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Along with the Father and the Holy Spirit we worship the Son of
God, Who was incorporeal before He took on humanity, and now in
His own person is incarnate and has become man though still being also
God. His flesh, then, in its own nature, if one were to make
subtle mental distinctions between what is seen and what is thought, is
not deserving of worship since it is created. But as it is united with
God the Word, it is worshipped on account of Him and in Him. For
just as the king deserves homage alike when un-robed and when robed,
and just as the purple robe, considered simply as a purple robe, is
trampled upon and tossed about, but after becoming the royal dress
receives all honour and glory, and whoever dishonours it is generally
condemned to death: and again, just as wood in itself is not of such a
nature that it cannot be touched, but becomes so when fire is applied
to it, and it becomes charcoal, and yet this is not because of its own
nature, but because of the fire united to it, and the nature of the
wood is not such as cannot be touched, but rather the charcoal or
burning wood: so also the flesh, in its own nature, is not to be
worshipped, but is worshipped in the incarnate God Word, not because
of itself, but because of its union in subsistence with God the
Word. And we do not say that we worship mere flesh, but God's
flesh, that is, God incarnate.
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