Letter 236: 1. Enquiry has already frequently been made concerning the saying of the gospels as to our Lord Jesus Christ's ignorance of the day and of the hour of the end; Mark 13:32 an objection constantly put forward by the Anomœans to the destruction of the glory of the Only-Begotten, in order to show Him to be unlike in essence and subordinate in dignit...

Basil of CaesareaUnknown|c. 371 AD|basil caesarea
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The question of our Lord Jesus Christ's apparent ignorance of the day and hour of the end has been raised many times. The Anomoeans [radical Arians who argued the Son was completely unlike the Father in essence] seize on this passage constantly, trying to show that the Son is unlike the Father in essence and inferior in dignity. Their reasoning: if He does not know all things, He cannot share the same nature as the One whose knowledge spans the universe.

You have now put this question to me as though it were new. I can give you the answer I heard from our teachers when I was a boy -- an answer I accepted without objection because of my trust in their goodness. I do not expect it to silence the shameless opponents of Christ, for what argument could possibly withstand their attacks? But it may be enough for those who love the Lord and in whom faith's conviction runs deeper than any logical demonstration.

The phrase "no man" appears to be universal, excluding no one. But this is not how Scripture uses it. Take the passage: "There is none good but one, that is, God." The Son does not exclude Himself from goodness by saying this. Rather, since the Father is the first good, we understand "no one" to carry the implied qualifier "first." Likewise with "No one knows the Son except the Father" -- this does not charge the Spirit with ignorance but testifies that knowledge of the Son's nature belongs to the Father first and by nature. In the same way, "No one knows" the day and hour refers first knowledge to the Father as the first cause of all things.

Otherwise, how could this passage agree with the rest of Scripture? How could it be reconciled with our belief that the Only-Begotten is the image of the invisible God -- not an image of bodily form, but of the very Godhead and all the attributes belonging to God's essence? Christ is called "the power of God and the wisdom of God," and knowledge is plainly a part of wisdom. It would be the height of absurdity to claim that Wisdom itself does not know something.

The Son's statement should be read not as a confession of ignorance but as a direction of our attention to the Father as the source and origin of all knowledge. The Son knows what the Father knows, because the Son is in the Father and the Father is in the Son. But in the economy of revelation, there are things the Son declares are not His to disclose -- not because He does not know them, but because the time for disclosure has not come, and because all things originate with the Father.

Modern English rendering for readability. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek for scholarly use.

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