FOURTH SUNDAY OF ADVENT

"May the God of peace
make you perfect in holiness. May he preserve you
whole and entire, spirit, soul, and body, irreproachable at the coming
of the Lord Jesus Christ. He who calls us is trustworthy, therefore he
will do it.
(1 Thessalonians 5:23-24)
The Hidden Sacrament
is Revealed
(by St Hippolytus against the Noetic heresy)
There is, brethren, one God, the knowledge
of whom we gain from the Holy Scriptures and from no other source. Whatever
things the Holy Scriptures declare, at these let us look; and whatever they
teach, let us learn it; and as the Father wills our belief to be, let us
believe; and as he wills the Son to be glorified, let us glorify him; and as he
wills the Holy Spirit to be bestowed, let us receive him. Not according to our
own will, nor according to our own mind, nor yet storming by force the things
which are given by God, but even as he has chosen to teach them by the Holy
Scriptures, so let us discern them.
God, subsisting alone, and having nothing coeval with himself, chose to create
the world. And conceiving the world in mind, and willing and uttering the Word,
he made it; and at once it appeared, formed it in the way he desired. For us it
is sufficient simply to know that nothing was coeval with God. Outside him there
was nothing; but he, while existing alone, yet existed in plurality. For he did
not lack reason, or wisdom, or power, or counsel. All things were in him, and he
was the All. At a time and in a manner chosen by him he made his Word manifest,
and through his Word he made all things.
He bears this Word in himself, as yet invisible to the created world. He makes
him visible, uttering the voice first, and begetting him as Light of Light. He
presents him to the world as its Lord; and whereas the Word was visible formerly
to God alone, and invisible to the world which is made, God makes the Word
visible in order that the world might see him and be able to be saved.
This is the mind which came forth into the world and was manifested as the Son
of God. All things came into being through him, and he alone comes from the
Father.
He gave us the Law and the prophets; and in giving them, he made them speak by
the Holy Ghost, in order that, receiving the inspiration of the Father’s power,
they might declare the Father’s counsel and will.
Thus, then, was the Word made manifest, even as the blessed John says. For he
sums up the things that were said by the prophets, and shows that this is the
Word, by whom all things were made. In the beginning was the Word, and the
Word was with God, and the Word was God. All things were made by him, and
without him nothing was made. And later, The world was made by him, and
the world did not know him; he came to his own, and his own did not receive him.