern
reader see the Incarnation, at least to some degree, through
Ephrem's eyes. It is a picture that helps us understand why
Christology looms so large in his theological understanding.
What could be big enough to cast into the shade this image of
the Judge-of-All bouncing on the knee of Joseph and being
crooned to by His mother? Those scenes cast long shadows in
Ephrem's imagination. Would not the recollection of personal
experience make that Judge more ready to view with indulgent
understanding the faults of His fellows whose lives He knew
from the inside out, from birth to death, not as an eye-witness
and companion, but as One Who, Himself, knew all these moments
as His own? Ephrem was convinced that it would. It is the
picture in his mind of the real human experience of the Judge
of All that stands out as the source of his hope for salvation.
If God the Son really knows, Himself, what it is to be a human,
Ephrem thinks, surely He will look on us with indulgence when
the time for Judgement comes._______
Notes
This passage is, theologically at least, an
echo of a famous earlier piece of Athanasius’ On the
Incarnation (sec. 17) “For he was not, as might be
imagined, circumscribed in the body, nor, while present in the
body, was he absent elsewhere; nor, while he moved the body,
was the universe left void of his working and providence; but,
thing most marvelous, Word as he was, so far from being
contained by anything, he rather contained all things himself;
... thus, even while present in a human body and himself
quickening it, he was, without inconsistency, quickening the
universe as well...” (trans. at 70-71 in Hardy,
Christology), but I did not meet that earlier writing,
myself, until after having seen Cyril’s letter, so it is
from Cyril that my interest in this aspect of Christology
stems.
My interest in this paper is in the use Ephrem
makes of one particular image to express his conviction that
this “miraculous and paradoxical self-abasement”
was real and must be held to firmly and fully for Christianity
to be correctly understood. Not all Christian writers who
hold to the full divinity of the Son are comfortable with His
full, personal involvement in human life as Jesus.
Ephrem’s desire to hold together these two convictions
is, I think, the central element of his Christology.
In an age of theological, especially
christological, controversy, teaching doctrine at a relatively
high level to laity becomes a necessary activity in a way that
is not true during more settled periods. This is a likely
explanation for the high level of Christian discourse in the
Fourth and Fifth centuries as opposed to that of more settled
times.
_______
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Des Heiligen Ephraem des Syrers
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Des Heiligen Ephraem des Syrers
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