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Saint Gregory of Nyssa
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Against Eunomius
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Book VI
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Thereafter He Shows That There Are Not Two Christs or Two Lords, but One Christ and One Lord, and That the Divine Nature, After Mingling With the Human, Preserved the Properties of Each Nature Without Confusion, and Declares That the Operations Are, by Reason of the Union, Predicated of the Two Natures in Common, in the Sense That the Lord Took Upon Himself the Sufferings of the Servant, and the Humanity is Glorified With Him in the Honour That is the Lord's, and That by the Power of the Divine Nature That is Made Anew, Conformably With That Divine Nature Itself
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The Sixth Book Shows That He Who Came for Man's Salvation Was Not a Mere Man, as Eunomius, Falsely Slandering Him, Affirmed That the Great Basil Had Said, but the Only-begotten Son of God, Putting on Human Flesh, and Becoming a Mediator Between God and Man, on Whom We Believe, as Subject to Suffering in the Flesh, but Impassible in His Godhead; and Demonstrates the Calumny of Eunomius