AN ANSWER TO THE JEWS
VII. AN ANSWER TO THE JEWS.(1)
TRANSLATED BY THE REV. S. THELWALL.
CHAP. I.--OCCASION OF WRITING. RELATIVE POSITIONOF JEWS AND GENTILES
ILLUSTRATED.
IT happened very recently a dispute was held between a Christian and a
Jewish proselyte. Alternately with contentious cable they each spun out the day
until evening. By the opposing din, moreover, of some partisans of the
individuals, truth began to be overcast by a sort of cloud. It was therefore our pleasure
that that which, owing to the confused noise of disputation, could be less
fully elucidated point by point, should be more carefully looked into, and that
the pen should determine, for reading purposes, the questions handled.
For the occasion, indeed, of claiming Divine grace even for the Gentiles
derived a pre-eminent fitness from this fact, that the man who set up to
vindicate CoWs Law as his own was of the Gentiles, and not a Jew "of the stock of the
Israelites."(2) For this fact--that Gentiles are admissible to God's Law--is
enough to prevent Israel from priding himself on the notion that "the Gentiles
are accounted as a little drop of a bucket," or else as "dust out of a
threshing-floor:"(3) although we have God Himself as an adequate engager and faithful
promiser, in that He promised to Abraham that "in his seed should be blest all
nations of the earth;"(4) and that(5) out of the womb of Rebecca "two peoples and
two nations were about to proceed,"(6)--of course those of the Jews, that is,
of Israel; and of the Gentiles, that is ours. Each, then, was called a people
and a nation; lest, from the nuncupative appellation, any should dare to claim
for himself the privilege of grace. For God ordained "two peoples and two
nations" as about to proceed out of the womb of one woman: nor did grace(6) make
distinction in the nuncupative appellation, but in the order of birth; to the effect
that, which ever was to be prior in proceeding from the womb, should be
subjected to "the less," that is, the posterior. For thus unto Rebecca did God speak:
"Two nations are in thy womb, and two peoples shall be divided from thy
bowels; and people shall overcome people, and the greater shall serve the less."(7)
Accordingly, since the people or nation of the Jews is anterior in time, and
"greater" through the grace of primary favour in the Law, whereas ours is
understood to be "less" in the age of times, as having in the last era of the world(8)
attained the knowledge of divine mercy: beyond doubt, through the edict of the
divine utterance, the prior and "greater" people--that is, the Jewish--must
necessarily serve the "less;" and the "less" people--that is, the
Christian--overcome the "greater." For, withal, according to the memorial records of the divine
Scriptures, the people of the Jews--that is, the more ancient--quite forsook
God, and did degrading service to idols, and, abandoning the Divinity, was
surrendered to images; while "the people" said to Aaron, "Make us gods to go before
us."(9) And when the gold out of the necklaces of the women and the rings of
the men had been wholly smelted by fire, and there had come forth a calf-like
head, to this figment Israel with one consent (abandoning God) gave honour,
saying, "These are the gods who brought us from the land of Egypt."(1) For thus, in
the later times in which kings were governing them, did they again, in
conjunction with Jeroboam, worship golden kine, and groves, and enslave themselves to
Baal.(2) Whence is proved that they have ever been depicted, out of the volume of
the divine Scriptures, as guilty of the crime of idolatry; whereas our
"less"--that is, posterior--people, quitting the idols which formerly it used
slavishly to serve, has been converted to the same God from whom Israel, as we have
above related, had departed.(3) For thus has the "less"--that is,
posterior--people overcome the"greater people," while it attains the grace of divine favour,
from which Israel has been divorced.
CHAP. II.--THE LAW ANTERIOR TO MOSES.
Stand we, therefore, foot to foot, and determine we the sum and substance
of the actual question within definite lists.
For why should God, the founder of the universe, the Governor of the whole
world,(4) the Fashioner of humanity,the Sower(5) of universal nations be
believed to have given a law through Moses to one people, and not be said to have
assigned it to all nations? For unless He had given it to all by no means would
He have habitually permitted even proselytes out of the nations to have access
to it. But--as is congruous with the goodness of God, and with His equity, as
the Fashioner of mankind--He gave to all nations the selfsame law, which at
definite and stated times He enjoined should be observed, when He willed, and
through whom He willed, and as He willed. For in the beginning of the world He gave
to Adam himself and Eve a law, that they were not to eat of the fruit of the
tree planted in the midst of paradise; but that, if they did contrariwise, by
death they were to die.(6) Which law had continued enough for them, had it been
kept. For in this law given to Adam we recognise in embryo(7) all the precepts
which afterwards sprouted forth when given through Moses; that is, Thou shalt
love the Lord thy God from thy whole heart and out of thy whole soul; Thou shalt
love thy neighbour as thyself;(8) Thou shalt not kill; Thou shall not commit
adultery; Thou shalt not steal; False witness thou shall not utter; Honour thy
father and mother; and, That which is another's, shall thou not covet. For the
primordial law was given to Adam and Eve in paradise, as the womb of all the
precepts of God. In short, if they had loved the Lord their God, they would not have
contravened His precept; if they had habitually loved their neighbour--that
is, themselves(9)--they would not have believed the persuasion of the serpent,
and thus would not have committed murder upon themselves,(9) by falling(10) from
immortality, by contravening God's precept; from theft also they would have
abstained, if they had not stealthily tasted of the fruit of the tree, nor had
been anxious to skulk beneath a tree to escape the view of the Lord their God; nor
would they have been made partners with the falsehood-asseverating devil, by
believing him that they would be "like God;" and thus they would not have
offended God either, as their Father, who had fashioned them from clay of the earth,
as out of the womb of a mother; if they had not coveted another's, they would
not have tasted of the unlawful fruit. Therefore, in this general and primordial
law of God, the observance of which, in the case of the tree's fruit, He had
sanctioned, we recognise enclosed all the precepts specially of the posterior
Law, which germinated when disclosed at their proper times. For the subsequent
superinduction of a law is the work of the same Being who had before premised a
precept; since it is His province withal subsequently to train, who had before
resolved to form, righteous creatures. For what wonder if He extends a
discipline who institutes it? if He advances who begins? In short, before the Law of
Moses,(11) written in stone-tables, I contend that there was a law unwritten,
which was habitually understood naturally, and by the fathers was habitually kept.
For whence was Noah "found righteous,"(12)if in his case the righteousness of a
natural law had not preceded? Whence was Abraham accounted "a friend of
God,"(13) if not on the ground of equity and righteousness, (in the observance) of a
natural law? Whence was Melchizedek named "priest of the most high God,"(14)
if, before the priesthood of the Levitical law, there were not levites who were
wont to offer sacrifices to God? For thus, after the above-mentioned patriarchs,
was the Law given to Moses, at that (well-known) time after their exode from
Egypt, after the interval and spaces of four hundred years. In fact, it was
after Abraham's "four hundred and thirty years"(1) that the Law was given. Whence
we understand that God's law was anterior even to Moses, and was not first
(given) in Horeb, nor in Sinai and in the desert, but was more ancient; (existing)
first in paradise, subsequently reformed for the patriarchs, and so again for
the Jews, at definite periods: so that we are not to give heed to Moses' Law as
to the primitive law, but as to a subsequent, which at a definite period God has
set forth to the Gentiles too and, after repeatedly promising so to do through
the prophets, has reformed for the better; and has premonished that it should
come to pass that, just as "the law was given through Moses"(2) at a definite
time, so it should be believed to have been temporarily observed and kept. And
let us not annul this power which God has, which reforms the law's precepts
answerably to the circumstances of the times, with a view to man's salvation. In
fine, let him who contends that the Sabbath is still to be observed as a balm of
salvation, and circumcision on the eighth day because of the threat of death,
teach us that, for the time past, righteous men kept the Sabbath, or practised
circumcision, and were thus rendered "friends of God." For if circumcision
purges a man since God made Adam uncircumcised, why did He not circumcise him, even
after his sinning, if circumcision purges? At all events, in settling him in
paradise, He appointed one uncircumcised as colonist of paradise. Therefore,
since God originated Adam uncircumcised, and inobservant of the Sabbath,
consequently his offspring also, Abel, offering Him sacrifices, uncircumcised and
inobservant of the Sabbath, was by Him commended; while He accepted(3) what he was
offering in simplicity of heart, and reprobated the sacrifice of his brother Cain,
who was not rightly dividing what he was offering.(4) Noah also,
uncircumcised--yes, and inobservant of the Sabbath--God freed from the deluge.(5) For Enoch,
too, most righteous man, uncircumcised and in-observant of the Sabbath, He
translated from this world;(6) who did not first taste(7) death, in order that,
being a candidate for eternal life,(8) he might by this time show us that we also
may, without the burden of the law of Moses, please God. Melchizedek also,
"the priest of the most high God," uncircumcised and inobservant of the Sabbath,
was chosen to the priesthood of God.(9) Lot, withal, the brother(10) of Abraham,
proves that it was for the merits of righteousness, without observance of the
law, that he was freed from the conflagration of the Sodomites.(11)
CHAP. Ill.--OF CIRCUMCISION AND THE SUPERCESSION OF THE OLD LAW.
But Abraham, (you say,) was circumcised. Yes, but he pleased God before
his circumcision;(12) nor yet did he observe the Sabbath. For he had
"accepted"(13) circumcision; but such as was to be for "a sign" of that time, not for a
prerogative title to salvation. In fact, subsequent patriarchs were uncircumcised,
like Melchizedek, who, uncircumcised, offered to Abraham himself, already
circumcised, on his return from battle, bread and wine.(14) "But again," (you say)
"the son of Moses would upon one occasion have been choked by an angel, if
Zipporah,(15) had not circumcised the foreskin of the infant with a pebble; whence,
"there is the greatest peril if any fail to circumcise the foreskin of his
flesh." Nay, but if circumcision altogether brought salvation, even Moses himself,
in the case of his own son, would not have omitted to circumcise him on the
eighth day; whereas it is agreed that Zipporah did it on the journey, at the
compulsion of the angel. Consider we, accordingly, that one single infant's
compulsory circumcision cannot have prescribed to every people, and rounded, as it
were, a law for keeping this precept. For God, foreseeing that He was about to
give this circumcision to the people of Israel for "a sign," not for salvation,
urges the circumcision of the son of Moses, their future leader, for this reason;
that, since He had begun, through him, to give the People the precept of
circumcision, the people should not despise it, from seeing this example (of
neglect) already exhibited conspicuously in their leader's son. For circumcision had
to be given; but as "a sign," whence Israel in the last time would have to be
distinguished, when, in accordance with their deserts, they should be prohibited
from entering the holy city, as we see through the words of the prophets,
saying, "Your land is desert; your cities utterly burnt with fire; your country, in
your sight, strangers shall eat up; and, deserted and subverted by strange
peoples, the daughter of Zion shall be derelict, like a shed in a vineyard, and
like a watchhouse in a cucumber-field, and as it were a city which is being
stormed."(1) Why so? Because the subsequent discourse of the prophet reproaches them,
saying, "Sons have I begotten and upraised, but they have reprobated me;"(2)
and again, "And if ye shall have outstretched hands, I will avert my face from
you; and if ye shall have multiplied prayers, I will not hear you: for your
hands are full of blood;"(3) and again, "Woe! sinful nation; a people full of sins;
wicked sons; ye have quite forsaken God, and have provoked unto indignation
the Holy One of Israel."(4) This, therefore, was God's foresight,--that of giving
circumcision to Israel, for a sign whence they might be distinguished when the
time should arrive wherein their above-mentioned deserts should prohibit their
admission into Jerusalem: which circumstance, because it was to be, used to be
announced; and, because we see it accomplished, is recognised by us. For, as
the carnal circumcision, which was temporary, was inwrought for "a sign" in a
contumacious people, so the spiritual has been given for salvation to an obedient
people; while the prophet Jeremiah says, "Make a renewal for you, and sow not
in thorns; be circumcised to God, and circumcise the foreskin of your
heart:"(5) and in another place he says, "Behold, days shall come, saith the Lord, and I
will draw up, for the house of Judah and for the house of Jacob,(6) a new
testament; not such as I once gave their fathers in the day wherein I led them out
from the land of Egypt."(7) Whence we understand that the coming cessation of
the former circumcision l then given, and the coming procession of a new law
(not such as He had already given to the fathers), are announced: just as Isaiah
foretold, saying that in the last days the mount of the Lord and the house of
God were to be manifest above the tops of the mounts: "And it shall be exalted,"
he says, "above the hills; and there shall come over it all nations; and many
shall walk, and say, Come, ascend we unto the mount of the Lord, and unto the
house of the God of Jacob,"(8)--not of Esau, the former son, but of Jacob, the
second; that is, of our "people," whose "mount" is Christ, "praecised without
concisors' hands,(9) filling every land," shown in the book of Daniel.(10) In
short, the coming procession of a new law out of this "house of the God of Jacob"
Isaiah in the ensuing words announces, saying, "For from Zion shall go out a
law, and the word of the Lord out of Jerusalem, and shall judge among the
nations,"--that is, among us, who have been called out of the nations,--"and they
shall join to beat their glaives into ploughs, and their lances into sickles; and
nations shall not take up glaive against nation, and they shall no more learn to
fight."(11) Who else, therefore, are understood but we, who, fully taught by
the new law, observe these practices,--the old law being obliterated, the coming
of whose abolition the action itself(12) demonstrates? For the wont of the old
law was to avenge itself by the vengeance of the glaive, and to pluck out "eye
for eye," and to inflict retaliatory revenge for injury.(13) But the new law's
wont was to point to clemency, and to convert to tranquillity the pristine
ferocity of "glaives" and "lances," and to remodel the pristine execution of "war"
upon the rivals and foes of the law into the pacific actions of "ploughing"
and "tilling" the land.(14) Therefore as we have shown above that the coming
cessation of the old law and of the carnal circumcision was declared, so, too, the
observance of the new law and the spiritual circumcision has shone out into the
voluntary obediences(15) of peace. For "a people," he says, "whom I knew not
hath served me; in obedience of the ear it hath obeyed me."(16) Prophets made
the announcement. But what is the "people" which was ignorant of God, but ours,
who in days bygone knew not God? and who, in the hearing of the ear, gave heed
to Him, but we, who, forsaking idols, have been converted to God? For
Israel--who had been known to God, and who had by Him been "upraised"(1) in Egypt, and
was transported through the Red Sea, and who in the desert, fed forty years with
manna, was wrought to the semblance of eternity, and not contaminated with
human passions,(2) or fed on this world's(3) meats, but fed on "angel's
loaves"(4)--the manna--and sufficiently bound to God by His benefits--forgat his Lord and
God, saying to Aaron: "Make us gods, to go before us: for that Moses, who
ejected us from the land of Egypt, hath quite forsaken us; and what hath befallen
him we know not." And accordingly we, who "were not the people of God" in days
bygone, have been made His people,(5) by accepting the new law above mentioned,
and the new circumcision before foretold.
CHAP. IV.--OF THE OBSERVANCE OF THE SABBATH.
It follows, accordingly, that, in so far as the abolition of carnal
circumcision and of the old law is demonstrated as having been consummated at its
specific times, so also the observance of the Sabbath is demonstrated to have been
temporary.
For the Jews say, that from the beginning God sanctified the seventh day,
by resting on it from all His works which He made; and that thence it was,
likewise, that Moses said to the People: "REMEMBER the day of the sabbaths, to
sanctify it: every servile work ye shall not do therein, except what pertaineth
unto life."(6) Whence we (Christians) understand that we still more ought to
observe a sabbath from all "servile work"(7) always, and not only every seventh day,
but through all time. And through this arises the question for us, what
sabbath God willed us to keep? For the Scriptures point to a sabbath eternal and a
sabbath temporal. For Isaiah the prophet says, "Your sabbaths my soul hateth;"(8)
and in another place he says, "My sabbaths ye have profaned."(9) Whence we
discern that the temporal sabbath is human, and the eternal sabbath is accounted
divine; concerning which He predicts through Isaiah: "And there shall be," He
says, "month after month, and day after day, and sabbath after sabbath; and all
flesh shall come to adore in Jerusalem, saith the Lord;"(10) which we understand
to have been fulfilled in the times of Christ, when "all flesh"--that is,
every nation--"came to adore in Jerusalem" God the Father, through Jesus Christ His
Son, as was predicted through the prophet: "Behold, proselytes through me
shall go unto Thee."(11) Thus, therefore, before this temporal sabbath, there was
withal an eternal sabbath foreshown and foretold; just as before the carnal
circumcision there was withal a spiritual circumcision foreshown. In short, let
them teach us, as we have already premised, that Adam observed the sabbath; or
that Abel, when offering to God a holy victim, pleased Him by a religious
reverence for the sabbath; or that Enoch, when translated, had been a keeper of the
sabbath; or that Noah the ark-builder observed, on account of the deluge, an
immense sabbath; or that Abraham, in observance of the sabbath, offered Isaac his
son; or that Melchizedek in his priesthood received the law of the sabbath.
But the Jews are sure to say, that ever since this precept was given
through Moses, the observance has been binding. Manifest accordingly it is, that the
precept was not eternal nor spiritual, but temporary,(12) which would one day
cease. In short, so true is it that it is not in the exemption from work of the
sabbath--that is, of the seventh day--that the celebration of this solemnity
is to consist, that Joshua the son of Nun, at the time that he was reducing the
city Jericho by war. stated that he had received from God a precept to order
the People that priests should carry the ark of the testament of God seven days,
making the circuit of the city; and thus, when the seventh day's circuit had
been performed, the walls of the city would spontaneously fall.(13) Which was so
done; and when the space of the seventh day was finished, just as was
predicted, down fell the walls of the city. Whence it is manifestly shown, that in the
number of the seven days there intervened a sabbath-day. For seven days,
whencesoever they may have commenced, must necessarily include within them a
sabbath-day; on which day not only must the priests have worked, but the city must have
been made a prey by the edge of the sword by all the people of Israel. Nor is
it doubtful that they "wrought servile work," when, in obedience to God's
precept, they drave the preys of war. For in the times of the Maccabees, too, they
did bravely in fighting on the sabbaths, and routed their foreign foes, and
recalled the law of their fathers to the primitive style of life by fighting on the
sabbaths.(1) Nor should I think it was any other law which they thus
vindicated, than the one in which they remembered the existence of the prescript touching
"the day of the sabbaths."(2)
Whence it is manifest that the force of such precepts was temporary, and
respected the necessity of present circumstances; and that it was not with a
view to its observance in perpetuity that God formerly gave them such a law.
CHAP. V.--OF SACRIFICES.
So, again, we show that sacrifices of earthly oblations and of spiritual
sacrifices(3) were predicted; and, moreover, that from the beginning the earthly
were foreshown, in the person of Cain, to be those of the "elder son," that
is, of Israel; and the opposite sacrifices demonstrated to be those of the
"younger son," Abel, that is, of our people. For the elder, Cain, offered gifts to
God from the fruit of the earth; but the younger son, Abel, from the fruit of his
ewes. "God had respect unto Abel, and unto his gifts; but unto Cain and unto
his gifts He had not respect. And God said unto Cain, Why is thy countenance
fallen? hast thou not--if thou offerest indeed aright, but dost not divide
aright--sinned? Hold thy peace. For unto thee shall thy conversion be and he shall
lord it over thee. And then Cain said unto Abel his brother, Let us go into the
field: and he went away with him thither, and he slew him. And then God said unto
Cain, Where is Abel thy brother? And he said, I know not: am I my brother's
keeper? To whom God said, The voice of the blood of thy brother crieth forth unto
me from the earth. Wherefore cursed is the earth, which hath opened her mouth
to receive the blood of thy brother. Groaning and trembling shalt thou be upon
the earth, and every one who shall have found thee shall slay thee."(4) From
this proceeding we gather that the twofold sacrifices of "the peoples" were even
from the very beginning foreshown. In short, when the sacerdotal law was being
drawn up, through Moses, in Leviticus, we find it prescribed to the people of
Israel that sacrifices should in no other place be offered to God than in the
land of promise; which the Lord God was about to give to "the people" Israel and
to their brethren, in order that, on Israel's introduction thither, there
should there be celebrated sacrifices and holocausts, as well for sins as for souls;
and nowhere else but in the holy land.(5) Why, accordingly, does the Spirit
afterwards predict, through the prophets, that it should come to pass that in
every place and in every land there should be offered sacrifices to God? as He
says through the angel Malachi, one of the twelve prophets: "I will not receive
sacrifice from your hands; for from the rising sun unto the setting my Name hath
been made famous among all the nations, saith the Lord Almighty: and in every
place they offer clean sacrifices to my Name."(6) Again, in the Pslams, David
says: "Bring to God, ye countries of the nations"--undoubtedly because "unto
every land" the preaching of the apostles had to "go out"(7)--"bring to God fame
and honour; bring to God the sacrifices of His name: take up(8) victims and enter
into His courts."(9) For that it is not by earthly sacrifices, but by
spiritual, that offering is to be made to God, we thus read, as it is written, An heart
contribulate and humbled is a victim for God;"(10) and elsewhere, "Sacrifice
to God a sacrifice of praise, and render to the Highest thy vows."(11) Thus,
accordingly, the spiritual "sacrifices of praise" are pointed to, and "an heart
contribulate" is demonstrated an acceptable sacrifice to God. And thus, as carnal
sacrifices are understood to be reprobated--of which Isaiah withal speaks,
saying, "To what end is the multitude of your sacrifices to me? saith the
Lord"(12)--so spiritual sacrifices are predicted(13) as accepted, as the prophets
announce. For, "even if ye shall have brought me," He says, "the finest wheat flour,
it is a vain supplicatory gift: a thing execrable to me;" and again He says,
"Your holocausts and sacrifices, and the fat of goats, and blood of bulls, I
will not, not even if ye come to be seen by me: for who hath required these things
from your hands?"(14) for "from the rising sun unto the setting, my Name hath
been made famous among all the nations, saith the Lord."(1) But of the
spiritual sacrifices He adds, saying, "And in every place they offer dean sacrifices to
my Name, saith the Lord."(1)
CHAP. VI.--OF THE ABOLITION AND THE ABOLISHER OF THE OLD LAW.
Therefore, since it is manifest that a sabbath temporal was shown, and a
sabbath eternal foretold; a circumcision carnal foretold, and a circumcision
spiritual pre-indicated; a law temporal and a law eternal formally declared;
sacrifices carnal and sacrifices spiritual foreshown; it follows that, after all
these precepts had been given carnally, in time preceding, to the people Israel,
there was to supervene a time whereat the precepts of the ancient Law and of the
old ceremonies would cease, and the promise(2) of the new law, and the
recognition of spiritual sacrifices, and the promise of the New Testament,
supervene;(3) while the light from on high would beam upon us who were sitting in
darkness, and were being detained in the shadow of death.(4) And so there is incumbent
on us a necessity s binding us, since we have premised that a new law was
predicted by the prophets, and that not such as had been already given to their
fathers at the time when He led them forth from the land of Egypt,(6) to show and
prove, on the one hand, that that old Law has ceased, and on the other, that the
promised new law is now in operation.
And, indeed, first we must inquire whether there be expected a giver of
the new law, and an heir of the new testament, and a priest of the new
sacrifices, and a purger of the new circumcision, and an observer of the eternal sabbath,
to suppress the old law, and institute the new testament, and offer the new
sacrifices, and repress the ancient ceremonies, and suppress(7) the old
circumcision together with its own sabbath,(8) and announce the new kingdom which is not
corruptible. Inquire, I say, we must, whether this giver of the new law,
observer of the spiritual sabbath, priest of the eternal sacrifices, eternal ruler
of the eternal kingdom, be come or no: that, if he is already come, service may
have to be rendered him; if he is not yet come, he may have to be awaited,
until by his advent it be manifest that the old Law's precepts are suppressed, and
that the beginnings of the new law ought to arise. And, primarily, we must lay
it down that the ancient Law and the prophets could not have ceased, unless He
were come who was constantly announced, through the same Law and through the
same prophets, as to come.
CHAP. VII.--THE QUESTION WHETHER CHRIST BE COME TAKEN UP.
Therefore upon this issue plant we foot to foot, whether the Christ who
was constantly announced as to come be already come, or whether His coming be yet
a subject of hope. For proof of which question itself, the times likewise must
be examined by us when the prophets announced that the Christ would come;
that, if we succeed in recognising that He has come within the limits of those
times, we may without doubt believe Him to be the very one whose future coming was
ever the theme of prophetic song, upon whom we--the nations, to wit--were ever
announced as destined to believe; and that, when it shall have been agreed that
He is come, we may undoubtedly likewise believe that the new law has by Him
been given, and not disavow the new testament in Him and through Him drawn up for
us. For that Christ was to come we know that even the Jews do not attempt to
disprove, inasmuch as it is to His advent that they are directing their hope.
Nor need we inquire at more length concerning that matter, since in days bygone
all the prophets have prophesied of it; as Isaiah: "Thus saith the Lord God to
my Christ (the) Lord,(9) whose right hand I have holden, that the nations may
hear Him: the powers of kings will I burst asunder; I will open before Him the
gates, and the cities shall not be closed to Him." Which very thing we see
fulfilled. For whose right hand does God the Father hold but Christ's, His Son?--whom
all nations have heard, that is, whom all nations have believed,--whose
preachers, withal, the apostles, are pointed to in the Psalms of David: "Into the
universal earth," says he, "is gone out their sound, and unto the ends of the
earth their words."(10) For upon whom else have the universal nations believed, but
upon the Christ who is already come? For whom have the nations
believed,--Parthians, Medes, Elamites, and they who inhabit Mesopotamia, Armenia, Phrygia,
Cappadocia, and they who dwell in Pontus, and Asia, and Pamphylia, tarriers in
Egypt, and inhabiters of the region of Africa which is beyond Cyrene, Romans and
sojourners, yes, and in Jerusalem Jews,(1) and all other nations; as, for
instance, by this time, the varied races of the Gaetulians, and manifold confines of
the Moors, all the limits of the Spains, and the diverse nations of the Gauls,
and the haunts of the Britons--inaccessible to the Romans, but subjugated to
Christ, and of the Sarmatians, and Dacians, and Germans, and Scythians, and of
many remote nations, and of provinces and islands many, to us unknown, and which
we can scarce enumerate? In all which places the name of the Christ who is
already come reigns, as of Him before whom the gates of all cities have been
opened, and to whom none are closed, before whom iron bars have been crumbled, and
brazen gates(2) opened. Although there be withal a spiritual sense to be affixed
to these expressions,--that the hearts of individuals, blockaded in various
ways by the devil, are unbarred by the faith of Christ,--still they have been
evidently fulfilled, inasmuch as in all these places dwells the "people" of the
Name of Christ. For who could have reigned over all nations but Christ, God's Son,
who was ever announced as destined to reign over all to eternity? For if
Solomon "reigned," why, it was within the confines of Judea merely: "from Beersheba
unto Dan" the boundaries of his kingdom are marked.(3) If, moreover, Darius
"reigned" over the Babylonians and Parthians, he had not power over all nations;
if Pharaoh, or whoever succeeded him in his hereditary kingdom, over the
Egyptians, in that country merely did he possess his kingdom's dominion; if
Nebuchadnezzar with his petty kings, "from India unto Ethiopia" he had his kingdom's
boundaries;(5) if Alexander the Macedonian he did not hold more than universal
Asia, and other regions, after he had quite conquered them; if the Germans, to this
day they are not suffered to cross their own limits; the Britons are shut
within the circuit of their own ocean; the nations of the Moors, and the barbarism
of the Gaetulians, are blockaded by the Romans, lest they exceed the confines
of their own regions. What shall I say of the Romans themselves,(5) who fortify
their own empire with garrisons of their own legions, nor can extend the might
of their kingdom beyond these nations? But Christ's Name is extending
everywhere, believed everywhere, worshipped by all the above-enumerated nations,
reigning everywhere, adored everywhere, conferred equally everywhere upon all. No
king, with Him, finds greater favour, no barbarian lesser joy; no dignities or
pedigrees enjoy distinctions of merit; to all He is equal, to all King, to all
Judge, to all "God and Lord."(6) Nor would you hesitate to believe what we
asseverate, since you see it taking place.
CHAP. VIII.--OF THE TIMES OF CHRIST'S BIRTH AND PASSION, AND OF JERUSALEM'S
DESTRUCTION.
Accordingly the times must be inquired into of the predicted and future
nativity of the Christ, and of His passion, and of the extermination of the city
of Jerusalem, that is, its devastation. For Daniel says, that "both the holy
city and the holy place are exterminated together with the coming Leader, and
that the pinnacle is destroyed unto ruin."(7) And so the times of the coming
Christ, the Leader,(8) must be inquired into, which we shall trace in Daniel; and,
after computing them, shall prove Him to be come, even on the ground of the
times prescribed, and of competent signs and operations of His. Which matters we
prove, again, on the ground of the consequences which were ever announced as to
follow His advent; in order that we may believe all to have been as well
fulfilled as foreseen.
In such wise, therefore, did Daniel predict concerning Him, as to show
both when and in what time He was to set the nations free; and how, after the
passion of the Christ, that city had to be exterminated. For he says thus: "In the
first year under Darius, son of Ahasuerus, of the seed of the Medes, who
reigned over the kingdom of the Chaldees, I Daniel understood in the books the number
of the years. ... And while I was yet speaking in my prayer, behold, the man
Gabriel, whom I saw in the vision in the beginning, flying; and he touched me,
as it were, at the hour of the evening sacrifice, and made me understand, and
spake with me, and said, Daniel I am now come out to imbue thee with
understanding; in the beginning of thy supplication went out a word. And I am come to
announce to thee, because thou art a man of desires;(1) and ponder thou on the word,
and understand in the vision. Seventy hebdomads have been abridged(2) upon thy
commonalty, and upon the holy city, until delinquency be made inveterate, and
sins sealed, and righteousness obtained by entreaty, and righteousness eternal
introduced; and in order that vision and prophet may be sealed, and an holy one
of holy ones anointed. And thou shalt know, and thoroughly see, and
understand, from the going forth of a word for restoring and rebuilding Jerusalem unto
the Christ, the Leader, hebdomads (seven and an half, and(3)) lxii and an half:
and it shall convert, and shall be built into height and entrenchment, and the
times shall be renewed: and after these lxii hebdomads shall the anointing be
exterminated, and shall not be; and the city and the holy place shall he
exterminate together with the Leader, who is making His advent; and they shall be cut
short as in a deluge, until (the) end of a war, which shall be cut short unto
ruin. And he shall confirm a testament in many. In one hebdomad and the half of
the hebdomad shall be taken away my sacrifice and libation, and in the holy
place the execration of devastation, (and(4)) until the end of (the) time
consummation shall be given with regard to this devastation."(5)
Observe we, therefore, the limit,--how, in truth, he predicts that there
are to be lxx hebdomads, within which if they receive Him, "it shall be built
into height and entrenchment, and the times shall be renewed." But God,
foreseeing what was to be--that they will not merely not receive Him, but will both
persecute and deliver Him to death--both recapitulated, and said, that in lx and ii
and an half of an hebdomad He is born, and an holy one of holy ones is
anointed; but that when vii hebdomads(6) and an half were fulfilling, He had to
suffer, and the holy city had to be exterminated after one and an half
hebdomad--whereby namely, the seven and an half hebdomads have been completed. For he says
thus: "And the city and the holy place to be exterminated together with the
leader who is to come; and they shall be cut short as in a deluge; and he shall
destroy the pinnacle unto ruin."(7) Whence, therefore, do we showy that the Christ
came within the lxii and an half hebdomads? We shall count, moreover, from the
first year of Darius, as at this particular time is shown to Daniel this
particular vision; for he says, "And understand and conjecture that at the completion
of thy word(8) I make thee these answers." Whence we are bound to compute from
the first year of Darius, when Daniel saw this vision.
Let us see, therefore, how the years are filled up until the advent of the
Christ:--
For Darius reigned . . xviiii(9) years (19).
Artaxerxes reigned . . xl and i years (41).
Then King Ochus (who is also called Cyrus) reigned . . xxiiii years (24).
Argus . . one year.
Another Darius, who is also named Melas, . . xxi years (21).
Alexander the Macedonian, . . xii years (12).
Then, after Alexander,who had reigned over both Medes and Persians, whom he
had reconquered, and had established his kingdom firmly in Alexandria, when
withal he called that (city) by his own name; (10) after him reigned, (there, in
Alexandria,) Soter, . . xxxv years (35).
To whom succeeds Philadelphus, reigning . . xxx and viii years (38).
To him succeeds Euergetes, . . xxv years (25).
Then Philopator . . xvii years (17)
After him Epiphanes, . . xxiiii years (24).
Then another Euergetes, . . xxviiii years (29).
Then another Soter, . . xxxviii years (38).
Ptolemy . . xxxvii years (37).
Cleopatra, . . xx years v months (20 5-12).
Yet again Cleopatra reigned jointly with Augustus . . xiii years (13.)
After Cleopatra, Augustus reigned other . . xliii years (43).
For all the years of the empire of Augustus were . . lvi years (56).
Let us see, moreover, how in the forty-first year of the empire of
Augustus, when he has been reigning for xx and viii years after the death of
Cleopatra, the Christ is born. (And the same Augustus survived, after Christ is born, xv
years; and the remaining times of years to the day of the birth of Christ will
bring us to the xl first year, which is the xx and viiith of Augustus after
the death of Cleopatra.) There are, (then,) made up cccxxx and vii years, v
months: (whence are filled up lxii hebdomads and an half: which make up ccccxxxvii
years, vi months:) on the day of the birth of Christ. And (then) "righteousness
eternal" was manifested, and "an Holy One of holy ones was anointed"--that is,
Christ--and "sealed was vision and prophet," and "sins" were remitted, which,
through faith in the name of Christ, are washed away(1) for all who believe on
Him. But what does he mean by saying that "vision and prophecy are sealed?" That
all prophets ever announced of Him that He was to come and had to suffer.
Therefore, since the prophecy was fulfilled through His advent, for that reason he
said that "vision and prophecy were sealed;" inasmuch as He is the signet of
all prophets, fulfilling all things which in days bygone they had announced of
Him.(2) For after the advent of Christ and His passion there is no longer "vision
or prophet" to announce Him as to come. In short, if this is not so, let the
Jews exhibit, subsequently to Christ, any volumes of prophets, visible miracles
wrought by any angels,(such as those) which in bygone days the patriarchs saw
until the advent of Christ, who is now come; since which event "sealed is vision
and prophecy," that is, confirmed. And justly does the evangelist(3) write,
"The law and the prophets (were) until John" the Baptist. For, on Christ's being
baptized, that is, on His sanctifying the waters in His own baptism,(4) all the
plenitude of bygone spiritual grace-gifts ceased in Christ, sealing as He did
all vision and prophecies, which by His advent He fulfilled. Whence most firmly
does he assert that His advent "seals visions and prophecy."
Accordingly, showing, (as we have done,) both the number of the years, and
the time of the lx two and an half fulfilled hebdomads, on completion of
which, (we have shown) that Christ is come, that is, has been born, let us see what
(mean) other "vii and an half hebdomads," which have been subdivided in the
abscision of(5) the former hebdomads; (let us see, namely,) in what event they
have been fulfilled:--
For, after Augustus who survived after the birth of Christ, are made up . . xv
years (15).
To whom succeeded Tiberius Caesar, and held the empire . . xx years, vii
months, xxviii days (20 etc.).
(In the fiftieth year of his empire Christ suffered being about xxx years of
age when he suffered.)
Again Caius Caesar, also called Caligula, . . iii years, viii months, xiii
days (3 etc.).
Nero Caesar, . . xi years, ix months, xiii days (11 etc.).
Galba . . vii months,vi days. (7 etc.).
Otho . . iii days.
Vitellius, . . viii mos., xxvii days (8 mos.)
Vespasian, in the first year of his empire, subdues the Jews in war; and there
are made lii years, vi months. For he reigned xi years. And thus, in the day
of their storming, the Jews fulfilled the lxx hebdomads predicted in Daniel.
Therefore, when these times also were completed, and the Jews subdued,
there afterwards ceased in that place "libations and sacrifices," which
thenceforward have not been able to be in that place celebrated; for "the unction,"
too,(6) was "exterminated" in that place after the passion of Christ. For it had
been predicted that the unction should be exterminated in that place; as in the
Psalms it is prophesied, "They exterminated my hands and feet."(7) And the
suffering of this "extermination" was perfected within the times of the lxx
hebdomads, under Tiberius Caesar, in the consulate of Rubellius Geminus and Fufius
Geminus, in the month of March, at the times of the passover, on the eighth day
before the calends of April,(8) on the first day of unleavened bread, on which they
slew the lamb at even, just as had been enjoined by Moses.(9) Accordingly, all
the synagogue of Israel did slay Him, saying to Pilate, when he was desirous
to dismiss Him, "His blood be upon us, and upon our children;"(10) and, "If thou
dismiss him, thou art not a friend of Caesar;"(11) in order that all things
might be fulfilled which had been written of Him.(12)
CHAP.IX.--OF THE PROPHECIES OF THE BIRTH AND ACHIEVEMENTS OF CHRIST
Begin we, therefore, to prove that the BIRTH of Christ was announced by
prophets; as Isaiah (e.g.,) foretells, "Hear ye, house of David; no petty contest
have ye with men, since God is proposing a struggle. Therefore God Himself
will give you a sign; Behold, the virgin(1) shall conceive, and bear a son, and ye
shall call his name Emmanuel"(2) (which is, interpreted, "God with us"(3)):
"butter and honey shall he eat;"(4): "since, ere the child learn to call father
or mother, he shall receive the power of Damascus and the spoils of Samaria, in
opposition to the king of the Assyrians."(5)
Accordingly the Jews say: Let us challenge that prediction of Isaiah, and
let us institute a comparison whether, in the case of the Christ who is already
come, there be applicable to Him, firstly, the name which Isaiah foretold, and
(secondly) the signs of it(6) which he announced of Him.
Well, then, Isaiah foretells that it behoves Him to be called Emmanuel;
and that subsequently He is to take the power of Damascus and the spoils of
Samaria, in opposition to the king of the Assyrians. "Now," say they, "that (Christ)
of yours, who is come, neither was called by that name, nor engaged in
warfare." But we, on the contrary, have thought they ought to be admonished to recall
to mind the context of this passage as well. For subjoined is withal the
interpretation of Emmanuel--"God with us"(7)--in order that you may regard not the
sound only of the name, but the sense too. For the Hebrew sound, which is
Emmanuel, has an interpretation, which is, God with us. Inquire, then, whether this
speech, "God with us" (which is Emmanuel), be commonly applied to Christ ever
since Christ's light has dawned, and I think you will not deny it. For they who
out of Judaism believe in Christ, ever since their believing on Him, do, whenever
they shall wish to say(8) Emmanuel, signify that God is with us: and thus it
is agreed that He who was ever predicted as Emmanuel is already come, because
that which Emmanuel signifies is come--that is, "God with us." Equally are they
led by the sound of the name when they so understand "the power of Damascus,"
and "the spoils of Samaria," and "the kingdom of the Assyrians," as if they
portended Christ as a warrior; not observing that Scripture premises, "since, ere
the child learn to call father or mother, he shall receive the power of Damascus
and the spoils of Samaria, in opposition to the king of the Assyrians." For the
first step is to look at the demonstration of His age, to see whether the age
there indicated can possibly exhibit the Christ as already a man, not to say a
general. Forsooth, by His babyish cry the infant would summon men to arms, and
would give the signal of war not with clarion, but with rattle, and point out
the foe, not from His charger's back or from a rampart, but from the back or
neck of His suckler and nurse, and thus subdue Damascus and Samaria in place of
the breast. (It is another matter if, among you, infants rush out into
battle,--oiled first, I suppose, to dry in the sun, and then armed with satchels and
rationed on butter,--who are to know how to lance sooner than how to lacerate the
bosom!)(9) Certainly, if nature nowhere allows this,--(namely,) to serve as a
soldier before developing into manhood, to take "the power of Damascus" before
knowing your father,--it follows that the pronouncement is visibly figurative.
"But again," say they, "nature suffers not a 'virgin' to be a parent; and yet the
prophet must be believed." And deservedly so; for he bespoke credit for a
thing incredible, by saying that it was to be a sign. "Therefore," he says, "shall
A SIGN be given you. Behold, a virgin shall conceive in womb, and bear a son."
But a sign from God, unless it had consisted in some portentous novelty, would
not have appeared a sign. In a word, if, when you are anxious to cast any down
from (a belief in) this divine prediction, or to convert whoever are simple,
you have the audacity to lie, as if the Scripture contained (the announcement),
that not "a virgin," but "a young female," was to conceive and bring forth; you
are refuted even by this fact, that a daily occurrence--the pregnancy and
parturition of a young female, namely--cannot possibly seem anything of a sign. And
the setting before us, then, of a virgin-mother is deservedly believed to be a
sign; but not equally so a warrior-infant. For there would not in this case
again be involved the question of a sign; but, the sign of a novel birth having
been awarded, the next step after the sign is, that there is enunciated a
different ensuing ordering(10) of the infant, who is to eat "honey and butter." Nor is
this, of course, for a sign. It is natural to infancy. But that he is to
receives(1) "the power of Damascus and the spoils of Samaria in opposition to the
king of the Assyrians," this is a wondrous sign. Keep to the limit of (the
infant's) age, and inquire into the sense of the prediction; nay, rather, repay to
truth what you are unwilling to credit her with, and the prophecy becomes
intelligible by the relation of its fulfilment. Let those Eastern magi be believed,
dowering with gold and incense the infancy of Christ as a king;(2) and the infant
has received "the power of Damascus" without battle and arms. For, besides the
fact that it is known to all that the "power"--for that is the "strength"--of
the East is wont to abound in gold and odours, certain it is that the divine
Scriptures regard "gold" as constituting the "power" also of all other nations;
as it says(3) through Zechariah: "And Judah keepeth guard at Jerusalem, and
shall amass all the vigour of the surrounding peoples, gold and silver."(4) For of
this gift of "gold" David likewise says, "And to Him shall be given of the gold
of Arabia;"(5) and again, "The kings of the Arabs and Saba shall bring Him
gifts."(6) For the East, on the one hand, generally held the magi (to be) kings;
and Damascus, on the other hand, used formerly to be reckoned to Arabia before
it was transferred into Syrophoenicia on the division of the Syrias: the "power"
whereof Christ then "received" in receiving its ensigns,--gold, to wit, and
odours. "The spoils," moreover, "of Samaria" (He received in receiving) the magi
themselves, who, on recognising Him, and honouring Him with gifts, and adoring
Him on bonded knee as Lord and King, on the evidence of the guiding and
indicating star, became "the spoils of Samaria," that is, of idolatry--by believing,
namely, on Christ. For (Scripture) denoted idolatry by the name of "Samaria,"
Samaria being ignominious on the score of idolatry; for she had at that time
revolted from God under King Jeroboam. For this, again, is no novelty to the Divine
Scriptures, figuratively to use a transference of name grounded on parallelism
of crimes. For it(7) calls your rulers "rulers of Sodore," and your people the
"people of Gomorrha,"(8) when those dries had already long been extinct.(9)
And elsewhere it says, through a prophet, to the people of Israel, "Thy father
(was) an Amorite, and thy mother an Hittite;"(10) of whose race they were not
begotten, but (were called their sons) by reason of their consimilarity in
impiety, whom of old (God) had called His own sons through Isaiah the prophet: "I have
generated and exalted sons."(11) So, too, Egypt is sometimes understood to
mean the whole world(12) in that prophet, on the count of superstition and
malediction.(13) So, again, Babylon, in our own John, is a figure of the city Rome, as
being equally great and proud of her sway, and triumphant over the saints.(14)
On this wise, accordingly, (Scripture)(15) entitled the magi also with the
appellation of "Samaritans,"--"despoiled"(of that) which they had had in common
with the Samaritans, as we have said--idolatry in opposition to the Lord. (It(16)
adds), "in opposition," moreover, "to the king of the Assyrians,"--in
opposition to the devil, who to this hour thinks himself to be reigning, if he detrudes
the saints from the religion of God.
Moreover, this our interpretation will be supported while (we find that)
elsewhere as well the Scriptures designate Christ a warrior, as we gather from
the names of certain weapons, and words of that kind. But by a comparison of the
remaining senses the Jews shall be convicted. "Gird thee," says David, "the
sword upon the thigh."(17) But what do you read above concerning the Christ?
"Blooming in beauty above the sons of men; grace is outpoured in thy lips."(18) But
very absurd it is if he was complimenting on the bloom of his beauty and the
grace of his lips, one whom he was girding for war with a sword; of whom he
proceeds subjunctively to say, "Outstretch and prosper, advance and reign!" And he
has added, "because of thy lenity and justice."(19) Who will ply the sword
without practising the contraries to lenity and justice; that is, guile, and
asperity, and injustice, proper (of course) to the business of battles? See we, then,
whether that which has another action be not another sword,--that is, the
Divine word of God, doubly sharpened(20) with the two Testaments of the ancient law
and the new law; sharpened by the equity of its own wisdom; rendering to each
one according to his own action.(21) Lawful, then, it was for the Christ of God
to be precinct, in the Psalms, without warlike achievements, with the
figurative sword of the word of God; to which sword is congruous the predicated
"bloom," together with the "grace of the lips;" with which sword He was then "girt
upon the thigh," in the eye of David, when He was announced as about to come to
earth in obedience to God the Father's decree. "The greatness of thy right hand,
he says, "shall conduct thee"(1)--the virtue to wit, of the spiritual grace
from which the recognition of Christ is deduced. "Thine arrows," he says, "are
sharp,"(2)--God's everywhere-flying precepts (arrows) threatening the exposure(3)
of every heart, and carrying compunction and transfixion to each conscience:
"peoples shall fall beneath thee,"(4)--of course, in adoration. Thus mighty in
war and weapon-bearing is Christ; thus will He "receive the spoils," not of
"Samaria" alone, but of all nations as well. Acknowledge that His "spoils" are
figurative whose weapons you have learnt to be allegorical. And thus, so far, the
Christ who is come was not a warrior, because He was not predicted as such by
Isaiah.
"But if the Christ," say they, "who is believed to be coming is not called
Jesus, why is he who is come called Jesus Christ?" Well, each name will meet
in the Christ of God, in whom is found likewise the appellation(5) Jesus. Learn
the habitual character of your error. In the course of the appointing of a
successor to Moses, Oshea(6) the son of Nun(7) is certainly transferred from his
pristine name, and begins to be called Jesus.(8) Certainly, you say. This we
first assert to have been a figure of the future. For, because Jesus Christ was to
introduce the second people (which is composed of us nations, lingering
deserted in the world(9) aforetime) into the land of promise, "flowing with milk and
honey"(10) (that is, into the possession of eternal life, than which nought is
sweeter); and this had to come about, not through Moses (that is, not through
the Law's discipline), but through Joshua (that is, through the new law's grace),
after our circumcision with "a knife of rock"(11) (that is, with Christ's
precepts, for Christ is in many ways and figures predicted as a rock(12));
therefore the man who was being prepared to act as images of this sacrament was
inaugurated under the figure of the Lord's name, even so as to be named Jesus.(13) For
He who ever spake to Moses was the Son of God Himself; who, too, was always
seen.(14) For God the Father none ever saw, and lived.(15) And accordingly it is
agreed that the Son of God Himself spake to Moses, and said to the people,
"Behold, I send mine angel before thy"--that is, the people's--"face, to guard thee
on the march, and to introduce thee into the land which I have prepared thee:
attend to him, and be not disobedient to him; for he hath not escaped(16) thy
notice, since my name is upon him."(17) For Joshua was to introduce the people
into the land of promise, not Moses. Now He called him an "angel," on account of
the magnitude of the mighty deeds which he was to achieve (which mighty deeds
Joshua the son of Nun did, and you yourselves read), and on account of his
office of prophet announcing (to wit) the divine will; just as withal the Spirit,
speaking in the person of the Father, calls the forerunner of Christ, John, a
future "angel," through the prophet: "Behold, I send mine angel before Thy"--that
is, Christ's--"face, who shall prepare Thy way before Thee."(18) Nor is it a
novel practice to the Holy Spirit to call those "angels" whom God has appointed
as ministers of His power. For the same John is called not merely an "angel" of
Christ, but withal a "lamp" shining before Christ: for David predicts, "I have
prepared the lamp for my Christ;"(19) and him Christ Himself, coming "to
fulfil the prophets,"(20) called so to the Jews. "He was," He says, "the burning and
shining lamp;"(21) as being he who not merely "prepared His ways in the
desert,"(22) but withal, by pointing out "the Lamb of God,"(23) illumined the minds
of men by his heralding, so that they understood Him to be that Lamb whom Moses
was wont to announce as destined to suffer. Thus, too, (was the son of Nun
called) JOSHUA, on account of the future mystery(1) of his name: for that name (He
who spake with Moses) confirmed as His own which Himself had conferred on him,
because He had bidden him thenceforth be called, not "angel" nor "Oshea," but
"Joshua." Thus, therefore, each name is appropriate to the Christ of God--that
He should be called Jesus as well (as Christ).
And that the virgin of whom it behoved Christ to be born (as we have above
mentioned) must derive her lineage of the seed of David, the prophet in
subsequent passages evidently asserts. "And there shall be born," he says, "a rod
from the root of Jesse"--which rod is Mary--"and a flower shall ascend from his
root: and there shall rest upon him the Spirit of God, the spirit of wisdom and
understanding, the spirit of discernment and piety, the spirit of counsel and
truth; the spirit of God's fear shall fill Him."(2) For to none of men was the
universal aggregation of spiritual credentials appropriate, except to Christ;
paralleled as He is to a "flower" by reason of glory, by reason of grace; but
accounted "of the root of Jesse," whence His origin is to be deduced,--to wit,
through Mary.(3) For He was from the native soil of Bethlehem, and from the house
of David; as, among the Romans, Mary is described in the census, of whom is born
Christ.(4)
I demand, again--granting that He who was ever predicted by prophets as
destined to come out of Jesse's race, was withal to exhibit all humility,
patience, and tranquillity--whether He be come? Equally so (in this case as in the
former), the man who is shown to bear that character will be the very Christ who
is come. For of Him the prophet says, "A man set in a plague, and knowing how to
bear infirmity;" who "was led as a sheep for a victim; and, as a lamb before
him who sheareth him, opened not His mouth."(5) If He "neither did contend nor
shout, nor was His voice heard abroad," who "crushed not the bruised
reed"--Israel's faith, who "quenched not the burning flax"(6)--that is, the momentary glow
of the Gentiles--but made it shine more by the rising of His own light,--He
can be none other than He who was predicted. The action, therefore, of the Christ
who is come must be examined by being placed side by side with the rule of the
Scriptures. For, if I mistake not, we find Him distinguished by a twofold
operation,--that of preaching and that of power. Now, let each count be disposed of
summarily. Accordingly, let us work out the order we have set down, teaching
that Christ was announced as a preacher; as, through Isaiah: "Cry out," he says,
"in vigour, and spare not; lift up, as with a trumpet, thy voice, and announce
to my commonalty their crimes, and to the house of Jacob their sins. Me from
day to day they seek, and to learn my ways they covet, as a people which hath
done righteousness, and hath not forsaken the judgment of God," and so forth:(7)
that, moreover, He was to do acts of power from the Father: "Behold, our God
will deal retributive judgment; Himself will come and save us: then shall the
infirm be healed, and the eyes of the blind shall see, and the ears of the deaf
shall hear, and the mutes' tongues shall be loosed, and the lame shall leap as an
hart,"(8) and so on; which works not even you deny that Christ did, inasmuch
as you were wont to say that, "on account of the works ye stoned Him not, but
because He did them on the Sabbaths."(9)
CHAP. X.--CONCERNING THE PASSION OF CHRIST, AND ITS OLD TESTAMENT PREDICTIONS
AND ADUMBRATIONS.
Concerning the last step, plainly, of His passion you raise a doubt;
affirming that the passion of the cross was not predicted with reference to Christ,
and urging, besides, that it is not credible that God should have exposed His
own Son to that kind of death; because Himself said, "Cursed is every one who
shall have hung on a tree."(10) But the reason of the case antecedently explains
the sense of this malediction; for He says in Deuteronomy: "If, moreover, (a
man) shall have been (involved) in some sin incurring the judgment of death, and
shall die, and ye shall suspend him on a tree, his body shall not remain on the
tree, but with burial ye shall bury him on the very day; because cursed by God
is every one who shall have been suspended on a tree; and ye shall not defile
the land which the Lord thy God shall give thee for (thy) lot."(11) Therefore
He did not maledictively adjudge Christ to this passion, but drew a distinction,
that whoever, in any sin, had incurred the judgment of death, and died
suspended on a tree, he should be "cursed by God," because his own sins were the cause
of his suspension on the tree. On the other hand, Christ, who spoke not guile
from His mouth,(1) and who exhibited all righteousness and humility, not
only(as we have above recorded it predicted of Him) was not exposed to that kind of
death for his own deserts, but (was so exposed) in order that what was predicted
by the prophets as destined to come upon Him through your means(2) might be
fulfilled; just as, in the Psalms, the Spirit Himself of Christ was already
singing, saying, "They were repaying me evil for good;"(3) and, "What I had not
seized I was then paying in full;(4)" They exterminated my hands and feet;"(5) and,
"They put into my drink gall, and in my thirst they slaked me with
vinegar;"(6) "Upon my vesture they did cast (the) lot;"(7) just as the other (outrages)
which you were to commit on Him were foretold,--all which He, actually and
thoroughly suffering, suffered not for any evil action of His own, but "that the
Scriptures from the mouth of the prophets might be fulfilled."(8)
And, of course, it had been meet that the mystery(9) of the passion itself
should be figuratively set forth in predictions; and the more incredible (that
mystery), the more likely to be "a stumbling-stone,"(10) if it had been
nakedly predicted; and the more magnificent, the more to be adumbrated, that the
difficulty of its intelligence might seek (help from) the grace of God.
Accordingly, to begin with, Isaac, when led by his father as a victim, and
himself bearing his own "wood,"(11) was even at that early period pointing to
Christ's death; conceded, as He was, as a victim by the Father; carrying, as He
did, the "wood" of His own passion.(12)
Joseph, again, himself was made a figure of Christ(13) in this point alone
(to name no more, not to delay my own course), that he suffered persecution at
the hands of his brethren, and was sold into Egypt, on account of the favour
of God;(14) just as Christ was sold by Israel--(and therefore,) "according to
the flesh," by His "brethren"(15)--when He is betrayed by Judas.(16) For Joseph
is withal blest by his father(17) after this form: "His glory(is that) of a
bull; his horns, the horns of an unicorn; on them shall he toss nations alike unto
the very extremity of the earth." Of course no one-horned rhinoceros was there
pointed to, nor any two-horned minotaur. But Christ was therein signified:
"bull," by reason of each of His two characters,--to some fierce, as Judge; to
others gentle, as Saviour; whose "horns" were to be the extremities of the cross.
For even in a ship's yard--which is part of a cross--this is the name by which
the extremities are called; while the central pole of the mast is a "unicorn."
By this power, in fact, of the cross, and in this manner horned, He does now, on
the one hand, "toss" universal nations through faith, wafting them away from
earth to heaven; and will one day, on the other, "toss" them through judgment,
casting them down from heaven to earth.
He, again, will be the" bull" elsewhere too in the same scripture.(18)
When Jacob pronounced a blessing on Simeon and Levi, he prophesies of the scribes
and Pharisees; for from them(19) is derived their(20) origin. For (his
blessing) interprets spiritually thus: "Simeon and Levi perfected iniquity out of their
sect,"(21)
--whereby, to wit, they persecuted Christ: "into their counsel come not my
soul! and upon their station rest not my heart! because in their indignation they
slew men"--that is, prophets--"and in their concupiscence they hamstrung a
bull!"(22)--that is, Christ, whom--after the slaughter of prophets--they slew, and
exhausted their savagery by transfixing His sinews with nails. Else it is idle
if, after the murder already committed by them, he upbraids others, and not
them, with butchery.(23)
But, to come now to Moses, why, I wonder, did he merely at the time when
Joshua was battling against Amalek, pray sitting with hands expanded, when, in
circumstances so critical, he ought rather, surely, to have commended his prayer
by knees bended, and hands beating his breast, and a face prostrate on the
ground; except it was that there, where the name of the Lord Jesus was the theme
of speech--destined as He was to enter the lists one day singly against the
devil--the figure of the cross was also necessary, (that figure) through which
Jesus was to win the victory?(1) Why, again, did the same Moses, after the
prohibition of any "likeness of anything,"(2) set forth a brazen serpent, placed on a
"tree," in a hanging posture, for a spectacle of healing to Israel, at the time
when, after their idolatry,(3) they were suffering extermination by serpents,
except that in this case he was exhibiting the Lord's cross on which the
"serpent" the devil was "made a show of,"(4) and, for every one hurt by such
snakes--that is, his angels(5)--on turning intently from the peccancy of sins to the
sacraments of Christ's cross, salvation was outwrought? For he who then gazed upon
that(cross) was freed from the bite of the serpents.(6)
Come, now, if you have read in the utterance of the prophet in the Psalms,
"God hath reigned from the tree,"(7) I wait to hear what you understand
thereby; for fear you may perhaps think some carpenter-king(8) is signified, and not
Christ, who has reigned from that time onward when he overcame the death which
ensued from His passion of "the tree."
Similarly, again, Isaiah says: "For a child is born to us, and to us is
given a son."(9) What novelty is that, unless he is speaking of the "Son" of
God?--and one is born to us the beginning of whose government has been made "on His
shoulder." What king in the world wears the ensign of his power on his
shoulder, and does not bear either diadem on his head, or else sceptre in his hand, or
else some mark of distinctive vesture? But the novel "King of ages," Christ
Jesus, alone reared "on His shoulder" His own novel glory, and power, and
sublimity,--the cross, to wit; that, according to the former prophecy, the Lord
thenceforth "might reign from the tree." For of this tree likewise it is that God
hints, through Jeremiah, that you would say, "Come, let us put wood(10) into his
bread, and let us wear him away out of the land of the living; and his name
shall no more be remembered."(11) Of course on His body that "wood" was put;(12)
for so Christ has revealed, calling His body "bread,"(13) whose body the prophet
in bygone days announced under the term "bread." If you shall still seek for
predictions of the Lord's cross, the twenty-first Psalm will at length be able to
satisfy you, containing as it does the whole passion of Christ; singing, as He
does, even at so early a date, His own glory.(14) "They dug," He says, "my
hands and feet"(15)--which is the peculiar atrocity of the cross; and again when
He implores the aid of the Father, "Save me," He says, out of the mouth of the
lion"--of course, of death --"and from the horn of the unicorns my
humility,"(16)--from the ends, to wit, of the cross, as we have above shown; which cross
neither David himself suffered, nor any of the kings of the Jews: that you may not
think the passion of some other particular man is here prophesied than His who
alone was so signally crucified by the People.
Now, if the hardness of your heart shall persist in rejecting and deriding
all these interpretations, we will prove that it may suffice that the death of
the Christ had been prophesied, in order that, from the fact that the nature
of the death had not been specified, it may be understood to have been affected
by means of the cross(17) and that the passion of the cross is not to be
ascribed to any but Him whose death was constantly being predicted. For I desire to
show, in one utterance of Isaiah, His death, and passion, and sepulture. "By the
crimes," he says, "of my people was He led unto death; and I will give the
evil for His sepulture, and the rich for His death, because He did not wickedness,
nor was guile found in his mouth; and God willed to redeem His soul from
death,"(18) and so forth. He says again, moreover: "His sepulture hath been taken
away from the midst."(19) For neither was He buried except He were dead, nor was
His sepulture removed from the midst except through His resurrection. Finally,
he subjoins: "Therefore He shall have many for an heritage, and of many shall
He divide spoils:(20)" who else (shall so do) but He who "was born," as we have
above shown?--"in return for the fact that His soul was delivered unto death?"
For, the cause of the favour accorded Him being shown,--in return, to wit, for
the injury of a death which had to be recompensed,--it is likewise shown that
He, destined to attain these rewards because of death, was to attain them after
death--of course after resurrection. For that which happened at His passion,
that mid-day grew dark, the prophet Amos announces, saying, "And it shall be," he
says, "in that day, saith the Lord, the sun shall set at mid-day, and the day
of light shall grow dark over the land: and I will convert your festive days
into grief, and all your canticles into lamentation; and I will lay upon your
loins sackcloth, and upon every head baldness; and I will make the grief like that
for a beloved (son), and them that are with him like a day of mourning."(1)
For that you would do thus at the beginning of the first month of your new
(years) even Moses prophesied, when he was foretelling that all the community of the
sons of lsrael was(2) to immolate at eventide a lamb, and were to eat(3) this
solemn sacrifice of this day (that is, of the passover of unleavened bread) with
bitterness;" and added that "it was the passover of the Lord,"(4) that is, the
passion of Christ. Which prediction was thus also fulfilled, that "on the
first day of unleavened bread"(5) you slew Christ;(6) and (that the prophecies
might be fulfilled) the day hasted to make an "eventide,"--that is, to cause
darkness, which was made at mid-day; and thus "your festive days God converted into
grief, and your canticles into lamentation." For after the passion of Christ
there overtook you even captivity and dispersion, predicted before through the
Holy Spirit.
CHAP. XI.--FURTHER PROOFS, FROM EZEKIEL. SUMMARY OF THE PROPHETIC ARGUMENT
THUS FAR.
For, again, it is for these deserts of yours that Ezekiel announces your
ruin as about to come: and not only in this age(7)--a ruin which has already
befallen--but in the "day of retribution,"(8) which will be subsequent. From which
ruin none will be freed but he who shall have been frontally sealed(9) with
the passion of the Christ whom you have rejected. For thus it is written: "And
the Lord said unto me, Son of man, thou hast seen what the elders of Israel do,
each one of them in darkness, each in a hidden bed-chamber: because they have
said, The Lord seeth us not; the Lord hath derelinquished the earth. And He said
unto me, Turn thee again, and thou shall see greater enormities which these do.
And He introduced me unto the thresholds of the gate of the house of the Lord
which looketh unto the north; and, behold, there, women sitting and bewailing
Thammuz. And the Lord said unto me, Son of man, hast thou seen? Is the house of
Judah moderate, to do the enormities which they have done? And yet thou art
about to see greater affections of theirs. And He introduced me into the inner
shrine of the house of the Lord; and, behold, on the thresholds of the house of
the Lord, between the midst of the porch and between the midst of the altar,(10)
as it were twenty and five men have turned their backs unto the temple of the
Lord, and their faces over against the east; these were adoring the sun. And He
said unto me, Seest thou, son of man? Are such deeds trifles to the house of
Judah, that they should do the enormities which these have done? because they
have filled up (the measure of) their impieties, and, behold, are themselves, as
it were, grimacing; I will deal with mine indignation,(11) mine eye shall not
spare, neither will I pity; they shall cry out unto mine ears with a loud voice,
and I will not hear them, nay, I will not pity. And He cried into mine ears
with a loud voice, saying, The vengeance of this city is at hand; and each one had
vessels of extermination in his hand. And, behold, six men were coming toward
the way of the high gate which was looking toward the north, and each one's
double-axe of dispersion was in his hand: and one man in the midst of them,
clothed with a garment reaching to the feet,(12) and a girdle of sapphire about his
loins: and they entered, and took their stand close to the brazen altar. And the
glory of the God of Israel, which was over the house, in the open court of
it,(13) ascended from the cherubim: and the Lord called the man who was clothed
with the garment reaching to the feet, who had upon his loins the girdle; and
said unto him, Pass through the midst of Jerusalem, and write the sign Tau(1) on
the foreheads of the men who groan and grieve over all the enormities which are
done in their midst. And while these things were doing, He said unto an
hearer,(2) Go ye after him into the city, and cut short; and spare not with your eyes,
and pity not elder or youth or virgin; and little ones and women slay ye all,
that they may be thoroughly wiped away; but all upon whom is the sign Tau
approach ye not; and begin with my saints."(3) Now the mystery of this "sign" was in
various ways predicted; (a "sign") in which the foundation of life was
forelaid for mankind; (a "sign") in which the Jews were not to believe: just as Moses
beforetime kept on announcing in Exodus,(4) saying, "Ye shall be ejected from
the land into which ye shall enter; and in those nations ye shall not be able to
rest: and there shall be instability of the prints of thy foot: and God shall
give thee a wearying heart, and a pining soul, and failing eyes, that they see
not: and thy life shall hang on the tree(6) before thine eyes; and thou shalt
not trust thy life."
And so, since prophecy has been fulfilled through His advent--that is,
through the nativity, which we have above commemorated, and the passion, which we
have evidently explained--that is the reason withal why Daniel said, "Vision
and prophet were sealed;" because Christ is the "signet" of all prophets,
fulfilling all that had in days bygone been announced concerning Him: for, since His
advent and personal passion, there is no longer "vision" or "prophet;" whence
most emphatically he says that His advent "seals vision and prophecy." And thus,
by showing "the number of the years, and the time of the lxii and an half
fulfilled hebdomads," we have proved that at that specified time Christ came, that
is, was born; and, (by showing the time) of the "seven and an half hebdomads,"
which are subdivided so as to be cut off from the former hebdomads, within which
times we have shown Christ to have suffered, and by the consequent conclusion
of the "lxx hebdomads," and the extermination of the city, (we have proved)
that "sacrifice and unction" thenceforth cease.
Sufficient it is thus far, on these points, to have meantime traced the
course of the ordained path of Christ, by which He is proved to be such as He
used to be announced, even on the ground of that agreement of Scriptures, which
has enabled us to speak out, in opposition to the Jews, on the ground(7) of the
prejudgment of the major part. For let them not question or deny the writings we
produce; that the fact also that things which were foretold as destined to
happen after Christ are being recognised as fulfilled may make it impossible for
them to deny (these writings) to be on a par with divine Scriptures. Else,
unless He were come after whom the things which were wont to be announced had to be
accomplished, would such as have been completed be proved?(8)
CHAP. XII.--FURTHER PROOFS FROM THE CALLING OF THE GENTILES.
Look at the universal nations thenceforth emerging from the vortex of
human error to the Lord God the Creator and His Christ; and if you dare to deny
that this was prophesied, forthwith occurs to you the promise of the Father in the
Psalms, which says, "My Son art Thou; to-day have I begotten Thee. Ask of Me,
and I will give Thee Gentiles as Thine heritage, and as Thy possession the
bounds of the earth."(9) For you will not be able to affirm that "son" to be David
rather than Christ; or the "bounds of the earth" to have been promised rather
to David, who reigned within the single (country of) Judea, than to Christ, who
has already taken captive the whole orb with the faith of His gospel; as He
says through Isaiah: "Behold, I have given Thee for a covenant(10) of my family,
for a light of Gentiles, that Thou mayst open the eyes of the blind"--of course,
such as err--"to outloose from bonds the bound"--that is, to free them from
sins--"and from the house of prison"--that is, of death--"such as sit in
darkness"(11)--of ignorance, to wit. And if these blessings accrue through Christ, they
will not have been prophesied of another than Him through whom we consider
them to have been accomplished.(12)
CHAP. XIII.--ARGUMENT FROM THE DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM AND DESOLATION OF
JUDEA.
Therefore, since the sons of Israel affirm that we err in receiving the
Christ, who is already come, let us put in a demurrer against them out of the
Scriptures themselves, to the effect that the Christ who was the theme of
prediction is come; albeit by the times of Daniel's prediction we have proved that the
Christ is come already who was the theme of announcement. Now it behoved Him to
be born in Bethlehem of Judah. For thus it is written in the prophet: "And
thou, Bethlehem, are not the least in the leaders of Judah: for out of thee shall
issue a Leader who shall feed my People lsrael."(1) But if hitherto he has not
been born, what "leader" was it who was thus announced as to proceed from the
tribe of Judah, out of Bethlehem? For it behoves him to proceed from the tribe of
Judah and from Bethlehem. But we perceive that now none of the race of Israel
has remained in Bethlehem; and (so it has been) ever since the interdict was
issued forbidding any one of the Jews to linger in the confines of the very
district, in order that this prophetic utterance also should be perfectly fulfilled:
"Your land is desert, your cities burnt up by fire,"--that is, (he is
foretelling) what will have happened to them in time of war "your region strangers
shall eat up in your sight, and it shall be desert and subverted by alien peoples."
(2) And in another place it is thus said through the prophet: "The King with
His glory ye shall see,"--that is, Christ, doing deeds of power in the glory of
God the Father;(3) "and your eyes shall see the land from afar,"(4)--which is
what you do, being prohibited, in reward of your deserts, since the storming of
Jerusalem, to enter into your land; it is permitted you merely to see it with
your eyes from afar: "your soul," he says, "shall meditate terror,"(5)--namely,
at the time when they suffered the ruin of themselves.(6) How, therefore, will
a "leader" be born from Judea, and how far will he "proceed from Bethlehem," as
the divine volumes of the prophets do plainly announce; since none at all is
left there to this day of (the house of) Israel, of whose stock Christ could be
born?
Now, if (according to the Jews) He is hitherto not come, when He begins to
come whence will He be anointed?(7) For the Law enjoined that, in captivity,
it was not lawful for the unction of the royal chrism to be compounded.(8) But,
if there is no longer "unction" there(9) as Daniel prophesied (for he says,
"Unction shall be exterminated"), it follows that they(10) no longer have it,
because neither have they a temple where was the "horn"(11) from which kings were
wont to be anointed. If, then, there is no unction, whence shall be anointed the
"leader" who shall be born in Bethlehem? or how shall he proceed "from
Bethlehem," seeing that of the seed of Israel none at all exists in Bethlehem.
A second time, in fact, let us show that Christ is already come, (as
foretold) through the prophets, and has suffered, and is already received back in
the heavens, and thence is to come accordingly as the predictions prophesied.
For, after His advent, we read, according to Daniel, that the city itself had to
be exterminated; and we recognise that so it has befallen. For the Scripture
says thus, that "the city and the holy place are simultaneously exterminated
together with the leader,"(12)--undoubtedly (that Leader) who was to proceed "from
Bethlehem," and from the tribe of "Judah." Whence, again, it is manifest that
"the city must simultaneously be exterminated" at the time when its "Leader" had
to suffer in it, (as foretold) through the Scriptures of the prophets, who say:
"I have outstretched my hands the whole day unto a People contumacious and
gainsaying Me, who walketh in a way not good, but after their own sins."(13) And
in the Psalms, David says: "They exterminated my hands and feet: they counted
all my bones; they themselves, moreover, contemplated and saw me, and in my
thirst slaked me with vinegar."(14) These things David did not suffer, so as to seem
justly to have spoken of himself; but the Christ who was crucified. Moreover,
the "hands and feet," are not "exterminated,"(15) except His who is suspended
on a "tree." Whence, again, David said that "the Lord would reign from the
tree:"(16) for elsewhere, too, the prophet predicts the fruit of this "tree," saying
"The earth hath given her blessings,"(17)--of course that virgin-earth, not
yet irrigated with rains, nor fertilized by showers, out of which man was of yore
first formed, out of which now Christ through theflesh has been born of a
virgin; "and the tree,"(1) he says, "hath brought his fruit,"(2)--not that "tree"
in paradise which yielded death to the protoplasts, but the "tree" of the
passion of Christ, whence life, hanging, was by you not believed!(3) For this "tree"
in a mystery,(4) it was of yore wherewith Moses sweetened the bitter water;
whence the People, which was perishing of thirst in the desert, drank and
revived;(5) just as we do, who, drawn out from the calamities of the heathendom(6) in
which we were tarrying perishing with thirst (that is, deprived of the divine
word), drinking, "by the faith which is on Him,"(7) the baptismal water of the
"tree" of the passion of Christ, have revived,--a faith from which Israel has
fallen away, (as foretold) through Jeremiah, who says, "Send, and ask
exceedingly whether such things have been done, whether nations will change their gods
(and these are not gods!). But My People hath changed their glory: whence no
profit shall accrue to them: the heaven turned pale thereat" (and when did it turn
pale? undoubtedly when Christ suffered), "and shuddered," he says, "most
exceedingly;"(8) and "the sun grew dark at mid-day:"(9) (and when did it "shudder
exceedingly" except at the passion of Christ, when the earth also trembled to her
centre, and the veil of the temple was rent, and the tombs were burst
asunder?(10) "because these two evils hath My People done; Me," He says, "they have
quite forsaken, the fount of water of life,(11) and they have digged for themselves
worn-out tanks, which will not be able to contain water." Undoubtedly, by not
receiving Christ, the "fount of water of life," they have begun to have
"worn-out tanks," that is, synagogues for the use of the "dispersions of the
Gentiles,"(12) in which the Holy Spirit no longer lingers, as for the time past He was
wont to tarry in the temple before the advent of Christ, who is the true temple
of God. For, that they should withal suffer this thirst of the Divine Spirit,
the prophet Isaiah had said, saying:
"Behold, they who serve Me shall eat, but ye shall be hungry; they who
serve Me shall drink, but ye shall thirst, and from general tribulation of spirit
shall howl: for ye shall transmit your name for a satiety to Mine elect, but
you the Lord shall slay; but for them who serve Me shall be named a new name,
which shall be blessed in the lands."(13)
Again, the mystery of this "tree"(14) we read as being celebrated even in
the Books of the Reigns. For when the sons of the prophets were cutting
"wood"(15) with axes on the bank of the river Jordan, the iron flew off and sank in
the stream; and so, on Elisha(16) the prophet's coming up, the sons of the
prophets beg of him to extract from the stream the iron which had sunk. And
accordingly Elisha, having taken "wood," and cast it into that place where the iron had
been submerged, forthwith it rose and swam on the surface,(17) and the "wood"
sank, which the sons of the prophets recovered.(18) Whence they understood that
Elijah's spirit was presently conferred upon him.(19) What is more manifest
than the mystery(20) of this "wood,"--that the obduracy of this world(21) had been
sunk in the profundity of error, and is freed in baptism by the "wood" of
Christ, that is, of His passion; in order that what had formerly perished through
the "tree" in Adam, should be restored through the "tree" in Christ?(22) while
we, of course, who have succeeded to, and occupy, the room of the prophets, at
the present day sustain in the world(23) that treatment which the prophets
always suffered on account of divine religion: for some they stoned, some they
banished; more, however, they delivered to mortal slaughter,(24)--a fact which they
cannot deny.(25)
This "wood," again, Isaac the son of Abraham personally carried for his
own sacrifice, when God had enjoined that he should be made a victim to Himself.
But, because these had been mysteries(26) which were being kept for perfect
fulfilment in the times of Christ, Isaac, on the one hand, with his "wood," was
reserved, the ram being offered which was caught by the horns in the bramble;(1)
Christ, on the other hand, in His times, carried His "wood" on His own
shoulders, adhering to the horns of the cross, with a thorny crown encircling His head.
For Him it behoved to be made a sacrifice on behalf of all Gentiles, who "was
led as a sheep for a victim, and, like a lamb voiceless before his shearer, so
opened not His mouth" (for He, when Pilate interrogated Him, spake nothing(2));
for "in humility His judgment was taken away: His nativity, moreover, who
shall declare?" Because no one at all of human beings was conscious of the nativity
of Christ at His conception, when as the Virgin Mary was found pregnant by the
word of God; and because "His life was to be taken from the land."(3) Why,
accordingly, after His resurrection from the dead, which was effected on the third
day, did the heavens receive Him back? It was in accordance with a prophecy of
Hosea, uttered on this wise: "Before daybreak shall they arise unto Me,
saying, Let us go and return unto the Lord our God, because Himself will draw us out
and free us. After a space of two days, on the third day"(4)--which is His
glorious resurrection--He received back into the heavens (whence withal the Spirit
Himself had come to the Virgin(5)) Him whose nativity and passion alike the
Jews have failed to acknowledge. Therefore, since the Jews still contend that the
Christ is not yet come, whom we have in so many ways approved(6) to be come,
let the Jews recognise their own fate,-a fate which they were constantly foretold
as destined to incur after the advent of the Christ, on account of the impiety
with which they despised and slew Him. For first, from the day when, according
to the saying of Isaiah, "a man cast forth his abominations of gold and
silver, which they made to adore with vain and hurtful (rites),"(7)--that is, ever
since we Gentiles, with our breast doubly enlightened through Christ's truth,
cast forth (let the Jews see it) our idols,--what follows has likewise been
fulfilled. For "the Lord of Sabaoth hath taken away, among the Jews from Jerusalem,"
among the other things named, "the wise architect" too,(8) who builds the
church, God's temple, and the holy city, and the house of the Lord. For thenceforth
God's grace desisted (from working) among them. And "the clouds were commanded
not to rain a shower upon the vineyard of Sorek,"(9)--the clouds being
celestial benefits, which were commanded not to be forthcoming to the house of Israel;
for it "had borne thorns"--whereof that house of Israel had wrought a crown for
Christ--and not "righteousness, but a clamour,"--the clamour whereby it had
extorted His surrender to the cross.(10) And thus, the former gifts of grace
being withdrawn, "the law and the prophets were until John,"(11)and the fishpool of
Bethsaida(12) until the advent of Christ: thereafter it ceased curatively to
remove from Israel infirmities of health; since, as the result of their
perseverance in their frenzy, the name of the Lord was through them blasphemed, as it
is written: "On your account the name of God is blasphemed among the
Gentiles:"(13) for it is from them that the infamy (attached to that name) began, and (was
propagated during) the interval from Tiberius to Vespasian. And because they
had committed these crimes, and had failed to understand that Christ "was to be
found"(14) in "the time of their visitation,"(15) their land has been made
"desert, and their cities utterly burnt with fire, while strangers devour their
region in their sight: the daughter of Sion is derelict, as a watch-tower in a
vineyard, or as a shed in a cucumber garden,"--ever since the time, to wit, when
"Israel knew not" the Lord, and "the People understood Him not;" but rather
"quite forsook, and provoked unto indignation, the Holy One of Israel."(16) So,
again, we find a conditional threat of the sword: "If ye shall have been
unwilling, and shall not have been obedient, the glaive shall eat you up."(17) Whence we
prove that the sword was CHRIST, by not hearing whom they perished; who,
again, in the Psalm, demands of the Father their dispersion, saying, "Disperse them
in Thy power;"(18) who, withal, again through Isaiah prays for their utter
burning. "On My account," He says, "have these things happened to you; in anxiety
shall ye sleep."(19)
Since, therefore, the Jews were predicted as destined to suffer these
calamities an Christ's account, and we find that they have suffered them, and see
them sent into dispersion and abiding in it, manifest it is that it is on
Christ's account that these things have befallen the Jews, the sense of the
Scriptures harmonizing with the issue of events and of the order of the times. Or else,
if Christ is not yet come, on whose account they were predicted as destined
thus to suffer, when He shall have come it follows that they will thus suffer.
And where will then be a daughter of Sion to be derelict, who now has no
existence? where the cities to be exust, which are already exust and in heaps? where
the dispersion of a race which is now in exile? Restore to Judea the condition
which Christ is to find; and (then, if you will), contend that some other
(Christ) is coming.
CHAP. XIV.--CONCLUSION. CLUE TO THE ERROR OF THE JEWS.
Learn now (over and above the immediate question) the clue to your error.
We affirm, two characters of the Christ demonstrated by the prophets, and as
many advents of His forenoted: one, in humility (of course the first), when He
has to be led "as a sheep for a victim; and, as a lamb voiceless before the
shearer, so He opened not His mouth," not even in His aspect comely. For "we have
announced," says the prophet, "concerning Him, (He is) as a little child, as a
root in a thirsty land; and there was not in Him attractiveness or glory. And we
saw Him, and He had not attractiveness or grace; but His mien was unhonoured,
deficient in comparison of the sons of men,"(1) "a man set in the plague,(2)
and knowing how to bear infirmity:" to wit as having been set by the Father "for
a stone of offence,"(3) and "made a little lower" by Him "than angels,"(4) He
pronounces Himself "a worm, and not a man, an ignominy of man, and the refuse of
the People."(5) Which evidences of ignobility suit the FIRST ADVENT, just as
those of sublimity do the SECOND; when He shall be made no longer "a stone of
offence nor a rock of scandal," but "the highest corner-stone,"(6) after
reprobation (on earth) taken up (into heaven) and raised sublime for the purpose of
consummation,(7) and that "rock"--so we must admit--which is read of in Daniel as
forecut from a mount, which shall crush and crumble the image of secular
kingdoms.(8) Of which second advent of the same (Christ) Daniel has said: "And,
behold, as it were a Son of man, coming with the clouds of the heaven, came unto the
Ancient of days, and was present in His sight; and they who were standing by
led (Him) unto Him. And there was given Him royal power; and all nations of the
earth, according to their race, and all glory, shall serve Him: and His power
is eternal, which shall not be taken away, and His kingdom one which shall not
be corrupted."(9) Then, assuredly, is He to have an honourable mien, and a grace
not "deficient more than the sons of men;" for (He will then be) "blooming in
beauty in comparison with the sons of men."(10) "Grace," says the Psalmist,
"hath been outpoured in Thy lips: wherefore God hath blessed Thee unto eternity.
Gird Thee Thy sword around Thy thigh, most potent in Thy bloom and beauty!" (10)
while the Father withal afterwards, after making Him somewhat lower than
angels, "crowned Him with glory and honour and subjected all things beneath His
feet."(11) And then shall they "learn to know Him whom they pierced, and shall beat
their breasts tribe by tribe;"(12) of course because in days bygone they did
not know Him when conditioned in the humility of human estate. Jeremiah says:
"He is a human being, and who will learn to know Him?"(13) because, "His
nativity," says Isaiah, "who shall declare?" So, too, in Zechariah, in His own person,
nay, in the very mystery(14) of His name withal, the most true Priest of the
Father, His own(15) Christ, is delineated in a twofold garb with reference to the
TWO ADVENTS.(16) First, He was clad in "sordid attire," that is, in the
indignity of passible and mortal flesh, when the devil, withal, was opposing himself
to Him--the instigator, to wit, of Judas the traitor(17)--who even after His
baptism had tempted Him. In the next place, He was stripped of His former sordid
raiment, and adorned with a garment down to the foot, and with a turban and a
clean mitre, that is, (with the garb) of the SECOND ADVENT; since He is
demonstrated as having attained "glory and honour." Nor will you be able to say that
the man (there depicted) is "the son of Jozadak,"(1) who was never at all clad in
a sordid garment, but was always adorned with the sacerdotal garment, nor ever
deprived of the sacerdotal function. But the "Jesus"(2) there alluded to is
CHRIST, the Priest of God the most high Father; who at His FIRST ADVENT came in
humility, in human form, and passible, even up to the period of His passion;
being Himself likewise made, through all (stages of suffering) a victim for us
all; who after His resurrection was "clad with a garment down to the foot,"(3)
and named the Priest of God the Father unto eternity.(4) So, again, I will make
an interpretation of the two goats which were habitually offered on the
fast-day.(5) Do not they, too, point to each successive stage in the character of the
Christ who is already come? A pair, on the one hand, and consimilar (they were),
because of the identity of the Lord's general appearance, inasmuch as He is
not to come in some other form, seeing that He has to be recognised by those by
whom He was once hurt. But the one of them, begirt with scarlet, amid cursing
and universal spitting, and tearing, and piercing, was cast away by the People
outside the city into perdition, marked with manifest tokens of Christ's passion;
who, after being begirt with scarlet garment, and subjected to universal
spitting, and afflicted with all contumelies, was crucified outside the city.(6) The
other, however: offered for sins, and given as food to the priests merely of
the temple,(7) gave signal evidences of the second appearance; in so far as,
after the expiation of all sins, the priests of the spiritual temple, that is, of
the church, were to enjoy(8) a spiritual public distribution (as it were) of
the Lord's grace, while all others are fasting from salvation.
Therefore, since the vaticinations of the FIRST ADVENT obscured it with
manifold figures, and debased it with every dishonour, while the SECOND (was
foretold as) manifest and wholly worthy of God, it has resulted therefrom, that, by
fixing their gaze on that one alone which they could easily understand and
believe (that is, the SECOND, which is in honour and glory), they have been (not
undeservedly) deceived as to the more obscure--at all events, the more
unworthy--that is, the FIRST. And thus to the present moment they affirm that their
Christ is not come, because He is not come in majesty; while they are ignorant
of(9) the fact that He was first to come in humility.
Enough it is, meantime, to have thus far followed the stream downward of
the order of Christ's course, whereby He is proved such as He was habitually
announced: in order that, as a result of this harmony of the Divine Scriptures, we
may understand; and that the events which used to be predicted as destined to
take place after Christ may be believed to have been accomplished as the result
of a divine arrangement. For unless He come after whom they had to be
accomplished, by no means would the events, the future occurrence whereof was
predictively assigned to His advent, have come to pass. Therefore, if you see universal
nations thenceforth emerging from the profundity of human error to God the
Creator and His Christ (which you dare not assert to have not been prophesied,
because, albeit you were so to assert, there would forthwith--as we have already
premised(10)--occur to you the promise of the Father saying, "My Son art Thou; I
this day have begotten Thee; ask of Me, and I will give Thee Gentiles as Thine
heritage, and as Thy possession the boundaries of the earth." Nor will you be
able to vindicate, as the subject of that prediction, rather the son of David,
Solomon, than Christ, God's Son; nor "the boundaries of the earth," as promised
rather to David's son, who reigned within the single land of Judea, than to
Christ the Son of God, who has already illumined the whole world(11) with the rays
of His gospel. In short, again, a throne "unto the age"(12) is more suitable
to Christ, God's Son, than to Solomon,--a temporal king, to wit, who reigned
over Israel alone. For at the present day nations are invoking Christ which used
not to know Him; and peoples at the present day are fleeing in a body to the
Christ of whom in days bygone they were ignorant(13)), you cannot contend that is
future which you see taking place.(14) Either deny that these events were
prophesied, while they are seen before your eyes; or else have been fulfilled, while
you hear them read: or, on the other hand, if you fail to deny each position,
they will have their fulfilment in Him with respect to whom they were
prophesied.