Page:Ante-Nicene Christian Library Vol 5.djvu/480

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
454
IRENÆUS AGAINST HERESIES.
[Book iv.

of liberty had arrived, the Word Himself did by Himself "wash away the filth of the daughters of Zion,"[1] when He washed the disciples' feet with His own hands.[2] For this is the end of the human race inheriting God; that as in the beginning, by means of our first [parents], we were all brought into bondage, by being made subject to death; so at last, by means of the New Man, all who from the beginning [were His] disciples, having been cleansed and washed from things pertaining to death, should come to the life of God. For He who washed the feet of the disciples sanctified the entire body, and rendered it clean. For this reason, too. He administered food to them in a recumbent posture, indicating that those who were lying in the earth were they to whom He came to impart life. As Jeremiah declares, "The holy Lord remembered His dead Israel, who slept in the land of sepulture; and He descended to them to make known to them His salvation, that they might be saved."[3] For this reason also were the eyes of the disciples weighed down when Christ's passion was approaching; and when, in the first instance, the Lord found them sleeping, He let it pass,—thus indicating the patience of God in regard to the state of slumber in which men lay; but coming the second time, He aroused them, and made them stand up, in token that His passion is the arousing of His sleeping disciples, on whose account "He also descended into the lower parts of the earth,"[4] to behold with His eyes the state of those who were resting from their labours,[5] in reference to whom He did also declare to the disciples: "Many prophets and righteous men have desired to see and hear what ye do see and hear."[6]

2. For it was not merely for those who believed on Him

  1. Isa. iv. 4.
  2. John xiii. 5.
  3. This spurious quotation has been introduced before. See book iii. 20, 4.
  4. Eph. iv. 9.
  5. So Harvey understands the obscure Latin text, "id quod erat inoperatum conditionis."
  6. Matt. xiii. 17.