JUSTIN DESCRIBES HIS STUDIES IN PHILOSOPHY AND OTHER ARTICLES (CHAP. II to Chap L)
CHAP. II.--JUSTIN DESCRIBES HIS STUDIES IN PHILOSOPHY.
"I will tell you," said I, "what seems to me; for philosophy is, in fact,
the greatest possession, and most honourable before God,(1) to whom it leads us
and alone commends us; and these are truly holy men who have bestowed
attention on philosophy. What philosophy is, however, and the reason why it has been
sent down to men, have escaped the observation of most; for there would be
neither Platonists, nor Stoics, nor Peripatetics, nor Theoretics,(2) nor
Pythagoreans, this knowledge being one.(3) I wish to tell you why it has become
many-headed. It has happened that those who first handled it [i.e., philosophy], and who
were therefore esteemed illustrious men, were succeeded by those who made no
investigations concerning truth, but only admired the perseverance and
self-discipline of the former, as well as the novelty of the doctrines; and each thought
that to be true which he learned from his teacher: then, moreover, those latter
persons handed down to their successors such things, and others similar to
them; and this system was called by the name of him who was styled the father of
the doctrine. Being at first desirous of personally conversing with one of these
men, I surrendered myself to a certain Stoic; and having spent a considerable
time with him, when I had not acquired any further knowledge of God (for he did
not know himself, and said such instruction was unnecessary), I left him and
betook myself to another, who was called a Peripatetic, and as he fancied,
shrewd. And this man, after having entertained me for the first few days, requested
me to settle the fee, in order that our intercourse might not be unprofitable.
Him, too, for this reason I abandoned, believing him to be no philosopher at
all. But when my soul was eagerly desirous to hear the peculiar and choice
philosophy, I came to a Pythagorean, very celebrated--a man who thought much of his
own wisdom. And then, when I had an interview with him, willing to become his
hearer and disciple, he said, 'What then? Are you acquainted with music,
astronomy, and geometry? Do you expect to perceive any of those things which conduce to
a happy life, if you have not been first informed on those points which wean
the soul from sensible objects, and render it fitted for objects which appertain
to the mind, so that it can contemplate that which is honourable in its essence
and that which is good in its essence?' Having commended many of these
branches of learning, and telling me that they were necessary, he dismissed me when I
confessed to him my ignorance. Accordingly I took it rather impatiently, as was
to be expected when I failed in my hope, the more so because I deemed the man
had some knowledge; but reflecting again on the space of time during which I
would have to linger over those branches of learning, I was not able to endure
longer procrastination. In my helpless condition it occurred to me to have a
meeting with the Platonists, for their fame was great. I thereupon spent as much of
my time as possible with one who had lately settled in our city,(4)--a
sagacious man, holding a high position among the Platonists,--and I progressed, and
made the greatest improvements daily. And the perception of immaterial things
quite overpowered me, and the contemplation of ideas furnished my mind with
wings,(5) so that in a little while I supposed that I had become wise; and such was
my stupidity, I expected forthwith to look upon God, for this is the end of
Plato's philosophy.
CHAP. III.--JUSTIN NARRATES THE MANNER OF HIS CONVERSION.
"And while I was thus disposed, when I wished at one period to be filled
with great quietness, and to shun the path of men, I used to go into a certain
field not far from the sea. And when I was near that spot one day, which having
reached I purposed to be by myself, a certain old man, by no means contemptible
in appearance, exhibiting meek and venerable manners, followed me at a little
distance. And when I turned round to him, having halted, I fixed my eyes rather
keenly on him.
"And he said, 'Do you know me?'
"I replied in the negative.
"'Why, then,' said he to me, 'do you so look at me?'
"'I am astonished,' I said, 'because you have chanced to be in my company
in the same place; for I had not expected to see any man here.'
"And he says to me, 'I am concerned about some of my household. These are
gone away from me; and therefore have I come to make personal search for them,
if, perhaps, they shall make their appearance somewhere. But why are you here?'
said he to me.
"'I delight,' said I, 'in such walks, where my attention is not
distracted, for converse with myself is uninterrupted; and such places are most fit for
philology.'(6)
"'Are you, then, a philologian,'(7) said he,(4) but no lover of deeds or
of truth? and do you not aim at being a practical man so much as being a
sophist?'
"'What greater work,' said I, 'could one accomplish than this, to show the
reason which governs all, and having laid hold of it, and being mounted upon
it, to look down on the errors of others, and their pursuits? But without
philosophy and right reason, prudence would not be present to any man. Wherefore it
is necessary for every man to philosophize, and to esteem this the greatest and
most honourable work; but other things only of second-rate or third-rate
importance, though, indeed, if they be made to depend on philosophy, they are of
moderate value, and worthy of acceptance; but deprived of it, and not accompanying
it, they are vulgar and coarse to those who pursue them.'
"'Does philosophy, then, make happiness?' said he, interrupting.
"'Assuredly,' I said, 'and it alone.'
"'What, then, is philosophy?' he says; 'and what is happiness? Pray tell
me, unless something hinders you from saying.'
"'Philosophy, then,' said I, 'is the knowledge of that which really
exists, and a clear perception of the truth; and happiness is the reward of such
knowledge and wisdom.'
"'But what do you call God?' said he.
"'That which always maintains the same nature, and in the same manner, and
is the cause of all other things--that, indeed, is God.' So I answered him;
and he listened to me with pleasure, and thus again interrogated me:--
"'Is not knowledge a term common to different matters? For in arts of all
kinds, he who knows any one of them is called a skilful man in the art of
generalship, or of ruling, or of healing equally. But in divine and human affairs it
is not so. Is there a knowledge which affords understanding of human and
divine things, and then a thorough acquaintance with the divinity and the
righteousness of them?'
"'Assuredly,' I replied.
"'What, then? Is it in the same way we know man and' God, as we know
music, and arithmetic, and astronomy, or any other similar branch?'
"'By no means,' I replied.
"'You have not answered me correctly, then,' he said; 'for some [branches
of knowledge] come to us by learning, or by some employment, while of others we
have knowledge by sight. Now, if one were to tell you that there exists in
India an animal with a nature unlike all others, but of such and such a kind,
multiform and various, you would not know it before you saw it; but neither would
you be competent to give any account of it, unless you should hear from one who
had seen it.'
"'Certainly not,' I said.
"'How then,' he said, 'should the philosophers judge correctly about God,
or speak any truth, when they have no knowledge of Him,
having neither seen Him at any time, nor heard Him?'
"'But, father,' said I, 'the Deity cannot be seen merely by the eyes, as
other living beings can, but is discernible to the mind alone, as Plato says;
and I believe him.'
CHAP. IV.--THE SOUL OF ITSELF CANNOT SEE GOD.
"'Is there then,' says he, 'such and so great power in our mind? Or can a
man not perceive by sense sooner? Will the mind of man see God at any time, if
it is uninstructed by the Holy Spirit?'
"'Plato indeed says,' replied I, 'that the mind's eye is of such a nature,
and has been given for this end, that we may see that very Being when the mind
is pure itself, who is the cause of all discerned by the mind, having no
colour, no form, no greatness--nothing, indeed, which the bodily eye looks upon; but
It is something of this sort, he goes on to say, that is beyond all essence,
unutterable and inexplicable, but alone honourable and good, coming suddenly
into souls well-dispositioned, on account of their affinity to and desire of
seeing Him.'
"'What affinity, then,' replied he, 'is there between us and God? Is the
soul also divine and immortal, and a part of that very regal mind? And even as
that sees God, so also is it attainable by us to conceive of the Deity in our
mind, and thence to become happy?'
"'Assuredly,' I said.
"'And do all the souls of all living beings comprehend Him?' he asked; 'or
are the souls of men of one kind and the souls of horses and of asses of
another kind?'
"'No; but the souls which are in all are similar,' I answered.
"'Then,' says he, 'shall both horses and asses see, or have they seen at
some time or other, God?'
"'No,' I said; 'for the majority of men will not, saving such as shall
live justly, purified by righteousness, and by every other virtue.'
"'It is not, therefore,' said he, 'on account of his affinity, that a man
sees God, nor because he has a mind, but because he is temperate and righteous?'
"'Yes,' said I; 'and because he has that whereby he perceives God.'
"'What then? Do goats or sheep injure any
one?'
"'No one in any respect,' I said.
"'Therefore these animals will see [God] according to your account,' says
he.
"'No; for their body being of such a nature, is an obstacle to them.'
"He rejoined,' If these animals could assume speech, be well assured that
they would with greater reason ridicule our body; but let us now dismiss this
subject, and let it be conceded to you as you say. Tell me, however, this: Does
the soul see [God] so long as it is in the body, or after it has been removed
from it?'
"'So long as it is in the form of a man, it is possible for it,' I
continue, 'to attain to this by means of the mind; but especially when it has been set
free from the body, and being apart by itself, it gets possession of that
which it was wont continually and wholly to love.'
"'Does it remember this, then [the sight of God], when it is again in the
man?'
"'It does not appear to me so,' I said.
"'What, then, is the advantage to those who have seen [God]? or what has
he who has seen more than he who has not seen, unless he remember this fact,
that he has seen?'
"'I cannot tell,' I answered.
"'And what do those suffer who are judged to be unworthy of this
spectacle?' said he.
"'They are imprisoned in the bodies of certain wild beasts, and this is
their punishment.'
"'Do they know, then, that it is for this reason they are in such forms,
and that they have committed some sin?'
"'I do not think so.'
"'Then these reap no advantage from their punishment, as it seems:
moreover, I would say that they are not punished unless they are conscious of the
punishment.'
"'No indeed.'
"'Therefore souls neither see God nor trans-migrate into other bodies; for
they would know that so they are punished, and they would be afraid to commit
even the most trivial sin afterwards. But that they can perceive that God
exists, and that righteousness and piety are honourable, I also quite agree with
you,' said he.
"'You are right,' I replied.
CHAP. V.--THE SOUL IS NOT IN ITS OWN NATURE IMMORTAL.
"'These philosophers know nothing, then, about these things; for they
cannot tell what a soul is.'
"'It does not appear so.'
"'Nor ought it to be called immortal; for if it is immortal, it is plainly
unbegotten.'
"'It is both unbegotten and immortal, according to some who are styled
Platonists.'
"'Do you say that the world is also unbegotten?'
"'Some say so. I do not, however, agree with them.'
"'You are right; for what reason has one for supposing that a body so
solid, possessing resistance, composite, changeable, decaying, and renewed every
day, has not arisen from some cause? But if the world is begotten, souls also are
necessarily begotten; and perhaps at one time they were not in existence, for
they were made on account of men and other living creatures, if you will say
that they have been begotten wholly apart, and not along with their respective
bodies.' "'This seems to be correct.'
"'They are not, then, immortal?'
"'No; since the world has appeared to us to be begotten.'
"'But I do not say, indeed, that all souls die; for that were truly a
piece of good fortune to the evil. What then? The souls of the pious remain in a
better place, while those of the unjust and wicked are in a worse, waiting for
the time of judgment. Thus some which have appeared worthy of God never die; but
others are punished so long as God wills them to exist and to be punished.'
"'Is what you say, then, of a like nature with that which Plato in Timoeus
hints about the world, when he says that it is indeed subject to decay,
inasmuch as it has been created, but that it will neither be dissolved nor meet with
the fate of death on account of the will of God? Does it seem to you the very
same can be said of the soul, and generally of all things? For those things
which exist after(1) God, or shall at any time exist,(2) these have the nature of
decay, and are such as may be blotted out and cease to exist; for God alone is
unbegotten and incorruptible, and therefore He is God, but all other things
after Him are created and corruptible. For this reason souls both die and are
punished: since, if they were unbegotten, they would neither sin, nor be filled with
folly, nor be cowardly, and again ferocious; nor would they willingly
transform into swine, and serpents, and dogs and it would not indeed be just to compel
them, if they be unbegotten. For that which is unbegotten is similar to, equal
to, and the same with that which is unbegotten; and neither in power nor in
honour should the one be preferred to the other, and hence there are not many
things which are unbegotten: for if there were some difference between them, you
would not discover the cause of the difference, though you searched for it; but
after letting the mind ever wander to infinity, you would at length, wearied
out, take your stand on one Unbegotten, and say that this is the Cause of all. Did
such escape the observation of Plato and Pythagoras, those wise men,'
I said, 'who have been as a wall and fortress of philosophy to us?'
CHAP. VI.--THESE THINGS WERE UNKNOWN PLATO AND OTHER PHILOSOPHERS.
"'It makes no matter to me,' said he, 'whether Plato or Pythagoras, or, in
short, any other man held such opinions. For the truth is so; and you would
perceive it from this. The soul assuredly is or has life. If, then, it is life,
it would cause something else, and not itself, to live, even as motion would
move something else than itself. Now, that the soul lives, no one would deny. But
if it lives, it lives not as being life, but as the partaker of life; but that
which partakes of anything, is different from that of which it does partake.
Now the soul partakes of life, since God wills it to live. Thus, then, it will
not even partake [of life] when God does not will it to live. For to live is not
its attribute, as it is God's; but as a man does not live always, and the soul
is not for ever conjoined with the body, since, whenever this harmony must be
broken up, the soul leaves the body, and the man exists no longer; even so,
whenever the soul must cease to exist, the spirit of life is removed from it, and
there is no more soul, but it goes back to the place from whence it was taken.'
CHAP. VII.--THE KNOWLEDGE OF TRUTH TO BE SOUGHT FROM THE PROPHETS ALONE.
"'Should any one, then, employ a teacher?' I say, 'or whence may any one
be helped, if not even in them there is truth?'
"'There existed, long before this time, certain men more ancient than all
those who are esteemed philosophers, both righteous and beloved by God, who
spoke by the Divine Spirit, and foretold events which would take place, and which
are now taking place. They are called prophets. These alone both saw and
announced the truth to men, neither reverencing nor fearing any man, not influenced
by a desire for glory, but speaking those things alone which they saw and which
they heard, being filled with the Holy Spirit. Their writings are still extant,
and he who has read them is very much helped in his knowledge of the beginning
and end of things, and of those matters which the philosopher ought to know,
provided he has believed them. For they did not use demonstration in their
treatises, seeing that they were witnesses to the truth above all demonstration, and
worthy of belief; and those events which have happened, and those which are
happening, compel you to assent to the utterances made by them, although, indeed,
they were entitled to credit on account of the miracles which they performed,
since they both glorified the Creator, the God and Father of all things, and
proclaimed His Son, the Christ [sent] by Him: which, indeed, the false prophets,
who are filled with the lying unclean spirit, neither have done nor do, but
venture to work certain wonderful deeds for the purpose of astonishing men, and
glorify the spirits and demons of error. But pray that, above all things, the
gates of light may be opened to you; for these things cannot be perceived or
understood by all, but only by the man to whom God and His Christ have imparted
wisdom.'
CHAP. VIII.--JUSTIN BY HIS COLLOQUY IS KINDLED WITH LOVE TO CHRIST.
"When he had spoken these and many other things, which there is no time
for mentioning at present, he went away, bidding me attend to them; and I have
not seen him since. But straightway a flame was kindled in my soul; and a love of
the prophets, and of those men who are friends of Christ, possessed me; and
whilst revolving his words in my mind, I found this philosophy alone to be safe
and profitable. Thus, and for this reason, I am a philosopher. Moreover, I would
wish that all, making a resolution similar to my own, do not keep themselves
away from the words of the Saviour. For they possess a terrible power in
themselves, and are sufficient to inspire those who turn aside from the path of
rectitude with awe; while the sweetest rest is afforded those who make a diligent
practice of them. If, then, you have any concern for yourself, and if you are
eagerly looking for salvation, and if you believe in God, you may--since you are
not indifferent to the matter.(1)--become acquainted with the Christ of God, and,
after being initiated,(2) live a happy life."
When I had said this, my beloved friends(3) those who were with Trypho
laughed; but he, smiling, says, "I approve of your other remarks, and admire the
eagerness with which you study divine things; but it were better for you still
to abide in the philosophy of Plato, or of some other man, cultivating
endurance, self-control, and moderation, rather than be deceived by false words, and
follow the opinions of men of no reputation. For if you remain in that mode of
philosophy, and live blamelessly, a hope of a better destiny were left to you;
but when you have forsaken God, and reposed confidence in man, what safety still
awaits you? If, then, you are willing to listen to me (for I have already
considered you a friend), first be circumcised, then observe what ordinances have
been enacted with respect to the Sabbath, and the feasts, and the new moons of
God; and, in a word, do all things which have been written in the law: and then
perhaps you shall obtain mercy from God. But Christ--if He has indeed been
born, and exists anywhere--is unknown, and does not even know Himself, and has no
power until Elias come to anoint Him, and make Him manifest to all. And you,
having accepted a groundless report, invent a Christ for yourselves, and for his
sake are inconsiderately perishing."
CHAP. IX.--THE CHRISTIANS HAVE NOT BELIEVED GROUNDLESS STORIES.
"I excuse and forgive you, my friend," I said. "For you know not what you
say, but have been persuaded by teachers who do not understand the Scriptures;
and you speak, like a diviner whatever comes into your mind. But if you are
willing to listen to an account of Him, how we have not been deceived, and shall
not cease to confess Him,--although men's reproaches be heaped upon us, although
the most terrible tyrant compel us to deny Him,--I shall prove to you as you
stand here that we have not believed empty fables, or words without any
foundation but words filled with the Spirit of God, and big with power, and flourishing
with grace."
Then again those who were in his company laughed, and shouted in an
unseemly manner. Then I rose up and was about to leave; but he, taking hold of my
garment, said I should not accomplish that(1) until I had performed what I
promised. "Let not, then, your companions be so tumultuous, or behave so
disgracefully," I said. "But if they wish, let them listen in silence; or, if some better
occupation prevent them, let them go away; while we, having retired to some spot,
and resting there, may finish the discourse." It seemed good to Trypho that we
should do so; and accordingly, having agreed upon it, we retired to the middle
space of the Xystus. Two of his friends, when they had ridiculed and made game
of our zeal, went off. And when we were come to that place, where there are
stone seats on both sides, those with Trypho, having seated themselves on the one
side, conversed with each other, some one of them having thrown in a remark
about the war waged in Judaea.
CHAP. X.--TRYPHO BLAMES THE CHRISTIANS FOR THIS ALONE--THE NON-OBSERVANCE OF
THE LAW.
And when they ceased, I again addressed them thus:--
"Is there any other matter, my friends, in which we are blamed, than this,
that we live not after the law, and are not circumcised in the flesh as your
forefathers were, and do not observe sabbaths as you do? Are our lives and
customs also slandered among you? And I ask this: have you also believed concerning
us, that we eat men; and that after the feast, having extinguished the lights,
we engage in promiscuous concubinage? Or do you condemn us in this alone, that
we adhere to such tenets, and believe in an opinion, untrue, as you think?"
"This is what we are amazed at," said Trypho, "but those things about
which the multitude speak are not worthy of belief; for they are most repugnant to
human nature. Moreover, I am aware that your precepts in the so-called Gospel
are so wonderful and so great, that I suspect no one can keep them; for I have
carefully read them. But this is what we are most at a loss about: that you,
professing to be pious, and supposing yourselves better than others, are not in
any particular separated from them, and do not alter your mode of living from the
nations, in that you observe no festivals or sabbaths, and do not have the
rite of circumcision; and further, resting your hopes on a man that was crucified,
you yet expect to obtain some good thing from God, while you do not obey His
commandments. Have you not read, that soul shall be cut off from his people who
shall not have been circumcised on the eighth day? And this has been ordained
for strangers and for slaves equally. But you, despising this covenant rashly,
reject the consequent duties, and attempt to persuade yourselves that you know
God, when, however, you perform none of those things which they do who fear
God. If, therefore, you can defend yourself on these points, and make it manifest
in what way you hope for anything whatsoever, even though you do not observe
the law, this we would very gladly hear from you, and we shall make other
similar investigations."
CHAP. XI.--THE LAW ABROGATED; THE NEW TESTAMENT PROMISED AND GIVEN BY GOD.
"There will be no other God, O Trypho, nor was there from eternity any
other existing" (I thus addressed him), "but He who made and disposed all this
universe. Nor do we think that there is one God for us, another for you, but that
He alone is God who led your fathers out from Egypt with a strong hand and a
high arm. Nor have we trusted in any other (for there is no other), but in Him
in whom you also have trusted, the God of Abraham, and of Isaac, and of Jacob.
But we do not trust through Moses or through the law; for then we would do the
same as yourselves. But now(2)--(for I have read that there shall be a final
law, and a covenant, the chiefest of all, which it is now incumbent on all men to
observe, as many as are seeking after the inheritance of God. For the law
promulgated on Horeb is now old, and belongs to yourselves alone; but this is for
all universally. Now, law placed against law has abrogated that which is before
it, and a covenant which comes after in like manner has put an end to the
previous one; and an eternal and final law--namely, Christ--has been given to us,
and the covenant is trustworthy, after which there shall be no law, no
commandment, no ordinance. Have you not read this which Isaiah says: 'Hearken unto Me,
hearken unto Me, my people; and, ye kings, give ear unto Me: for a law shall go
forth from Me, and My judgment shah be for a light to the nations. My
righteousness approaches swiftly, and My salvation shall go forth, and nations shall
trust in Mine arm?'(1) And by Jeremiah, concerning this same new covenant, He thus
speaks: 'Behold, the days come, saith the Lord, that I will make a new covenant
with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah; not according to the
covenant which I made with their fathers, in the day that I took them by the hand,
to bring them out of the land of Egypt'(2)). If, therefore, God proclaimed a
new covenant which was to be instituted, and this for a light of the nations, we
see and are persuaded that men approach God, leaving their idols and other
unrighteousness, through the name of Him who was crucified, Jesus Christ, and
abide by their confession even unto death, and maintain piety. Moreover, by the
works and by the attendant miracles, it is possible for all to understand that He
is the new law, and the new covenant, and the expectation of those who out of
every people wait for the good things of God. For the true spiritual Israel,
and descendants of Judah, Jacob, Isaac, and Abraham (who in uncircumcision was
approved of and blessed by God on account of his faith, and called the father of
many nations), are we who have been led to God through this crucified Christ,
as shall be demonstrated while we proceed.
CHAP. XII.--THE JEWS VIOLATE THE ETERNAL LAW, AND INTERPRET ILL THAT OF MOSES.
I also adduced another passage in which Isaiah exclaims: "'Hear My
words, and your soul shall live; and I will make an everlasting covenant with you,
even the sure mercies of David. Behold, I have given Him for a witness to the
people: nations which know not Thee shall call on Thee; peoples who know not Thee
shall escape to Thee, because of thy God, the Holy One of Israel; for He has
glorified Thee.'(3) This same law you have despised, and His new holy covenant
you have slighted; and now you neither receive it, nor repent of your evil
deeds. 'For your ears are closed, your eyes are blinded, and the heart is hardened,'
Jeremiah(4) has cried; yet not even then do you listen. The Lawgiver is
present, yet you do not see Him; to the poor the Gospel is preached, the blind see,
yet you do not understand. You have now need of a second circumcision, though
you glory greatly in the flesh. The new law requires you to keep perpetual
sabbath, and you, because you are idle for one day, suppose you are pious, not
discerning why this has been commanded you: and if you eat unleavened bread, you say
the will of God has been fulfilled. The Lord our God does not take pleasure in
such observances: if there is any perjured person or a thief among you, let
him cease to be so; if any adulterer, let him repent; then he has kept the
sweet and true sabbaths of God. If any one has impure hands, let him wash and be
pure.
CHAP. XIII.--ISAIAH TEACHES THAT SINS ARE FORGIVEN THROUGH CHRIST'S BLOOD.
"For Isaiah did not send you to a bath, there to wash away murder and
other sins, which not even all the water of the sea were sufficient to purge; but,
as might have been expected, this was that saving bath of the olden time which
followed s those who repented, and who no longer were purified by the blood of
goats and of sheep, or by the ashes of an heifer, or by the offerings of fine
flour, but by faith through the blood of Christ, and through His death, who
died for this very reason, as Isaiah himself said, when he spake thus: 'The Lord
shall make bare His holy arm in the eyes of all the nations, and all the nations
and the ends of the earth shall see the salvation of God. Depart ye, depart
ye, depart ye,(6) go ye out from thence, and touch no unclean thing; go ye out of
the midst of her, be ye clean that bear the vessels of the Lord, for(7) ye go
not with haste. For the Lord shall go before you; and the Lord, the God of
Israel, shall gather you together. Behold, my servant shall deal prudently; and He
shall be exalted, and be greatly glorified. As many were astonished at Thee,
so Thy form and Thy glory shall be marred more than men. So shall many nations
be astonished at Him, and the kings shall shut their mouths; for that which had
not been told them concerning Him shall they see, and that which they had not
heard shall they consider. Lord, who hath believed our report? and to whom is
the arm of the Lord revealed? We have announced Him as a child before Him, as a
root in a dry ground. He hath no form or comeliness, and when we saw Him He had
no form or beauty; but His form is dishonoured, and fails more than the sons of
men. He is a man in affliction, and acquainted with bearing sickness, because
His face has been turned away; He was despised, and we esteemed Him not. He
bears our sins, and is distressed for us; and we esteemed Him to be in toil and in
affliction, and in evil treatment But He was wounded for our transgressions,
He was bruised for our iniquities; the chastisement of our peace was upon Him.
With His stripes we are healed. All we, like sheep, have gone astray. Every man
has turned to his own way; and the Lord laid on Him our iniquities, and by
reason of His oppression He opens not His mouth. He was brought as a sheep to the
slaughter; and as a lamb before her shearer is dumb, so He openeth not His
mouth. In His humiliation His judgment was taken away. And who shall declare His
generation? For His life is taken from the earth. Because of the transgressions of
my people He came unto death. And I will give the wicked for His grave, and
the rich for His death, because He committed no iniquity, and deceit was not
found in His mouth. And the Lord wills to purify Him from affliction. If he has
been given for sin, your soul shall see a long-lived seed. And the Lord wills to
take His soul away from trouble, to show Him light, and to form Him in
understanding, to justify the righteous One who serves many well. And He shall bear our
sins; therefore He shall inherit many, and shall divide the spoil of the
strong, because His soul was delivered to death; and He was numbered with the
transgressors, and He bare the sins of many, and was delivered for their
transgression. Sing, O barren, who bearest not; break forth and cry aloud, thou who dost not
travail in pain: for more are the children of the desolate than the children
of the married wife. For the Lord said, Enlarge the place of thy tent and of thy
curtains; fix them, spare not, lengthen thy cords, and strengthen thy stakes;
stretch forth to thy right and thy left; and thy seed shall inherit the
Gentiles, and thou shalt make the desolate cities to be inherited. Fear not because
thou art ashamed, neither be thou confounded because thou hast been reproached;
for thou shalt forget everlasting shame, and shalt not remember the reproach of
thy widowhood, because the Lord has made a name for Himself, and He who has
redeemed thee shall be called through the whole earth the God of Israel. The Lord
has called thee as(1) a woman forsaken and grieved in spirit, as(1) a woman
hated from her youth.'(2)
CHAP. XIV.--RIGHTEOUSNESS IS NOT PLACED IN JEWISH RITES, BUT IN THE CONVERSION
OF THE HEART GIVEN IN BAPTISM BY CHRIST.
"By reason, therefore, of this laver of repentance and knowledge of God,
which has been ordained on account of the transgression of God's people, as
Isaiah cries, we have believed, and testify that that very baptism which he
announced is alone able to purify those who have repented; and this is the water of
life. But the cisterns which you have dug for yourselves are broken and
profitless to you. For what is the use of that baptism which cleanses the flesh and body
alone? Baptize the soul from wrath and from covetousness, from envy, and from
hatred; and, lo! the body is pure. For this is the symbolic significance of
unleavened bread, that you do not commit the old deeds of wicked leaven. But you
have understood all things in a carnal sense, and you suppose it to be piety if
you do such things, while your souls are filled with deceit, and, in short,
with every wickedness. Accordingly, also, after the seven days of eating
unleavened bread, God commanded them to mingle new leaven, that is, the performance of
other works, and not the imitation of the old and evil works. And because this
is what this new Lawgiver demands of you, I shall again refer to the words which
have been quoted by me, and to others also which have been passed over. They
are related by Isaiah to the following effect: 'Hearken to me, and your soul
shall live; and I will make with you an everlasting covenant, even the sure
mercies of David. Behold, I have given Him for a witness to the people, a leader and
commander to the nations. Nations which know not Thee shall call on Thee; and
peoples who know not Thee shall escape unto Thee, because of Thy God, the Holy
One of Israel, for He has glorified Thee. Seek ye God; and when you find Him,
call on Him, so long as He may be nigh you. Let the wicked forsake his ways, and
the unrighteous man his thoughts; and let him return unto the Lord, and he will
obtain mercy, because He will abundantly pardon your sins. For my thoughts are
not as your thoughts, neither are my ways as your ways; but as far removed as
the heavens are from the earth, so far is my way removed from your way, and
your thoughts from my thoughts. For as the snow or the rain descends from heaven,
and shall not return till it waters the earth, and makes it bring forth and
bud, and gives seed to the sower and bread for food, so shall My word be that
goeth forth out of My mouth: it shall not return until it shall have accomplished
all that I desired, and I shall make My commandments prosperous. For ye shall go
out with joy, and be taught with gladness. For the mountains and the hills
shall leap while they expect you, and all the trees of the fields shall applaud
with their branches: and instead of the thorn shall come up the cypress, and
instead of the brier shall come up the myrtle. And the Lord shall be for a name,
and for an everlasting sign, and He shall not fail!'(1) Of these and such like
words written by the prophets, O Trypho," said I, "some have reference to the
first advent of Christ, in which He is preached as inglorious, obscure, and of
mortal appearance: but others had reference to His second advent, when He shall
appear in glory and above the clouds; and your nation shall see and know Him whom
they have pierced, as Hosea, one of the twelve prophets, and Daniel, foretold.
CHAP. XV.--IN WHAT THE TRUE FASTING CONSISTS.
"Learn, therefore, to keep the true fast of God, as Isaiah says, that you
may please God. Isaiah has cried thus: 'Shout vehemently, and do not spare:
lift up thy voice as with a trumpet, and show My people their transgressions, and
the house of Jacob their sins. They seek Me from day to day, and desire to know
My ways, as a nation that did righteousness, and forsook not the judgment of
God. They ask of Me now righteous judgment, and desire to draw near to God,
saying, Wherefore have we fasted, and Thou seest not? and afflicted our souls, and
Thou hast not known? Because in the days of your fasting you find your own
pleasure, and oppress all those who are subject to you. Behold, ye fast for strifes
and debates, and smite the humble with your fists. Why do ye fast for Me, as
to-day, so that your voice is heard aloud? This is not the fast which I have
chosen, the day in which a man shall afflict his soul. And not even if you bend
your neck like a ring, or clothe yourself in sackcloth and ashes, shall you call
this a fast, and a day acceptable to the Lord. This is not the fast which I
have chosen, saith the Lord; but loose every unrighteous bond, dissolve the terms
of wrongous covenants, let the oppressed go free, and avoid every iniquitous
contract. Deal thy bread to the hungry, and lead the homeless poor under thy
dwelling; if thou seest the naked, clothe him; and do not hide thyself from thine
own flesh. Then shall thy light break forth as the morning, and thy garments(2)
shall rise up quickly: and thy righteousness shall go before thee, and the
glory of God shall envelope thee. Then shalt thou cry, and the Lord shall hear
thee: while thou art speaking, He will say, Behold, I am here. And if thou take
away from thee the yoke, and the stretching out of the hand, and the word of
murmuring; and shalt give heartily thy bread to the hungry, and shalt satisfy the
afflicted soul; then shall thy light arise in the darkness, and thy darkness
shall be as the noon-day: and thy God shall be with thee continually, and thou
shalt be satisfied according as thy soul desireth, and thy bones shall become fat,
and shall be as a watered garden, and as a fountain of water, or as a land
where water fails not.'(3) 'Circumcise, therefore, the foreskin of your heart,' as
the words of God in all these passages demand."
CHAP. XVI.--CIRCUMCISION GIVEN AS A SIGN, THAT THE JEWS MIGHT BE DRIVEN AWAY
FOR THEIR EVIL DEEDS DONE TO CHRIST AND THE CHRISTIANS.
"And God himself proclaimed by Moses, speaking thus: 'And circumcise the
hardness of your hearts, and no longer stiffen the neck. For the Lord your God
is both Lord of lords, and a great, mighty, and terrible God, who regardeth not
persons, and taketh not rewards.'(4) And in Leviticus: 'Because they have
transgressed against Me, and despised Me, and because they have walked contrary to
Me, I also walked contrary to them, and I shall cut them off in the land of
their enemies. Then shall their uncircumcised heart be turned.'(5) For the
circumcision according to the flesh, which is from Abraham, was given for a sign; that
you may be separated from other nations, and from us; and that you alone may
suffer that which you now justly suffer; and that your land may be desolate, and
your cities burned with fire; and that strangers may eat your fruit in your
presence, and not one of you may go up to Jerusalem.'(6) For you are not
recognised among the rest of men by any other mark than your fleshly circumcision. For
none of you, I suppose, will venture to say that God neither did nor does
foresee the events, which are future, nor fore-ordained his deserts for each one.
Accordingly, these things have happened to you in fairness and justice, for you
have slain the Just One, and His prophets before Him; and now you reject those
who hope in Him, and in Him who sent Him--God the Almighty and Maker of all
things--cursing in your synagogues those that believe on Christ. For you have not
the power to lay hands upon us, on account of those who now have the mastery. But
as often as you could, you did so. Wherefore God, by Isaiah, calls to you,
saying, 'Behold how the righteous man perished, and no one regards it. For the
righteous man is taken away from before iniquity. His grave shall be in peace, he
is taken away from the midst. Draw near hither, ye lawless children, seed of
the adulterers, and children of the whore. Against whom have you sported
yourselves, and against whom have you opened the mouth, and against whom have you
loosened the tongue?'(1)
CHAP. XVII.--THE JEWS SENT PERSONS THROUGH THE WHOLE EARTH TO SPREAD CALUMNIES
ON CHRISTIANS.
"For other nations have not inflicted on us and on Christ this wrong to
such an extent as you have, who in very deed are the authors of the wicked
prejudice against the Just One, and us who hold by Him. For after that you had
crucified Him, the only blameless and righteous Man,-- through whose swipes those who
approach the Father by Him are healed,--when you knew that He had risen from
the dead and ascended to heaven, as the prophets foretold He would, you not only
did not repent of the wickedness which you had committed, but at that time you
selected and sent out from Jerusalem chosen men through all the land to tell
that the godless heresy of the Christians had sprung up, and to publish those
things which all they who knew us not speak against us. So that you are the cause
not only of your own unrighteousness, but in fact of that of all other men.
And Isaiah cries justly: 'By reason of you, My name is blasphemed among the
Gentiles.'(2) And: 'Woe unto their soul! because they have devised an evil device
against themselves, saying, Let us bind the righteous, for he is distasteful to
us. Therefore they shall eat the fruit of their doings. Woe unto the wicked evil
shall be rendered to him according to the works of his hands.' And again, in
other words:(3) 'Woe unto them that draw their iniquity as with a long cord, and
their transgressions as with the harness of a heifer's yoke: who say, Let his
speed come near; and let the counsel of the Holy One of Israel come, that we
may know it. Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; that put light for
darkness, and darkness for light; that put bitter for sweet, and sweet for
bitter!'(4) Accordingly, you displayed great zeal in publishing throughout all the
land bitter and dark and unjust things against the only blameless and
righteous Light sent by God.
For He appeared distasteful to you when He cried among you, 'It is
written, My house is the house of prayer; but ye have made it a den of thieves!'(5) He
overthrew also the tables of the money-changers in the temple, and exclaimed,
'Woe unto you, Scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! because ye pay tithe of mint
and rue, but do not observe the love of God and justice. Ye whited sepulchres!
appearing beautiful outward, but are within full of dead men's bones.'(6) And
to the Scribes, 'Woe unto you, Scribes! for ye have the keys, and ye do not
enter in yourselves, and them that are entering in ye hinder; ye blind guides!'
CHAP. XVIII.--CHRISTIANS WOULD OBSERVE THE LAW, IF THEY DID NOT KNOW WHY IT
WAS INSTITUTED.
"For since you have read, O Trypho, as you yourself admitted, the
doctrines taught by our Saviour, I do not think that I have done foolishly in adding
some short utterances of His to the prophetic statements. Wash therefore, and be
now clean, and put away iniquity from your souls, as God bids you be washed in
this layer, and be circumcised with the true circumcision. For we too would
observe the fleshly circumcision, and the Sabbaths, and in short all the feasts,
if we did not know for what reason they were enjoined you,--namely, on account
of your transgressions and the hardness of your hearts. For if we patiently
endure all things contrived against us by wicked men and demons, so that even amid
cruelties unutterable, death and torments, we pray for mercy to those who
inflict such things upon us, and do not wish to give the least retort to any one,
even as the new Lawgiver commanded us: how is it, Trypho, that we would not
observe those rites which do not harm us,--I speak of fleshly circumcision, and
Sabbaths, and feasts?
CHAP. XIX.--CIRCUMCISION UNKNOWN BEFORE ABRAHAM. THE LAW WAS GIVEN BY MOSES ON
ACCOUNT OF THE HARDNESS OF THEIR HEARTS.
"It is this about which we are at a loss, and with reason, because, while
you endure such things, you do not observe all the other customs which we are
now discussing."
"This circumcision is not, however, necessary for all men, but for you
alone, in order that, as I have already said, you may suffer these things which
you now justly suffer. Nor do we receive that useless baptism of cisterns, for it
has nothing to do with this baptism of life. Wherefore also God has announced
that you have forsaken Him, the living fountain, and digged for your selves
broken cisterns which can hold no water. Even you, who are the circumcised
according to the flesh, have need of our circumcision; but we, having the latter,
do not require the former. For if it were necessary, as you suppose, God would
not have made Adam uncircumcised would not have had respect to the gifts of Abel
when, being uncircumcised, he offered sacrifice and would not have been
pleased with the uncircumcision of Enoch, who was not found, because God had
translated him. Lot, being uncircumcised, was saved from Sodom, the angels themselves
and the Lord sending him out. Noah was the beginning of our race; yet,
uncircumcised, along with his children he went into the ark. Melchizedek, the priest of
the Most High, was uncircumcised; to whom also Abraham the first who received
circumcision after the flesh, gave tithes, and he blessed him: after whose order
God declared, by the mouth of David, that He would establish the everlasting
priest. Therefore to you alone this circumcision was necessary, in order that
the people may be no people, and the nation no nation; as also Hosea,(1) one of
the twelve prophets, declares. Moreover, all those righteous men already
mentioned, though they kept no Sabbaths,(2) were pleasing to God; and after them
Abraham with all his descendants until Moses, under whom your nation appeared
unrighteous and ungrateful to God, making a calf in the wilderness: wherefore God,
accommodating Himself to that nation, enjoined them also to offer sacrifices, as
if to His name, in order that you might not serve idols. Which precept,
however, you have not observed; nay, you sacrificed your children to demons. And you
were commanded to keep Sabbaths, that you might retain the memorial of God. For
His word makes this announcement, saying, 'That ye may know that I am God who
redeemed you.'(3)
CHAP. XX.--WHY CHOICE OF MEATS WAS PRESCRIBED.
"Moreover, you were commanded to abstain from certain kinds of food, in
order that you might keep God before your eyes while you ate and drank, seeing
that you were prone and very ready to depart from His knowledge, as Moses also
affirms: 'The people ate and drank, and rose up to play.'(4) And again: 'Jacob
ate, and was satisfied, and waxed fat; and he who was beloved kicked: he waxed
fat, he grew thick, he was enlarged, and he forsook God who had made him.'(5) For
it was told you by Moses in the book of Genesis, that God granted to Noah,
being a just man, to eat of every animal, but not of flesh with the blood, which
is dead."(6) And as he was ready to say, "as the green herbs," I anticipated
him: "Why do you not receive this statement, 'as the green herbs,' in the sense in
which it was given by God, to wit, that just as God has granted the herbs for
sustenance to man, even so has He given the animals for the diet of flesh? But,
you say, a distinction was laid down thereafter to Noah, because we do not eat
certain herbs. As you interpret it, the thing is incredible. And first I shall
not occupy myself with this, though able to say and to hold that every
vegetable is food, and fit to be eaten. But although we discriminate between green
herbs, not eating all, we refrain from eating some, not because they are common or
unclean, but because they are bitter, or deadly, or thorny. But we lay hands
on and take of all herbs which are sweet, very nourishing and good, whether they
are marine or land plants. Thus also God by the mouth of Moses commanded you
to abstain from unclean and improper(7) and violent animals: when, moreover,
though you were eating manna in the desert, and were seeing all those wondrous
acts wrought for you by God, you made and worshipped the golden calf.(8) Hence he
cries continually, and justly, 'They are foolish children, in whom is no
faith.'(9)
CHAP. XXI.--SABBATHS WERE INSTITUTED ON ACCOUNT OF THE PEOPLE'S SINS, AND NOT
FOR A WORK OF RIGHTEOUSNESS.
"Moreover, that God enjoined you to keep the Sabbath, and impose on you
other precepts for a sign, as I have already said, on account of your
unrighteousness, and that of your fathers,--as He declares that for the sake of the
nations, lest His name be profaned among them, therefore He permitted some of you to
remain alive,--these words of His can prove to you: they are narrated by
Ezekiel thus: I am the Lord your God; walk in My statutes, and keep My judgments,
and take no part in the customs of Egypt; and hallow My Sabbaths; and they shall
be a sign between Me and you, that ye may know that I am the Lord your God.
Notwithstanding ye rebelled against Me, and your children walked not in My
statutes, neither kept My judgments to do them: which if a man do, he shall live in
them. But they polluted My Sabbaths. And I said that I would pour out My fury
upon them in the wilderness, to accomplish My anger upon them; yet I did it not;
that My name might not be altogether profaned in the sight of the heathen. I led
them out before their eyes, and I lifted up Mine hand unto them in the
wilderness, that I would scatter them among the heathen, and disperse them through the
countries; because they had not executed My judgments, but had despised My
statutes, and polluted My Sabbaths, and their eyes were after the devices of their
fathers. Wherefore I gave them also statutes which were not good, and
judgments whereby they shall not live. And I shall pollute them in their own gifts,
that I may destroy all that openeth the womb, when I pass through them.'(1)
CHAP. XXII.--SO ALSO WERE SACRIFICES AND OBLATIONS.
"And that you may learn that it was for the sins of your own nation, and
for their idolatries and not because there was any necessity for such
sacrifices, that they were likewise enjoined, listen to the manner in which He speaks of
these by Amos, one of the twelve, saying: 'Woe unto you that desire the day of
the Lord! to what end is this day of the Lord for you? It is darkness and not
light, as when a man flees from the face of a lion, and a bear meets him; and he
goes into his house, and leans his hands against the wall, and the serpent
bites him. Shall not the day of the Lord be darkness and not light, even very
dark, and no brightness in it? I have hated, I have despised your feast-days, and I
will not smell in your solemn assemblies: wherefore, though ye offer Me your
burnt-offerings and sacrifices, I will not accept them; neither will I regard
the peace-offerings of your presence. Take thou away from Me the multitude of thy
songs and psalms; I will not hear thine instruments. But let judgment be
rolled down as water, and righteousness as an impassable torrent. Have ye offered
unto Me victims and sacrifices in the wilderness, O house of Israel? saith the
Lord. And have ye taken up the tabernacle of Moloch, and the star of your god
Raphan, the figures which ye made for yourselves? And I will carry you away beyond
Damascus, saith the Lord, whose name is the Almighty God. Woe to them that are
at ease in Zion, and trust in the mountain of Samaria: those who are named
among the chiefs have plucked away the first-fruits of the nations: the house of
Israel have entered for themselves. Pass all of you unto Calneh, and see; and
from thence go ye unto Hamath the great, and go down thence to Gath of the
strangers, the noblest of all these kingdoms, if their boundaries are greater than
your boundaries. Ye who come to the evil day, who are approaching, and who hold
to false Sabbaths; who lie on beds of ivory, and are at ease upon their couches;
who eat the lambs out of the flock, and the sucking calves out of the midst of
the herd; who applaud at the sound of the musical instruments; they reckon
them as stable, and not as fleeting, who drink wine in bowls, and anoint
themselves with the chief ointments, but they are not grieved for the affliction of
Joseph. Wherefore now they shall be captives, among the first of the nobles who are
carried away; and the house of evil-doers shall be removed, and the neighing
of horses shall be taken away from Ephraim.(2) And again by Jeremiah: 'Collect
your flesh, and sacrifices, and eat: for concerning neither sacrifices nor
libations did I command your fathers in the day in which I took them by the hand to
lead them out of Egypt.(3) And again by David, in the forty-ninth Psalm, He
thus said: 'The God of gods, the Lord hath spoken, and called the earth, from
the rising of the sun unto the going down thereof. Out of Zion is the
perfection of His beauty. God, even our God, shall come openly, and shall not keep
silence. Fire shall burn before Him, and it shall be very temptestuous round about
Him. He shall call to the heavens above, and to the earth, that He may judge His
people. Assemble to Him His saints; those that have made a covenant with Him
by sacrifices. And the heavens shall declare His righteousness, for God is
judge. Hear, O My people, and I will speak to thee; O Israel, and I will testify to
thee, I am God, even thy God. I will not reprove thee for thy sacrifices; thy
burnt-offerings are continually before me. I will take no bullocks out of thy
house, nor he-goats out of thy folds: for all the beasts of the field are Mine,
the herds and the oxen on the mountains. I know all the fowls of the heavens,
and the beauty of the field is Mine. If I were hungry, I would not tell thee; for
the world is Mine, and the fulness thereof. Will I eat the flesh of bulls, or
drink the blood of goats? Offer unto God the sacrifice of praise, and pay thy
vows unto the Most High, and call upon Me in the day of trouble, and I will
deliver thee, and thou shalt glorify Me. But unto the wicked God saith, What hast
thou to do to declare My statutes, and to take My covenant into thy mouth? But
thou hast hated instruction, and cast My words behind thee. When thou sawest a
thief, thou consentedst with him; and hast been partaker with the adulterer. Thy
mouth has framed evil, and thy tongue has enfolded deceit. Thou sittest and
speakest against thy brother; thou slanderest thine own mother's son. These
things hast thou done, and I kept silence; thou thoughtest that I would be like
thyself in wickedness. I will reprove thee, and set thy sins in order before thine
eyes. Now consider this, ye that forget God, lest He tear you in pieces, and
there be none to deliver. The sacrifice of praise shall glorify Me; and there is
the way in which I shall show him My salvation.(1) Accordingly He neither takes
sacrifices from you nor commanded them at first to be offered because they are
needful to Him, but because of your sins. For indeed the temple, which is
called the temple in Jerusalem, He admitted to be His house or court, not as though
He needed it, but in order that you, in this view of it, giving yourselves to
Him, might not worship idols. And that this is so, Isaiah says: 'What house
have ye built Me? saith the Lord. Heaven is My throne, and earth is My
footstool.'(2)
CHAP. XXXIII.--THE OPINION OF THE JEWS REGARDING THE LAW DOES AN INJURY TO GOD.
"But if we do not admit this, we shall be liable to fall into foolish
opinions, as if it were not the same God who existed in the times of Enoch and all
the rest, who neither were circumcised after the flesh, nor observed Sabbaths,
nor any other rites, seeing that Moses enjoined such observances; or that God
has not wished each race of mankind continually to perform the same righteous
actions: to admit which, seems to be ridiculous and absurd. Therefore we must
confess that He, who is ever the same, has commanded these and such like
institutions on account of sinful men, and we must declare Him to be benevolent,
foreknowing, needing nothing, righteous and good. But if this be not so, tell me, sir,
what you think of those matters which we are investigating." And when no one
responded: "Wherefore, Trypho, I will proclaim to you, and to those who wish to
become proselytes, the divine message which I heard from that man.(3) Do you
see that the elements are not idle, and keep no Sabbaths? Remain as you were
born. For if there was no need of circumcision before Abraham, or Of the observance
of Sabbaths, of feasts and sacrifices, before Moses; no more need is there of
them now, after that, according to the will of God, Jesus Christ the Son of God
has been born without sin, of a virgin sprung from the stock of Abraham. For
when Abraham himself was in un-circumcision, he was justified and blessed by
reason of the faith which he reposed in God, as the Scripture tells. Moreover, the
Scriptures and the facts themselves compel us to admit that He received
circumcision for a sign, and not for righteousness. So that it was justly recorded
concerning the people, that the soul which shall not be circumcised on the eighth
day shall be cut off from his family. And, furthermore, the inability of the
female sex to receive fleshly circumcision, proves that this circumcision has
been given for a sign, and not for a work of righteousness. For God has given
likewise to women the ability to observe all things which are righteous and
virtuous; but we see that the bodily form of the male has been made different from
the bodily form of the female; yet we know that neither of them is righteous or
unrighteous merely for this cause, but [is considered righteous] by reason of
piety and righteousness.
CHAP. XXIV.--THE CHRISTIANS' CIRCUMCISION FAR MORE EXCELLENT.
"Now, sirs," I said, "it is possible for us to show how the eighth day
possessed a certain mysterious import, which the seventh day did not possess, and
which was promulgated by God through these rites. But lest I appear now to
diverge to other subjects, understand what I say: the blood of that circumcision is
obsolete, and we trust in the bloOd of salvation; there is now another
covenant, and another law has gone forth from Zion. Jesus Christ circumcises all who
will--as was declared above--with knives of stone;(4) that they may be a
righteous nation, a people keeping faith, holding to the truth, and maintaining peace.
Come then with me, all who fear God, who wish to see the good of Jerusalem.
Come, let us go to the light of the Lord; for He has liberated His people, the
house of Jacob. Come, all nations; let us gather ourselves together at Jerusalem,
no longer plagued by war for the sins of her people. 'For I was manifest to
them that sought Me not; I was found of them that asked not for Me;'(5) He
exclaims by Isaiah: 'I said, Behold Me, unto nations which were not called by My
name. I have spread out My hands all the day unto a disobedient and gainsaying
people, which walked in a way that was not good, but after their own sins. It is a
people that rovoketh Me to my face.'(5)
CHAP. XXV.--THE JEWS BOAST IN VAIN THAT THEY ARE SONS OF ABRAHAM.
"Those who justify themselves, and say they are sons of Abraham, shall be
desirous even in a small degree to receive the inheritance along with you;(6)
as the Holy Spirit, by the mouth of Isaiah, cries, speaking thus while he
personates them: 'Return from heaven, and behold from the habitation of Thy holiness
and glory. Where is Thy zeal and strength? Where is the multitude of Thy mercy?
for Thou hast sustained us, O Lord. For Thou art our Father, because Abraham
is ignorant of us, and Israel has not recognised us. But Thou, O Lord, our
Father, deliver us: from the beginning Thy name is upon us. O Lord, why hast Thou
made us to err from Thy way? and hardened our hearts, so that we do not fear
Thee? Return for Thy servants' sake, the tribes of Thine inheritance, that we may
inherit for a little Thy holy mountain. We were as from the beginning, when Thou
didst not bear rule over us, and when Thy name was not called upon us. If Thou
wilt open the heavens, trembling shall seize the mountains before Thee: and
they shall be melted, as wax melts before the fire; and fire shah consume the
adversaries, and Thy name shall be manifest among the adversaries; the nations
shall be put into disorder before Thy face. When Thou shall do glorious things,
trembling shall seize the mountains before Thee. From the beginning we have not
heard, nor have our eyes seen a God besides Thee: and Thy works,(1) the mercy
which Thou shall show to those who repent. He shall meet those who do
righteousness, and they shall remember Thy ways. Behold, Thou art wroth, and we were
sinning. Therefore we have erred and become all unclean, and all our righteousness
is as the rags of a woman set apart: and we have faded away like leaves by
reason of our iniquities; thus the wind will take us away. And there is none that
calleth upon Thy name, or remembers to take hold of Thee; for Thou hast turned
away Thy face from us, and hast given us up on account of our sins. And now
return, O Lord, for we are all Thy people. The city of Thy holiness has become
desolate. Zion has become as a wilderness, Jerusalem a curse; the house, our
holiness, and the glory which our fathers blessed, has been burned with fire; and all
the glorious nations(2) have fallen along with it. And in addition to these
[misfortunes], O Lord, Thou hast refrained Thyself, and art silent, and hast
humbled us very much.'"(3)
And Trypho remarked, "What is this you say? that none of us shall inherit
anything on the holy mountain of God?"
CHAP. XXVI.--NO SALVATION TO THE JEWS EXCEPT THROUGH CHRIST.
And I replied, "I do not say so; but those who have persecuted and do
persecute Christ, if they do not repent, shall not inherit anything on the holy
mountain. But the Gentiles, who have believed on Him, and have repented of the
sins which they have committed, they shall receive the inheritance along with the
patriarchs and the prophets, and the just men who are descended from Jacob,
even although they neither keep the Sabbath, nor are circumcised, nor observe the
feasts. Assuredly they shall receive the holy inheritance of God. For God
speaks by Isaiah thus: 'I, the Lord God, have called Thee in righteousness, and
will hold Thine hand, and will strengthen Thee; and I have given Thee for a
covenant of the people, for a light of the Gentiles, to open the eyes of the blind,
to bring out them that are bound from the chains, and those who sit in darkness
from the prison-house.'(4) And again: 'Lift up a standard s for the people;
for, lo, the Lord has made it heard unto the end of the earth. Say ye to the
daughters of Zion, Behold, thy Saviour has come; having His reward, and His work
before His face: and He shall call it a holy nation, redeemed by the Lord. And
thou shalt be called a city sought out, and not forsaken. Who is this that cometh
from Edom? in red garments from Bosor? This that is beautiful in apparel, going
up with great strength? I speak righteousness, and the judgment of salvation.
Why are Thy garments red, and Thine apparel as from the trodden wine-press?
Thou art full of the trodden grape. I have trodden the wine-press all alone, and
of the people there is no man with Me; and I have trampled them in fury, and
crushed them to the ground, and spilled their blood on the earth. For the day of
retribution has come upon them, and the year of redemption is present. And I
looked, and there was none to help; and I considered, and none assisted: and My
arm delivered; and My fury came on them, and I trampled them in My fury, and
spilled their blood on the earth.'"(6)
CHAP. XXVII.--WHY GOD TAUGHT THE SAME THINGS BY THE PROPHETS AS BY MOSES.
And Trypho said, "Why do you select and quote whatever you wish from the
prophetic writings, but do not refer to those which expressly command the
Sabbath to be observed? For Isaiah thus speaks: 'If thou shalt turn away thy foot
from the Sabbaths, so as not to do thy pleasure on the holy day, and shalt call
the Sabbaths the holy delights of thy God; if thou shalt not lift thy foot to
work, and shalt not speak a word from thine own mouth; then thou shalt trust in
the Lord, and He shall cause thee to go up to the good things of the land; and He
shall feed thee with the inheritance of Jacob thy father: for the mouth of the
Lord hath spoken it.'"(7)
And I replied, "I have passed them by, my friends, not because such
prophecies were contrary to me, but because you have understood, and do understand,
that although God commands you by all the prophets to do the same things which
He also commanded by Moses, it was on account of the hardness of your hearts,
and your ingratitude towards Him, that He continually proclaims them, in order
that, even in this way, if you repented, you might please Him, and neither
sacrifice your children to demons, nor be partakers with thieves, nor lovers of
gifts, nor hunters after revenge, nor fail in doing judgment for orphans, nor be
inattentive to the justice due to the widow nor have your hands full of blood.
'For the daughters of Zion have walked with a high neck, both sporting by winking
with their eyes, and sweeping along their dresses.(1) For they are all gone
aside,' He exclaims, 'they are all become useless. There is none that understands,
there is not so much as one. With their tongues they have practised deceit,
their throat is an open sepulchre, the poison of asps is under their lips,
destruction and misery are in their paths, and the way of peace they have not
known.'(2) So that, as in the beginning, these things were enjoined you because of
your wickedness, in like manner because of your stedfastness in it, or rather your
increased proneness to it, by means of the same precepts He calls you to a
remembrance or knowledge of it. But you are a people hard-hearted and without
understanding, both blind and lame, children in whom is no faith, as He Himself
says, honouring Him only with your lips, far from Him in your hearts, teaching
doctrines that are your own and not His. For, tell me, did God wish the priests to
sin when they offer the sacrifices on the Sabbaths? or those to sin, who are
circumcised and do circumcise on the Sabbaths; since He commands that on the
eighth day--even though it happen to be a Sabbath--those who are born shall be
always circumcised? or could not the infants be operated upon one day previous or
one day subsequent to the Sabbath, if He knew that it is a sinful act upon the
Sabbaths? Or why did He not teach those--who are called righteous and pleasing
to Him, who lived before Moses and Abraham, who were not circumcised in their
foreskin, and observed no Sabbaths--to keep these institutions?"
CHAP. XXVIII.--TRUE RIGHTEOUSNESS IS OBTAINED BY CHRIST.
And Trypho replied, "We heard you adducing this consideration a little
ago, and we have given it attention: for, to tell the truth, it is worthy of
attention; and that answer which pleases most--namely, that so it seemed good to
Him--does not satisfy me. For this is ever the shift to which those have recourse
who are unable to answer the question."
Then I said, "Since I bring from the Scriptures and the facts themselves
both the proofs and the inculcation of them, do not delay or hesitate to put
faith in me, although I am an uncircumcised man; so short a time is left you in
which to become proselytes. If Christ's coming shall have anticipated you, in
vain you will repent, in vain you will weep; for He will not hear yon. 'Break up
your fallow ground,' Jeremiah has cried to the people, 'and sow not among
thorns. Circumcise yourselves to the Lord, and circumcise the foreskin of your
heart.'(3) Do not sow, therefore, among thorns, and in untilled ground, whence you
can have no fruit. Know Christ; and behold the fallow ground, good, good and fat,
is in your hearts. 'For, behold, the days come, saith the Lord, that I will
visit all them that are circumcised in their foreskins; Egypt, and Judah,(4) and
Edom, and the sons of Moab. For all the nations are uncircumcised, and all the
house of Israel are uncircumcised in their hearts.'(5) Do you see how that God
does not mean this circumcision which is given for a sign? For it is of no use
to the Egyptians, or the sons of Moab, or the sons of Edom. But though a man be
a Scythian or a Persian, if he has the knowledge of God and of His Christ, and
keeps the everlasting righteous decrees, he is circumcised with the good and
useful circumcision, and is a friend of God, and God rejoices in his gifts and
offerings. But I will lay before you, my friends, the very words of God, when He
said to the people by Malachi, one of the twelve prophets, 'I have no pleasure
in you, saith the Lord; and I shall not accept your sacrifices at your hands:
for from the rising of the sun unto its setting My name shall be glorified
among the Gentiles; and in every place a sacrifice is offered unto My name, even a
pure sacrifice: for My name is honoured among the Gentiles, saith the Lord; but
ye profane it.'(6) And by David He said, 'A people whom I have not known,
served Me; at the hearing of the ear they obeyed Me.'(7)
CHAP. XXIX.--CHRIST IS USELESS TO THOSE WHO OBSERVE THE LAW.
"Let us glorify God, all nations gathered together; for He has also
visited us. Let us glorify Him by the King of glory, by the Lord of hosts. For He has
been gracious towards the Gentiles also; and our sacrifices He esteems more
grateful than yours. What need, then, have I of circumcision, who have been
witnessed to by God? What need have I of that other baptism, who have been baptized
with the Holy Ghost? I think that while I mention this, I would persuade even
those who are possessed of scanty intelligence. For these words have neither
been prepared by me, nor embellished by the art of man; but David sung them,
Isaiah preached them, Zechariah proclaimed them, and Moses wrote them. Are you
acquainted with them, Trypho? They are contained in your Scriptures, or rather not
yours, but ours.(1) For we believe them; but you, though you read them, do not
catch the spirit that is in them. Be not offended at, or reproach us with, the
bodily uncircumcision with which God has created us; and think it not strange
that we drink hot water on the Sabbaths, since God directs the government of the
universe on this day equally as on all others; and the priests, as on other
days, so on this, are ordered to offer sacrifices; and there are so many righteous
men who have performed none of these legal ceremonies, and yet are witnessed
to by God Himself.
CHAP. XXX.--CHRISTIANS POSSESS THE TRUE RIGHTEOUSNESS.
"But impute it to your own wickedness, that God even can be accused by
those who have no understanding, of not having always instructed all in the same
righteous statutes. For such institutions seemed to be unreasonable and unworthy
of God to many men, who had not received grace to know that your nation were
called to conversion and repentance of spirit,(2) while they were in a sinful
condition and labouring under spiritual disease; and that the prophecy which was
announced subsequent to the death of Moses is everlasting. And this is
mentioned in the Psalm, my friends.(3) And that we, who have been made wise by them,
confess that the statutes of the Lord are sweeter than honey and the honey-comb,
is manifest from the fact that, though threatened with death, we do not deny
His name. Moreover, it is also manifest to all, that we who believe in Him pray
to be kept by Him from strange, i.e., from wicked and deceitful, spirits; as the
word of prophecy, personating one of those who believe in Him, figuratively
declares. For we do continually beseech God by Jesus Christ to preserve us from
the demons which are hostile to the worship of God, and whom we of old time
served, in order that, after our conversion by Him to God, we may be blameless. For
we call Him Helper and Redeemer, the power of whose name even the demons do
fear; and at this day, when they are exorcised in the name of Jesus Christ,
crucified under Pontius Pilate, governor of Judaea, they are overcome. And thus it
is manifest to all, that His Father has given Him so great power, by virtue of
which demons are subdued to His name, and to the dispensation of His suffering.
CHAP. XXXI.--IF CHRIST'S POWER BE NOW SO GREAT, HOW MUCH GREATER AT THE SECOND
ADVENT!
"But if so great a power is shown to have followed and to be still
following the dispensation of His suffering, how great shall that be which shall
follow His glorious advent! For He shall come on the clouds as the Son of man, so
Daniel foretold, and His angels shall come with Him. These are the words: 'I
beheld till the thrones were set; and the Ancient of days did sit, whose garment
was white as snow, and the hair of His head like the pure wool. His throne was
like a fiery flame, His wheels as burning fire. A fiery stream issued and came
forth from before Him. Thousand thousands ministered unto Him, and ten thousand
times ten thousand stood before Him. The books were opened, and the judgment was
set. I beheld then the voice of the great words which the horn speaks: and the
beast was beat down, and his body destroyed, and given to the burning flame.
And the rest of the beasts were taken away from their dominion, and a period of
life was given to the beasts until a season and time. I saw in the vision of
the night, and, behold, one like the Son of man coming with the clouds of heaven;
and He came to the Ancient of days, and stood before Him. And they who stood
by brought Him near; and there were given Him power and kingly honour, and all
nations of the earth by their families, and all glory, serve Him. And His
dominion is an everlasting dominion, which shall not be taken away; and His kingdom
shall not be destroyed. And my spirit was chilled within my frame, and the
visions of my head troubled me. I came near unto one of them that stood by, and
inquired the precise meaning of all these things. In answer he speaks to me, and
showed me the judgment of the matters: These great beasts are four kingdoms,
which shall perish from the earth, and shall not receive dominion for ever, even
for ever and ever. Then I wished to know exactly about the fourth beast, which
destroyed all [the others] and was very terrible, its teeth of iron, and its
nails of brass; which devoured, made waste, and stamped the residue with its feet:
also about the ten horns upon its head, and of the one which came up, by means
of which three of the former fell. And that horn had eyes, and a mouth speaking
great things; and its countenance excelled the rest. And I beheld that horn
waging war against the saints, and prevailing against them, until the Ancient of
days came; and He gave judgment for the saints of the Most High. And the time
came, and the saints of the Most High possessed the kingdom. And it was told me
concerning the fourth beast: There shall be a fourth kingdom upon earth, which
shall prevail over all these kingdoms, and shall devour the whole earth, and
shall destroy and make it thoroughly waste. And the ten horns are ten kings that
shall arise; and one shall arise after them;(1) and he shall surpass the first
in evil deeds, and he shall subdue three kings, and he shall speak words
against the Most High, and shall overthrow the rest of the saints of the Most High,
and shall expect to change the seasons and the times. And it shall be delivered
into his hands for a time, and times, and half a time. And the judgment sat,
and they shall take away his dominion, to consume and to destroy it unto the
end. And the kingdom, and the power, and the great places of the kingdoms under
the heavens, were given to the holy people of the Most High, to reign in an
everlasting kingdom: and all powers shall be subject to Him, and shall obey Him.
Hitherto is the end of the matter. I, Daniel, was possessed with a very great
astonishment, and my speech was changed in me; yet I kept the matter in my
heart.'"(2)
CHAP. XXXII.--TRYPHO OBJECTING THAT CHRIST IS DESCRIBED AS GLORIOUS BY DANIEL,
JUSTIN DISTINGUISHES TWO ADVENTS.
And when I had ceased, Trypho said, "These and such like Scriptures, sir,
compel us to wait for Him who, as Son of man, receives from the Ancient of days
the everlasting kingdom. But this so-called Christ of yours was dishonourable
and inglorious, so much so that the last curse contained in the law of God fell
on him, for he was crucified."
Then I replied to him, "If, sirs, it were not said by the Scriptures which
I have already quoted, that His form was inglorious, and His generation not
declared, and that for His death the rich would suffer death, and with His
stripes we should be healed, and that He would be led away like a sheep; and if I had
not explained that there would be two advents of His,--one in which He was
pierced by you; a second, when you shall know Him whom you have pierced, and your
tribes shall mourn, each tribe by itself, the women apart, and the men apart,
--then I must have been speaking dubious and obscure things. But now, by means
of the contents of those Scriptures esteemed holy and prophetic amongst you, I
attempt to prove all [that I have adduced], in the hope that some one of you may
be found to be of that remnant which has been left by the grace of the Lord of
Sabaoth for the eternal salvation. In order, therefore, that the matter
inquired into may be plainer to you, I will mention to you other words also spoken by
the blessed David, from which you will perceive that the Lord is called the
Christ by the Holy Spirit of prophecy; and that the Lord, the Father of all, has
brought Him again from the earth, setting Him at His own right hand, until He
makes His enemies His footstool; which indeed happens from the time that our
Lord Jesus Christ ascended to heaven, after He rose again from the dead, the times
now running on to their consummation; and he whom Daniel foretells would have
dominion for a time, and times, and an half, is even already at the door, about
to speak blasphemous and daring things against the Most High. But you, being
ignorant of how long he will have dominion, hold another opinion. For you
interpret the 'time' as being a hundred years. But if this is so, the man of sin
must, at the shortest, reign three hundred and fifty years, in order that we may
compute that which is said by the holy Daniel--'and times'--to be two times only.
All this I have said to you in digression, in order that you at length may be
persuaded of what has been declared against you by God, that you are foolish
sons; and of this, 'Therefore, behold, I will proceed to take away this people,
and shall take them away; and I will strip the wise of their wisdom, and will
hide the understanding of their prudent men;'(3) and may cease to deceive
yourselves and those who hear you, and may learn of us, who have been taught wisdom
by the grace of Christ. The words, then, which were spoken by David, are
these:(4) 'The Lord said unto My Lord, Sit Thou at My right hand, until I make Thine
enemies Thy footstool. The Lord shall send the rod of Thy strength out of Sion:
rule Thou also in the midst of Thine enemies. With Thee shall be, in the day,
the chief of Thy power, in the beauties of Thy saints. From the womb, before the
morning star, have I begotten Thee. The Lord hath sworn, and will not repent:
Thou art a priest for ever after the order of Melchizedek. The Lord is at Thy
right hand: He has crushed kings in the day of His wrath: He shall judge among
the heathen, He shall fill [with] the dead bodies.(5) He shall drink of the
brook in the way; therefore shall He lift up the head.'
CHAP. XXXIII.--PS, CX. IS NOT SPOKEN OF HEZEKIAH. HE PROVES THAT CHRIST WAS
FIRST HUMBLE, THEN SHALL BE GLORIOUS.
"And," I continued, "I am not ignorant that you venture to expound this
psalm as if it referred to king Hezekiah; but that you arc mistaken, I shall
prove to you from these very words forthwith. 'The Lord hath sworn, and will not
repent,' it is said; and, 'Thou art a priest for ever, after the order of
Melchizedek,' with what follows and precedes. Not even you will venture to object
that Hezekiah was either a priest, or is the everlasting priest of God; but that
this is spoken of our Jesus, these expressions show. But your ears are shut up,
and your hearts are made dull.(1) For by this statement, 'The Lord hath sworn,
and will not repent: Thou art a priest for ever, after the order of
Melchizedek,' with an oath God has shown Him (on account of your unbelief) to be the High
Priest after the order of Melchizedek; i.e., as Melchizedek was described by
Moses as the priest of the Most High, and he was a priest of those who were in
uncircumcision, and blessed the circumcised Abraham who brought him tithes, so
God has shown that His everlasting Priest, called also by the Hold Spirit Lord,
would be Priest of those in uncircumcision. Those too in circumcision who
approach Him, that is, believing Him and seeking blessings from Him, He will both
receive and bless. And that He shall be first humble as a man, and then exalted,
these words at the end of the Psalm show: 'He shall drink of the brook in the
way,' and then, 'Therefore shall He lift up the head.'
CHAP. XXXIV.--NOR DOES PS. LXXII. APPLY TO SOLOMON, WHOSE FAULTS CHRISTIANS
SHUDDER AT.
"Further, to persuade you that you have not understood anything of the
Scriptures, I will remind you of another psalm, dictated to David by the Holy
Spirit, which you say refers to Solomon, who was also your king. But it refers also
to our Christ. But you deceive yourselves by the ambiguous forms of speech.
For where it is said, 'The law of the Lord is perfect,' you do not understand it
of the law which was to be after Moses, but of the law which was given by
Moses, although God declared that He would establish a new law and a new covenant.
And where it has been said, 'O God, give Thy judgment to the king,' since
Solomon was king, you say that the Psalm refers to him, although the words of the
Psalm expressly proclaim that reference is made to the everlasting King, i.e., to
Christ. For Christ is King, and Priest, and God, and Lord, and angel, and man,
and captain, and stone, and a Son born, and first made subject to suffering,
then returning to heaven, and again coming with glory, and He is preached as
having the everlasting kingdom: so I prove from all the Scriptures. But that you
may perceive what I have said, I quote the words of the Psalm; they are these: 'O
God, give Thy judgment to the king, and Thy righteousness unto the king's son,
to judge Thy people with righteousness, and Thy poor with judgment. The
mountains shall take up peace to the people, and the little hills righteousness. He
shall judge the poor of the people, and shah save the children of the needy, and
shall abase the slanderer. He shall co-endure with the sun, and before the
moon unto all generations. He shall come down like rain upon the fleece, as drops
falling on the earth. In His days shall righteousness flourish, and abundance
of peace until the moon be taken away. And He shall have dominion from sea to
sea, and from the rivers unto the ends of the earth. Ethiopians shall fall down
before Him, and His enemies shall lick the dust. The kings of Tarshish and the
isles shall offer gifts; the kings of Arabia and Seba shall offer gifts; and all
the kings of the earth shall worship Him, and all the nations shall serve Him:
for He has delivered the poor from the man of power, and the needy that hath
no helper. He shall spare the poor and needy, and shall save the souls of the
needy: He shall redeem their souls from usury and injustice, and His name shall
be honourable before them. And He shall live, and to Him shall be given of the
gold of Arabia, and they shall pray continually for Him: they shall bless Him
all the day. And there shall be a foundation on the earth, it shall be exalted on
the tops of the mountains: His fruit shall be on Lebanon, and they of the city
shall flourish like grass of the earth. His name shah be blessed for ever. His
name shall endure before the sun; and all tribes of the earth shall be blessed
in Him, all nations shall call Him blessed. Blessed be the Lord, the God of
Israel, who only doeth wondrous things; and blessed be His glorious name for
ever, and for ever and ever; and the whole earth shall be filled with His glory.
Amen, amen.'(2) And at the close of this Psalm which I have quoted, it is
written, 'The hymns of David the son of Jesse are ended.'(3) Moreover, that Solomon
was a renowned and great king, by whom the temple called that at Jerusalem was
built, I know; but that none of those things mentioned in the Psalm happened to
him, is evident. For neither did all kings worship him; nor did he reign to the
ends of the earth; nor did his enemies, failing before him, lick the dust.
Nay, also, I venture to repeat what is written in the book of Kings as committed
by him, how through a woman's influence he worshipped the idols of Sidon, which
those of the Gentiles who know God, the Maker of all things through Jesus the
crucified, do not venture to do, but abide every torture and vengeance even to
the extremity of death, rather than worship idols, or eat meat offered to idols."
CHAP. XXXV.--HERETICS CONFIRMTHE CATHOLICS IN THE FAITH.
And Trypho said, "I believe, however, that many of those who say that they
confess Jesus, and are called Christians, eat meats offered to idols, and
declare that they are by no means injured in consequence." And I replied, "The fact
that there are such men confessing themselves to be Christians, and admitting
the crucified Jesus to be both Lord and Christ, yet not teaching His doctrines,
but those of the spirits of error, causes us who are disciples of the true and
pure doctrine of Jesus Christ, to be more faithful and stedfast in the hope
announced by Him. For what things He predicted would take place in His name,
these we do see being actually accomplished in our sight. For he said, 'Many shall
come in My name, clothed outwardly in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are
ravening wolves."(1) And, 'There shall be schisms and heresies.'(2) And, 'Beware
of false prophets, who shall come to you clothed outwardly in sheep's
clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves.'(1) And, 'Many false Christs and false
apostles shall arise, and shall deceive many of the faithful.'(3) There are,
therefore, and there were many, my friends, who, coming forward in the name of
Jesus, taught both to speak and act impious and blasphemous things; and these
are called by us after the name of the men from whom each doctrine and opinion
had its origin. (For some in one way, others in another, teach to blaspheme the
Maker of all things, and Christ, who was foretold by Him as coming, and the God
of Abraham, and of Isaac, and of Jacob, with whom we have nothing in common,
since we know them to be atheists, impious, unrighteous, and sinful, and
confessors of Jesus in name only, instead of worshippers of Him. Yet they style
themselves Christians, just as certain among the Gentiles inscribe the name of God
upon the works of their own hands, and partake in nefarious and impious rites.)
Some are called Marcians, and some Valentinians, and some Basilidians, and some
Saturnilians, and others by other names; each called after the originator of the
individual opinion, just as each one of those who consider themselves
philosophers, as I said before, thinks he must bear the name of the philosophy which he
follows, from the name of the father of the particular doctrine. So that, in
consequence of these events, we know that Jesus foreknew what would happen after
Him, as well as in consequence of many other events which He foretold would
befall those who believed on and confessed Him, the Christ. For all that we
suffer, even when killed by friends, He foretold would take place; so that it is
manifest no word or act of His can be found fault with. Wherefore we pray for you
and for all other men who hate us; in order that you, having repented along
with us, may not blaspheme Him who, by His works, by the mighty deeds even now
wrought through His name, by the words He taught, by the prophecies announced
concerning Him, is the blameless, and in all things irreproachable, Christ Jesus;
but, believing on Him, may be saved in His second glorious advent, and may not
be condemned to fire by Him."
CHAP. XXXVI.--HE PROVES THAT CHRIST IS CALLED LORD OF HOSTS.
Then he replied, "Let these things be so as you say--namely, that it was
foretold Christ would suffer, and be called a stone; and after His first
appearance, in which it had been announced He would suffer, would come in glory, and
be Judge finally of all, and eternal King and Priest. Now show if this man be He
of whom these prophecies were made."
And I said, "As you wish, Trypho, I shall come to these proofs which you
seek in the fitting place; but now you will permit me first to recount the
prophecies, which I wish to do in order to prove that Christ is called both God and
Lord of hosts, and Jacob, in parable by the Holy Spirit; and your interpreters,
as God says, are foolish, since they say that reference is made to Solomon
and not to Christ, when he bore the ark of testimony into the temple which he
built. The Psalm of David is this: 'The earth is the Lord's, and the fulness
thereof; the world, and all that dwell therein. He hath rounded it upon the seas,
and prepared it upon the floods. Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord? or
who shall stand in His holy place? He that is clean of hands and pure of heart:
who has not received his soul in vain, and has not sworn guilefully to his
neighbour: he shall receive blessing from the Lord, and mercy from God his Saviour.
This is the generation of them that seek the Lord, that seek the face of the
God of Jacob.(4) Lift up your gates, ye rulers; and be ye lift up, ye
everlasting doors; and the King of glory shall come in. Who is this King of glory? The
Lord strong and mighty in battle. Lift up your gates, ye rulers; and be ye lift
up, ye everlasting doors; and the King of glory shall come in. Who is this King
of glory? The Lord of hosts, He is the King of glory.'(1) Accordingly, it is
shown that Solomon is not the Lord of hosts; but when our Christ rose from the
dead and ascended to heaven, the rulers in heaven, under appointment of God, are
commanded to open the gates of heaven, that He who is King of glory may enter
in, and having ascended, may sit on the right hand of the Father until He make
the enemies His footstool, as has been made manifest by another Psalm. For when
the rulers of heaven saw Him of uncomely and dishonoured appearance, and
inglorious, not recognising Him, they inquired, 'Who is this King of glory?' And the
Holy Spirit, either from the person of His Father, or from His own person,
answers them, 'The Lord of hosts, He is this King of glory.' For every one will
confess that not one of those who presided over the gates of the temple at
Jerusalem would venture to say concerning Solomon, though he was so glorious a king,
or concerning the ark of testimony, 'Who is this King of glory?'
CHAP. XXXVII.--THE SAME IS PROVED FROM OTHER PSALMS.
"Moreover, in the diapsalm of the forty-sixth Psalm, reference is thus
made to Christ: 'God went up with a shout, the Lord with the sound of a trumpet.
Sing ye to our God, sing ye: sing to our King, sing ye; for God is King of all
the earth: sing with understanding. God has ruled over the nations. God sits
upon His holy throne. The rulers of the nations were assembled along with the God
of Abraham, for the strong ones of God are greatly exalted on the earth.'(2)
And in the ninety-eighth Psalm, the Holy Spirit reproaches you, and predicts Him
whom you do not wish to be king to be King and Lord, both of Samuel, and of
Aaron, and of Moses, and, in short, of all the others. And the words of the Psalm
are these: 'The Lord has reigned, let the nations be angry: [it is] He who sits
upon the cherubim, let the earth be shaken. The Lord is great in Zion, and He
is high above all the nations. Let them confess Thy great name, for it is
fearful and holy, and the honour of the King loves judgment. Thou hast prepared
equity; judgment and righteousness hast Thou performed in Jacob. Exalt the Lord our
God, and worship the footstool of His feet; for He is holy. Moses and Aaron
among His priests, and Samuel among those who call upon His name. They called
(says the Scripture) on the Lord, and He heard them. In the pillar of the cloud He
spake to them; for(3) they kept His testimonies, and the commandment which he
gave them. O Lord our God, Thou heardest them: O God, Thou wert propitious to
them, and [yet] taking vengeance on all their inventions. Exalt the Lord our
God, and worship at His holy hill; for the Lord our God is holy.'"(4)
CHAP. XXXVIII.--IT IS AN ANNOYANCE TO THE JEW THAT CHRIST IS SAID TO BE
ADORED. JUSTIN CONFIRMS IT, HOWEVER, FROM PS. XLV.
And Trypho said, "Sir, it were good for us if we obeyed our teachers, who
laid down a law that we should have no intercourse with any of you, and that we
should not have even any communication with you on these questions. For you
utter many blasphemies, in that you seek to persuade us that this crucified man
was with Moses and Aaron, and spoke to them in the pillar of the cloud; then
that he became man, was crucified, and ascended up to heaven, and comes again to
earth, and ought to be worshipped."
Then I answered, "I know that, as the word of God says, this great wisdom
of God, the Maker of all things, and the Almighty, is hid from you. Wherefore,
in sympathy with you, I am striving to the utmost that you may understand these
matters which to you are paradoxical; but if not, that I myself may be
innocent in the day of judgment. For you shall hear other words which appear still
more paradoxical; but be not confounded, nay, rather remain still more zealous
hearers and investigators, despising the tradition of your teachers, since they
are convicted by the Holy Spirit of inability to perceive the truths taught by
God, and of preferring to teach their own doctrines. Accordingly, in the
forty-fourth [forty-fifth] Psalm, these words are in like manner referred to Christ:
'My heart has brought forth a good matter;(5) I tell my works to the King. My
tongue is the pen of a ready writer. Fairer in beauty than the sons of men: grace
is poured forth into Thy lips: therefore bath God blessed Thee for ever. Gird
Thy sword upon Thy thigh, O mighty One. Press on in Thy fairness and in Thy
beauty, and prosper and reign, because of truth, and of meekness, and of
righteousness: and Thy right hand shall instruct Thee marvellously. Thine arrows are
sharpened, O mighty One; the people shall fall under Thee; in the heart of the
enemies of the King [the arrows are fixed]. Thy throne, O God, is for ever and
ever: a sceptre of equity is the sceptre of Thy kingdom. Thou hast loved
righteousness, and hast hated iniquity; therefore thy God(1) hath anointed Thee with the
oil of gladness above Thy fellows. [He hath anointed Thee] with myrrh,(2) and
oil, and cassia, from Thy garments; from the ivory palaces, whereby they made
Thee glad. Kings' daughters are in Thy honour. The queen stood at Thy right hand,
clad in garments(3) embroidered with gold. Hearken, O daughter, and behold,
and incline thine ear, and forget thy people and the house of thy father: and the
King shall desire thy beauty; because He is thy Lord, they shall worship Him
also. And the daughter of Tyre [shall be there] with gifts. The rich of the
people shall entreat Thy face. All the glory of the King's daughter [is] within,
clad in embroidered garments of needlework. The virgins that follow her shall be
brought to the King; her neighbours shall be brought unto Thee: they shall be
brought with joy and gladness: they shall be led into the King's shrine. Instead
of thy fathers, thy sons have been born: Thou shalt appoint them rulers over
all the earth. I shall remember Thy name in every generation: therefore the
people shall confess Thee for ever, and for ever and ever.'
CHAP. XXXIX.--THE JEWS HATE THE CHRISTIANS WHO BELIEVE THIS. HOW GREAT THE
DISTINCTION IS BETWEEN BOTH!
"Now it is not surprising," I continued, "that you hate us who hold these
opinions, and convict you of a continual hardness of heart.(4) For indeed
Elijah, conversing with God concerning you, speaks thus: 'Lord, they have slain Thy
prophets, and digged down Thine altars: and I am left alone, and they seek my
life.' And He answers him: 'I have still seven thousand men who have not bowed
the knee to Baal.'(5) Therefore, just as God did not inflict His anger on
account of those seven thousand men, even so He has now neither yet inflicted
judgment, nor does inflict it, knowing that daily some [of you] are becoming disciples
in the name of Christ, and quitting the path of error; who are also receiving
gifts, each as he is worthy, illumined through the name of this Christ. For one
receives the spirit of understanding, another of counsel, another of strength,
another of healing, another of foreknowledge, another of teaching, and another
of the fear of God."
To this Trypho said to me, "I wish you knew that you are beside yourself,
talking these sentiments."
And I said to him, "Listen, O friend,(6) for I am not mad or beside
myself; but it was prophesied that, after the ascent of Christ to heaven, He would
deliver(7) us from error and give us gifts. The words are these: 'He ascended up
on high; He led captivity captive; He gave gifts to men.'(8) Accordingly, we
who have received gifts from Christ, who has ascended up on high, prove from the
words of prophecy that you, 'the wise in yourselves, and the men of
understanding in your own eyes,'(9) are foolish, and honour God and His Christ by lip
only. But we, who are instructed in the whole truth,(10) honour Them both in acts,
and in knowledge, and in heart, even unto death. But you hesitate to confess
that He is Christ, as the Scriptures and the events witnessed and done in His
name prove, perhaps for this reason, lest you be persecuted by the rulers, who,
under the influence of the wicked and deceitful spirit, the serpent, will not
cease putting to death and persecuting those who confess the name of Christ until
He come again, and destroy them all, and render to each his deserts."
And Trypho replied, "Now, then, render us the proof that this man who you
say was crucified and ascended into heaven is the Christ of God. For you have
sufficiently proved by means of the Scriptures previously quoted by you, that it
is declared in the Scriptures that Christ must suffer, and come again with
glory, and receive the eternal kingdom over all the nations, every kingdom being
made subject to Him: now show us that this man is He."
And I replied, "It has been already proved, sirs, to those who have ears,
even from the facts which have been conceded by you; but that you may not think
me at a loss, and unable to give proof of what you ask, as I promised, I shall
do so at a fitting place. At present, I resume the consideration of the
subject which I was discussing.
CHAP. XL.--HE RETURNS TO THE MOSAIC LAWS, AND PROVES THAT THEY WERE FIGURES OF
THE THINGS WHICH PERTAIN TO CHRIST.
"The mystery, then, of the lamb which God enjoined to be sacrificed as the
passover, was a type of Christ; with whose blood, in proportion to their faith
in Him, they anoint their houses, i.e., themselves, who believe on Him. For
that the creation which God created--to wit, Adam--was a house for the spirit
which proceeded from God, you all can understand. And that this injunction was
temporary, I prove thus. God does not permit the lamb of the passover to be
sacrificed in any other place than where His name was named; knowing that the days
will come, after the suffering of Christ, when even the place in Jerusalem shall
be given over to your enemies, and all the offerings, in short, shall cease;
and that lamb which was commanded to be wholly roasted was a symbol of the
suffering of the cross which Christ would undergo. For the lamb,(1) which is roasted,
is roasted and dressed up in the form of the cross. For one spit is transfixed
right through from the lower parts up to the head, and one across the back, to
which are attached the legs of the lamb. And the two goats which were ordered
to be offered during the fast, of which one was sent away as the scape [goat],
and the other sacrificed, were similarly declarative of the two appearances of
Christ: the first, in which the elders of your people, and the priests, having
laid hands on Him and put Him to death, sent Him away as the scope [goat]; and
His second appearance, because in the same place in Jerusalem you shall
recognise Him whom you have dishonoured, and who was an offering for all sinners
willing to repent, and keeping the fast which Isaiah speaks of, loosening the
terms(2) of the violent contracts, and keeping the other precepts, likewise
enumerated by him, and which I have quoted,(3) which those believing in Jesus do. And
further, you are aware that the offering of the two goats, which were enjoined to
be sacrificed at the fast, was not permitted to take place similarly anywhere
else, but only in Jerusalem.
CHAP. XLI.--THE OBLATION OF FINE FLOUR WAS A FIGURE OF THE EUCHARIST.
"And the offering of fine flour, sirs," I said, "which was prescribed to
be presented on behalf of those purified from leprosy, was a type of the bread
of the Eucharist, the celebration of which our Lord Jesus Christ prescribed, in
remembrance of the suffering which He endured on behalf of those who are
purified in soul from all iniquity, in order that we may at the same time thank God
for having created the world, with all things therein, for the sake of man, and
for delivering us from the evil in which we were, and for utterly
overthrowing(4) principalities and powers by Him who suffered according to His will. Hence
God speaks by the mouth of Malachi, one of the twelve [prophets], as I said
before,(5) about the sacrifices at that time presented by you: 'I have no pleasure
in you, saith the Lord; and I will not accept your sacrifices at your hands:
for, from the rising of the sun unto the going down of the same, My name has been
glorified among the Gentiles, and in every place incense is offered to My
name, and a pure offering: for My name is great among the Gentiles, saith the Lord:
but ye profane it.'(6) [So] He then speaks of those Gentiles, namely us, who
in every place offer sacrifices to Him, i.e., the bread of the Eucharist, and
also the cup of the Eucharist, affirming both that we glorify His name, and that
you profane [it]. The command of circumcision, again, bidding [them] always
circumcise the children on the eighth day, was a type of the true circumcision, by
which we are circumcised from deceit and iniquity through Him who rose from
the dead on the first day after the Sabbath, [namely through] our Lord Jesus
Christ. For the first day after the Sabbath, remaining the first(7) of all the
days, is called, however, the eighth, according to the number of all the days of
the cycle, and [yet] remains the first.
CHAP. XLII.--THE BELLS ON THE PRIEST'S ROBE WERE A FIGURE OF THE APOSTLES.
"Moreover, the prescription that twelve bells(8) be attached to the [robe]
of the high priest, which hung down to the feet, was a symbol of the twelve
apostles, who depend on the power of Christ, the eternal Priest; and through
their voice it is that all the earth has been filled with the glory and grace of
God and of His Christ. Wherefore David also says: 'Their sound has gone forth
into all the earth, and their words to the ends of the world.'(9) And Isaiah
speaks as if he were personating the apostles, when they say to Christ that they
believe not in their own report, but in the power of Him who sent them. And so he
says: 'Lord, who hath believed our report? and to whom is the arm of the Lord
revealed? We have preached before Him as if [He were] a child, as if a root in a
dry ground.'(10) (And what follows in order of the prophecy already
quoted.(11)) But when the passage speaks as from the lips of many, 'We have preached
before Him,' and adds, 'as if a child,' it signifies that the wicked shall become
subject to Him, and shall obey His command, and that all shall become as one
child. Such a thing as you may witness in the body: although the members are
enumerated as many, all are called one, and are a body. For, indeed, a commonwealth
and a church,(12) though many individuals in number, are in fact as one, called
and addressed by one appellation. And in short, sirs," said I, "by enumerating
all the other appointments of Moses I can demonstrate that they were types,
and symbols, and declarations of those things which would happen to Christ, of
those who it was foreknown were to believe in Him, and of those things which
would also be done by Christ Himself. But since what I have now enumerated appears
to me to be sufficient, I revert again to the order of the discourse.(1)
CHAP. XLIII.--HE CONCLUDES THAT THE LAW HAD AN END IN CHRIST, WHO WAS BORN OF
THE VIRGIN.
"As, then, circumcision began with Abraham, and the Sabbath and sacrifices
and offerings and feasts with Moses, and it has been proved they were enjoined
on account of the hardness of your people's heart, so it was necessary, in
accordance with the Father's will, that they should have an end in Him who was
born of a virgin, of the family of Abraham and tribe of Judah, and of David; in
Christ the Son of God, who was proclaimed as about to come to all the world, to
be the everlasting law and the everlasting covenant, even as the forementioned
prophecies show. And we, who have approached God through Him, have received not
carnal, but spiritual circumcision, which Enoch and those like him observed.
And we have received it through baptism, since we were sinners, by God's mercy;
and all men may equally obtain it. But since the mystery of His birth now
demands our attention I shall speak of it. Isaiah then asserted in regard to the
generation of Christ, that it could not be declared by man, in words already
quoted:(2) 'Who shall declare His generation? for His life is taken from the earth:
for the transgressions of my people was He led(3) to death.'(4) The Spirit of
prophecy thus affirmed that the generation of Him who was to die, that we sinful
men might be healed by His stripes, was such as could not be declared.
Furthermore, that the men who believe in Him may possess the knowledge of the manner
in which He came into the world,(5) the Spirit of prophecy by the same Isaiah
foretold how it would happen thus: 'And the Lord spoke again to Ahaz, saying, Ask
for thyself a sign from the Lord thy God, in the depth, or in the height. And
Ahaz said, I will not ask, neither will I tempt the Lord. And Isaiah said, Hear
then, O house of David; Is it a small thing for you to contend with men, and
how do you contend with the Lord? Therefore the Lord Himself will give you a
sign. Behold, the virgin shall conceive, and shall bear a son, and his name shall
be called Immanuel. Butter and honey shall he eat, before he knows or prefers
the evil, and chooses out the good;(6) for before the child knows good or ill,
he rejects evil(7) by choosing out the good. For before the child knows how to
call father or mother, he shall receive the power of Damascus and the spoil of
Samaria in presence of the king of Assyria. And the land shall be forsaken,(8)
which thou shalt with difficulty endure in consequence of the presence of its
two kings.(9) But God shall bring on thee, and on thy people, and on the house of
thy father, days which have not yet come upon thee since the day in which
Ephraim took away from Judah the king of Assyria.'(10) Now it is evident to all,
that in the race of Abraham according to the flesh no one has been born of a
virgin, or is said to have been born [of a virgin], save this our Christ. But since
you and your teachers venture to affirm that in the prophecy of Isaiah it is
not said, 'Behold, the virgin shall conceive,' but, 'Behold, the young woman
shall conceive, and bear a son;' and [since] you explain the prophecy as if [it
referred] to Hezekiah, who was your king, I shall endeavor to [discuss shortly
this point in opposition to you, and to show that reference is made to Him who is
acknowledged by us as Christ.
CHAP. XLIV.--THE JEWS IN VAIN PROMISE THEMSELVES SALVATION, WHICH CANNOT BE
OBTAINED EXCEPT THROUGH CHRIST.
"For thus, so far as you are concerned, I shall be found in all respects
innocent, if I strive earnestly to persuade you by bringing forward
demonstrations. But if you remain hard-hearted, or weak in [forming] a resolution, on
account of death, which is the lot of the Christians, and are unwilling to assent to
the truth, you shall appear as the authors of your own [evils]. And you
deceive yourselves while you fancy that, because you are the seed of Abraham after
the flesh, therefore you shall fully inherit the good things announced to be
bestowed by God through Christ. For no one, not even of them,(11) has anything to
look for, but only those who in mind are assimilated to the faith of Abraham,
and who have recognised all the mysteries: for I say,(1) that some injunctions
were laid on you in reference to the worship of God and practice of
righteousness; but some injunctions and acts were likewise mentioned in reference to the
mystery of Christ, on account of(2) the hardness of your people's hearts. And that
this is so, God makes known in Ezekiel, [when] He said concerning it: 'If Noah
and Jacob(3) and Daniel should beg either sons or daughters, the request would
not be granted them.'(4) And in Isaiah, of the very same matter He spake thus:
'The Lord God said, they shall both go forth and look on the members [of the
bodies] of the men that have transgressed. For their worm shall not die, and
their fire shall not be quenched, and they shall be a gazing-stock to all
flesh.'(5) So that it becomes you to eradicate this hope from your souls, and hasten to
know in what way forgiveness of sins, and a hope of inheriting the promised
good things, shall be yours. But there is no other [way] than this,--to become
acquainted with this Christ, to be washed in the fountain(6) spoken of by Isaiah
for the remission of sins; and for the rest, to live sinless lives."
CHAP. XLV.--THOSE WHO WERE RIGHTEOUS BEFORE AND UNDER THE LAW SHALL BE SAVED
BY CHRIST.
And Trypho said, "If I seem to interrupt these matters, which you say must
be investigated, yet the question which I mean to put is urgent. Suffer me
first."
And I replied, "Ask whatever you please, as it occurs to you; and I shall
endeavour, after questions and answers, to resume and complete the discourse."
Then he said, "Tell me, then, shall those who lived according to the law
given by Moses, live in the same manner with Jacob, Enoch, and Noah, in the
resurrection of the dead, or not?"
I replied to him, "When I quoted, sir, the words spoken by Ezekiel, that
'even if Noah and Daniel and Jacob were to beg sons and daughters, the request
would not be granted them,' but that each one, that is to say, shall be saved by
his own righteousness, I said also, that those who regulated their lives by
the law of Moses would in like manner be saved. For what in the law of Moses is
naturally good, and pious, and righteous, and has been prescribed to be done by
those who obey it;(7) and what was appointed to be performed by reason of the
hardness of the people's hearts; was similarly recorded, and done also by those
who were under the law. Since those who did that which is universally,
naturally, and eternally good are pleasing to God, they shall be saved through this
Christ in the resurrection equally with those righteous men who were before them,
namely Noah, and Enoch, and Jacob, and whoever else there be, along with those
who have known(8) this Christ, Son of God, who was before the morning star and
the moon, and submitted to become incarnate, and be born of this virgin of the
family of David, in order that, by this dispensation, the serpent that sinned
from the beginning, and the angels like him, may be destroyed, and that death
may be contemned, and for ever quit, at the second coming of the Christ Himself,
those who believe in Him and live acceptably,--and be no more: when some are
sent to be punished unceasingly into judgment and condemnation of fire; but
others shall exist in freedom from suffering, from corruption, and from grief, and
in immortality."
CHAP. XLVI.--TRYPHO ASKS WHETHER A MAN WHO KEEPS THE LAW EVEN NOW WILL BE
SAVED. JUSTIN PROVES THAT IT CONTRIBUTES NOTHING TO RIGHTEOUSNESS.
"But if some, even now, wish to live in the observance of the institutions
given by Moses, and yet believe in this Jesus who was crucified, recognising
Him to be the Christ of God, and that it is given to Him to be absolute Judge of
all, and that His is the everlasting kingdom, can they also be saved?" he
inquired of me.
And I replied, "Let us consider that also together, whether one may now
observe all the Mosaic institutions."
And he answered, "No. For we know that, as you said, it is not possible
either anywhere to sacrifice the lamb of the passover, or to offer the goats
ordered for the fast; or, in short, [to present] all the other offerings."
And I said, "Tell [me] then yourself, I pray, some things which can be
observed; for you will be persuaded that, though a man does not keep or has not
performed the eternal(6) decrees, he may assuredly be saved."
Then he replied, "To keep the Sabbath, to be circumcised, to observe
months, and to be washed if you touch anything prohibited by Moses, or after sexual
intercourse."
And I said, "Do you think that Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Noah, and Job, and
all the rest before or after them equally righteous, also Sarah the wife of
Abraham, Rebekah the wife of Isaac, Rachel the wife of Jacob, and Leah, and all the
rest of them, until the mother of Moses the faithful servant, who observed
none of these [statutes], will be saved?"
And Trypho answered, "Were not Abraham and his descendants circumcised?"
And I said, "I know that Abraham and his descendants were circumcised. The
reason why circumcision was given to them I stated at length in what has gone
before; and if what has been said does not convince you,(1) let us again search
into the matter. But you are aware that, up to Moses, no one in fact who was
righteous observed any of these rites at all of which we are talking, or
received one commandment to observe, except that of circumcision, which began from
Abraham."
And he replied, "We know it, and admit that they are saved."
Then I returned answer, "You perceive that God by Moses laid all such
ordinances upon you on account of the hardness of your people's hearts, in order
that, by the large number of them, you might keep God continually, and in every
action, before your eyes, and never begin to act unjustly or impiously. For He
enjoined you to place around you [a fringe] of purple dye,(2) in order that you
might not forget God; and He commanded you to wear a phylactery,(3) certain
characters, which indeed we consider holy, being engraved on very thin parchment;
and by these means stirring you up(4) to retain a constant remembrance of God:
at the same time, however, convincing you, that in your hearts you have not
even a faint remembrance of God's worship. Yet not even so were you dissuaded from
idolatry: for in the times of Elijah, when [God] recounted the number of those
who had not bowed the knee to Baal, He said the number was seven thousand; and
in Isaiah He rebukes you for having sacrificed your children to idols. But we,
because we refuse to sacrifice to those to whom we were of old accustomed to
sacrifice, undergo extreme penalties, and rejoice in death,--believing that God
will raise us up by His Christ, and will make us incorruptible, and
undisturbed, and immortal; and we know that the ordinances imposed by reason of the
hardness of your people's hearts, contribute nothing to the performance of
righteousness and of piety."
CHAP. XLVII.--JUSTIN COMMUNICATES WITH CHRISTIANS WHO OBSERVE THE LAW. NOT A
FEW CATHOLICS DO OTHERWISE.
And Trypho again inquired, "But if some one, knowing that this is so,
after he recognises that this man is Christ, and has believed in and obeys Him,
wishes, however, to observe these [institutions], will he be saved?"
I said, "In my opinion, Trypho, such an one will be saved, if he does not
strive in every way to persuade other men,--I mean those Gentiles who have been
circumcised from error by Christ, to observe the same things as himself,
telling them that they will not be saved unless they do so. This you did yourself at
the commencement of the discourse, when you declared that I would not be saved
unless I observe these institutions."
Then he replied, "Why then have you said, 'In my opinion, such an one will
be saved,' unless there are some(5) who affirm that such will not be saved?"
"There are such people, Trypho," I answered; "and these do not venture to
have any intercourse with or to extend hospitality to such persons; but I do
not agree with them. But if some, through weak-mindedness, wish to observe such
institutions as were given by Moses, from which they expect some virtue, but
which we believe were appointed by reason of the hardness of the people's hearts,
along with their hope in this Christ, and [wish to perform] the eternal and
natural acts of righteousness and piety, yet choose to live with the Christians
and the faithful, as I said before, not inducing them either to be circumcised
like themselves, or to keep the Sabbath, or to observe any other such ceremonies,
then I hold that we ought to join ourselves to such, and associate with them
in all things as kinsmen and brethren. But if, Trypho," I continued, "some of
your race, who say they believe in this Christ, compel those Gentiles who believe
in this Christ to live in all respects according to the law given by Moses, or
choose not to associate so intimately with them, I in like manner do not
approve of them. But I believe that even those, who have been persuaded by them to
observe the legal dispensation along with their confession of God in Christ,
shall probably be saved. And I hold, further, that such as have confessed and
known this man to be Christ, yet who have gone back from some cause to the legal
dispensation, and have denied that this man is Christ, and have repented not
before death, shall by no means be saved. Further, I hold that those of the seed of
Abraham who live according to the law, and do not believe in this Christ
before death, shall likewise not be saved, and especially those who have
anathematized and do anathematize this very Christ in the synagogues, and everything by
which they might obtain salvation and escape the vengeance of fire.(6) For the
goodness and the loving-kindness of God, and His boundless riches, hold righteous
and sinless the man who, as Ezekiel(1) tells, repents of sins; and reckons
sinful, unrighteous, and impious the man who fails away from piety and
righteousness to unrighteousness and ungodliness. Wherefore also our Lord Jesus Christ
said, 'In whatsoever things I shall take you, in these I shall judge you.' "(2)
CHAP. XLVIII.--BEFORE THE DIVINITY OF CHRIST IS PROVED, HE [TRYPHO] DEMANDS
THAT IT BE SETTLED THAT HE IS CHRIST.
And Trypho said, "We have heard what you think of these matters. Resume
the discourse where you left off, and bring it to an end. For some of it appears
to me to be paradoxical, and wholly incapable of proof. For when you say that
this Christ existed as God before the ages, then that He submitted to be born
and become man, yet that He is not man of man, this[assertion] appears to me to
be not merely paradoxical, but also foolish."
And I replied to this, "I know that the statement does appear to be
paradoxical, especially to those of your race, who are ever unwilling to understand
or to perform the[requirements] of God, but[ready to perform] those of your
teachers, as God Himself declares.(3) Now assuredly, Trypho," I continued,"[the
proof] that this man(4) is the Christ of God does not fail, though I be unable to
prove that He existed formerly as Son of the Maker of all things, being God,
and was born a man by the Virgin. But since I have certainly proved that this man
is the Christ of God, whoever He be, even if I do not prove that He
pre-existed, and submitted to be born a man of like passions with us, having a body,
according to the Father's will; in this last matter alone is it just to say that I
have erred, and not to deny that He is the Christ, though it should appear that
He was born man of men, and[nothing more] is proved[than this], that He has
become Christ by election. For there are some, my friends," I said, "of our
race,(5) who admit that He is Christ, while holding Him to be man of men; with whom
I do not agree, nor would I,(6) even though most of those who have[now] the
same opinions as myself should say so; since we were enjoined by Christ Himself to
put no faith
in human doctrines,(7) but in those proclaimed by the blessed prophets and
taught by Himself."
CHAP. XLIX.--TO THOSE WHO OBJECT THAT ELIJAH HAS NOT YET COME, HE REPLIES THAT
HE IS THE PRECURSOR OF THE FIRST ADVENT.
And Trypho said, "Those who affirm him to have been a man, and to have
been anointed by election, and then to have become Christ, appear to me to speak
more plausibly than you who hold those opinions which you express. For we all
expect that Christ will be a man[born] of men, and that Elijah when he comes will
anoint him. But if this man appear to be Christ, he must certainly be known as
man[born] of men; but from the circumstance that Elijah has not yet come, I
infer that this man is not He[the Christ]."
Then I inquired of him, "Does not Scripture, in the book of Zechariah,(8)
say that Elijah shall come before the great and terrible day of the Lord?"
And he answered, "Certainly."
"If therefore Scripture compels you to admit that two advents of Christ
were predicted to take place,--one in which He would appear suffering, and
dishonoured, and without comeliness; but the other in which He would come glorious.
and Judge of all, as has been made manifest in many of the forecited
passages,--shall we not suppose that the word of God has proclaimed that Elijah shall be
the precursor of the great and terrible day, that is, of His second advent?"
"Certainly," he answered.
"And, accordingly, our Lord in His teaching," I continued, "proclaimed
that this very thing would take place, saying that Elijah would also come. And we
know that this shall take place when our Lord Jesus Christ shall come in glory
from heaven; whose first manifestation the Spirit of God who was in Elijah
preceded as herald in[the person of] John, a prophet among your nation; after whom
no other prophet appeared among you. He cried, as he sat by the river Jordan:
'I baptize you with water to repentance; but He that is stronger than I shall
come, whose shoes I am not worthy to bear: He shall baptize you with the Holy
Ghost and with fire: whose fan is in His hand, and He will thoroughly purge His
floor, and will gather the wheat into the barn; but the chaff He will burn up
with unquenchable fire.'(9) And this very prophet your king Herod had shut up in
prison; and when his birthday was celebrated, and the niece(10) of the same
Herod by her dancing had pleased him, he told her to ask whatever she pleased.
Then the mother of the maiden instigated her to ask the head of John, who was
in prison; and having asked it,[Herod] sent and ordered the head of John to be
brought in on a charger. Wherefore also our Christ said,[when He was] on
earth, to those who were affirming that Elijah must come before Christ: 'Elijah
shall come, and restore all things; but I say unto you, that Elijah has already
come, and they knew him not, but have done to him whatsoever they chose.'(1) And
it is written, 'Then the disciples understood that He spake to them about John
the Baptist.' "
And Trypho said, "This statement also seems to me paradoxical; namely,
that the prophetic Spirit of God, who was in Elijah, was also in John."
To this I replied, "Do you not think that the same thing happened in the
case of Joshua the son of Nave(Nun), who succeeded to the command of the people
after Moses, when Moses was commanded to lay his hands on Joshua, and God said
to him,(4) I will take of the spirit which
is in thee, and put it on him?' "(2)
And he said, "Certainly."
"As therefore," I say, "while Moses was still among men, God took of the
spirit which was in Moses and put it on Joshua, even so God was able to
cause[the spirit] of Elijah to come upon John; in order that, as Christ at His first
coming appeared inglorious, even so the first coming of the spirit, which
remained always pure in Elijah s like that of Christ, might be perceived to be
inglorious. For the Lord said He would wage war against Amalek with concealed hand;
and you will not deny that Amalek fell. But if it is said that only in the
glorious advent of Christ war will be waged with Amalek, how great will the
fulfilment(4) of Scripture be which says, 'God will wage war against Amalek with
concealed hand!' You can perceive that the concealed power of God was in Christ the
crucified, before whom demons, and all the principalities and powers of the
earth, tremble."
CHAP. L.--IT IS PROVED FROM ISAIAH THAT JOHN IS THE PRECURSOR OF CHRIST.
And Trypho said, "You seem to me to have come out of a great conflict with
many persons about all the points we have been searching into, and therefore
quite ready to return answers to all questions put to you. Answer me then,
first, how you can show that there is another God besides the Maker of all things;
and then you will show,[further], that He submitted to be born
of the Virgin."
I replied, "Give me permission first of all to quote certain passages from
the prophecy of Isaiah, which refer to the office of forerunner discharged by
John the Baptist and prophet before this our Lord Jesus Christ." "I grant it,"
said he.
Then I said, "Isaiah thus foretold John's forerunning: 'And Hezekiah said
to Isaiah, Good is the word of the Lord which He spake: Let there be peace and
righteousness in my days.'(5) And, 'Encourage the people; ye priests, speak to
the heart of Jerusalem, and encourage her, because her humiliation is
accomplished. Her sin is annulled; for she has received of the Lord's
hand double for her sins. A voice of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare the
ways of the Lord; make straight the paths of our God. Every valley shall be
filled up, and every mountain and hill shall be brought low: and the crooked
shall be made straight, and the rough way shall be plain ways; and the glory of the
Lord thall be seen, and all flesh shall see the salvation of God: for the Lord
hath spoken it. A voice of one saying, Cry; and I said, What shall I cry? All
flesh is grass, and all the glory of man as the flower of grass. The grass has
withered, and the flower of it has fallen away; but the word of the Lord
endureth for ever. Thou that bringest good tidings to Zion, go up to the high
mountain; thou that bringest good tidings to Jerusalem, lift up thy voice with
strength. Lift ye up, be not afraid; tell the cities of Judah, Behold your God!
Behold, the Lord comes with strength, and[His] arm comes with authority. Behold, His
reward is with Him, and His work before Him. As a shepherd He will tend His
flock, and will gather the lambs with[His] arm, and cheer on her that is with
young. Who has measured the water with[his] hand, and the heaven with a span, and
all the earth with[his] fist? Who has weighed the mountains, and[put] the
valleys into a balance? Who has known the mind of the Lord? And who has been His
counsellor, and who shall advise Him? Or with whom did He take counsel, and he
instructed Him? Or who showed Him judgment? Or who made Him to know the way of
understanding? All the nations are reckoned as a drop of a bucket, and as a turning
of a balance, and shall be reckoned as spittle. But Lebanon is not sufficient
to burn, nor the beasts sufficient for a burnt-offering; and all the nations
are considered nothing, and for nothing.' "(6)