Ante-Nicene Fathers/Volume VI/Alexander of Alexandria/Epistles on the Arian Heresy/Part 4

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Ante-Nicene Fathers Vol. VI, Epistles on the Arian Heresy
by Alexander of Alexandria, translated by James Benjamin Head Hawkins
Part 4
158517Ante-Nicene Fathers Vol. VI, Epistles on the Arian Heresy — Part 4James Benjamin Head HawkinsAlexander of Alexandria

IV.—Epistle to Æglon, Bishop of Cynopolis, Against the Arians.[1]

From a letter of St. Alexander, bishop of Alexandria, to Æglon, bishop of Cynopolis, against the Arians.

1. Natural will is the free faculty of every intelligent nature as having nothing involuntary which is in respect of its essence.

2. Natural operation is the innate motion of all substance. Natural operation is the substantial and notifying reason of every nature. Natural operation is the notifying virtue of every substance.


Footnotes

[edit]
  1. Two fragments from an epistle. St. Maxim., Theological and Polemical Works, vol. ii. pp. 152–155. Edit. Paris, 1675.