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We confess, then, that He assumed all the natural and innocent
passions of man. For He assumed the whole man and all man's
attributes save sin. For that is not natural, nor is it implanted in
us by the Creator, but arises voluntarily in our mode of life as the
result of a further implantation by the devil, though it cannot prevail
over us by force. For the natural and innocent passions are those
which are not in our power, but which have entered into the life of man
owing to the condemnation by reason of the transgression; such as
hunger, thirst, weariness, labour, the tears, the corruption, the
shrinking from death, the fear, the agony with the bloody sweat, the
succour at the hands of angels because of the weakness of the nature,
and other such like passions which belong by nature to every man.
All, then, He assumed that He might sanctify all. He was tried
and overcame in order that He might prepare victory for us and give to
nature power to overcome its antagonist, in order that nature which was
overcome of old might overcome its former conqueror by the very weapons
wherewith it had itself been overcome.
The wicked one, then, made his assault from without, not by thoughts
prompted inwardly, just as it was with Adam. For it was not by
inward thoughts, but by the serpent that Adam was assailed. But the
Lord repulsed the assault and dispelled it like vapour, in order that
the passions which assailed him and were overcome might be easily
subdued by us, and that the new Adam should save the old.
Of a truth our natural passions were in harmony with nature and above
nature in Christ. For they were stirred in Him after a natural
manner when He permitted the flesh to suffer what was proper to it:
but they were above nature because that which was natural did not in the
Lord assume command over the will. For no compulsion is contemplated
in Him but all is voluntary. For it was with His will that He
hungered and thirsted and feared and died.
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