Our Only Hope Lay in the Word of God

“There is no God else beside Me; a just God and a Savior; there is none beside Me.”

Isaiah 45:21

God couldn’t abandon humanity to be swept away by the process of decay; this would be unacceptable, unworthy of a good God. 

However, it’s equally true that the righteous claims of God’s law pressed against us. God must show Himself true to His word concerning death as sin’s consequence. It would be monstrous if God, the Father of Truth, went back on His word concerning death, becoming false in order to preserve us. 

So again, what was God to do? Should He require repentance from humans for their transgression? We could say this was worthy of God, that as we became subject to perishing through transgression, so through repentance we might return to imperishability. Yet mere repentance wouldn’t safeguard God’s consistency with Himself. He still wouldn’t be true to His word, if death failed to hold mastery over disobedient humans. Nor does repentance bring humans out of their natural condition of mortality; all it does is stop them sinning again. 

Repentance would have sufficed, if all that needed rectifying was a bare act of sin, rather than the corruption of our nature that followed the act. But once sin had begun, humans fell under the dominating power of the decay proper to their nature, deprived of the grace belonging to them as God’s image-bearers.

What else was required? How could we receive the grace we needed, and be rescued from decay? Our only hope lay in the Word of God, who originally made everything from nothing. He alone had power to restore the perishing to imperishable life, and to safeguard the Father’s consistency toward us all. 

Only the Word, by the fitness of His nature as the Father’s Word exalted above all, could recreate all; He alone was worthy to suffer for all, and be an ambassador for all with the Father.


This treatise by Athanasius is excerpted from On the Incarnation of the Word 6:10–7:5, translated by © Nick Needham, Daily Readings from the Early Church Fathers, 2017, Christian Heritage, Scotland, UK.

Top image credit: Christ Pantocrator (Ruler of All), icon from St. Catherine’s Monastery, Mount Sinai, Eqypt, painted in the 500s AD. Image in the public domain.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *