and alway held in the Catholick Church from the Apostles to that day, even from those that had seen with their eyes, and were made Ministers of the Word, and which was preached in the Law and Prophets, and in the New Testament. And the Faith concerning Christ they say is this: That he is the Word the Wisdom and Power of God, that was before all Ages, God the Son of God in substance and subsistance.
Pierius, a Presbyter of Alexandria, was of the same Opinion, as Photius relates Cod. 119. That the Father and the Son were of one Substance and Equality.
St. Lucian, a Presbyter of Antioch, published the same Faith, which is to be seen in Socrates, l. 2. c. 10. We believe in one God the Father Al∣mighty, Maker of all things, and in one Lord Jesus Christ his only begotten Son, by whom all things were made, begotten of the Father before all Ages, God of God, Whole of Whole, Sole of Sole, Perfect of Perfect, King of King, Lord of Lord, the Living Word, Wisdom, Life, the true Light, Way, and Truth, the Resurrection, Pastor, and Gate, not obnoxious to Change or Alteration, every way the express Image of the Father's Deity, Substance, Power, Counsel, and Glory, the first Begotten of every Creature, who was with God in the beginning, God the Word as is said in the Scripture, who in the last times came down from Heaven, and was born of a Virgin, ac∣cording to the Scripture: and in the Holy Ghost which is given to Believers to comfort, sanctifie and consummate them, as our Lord Christ commanded his Disciples, go teach all Nations, baptizing them in the Name of the Fa∣ther, Son and Holy Ghost, who are three in Person, but agree in One.
Arnobius gives the like Testimony, That Christ without any Instru∣ment, Help or Rule, but by the power of his own Nature made all things, and as it was worthy of God, nothing that was hurtful, but all beneficial, and this is the property of the true God to deny his bounty to none.
Lastly, Lactantius, whom the Arians claim to be of their Opinion, says thus: When we say God the Father, and God the Son, we do not speak of what is diverse or separated, because neither the Father can be so called without the Son, nor the Son be begotten without the Father, seeing therefore the Father makes the Son, and the Son makes him a Father, there is in both one Mind, one Spirit, and one Substance, the one as a Fountain, the other as a Stream flowing from him, or as the Beams from the Sun, which are not separated.
These many and plain Evidences of the Belief of the Ancient Fa∣thers, before the Council of Nice, do evidently declare, what sure footing they had for their Faith, (viz.) the unanimous Consent of Apostolical Men, Martyrs, and Confessors, who maintained that the Son of God was of the same Divine Nature and Substance with his Father, consonant to the Doctrine of the Holy Scripture; and con∣sequently