Athanasius Little Gods
Athanasius Little Gods

The Word Incarnate, as is the case with the Invisible God, is known to us by His works. By them we recognize His deifying mission… For He was made man that we might be made God.

— Athanasius, On the Incarnation

Athanasius’ Little Gods Doctrine

Athanasius of Alexandria is a major figure in the Nicene and Post-Nicene Church who is known for vigorously defending the deity of Christ and the doctrine of the Trinity. While these doctrines are accepted in modern Christian theology, what’s often missed is the way in which he defined and defended these views.

Where his rival ideologue Arius brought Jesus down to the level of a mere creature, Athanasius elevated common man to the level of divinity. Both of these views reflect a fundamental misunderstanding of creation and the incarnation of Christ, and trinitarians need to recognize that this early champion of the Trinity had significant flaws in his framing of God’s word.

Theological Backdrop of Athanasius’ Little Gods

As we discussed in the article about his gnostic influences, Athanasius had a view of the fall of man which centered around a failure to contemplate God over the material realm. For Athanasius, man is by nature corrupt on account of his being called out of nothing, but his contemplation of the Word stays this natural trend to return to nothingness. In essence, man is created in the image of the Word, and his continued contemplation of the Word sustains this image. The image in turn secures him a divine portion of the Word, making him truly divine.

Our creation and God’s Incarnation [are] most intimately connected. As by the Word man was called from non-existence into being, and further received the grace of a divine life, so by the one fault which forfeited that life they again incurred corruption and untold sin and misery filled the world…

For man is by nature mortal, inasmuch as he is made out of what is not; but by reason of his likeness to Him that is (and if he still preserved this likeness by keeping Him in his knowledge) he would stay his natural corruption, and remain incorrupt; as Wisdom [ Wisdom 6:18 ] says: ” The taking heed to His laws is the assurance of immortality; ” but being incorrupt, he would live henceforth as God, to which I suppose the divine Scripture refers, when it says: ” I have said you are gods, and you are all sons of the most Highest; but you die like men, and fall as one of the princes.”

Athanasius, On the Incarnation

Athanasius’ meaning is made clear by his citation of Psalm 82, a text which is often used by the cults to deify man. In his unfallen state, man is made divine by virtue of the image of God impressed into him. This differs from modern theologians, who will generally view the image of God as “finite replicas of God’s infinite qualities” (John M. Frame, Systematic Theology, p. 785). To put it simply, modern theology views man as a type or replica of God with no intrinsically divine qualities, whereas Athanasius views man as an incarnation of God. Hence his words, “Our creation and God’s Incarnation [are] most intimately connected.”

54. The Word Incarnate, as is the case with the Invisible God, is known to us by His works. By them we recognise His deifying mission. Let us be content to enumerate a few of them, leaving their dazzling plentitude to him who will behold.

As, then, if a man should wish to see God, Who is invisible by nature and not seen at all, he may know and apprehend Him from His works: so let him who fails to see Christ with his understanding, at least apprehend Him by the works of His body, and test whether they be human works or God’s works…

For He was made man that we might be made God; and He manifested Himself by a body that we might receive the idea of the unseen Father; and He endured the insolence of men that we might inherit immortality

Athanasius, On the Incarnation

Image of God as Substance of God

Some of Athanasius’s statements about the divinity of unfallen / redeemed man could perhaps be passed over as issues of translation, though the context of the above quotes would seem to push strongly against this resolution tactic. More importantly, it flows logically from his system of theology, which treats the image of God in man as if it were the substance (divine nature) of God in man. This is implied and assumed throughout his work, but is most succinctly stated by his mentor Alexander in the deposition of Arius.

Or again, how is He “unlike in substance to the Father,” seeing He is the perfect “image” and “brightness [ Hebrews 1:3 ] “of the Father?

Alexander of Alexandria, The Deposition of Arius

Because Athanasius and Alexander conflate the nature of God with the image of God, their system necessarily deifies man, since we are created in the image and likeness of God. They recognize our creaturely status, but nevertheless assign us a “portion of the Word” in our unfallen and redeemed states that truly turns us into little gods. In contrast to this, scripture describes man in his unfallen / redeemed state as a temple within which God dwells (1Co 6:19), affirming the high dignity and purpose of man, but never conflating our status as creatures with the divine nature that dwells within.

Modern orthodox theologians generally view the little gods theory as a heresy, yet hail Athanasius and Alexander as heroes of the faith whose trinitarian system is beyond question at this point of history. While these church fathers certainly may be great men in God’s eyes, it is an error to grant their system of theology the degree of infallibility that should be reserved for scripture alone.

The trinity is a system of theology, nothing more and nothing less. Like Dispensationalism, Covenant Theology, Calvinism and Arianism, it is contingent on biblical revelation, and should be open to critique and debate as such. Trinity Berean works to do just that, seeking to highlight the good and the bad aspects of the trinitarian system, and pursuing a more biblical system to compete with it.

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History Articles: Athanasius

Athanasius proffered a view of Jesus that seems to have diminished his true humanity. Whereas modern theologians recognize that Jesus had a truly human body and soul, Athanasius treated the Word as if it replaced the human soul of Jesus, merely occupying a human body. Such a view compromises the ability of Jesus to be tempted as a man, or to have incomplete knowledge about a subject (like the timing of his return), attributes of his humanity that are represented in the gospel testimonies about him.

Gnosticism is one of the oldest rivals of Christianity, which often tried to assimilate Christian ideas into an anti-material worldview. While Athanasius opposed the gnostics, his counterarguments agree with them in their devaluing of the material world, with anti-materialism serving a foundational role in his system of theology.

The impact of anti-materialism on Christian thought is one of the most enduring and destructive trends in the history of ideas, being seen to this day in the Christian’s focus on heavenly and spiritual pursuits, at the expense of earthly matters like politics, economics, human rights, and culture, etc.

Athanasius viewed the relationship of God to man in a way that deified mankind, making us “little gods” of a sort. For Athenasius, mankind is corrupt on account of his physicality, meaning that because we were formed out of nothing, we return back to nothing when we fail to contemplate the divine Word of God. This contemplation of God maintains the image of God in man, which in turn serves as our portion of God’s divinity.

Athanasius’s understanding of man is that we are created with a natural tendency toward corruption, i.e. nonexistence. Our contemplation of the Word is what stays this corruption, therefore fallen man degrades back into nothingness, given his focus on the material world. The resulting end of fallen man is thus to become nonexistent rather than suffer eternally in the fires of Hell, a doctrine known as annihilationism.

Pattern Christology

Jesus has two natures — an uncreated divine nature, and a created human nature.

Jesus is truly God, meaning that his divine nature predates the existence of the universe, and has all of the attributes of monotheistic, biblical divinity (omniscience, omnipotence etc.). He is not a lesser, created god, but rather exists eternally before and outside of time as the one true God.

Jesus is truly man, meaning that his human nature is truly descended from Adam. From the moment of conception onward, he has (and forever will have) a human body comprised of matter and energy, and a human soul with its own distinct intellect and will. He is not a mirage or apparition; he truly lived a real, human life among us, while simultaneously possessing and displaying his divinity through miraculous works and words of life.

Like the title “son of man,” the title “son of God” describes Jesus’ created, human nature. Adam, Jesus, and the Christian are all described as sons of God because we are in the form/image/likeness of God. Both divine and human activities are ascribed to Jesus through both titles, because of their contextual meaning (Jesus is a particular son of man who is divine; Jesus is a particular son of God who is divine). But the title “son of God” fundamentally describes his human nature and human relationship to God.

A few scriptures describe Jesus as having a father/son relationship with God prior to his incarnation as a man. If Jesus’ sonship is through his humanity, then this presents a challenge to pattern christology, because his human relationship with God predates his existence as a man.

Trinitarians turn to Jesus’ divinity to explain this preincarnate sonship. Patternists, on the other hand, maintain that he was the son of God through a “preincarnate hypostatic union” known as the angel of the Lord. Prior to the incarnation, Jesus was truly God, and truly angelic (or at least a true creature). This allows the person of the son to exist from the moment that God first created light, without compromising his true divinity.

Like trinitarians, patternists believe that Jesus has two natures that together form a single person. Unlike trinitarians, we also affirm that each nature is distinctly personal, and that Jesus can behave as a single unified person, or as two distinct persons (often identified as the Father and the Son). Scripture shows us that Jesus has a human mind and human will that are distinct from his divine mind and divine will. This implies that Jesus’ human and divine natures are distinctly personal.

Pattern christology therefore agrees with both orthodox christology (belief in a single person), and nestorianism (belief in two distinct persons). This is not a contradiction, because scripture supports the idea of two (or more) persons becoming and behaving as one person.

God dwells in Jesus as a human temple, similar to how he dwells in a Christian, but with a few differences. First, Jesus is described as God incarnate, and we are not. Second, God dwells in Christ through the divine person of the Word, whereas he dwells in the Christian through the divine person of the Holy Spirit.

These two temples correspond to the two persons in the godhead. God is a composite union of two persons who are one, the Word and the Spirit. The term “Father” is used to denote the godhead as a whole, the composite union of Word and Spirit. Thus it is accurate to say that the Father (God) dwells in Christ through the Word, and the Father (God) dwells in the Christian through the Spirit.