Ante-Nicene Fathers/Volume IX/Origen on Matthew/Origen's Commentary on Matthew/Book XII/Chapter 29
29. The Coming of the Son of Man in Glory.
“For the Son of man shall come in the glory of His own Father with His angels.”[1] Now, indeed, the Son of man has not come in His glory; “for we saw Him, and He had no form nor beauty; but His form was dishonoured and defective compared with the sons of men; He was a man in affliction and toil, and acquainted with the enduring of sickness, because His face was turned away, He was dishonoured and not esteemed.”[2] And it was necessary that He should come in such form that He might bear our sins[3] and suffer pain for us; for it did not become Him in glory to bear our sins and suffer pain for us. But He also comes in glory, having prepared[4] the disciples through that epiphany of His which has no form nor beauty; and, having become as they that they might become as He, “conformed to the image of His glory,”[5] since He formerly became conformed to “the body of our humiliation,”[6] when He “emptied Himself and took upon Him the form of a servant,”[7] He is restored to the image of God and also makes them conformed unto it.