Athanasius on God becoming human
“He was made man that we might be made God.”
Plain English
Athanasius is summarizing the purpose of the incarnation. The Word becomes human so humanity can share, by grace, in the life of God.
Why it matters
This became one of the most compact statements of patristic deification.
About Athanasius
Athanasius spent forty-five years as bishop of Alexandria and was exiled five times for refusing to compromise on the divinity of Christ. When the empire wanted unity-at-the-cost-of-doctrine, he chose doctrine and lost everything. He had attended the Council of Nicaea in 325 as a young deacon and secretary to Bishop Alexander; he did not call the council, but after it chose homoousios ('of one substance') he became the council's fiercest defender. The point was simple and enormous: if the Son is not truly God, the gospel cannot say that God himself has come to save us. That is why the Creed says the Son is 'one in being with the Father' rather than a created being close to God. Read On the Incarnation next: it is short, clear, and still the best first answer to 'why did God become man.' C.S. Lewis loved it enough to write the famous introduction, where he advised reading one old book for every three modern ones.
- Lifespan
- c. 296 – 373
- Era
- Nicene
- Born in
- Alexandria
- See
- Alexandria
- Region
- Egypt

On the Incarnation
Athanasius of AlexandriaShort, readable, and central: why God became man, written from inside the Nicene fight.
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