Nilus of Ancyra→Athanasius|c. 415 AD|nilus ancyra|From Ancyra|AI-assisted
To Athanasius the Ekdikos [defensor ecclesiae, an ecclesiastical legal advocate].
You inquired of me how, if Christ the Master of all things is substantial Wisdom, and alone full, and perfect, and lacking in nothing from the beginning, Luke writes concerning him: "He advanced in stature, and in wisdom, and in grace." [Luke 2:52] It was not that he was perceived to be taking on from some external source a wisdom which he already possessed of himself; for in respect of his divinity he is wholly Wisdom, and incomprehensible knowledge, and grace, and a treasury of inexhaustible graces. Rather it was that, as the human stature of the Savior advanced, the manifestation of the divine wisdom and grace was progressively laid bare to men.
To Athanasius the Ekdikos [defensor ecclesiae, an ecclesiastical legal advocate].
You inquired of me how, if Christ the Master of all things is substantial Wisdom, and alone full, and perfect, and lacking in nothing from the beginning, Luke writes concerning him: "He advanced in stature, and in wisdom, and in grace." [Luke 2:52] It was not that he was perceived to be taking on from some external source a wisdom which he already possessed of himself; for in respect of his divinity he is wholly Wisdom, and incomprehensible knowledge, and grace, and a treasury of inexhaustible graces. Rather it was that, as the human stature of the Savior advanced, the manifestation of the divine wisdom and grace was progressively laid bare to men.
AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek below for scholarly use.