Nilus of Ancyra→Gainas|c. 415 AD|nilus ancyra|From Ancyra|AI-assisted
To the same person.
To "intercede" does not mean, as is the common usage of many, also to seek vengeance for oneself (for that smacks somewhat of low-mindedness); rather it means to plead on our behalf by the office of mediation, just as the Spirit too is said to intercede on our behalf. For "there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus." [1 Timothy 2:5] For he is said to plead, even now, as a man on behalf of my salvation, because he is with the body which he took up, until he should bring it about that I am known according to the flesh - I mean the sufferings of the flesh, ours apart from sin. [...] So too we have Jesus as advocate with the Father, not as one who is bent down before the Father on our behalf and falls down in servile fashion - away with such a servile, unworthy supposition! For it is right neither to think that the Father holds the keys of the [kingdom] [...], nor that the Son suffers, nor to reason in this way about God. But Jesus suffered as a man, and is persuaded to endure as the Word and exhorter. For this is how you must understand the consolation.
To "intercede" does not mean, as is the common usage of many, also to seek vengeance for oneself (for that smacks somewhat of low-mindedness); rather it means to plead on our behalf by the office of mediation, just as the Spirit too is said to intercede on our behalf. For "there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus." [1 Timothy 2:5] For he is said to plead, even now, as a man on behalf of my salvation, because he is with the body which he took up, until he should bring it about that I am known according to the flesh - I mean the sufferings of the flesh, ours apart from sin. [...] So too we have Jesus as advocate with the Father, not as one who is bent down before the Father on our behalf and falls down in servile fashion - away with such a servile, unworthy supposition! For it is right neither to think that the Father holds the keys of the [kingdom][...], nor that the Son suffers, nor to reason in this way about God. But Jesus suffered as a man, and is persuaded to endure as the Word and exhorter. For this is how you must understand the consolation.
AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek below for scholarly use.