Article XIX
The Union and Distinction of the Two Natures in the Person of Christ
We believe that by this conception the person of the Son is inseparably
united and connected with the human nature; so that there are not two Sons of
God, nor two persons, but two natures united in one single person; yet each
nature retains its own distinct properties. As, then, the divine nature has
always remained uncreated, without beginning of days or end of life, filling
heaven and earth, so also has the human nature not lost its properties but
remained a creature, having beginning of days, being a finite nature, and
retaining all the properties of a real body. And though He has by His
resurrection given immortality to the same, nevertheless He has not changed the
reality of His human nature; forasmuch as our salvation and resurrection also
depend on the reality of His body. But these two natures are so closely united
in one person that they were not separated even by His death. Therefore that
which He, when dying, commended into the hands of His Father, was a real human
spirit, departing from His body. But in the meantime the divine nature always
remained united with the human, even when He lay in the grave; and the Godhead
did not cease to be in Him, any more than it did when He was an infant, though
it did not so clearly manifest itself for a while. Wherefore we confess that He
is very God and very man: very God by His power to conquer death;
and very man that He might die for us according to the infirmity of His
flesh.