Friday, June 28, 2019

Early Christianity on: The Emotions of God the Father (Full Script)

Too lazy to read?  Watch the video!
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gw0CdTRYEGQ


Early Christianity on the Emotions of God the Father
Post-Apostolic Church
INTRO
This is the thirteenth video in a series on what the Pre-Nicene Christians believed about the Divinity.  And this is the tenth video about God the Father.

The Christian belief about the emotions of God the Father has, in the past, been called the impassibility of God the Father.  This is the belief that Father God does not have passions.  This is a hard belief to define because “passion” is word has changed its meaning over time.  Today, passion means strong emotion or a strong love for something.  But in ancient times, passion had a few meanings.  One ancient meaning was suffering and pain, as in, the Passion of Christ,* referring to His crucifixion.  Another ancient meaning was an intense desire or a craving, especially for something sexual, as in, two lovers becoming passionate.  The impassibility, or passionlessness, of God the Father was a common belief in early Christianity.  Though impassibility was a common belief, the way the Pre-Nicene Christians approached it varied.  And the same varied approach remains in Christianity today.  Because of these different interpretations of “passion,” any teaching on the emotions of God can be controversial.
* See Acts 1:3, “pascho” in Greek; it is rendered “passion” in older translations.

What might the impassibility of God mean?  First, it could mean that God the Father does not have any actual emotions, including joy or sadness or anger or pity.  That is, God does not actually feel at all.  So when the Scriptures talk about the emotions of God, they are only to be understood figuratively.  Second, it could mean that God the Father does not suffer from evil emotions, such as malice, lust, or greed.  That is, God’s emotions are only righteous emotions.  Third, it could mean that God the Father cannot feel the emotions that come from physical sufferings (though God the Son has indeed suffered physically).  That is, God does not suffer from feelings like hunger, pain, or sexual desires.  Fourth, it could mean that God the Father cannot be controlled by or affected by His emotions; as humans can easily be affected, even controlled, by their emotions.  That is, God controls His emotions and does not act or speak based on His emotions.  Fifth, it could mean that God’s emotions are not unstable or fickle, as human emotions are.  That is, God does not have mood swings.  This is a long list of possible meanings behind the impassibility of God.  Of course, none these are exclusive; any one or more of these things can be true.  The purpose of sharing this list is to get us thinking about this varied and controversial teaching.  This also explains why this video is so lengthy.  It would be wrong not to give this subject a sufficient discussion.

PRE-NICENE CHRISTIANS: GOD IS IMPASSIBLE (PASSIONLESS)
Now that we have laid the groundwork, let us look at what early Christianity had to say about the emotions of God the Father.  Again, the impassibility of God was a common belief among the early Christians.  Aristides wrote,

Wrath and indignation He does not possess, for there is nothing which is able to stand against Him.  Ignorance and forgetfulness are not in His nature, for He is altogether wisdom and understanding.  (Aristides.  AD 125.  ANF, vol 9, page 264.)
(http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/anf09.xiii.iv.html, “I say, then, that God…”)

Contrasting God to both mankind and the pantheon of gods, Irenaeus wrote,

If they had known the Scriptures and been taught by the truth, they would have known, beyond doubt, that God is not as men are.  And that His thoughts are not like the thoughts of men.  For the Father of all is at a vast distance from those affections and passions which operate among men.  (Irenaeus.  AD 180.  ANF, vol 1, page 374.)

Clement of Alexandria taught that the impassibility of God is something that mankind should also strive for.

It was said by the Lord, “Be perfect as your Father, perfectly,” by forgiving sins and forgetting injuries, and living in the habit of passionlessness.  (Clement of Alexandria.  AD 195.  ANF, vol 2, page 549.)
(http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/anf02.vi.iv.vii.xiv.html, “Let the specimen suffice…”)

There are many quotations like these throughout the Pre-Nicene Christian writings because, as said before, this was a common belief.  All of them believed in the impassibility of God the Father.  But how many writers specifically explained this belief depended on their own points of view.  Revisiting the various definitions about the impassibility of God, the points of view of the early Christians that were universally believed were (1) how the Father does not feel evil emotions, (2) how the Father does not have emotions that result from physical sufferings (though the Son did), (3) how the Father is not fickle and does not have mood swings, (4) and how the Father is not affected or controlled by emotions.  On these points, the Pre-Nicene Christians fully agreed.  And these are the points that are most important when it comes to the emotions of God the Father.

About these areas where their points of view were the same, Novatian said it well, writing,

Moreover, if we read of His wrath, and consider certain descriptions of His indignation, and learn that hatred is forced upon Him, yet we are not to understand these to be forced upon Him in the sense in which they are human vices.  For all these things, although they may corrupt man, cannot at all corrupt the divine power.  For such passions as these will rightly be said to be in men, and will not rightly be judged to be in God.  For man may be corrupted by these things, because he can be corrupted.  God may not be corrupted by them, because He cannot be corrupted....  For when God is angry, [this] arises from no vice in Him.  But He is so for our advantage; for He is merciful even then when He threatens, because by these threats men are recalled to righteousness.  For fear is necessary for those who want motivation toward a virtuous life, that they who have forsaken reason may at least be moved by terror....  And thus those things which in men are faulty and corrupting, since they arise from the corruptibility of the body and matter itself, in God cannot exert the force of corruptibility, since they have come of reason, not of vice, as we have said.  (Novatian.  AD 235.  ANF, vol 5, page 615.)

Now let us move on to the different points of view the early Christians held.  Their points of view can be divided into two categories: either the Father does not literally feel emotions—the Scriptures describing emotions figuratively—or the Father does literally feel emotions but they are very far from being like human emotions.  For most of this video, we will take a look at their reasoning behind each point of view.

PRE-NICENE CHRISTIANS: GOD’S EMOTIONS IN SCRIPTURE ARE FIGURATIVE
The early Christian writer who wrote the most about the Father’s emotions being figurative was Origen.  His point of view on the emotions of God is closely connected to their belief in the Personification of God.  For more information on that belief, see the video.

Origen can introduce us to his point of view this way.

Statements are found even in the parables of the Gospel; as when it is said, that he who planted a vineyard, and let it out to husbandmen, who killed the servants that were sent to them, and at last put to death even the son, is said in anger to have taken away the vineyard from them, and to have delivered over the wicked husbandmen to destruction, and to have handed over the vineyard to others, who would yield him the fruit in its season.*  And so also with regard to those citizens who, when the head of the household had set out to receive for himself a kingdom, sent messengers after him, saying, “We will not have this man to reign over us.”**  For the head of the household having obtained the kingdom, returned, and in anger commanded them to be put to death before him, and burned their city with fire.***  But when we read either in the Old Testament or in the New of the anger of God, we do not take such expressions literally, but seek in them a spiritual meaning, that we may think of God as He deserves to be thought of.  (Origen.  AD 235.  ANF, vol 4, page 277-278.)
* Matt 21:33-46, Mark 12:1-12, Luke 20:9-19.
** Luke 19:12-14.
*** Matt 22:5-7.

Next, Origen points out how easy it is to understand the emotions of God in figurative terms.  For example, what about the Scriptural passages that refer to God sleeping?

Further, it is manifest that the language used regarding the wrath of God is to be understood figuratively from what is related of His “sleep.”  From which, as if awaking Him, the prophet says:  “Awake, why do You sleep, Lord?”* and again:  “Then the Lord awaked as one out of sleep, and like a mighty man that shouts by reason of wine.”**  Then, if “sleep” must mean something else, and not what the first recognized meaning of the word conveys, why should not “wrath” also be understood in a similar way…?  Then, it is not human passions which we ascribe to God, nor impious opinions which we entertain of Him.  Nor do we err when we present the various narratives concerning Him, drawn from the Scriptures themselves, after careful comparison one with another.  (Origen.  AD 235.  ANF, vol 4, page 529-530.)
* Ps 44:23.
** Ps 78:65.

Origen spoke about the wrath of God, an emotion of God that is often talked about today.  It appears that an old opponent of the Christians, Celsus, used the idea of God’s wrath to defame God.  Origen responded, writing that any unpleasant emotion of God is not to be interpreted as malice, but because of love, it is figuratively describing the Father’s discipline.

Celsus, not understanding that the language of Scripture regarding God is adapted to an anthropopathic point of view, ridicules those passages which speak of words of anger addressed to the ungodly, and of threatenings directed against sinners.  We have to say that…, when talking with very young children, [we] do not aim at exerting our own power of eloquence, but, adapting ourselves to the weakness of our charge [of parenthood], both say and do those things which may appear to us useful for the correction and improvement of the children as children….  Indeed, we speak of the “wrath” of God.  However, we do not assert that it indicates any “passion” on His part, but that it is something which is assumed in order to discipline by stern means those sinners who have committed many and grievous sins.  For that which is called God’s “wrath,” and “anger,” is a means of discipline; and that such a view is agreeable to Scripture.  (Origen.  AD 235.  ANF, vol 4, page 529.)

Origen saw the Father to be of such love and goodness, he did not believe that the wrath of God was something literal.  Instead, the wrath people feel is a result of their own sins and is not because of God.  Origen also said that true repentance doesn’t come from a fear of wrath or a fear of threats.  Here, Origen makes the same argument using Scripture.

[Anyone will] easily see for what purpose the “wrath” is mentioned, of which “wrath,” as the Apostle Paul declares, all men are children: “We were by nature children of wrath, even as others.”*  Moreover, that “wrath” is no passion on the part of God, but that each one brings it upon himself by his sins, will be clear from the further statement of Paul: “Or do you despise the riches of His goodness, and forbearance, and long-suffering, not knowing that the goodness of God leads you to repentance?  But after your hardness and impenitent heart, do you treasure up unto yourself wrath against the day of wrath, and revelation of the righteous judgment of God.”**  Then, how can anyone treasure up for himself “wrath” against a “day of wrath,” if “wrath” be understood in the sense of “passion?”  Or how can the “passion of wrath” be a help to discipline?  Besides, the Scripture, which tells us not to be angry at all and which says in the thirty-seventh Psalm, “Cease from anger, and forsake wrath,”*** and which commands us by the mouth of Paul to “put off all these, anger, wrath, malice, blasphemy, filthy communication,”**** would not involve God in the same passion from which it would have us to be altogether free...?  Again, the “threatenings” are indications of the (punishments) which are to befall the wicked.  For it is as if one were to call the words of a physician “threats,” when he tells his patients, “I will have to use the knife, and apply cauteries, if you do not obey my prescriptions, and regulate your diet and mode of life in such a way as I direct you.”  (Origen.  AD 235.  ANF, vol 4, page 529.)
* Eph 2:3.
** Rom 2:4-5.
*** Ps 37:8.
**** Col 3:8.

We have read Origen’s point of view, which is that the emotions described in Scripture are figurative.  And Origen believed that the point of describing the emotions of the Father in personification was for our benefit.  This was so that we can better understand the Father as our Parent.  Lastly, Origen explained,

The word of God appears to have dealt with the history, aiming for the capacity of the hearers, and the benefit which they were to receive, and the standard of the appropriateness of its announcements (regarding Him).  And, generally, with regard to such a style of speaking about God, we find in the book of Deuteronomy the following:  “The Lord your God bears with your [childish] manners, as a man would bear with the manners of his son.”*  It is, as it were, [God was] assuming the manners of a man in order to secure the advantage of men that the Scripture makes use of such expressions.  For it would not have been suitable to the condition of the multitude, that what God had to say to them should be spoken by Him in a manner more befitting the majesty of His own person.  (Origen.  AD 235.  ANF, vol 4, page 529.)
* Deut 1:31, LXX.

PRE-NICENE CHRISTIANS: GOD’S EMOTIONS IN SCRIPTURE ARE LITERAL
The early Christian writer who wrote the most about the Father’s emotions being literal was Lactantius.  His point of view on the emotions of God is closely tied to their belief in the Perfect Goodness of God.  For more information on that belief, see the video.

Here, Lactantius explained the differences between the emotions of mankind and the emotions of the Father, such as the fear of death and sexual desire.  Then he concludes showing his point of view on the Father’s emotions.

The affection [or emotion] of fear has a subject-matter in man, but it has none in God.  Man, inasmuch as he is liable to many accidents and dangers, fears lest any greater violence should arise which may strike, despoil, lacerate, dash down, and destroy him.  But God, who is liable neither to want, nor injury, nor pain, nor death, can by no means fear, because there is nothing which can offer violence to Him.  Also the reason and cause of desire is manifest in man.  For, inasmuch as he was made frail and mortal, it was necessary that another and different sex should be made, by union with which offspring might be produced to continue the perpetuity of his race.  But this desire has no place in God, because frailty and death are far removed from Him; nor is there with Him any female in whose union He is able to rejoice; nor does He stand in need of succession, since He will live forever.  The same things may be said respecting envy and passion, to which, from sure and manifest causes, man is liable, but to which God is by no means liable.  But, in truth, favor and anger and pity have their substance in God, and that greatest and matchless power employs them for the preservation of the world.  (Lactantius.  AD 310.  ANF, vol 7, page 272.)

Lactantius explained why humans have the emotions they do.  When injustices are done, the Father feels compassion for the victims and feels anger for the perpetrators.

Someone will ask what this substance is.  First of all, when evils befall them, men in their dejected state for the most part have recourse to God: they appease and entreat Him, believing that He is able to repel injuries from them.  He has therefore an occasion of exercising pity.  For He is not so unmerciful and a despiser of men as to refuse aid to those who are in distress.  Also, very many who are persuaded that justice is pleasing to God, both worship Him who is Lord and Parent of all, and with continual prayers and repeated vows offer gifts and sacrifices, follow up His name with praises, striving to gain His favor by just and good works.  Therefore, there is a reason, on account of which God may and ought to favor them.  For if there is nothing so befitting God as beneficence, and nothing so unsuited to His character as to be ungrateful, it is necessary that He should make some return for the services of those who are excellent, and who lead a holy life; that He may not be liable to the charge of ingratitude which is worthy of blame even in the case of (273) a man. But, on the contrary, others are daring and wicked, who pollute all things with their lusts, harass with slaughters, practice fraud, plunder, commit perjury, neither spare relatives nor parents, neglect the laws, and even God Himself.  Therefore, anger has a befitting occasion in God.  (Lactantius.  AD 310.  ANF, vol 7, page 272-273.)

In another place in his writings, Lactantius spoke about how, when injustice is done in the world, the Father feels compassion for the victims and He feels anger for the perpetrators.  It is through God’s compassion that He rescues and rewards people.  And it is befitting of God to be angry at sin and how it pollutes all things.

Lactantius argued that if the Father has positive emotions like kindness, then also He has negative emotions.  But of course, these are NOT to be confused with evil emotions.  Lactantius explained,

For it is not right that, when He sees such things, He should not be moved, and arise to take vengeance upon the wicked, and destroy the pestilent and guilty, so as to promote the interests of all good men.  Thus even in anger itself there is also contained a showing of kindness.  Therefore, the arguments are found to be empty and false, either of those who, when they will not admit that God is angry, will have it that He shows kindness, because this, indeed, cannot take place without anger; or of those who think that there is no emotion of the mind in God.  And because there are some affections to which God is not liable, as desire, fear, avarice, grief, and envy, they have said that He is entirely free from all affection.  For He is not liable to these, because they are vicious affections.  But as to those which belong to virtue—that is, anger towards the wicked, regard towards the good, pity towards the afflicted—, inasmuch as they are worthy of the divine power, He has affections of His own, both just and true.  (Lactantius.  AD 310.  ANF, vol 7, page 273.)

Within the context of the next quotation, Lactantius spoke about what anger is and how it was viewed in his day.  He very methodically explains the difference between evil anger and righteous anger.

Seneca [a Stoic philosopher] enumerated in the books which he composed on the subject of anger.  He says, “Anger is the desire of avenging an injury.”  As Posidonius [another Stoic philosopher] says, others describe it as the desire of punishing him by whom you think that you have been unfairly injured.  Some have thus defined it: “Anger is an incitement of the mind to injure him who either has committed an injury, or who has wished to do so.”  The definition of Aristotle does not differ greatly from ours.  For he says that “anger is the desire of requiting pain.”  This is the unjust anger, concerning which we spoke before, which is contained even in the dumb animals.  But it is to be restrained in man, lest he should rush to some very great evil through rage.  This cannot exist in God, because He cannot be injured.  But it is found in man, inasmuch as he is frail.  For the inflicting of injury inflames anguish, and anguish produces a desire of revenge.  Then, where is that just anger against offenders?  For this is evidently not the desire of revenge, inasmuch as no injury precedes.  I do not speak of those who sin against the laws.  For although a judge may be angry with these without incurring blame, let us, however, suppose that he ought to be of a sedate mind when he sentences the guilty to punishment, because he is the executor of the laws….  I speak of those in particular who are in our own power, as slaves, children, wives, and pupils.  For when we see these offend, we are incited to restrain them.  For it cannot fail to be [so], that he who is just and good is displeased with things which are bad, and that he who is displeased with evil is moved when he sees it practiced.  Therefore, we arise to take vengeance, not because we have been injured, but that discipline may be preserved, morals may be corrected, and addictions be suppressed.  This is just anger.  As it is necessary in man for the correction of wickedness, so manifestly is it necessary in God, from whom an example comes to man.  For as we ought to restrain those who are subject to our power, so also ought God to restrain the offences of all.  And in order that He may do this, He must be angry.  Because it is natural for one who is good to be moved and incited at the fault of another.  Therefore they [the philosophers] ought to have given this definition: Anger is an emotion of the mind arousing itself for the restraining of faults….  But that anger which we may call either fury or rage ought not to exist even in man, because it is altogether vicious.  But the anger which relates to the correction of vices ought not to be taken away from man; nor can it be taken away from God, because it is both serviceable for the affairs of men, and necessary.  (Lactantius.  AD 310.  ANF, vol 7, page 274.)

Lactantius says that anger is a necessary feeling when a wrong has been done.  The only times when anger is not felt at a wrong is either: when there is a possibility that the person is innocent or when the wrong was not witnessed.

What need is there, they say, of anger, since faults can be corrected without this affection?  But there is no one who can calmly see any one committing an offence. This may perhaps be (275) possible in him who presides over the laws, because the deed is not committed before his eyes, but it is brought before him as a doubtful matter from another quarter.  Nor can any wickedness be so manifest, that there is no place for a defense.  Therefore, it is possible that a judge may not be moved against him who may possibly be found to be innocent.  And when the detected crime shall have come to light, he now no longer uses his own opinion, but that of the laws.  It may be granted that he does that which he does without anger.  For he has that which he may follow.  Undoubtedly, we, when an offence is committed by our household at home, whether we see or perceive it, must be indignant.  For the very sight of a sin is unbecoming.  (Lactantius.  AD 310.  ANF, vol 7, page 274-275.)

While Origen saw from Scripture that anger is something that God tells mankind to be rid of, Lactantius sees anger as a God-given emotion and also uses Scripture to support his point of view.

[Someone might say,] “God is not angry for a short time, because He is eternal and of perfect virtue, and He is never angry unless deservedly.”  But, however, the matter is not so.  For if He should altogether prohibit anger, He Himself would have been in some measure the censurer of His own workmanship, since He from the beginning had inserted anger in the liver of man, since it is believed that the cause of this emotion is contained in the moisture of the gall.  Therefore, He does not altogether prohibit anger, because that affection is necessarily given, but He forbids us to persevere in anger.  For the anger of mortals ought to be mortal [that is, temporary].  For if it is lasting, hostility is strengthened to lasting destruction.  Then, again, when He commanded us to be angry, and yet not to sin,* it is plain that He did not tear up anger by the roots, but restrained it, that in every correction we might preserve moderation and justice.  Therefore, He who commands us to be angry is manifestly Himself angry.  He who commands us to be quickly appeased is manifestly Himself easy to be appeased.  For He has commanded those things which are just and useful for the interests of society.  But because I had said that the anger of God is not for a time only, as is the case with man, who becomes inflamed with an immediate excitement, and on account of his frailty is unable easily to govern himself, we ought to understand that because God is eternal, His anger also remains to eternity.  But, on the other hand, that because He is endued with the greatest excellence, He controls His anger, and is not ruled by it, but that He regulates it according to His will.  (Lactantius.  AD 310.  ANF, vol 7, page 277.)
* Ps 4:4, Eph 4:26.

PRE-NICENE CHRISTIANS’ POINTS OF VIEW
Now that we have seen the point of view of Lactantius, it sounds like he is strongly rejecting the things Origen taught.  At least, it sounds that way.  Yet, I’m very curious what Origen would say about Lactantius’ point of view on the emotions of God.  Even though they approach this topic very differently, it is possible that Origen and Lactantius would agree with each other’s point of view.  For example… Lactantius wouldn’t describe it as Origen does but could understand why Origen described God’s emotions as figurative.  And Origen wouldn’t describe it as Lactantius does but could understand Lactantius’ meaning about how God is still perfectly righteous in His emotions.  It is very probable that that each of them understood things differently, describing it in very different words, but neither of them being wrong.

Keep in mind that this difference between the points of view of Origen and Lactantius is, truthfully, really minor.  This video has gone into some minute details about the emotions of God, which may make it seem like Origen and Lactantius were opponents.  But please remember that when it comes to the belief in the impassibility of God, both Origen and Lactantius fully agreed with it.  From the quotations we have read, they both agreed on the important things: (1) God IS NOT affected by emotions as mankind is; (2) in no way are emotions a weakness of God, though they are easily weaknesses of every man; (3) any anger displayed by God is actually love and kindness, an act of discipline, as a parent would discipline their child.

SCRIPTURES: GOD’S EMOTIONS ARE NOT LIKE MANKIND’S
What do the Scriptures say about the emotions of God?  When looking at the Old Testament, it depends on which family of manuscripts you are looking at.  English-speaking Christians today use an Old Testament that is translated from the Hebrew Masoretic.  In those Old Testament manuscripts, there are far, far more occurrences of God having emotions.  The Pre-Nicene Christians used an Old Testament called the Greek Septuagint.  In those Old Testament manuscripts, there are far fewer occurrences of God having emotions.  This may be one of the reasons why the Pre-Nicene Christians did not write many details about the impassibility of God, except for Origen and Lactantius who went into the details from their own points of view.  For the early Christians, the topic of the emotions of God the Father was not a controversial one.  Because Old Testament families of manuscripts differ on this topic, this increases the controversy today.  (For more information about the Septuagint, please check out that video series.)

Without getting lost in all the details, the truth is that Scripture does speak of the emotions of God.  The question at hand is whether those emotions are to be understood literally or figuratively.  Sadly (pun intended), the Scriptures do not explicitly give us the answer.  We can only gather the important, general truths that Scripture does reveal.  One of the Scriptural truths about the impassibility of God is that the Father’s emotions are not like mankind’s emotions.

God is not a man who lies, or a son of man who changes His mind.  (Numbers 23:19, HCSB)

God changed His mind at least 12 times in the Scriptures.*  It’s not that God doesn’t change His mind, it is that God doesn’t do it like man does.  Because of this analogy, it seems that Lactantius would be more correct than Origen—though both points of view can still be true.  Num 23:19 is different in the Septuagint.  Maybe if this verse appeared like this in the Septuagint, Origen would have considered it.
* Ex 32:14, Deut 32:36, 1Sam 15:35, 2Sam 24:16, 1Chr 21:15, Jer 18:8, Jer 26:3, Jer 26:13, Jer 26:19, Jer 42:10, Amos 7:3,6, Jonah 3:10

With Him there is no variation or shadow cast by turning.  (James 1:17, HCSB)

There are so many Scriptures that speak about the Father’s emotions.

God regretted because He made mankind upon the earth, and He considered it.  (Genesis 6:6, LXX)

The Lord was greatly angered against Moses.  (Exodus 4:14, Brenton)

The Lord hates six things; in fact, seven are detestable to Him.  (Proverbs 6:16, HCSB)

You have rejected me, says Jehovah, you have gone backward: therefore have I stretched out my hands against you, and destroyed you.  I am weary with repenting.  (Jeremiah 15:6, ASV)

Your new moons and your appointed feasts my soul hates.  They are a trouble unto me.  I am weary of bearing them.  (Is 1:14, ASV)

[God] does not hold on to His anger forever, because He delights in faithful love.  (Micah 7:18, HCSB)

And then there are the Scriptures that speak against anger.

All bitterness, anger and wrath, shouting and slander must be removed from you, along with all malice.  (Eph 4:31, HCSB)

Cease from anger and forsake wrath.  Do not provoke yourself toward evil.  (Ps 37:8, LXX)

But now you must also put away all the following: anger, wrath, malice, slander, and filthy language from your mouth.  Do not lie to one another, since you have put off the old self with its practices and have put on the new self.  (Col 3:8-10, HCSB)

Now, are these Scriptures to be taken figuratively, as Origen did, or literally, as Lactantius did?  Origen said that the Father’s emotions are figurative.  For example, why would the Father become tired, or weary?  And why would the Father literally feel anger when He tells us to put it away?  Lactantius said that the Father’s emotions are literal.  He said that they are temporary, and that, for God to have delight in righteousness, He would also have anger in unrighteousness.  Why would God have compassion and not anger?  In conclusion, both Origen’s and Lactantius’ points of view appear to be grounded in the Scriptures.  And this is why their beliefs have been called points of view throughout this video.  Different points of view may not be the same, but there is a sense of truth within each one.

CONCLUSION
To finish this video, here are two encouraging messages from Lactantius and James.

If His anger had been altogether immortal [or never-ceasing], there would be no place after a fault for satisfaction or kind feeling, though He Himself commands men to be reconciled before the setting of the sun.*  But the divine anger remains forever against those who ever-sin.  Therefore, God is appeased not by incense or a victim, not by costly offerings, which things are all corruptible, but by a reformation of the morals.  And he who ceases to sin renders the anger of God mortal [or temporary].  For this reason, He does not immediately punish everyone who is guilty, that man may have the opportunity of coming to a right mind, and correcting himself.  (Lactantius.  AD 310.  ANF, vol 7, page 277.)
* Eph 4:26.

My dearly loved brothers, understand this: Everyone must be quick to hear, slow to speak, and slow to anger, for man’s anger does not accomplish God’s righteousness.  (James 1:19-20, HCSB)

Blessings and so forth.

Saturday, June 1, 2019

Update - June 2019

This month, I plan on posting the next video, Early Christianity on the Emotions of God.

That least one final video on God the Father, Early Christianity on the Name of God.  I do not expect to have this video ready until July.