THE FIVE BOOKS AGAINST MARCION -- BOOK II
BOOK II.(1)
WHEREIN TERTULLIAN SHOWS THAT THE CREATOR, OR DEMIURGE, WHOM MARCION
CALUMNIATED, IS THE TRUE AND GOOD GOD.
CHAP. I.--THE METHODS OF MARCION'S ARGUMENT INCORRECT AND ABSURD. THE PROPER
COURSE OF THE ARGUMENT.
THE Occasion of reproducing this little work, the fortunes of which we
noticed in the preface of our first book, has furnished us with the opportunity of
distinguishing, in our treatment of the subject of two Gods in opposition to
Marcion, each of them with a description and section of his own, according to
the division of the subject-matter, defining one of the gods to have no existence
at all, and maintaining of the Other that He is rightly(2) God; thus far
keeping pace with the heretic of Pontus, who has been pleased to admit one unto, and
exclude the other.(3) For he could not build up his mendacious scheme without
pulling down the system of truth. He found it necessary to demolish(4) some
other thing, in order to build up the theory which he wished. This process,
however, is like constructing a house without preparing suitable materials.(5) The
discussion ought to have been directed to this point alone, that he is no god who
supersedes the Creator. Then, when the false god had been excluded by certain
rules which prescriptively settle what is the character of the One only perfect
Divinity, there could have remained no longer any question as to the true God.
The proof of His existence would have been clear, and that, too, amid the
failure of all evidence in support of any other god; and still clearer(6) would
have seemed the point as to the honour in which He ought without controversy to be
held: that He ought to be worshipped rather than judged; served reverentially
rather than handled critically, or even dreaded for His severity. For what was
more fully needed by man than a careful estimate of(7) the true God, on whom,
so to speak, he had alighted,(8) because there was no other god?
CHAP. II.--THE TRUE DOCTRINE OF GOD THE CREATOR. THE HERETICS PRETENDED TO A
KNOWLEDGE OF THE DIVINE BEING, OPPOSED TO AND SUBVERSIVE OF REVELATION. GOD'S
NATURE AND WAYS PAST HUMAN DISCOVERY. ADAM'S HERESY.
We have now, then, cleared our way to the contemplation of the Almighty
God, the Lord and Maker of the universe. His greatness, as I think, is shown in
this, that from the beginning He made Himself known: He never hid Himself, but
always shone out brightly, even before the time of Romulus, to say nothing of
that of Tiberius; with the exception indeed that the heretics, and they alone,
know Him not, although they take such pains about Him. They on this account
suppose that another god must be assumed to exist, because they are more able to
censure than deny Him whose existence is so evident, deriving all their thoughts
about God from the deductions of sense; just as if some blind man, or a man of
imperfect vision,(9) chose to assume some other sun of milder and healthier ray,
because he sees not that which is the object of sight.(10) There is, O man,
but one sun which rules(1) this world and even when you think otherwise of him,
he is best and useful; and although to you he may seem too fierce and baneful,
or else, it may be, too sordid and corrupt, he yet is true to the laws of his
own existence. Unable as you are to see through those laws, you would be equally
impotent to bear the rays of any other sun, were there one, however great and
good. Now, you whose sight is defective(2) in respect of the inferior god, what
is your view of the sublimer One? Really you are too lenient(3) to your
weakness; and set not yourself to the proof(4) of things, holding God to be certainly,
undoubtedly, and therefore sufficiently known, the very moment you have
discovered Him to exist, though you know Him not except on the side where He has
willed His proofs to lie. But you do not even deny God intelligently,(5) you treat
of Him ignorantly;(6) nay, you accuse Him with a semblance of intelligence,(7)
whom if you did but know Him, you would never accuse, nay, never treat of.(8)
You give Him His name indeed, but you deny the essential truth of that name,
that is, the greatness which is called God; not acknowledging it to be such as,
were it possible for it to have been known to man in every respect,(9) would not
be greatness. Isaiah even so early, with the clearness of an apostle,
foreseeing the thoughts of heretical hearts, asked, "Who hath known the mind of the
Lord? or who hath been His counsellor? With whom took He counsel? ... or who taught
Him knowledge, and showed to Him the way of understanding?"(10) With whom the
apostle agreeing exclaims, "Oh the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and
knowledge of God! how unsearchable are His judgments, and His ways past finding
out!"(11) "His judgments unsearchable," as being those of God the Judge; and
"His ways past finding out," as comprising an understanding and knowledge which
no man has ever shown to Him, except it may be those critics of the Divine
Being, who say, God ought not to have been this,(12) and He ought rather to have
been that; as if any one knew what is in God, except the Spirit of God.(13)
Moreover, having the spirit of the world, and "in the wisdom of God by wisdom knowing
not God,"(14) they seem to themselves to be wiser(15) than God; because, as
the wisdom of the world is foolishness with God, so also the wisdom of God is
folly in the world's esteem. We, however, know that "the foolishness of God is
wiser than men, and the weakness of God is stronger than men."(16) Accordingly,
God is then especially great, when He is small(17) to man; then especially good,
when not good in man's judgment; then especially unique, when He seems to man
to be two or more. Now, if from the very first "the natural man, not receiving
the things of the Spirit of God,"(18) has deemed God's law to be foolishness,
and has therefore neglected to observe it; and as a further consequence, by his
not having faith, "even that which he seemeth to have hath been taken from
him"(19)--such as the grace of paradise and the friendship of God, by means of which
he might have known all things of God, if he had continued in his
obedience--what wonder is it, if he,(20) reduced to his material nature, and banished to
the toil of tilling the ground, has in his very labour, downcast and
earth-gravitating as it was, handed on that earth-derived spirit of the world to his entire
race, wholly natural(21) and heretical as it is, and not receiving the things
which belong to God? Or who will hesitate to declare the great sin of Adam to
have been heresy, when he committed it by the choice(22) of his own will rather
than of God's? Except that Adam never said to his fig-tree, Why hast thou made
me thus? He confessed that he was led astray; and he did not conceal the
seducer. He was a very rude heretic. He was disobedient; but yet he did not blaspheme
his Creator, nor blame that Author of his being, Whom from the beginning of
his life he had found to be so good and excellent, and Whom he had perhaps(23)
made his own judge from the very first.
CHAP. III.--GOD KNOWN BY HIS WORKS. HIS GOODNESS SHOWN IN HIS CREATIVE ENERGY;
BUT EVERLASTING IN ITS NATURE; INHERENT IN GOD, PREVIOUS TO ALL EXHIBITION OF
IT. THE FIRST STAGE OF THIS GOODNESS PRIOR TO MAN.
It will therefore be right for us, as we enter on the examination of the
known God, when the question arises, in what condition He is known to us, to
begin with His works, which are prior to man; so that His goodness, being
discovered immediately along with Himself, and then constituted and prescriptively
settled, may suggest to us some sense whereby we may understand how the subsequent
order of things came about. The disciples of Marcion, moreover, may possibly be
able, while recognising the goodness of our God, to learn how worthy it is
likewise of the Divine Being, on those very grounds whereby we have proved it to
be unworthy in the case of their god. Now this very point,(1) which is a
material one in their scheme,(2) Marcion did not find in any other god, but eliminated
it for himself out of his own god. The first goodness, then,(3) was that of
the Creator, whereby God was unwilling to remain hidden for ever; in other words,
(unwilling) that there should not be a something by which God should become
known. For what, indeed, is so good as the knowledge and fruition(4) of God? Now,
although it did not transpires that this was good, because as yet there
existed nothing to which it could transpire, yet God foreknew what good would
eventually transpire, and therefore He set Himself about developing(6) His own perfect
goodness, for the accomplishment of the good which was to transpire; not,
indeed, a sudden goodness issuing m some accidental boon(7) or in some excited
impulse,(8) such as must be dated simply from the moment when it began to operate.
For if it did itself produce its own beginning when it began to operate, it had
not, in fact, a beginning itself when it acted. When, however, an initial act
had been once done by it, the scheme of temporal seasons began, for
distinguishing and noting which, the stars and luminaries of heaven were arranged in their
order. "Let them be," says God, "for seasons, and for days, and years."(9)
Previous, then, to this temporal course, (the goodness) which created time had not
time; nor before that beginning which the same goodness originated, had it a
beginning. Being therefore without aIl order of a beginning, and all mode of
time, it will be reckoned to possess an age, measureless in extent(10) and endless
in duration;(11) nor will it be possible to regard it as a sudden or
adventitious or impulsive emotion, because it has nothing to occasion such an estimate
of itself; in other words, no sort of temporal sequence. It must therefore be
accounted an eternal attribute, inbred in God,(12) and everlasting,(13) and on
this account worthy of the Divine Being, putting to shame for ever(14) the
benevolence of Marcion's god, subsequent as he is to (I will not say) all beginnings
and times, but to the very malignity of the Creator, if indeed malignity could
possibly have been found in goodness.
CHAP. IV.--THE NEXT STAGE OCCURS IN THE CREATION OF MAN BY THE ETERNAL WORD.
SPIRITUAL AS WELL AS PHYSICAL GIFTS TO MAN. THE BLESSINGS OF MAN'S FREE-WILL.
The goodness of God having, therefore, provided man for the pursuit of the
knowledge of Himself, added this to its original notification,(15) that it
first prepared a habitation for him, the vast fabric (of the world) to begin with,
and then afterwards(16) the vaster one(of a higher world,(17)) that he might
on a great as well as on a smaller stage practise and advance in his probation,
and so be promoted from the good which God had given him, that is, from his
high position, to God's best; that is, to some higher abode.(18) In this good work
God employs a most excellent minister, even His own Word. "My heart" He says,
"hath emitted my most excellent Word."(19) Let Marcion take hence his first
lesson on the noble fruit of this truly most excellent tree. But, like a most
clumsy clown, he has grafted a good branch on a bad stock. The sapling, however, of
his blasphemy shall be never strong: it shall wither with its planter, and
thus shall be manifested the nature of the good tree. Look at the total result:
how fruitful was the Word! God issued His fiat, and it was done: God also saw
that it was good;(1) not as if He were ignorant of the good until He saw it; but
because it was good, He therefore saw it, and honoured it, and set His seal upon
it; and consummated(2) the goodness of His works by His vouchsafing to them
that contemplation. Thus God blessed what He made good, in order that He might
commend Himself to you as whole and perfect, good both in word and act.(3) As yet
the Word knew no malediction, because He was a stranger to malefaction.(4) We
shall see what reasons required this also of God. Meanwhile the world consisted
of all things good, plainly foreshowing how much good was preparing for him
for whom all this was provided. Who indeed was so worthy of dwelling amongst the
works of God, as he who was His own image and likeness? That image was wrought
out by a goodness even more operative than its wont,(5) with no imperious word,
but with friendly hand preceded by an almost affable(6) utterance: "Let us
make man in our image, after our likeness."(7) Goodness spake the word; Goodness
formed man of the dust of the ground into so great a substance of the flesh,
built up out of one material with so many qualities; Goodness breathed into him a
soul, not dead but living. Goodness gave him dominion(8) over all things, which
he was to enjoy and rule over, and even give names to. In addition to this,
Goodness annexed pleasures(9) to man so that, while master of the whole
world,(10) he might tarry among higher delights, being translated into paradise, out of
the world into the Church.(11) The self-same Goodness provided also a help meet
for him, that there might be nothing in his lot that was not good. For, said
He, that the man be alone is not good.(12) He knew full well what a blessing to
him would be the sex of Mary,(13) and also of the Church. The law, however,
which you find fault with,(14) and wrest into a subject of contention, was imposed
on man by Goodness, aiming at his happiness, that he might cleave to God, and
so not show himself an abject creature rather than a free one, nor reduce
himself to the level of the other animals, his subjects, which were free from God,
and exempt from all tedious subjection;(15) but might, as the sole human being,
boast that he alone was worthy of receiving laws from God; and as a rational
being, capable of intelligence and knowledge, be restrained within the bounds of
rational liberty, subject to Him who had subjected all things unto him. To
secure the observance of this law, Goodness likewise took counsel by help of this
sanction: "In the day that thou eatest thereof, thou shall surely die."(16) For
it was a most benignant act of His thus to point out the issues of
transgression, lest ignorance of the danger should encourage a neglect of obedience. Now,
since(17) it was given as a reason previous to the imposition of the law, it
also amounted to a motive for subsequently observing it, that a penalty was
annexed to its transgression; a penalty, indeed, which He who proposed it was still
unwilling that it should be incurred. Learn then the goodness of our God amidst
these things and up to this point; learn it from His excellent works, from His
kindly blessings, from His indulgent bounties, from His gracious providences,
from His laws and warnings, so good and merciful.
CHAP. V.--MARCION'S CAVILS CONSIDERED. HIS OBJECTION REFUTED, I.E., MAN'S FALL
SHOWED FAILURE IN GOD. THE PERFECTION OF MAN'S BEING LAY IN HIS LIBERTY, WHICH
GOD PURPOSELY BESTOWED ON HIM. THE FALL IMPUTABLE TO MAN'S OWN CHOICE.
Now then, ye dogs, whom the apostle puts outside,(18) and who yelp at the
God of truth, let us come to your various questions. These are the bones of
contention, which you are perpetually gnawing! If God is good, and prescient of
the future, and able to avert evil, why did He permit man, the very image and
likeness of Himself, and, by the origin of his soul, His own substance too, to be
deceived by the devil, and fall from obedience of the law into death? For if He
had been good, and so unwilling that such a catastrophe should happen, and
prescient, so as not to be ignorant of what was to come to pass, and powerful
enough to hinder its occurrence, that issue would never have come about, which
should be impossible under these three conditions of the divine greatness. Since,
however, it has occurred, the contrary proposition is most certainly true, that
God must be deemed neither good, nor prescient, nor powerful. For as no such
issue could have happened had God been such as He is reputed--good, and
prescient, and mighty--so has this issue actually happened, because He is not such a
God. In reply, we must first vindicate those attributes in the Creator which are
called in question--namely, His goodness and foreknowledge, and power. But I
shall not linger long over this point(1) for Christ's own definition(2) comes to
our aid at once. From works must proofs be obtained. The Creator's works testify
at once to His goodness, since they are good, as we have shown, and to His
power, since they are mighty, and spring indeed out of nothing. And even if they
were made out of some (previous) matter, as some(3) will have it, they are even
thus out of nothing, because they were not what they are. In short, both they
are great because they are good; and(4) God is likewise mighty, because all
things are His own, whence He is almighty. But what shall I say of His prescience,
which has for its witnesses as many prophets as it inspired? After all,(5) what
title to prescience do we look for in the Author of the universe, since it was
by this very attribute that He foreknew all things when He appointed them
their places, and appointed them their places when He fore knew them? There is sin
itself. If He had not foreknown this, He would not have proclaimed a caution
against it under the penalty of death. Now if there were in God such attributes
as must have rendered it both impossible and improper for any evil to have
happened to man,(6) and yet evil did occur, let us consider man's condition
also--whether it were not, in fact, rather the cause why that came to pass which could
not have happened through God. I find, then, that man was by God constituted
free, master of his own will and power; indicating the presence of God's image
and likeness in him by nothing so well as by this constitution of his nature. For
it was not by his face, and by the lineaments of his body, though they were so
varied in his human nature, that he expressed his likeness to the form of God;
but he showed his stamp(7) in that essence which he derived from God Himself
(that is, the spiritual,(8) which answered to the form of God), and in the
freedom and power of his will. This his state was confirmed even by the very law
which God then imposed upon him. For a law would not be imposed upon one who had
it not in his power to render that obedience which is due to law; nor again,
would the penalty of death be threatened against sin, if a contempt of the law
were impossible to man in the liberty of his will. So in the Creator's subsequent
laws also you will find, when He sets before man good and evil, life and death,
that the entire course of discipline is arranged in precepts by God's calling
men from sin, and threatening and exhorting them; and this on no other ground
than(9) that man is free, with a will either for obedience or resistance.
CHAP. VI.--THIS LIBERTY VINDICATED IN RESPECT OF ITS ORIGINAL CREATION;
SUITABLE ALSO FOR EXHIBITING THE GOODNESS AND THE PURPOSE OF GOD. REWARD AND
PUNISHMENT IMPOSSIBLE IF MAN WERE GOOD OR EVIL THROUGH NECESSITY AND NOT CHOICE.
But although we shall be understood, from our argument, to be only so
affirming man's unshackled power over his will, that what happens to him should be
laid to his own charge, and not to God's, yet that you may not object, even
now, that he ought not to have been so constituted, since his liberty and power of
will might turn out to be injurious, I will first of all maintain that he was
rightly so constituted, that I may with the greater confidence commend both his
actual constitution, and the additional fact of its being worthy of the Divine
Being; the cause which led to man's being created with such a constitution
being shown to be the better one. Moreover, man thus constituted will be protected
by both the goodness of God and by His purpose,(10) both of which are always
found in concert in our God. For His purpose is no purpose without goodness; nor
is His goodness goodness without a purpose, except forsooth in the case of
Marcion's god, who is purposelessly (11) good, as we have shown.(12) Well, then,
it was proper that God should be known; it was no doubt(13) a good and
reasonable(14) thing. Proper also was it that there should be something worthy of
knowing God. What could be found so worthy as the image and likeness of God? This
also was undoubtedly good and reasonable. Therefore it was proper that (he who is)
the image and likeness of God should be formed with a free will and a mastery
of himself;(1) so that this very thing--namely, freedom of will and
self-command--might be reckoned as the image and likeness of God in him. For this purpose
such an essence(2) was adapted(3) to man as suited this character,(4) even the
afflatus of the Deity, Himself free and uncontrolled.(5) But if you will take
some other view of the case,(6) how came it to pass (7) that man, when in
possession of the whole world, did not above all things reign in
self-possession(8)--a master over others, a slave to himself? The goodness of God, then, you can
learn from His gracious gift(9) to man, and His purpose from His disposal of all
things.(10) At present, let God's goodness alone occupy our attention, that
which gave so large a gift to man, even the liberty of his will. God's purpose
claims some other opportunity of treatment, offering as it does instruction of
like import. Now, God alone is good by nature. For He, who has that which is
without beginning, has it not by creation,(11) but by nature. Man, however, who
exists entirely by creation, having a beginning, along with that beginning obtained
the form in which he exists; and thus he is not by nature disposed to good,
but by creation, not having it as his own attribute to be good, because, (as we
have said,) it is not by nature, but by creation, that he is disposed to good,
according to the appointment of his good Creator, even the Author of all good.
In order, therefore, that man might have a goodness of his own,(12) bestowed(13)
on him by God, and there might be henceforth in man a property, and in a
certain sense a natural attribute of goodness, there was assigned to him in the
constitution of his nature, as a formal witness(14) of the goodness which God
bestowed upon him, freedom and power of the will, such as should cause good to be
performed spontaneously by man, as a property of his own, on the ground that no
less than this(15) would be required in the matter of a goodness which was to be
voluntarily exercised by him, that is to say, by the liberty of his will,
without either favour or servility to the constitution of his nature, so that man
should be good(16) just up to this point,(17) if he should display his goodness
in accordance with his natural constitution indeed, but still as the result of
his will, as a property of his nature; and, by a similar exercise of
volition,(18) should show himself to be too strong(19) in defence against evil also (for
even this God, of course, foresaw), being free, and master of himself; because,
if he were wanting in this prerogative of self-mastery, so as to perform even
good by necessity and not will, he would, in the helplessness of his servitude,
become subject to the usurpation of evil, a slave as much to evil as to good.
Entire freedom of will, therefore, was conferred upon him in both tendencies;
so that, as master of himself, he might constantly encounter good by spontaneous
observance of it, and evil by its spontaneous avoidance; because, were man
even otherwise circumstanced, it was yet his bounden duty, in the judgment of God,
to do justice according to the motions(20) of his will regarded, of course, as
free. But the reward neither of good nor of evil could be paid to the man who
should be found to have been either good or evil through necessity and not
choice. In this really lay(21) the law which did not exclude, but rather prove,
human liberty by a spontaneous rendering of obedience, or a spontaneous commission
of iniquity; so patent was the liberty of man's will for either issue. Since,
therefore, both the goodness and purpose of God are(22) discovered in the gift
to man of freedom in his will, it is not right, after ignoring the original
definition of goodness and purpose which it was necessary to determine previous to
any discussion of the subject, on subsequent facts to presume to say that God
ought not in such a way to have formed man, because the issue was other than
what was assumed to be(23) proper for God. We ought rather,(24) after duly
considering that it behoved God so to create man, to leave this consideration
unimpaired, and to survey the other aspects of the case. It is, no doubt, an easy
process for persons who take offence at the fall of man, before they have looked
into the facts of his creation, to impute the blame of what happened to the
Creator, without any examination of His purpose. To conclude: the goodness of God,
then fully considered from the beginning of His works, will be enough to
convince us that nothing evil could possibly have come forth from God; and the liberty
of man will, after a second thought,(1) show us that it alone is chargeable
with the fault which itself committed.
CHAP. VII.--IF GOD HAD ANYHOW CHECKED MAN'S LIBERTY, MARCION WOULD HAVE BEEN
READY WITH ANOTHER AND OPPOSITE CAVIL. MAN'S FALL FORESEEN BY GOD. PROVISION
MADE FOR IT REMEDIALLY AND CONSISTENTLY WITH HIS TRUTH AND GOODNESS.
By such a conclusion all is reserved(2) unimpaired to God; both His
natural goodness, and the purposes of His governance and foreknowledge, and the
abundance of His power. You ought, however, to deduct from God's attributes both His
supreme earnestness of purpose(3) and most excellent truth in His whole
creation, if you would cease to inquire whether anything could have happened against
the will of God. For, while holding this earnestness and truth of the good God,
which are indeed(4) capable of proof from the rational creation, you will not
wonder at the fact that God did not interfere to prevent the occurrence of what
He wished not to happen, in order that He might keep from harm what He wished.
For, since He had once for all allowed (and, as we have shown, worthily
allowed) to man freedom of will and mastery of himself, surely He from His very
authority in creation permitted these gifts to be enjoyed: to be enjoyed, too, so
far as lay in Himself, according to His own character as God, that is, for good
(for who would permit anything hostile to himself?); and, so far as lay in man,
according to the impulses of his liberty (for who does not, when giving
anything to any one to enjoy, accompany the gift with a permission to enjoy it with
all his heart and will?). The necessary consequence,(5) therefore, was, that God
must separate from the liberty which He had once for all bestowed upon man (in
other words, keep within Himself), both His foreknowledge and power, through
which He might have prevented man's falling into danger when attempting wrongly
to enjoy his liberty. Now, if He had interposed, He would have rescinded the
liberty of man's will, which He had permitted with set purpose, and in goodness.
But, suppose God had interposed; suppose Him to have abrogated man's liberty, by
warning him from the tree, and keeping off the subtle serpent from his
interview with the woman; would not Marcion then exclaim, What a frivolous, unstable,
and faithless Lord, cancelling the gifts He had bestowed! Why did He allow any
liberty of will, if He afterwards withdrew it? Why withdraw it after allowing
it? Let Him choose where to brand Himself with error, either in His original
constitution of man, or in His subsequent abrogation thereof! If He had checked
(man's freedom), would He not then seem to have been rather deceived, through
want of foresight into the future? But in giving it full scope, who would not say
that He did so in ignorance of the issue of things? God, however, did fore-know
that man would make a bad use of his created constitution; and yet what can be
so worthy of God as His earnestness of purpose, and the truth of His created
works, be they what they may? Man must see, if he failed to make the most of(6)
the good gift he had received, how that he was himself guilty in respect of the
law which he did not choose to keep, and not that the Lawgiver was committing
a fraud against His own law, by not permitting its injunctions to be fulfilled.
Whenever you are inclined to indulge in such censure(7) (and it is the most
becoming for you) against the Creator, recall gently to your mind in His
behalf(8) His earnestness, and endurance, and truth, in having given completeness(9) to
His creatures both as rational and good.
CHAP. VIII.--MAN, ENDUED WITH LIBERTY, SUPERIOR TO THE ANGELS. OVERCOMES EVEN
THE ANGEL WHICH LURED HIM TO HIS FALL, WHEN REPENTANT AND RESUMING OBEDIENCE TO
GOD.
For it was not merely that he might live the natural life that God had
produced man, but(10) that he should live virtuously, that is, in relation to God
and to His law. Accordingly, God gave him to live when he was formed into a
living soul; but He charged him to live virtuously when he was required to obey a
law. So also God shows that man was not constituted for death, by now wishing
that he should be restored to life, preferring the sinner's repentance to his
death.(11) As, therefore, God designed for man a condition of life, so man
brought on himself a state of death; and this, too, neither through infirmity nor
through ignorance, so that no blame can be imputed to the Creator. No doubt it was
an angel who was the seducer; but then the victim of that seduction was free,
and master of himself; and as being the image and likeness of God, was stronger
than any angel; and as being, too, the afflatus of the Divine Being, was
nobler than that material spirit of which angels were made. Who maketh, says he, His
angels spirits, and His ministers a flame of fire.(1) He would not have made
all things subject to man, if he had been too weak for the dominion, and
inferior to the angels, to whom He assigned no such subjects; nor would He have put
the burden of law upon him, if he had been incapable of sustaining so great a
weight; nor, again, would He have threatened with the penalty of death a creature
whom He knew to be guiltless on the score of his helplessness: in short, if He
had made him infirm, it would not have been by liberty and independence of
will, but rather by the withholding from him these endowments. And thus it comes to
pass, that even now also, the same human being, the same substance of his
soul, the same condition as Adam's, is made conqueror over the same devil by the
self-same liberty and power of his will, when it moves in obedience to the laws
of God.(2)
CHAP. IX.--ANOTHER CAVIL ANSWERED, I.E., THE FALL IMPUTABLE TO GOD, BECAUSE
MAN'S SOUL IS A PORTION OF THE SPIRITUAL ESSENCE OF THE CREATOR. THE DIVINE
AFFLATUS NOT IN FAULT IN THE SIN OF MAN, BUT THE HUMAN WILL WHICH WAS ADDITIONAL TO
IT.
But, you say, in what way soever the substance of the Creator is found to
be susceptible of fault, when the afflatus of God, that is to say, the soul,(3)
offends in man, it cannot but be that that fault of the portion is referrible
to the original whole. Now, to meet this objection, we must explain the
nature(4) of the soul. We must at the outset hold fast the meaning of the Greek
scripture, which has afflatus, not spirit.(5) Some interpreters of the Greek, without
reflecting on the difference of the words, and careless about their exact
meaning, put spirit for afflatus; they thus afford to heretics an opportunity of
tarnishing(6) the Spirit of God, that is to say, God Himself, with default. And
now comes the question. Afflatus, observe then, is less than spirit, although it
comes from spirit; it is the spirit's gentle breeze,(7) but it is not the
spirit. Now a breeze is rarer than the wind; and although it proceeds from wind,
yet a breeze is not the wind. One may call a breeze the image of the spirit. In
the same manner, man is the image of God, that is, of spirit; for God is spirit.
Afflatus is therefore the image of the spirit. Now the image is not in any
case equal to the very thing.(8) It is one thing to be like the reality, and
another thing to be the reality itself. So, although the afflatus is the image of
the spirit, it is yet not possible to compare the image of God in such a way,
that, because the reality--that is, the spirit, or in other words, the Divine
Being--is faultless, therefore the afflatus also, that is to say, the image, ought
not by any possibility to have done wrong. In this respect will the image be
less than the reality, and the afflatus inferior to the spirit, in that, while it
possesses beyond doubt the true lineaments of divinity, such as an immortal
soul, freedom and its own mastery over itself, foreknowledge in a great
degree,(9) reasonableness, capacity of understanding and knowledge, it is even in these
respects an image still, and never amounts to the actual power of Deity, nor to
absolute exemption from fault,--a property which is only conceded to God, that
is, to the reality, and which is simply incompatible with an image. An image,
although it may express all the lineaments of the reality, is yet wanting in
its intrinsic power; it is destitute of motion. In like manner, the soul, the
image of the spirit, is unable to express the simple power thereof, that is to
say, its happy exemption from sinning.(10) Were it otherwise,(11) it would not be
soul, but spirit; not man, who received a soul, but God. Besides, to take
another view of the matter,(12) not everything which pertains to God will be
regarded as God, so that you would not maintain that His afflatus was God, that is,
exempt from fault, because it is the breath of God. And in an act of your own,
such as blowing into a flute, you would not thereby make the flute human,
although it was your own human breath which you breathed into it, precisely as God
breathed of His own Spirit, In fact,(13) the Scripture, by expressly saying(14)
that God breathed into man's nostrils the breath of life, and that man became
thereby a living soul, not a life-giving spirit, has distinguished that soul from
the condition of the Creator. The work must necessarily be distinct from the
workman, and it is inferior to him. The pitcher will not be the potter, although
made by the potter; nor in like manner, will the afflatus, because made by the
spirit, be on that account the spirit. The soul has often been called by the
same name as the breath. You should also take care that no descent be made from
the breath to a still lower quality. So you have granted (you say) the infirmity
of the soul, which you denied before! Undoubtedly, when you demand for it an
equality with God, that is, a freedom from fault, I contend that it is infirm.
But when the comparison is challenged with an angel, I am compelled to maintain
that the head over all things is the stronger of the two, to whom the angels
are ministers,(1) who is destined to be the judge of angels,(2) if he shall stand
fast in the law of God--an obedience which he refused at first. Now this
disobedience(3) it was possible for the afflatus of God to commit: it was possible,
but it was not proper. The possibility lay in its slenderness of nature, as
being the breath and not the spirit; the impropriety, however, arose from its
power of will, as being free, and not a slave. It was furthermore assisted by the
warning against committing sin under the threat of incurring death, which was
meant to be a support for its slender nature, and a direction for its liberty of
choice. So that the soul can no longer appear to have sinned, because it has an
affinity with God, that is to say, through the afflatus, but rather through
that which was an addition to its nature, that is, through its free-will, which
was indeed given to it by God in accordance with His purpose and reason, but
recklessly employed(4) by man according as he chose. This, then, being the case,
the entire course(5) of God's action is purged from all imputation to evil. For
the liberty of the will will not retort its own wrong on Him by whom it was
bestowed, but on him by whom it was improperly used. What is the evil, then, which
you want to impute to the Creator? If it is man's sin, it will not be God's
fault, because it is man's doing; nor is that Being to be regarded as the author
of the sin, who turns out to be its forbidder, nay, its condemner. If death is
the evil, death will not give the reproach of being its own author to Him who
threatened it, but to him who despised it. For by his contempt he introduced it,
which assuredly(6) would not have appeared had man not despised it.
CHAP. X.--ANOTHER CAVIL MET, I.E., THE DEVIL WHO INSTIGATED MAN TO SIN HIMSELF
THE CREATURE OF GOD. NAY, THE PRIMEVAL CHERUB ONLY WAS GOD'S WORK. THE
DEVILISH NATURE SUPERADDED BY WILFULNESS. IN MAN'S RECOVERY THE DEVIL IS VANQUISHED IN
A CONFLICT ON HIS OWN GROUND.
If, however, you choose to transfer the account(7) of evil from man to the
devil as the instigator of sin, and in this way, too, throw the blame on the
Creator, inasmuch as He created the devil,--for He maketh those spirtual beings,
the angels--then it will follow that(8) what was made, that is to say, the
angel, will belong to Him who made it; while that which was not made by God, even
the devil, or accuser,(9) cannot but have been made by itself; and this by
false detraction(10) from God: first, how that God had forbidden them to eat of
every tree; then, with the pretence that they should not die if they ate; thirdly,
as if God grudged them the property of divinity. Now, whence originated this
malice of lying and deceit towards man, and slandering of God? Most certainly
not from God, who made the angel good after the fashion of His good works.
Indeed, before he became the devil, he stands forth the wisest of creatures; and(11)
wisdom is no(11) evil. if you turn to the prophecy of Ezekiel, you will at once
perceive that this angel was both by creation good and by choice corrupt. For
in the person of the prince of Tyre it is said in reference to the devil:
"Moreover, the word of the Lord came unto me, saying, Son of man, take up a
lamentation upon the king of Tyrus, and say unto him, Thus saith the Lord God: Thou
sealest up the sum, full of wisdom, perfect in beauty" (this belongs to him as the
highest of the angels, the archangel, the wisest of all); "amidst the delights
of the paradise of thy God wast thou born" (for it was there, where God had
made the angels in a shape which resembled the figure of animals). "Every
precious stone was thy covering, the sardius, the topaz, and the diamond, the beryl,
the onyx, and the jasper, the sapphire, the emerald, and the carbuncle; and with
gold hast thou filled thy barns and thy treasuries. From the day when thou
wast created, when I set thee, a cherub, upon the holy mountain of God, thou wast
in the midst of stones of fire, thou wast irreproachable in thy days, from the
day of thy creation, until thine iniquities were discovered. By the abundance
of thy merchandise thou hast filled thy storehouses, and thou hast sinned,"
etc.(1) This description, it is manifest, properly belongs to the transgression of
the angel, and not to the prince's: for none among human beings was either born
in the paradise of God, not even Adam himself, who was rather translated
thither; nor placed with a cherub upon God's holy mountain, that is to say, in the
heights of heaven, from which the Lord testifies that Satan fell; nor detained
amongst the stones of fire, and the flashing rays of burning conStellations,
whence Satan was cast down like lightning.(2) No, it is none else than the very
author of sin who was denoted in the person of a sinful man: he was once
irreproachable, at the time of his creation, formed for good by God, as by the good
Creator of irreproachable creatures, and adorned with every angelic glory, and
associated with God, good with the Good; but afterwards of his own accord removed
to evil. From the day when thine iniquities,(3) says he, were
discovered,--attributing to him those injuries wherewith he injured man when he was expelled
from his allegiance to God,--even from that time did he sin, when he propagated
his sin, and thereby plied "the abundance of his merchandise," that is, of his
Wickedness, even the tale(4) of his transgressions, because he was himself as a
spirit no less (than man) created, with the faculty of free-will. For God would
in nothing fail to endow a being who was to be next to Himself with a liberty
of this kind. Nevertheless, by precondemning him, God testified that he had
departed from the condition(5) of his created nature, through his own lusting after
the wickedness which was spontaneously conceived within him; and at the same
time, by conceding a permission for the operation of his designs, He acted
consistently with the purpose of His own goodness, deferring the devil's destruction
for the self-same reason as He postponed the restitution of man. For He
afforded room for a conflict, wherein man might crush his enemy with the same freedom
of his will as had made him succumb to him (proving that the fault was all his
own, not God's), and so worthily recover his salvation by a victory; wherein
also the devil might receive a more bitter punishment, through being vanquished
by him whom he had previously injured; and wherein God might be discovered to
be so much the more good, as waiting(6) for man to return from his present life
to a more glorious paradise, with a right to pluck of the tree of life.(7)
CHAP. XI.--IF, AFTER MAN'S SIN, GOD EXERCISED HIS ATTRIBUTE OF JUSTICE AND
JUDGMENT, THIS WAS COMPATIBLE WITH HIS GOODNESS, AND ENHANCES THE TRUE IDEA OF THE
PERFECTION OF GOD'S CHARACTER.
Up to the fall of man, therefore, from the beginning God was simply good;
after that He became a judge both severe and, as the Marcionites will have it,
cruel. Woman is at once condemned to bring forth in sorrow, and to serve her
husband,(8) although before she had heard without pain the increase of her race
proclaimed with the blessing, Increase and multiply, and although she had been
destined to be a help and not a slave to her male partner. Immediately the earth
is also cursed,(9) which before was blessed. Immediately spring up briers and
thorns, where once had grown grass, and herbs, and fruitful trees. Immediately
arise sweat and labour for bread, where previously on every tree was yielded
spontaneous food and untilled(10) nourishment. Thenceforth it is "man to the
ground," and not as before, "from the ground; to death thenceforth, but before, to
life; thenceforth with coats of skins, but before, nakedness without a blush.
Thus God's prior goodness was from(11) nature, His subsequent severity from(11)
a cause. The one was innate, the other accidental; the one His own, the other
adapted;(12) the one issuing from Him, the other admitted by Him. But then
nature could not have rightly permitted His goodness to have gone on inoperative,
nor the cause have allowed His severity to have escaped in disguise or
concealment. God provided the one for Himself, the other for the occasion.(13) You should
now set about showing also that the position of a judge is allied with evil,
who have been dreaming of another god as a purely good one--solely because you
cannot understand the Deity to be a judge; although we have proved God to be
also a judge. Or if not a judge, at any rate a perverse and useless originator of
a discipline which is not to be vindicated--in other words, not to be judged.
You do not, however, disprove God's being a judge, who have no proof to show
that He is a judge. You will undoubtedly have to accuse justice herself, which
provides the judge, or else to reckon her among the species of evil, that is, to
add injustice to the titles of goodness. But then justice is an evil, if
injustice is a good. And yet you are forced to declare injustice to be one of the
worst of things, and by the same rule are constrained to class justice amongst the
most excellent. Since there is nothing hostile(1) to evil which is not good,
and no enemy of good which is not evil. It follows, then, that as injustice is an
evil, so in the same degree is justice a good. Nor should it be regarded as
simply a species of goodness, but as the practical observance(2) of it, because
goodness (unless justice be so controlled as to be just) will not be goodness,
if it be unjust. For nothing is good which is unjust; while everything, on the
other hand, which is just is good.
CHAP. XII.--THE ATTRIBUTES OF GOODNESS AND JUSTICE SHOULD NOT BE SEPARATED.
THEY ARE COMPATIBLE IN THE TRUE GOD. THE FUNCTION OF JUSTICE IN THE DIVINE BEING
DESCRIBED.
Since, therefore, there is this union and agreement between goodness and
justice, you cannot prescribes their separation. With what face will you
determine the separation of your two Gods, regarding in their separate condition one
as distinctively the good God, and the other as distinctively the just God?
Where the just is, there also exists the good. in short, from the very first the
Creator was both good and also just. And both His attributes advanced together.
His goodness created, His justice arranged, the world; and in this process it
even then decreed that the world should be formed of good materials, because it
took counsel with goodness. The work of justice is apparent, in the separation
which was pronounced between light and darkness, between day and night, between
heaven and earth, between the water above and the water beneath, between the
gathering together of the sea and the mass of the dry land, between the greater
lights and the lesser, between the luminaries of the day and those of the night,
between male and female, between the tree of knowledge of death and of life,
between the world and paradise, between the aqueous and the earth-born animals.
As goodness conceived all things, so did justice discriminate them. With the
determination of the latter, everything was arranged and set in order. Every site
and quality(4) of the elements, their effect, motion, and state, the rise and
setting of each, are the judicial determinations of the Creator. Do not suppose
that His function as a judge must be defined as beginning I when evil began,
and so tarnish His justice i with the cause of evil. By such considerations,
then, do we show that this attribute advanced in company with goodness, the author
s of all things,--worthy of being herself, too, deemed innate and natural, and
not as accidentally accruing(6) to God, inasmuch as she was found to be in
Him, her Lord, the arbiter of His works.
CHAP. XIII.--FURTHER DESCRIPTION OF THE DIVINE JUSTICE; SINCE THE FALL OF MAN
IT HAS REGULATED THE DIVINE GOODNESS, GOD'S CLAIMS ON OUR LOVE AND OUR FEAR
RECONCILED.
But yet, when evil afterwards broke out, and the goodness of God began now
to have an adversary to contend against, God's justice also acquired another
function, even that of directing His goodness according to men's application for
it.(7) And this is the result: the divine goodness, being interrupted in that
free course whereby God was spontaneously good, is now dispensed according to
the deserts of every man; it is offered to the worthy, denied to the unworthy,
taken away from the unthankful, and also avenged on all its enemies. Thus the
entire office of justice in this respect becomes an agency(8) for goodness:
whatever it condemns by its judgment, whatever it chastises by its condemnation,
whatever (to use your phrase) it ruthlessly pursues,(9) it, in fact, benefits with
good instead of injuring. Indeed, the fear of judgment contributes to good,
not to evil. For good, now contending with an enemy, was not strong enough to
recommend itself(10) by itself alone. At all events, if it could do so much, it
could not keep its ground; for it had lost its impregnability through the foe,
unless some power of fear supervened, such as might compel the very unwilling to
seek after good, and take care of it. But who, when so many incentives to evil
were assailing him, would desire that good, which he could despise with
impunity? Who, again, would take care of what he could lose without danger? You read
bow broad is the road to evil,(11) how thronged in comparison with the opposite:
would not all glide down that road were there nothing in it to fear? We dread
the Creator's tremendous threats, and yet scarcely turn away from evil. What,
if He threatened not? Will you call this justice an evil, when it is all
unfavourable to evil? Will you deny it to be a good, when it has its eye towards(1)
good? What sort of being ought you to wish God to be? Would it be right to prefer
that He should be such, that sins might flourish under Him, and the devil make
mock at Him? Would you suppose Him to be a good God, who should be able to
make a man worse by security in sin? Who is the author of good, but He who also
requires it? In like manner who is a stranger to evil, except Him who is its
enemy? Who its enemy, besides Him who is its conqueror? Who else its conqueror,
than He who is its punisher? Thus God is wholly good, because in all things He is
on the side of good. In fact, He is omnipotent, because able both to help and
to hurt. Merely to profit is a comparatively small matter, because it can do
nothing else than a good turn. From such a conduct(2) with what confidence can I
hope for good, if this is its only ability? How can I follow after the reward of
innocence, if I have no regard to the requital of wrong-doing? I must needs
have my doubts whether he might not fail in recompensing one or other
alternative, who was unequal in his resources to meet both. Thus far, then, justice is the
very fulness of the Deity Himself, manifesting God as both a perfect father
and a perfect master: a father in His mercy, a master in His discipline; a father
in the mildness of His power, a master in its severity; a father who must be
loved with dutiful affection, a master who must needs be feared; be loved,
because He prefers mercy to sacrifice;(3) be feared because He dislikes sin; be
loved, because He prefers the sinner,s repentance to his death;(4) be feared,
because He dislikes the sinners who do not repent. Accordingly, the divine law
enjoins duties in respect of both these attributes: Thou shalt love God, and, Thou
shalt fear God. It proposed one for the obedient man, the other for the
transgressor.(5)
CHAP. XIV.--EVIL OF TWO KINDS, PENAL AND CRIMINAL. IT IS NOT OF THE LATTER
SORT THAT GOD IS THE AUTHOR, BUT ONLY OF THE FORMER, WHICH ARE PENAL, AND INCLUDED
IN HIS JUSTICE.
On all occasions does God meet you: it is He who smites, but also heals;
who kills, but also makes alive; who humbles, and yet exalts; who "creates(6)
evil," but also "makes peace;"(7)--so that from these very (contrasts Of HiS
providence) I may get an answer to the heretics. Behold, they say, how He
acknowledges Himself to be the creator of evil in the passage, "It is I who create
evil." They take a word whose one form reduces to confusion and ambiguity two kinds
of evils (because both sins and punishments are called evils), and will have
Him in every passage to be understood as the creator of all evil things, in order
that He may be designated the author of evil. We, on the contrary, distinguish
between the two meanings of the word in question, and, by separating evils of
sin from penal evils, mala culpoe from mala poenoe, confine to each of the two
classes its own author,--the devil as the author of the sinful evils (culpoe),
and God as the creator of penal evils (poenoe); so that the one class shall be
accounted as morally bad, and the other be classed as the operations of justice
passing penal sentences against the evils of sin. Of the latter class of evils
which are compatible with justice, God is therefore avowedly the creator. They
are, no doubt, evil to those by whom they are endured, but still on their own
account good, as being just and defensive of good and hostile to sin. In this
respect they are, moreover, worthy of God. Else prove them to be unjust, in
order to show them deserving of a place in the sinful class, that is to say, evils
of injustice; because if they turn out to belong to justice, they will be no
longer evil things, but good--evil only to the bad, by whom even directly good
things are condemned as evil. In this case, you must decide that man, although
the wilful contemner of the divine law, unjustly bore the doom which he would
like to have escaped; that the wickedness of those days was unjustly smitten by
the deluge, afterwards by the fire (of Sodom); that Egypt, although most depraved
and superstititious, and, worse still, the harasser of its
guest-population,(8) was unjustly stricken with the chastisement of its ten plagues. God hardens
the heart of Pharaoh. He deserved, however, to be influenced(9) to his
destruction, who had already denied God, already in his pride so often rejected His
ambassadors, accumulated heavy burdens on His people, and (to sum up all) as an
Egyptian, had long been guilty before God of Gentile idolatry, worshipping the
ibis and the crocodile in preference to the living God. Even His own people did
God visit in their ingratitude.(10) Against young lads, too, did He send forth
bears, for their irreverence to the prophet.(1)
CHAP. XV.--THE SEVERITY OF GOD COMPATIBLE WITH REASON AND JUSTICE. WHEN
INFLICTED, NOT MEANT TO BE ARBITRARY, BUT REMEDIAL.
Consider well,(2) then, before all things the justice of the Judge; and if
its purpose(3) be clear, then the severity thereof, and the operations of the
severity in its course, will appear compatible with reason and justice. Now,
that we may not linger too long on the point, (I would challenge you to) assert
the other reasons also, that you may condemn the Judge's sentences; extenuate
the delinquencies of the sinner, that you may blame his judicial conviction.
Never mind censuring the Judge; rather prove Him to be an unjust one. Well, then,
even though(4) He required the sins of the fathers at the hands of the children,
the hardness of the people made such remedial measures necessary s for them,
in order that, having their posterity in view, they might obey the divine law.
For who is there that feels not a greater care for his children than for
himself? Again, if the blessing of the fathers was destined likewise for their
offspring, previous to(6) any merit on the part of these, why might not the guilt of
the fathers also redound to their children? As was the grace, so was the
offence; so that the grace and the offence equally ran down through the whole race,
with the reservation, indeed, of that subsequent ordinance by which it became
possible to refrain from saying, that "the fathers had eaten a sour grape, and the
children's teeth were set on edge:"(7) in other words, that the father should
not bear the iniquity of the son, nor the son the iniquity of the father, but
that every man should be chargeable with his own sin; so that the harshness of
the law having been reduced(8) after the hardness of the people, justice was no
longer to judge the race, but individuals. If, however, you accept the gospel
of truth, you will discover on whom recoils the sentence of the Judge, when
requiting on sons the sins of their fathers, even on those who had been (hardened
enough) to imprecate spontaneously on themselves this condemnation: "His blood
be on us, and on our children."(9) This, therefore, the providence of God has
ordered throughout its course,(10) even as it had heard it.
CHAP. XVI.--TO THE SEVERITY OF GOD THERE BELONG ACCESSORY QUALITIES,
COMPATIBLE WITH JUSTICE. IF HUMAN PASSIONS ARE PREDICATED OF GOD, THEY MUST NOT BE
MEASURED ON THE SCALE OF HUMAN IMPERFECTION.
Even His severity then is good, because just: when the judge is good, that
is just. Other. qualities likewise are good, by means of which the good work
of a good severity runs out its course, whether wrath, or jealousy,(11) or
sternness.(12) For all these are as indispensable(13) to severity as severity is to
justice. The shamelessness of an age, which ought to have been reverent, had to
be avenged. Accordingly, qualities which pertain to the judge, when they are
actually free from blame, as the judge himself is, will never be able to be
charged upon him as a fault.(14) What would be said, if, when you thought the
doctor necessary, you were to find fault with his instruments, because they cut, or
cauterize, or amputate, or tighten; whereas there could be no doctor of any
value without his professional tools? Censure, if you please, the practitioner who
cuts badly, amputates clumsily, is rash in his cautery; and even blame his
implements as rough tools of his art. Your conduct is equally unreasonable,(15)
when you allow indeed that God is a judge, but at the same time destroy those
operations and dispositions by which He discharges His judicial functions. We are
taught(16) God by the prophets, and by Christ, not by the philosophers nor by
Epicurus. We who believe that God really lived on earth, and took upon Him the
low estate of human form,(17) for the purpose of man's salvation, are very far
from thinking as those do who refuse to believe that God cares for(18) anything.
Whence has found its way to the heretics an argument of this kind: If God is
angry, and jealous, and roused, and grieved, He must therefore be corrupted, and
must therefore die. Fortunately, however, it is a part of the creed of
Christians even to believe that God did die,(19) and yet that He is alive for
evermore. Superlative is their folly, who prejudge divine things from human; so that,
because in man's corrupt condition there are found passions of this description,
therefore there must be deemed to exist in God also sensations(1) of the same
kind. Discriminate between the natures, and assign to them their respective
senses, which are as diverse as their natures require, although they seem to have
a community of designations. We read, indeed, of God's right hand, and eyes,
and feet: these must not, however, be compared with those of human beings,
because they are associated in one and the same name. Now, as great as shall be the
difference between the divine and the human body, although their members pass
under identical names, so great will also be the diversity between the divine and
the human soul, notwithstanding that their sensations are designated by the
same names. These sensations in the human being are rendered just as corrupt by
the corruptibility of man's substance, as in God they are rendered incorruptible
by the incorruption of the divine essence. Do you really believe the Creator
to be God? By all means, is your reply. How then do you suppose that in God
there is anything human, and not that all is divine? Him whom you do not deny to be
God, you confess to be not human; because, when you confess Him to be God, you
have, in fact, already determind that He is undoubtedly diverse from every
sort of human conditions. Furthermore, although you allow, with others,(2) that
man was inbreathed by God into a living soul, not God by man, it is yet palpably
absurd of you to be placing human characteristics in God rather than divine
ones in man, and clothing God in the likeness of man, instead of man in the image
of God. And this, therefore, is to be deemed the likeness of God in man, that
the human soul have the same emotions and sensations as God, although they are
not of the same kind; differing as they do both in their conditions and their
issues according to their nature. Then, again, with respect to the opposite
sensations,--I mean meekness, patience, mercy, and the very parent of them all,
goodness,--why do you form your opinion of(3) the divine displays of these (from
the human qualities)? For we indeed do not possess them in perfection, because it
is God alone who is perfect. So also in regard to those others,--namely, anger
and irritation. we are not affected by them in so happy a manner, because God
alone is truly happy, by reason of His property of incorruptibility. Angry He
will possibly be, but not irritated, nor dangerously tempted;(4) He will be
moved, but not subverted.(5) All appliances He must needs use, because of all
contingencies; as many sensations as there are causes: anger because of the wicked,
and indignation because of the ungrateful, and jealousy because of the proud,
and whatsoever else is a hinderance to the evil. So, again, mercy on account of
the erring, and patience on account of the impenitent, and pre-eminent
resources(6) on account of the meritorious, and whatsoever is necessary to the good.
All these affections He is moved by in that peculiar manner of His own, in which
it is profoundly fit(7) that He should be affected; and it is owing to Him that
man is also similarly affected in a way which is equally his own.
CHAP. XVII.--TRACE GOD'S GOVERNMENT IN HISTORY AND IN HIS PRECEPTS, AND YOU
WILL FIND IT FULL OF HIS GOODNESS.
These considerations show that the entire order of God as Judge is an
operative one, and (that I may express myself in worthier words) protective of His
Catholic(8) and supreme goodness, which, removed as it is from judiciary
emotions, and pure in its own condition, the Marcionites refuse to acknowledge to be
in one and the same Deity, "raining on the just and on the unjust, and making
His sun to rise on the evil and on the good,"(9)--a bounty which no other god at
all exercises. It is true that Marcion has been bold enough to erase from the
gospel this testimony of Christ to the Creator; but yet the world itself is
inscribed with the goodness of its Maker, and the inscription is read by each
man's conscience. Nay, this very long-suffering of the Creator will tend to the
condemnation of Marcion; that patience, (I mean,) which waits for the sinner's
repentance rather than his death, which prefers mercy to sacrifice,(10) averting
from the Ninevites the ruin which had been already denounced against them,(11)
and vouchsafing to Hezekiah's tears an extension of his life,(12) and restoring
his kingly state to the monarch of Babylon after his complete repentance;(13)
that mercy, too, which conceded to the devotion of the people the son of Saul
when about to die,(14) and gave free forgiveness to David on his confessing his
sins against the house of Uriah;(1) which also restored the house of Israel as
often as it condemned it, and addressed to it consolation no less frequently
than reproof. Do not therefore look at God simply as Judge, but turn your
attention also to examples of His conduct as the Most Good.(2) Noting Him, as you do,
when He takes vengeance, consider Him likewise When He shows mercy.(3) In the
scale, against His severity place His gentleness. When you shall have discovered
both qualities to co-exist in the Creator, you will find in Him that very
circumstance which induces you to think there is another God. Lastly, come and
examine into His doctrine, discipline, precepts, and counsels. You will perhaps say
that there are equally good prescriptions in human laws. But Moses and God
existed before all your Lycurguses and Solons. There is not one after-age(4) which
does not take from primitive sources. At any rate, my Creator did not learn
from your God to issue such commandments as: Thou shalt not kill; thou shalt not
commit adultery; thou shalt not steal; thou shalt not bear false witness; thou
shalt not covet what is thy neighbour's; honour thy father and thy mother; and,
thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. To these prime counsels of innocence,
chastity, and justice, and piety, are also added prescriptions of humanity, as
when every seventh year slaves are released for liberty;(5) when at the same
period the land is spared from tillage; a place is also granted to the needy;
and from the treading ox's mouth the muzzle is removed, for the enjoyment of the
fruit of his labour before him, in order that kindness first shown in the case
of animals might be raised from such rudiments(6) to the refreshment(7) of men.
CHAP. XVIII.--SOME OF GOD'S LAWS DEFENDED AS GOOD, WHICH THE MARCIONITES
IMPEACHED, SUCH AS THE LEX TALIONIS. USEFUL PURPOSES IN A SOCIAL AND MORAL POINT OF
VIEW OF THIS, AND SUNDRY OTHER ENACTMENTS.
But what parts of the law can I defend as good with a greater confidence
than those which heresy has shown such a longing for?--as the statute of
retaliation, requiring eye for eye, tooth for tooth, and stripe for stripe.(8) Now
there is not here any smack of a permission to mutual injury; but rather, on the
whole, a provision for restraining violence. To a people which was very
obdurate, and wanting in faith towards God, it might seem tedious, and even incredible,
to expect from God that vengeance which was subsequently to be declared by the
prophet: "Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord."(9) Therefore, in
the meanwhile, the commission of wrong was to be checked(10) by the fear of a
retribution immediately to happen; and so the permission of this retribution was
to be the prohibition of provocation, that a stop might thus be put to all
hot-blooded(11) injury, whilst by the permission of the second the first is
prevented by fear, and by this deterring of the first the second fails to be
committed. By the same law another result is also obtained,(12) even the more ready
kindling of the fear of retaliation by reason of the very savour of passion which
is in it. There is no more bitter thing, than to endure the very suffering which
you have inflicted upon others. When, again, the law took somewhat away from
men's food, by pronouncing unclean certain animals which were once blessed, you
should understand this to be a measure for encouraging continence, and
recognise in it a bridle imposed on that appetite which, while eating angels' food,
craved after the cucumbers and melons of the Egyptians. Recognise also therein a
precaution against those companions of the appetite, even lust and luxury, which
are usually chilled by the chastening of the appetite.(13) For "the people sat
down to eat and to drink, and rose up to play."(14) Furthermore, that an eager
wish for money might be restrained, so far as it is caused by the need of
food, the desire for costly meat and drink was taken out of their power. Lastly, in
order that man might be more readily educated by God for fasting, he was
accustomed to such articles of food as were neither plentiful nor sumptuous, and not
likely to pamper the appetite of the luxurious. Of course the Creator deserved
all the greater blame, because it was from His own people that He took away
food, rather than from the more ungrateful Marcionites. As for the burdensome
sacrifices also, and the troublesome scrupulousness of their ceremonies(15) and
oblations, no one should blame them, as if God specially required them for
Himself: for He plainly asks, "To what purpose is the multitude of your sacrifices
unto me?" and, "Who hath required them at your hand?"(1) But he should see herein
a careful provision on God's part, which showed His wish to bind to His own
religion a people who were prone to idolatry and transgression by that kind of
services wherein consisted the superstition of that period; that He might call
them away therefrom, while requesting it to be performed to Himself, as if He
desired that no sin should be committed in making idols.
CHAP.XIX.--THE MINUTE PRESCRIPTIONS OF THE LAW MEANT TO KEEP THE PEOPLE
DEPENDENT ON GOD. THE PROPHETS SENT BY GOD IN PURSUANCE OF HIS GOODNESS. MANY
BEAUTIFUL PASSAGES FROM THEM QUOTED IN ILLUSTRATION OF THIS ATTRIBUTE.
But even in the common transactions of life, and of human intercourse at
home and in public, even to the care of the smallest vessels, He in every
possible manner made distinct arrangement; in order that, when they everywhere
encountered these legal instructions, they might not be at any moment out of the
sight of God. For what could better tend to make a man happy, than having "his
delight in the law of the Lord?" "In that law would he meditate day and night.(3)
It was not in severity that its Author promulgated this law, but in the interest
of the highest benevolence, which rather aimed at subduing(4) the nation's
hardness of heart, and by laborious services hewing out a fealty which was (as
yet) untried in obedience: for I purposely abstain from touching on the mysterious
senses of the law, considered in its spiritual and prophetic relation, and as
abounding in types of almost every variety and sort. It is enough at present,
that it simply bound a man to God, so that no one ought to find fault with it,
except him who does not choose to serve God. To help forward this beneficent,
not onerous, purpose of the law, the prophets were also ordained by the self-same
goodness of God, teaching precepts worthy of God, how that men should "cease
to do evil, learn to do well, seek judgment, judge the fatherless,(5) and plead
for the widow:"(6) be fond of the divine expostulations:(7) avoid contact with
the wicked:(8) "let the oppressed go free:"(9) dismiss the unjust sentence.(10)
"deal their bread to the hungry; bring the outcast into their house; cover the
naked, when they see him; nor hide themselves from their own flesh and
kin:"(11) "keep their tongue from evil, and their lips from speaking guile: depart
from evil, and do good; seek peace, and pursue it:"(12) be angry, and sin not;
that is, not persevere in anger, or be enraged:(13) "walk not in the counsel of
the ungodly; nor stand in the way of sinners; nor sit in the seat of the
scornful."(14) Where then? "Behold, how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to
dwell together in unity;"(15) meditating (as they do) day and night in the law of
the Lord, because "it is better to trust in the Lord than to put confidence in
man; better to hope in the Lord than in man."(16) For what recompense shall man
receive from God? "He shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water,
that bringeth forth his fruit in his season; his leaf also shall not wither, and
whatsoever he doeth shall prosper."(17) "He that hath clean hands and a pure
heart, who hath not taken God's name in vain, nor sworn deceitfully to his
neighbour, he shall receive blessing from the Lord, and mercy from the God of his
salvation."(18) "For the eyes of the Lord are upon them that fear Him, upon them
that hope in His mercy, to deliver their souls from death," even eternal death,
"and to nourish them in their hunger," that is, after eternal life.(19) "Many
are the afflictions of the righteous, but the Lord delivereth them out of them
all."(20) "Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of His saints."(21)
"The Lord keepeth all their bones; not one of them shall be broken."(22) The Lord
will redeem the souls of His servants.(23) We have adduced these few quotations
from a mass of the Creator's Scriptures; and no more, I suppose, are wanted to
prove Him to be a most good God, for they sufficiently indicate both the
precepts of His goodness and the first-fruits(24) thereof.
CHAP. XX.--THE MARCIONITES CHARGED GOD WITH HAVING INSTIGATED THE HEBREWS TO
SPOIL THE EGYPTIANS. DEFENCE OF THE DIVINE DISPENSATION IN THAT MATTER.
But these "saucy cuttles"(25) (of heretics) under the figure of whom the
law about things to be eaten(1) prohibited this very kind of piscatory ailment,
as soon as they find themselves confuted, eject the black venom of their
blasphemy, and so spread about in all directions the object which (as is now plain)
they severally have in view, when they put forth such assertions and
protestations as shall obscure and tarnish the rekindled light(2) of the Creator's bounty.
We will, however, follow their wicked design, even through these black clouds,
and drag to light their tricks of dark calumny, laying to the Creator's charge
with especial emphasis the fraud and theft of gold and silver which the
Hebrews were commanded by Him to practise against the Egyptians. Come, unhappy
heretic, I cite even you as a witness; first look at the case of the two nations, and
then you will form a judgment of the Author of the command. The Egyptians put
in a claim on the Hebrews for these gold and silver vessels.(3) The Hebrews
assert a counter claim, alleging that by the bond(4) of their respective fathers,
attested by the written engagement of both parties, there were due to them the
arrears of that laborious slavery of theirs, for the bricks they had so
painfully made, and the cities and palaces s which they had built. What shall be your
verdict,you discoverer(6) of the most good God? That the Hebrews must admit the
fraud, or the Egyptians the compensation? For they maintain that thus has the
question been settled by the advocates on both sides,(7) of the Egyptians
demanding their vessels, and the Hebrews claiming the requital of their labours. But
for all they say,(8) the Egyptians justly renounced their restitution-claim
then and there; while the Hebrews to this day, in spite of the Marcionites,
re-assert their demand for even greater damages,(9) insisting that, however large
was their loan of the gold and silver, it would not be compensation enough, even
if the labour of six hundred thousand men should be valued at only "a
farthing"(10) a day a piece. Which, however, were the more in number--those who claimed
the vessel, or those who dwelt in the palaces and cities? Which, too, the
greater--the grievance of the Egyptians against the Hebrews, or "the favour"(11)
which they displayed towards them? Were free men reduced to servile labour, in
order that the Hebrews might simply proceed against the Egyptians by action at law
for injuries; or in order that their officers might on their benches sit and
exhibit their backs and shoulders shamefully mangled by the fierce application
of the scourge? It was not by a few plates and cup--in all cases the property,
no doubt, of still fewer rich men--that any one would pronounce that
compensation should have been awarded to the Hebrews, but both by all the resources of
these and by the contributions of all the people.(12) If, therefore, the case of
the Hebrews be a good one, the Creator's case must likewise be a good one; that
is to say, his command, when He both made the Egyptians unconsciously grateful,
and also gave His own people their discharge in full(13) at the time of their
migration by the scanty comfort of a tacit requital of their long servitude. It
was plainly less than their due which He commanded to be exacted. The
Egyptians ought to have given back their men-children(14) also to the Hebrews.
CHAP. XXI.--THE LAW OF THE SABBATH-DAY EXPLAINED. THE EIGHT DAYS' PROCESSION
AROUND JERICHO. THE GATHERING OF STICKS A VIOLATION.
Similarly on other points also, you reproach Him with fickleness and
instability for contradictions in His commandments, such as that He forbade work to
be done on Sabbath-days, and yet at the siege of Jericho ordered the ark to be
carried round the walls during eight days; in other words, of course, actually
on a Sabbath. You do not, however, consider the law of the Sabbath: they are
human works, not divine, which it prohibits.(15) For it says, "Six days shalt
thou labour, and do all thy work; but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord
thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work." What work? Of course your own. The
conclusion is, that from the Sabbath-day He removes those works which He had
before enjoined for the six days, that is, your own works; in other words, human
works of daily life. Now, the carrying around of the ark is evidently not an
ordinary daily duty, nor yet a human one; but a rare and a sacred work, and, as
being then ordered by the direct precept of God, a divine one. And t might fully
explain what this signified, were it not a tedious process to open out the
forms(1) of all the Creator's proofs, which you would, moreover, probably refuse to
allow. It is more to the point, if you be confuted on plain matters(2) by the
simplicity of truth rather than curious reasoning. Thus, in the present
instance, there is a clear distinction respecting the Sabbath's prohibition of human
labours, not divine ones. Accordingly, the man who went and gathered sticks on
the Sabbath-day was punished with death. For it was his own work which he did;
and this(3) the law forbade. They, however, who on the Sabbath carried the ark
round Jericho, did it with impunity. For it was not their own work, but God's,
which they executed, and that too, from His express commandment.
CHAP. XXII.--THE BRAZEN SERPENT AND THE GOLDEN CHERUBIM WERE NOT VIOLATIONS OF
THE SECOND COMMANDMENT. THEIR MEANING.
Likewise, when forbidding the similitude to be made of all things which
are in heaven, and in earth, and in the waters, He declared also the reasons, as
being prohibitory of all material exhibition(4) of a latent(5) idolatry. For He
adds: "Thou shalt not bow down to them, nor serve them." The form, however, of
the brazen serpent which the Lord afterwards commanded Moses to make, afforded
no pretext(6) for idolatry, but was meant for the cure of those who were
plagued with the fiery serpents? I say nothing of what was figured by this cure.(8)
Thus, too, the golden Cherubim and Seraphim were purely an ornament in the
figured fashion(9) of the ark; adapted to ornamentation for reasons totally remote
from all condition of idolatry, on account of which the making a likeness is
prohibited; and they are evidently not at variance with(10) this law of
prohibition, because they are not found in that form(11) of similitude, in reference to
which the prohibition is given. We have spoken(12) of the rational institution
of the sacrifices, as calling off their homage from idols to God; and if He
afterwards rejected this homage, saying, "To what purpose is the multitude of your
sacrifices unto me?"(13)--He meant nothing else than this to be understood,
that He had never really required such homage for Himself. For He says, "I will
not eat the flesh of bulls;"(14) and in another passage: "The everlasting God
shall neither hunger nor thirst."(15) Although He had respect to the offerings of
Abel, and smelled a sweet savour from the holocaust of Noah, yet what pleasure
could He receive from the flesh of sheep, or the odour of burning victims? And
yet the simple and God-fearing mind of those who offered what they were
receiving from God, both in the way of food and of a sweet smell, was favourably
accepted before God, in the sense of respectful homage(16) to God, who did not so
much want what was offered, as that which prompted the offering. Suppose now,
that some dependant were to offer to a rich man or a king, who was in want of
nothing, some very insignificant gift, will the amount and quality of the gift
bring dishonour(17) to the rich man and the king; or will the consideration(18) of
the homage give them pleasure? Were, however, the dependant, either of his own
accord or even in compliance with a command, to present to him gifts suitably
to his rank, and were he to observe the solemnities due to a king, only without
faith and purity of heart, and without any readiness for other acts of
obedience, will not that king or rich man consequently exclaim: "To what purpose is
the multitude of your sacrifices unto me? I am full of your solemnities, your
feast-days, and your Sabbaths."(19) By calling them yours, as having been
performed(20) after the giver's own will, and not according to the religion of God
(since he displayed them as his own, and not as God's), the Almighty in this
passage, demonstrated how suitable to the conditions of the case, and how reasonable,
was His rejection of those very offerings which He had commanded to be made to
Him.
CHAP. XXIII.--GOD'S PURPOSES IN ELECTION AND REJECTION OF THE SAME MEN, SUCH
AS KING SAUL, EXPLAINED, IN ANSWER TO THE MARCIONITE CAVIL.
Now, although you will have it that He is inconstant(1) in respect of
persons, sometimes disapproving where approbation is deserved; or else wanting in
foresight, bestowing approbation on men who ought rather to be reprobated, as if
He either censured(2) His own past judgments, or could not forecast His future
ones; yet s nothing is so consistent for even a good judge(4) as both to
reject and to choose on the merits of the present moment. Saul is chosen,(5) but he
is not yet the despiser of the prophet Samuel.(6) Solomon is rejected; but he
is now become a prey to foreign women, and a slave to the idols of Moab and
Sidon. What must the Creator do, in order to escape the censure of the Marcionites?
Must He prematurely condemn men, who are thus far correct in their conduct,
because of future delinquencies? But it is not the mark of a good God to condemn
beforehand persons who have not yet deserved condemnation. Must He then refuse
to eject sinners, on account of their previous good deeds? But it is not the
characteristic of a just judge to forgive sins in consideration of former virtues
which are no longer practised. Now, who is so faultless among men, that God
could always have him in His choice, and never be able to reject him? Or who, on
the other hand, is so void of any good work, that God could reject him for
ever, and never be able to choose him? Show me, then, the man who is always good,
and he will not be rejected; show me, too, him who is always evil, and he will
never be chosen. Should, however, the same man, being found on different
occasions in the pursuit of both (good and evil) be recompensed(7) in both directions
by God, who is both a good and judicial Being, He does not change His judgments
through inconstancy or want of foresight, but dispenses reward according to
the deserts of each case with a most unwavering and provident decision.(8)
CHAP. XXIV.--INSTANCES OF GOD'S REPENTANCE, AND NOTABLY IN THE CASE OF THE
NINEVITES, ACCOUNTED FOR AND VINDICATED.
Furthermore, with respect to the repentance which occurs in His
conduct?(9) you interpret it with similar perverseness just as if it were with fickleness
and improvidence that He repented, or on the recollection of some wrong-doing;
because He actually said, "It repenteth me that I have set up Saul to be
king,(10) "very much as if He meant that His repentance savoured of an
acknowledgment of some evil work or error. Well,(11) this is not always implied. For there
occurs even in good works a confession of repentance, as a reproach and
condemnation of the man who has proved himself unthankful for a benefit. For instance,
in this case of Saul, the Creator, who had made no mistake in selecting him for
the kingdom, and endowing him with His Holy Spirit, makes a statement
respecting the goodliness of his person, how that He had most fitly chosen him as being
at that moment the choicest man, so that (as He says) there was not his fellow
among the children of Israel.(12) Neither was He ignorant how he would
afterwards turn out. For no one would bear you out in imputing lack of foresight to
that God whom, since you do not deny Him to be divine, you allow to be also
foreseeing; for this proper attribute of divinity exists in Him. However, He did, as
I have said, burden(13) the guilt of Saul with the confession of His own
repentance; but as there is an absence of all error and wrong in His choice of Saul,
it follows that this repentance is to be understood as upbraiding another(14)
rather than as self-incriminating.(15) Look here then, say you: I discover a
self-incriminating case in the matter of the Ninevites, when the book of Jonah
declares, "And God repented of the evil that He had said that He would do unto
them; and He did it not."(16) In accordance with which Jonah himself says unto
the Lord, "Therefore I fled before unto Tarshish; for I knew that Thou art a
gracious God and merciful, slow to anger, and of great kindness, and repentest Thee
of the evil."(17) It is well, therefore, that he premised the attribute(18) of
the most good God as most patient over the wicked, and most abundant in mercy
and kindness over such as acknowledged and bewailed their sins, as the
Ninevites were then doing. For if He who has this attribute is the Most Good, you will
have first to relinquish that position of yours, that the very contact with(19)
evil is incompatible with such a Being, that is, with the most good God. And
because Marcion, too, maintains that a good tree ought not to produce bad fruit;
but yet he has mentioned "evil" (in the passage under discussion), which the
most good God is incapable of,(1) is there forthcoming any explanation of these
"evils," which may render them compatible with even the most Good? There is, We
say, in short, that evil in the present case(2) means, not what may be
attributed to the Creator's nature as an evil being, but what may be attributed to His
power as a judge. In accordance with which He declared, "I create evil,"(3)
and, "I frame evil against you;"(4) meaning not to sinful evils, but avenging
ones. What sort of stigmas pertains to these, congruous as they are with God's
judicial character, we have sufficiently explained.(6) Now although these are
called "evils," they are yet not reprehensible in a judge; nor because of this
their name do they show that the judge is evil: so in like manner will this
particular evil(7) be understood to be one of this class of judiciary evils, and along
with them to be compatible with (God as) a judge. The Greeks also sometimes(8)
use the word "evils" for troubles and injuries (not malignant ones), as in
this passage of yours(9) is also meant. Therefore, if the Creator repented of such
evil as this, as showing that the creature deserve dcondemnation, and ought to
be punished for his sin, then, in(10) the present instance no fault of a
criminating nature will be imputed to the Creator, for having deservedly and
worthily decreed the destruction of a city so full of iniquity. What therefore He had
justly decreed, having no evil purpose in His decree, He decreed from the
principle of justice,(11) not from malevolence. Yet He gave it the name of "evil,"
because of the evil and desert involved in the very suffering itself. Then, you
will say, if you excuse the evil under name of justice, on the ground that He
had justly determined destruction against the people of Nineveh, He must even on
this argument be blameworthy, for having repented of an act of justice, which
surely should not be repented of. Certainly not,(12) my reply is; God will
never repent of an act of justice. And it now remains that we should understand
what God's repentance means. For although man repents most frequently on the
recollection of a sin, and occasionally even from the unpleasantness(13) of some
good action, this is never the case with God. For, inasmuch as God neither commits
sin nor condemns a good action, in so far is there no room in Him for
repentance of either a good or an evil deed. Now this point is determined for you even
in the scripture which we have quoted. Samuel says to Saul, "The Lord hath rent
the kingdom of Israel from thee this day, and hath given it to a neighbour of
thine that is better than thou;"(14) and into two parts shall Israel be
divided: "for He will not turn Himself, nor repent; for He does not repent as a man
does."(15) According, therefore, to this definition, the divine repentance takes
in all cases a different form from that of man, in that it is never regarded as
the result of improvidence or of fickleness, or of any condemnation of a good
or an evil work. What, then, will be the mode of God's repentance? It is
already quite clear,(16) if you avoid referring it to human conditions. For it will
have no other meaning than a simple change of a prior purpose; and this is
admissible without any blame even in a man, much more(17) in God, whose every
purpose is faultless. Now in Greek the word for repentance (<greek>metanoia</greek>)
is formed, not from the confession of a sin, but from a change of mind, which
in God we have shown to be regulated by the occurrence of varying circumstances.
CHAP. XXV.--GOD'S DEALINGS WITH ADAM AT THE FALL, AND WITH CAIN AFTER HIS
CRIME, ADMIRABLY EXPLAINED AND DEFENDED.
It is now high time that I should, in order to meet all(18) objections of
this kind, proceed to the explanation and clearing up(19) of the other
trifles,(20) weak points, and inconsistencies, as you deemed them. God calls out to
Adam,(21) Where art thou? as if ignorant where he was; and when he alleged that
the shame of his nakedness was the cause (of his hiding himself), He inquired
whether he had eaten of the tree, as if He were in doubt. By no means;(22) God was
neither uncertain about the commission of the sin, nor ignorant of Adam's
whereabouts. It was certainly proper to summon the offender, who was concealing
himself from the consciousness of his sin, and to bring him forth into the
presence of his Lord, not merely by the calling out of his name, but with a
home-thrust blow(1) at the sin which he had at that moment committed. For the question
ought not to be read in a merely interrogative tone, Where art thou, Adam? but
with an impressive and earnest voice, and with an air of imputation, Oh, Adam,
where art thou?--as much as to intimate: thou art no longer here, thou art in
perdition--so that the voice is the utterance of One who is at once rebuking and
sorrowing.(2) But of course some part of paradise had escaped the eye of Him who
holds the universe in His hand as if it were a bird's nest, and to whom heaven
is a throne and earth a footstool; so that He could not see, before He
summoned him forth, where Adam was, both while lurking and when eating of the
forbidden fruit! The wolf or the paltry thief escapes not the notice of the keeper of
your vineyard or your garden! And God, I suppose, with His keener vision,(3)
from on high was unable to miss the sight of(4) aught which lay beneath Him!
Foolish heretic, who treat with scorn(5) so fine an argument of God's greatness and
man's instruction! God put the question with an appearance of uncertainty, in
order that even here He might prove man to be the subject of a free will in the
alternative of either a denial or a confession, and give to him the opportunity
of freely ackowledging his transgression, and, so far,(6) of lightening it.(7)
In like manner He inquires of Cain where his brother was, just as if He had
not yet heard the blood of Abel crying from the ground, in order that he too
might have the opportunity from the same power of the will of spontaneously
denying, and to this degree aggravating, his crime; and that thus there might be
supplied to us examples of confessing sins rather than of denying them: so that even
then was initiated the evangelic doctrine, "By thy words(8) thou shall be
justified, and by thy words thou shalt be condemned."(9)
Now, although Adam was by reason of his condition under law(10) subject to
death, yet was hope preserved to him by the Lord's saying, "Behold, Adam is become
as one of us;"(11) that is, in consequence of the future taking of the man
into the divine nature. Then what follows? "And now, lest he put forth his hand,
and take also of the tree of life, (and eat), and live for ever." Inserting thus
the particle of present time, "And now," He shows that He had made for a time,
and at present, a prolongation of man's life. Therefore He did not
actually(12) curse Adam and Eve, for they were candidates for restoration, and they had
been relieved(13) by confession. Cain, however, He not only cursed; but when he
wished to atone for his sin by death, He even prohibited his dying, so that he
had to bear the load of this prohibition in addition to his crime. This, then,
will prove to be the ignorance of our God, which was simulated on this account,
that delinquent man should not be unaware of what he ought to do. Coming down
to the case of Sodom and Gomorrha, he says: "I will go down now, and see
whether they have done altogether according to the cry of it which is come unto me;
and if not, I will know."(14) Well, was He in this instance also uncertain
through ignorance, and desiring to know? Or was this a necessary tone of utterance,
as expressive of a minatory and not a dubious sense, under the colour of an
inquiry? If you make merry at God's "going down," as if He could not except by
the descent have accomplished His judgment, take care that you do not strike your
own God with as hard a blow. For He also came down to accomplish what He
wished.
CHAP. XXVI.--THE OATH OF GOD: ITS MEANING. MOSES, WHEN DEPRECATING GOD'S WRATH
AGAINST ISRAEL, A TYPE OF CHRIST.
But God also swears. Well, is it,I wonder, by the God of Marcion? No,no,
he says; a much vainer oath--by Himself!(15) What was He to do, when He knew(16)
of no other God; especially when He was swearing to this very point, that
besides himself there was absolutely no God? Is it then of swearing falsely that
you convict(17) Him, or of swearing a vain oath? But it is not possible for him
to appear to have sworn falsely, when he was ignorant, as you say he was, that
there was another God. For when he swore by that which he knew, he really
committed no perjury. But it was not a vain oath for him to swear that there was no
other God. It would indeed be a vain oath, if there had been no persons who
believed that there were other Gods, like the worshippers of idols then, and the
heretics of the present day. Therefore He swears by Himself, in order that you
may believe God, even when He swears that there is besides Himself no other God
at all. But you have yourself, O Marcion, compelled God to do this. For even so
early as then were you foreseen. Hence, if He swears both in His promises and
His threatenings, and thus extorts(1) faith which at first was difficult,
nothing is unworthy of God which causes men to believe in God. But (you say) God was
even then mean(2) enough in His very fierceness, when, in His wrath against the
people for their consecration of the calf, He makes this request of His
servant Moses: "Let me alone, that my wrath may wax hot against them, and that I
may consume them; and I will make of thee a great nation."(3) Accordingly, you
maintain that Moses is better than his God, as the deprecator, nay the averter,
of His anger. "For," said he, "Thou shall not do this; or else destroy me along
with them."(4) Pitiable are ye also, as well as the people, since you know not
Christ, prefigured in the person of Moses as the deprecator of the Father, and
the offerer of His own life for the salvation of the people. It is enough,
however, that the nation was at the instant really given to Moses. That which he,
as a servant, was able to ask of the Lord, the Lord required of Himself. For
this purpose did He say to His servant, "Let me alone, that I may consume them,"
in order that by his entreaty, and by offering himself, he might hinder(5) (the
threatened judgment), and that you might by such an Instance learn how much
privilege is vouch-safed(6) with God to a faithful man and a prophet.
CHAP. XXVII.--OTHER OBJECTIONS CONSIDERED. GOD'S CONDESCENSION IN THE
INCARNATION NOTHING DEROGATORY TO THE DIVINE BEING IN THIS ECONOMY. THE DIVINE
MAJESTY WORTHILY SUSTAINED BY THE ALMIGHTY FATHER, NEVER VISIBLE TO MAN.
PERVERSENESS OF THE MARCIONITE CAVILS.
And now, that I may briefly pass in review(7) the other points which you
have thus far been engaged in collecting, as mean, weak, and unworthy, for
demolishing(8) the Creator, I will propound them in a simple and definite
statement:(9) that God would have been unable to hold any intercourse with men, if He had
not taken on Himself the emotions and affections of man, by means of which He
could temper the strength of His majesty, which would no doubt have been
incapable of endurance to the moderate capacity of man, by such a humiliation as was
indeed degrading(10) to Himself, but necessary for man, and such as on this
very account became worthy of God, because nothing is so worthy of God as the
salvation of man. If I were arguing with heathens, I should dwell more at length on
this point; although with heretics too the discussion does not stand on very
different grounds. Inasmuch as ye yourselves have now come to the belief that
God moved about(11) in the form and all other circumstances of man's nature,(12)
you will of course no longer require to be convinced that God conformed Himself
to humanity, but feel yourselves bound by your own faith. For if the God (in
whom ye believe,) even from His higher condition, prostrated the supreme dignity
of His majesty to such a lowliness as to undergo death, even the death of the
cross, why can you not suppose that some humiliations(13) are becoming to our
God also, only more tolerable than Jewish contumelies, and crosses,(14) and
sepulchres? Are these the humiliations which henceforth are to raise a prejudice
against Christ (the subject as He is of human passions(15)) being a partaker of
that Godhead(16) against which you make the participation in human qualities a
reproach? Now we believe that Christ did ever act in the name of God the Father;
that He actually(17) from the beginning held intercourse with (men);
actually(18) communed with(19) patriarchs and prophets; was the Son of the Creator; was
His Word; whom God made His Son(20) by emitting Him from His own self,(21) and
thenceforth set Him over every dispensation and (administration of) His
will,(22) making Him a little lower than the angels, as is written in David.(23) In
which lowering of His condition He received from the Father a dispensation in
those very respects which you blame as human; from the very beginning
learning,(24) even then, (that state of a) man which He was destined in the end to
become.(25) It is He who descends, He who interrogates, He who demands, He who swears.
With regard, however, to the Father, the very gospel which is common to us will
testify that He was never visible, according to the word of Christ: "No man
knoweth the Father, save the Son."(1) For even in the Old Testament He had
declared, "No man shall see me, and live."(2) He means that the Father is invisible,
in whose authority and in whose name was He God who appeared as the Son of God.
But with us(3) Christ is received in the person of Christ, because even in
this manner is He our God. Whatever attributes therefore you require as worthy of
God, must be found in the Father, who is invisible and unapproachable, and
placid, and (so to speak) the God of the philosophers; whereas those qualities
which you censure as unworthy must be supposed to be in the Son, who has been seen,
and heard, and encountered, the Witness and Servant of the Father, uniting in
Himself man and God, God in mighty deeds, in weak ones man, in order that He
may give to man as much as He takes from God. What in your esteem is the entire
disgrace of my God, Is in fact the sacrament of man's salvation God held
converse with man, that man might learn to act as God. God dealt on equal terms(4)
with man, that man might be able to deal on equal terms with God. God was found
little, that man might become very great. You who disdain such a God, I hardly
know whether you ex fide believe that God was crucified. How great, then, is your
perversity in respect of the two characters of the Creator! You designate Him
as Judge, and reprobate as Cruelty that severity of the Judge which only acts
in accord with the merits of cases. You require God to be very good, and yet
despise as meanness that gentleness of His which accorded with His kindness, (and)
held lowly converse in proportion to the mediocrity of man's estate. He
pleases you not, whether great or little, neither as your judge nor as your friend !
What if the same features should be discovered in your God? That He too is a
judge, we have already shown in the proper section:(5) that from being a judge He
must needs be severe; and from being severe He must also be cruel, if indeed
cruel.(6)
CHAP. XXVIII.--THE TABLES TURNED UPON MARCION, BY CONTRASTS, IN FAVOUR OF THE
TRUE GOD.
Now, touching the weaknesses and malignities, and the other (alleged),
notes (of the Creator), I too shall advance antitheses in rivalry to Marcion's. If
my God knew not of any other superior to Himself, your god also was utterly
unaware that there was any beneath himself. It is just what Heraclitus "the
obscure"(7) said; whether it be up or down,(8) it comes to the same thing. If,
indeed, he was not ignorant (of his position), it must have occurred to Him from
the beginning. Sin and death, and the author of sin too--the devil--and all the
evil which my God permitted to be, this also, did your god permit; for he
allowed Him to permit it. Our God changed His purposes;(9) in like manner yours did
also. For he who cast his look so late in the human race, changed that purpose,
which for so long a period had refused to cast that look. Our God repented Him
of the evil in a given case; so also did yours. For by the fact that he at last
had regard to the salvation of man, he showed such a repentance of his
previous disregard(10) as was due for a wrong deed. But neglect of man's salvation
will be accounted a wrong deed, simply because it has been remedied(11) by his
repentance in the conduct of your god. Our God you say commanded a fraudulent act,
but in a matter of gold and silver. Now, inasmuch as man is more precious than
gold and silver, in so far is your god more fraudulent still, because he robs
man of his Lord and Creator. Eye for eye does our God require; but your god
does even a greater injury, (in your ideas,) when he prevents an act of
retaliation. For what man will not return a blow, without waiting to be struck a second
time.(12) Our God (you say) knows not whom He ought to choose. Nor does your
god, for if he had foreknown the issue, he would not have chosen the traitor
Judas. If you allege that the Creator practised deception(1) in any instance, there
was a far greater mendacity in your Christ, whose very body was unreal.(2) Many
were consumed by the severity of my God. Those also who were not saved by your
god are verily disposed by him to ruin. My God ordered a man to be slain. Your
god willed himself to be put to death; not less a homicide against himself
than in respect of him by whom he meant to be slain. I will moreover prove to
Marcion that they were many who were slain by his god; for he made every one a
homicide: in other words, he doomed him to perish, except when people failed in no
duty towards Christ.(3) But the straightforward virtue of truth is contented
with few resources.(4) Many things will be necessary for falsehood.
CHAP. XXIX.--MARCION'S OWN ANTITHESES, IF ONLY THE TITLE AND OBJECT OF THE
WORK BE EXCEPTED, AFFORD PROOFS OF THE CONSISTENT ATTRIBUTES OF THE TRUE GOD.
But I would have attacked Marcion's own Antitheses in closer and fuller
combat, if a more elaborate demolition of them were required in maintaining for
the Creator the character of a good God and a Judge, alters the examples of both
points, which we have shown to be so worthy of God. Since, however, these two
attributes of goodness and justice do together make up the proper fulness of
the Divine Being as omnipotent, I am able to content myself with having now
compendiously refuted his Antitheses, which aim at drawing distinctions out of the
qualities of the (Creator's) artifices,(6) or of His laws, or of His great
works; and thus sundering Christ from the Creator, as the most Good from the Judge,
as One who is merciful from Him who is ruthless, and One who brings salvation
from Him who causes ruin. The truth is,(7) they(8) rather unite the two Beings
whom they arrange in those diversities (of attribute), which yet are compatible
in God. For only take away the title of Marcion's book,(9) and the intention
and purpose of the work itself, and you could get no better demonstration that
the self-same God was both very good and a Judge, inasmuch as these two
characters are only competently found in God. Indeed, the very effort which is made in
the selected examples to oppose Christ to the Creator, conduces all the more to
their union. For so entirely one and the same was the nature of the Divine
Beings, the good and the severe, as shown both by the same examples and in similar
proofs, that It willed to display Its goodness to those on whom It had first
inflicted Its severity. The difference in time was no matter of surprise, when
the same God was afterwards merciful in presence of evils which had been
subdued,(10) who had once been so austere whilst they were as yet unsubdued. Thus, by
help of the Antitheses, the dispensation of the Creator can be more readily
shown to have been reformed by Christ, rather than destroyed;(11) restored, rather
than abolished;(12) especially as you sever your own god from everything like
acrimonious conduct,(13) even from all rivalry whatsoever with the Creator. Now,
since this is the case, how comes it to pass that the Antitheses demonstrate
Him to have been the Creator's rival in every disputed cause?(14) Well, even
here, too, I will allow that in these causes my God has been a jealous God, who
has in His own right taken especial care that all things done by Him should be in
their beginning of a robuster growth;(15) and this in the way of a good,
because rational(16) emulation, which tends to maturity. In this sense the world
itself will acknowledge His "antitheses," from the contrariety of its own
elements, although it has been regulated with the very highest reason.(17) Wherefore,
most thoughtless Marcion, it was your duty to have shown that one (of the two
Gods you teach) was a God of light, and the other a God of darkness; and then you
would have found it an easier task to persuade us that one was a God of
goodness, the other a God of severity. How ever, the "antithesis" (or variety of
administration) will rightly be His property, to whom it actually belongs in
(the government of) the world.