THE FIVE BOOKS AGAINST MARCION -- BOOK V (CHAP. I to CHAP. X)
BOOK V.
WHEREIN TERTULLIAN PROVES, WITH RESPECT TO ST. PAUL'S EPISTLES, WHAT HE HAD
PROVED IN THE PRECEDING BOOK WITH RESPECT TO ST. LUKE'S GOSPEL. FAR FROM BEING AT
VARIANCE, THEY WERE IN PERFECT UNISON WITH THE WRITINGS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT,
AND THEREFORE TESTIFIED THAT THE CREATOR WAS THE ONLY GOD, AND THAT THE LORD
JESUS WAS HIS CHRIST. AS IN THE PRECEDING BOOKS, TERTULLIAN SUPPORTS HIS ARGUMENT
WITH PROFOUND REASONING, AND MANY HAPPY ILLUSTRATIONS OF HOLY SCRIPTURE.
CHAP. I.--INTRODUCTORY. THE APOSTLE PAUL HIMSELF NOT THE PREACHER OF A NEW
GOD. CALLED BY JESUS CHRIST, ALTHOUGH AFTER THE OTHER APOSTLES, HIS MISSION WAS
FROM THE CREATOR. STATES HOW. THE ARGUMENT, AS IN THE CASE OF THE GOSPEL,
CONFINING PROOFS TO SUCH PORTIONS OF ST. PAUL'S WRITINGS AS MARCION ALLOWED.
There is nothing without a beginning but God alone. Now, inasmuch as the
beginning: occupies the first place in the condition of all things, so it must
necessarily take precedence in the treatment of them, if a clear knowledge is
to be arrived at concerning their condition; for you could not find the means of
examining even the quality of anything, unless you were certain of its
existence, and that after discovering its origin.(1) Since therefore I am brought, in
the course of my little work, to this point,(2) I require to know of Marcion
the origin of his apostles even--I, who am to some degree a new disciple? the
follower of no other master; who at the same time(5) can believe nothing, except
that nothing ought to be believed hastily(6) (and that I may further say is
hastily believed, which is believed without any examination(7) of its beginning);
in short, I who have the best reason possible for bringing this inquiry to a
most careful solution,(8) since a man is affirmed to me to be an apostle whom I
do not find mentioned in the Gospel in the catalogue, of the apostles. Indeed,
when I hear that this man was chosen by the Lord after He had attained His rest
in heaven, I feel that a kind of improvidence is imputable to Christ, for not
knowing before that this man was necessary to Him; and because He thought that
he must be added to the apostolic body in the way of a fortuitous encounter(10)
rather than a deliberate selection; by necessity (so to speak), and not
voluntary choice, although the members of the apostolate had been duly ordained, and
were now dismissed to their several missions. Wherefore, O shipmaster of
Pontus,(1) if you have never taken on board your small craft(2) any contraband goods
or smuggler's cargo, if you have never thrown overboard or tampered with a
freight, you are still more careful and conscientious, I doubt not, in divine
things; and so I should be glad if you would inform us under what bill of lading(3)
you admitted the Apostle Paul on board, who ticketed him,(4) what owner
forwarded him,(5) who handed him to you,(6) that so you may land him without any
misgiving,(7) lest he should turn out to belong to him,(8) who can substantiate his
claim to him by producing all his apostolic writings.(9) He professes himself to
be "an apostle"--to use his own, words--"not of men, nor by man, but by Jesus
Christ."(10) Of course, any one may make a profession concerning himself; but
his profession is only rendered valid by the authority of a second person. One
man signs, another countersigns;(11) one man appends his seal, another registers
in the public records.(12) No one is at once a proposer and a seconder to
himself. Besides, you have read, no doubt, that "many shall come, saying, I am
Christ."(13) Now if any one can pretend that he is Christ, how much more might a
man profess to be an apostle of Christ ! But still, for my own part, I appear(14)
in the character of a disciple and an inquirer; that so I may even thus(15)
both refute your belief, who have nothing to support it, and confound your
shamelessness, who make claims without possessing the means of establishing them. Let
there be a Christ, let there be an apostle, although of another god; but what
matter? since they are only to draw their proofs out of the Testament of the
Creator. Because even the book of Genesis so long ago promised me the Apostle
Paul. For among the types and prophetic blessings which he pronounced over his
sons, Jacob, when he turned his attention to Benjamin, exclaimed, "Benjamin shall
ravin as a wolf; in the morning He shall devour the prey, and at night he shall
impart nourishment."(16) He foresaw that Paul would arise out of the tribe of
Benjamin, a voracious wolf, devouring his prey in the morning: in order words,
in the early period of his life he would devastate the Lord's sheep, as a
persecutor of the churches; but in the evening he would give them nourishment, which
means that in his declining years he would educate the fold of Christ, as the
teacher of the Gentiles. Then, again, in Saul's conduct towards David,
exhibited first in violent persecution of him, and then in remorse and reparation,(17)
on his receiving from him good for evil, we have nothing else than an
anticipation(18) of Paul in Saul--belonging, too, as they did, to the same tribe--and of
Jesus in David, from whom He descended according to the Virgin's
genealogy.(19) Should you, however, disapprove of these types,(20) the Acts of the
Apostles," at all events, have handed down to me this career of Paul, which you must not
refuse to accept. Thence I demonstrate that from a persecutor he became "an
apostle, not of men, neither by man;"(22) thence am I led to believe the Apostle
himself; thence do I find reason for rejecting your defence of him,(23) and for
bearing fearlessly your taunt. "Then you deny the Apostle Paul." I do not
calumniate him whom I defend.(24) I deny him, to compel you to the proof of him. I
deny him, to convince you that he is mine. If you have regard to our belief you
should admit the particulars which comprise it. If you challenge us to your
belief, (pray) tell us what things constitute its basis.(25) Either prove the
truth of what you believe, or failing in your proof, (tell us) how you believe.
Else what conduct is yours,(26) believing in opposition to Him from whom alone
comes the proof of that which you believe? Take now from my point of view(27) the
apostle, in the same manner as you have received the Christ--the apostle shown
to be as much mine as the Christ is. And here, too, we will fight within the
same lines, and challenge our adversary on the mere ground of a simple rule,(1)
that even an apostle who is said not to belong to the Creator-nay, is displayed
as in actual hostility to the Creator--can be fairly regarded as teaching(2)
nothing, knowing nothing, wishing nothing in favour of the Creator whilst it
would be a first principle with him to set forth(3) another god with as much
eagerness as he would use in withdrawing us from the law of the Creator. It is not
at all likely that he would call men away from Judaism without showing them at
the same time what was the god in whom he invited them to believe; because
nobody could possibly pass from allegiance to the Creator without knowing to whom he
had to cross over. For either Christ had already revealed another god--in
which case the apostle's testimony would also follow to the same effect, for fear
of his not being else regarded(4) as an apostle of the god whom Christ had
revealed, and because of the impropriety of his being concealed by the apostle who
had been already revealed by Christ--or Christ had made no such revelation
concerning God; then there was all the greater need why the apostle should reveal a
God who could now be made known by no one else, and who would undoubtedly be
left without any belief at all, if he were revealed not even by an apostle. We
have laid down this as our first principle, because we wish at once to profess
that we shall pursue the same method here in the apostle's case as we adopted
before in Christ's case, to prove that he proclaimed no new god;(5) that is, we
shall draw our evidence from the epistles of St. Paul himself. Now, the garbled
form in which we have found the heretic's Gospel will have already prepared us
to expect to find(6) the epistles also mutilated by him with like
perverseness--and that even as respects their number.(7)
CHAP.II.--ON THE EPISTLE TO THE GALATIANS. THE ABOLITION OF THE ORDINANCES OF
THE MOSAIC LAW NO PROOF OF ANOTHER GOD. THE DIVINE LAWGIVER, THE CREATOR
HIMSELF, WAS THE ABROGATOR. THE APOSTLE'S DOCTRINE IN THE FIRST CHAPTER SHOWN TO
ACCORD WITH THE TEACHING OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. THE ACTS OF THE APOSTLES SHOWN TO BE
GENUINE AGAINST MARCION. THIS BOOK AGREES WITH THE PAULINE EPISTLES.
The epistle which we also allow to be the most decisive(8) against
Judaism, is that wherein the apostle instructs the Galatians. For the abolition of the
ancient law we fully admit, and hold that it actually proceeds from the
dispensation of the Creator,--a point which we have already often treated in the
course of our discussion, when we showed that the innovation was foretold by the
prophets of our God.(9) Now, if the Creator indeed promised that "the ancient
things should pass any,"(10) to be superseded by a new course of things which
should arise, whilst Christ marks the period of the separation when He says, "The
law and the prophets were until John"(11)--thus making the Baptist the limit
between the two dispensations of the old things then terminating--and the new
things then beginning, the apostle cannot of course do otherwise, (coming as he
does) in Christ, who was revealed after John, than invalidate "the old things" and
confirm "the new," and yet promote thereby the faith of no other god than the
Creator, at whose instance(12) it was foretold that the ancient things should
pass away. Therefore both the abrogation of the law and the establishment of the
gospel help my argument even in this epistle, wherein they both have reference
to the fond assumption of the Galatians, which led them to suppose that faith
in Christ (the Creator's Christ, of course) was obligatory, but without
annulling the law, because it still appeared to them a thing incredible that the law
should be set aside by its own author. Again,(13) if they had at all heard of
any other god from the apostle, would they not have concluded at once, of
themselves, that they must give up the law of that God whom they had left, in order to
follow another? For what man would be long in learning, that he ought to
pursue a new discipline, after he had taken up with a new god? Since, however,(14)
the same God was declared in the gospel which had always been so well known in
the law, the only change being in the dispensation,(15) the sole point of the
question to be discussed was, whether the law of the Creator ought by the gospel
to be excluded in the Christ of the Creator? Take away this point, and the
controversy falls to the ground. Now, since they would all know of themselves,(16)
on the withdrawal of this point, that they must of course renounce all
submission to the Creator by reason of their faith in another god, there could have
been no call for the apostle to teach them so earnestly that which their own
belief must have spontaneously suggested to them. Therefore the entire purport of
this epistle is simply to show us that the supersession(1) of the law comes from
the appointment of the Creator--a point, which we shall still have to keep in
mind.(2) Since also he makes mention of no other god (and he could have found no
other opportunity of doing so, more suitable than when his purpose was to set
forth the reason for the abolition of the law--especially as the prescription
of a new god would have afforded a singularly good and most sufficient reason),
it is clear enough in what sense he writes, "I marvel that ye are so soon
removed from Him who hath called you to His grace to another gospel"(3)--He means)
"another" as to the conduct it prescribes, not in respect of its worship;
"another" as to the discipline it teaches, not in respect of its divinity; because it
is the office of(4) Christ's gospel to call men from the law to grace, not
from the Creator to another god. For nobody had induced them to apostatize from(5)
the Creator, that they should seem to "be removed to another gospel," simply
when they return again to the Creator. When he adds, too, the words, "which is
not another,"(6) he confirms the fact that the gospel which he maintains is the
Creator's. For the Creator Himself promises the gospel, when He says by Isaiah:
"Get thee up into the high mountain, thou that bringest to Sion good tidings;
lift up thy voice with strength, thou that bringest the gospel to
Jerusalem."(7) Also when, with respect to the apostles personally, He says, "How beautiful
are the feet of them that preach the gospel of peace, that bring good tidings of
good"(8)--even proclaiming the gospel to the Gentiles, because He also says,
"In His name shall the Gentiles trust;"(9) that is, in the name of Christ, to
whom He says, "I have given thee as a light of the Gentiles."(10) However, you
will have it that it is the gospel of a new god which was then set forth by the
apostle. So that there are two gospels for(11) two gods; and the apostle made a
great mistake when he said that "there is not another" gospel," since there is
(on the hypothesis)(13) another; and so he might have made a better defence of
his gospel, by rather demonstrating this, than by insisting on its being but
one. But perhaps, to avoid this difficulty, you will say that he therefore added
just afterwards, "Though an angel from heaven preach any other gospel, let him
be accursed,"(14) because he was aware that the Creator was going to introduce
a gospel! But you thus entangle yourself still more. For this is now the mesh
in which you are caught. To affirm that there are two gospels, is not the part
of a man who has already denied that there is another. His meaning, however, is
clear, for he has mentioned himself first (in the anathema): "But though we or
an angel from heaven preach any other gospel."(15) It is by way of an example
that he has expressed himself. If even he himself might not preach any other
gospel, then neither might an angel. He said "angel"' in this way, that he might
show how much more men ought not to be believed, when neither an angel nor an
apostle ought to be; not that he meant to apply(16) an angel to the gospel of the
Creator. He then cursorily touches on his own conversion from a persecutor to
an apostle--confirming thereby the Acts of the Apostles,(17) in which book may
be found the very subject(18) of this epistle, how that certain persons
interposed, and said that men ought to be circumcised, and that the law of Moses was
to be observed; and how the apostles, when consulted, determined, by the
authority of the Holy Ghost, that "a yoke should not be put upon men's necks which
their fathers even had not been able to bear."(19) Now, since the Acts of the
Apostles thus agree with Paul, it becomes apparent why you reject them. It is
because they declare no other God than the Creator, and prove Christ to belong to no
other God than the Creator; whilst the promise of the Holy Ghost is shown to
have been fulfilled in no other document than the Acts of the Apostles. Now, it
is not very likely that these(20) should be found in agreement with the
apostle, on the one hand, when they described his career in accordance with his own
statement; but should, on the other hand, be at variance with him when they
announce the (attribute of) divinity in the Creator's Christ--as if Paul did not
follow(1) the preaching of the apostles when he received from them the
prescription(2) of not teaching the Law.(3)
CHAP. III.--ST. PAUL QUITE IN ACCORDANCE WITH ST. PETER AND OTHER APOSTLES OF
THE CIRCUMCISION. HIS CENSURE OF ST. PETER EXPLAINED, AND RESCUED FROM
MARCION'S MISAPPLICATION. THE STRONG PROTESTS OF THIS EPISTLE AGAINST JUDAIZERS, YET
ITS TEACHING IS SHOWN TO BE IN KEEPING WITH THE LAW AND THE PROPHETS, MARCION'S
TAMPERING WITH ST. PAUL'S WRITINGS CENSURED.
But with regard to the countenance(4) of Peter and the rest of the
apostles, he tells us s that "fourteen years after he went up to Jerusalem," in order
to confer with them(6) about the rule which he followed in his gospel, lest
perchance he should all those years have been running, and be running still, in
vain, (which would be the case,) of course, if his preaching of the gospel fell
short of their method.(7) So great had been his desire to be approved and
supported by those whom you wish on all occasions(8) to be understood as in alliance
with Judaism! When indeed he says, that "neither was Titus circumcised,"(9) he
for the first time shows us that circumcision was the only question connected
with the maintenance(10) of the law, which had been as yet agitated by those
whom he therefore calls "false brethren unawares brought in."(11) These persons
went no further than to insist on a continuance of the law, retaining
unquestionably a sincere belief in the Creator. They perverted the gospel in their
teaching, not indeed by such a tampering with the Scripture(12) as should enable them
to expunge(13) the Creator's Christ, but by so retaining the ancient regime as
not to exclude the Creator's law. Therefore he says: "Because of false brethren
unawares brought in, who came in privily to spy out our liberty which we have
in Christ, that they might bring us into bondage, to whom we gave place by
subjection not even for an hour."(14) Let us only attend to the clear(15) sense and
to the reason of the thing, and the perversion of the Scripture will be
apparent. When he first says, "Neither Titus, who was with me, being a Greek, was
compelled to be circumcised," and then adds, "And that because of false brethren
unawares brought in,"(16) etc., he gives us an insight into his reason(17) for
acting in a clean contrary way,(18) showing us wherefore he did that which he
would neither have done nor shown to us, if that had not happened which induced
him to act as he did. But then(19) I want you to tell us whether they would have
yielded to the subjection that was demanded,(20) if these false brethren had
not crept in to spy out their liberty? I apprehend not. They therefore gave way
(in a partial concession), because there were persons whose weak faith required
consideration.(21) For their rudimentary belief, which was still in suspense
about the observance of the law, deserved this concessive treatment,(22) when
even the apostle himself had some suspicion that he might have run, and be still
running, in vain.(23) Accordingly, the false brethren who were the spies of
their Christian liberty must be thwarted in their efforts to bring it under the
yoke of their own Judaism before that Paul discovered whether his labour had been
in vain, before that those who preceded him in the apostolate gave him their
right hands of fellowship, before that he entered on the office of preaching to
the Gentiles, according to their arrangement with him.(24) He therefore made
some concession, as was necessary, for a time; and this was the reason why he had
Timothy circumcised,(25) and the Nazarites introduced into the temple,(26)
which incidents are described in the Acts. Their truth may be inferred from their
agreement with the apostle's own profession, how "to the Jews he became as a
Jew, that he might gain the Jews, and to them that were under the law, as under
the law,"--and so here with respect to those who come in secretly,--"and lastly,
how he became all things to all men, that he might gain all."(1) Now, inasmuch
as the circumstances require such an interpretation as this, no one will
refuse to admit that Paul preached that God and that Christ whose law he was
excluding all the while, however much he allowed it, owing to the times, but which he
would have had summarily to abolish if he had published a new god. Rightly,
then, did Peter and James and John give their right hand of fellowship to Paul,
and agree on such a division of their work, as that Paul should go to the
heathen, and themselves to the circumcision.(2) Their agreement, also, "to remember
the poor"(3) was in complete conformity with the law of the Creator, which
cherished the poor and needy, as has been shown in our observations on your
Gospel.(4) It is thus certain that the question was one which simply regarded the law,
while at the same time it is apparent what portion of the law it was convenient
to have observed. Paul, however, censures Peter for not walking
straightforwardly according to the truth of the gospel. No doubt he blames him; but it was
solely because of his inconsistency in the matter of "eating,"(5) which he varied
according to the sort of persons (whom he associated with) "fearing them which
were of the circumcision,"(6) but not on account of any perverse opinion
touching another god. For if such a question had arisen, others also would have been
"resisted face to face" by the man who had not even spared Peter on the
comparatively small matter of his doubtful conversation. But what do the Marcionites
wish to have believed (on the point)? For the rest, the apostle must (be
permitted to) go on with his own statement, wherein he says that "a man is not
justified by the works of the law, but by faith:"(7) faith, however, in the same God
to whom belongs the law also. For of course he would have bestowed no labour on
severing faith from the law, when the difference of the god would, if there had
only been any, have of itself produced such a severance. Justly, therefore,
did he refuse to "build up again (the structure of the law) which he had
overthrown."(8) The law, indeed, had to be overthrown, from the moment when John "cried
in the wilderness, Prepare ye the ways of the Lord," that valleys(9) and hills
and mountains may be filled up and levelled, and the crooked and the rough
ways be made straight and smooth(10)--in other words, that the difficulties of the
law might be changed into the facilities of the gospel. For he remembered that
the time was come of which the Psalm spake, "Let us break their bands asunder,
and cast off their yoke from us;"(11) since the time when "the nations became
tumultuous, and the people imagined vain counsels;" when "the kings of the
earth stood up, and the rulers were gathered together against the Lord, and against
His Christ,"(12) in order that thenceforward man might be justified by the
liberty of faith, not by servitude to the law,(13) "because the just shall live by
his faith."(14) Now, although the prophet Habakkuk first said this, yet you
have the apostle here confirming the prophets, even as Christ did. The object,
therefore, of the faith whereby the just man shall live, will be that same God to
whom likewise belongs the law, by doing which no man is justified. Since,
then, there equally are found the curse in the law and the blessing in faith, you
have both conditions set forth by(15) the Creator: "Behold," says He, "I have
set before you a blessing and a curse."(16) You cannot establish a diversity of
authors because there happens to be one of things; for the diversity is itself
proposed by one and the same author. Why, however, "Christ was made a curse for
us,"(17) is declared by the apostle himself in a way which quite helps our
side, as being the result of the Creator's appointment. But yet it by no means
follows, because the Creator said of old, "Cursed is every one that hangeth on a
tree,"(18) that Christ belonged to another god, and on that account was accursed
even then in the law. And how, indeed, could the Creator have cursed by
anticipation one whom He knew not of? Why, however, may it not be more suitable for
the Creator to have delivered His own Son to His own curse, than to have
submitted Him to the malediction of that god of yours,--in behalf, too, of man, who is
an alien to him? Now, if this appointment of the Creator respecting His Son
appears to you to be a cruel one, it is equally so in the case of your own god;
if, on the contrary, it be in accordance with reason in your god, it is equally
so--nay, much more so--in mine. For it would be more credible that that God had
provided blessing for man, through the curse of Christ, who formerly set both a
blessing and a curse before man, than that he had done so, who, according to
you,(1) never at any time pronounced either. "We have received therefore, the
promise of the Spirit," as the apostle says, "through faith," even that faith by
which the just man lives, in accordance with the Creator's purpose.(2) What I
say, then, is this, that that God is the object of faith who prefigured the
grace of faith. But when he also adds, ".For ye are all the children of faith,"(3)
it becomes dear that what the heretic's industry erased was the mention of
Abraham's name; for by faith the apostle declares us to be "children of
Abraham,"(4) and after mentioning him he expressly called us "children of faith" also. But
how are we children of faith? and of whose faith, if not Abraham's? For since
"Abraham believed God, and it was accounted to him for righteousness;"(5)
since, also, he deserved for that reason to be called "the father of many nations,"
whilst we, who are even more like him(6) in believing in God, are thereby
justified as Abraham was, and thereby also obtain life--since the just lives by his
faith,--it therefore happens that, as he in the previous passage called us
"sons of Abraham," since he is in faith our (common) father,(7) so here also he
named us "children of faith," for it was owing to his faith that it was promised
that Abraham should be the father of (many) nations. As to the fact itself of
his calling off faith from circumcision, did he not seek thereby to constitute us
the children of Abraham, who had believed previous to his circumcision in the
flesh?(8) In short,(9) faith in one of two gods cannot possibly admit us to the
dispensation(10) of the other,(11) so that it should impute righteousness to
those who believe in him, and make the just live through him, and declare the
Gentiles to be his children through faith. Such a dispensation as this belongs
wholly to Him through whose appointment it was already made known by the call of
this self-same Abraham, as is conclusively shown(12)' by the natural
meaning.(13)
CHAP. IV.--ANOTHER INSTANCE OF MARCION'S TAMPERING WITH ST. PAUL'S TEXT. THE
FULNESS OF TIME, ANNOUNCED BY THE APOSTLE, FORETOLD BY THE PROPHETS. MOSAIC
RITES ABROGATED BY THE CREATOR HIMSELF. MARCION'S TRICKS ABOUT ABRAHAM'S NAME. THE
CREATOR, BY HIS CHRIST, THE FOUNTAIN OF THE GRACE AND THE LIBERTY WHICH ST.
PAUL ANNOUNCED. MARCION'S DOCETISM REFUTED.
"But," says he, "I speak after the manner of men: when we were children,
we were placed in bondage under the elements of the world."(14) This, however,
was not said "after the manner of men." For there is no figure(15) here, but
literal truth. For (with respect to the latter clause of this passage), what child
(in the sense, that is, in which the Gentiles are children) is not in bondage
to the elements of the world, which he looks up to(16) in the light of a god?
With regard, however, to the former clause, there was a figure (as the apostle
wrote it); because after he had said, "I speak after the manner of men," he
adds), "Though it be but a man's covenant, no man disannulleth, or addeth
thereto."(17) For by the figure of the permanency of a human covenant he was defending
the divine testament. "To Abraham were the promises made, and to his seed. He
said not 'to seeds,' as of many; but as of one, 'to thy seed,' which is
Christ."(18) Fie on(19) Marcion's sponge! But indeed it is superfluous to dwell on what
he has erased, when he may be more effectually confuted from that which he has
retained.(20) "But when the fulness of time was come, God sent forth His
Son"(21)--the God, of course, who is the Lord of that very succession of times which
constitutes an age; who also ordained, as "signs" of time, suns and moons and
constellations and stars; who furthermore both predetermined and predicted that
the revelation of His Son should be postponed to the end of the times.(1) "It
shall come to pass in the last days, that the mountain (of the house) of the
Lord shall be manifested";(2) "and in the last days I will. pour out of my Spirit
upon all flesh"(3) as Joel says. It was characteristic of Him (only)(4) to
wait patiently for the fulness of time, to whom belonged the end of time no less
than the beginning. But as for that idle god, who has neither any work nor any
prophecy, nor accordingly any time, to show for himself what has he ever done
to bring about the fulness of time, or to wait patiently its completion? If
nothing, what an impotent state to have to wait for the Creator's time, in
servility to the Creator! But for what end did He send His Son? "To redeem them that
were under the law,"(5) in other words, to "make the crooked ways straight, and
the rough places smooth," as Isaiah says(6)--in order that old things might
pass away, and a new course begin, even "the new law out of Zion, and the word of
the Lord from Jerusalem,"(7) and "that we might receive the adoption of
sons,"(8) that is, the Gentiles, who once were not sons. For He is to be "the light of
the Gentiles," and "in His name shall the Gentiles trust."(9) That we may
have, therefore the assurance that we are the children of God, "He hath sent forth
His Spirit into our hearts, crying, Abba, Father."(10) For "in the last days,"
saith He," I will pour out of my Spirit upon all flesh."(11) Now, from whom
comes this grace, but from Him who proclaimed the promise thereof? Who is (our)
Father, but He who is also our Maker? Therefore, after such affluence (of grace),
they should not have returned "to weak and beggarly elements."(12) By the
Romans, however, the rudiments of learning are wont to be called elements. He did
not therefore seek, by any depreciation of the mundane elements, to turn them
away from their god, although, when he said just before, "Howbeit, then, ye serve
them which by nature are no gods,"(13) he censured the error of that physical
or natural superstition which holds the elements to be god; but at the God of
those elements he aimed not in this censure.(14) He tells us himself clearly
enough what he means by "elements," even the rudiments of the law: "Ye observe
days, and months, and times, and years"(15)--the sabbaths, I suppose, and "the
preparations,"(16) and the fasts, and the "high days."(17) For the cessation of
even these, no less than of cicumcision, was appointed by the Creator's decrees,
who had said by Isaiah, "Your new moons, and your sabbaths, and your high days
I cannot bear; your fasting, and feasts, and ceremonies my soul hateth;"(18)
also by Amos, "I hate, I despise your feast-days, and I will not smell in your
solemn assemblies;"(19) and again by Hosea, "I will cause to cease all her mirth,
and her feast-days, and her sabbaths, and her new moons, and all her solemn
assemblies."(20) The institutions which He set up Himself, you ask, did He then
destroy? Yes, rather than any other. Or if another destroyed them, he only
helped on the purpose of the Creator, by removing what even He had condemned. But
this is not the place to discuss the question why the Creator abolished His own
laws. It is enough for us to have proved that He intended such an abolition,
that so it may be affirmed that the apostle determined nothing to the prejudice of
the Creator, since the abolition itself proceeds from the Creator. But as, in
the case of thieves, something of the stolen goods is apt to drop by the way,
as a clue to their detection; so, as it seems to me, it has happened to Marcion:
the last mention of Abraham's name he has left untouched (in the epistle),
although no passage required his erasure more than this, even his partial
alteration of the text.(21) "For (it is written) that Abraham had two sons, the one by
a bond maid, the other by a free woman; but he who was of the bond maid was
born after the flesh, but he of the free woman was by promise: which things are
allegorized"(22) (that is to say, they presaged something besides the literal
history); "for these are the two covenants," or the two exhibitions (of the divine
plans),(1) as we have found the word interpreted," the one from the Mount
Sinai," in relation to the synagogue of the Jews, according to the law, "which
gendereth to bondage"--"the other gendereth" (to liberty, being raised) above all
principality, and power, and dominion, and every name that is l named, not only
in this world, but in that which is to come, "which is the mother of us all,"
in which we have the promise of (Christ's) holy church; by reason of which he
adds in conclusion: "So then, brethren, we are not children of the bond woman,
but of the free."(2) In this passage he has undoubtedly shown that Christianity
had a noble birth, being sprung, as the mystery of the allegory indicates, from
that son of Abraham who was born of the free woman; whereas from the son of
the bond maid came the legal bondage of Judaism. Both dispensations, therefore,
emanate from that same God by whom,(3) as we have found, they were both sketched
out beforehand. When he speaks of "the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us
free,"(4) does not the very phrase indicate that He is the Liberator who was
once the Master? For Galba himself never liberated slaves which were not his own,
even when about to restore free men to their liberty.(5) By Him, therefore,
will liberty be bestowed, at whose command lay the enslaving power of the law. And
very properly. It was not meet that those who had received liberty should be
"entangled again with the yoke of bondage"(6)--that is, of the law; now that the
Psalm had its prophecy accomplished: "Let us break their bands asunder, and
cast away their cords from us, since the rulers have gathered themselves together
against the Lord and against His Christ.''(7) All those, therefore, who had
been delivered from the yoke of slavery he would earnestly have to obliterate the
very mark of slavery--even circumcision, on the authority of the prophet's
prediction. He remembered how that Jeremiah had said, "Circumcise the foreskins
of your heart;"(8) as Moses likewise had enjoined, "Circumcise your hard
hearts"(9)--not the literal flesh. If, now, he were for excluding circumcision, as
the messenger of a new god, why does he say that "in Christ neither circumcisoin
availeth anything, nor uncircumcision?(10) For it was his duty to prefer the
rival principle of that which he was abolishing, if he had a mission from the god
who was the enemy of circumcision. Furthermore, since both circumcision and
uncircumcision were attributed to the same Deity, both lost their power(11) in
Christ, by reason of the excellency of faith--of that faith concerning which it
had been written, "And in His name shall the Gentiles trust?"(12)--of that faith
"which," he says "worketh by love."(13) By this saying he also shows that the
Creator is the source of that grace. For whether he speaks of the love which is
due to God, or that which is due to one's neighbor--in either case, the
Creator's grace is meant: for it is He who enjoins the first in these words, "Thou
shalt love God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy
strength;" (14) and also the second in another passage: "Thou shalt love thy
neighbour as thyself."(15) "But he that troubleth you shall have to bear
judgment."(16) From what God? From (Marcion's) most excellent god? But he does not execute
judgment. From the Creator? But neither will He condemn the maintainer of
circumcision. Now, if none other but the Creator shall be found to execute judgment,
it follows that only He, who has determined on the cessation of the law, shall
be able to condemn the defenders of the law; and what, if he also affirms the
law in that portion of it where it ought (to be permanent)? "For," says he,
"all the law is fulfilled in you by this: 'Thou shalt love thy neighhour as
thyself.' "(17) If, indeed, he will have it that by the words "it is fulfilled" it
is implied that the law no longer has to be fulfilled, then of course he does
not mean that I should any more love my neighbour as myself, since this precept
must have ceased together with the law. But no! we must evermore continue to
observe this commandment. The Creator's law, therefore, has received the approval
of the rival god, who has, in fact, bestowed upon it not the sentence of a
summary dismissal,(18) but the favour of a compendious acceptance;(19) the gist of
it all being concentrated in this one precept! But this condensation of the
law is, in fact, only possible to Him who is the Author of it. When, therefore,
he says, "Bear ye one another's burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ,"(1)
since this cannot be accomplished except a man love his neighhour as himself, it
is evident that the precept, "Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself"
(which, in fact, underlies the injunction, 'Bear ye one another's burdens"), is
really "the law of Christ," though literally the law of the Creator. Christ,
therefore, is the Creator's Christ, as Christ's law is the Creator's law. "Be not
deceived,(2) God is not mocked."(3) But Marcion's god can be mocked; for he knows
not how to be angry, or how to take vengeance. "For whatsoever a man soweth,
that shall he also reap."(4) It is then the God of recompense and judgment who
threatens(5) this. "Let us not be weary in well-doing;"(6) and "as we have
opportunity, let us do good."(7) Deny now that the Creator has given a commandment to
do good, and then a diversity of precept may argue a difference of gods. If,
however, He also announces recompense, then from the same God must come the
harvest both of death(8) and of life. But "in due time we shall reap;"(9) because
in Ecclesiastes it is said, "For everything there will be a time."(10) Moreover,
"the world is crucified unto me," who am a servant of the Creator--"the
world," (I say,) but not the God who made the world--"and I unto the world,"(11) not
unto the God who made the world. The world, in the apostle's sense, here means
life and conversation according to worldly principles; it is in renouncing
these that we and they are mutually crucified and mutually slain. He calls them
"persecutors of Christ."(12) But when he adds, that "he bare in his body the
scars(13) of Christ"-- since scars, of course, are accidents of body(14)--he
therefore expressed the truth, that the flesh of Christ is not putative, but real and
substantial,(15) the scars of which he represents as borne upon his body.
CHAP. V.--THE FIRST EPISTLE TO THE CORINTHIANS. THE PAULINE SALUTATION OF
GRACE AND PEACE SHOWN TO BE ANTI-MARCIONITE. THE CROSS OF CHRIST PURPOSED BY THE
CREATOR. MARCION ONLY PERPETUATES THE OFFENCE AND FOOLISHNESS OF CHRIST'S CROSS
BY HIS IMPIOUS SEVERANCE OF THE GOSPEL FROM THE CREATOR.ANALOGIES BETWEEN THE
LAW AND THE GOSPEL IN THE MATTER OF WEAK THINGS, AND FOOLISH THINGS AND BASE
THINGS.
My preliminary remarks(16) on the preceding epistle called me away from
treating of its superscription,(17) for I was sure that another opportunity would
occur for considering the matter, it being of constant recurrence, and in the
same form too, in every epistle. The point, then, is, that it is not (the
usual) health which the apostle prescribes for those to whom he writes, but "grace
and peace."(18) I do not ask, indeed, what a destroyer of Judaism has to do with
a formula which the Jews still use. For to this day they salute each other(19)
with the greeting of "peace," and formerly in their Scriptures they did the
same. But I understand him by his practice(20) plainly enough to have
corroborated the declaration of the Creator: "How beautiful are the feet of them that
bring glad tidings of good, who preach the gospel of peace!"(21) For the herald of
good, that is, of God's "grace" was well aware that along with it "peace" also
was to be proclaimed.(22) Now, when he announces these blessings as "from God
the Father and the Lord Jesus,"(23) he uses titles that are common to both, and
which are also adapted to the mystery of our faith; and I suppose it to be
impossible accurately to determine what God is declared to be the Father and the
Lord Jesus, unless (we consider) which of their accruing attributes are more
suited to them severally.(25) First, then, I assert that none other than the
Creator and Sustainer of both man and the universe can be acknowledged as Father and
Lord; next, that to the Father also the title of Lord accrues by reason of His
power, and that the Son too receives the same through the Father; then that
"grace and peace" are not only His who had them published, but His likewise to
whom offence had been given. For neither does grace exist, except after offence;
nor peace, except after war. Now, both the people (of Israel) by their
transgression of His laws,(1) and the whole race of mankind by their neglect of natural
duty,(2) had both sinned and rebelled against the Creator. Marcion's god,
however, could not have been offended, both because he was unknown to everybody, and
because he is incapable of being irritated. What grace, therefore, can be had
of a god who has not been offended? What peace from one who has never
experienced rebellion? "The cross of Christ," he says, "is to them that perish
foolishness; but unto such as shall obtain salvation, it is the power of God and the
wisdom of God."(3) And then, that we may known from whence this comes, he adds:
"For it is written, 'I will destroy the wisdom of the wise, and will bring to
nothing the understanding of the prudent.'"(4) Now, since these are the Creator's
words, and since what pertains to the doctrine s of the cross he accounts as
foolishness, therefore both the cross, and also Christ by reason of the cross,
will appertain to the Creator, by whom were predicted the incidents of the cross.
But if(6) the Creator, as an enemy, took away their wisdom in order that the
cross of Christ, considered as his adversary, should be accounted foolishness,
how by any possibility can the Creator have foretold anything about the cross of
a Christ who is not His own, and of whom He knew nothing, when He published
the prediction? But, again, how happens it, that in the system of a Lord(7) who
is so very good, and so profuse in mercy, some carry off salvation, when they
believe the cross to be the wisdom and power of God, whilst others incur
perdition, to whom the cross of Christ is accounted folly;--(how happens it, I repeat,)
unless it is in the Creator's dispensation to have punished both the people of
Israel and the human race, for some great offence committed against Him, with
the loss of wisdom and prudence? What follows will confirm this suggestion,
when he asks, "Hath not God infatuated the wisdom of this world?"(8) and when he
adds the reason why: "For after that, in the wisdom of God, the world by wisdom
knew not God, it pleased God(9) by the foolishness of preaching to save them
that believe."(10) But first a word about the expression "the world;" because in
this passage particularly,(11) the heretics expend a great deal of their
subtlety in showing that by world is meant the lord of the world. We, however,
understand the term to apply to any person that is in the world, by a simple idiom of
human language, which often substitutes that which contains for that which is
contained. "The circus shouted," "The forum spoke," and "The basilica
murmured," are well-known expressions, meaning that the people in these places did so.
Since then the man, not the god, of the world(12) in his wisdom knew not God,
whom indeed he ought to have known (both the Jew by his knowledge of the
Scriptures, and all the human race by their knowledge of God's works), therefore that
God, who was not acknowledged in His wisdom, resolved to smite men's knowledge
with His foolishness, by saving all those who believe in the folly of the
preached cross. "Because the Jews require signs," who ought to have already made up
their minds about God, "and the Greeks seek after wisdom,''(13) who rely upon
their own wisdom, and not upon God's. If, however, it was a new god that was
being preached, what sin had the Jews committed, in seeking after signs to believe;
or the Greeks, when they hunted after a wisdom which they would prefer to
accept? Thus the very retribution which overtook both Jews and Greeks proves that
God is both a jealous God and a Judge, inasmuch as He infatuated the world's
wisdom by an angry(14) and a judicial retribution. Since, then, the causes(15) are
in the hands of Him who gave us the Scriptures which we use, it follows that
the apostle, when treating of the Creator, (as Him whom both Jew and Gentile as
yet have) not known, means undoubtedly to teach us, that the God who is to
become known (in Christ) is the Creator. The very "stumbling-block" which he
declares Christ to be "to the Jews,"(16) points unmistakeably(17) to the Creator's
prophecy respecting Him, when by Isaiah He says: "Behold I lay in Siona stone of
stumbling and a rock of offence."(18) This rock or stone is Christ.(19) This
stumbling-stone Marcion retains still.(20)
Now, what is that "foolishness of God which is wiser than men," but the
cross and death of Christ? What is that "weakness of God which is stronger than
men,"(1) but the nativity and incarnation(2) of God? If, however, Christ was not
born of the Virgin, was not constituted of human flesh, and thereby really
suffered neither death nor the cross there was nothing in Him either of
foolishness or weakness; nor is it any longer true, that "God hath chosen the foolish
things of the world to confound the wise;" nor, again, hath "God chosen the weak
things of the world to confound the mighty;" nor "the base things" and the least
things "in the world, and things which are despised, which are even as
nothing" (that is, things which really(3) are not), "to bring to nothing things which
are" (that is, which really are).(4) For nothing in the dispensation of God is
found to be mean, and ignoble, and contemptible. Such only occurs in man's
arrangement. The very Old Testament of the Creators itself, it is possible, no
doubt, to charge with foolishness, and weakness, and dishonour and meanness, and
contempt. What is more foolish and more weak than God's requirement of bloody
sacrifices and of savoury holocausts? What is weaker than the cleansing of vessels
and of beds?(6) What more dishonourable than the discoloration of the
reddening skin?(7) What so mean as the statute of retaliation? What so contemptible as
the exception in meats and drinks? The whole of the Old Testament, the heretic,
to the best of my belief, holds in derision. For God has chosen the foolish
things of the world to confound its wisdom. Marcion's god has no such discipline,
because he does not take after(8) (the Creator) in the process of confusing
opposites by their opposites, so that "no flesh shall glory; but, as it is
written, He that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord."(9) In what Lord? Surely in Him
who gave this precept.(10) Unless, forsooth, the Creator en-joined us to glory
in the god of Marcion
CHAP. VI.--THE DIVINE WAY OF WISDOM, AND GREATNESS, AND MIGHT. GOD'S HIDING OF
HIMSELF, AND SUBSEQUENT REVELATION. TO MARCION'S GOD SUCH A CONCEALMENT AND
MANIFESTATION IMPOSSIBLE. GOD'S PREDESTINATION. NO SUCH PRIOR SYSTEM OF INTENTION
POSSIBLE TO A GOD PREVIOUSLY UNKNOWN AS WAS MARCION'S. THE POWERS OF THE WORLD
WHICH CRUCIFIED CHRIST. ST. PAUL, AS A WISE MASTER-BUILDER, ASSOCIATED WITH
PROPHECY. SUNDRY INJUNCTIONS OF THE APOSTLE PARALLEL WITH THE TEACHING OF THE OLD
TESTAMENT.
By all these statements, therefore, does he show us what God he means,
when he says, "We speak the wisdom of God among them that are perfect."(11) It is
that God who has confounded the wisdom of the wise, who has brought to nought
the understanding of the prudent, who has reduced to folly(12) the world's
wisdom, by choosing its foolish things, and disposing them to the attainment of
salvation. This wisdom, he says, once lay hidden in things that were foolish, weak,
and lacking in honour; once also was latent under figures, allegories, and
enigmatical types; but it was afterwards to be revealed in Christ, who was set "as
a light to the Gentiles,"(13) by the Creator who promised through the mouth of
Isaiah that He would discover "the hidden treasures, which eye had not
seen."(14) Now, that that god should have ever hidden anything who had never made a
cover wherein to practise concealment, is in itself a wholly incredible idea. If
he existed, concealment of himself was out of the question--to say nothing(15)
of any of his religious ordinances.(16) The Creator, on the contrary, was as
well known in Himself as His ordinances were. These, we know, were publicly
instituted(17) in Israel; but they lay overshadowed with latent meanings, in which
the wisdom of God was concealed(18) to be brought to light by and by amongst
"the perfect," when the time should come, but "pre-ordained in the counsels of God
before the ages."(19) But whose ages, if not the Creator's? For because ages
consist of times, and times are made up of days, and months, and years; since
also days, and months, and years are measured by suns, and moons, and stars,
which He ordained for this purpose (for "they shall be," says He, "for signs of the
months and the years"), (20) it clearly follows that the ages belong to the
Creator, and that nothing of what was fore-ordained before the ages can be said
to be the property of any other being than Him who claims the ages also as His
own. Else let Marcion show that the ages belong to his god. He must then also
claim the world itself for him; for it is in it that the ages are reckoned, the
vessel as it were(1) of the times, as well as the signs thereof, or their order.
But he has no such demonstration to show us. I go back therefore to the point,
and ask him this question: Why did (his god) fore-ordain our glory before the
ages of the Creator? I could understand his having predetermined it before the
ages, if he had revealed it at the commencement of time.(2) But when he does
this almost at the very expiration of all the ages(3) of the Creator, his
predestination before the ages, and not rather within the ages, was in vain, because
he did not mean to make any revelation of his purpose until the ages had almost
run out their course. For it is wholly inconsistent in him to be so forward in
planning purposes, who is so backward in revealing them. In the Creator,
however, the two courses were perfectly compatible--both the predestination before
the ages and the revelation at the end thereof, because that which He both
fore-ordained and revealed He also in the intermediate space of time announced by the
pre-ministration of figures, and symbols, and allegories. But because (the
apostle) subjoins, on the subject of our glory, that "none of the princes of this
world knew it for had they known it they would not have crucified the Lord of
glory,"(4) the heretic argues that the princes of this world crucified the Lord
(that is, the Christ of the rival god) in order that this blow might even
recoil(5) on the Creator Himself. Any one, however, who has seen from what we have
already said how our glory must be regarded as issuing from the Creator, will
already have come to the conclusion that, inasmuch as the Creator settled it in
His own secret purpose, it properly enough was unknown to all the princes(6) and
powers of the Creator, on the principle that servants are not permitted to
know their masters' plans, much less the fallen angels and the leader of
transgression himself, the devil; for I should contend that these, on account of their
fall, were greater strangers still to any knowledge of the Creator's
dispensations. But it is no longer open to me(7) even to interpret the princes and powers
of this world as the Creator's, since the apostle imputes ignorance to them,
whereas even the devil according to our Gospel recognised Jesus in the
temptation,(8) and, according to the record which is common to both (Marcionites and
ourselves) the evil spirit knew that Jesus was the Holy One of God, and that Jesus
was His name, and that He was come to destroy them.(9) The parable also of the
strong man armed, whom a stronger than he overcame and seized his goods, is
admitted by Marcion to have reference to the Creator:(10) therefore the Creator
could not have been ignorant any longer of the God of glory, since He is overcome
by him;(11) nor could He have crucified him whom He was unable to cope with.
The inevitable inference, therefore, as it seems to me, is that we must believe
that the princes and powers of the Creator did knowingly crucify the God of
glory in His Christ, with that desperation and excessive malice with which the
most abandoned slaves do not even hesitate to slay their masters. For it is
written in my Gospel(12) that "Satan entered into Judas."(13) According to Marcion,
however, the apostle in the passage under consideration(14) does not allow the
imputation of ignorance, with respect to the Lord of glory, to the powers of the
Creator; because, indeed, he will have it that these are not meant by "the
princes of this world." But (the apostle) evidently(15) did not speak of spiritual
princes; so that he meant secular ones, those of the princely people, (chief
in the divine dispensation, although) not, of course, amongst the nations of the
world, and their rulers, and king Herod, and even Pilate, and, as represented
by him,(16) that power of Rome which was the greatest in the world, and then
presided over by him. Thus the arguments of the other side are pulled down, and
our own proofs are thereby built up. But you still maintain that our glory comes
from your god, with whom it also lay in secret. Then why does your god employ
the self-same Scripture(17) which the apostle also relies on? What has your god
to do at all with the sayings of the prophets? "Who hath discovered the mind
of the Lord, or who hath been His counsellor?"(18) So says Isaiah. What has he
also to do with illustrations from our God? For when (the apostle) calls himself
"a wise master-builder,"(19) we find that the Creator by Isaiah designates the
teacher who sketches(20) out the divine discipline by the same title, "I will
take away from Judah the cunning artificer,"(1) etc. And was it not Paul
himself who was there foretold, destined "to be taken away from Judah"--that is, from
Judaism--for the erection of Christianity, in order "to lay that only
foundation, which is Christ?"(2) Of this work the Creator also by the same prophet
says, "Behold, I lay in Sion for a foundation a precious stone and honourable; and
he that resteth thereon shall not be confounded."(3) Unless it be, that God
professed Himself to be the builder up of an earthly work, that so He might not
give any sign of His Christ, as destined to be the foundation of such as believe
in Him, upon which every man should build at will the superstructure of either
sound or worthless doctrine; forasmuch as it is the Creator's function, when a
man's work shall be tried by fire,(or) when a reward shall be recompensed to
him by fire; because it is by fire that the test is applied to the building which
you erect upon the foundation which is laid by Him, that is, the foundation of
His Christ.(4) "Know ye not that ye are the temple of God, and that the Spirit
of God dwelleth in you?"(5) Now, since man is the property, and the work, and
the image and likeness of the Creator, having his flesh, formed by Him of the
ground, and his soul of His afflatus, it follows that Marcion's god wholly
dwells in a temple which belongs to another, if so be we are not the Creator's
temple. But "if any man defile the temple of God, he shall be himself
destroyed"(6)--of course, by the God of the temple.(7) If you threaten an avenger, you
threaten us with the Creator. "Ye must become fools, that ye may be wise." (8)
Wherefore? "Because the wisdom of this world is foolishness with God."(9) With what
God? Even if the ancient Scriptures have contributed nothing in support of our
view thus far,(10) an excellent testimony turns up in what (the apostle) here
adjoins: "For it is written, He taketh the wise in their own craftiness; and
again, The Lord knoweth the thoughts of the wise, that they are vain."(11) For in
general we may conclude for certain that he could not possibly have cited the
authority of that God whom he was bound to destroy, since he would not teach for
Him.(12) "Therefore," says he, "let no man glory in man;"(13) an injunction
which is in accordance with the teaching of the Creator, "wretched is the man that
trusteth in man;"(14) again, "It is better to trust in the Lord than to
confide in man;"(15) and the same thing is said about glorying (in princes).(16)
CHAP. VII.--ST. PAUL'S PHRASEOLOGY OFTEN SUGGESTED BY THE JEWISH SCRIPTURES.
CHRIST OUR PASSOVER--A PHRASE WHICH INTRODUCES US TO THE VERY HEART OF THE
ANCIENT DISPENSATION. CHRIST'S TRUE CORPOREITY. MARRIED AND UNMARRIED STATES.
MEANING OF THE TIME IS SHORT. IN HIS EXHORTATIONS AND DOCTRINE, THE APOSTLE WHOLLY
TEACHES ACCORDING TO THE MIND AND PURPOSES OF THE GOD OF THE OLD TESTAMENT.
PROHIBITION OF MEATS AND DRINKS WITHDRAWN BY THE CREATOR.
"And the hidden things of darkness He will Himself bring to light,"(17)
even by Christ; for He has promised Christ to be a Light,(18) and Himself He has
declared to be a lamp, "searching the hearts and reins."(19) From Him also
shall "praise be had by every man,"(20) from whom proceeds, as from a judge, the
opposite also of praise. But here, at least, you say he interprets the world to
be the God thereof, when he says: "We are made a spectacle unto the world, and
to angels, and to men."(21) For if by world he had meant the people thereof, he
would not have afterwards specially mentioned "men." To prevent, however,
your using such an argument as this, the Holy Ghost has providentially explained
the meaning of the passage thus: "We are made a spectacle to the world," i.e.
"both to angels," who minister therein, "and to men," who are the objects of
their ministration.(22) Of course,(23) a man of the noble courage of our apostle
(to say nothing of the Holy Ghost) was afraid, when writing to the children whom
he had begotten in the gospel, to speak freely of the God of the world; for
against Him he could not possibly seem to have a word to say, except only in a
straightforward manner!(1) I quite admit, that, according to the Creator's law,(2)
the man was an offender" who had his father's wife."(3) He followed, no
doubt,(4) the principles of natural and public law. When, however, he condemns the
man "to be delivered unto Satan,"(5) he becomes the herald of an avenging God. It
does not matter(6) that he also said, "For the destruction of the flesh, that
the spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord,"(7) since both in the
destruction of the flesh and in the saving of the spirit there is, on His part, judicial
process; and when he bade "the wicked person be put away from the midst of
them,"(8) he only mentioned what is a very frequently recurring sentence of the
Creator. "Purge out the old leaven, that ye may be a new lump, as ye are
unleavened."(9) The unleavened bread was therefore, in the Creator's ordinance, a
figure of us (Christians). "For even Christ our passover is sacrificed for us."(10)
But why is Christ our passover, if the passover be not a type of Christ, in the
similitude of the blood which saves, and of the Lamb, which is Christ?(11) Why
does (the apostle) clothe us and Christ with symbols of the Creator's solemn
rites, unless they had relation to ourselves? When, again, he warns us against
fornication, he reveals the resurrection of the flesh. "The body," says he, "is
not for fornication, but for the Lord; and the Lord for the body,"(12) just as
the temple is for God, and God for the temple. A temple will therefore pass
away(15) with its god, and its god with the temple. You see, then, how that "He
who raised up the Lord will also raise us up."(14) In the body will He raise us,
because the body is for the Lord, and the Lord for the body. And suitably does
he add the question: "Know ye not that your bodies are the members of
Christ?''(15) What has the heretic to say? That these members of Christ will not rise
again, for they are no longer our own? "For," he says, "ye are bought with a
price."(16) A price! surely none at all was paid, since Christ was a phantom, nor
had He any corporeal substance which He could pay for our bodies! But, in truth,
Christ had wherewithal to redeem us; and since He has redeemed, at a great
price, these bodies of ours, against which fornication must not be committed
(because they are now members of Christ, and not our own), surely He will secure, on
His own account, the safety of those whom He made His own at so much cost!
Now, how shall we glorify, how shall we exalt, God in our body,(27) which is
doomed to perish? We must now encounter the subject of marriage, which Marcion, more
continent(18) than the apostle, prohibits. For the apostle, although
preferring the grace of continence,(19) yet permits the contraction of marriage and the
enjoyment of it,(20) and advises the continuance therein rather than the
dissolution thoreof.(21) Christ plainly forbids divorce, Moses unquestionably permits
it.(22) Now, when Marcion wholly prohibits all carnal intercourse to the
faithful (for we will say nothing(23) about his catechumens), and when he prescribes
repudiation of all engagements before marriage, whose teaching does he follow,
that of Moses or of Christ? Even Christ,(24) however, when He here commands
"the wife not to depart from her husband, or if she depart, to remain unmarried
or be reconciled to her husband,"(25) both permitted divorce, which indeed He
never absolutely prohibited, and confirmed (the sanctity) of marriage, by first
forbidding its dissolution; and, if separation had taken place, by wishing the
nuptial bond to be resumed by reconciliation. But what reasons does (the
apostle) allege for continence? Because "the time is short."(26) I had almost thought
it was because in Christ there was another god! And yet He from whom emanates
this shortness of the time, will also send what suits the said brevity. No one
makes provision for the time which is another's. You degrade your god, O
Marcion, when you make him circumscribed at all by the Creator's time. Assuredly also,
when (the apostle) rules that marriage should be "only in the Lord,"(27) that
no Christian should intermarry with a heathen, he maintains a law of the
Creator, who everywhere prohibits marriage with strangers. But when he says,
"although there be that are called gods, whether in l heaven or in earth,"(1) the
meaning of his words is clear--not as if there were gods in reality, but as if there
were some who are called gods, without being truly so. He introduces his
discussion about meats offered to idols with a statement concerning idols
(themselves): "We know that an idol is nothing in the world."(2) Marcion, however, does
not say that the Creator is not God; so that the apostle can hardly be thought
to have ranked the Creator amongst those who are called gods, without being so;
since, even if they had been gods, "to us there is but one God, the Father."(3)
Now, from whom do all things come to us, but from Him to whom all things
belong? And pray, what things are these? You have them in a preceding part of the
epistle: "All things are yours; whether Paul, or Apollos, or Cephas, or the
world, or life, or death, or things present, or things to come."(4) He makes the
Creator, then the God of all things, from whom proceed both the world and life and
death, which. cannot possibly belong to the other god. From Him, therefore,
amongst the "all things" comes also Christ.(5) When he teaches that every man
ought to live of his own industry,(6) he begins with a copious induction of
examples--of soldiers, and shepherds, and husbandmen.(7) But he(8) wanted divine
authority. What was the use, however, of adducing the Creator's, which he was
destroying? It was vain to do so; for his god had no such authority! (The apostle)
says: "Thou shalt not muzzle the ox that treadeth out the corn,"(9) and adds:
"Doth God take care of oxen?" Yes, of oxen, for the sake of men! For, says he,
"it is written for our sakes."(10) Thus he showed that the law had a symbolic
reference to ourselves, and that it gives its sanction in favour of those who live
of the gospel. (He showed) also, that those who preach the gospel are on this
account sent by no other god but Him to whom belongs the law, which made
provision for them, when he says: "For our sakes was this writ. ten."(11) Still he
declined to use this power which the law gave him, because he preferred working
without any restraint.(12) Of this he boasted, and suffered no man to rob him of
such glory(13)--certainly with no view of destroying the law, which he proved
that another man might use. For behold Marcion, in his blindness, stumbled at
the rock whereof our fathers drank in the wilderness. For since "that rock was
Christ,"(14) it was, of course, the Creator's, to whom also belonged the people.
But why resort to the figure of a sacred sign given by an extraneous god?(15)
Was it to teach the very truth, that ancient things prefigured the Christ who
was to be educed(16) out of them? For, being about to take a cursory view of
what befell the people (of Israel) he begins with saying: "Now these things
happened as examples for us."(17) Now, tell me, were these examples given by the
Creator to men belonging to a rival god? Or did one god borrow examples from
another, and a hostile one too? He withdraws me to himself in alarm(28) from Him from
whom he transfers my allegiance. Will his antagonist make me better disposed
to him? Should I now commit the same sins as the people, shall I have to suffer
the same penalties, or not?(19) But if not the same, how vainly does he propose
to me terrors which I shall not have to endure! From whom, again, shall I have
to endure them? If from the Creator, What evils does it appertain to Him to
inflict? And how will it happen that, jealous God as He is, He shall punish the
man who offends His rival, instead of rather encouraging(20) him. If, however,
from the other god--but he knows not how to punish. So that the whole
declaration of the apostle lacks a reasonable basis, if it is not meant to relate to the
Creator's discipline. But the fact is, the apostle's conclusion corresponds to
the beginning: "Now all these things happened unto them for ensamples; and they
are written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of the world are come."(21)
What a Creator! how prescient already, and considerate in warning Christians
who belong to another god! Whenever cavils occur the like to those which have
been already dealt with, I pass them by; certain others I despatch briefly. A
great argument for another god is the permission to eat of all kinds of meats,
contrary to the law.(22) Just as if we did not ourselves allow that the burdensome
ordinances of the law were abrogated--but by Him who imposed them, who also
promised the new condition of things.(1) The same, therefore, who prohibited
meats, also restored the use of them, just as He had indeed allowed them from the
beginning. If, however, some strange god had come to destroy our God, his
foremost prohibition would certainly have been, that his own votaries should abstain
from supporting their lives on the resources of his adversary.
CHAP. VIII.--MAN THE IMAGE OF THE CREATOR AND CHRIST THE HEAD OF THE MAN.
SPIRITUAL GIFTS. THE SEVENFOLD SPIRIT DESCRIBED BY ISAIAH. THE APOSTLE AND THE
PROPHET COMPARED. MARCION CHALLENGED TO PRODUCE ANYTHING LIKE THESE GIFTS OF THE
SPIRIT FORETOLD IN PROPHECY HIS GOD.
"The head of every man is Christ."(2) What Christ, if He is not the author
of man? The head he has here put for authority; now "authority" will accrue to
none else than the "author." Of what man indeed is He the head? Surely of him
concerning whom he adds soon afterwards: "The man ought not to cover his head,
forasmuch as he is the image of God."(3) Since then he is the image of the
Creator (for He, when looking on Christ His Word, who was to become man, said, "Let
us make man in our own image, after our likeness"(4)), how can I possibly have
another head but Him whose image I am? For if I am the image of the Creator
there is no room in me for another head But wherefore "ought the woman to have
power over her head, because of the angels?"(5) If it is because "she was created
for the man,''(6) and taken out of the man, according to the Creator's
purpose, then in this way too has the apostle maintained the discipline of that God
from whose institution he explains the reasons of His discipline. He adds:
"Because of the angels."(7) What angels? In other words, whose angels? If he means
the fallen angels of the Creator,(8) there is great propriety in his meaning. It
is right that that face which was a snare to them should wear some mark of a
humble guise and obscured beauty. If, however, the angels of the rival god are
referred to, what fear is there for them? for not even Marcion's disciples, (to
say nothing of his angels,) have any desire for women. We have often shown
before now, that the apostle classes heresies as evil(9) among "works of the flesh,"
and that he would have those persons accounted estimable(10) who shun heresies
as an evil thing. In like manner, when treating of the gospel,(11) we have
proved from the sacrament of the bread and the cup(12) the verity of the Lord's
body and blood in opposition to Marcion's phantom; whilst throughout almost the
whole of my work it has been contended that all mention of judicial attributes
points conclusively to the Creator as to a God who judges. Now, on the subject
of "spiritual gifts,"(13) I have to remark that these also were promised by the
Creator through Christ; and I think that we may derive from this a very just
conclusion that the bestowal of a gift is not the work of a god other than Him
who is proved to have given the promise. Here is a prophecy of Isaiah "There
shall come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse, and a flower(14) shall spring up
from his root; and upon Him shall rest the Spirit of the Lord." After which he
enumerates the special gifts of the same "The spirit of wisdom and
understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and of religion.(15)
And with the fear of the Lord(16) shall the Spirit fill Him."(17) In this
figure of a flower he shows that Christ was to arise out of the rod which sprang
from the stem of Jesse; in other words, from the virgin of the race of David, the
son of Jesse. In this Christ the whole substantia of the Spirit would have to
rest, not meaning that it would be as it were some subsequent acquisition
accruing to Him who was always, even before His incarnation, the Spirit of God;(18)
so that you cannot argue from this that the prophecy has reference to that
Christ who (as mere man of the race only of David) was to obtain the Spirit of his
God. (The prophet says,) on the contrary, that from the time when (the true
Christ) should appear in the flesh as the flower predicted,(19) rising from the
root of Jesse, there would have to rest upon Him the entire operation of the
Spirit of grace, which, so far as the Jews were concerned, would cease and come to
an end. This result the case itself shows; for after this time the Spirit of
the Creator never breathed amongst them. From Judah were taken away "the wise
man, and the cunning artificer, and the counsellor, and the prophet;"(1) that so
it might prove true that "the law and the prophets were until John.''(2) Now
hear how he declared that by Christ Himself, when returned to heaven, these
spiritual gifts were to be sent: "He ascended up. on high," that is, into heaven; "He
led captivity captive," meaning death or slavery of man; "He gave gifts to the
sons of men,"(3) that is, the gratuities, which we call charismata. He says
specifically "sons of men,"(4) and not men promiscuously; thus exhibiting to us
those who were the children of men truly so called, choice men, apostles. "For,"
says he, "I have begotten you through the gospel;"(5) and "Ye are my children,
of whom I travail again in birth."(6) Now was absolutely fulfilled that
promise of the Spirit which was given by the word of Joel: "In the last days will I
pour out of my Spirit upon all flesh, and their sons and their daughters shall
prophesy; and upon my servants and upon my handmaids will I pour out of my
Spirit."(7) Since, then, the Creator promised the gift of His Spirit in the latter
days; and since Christ has in these last days appeared as the dispenser of
spiritual gifts (as the apostle says, "When the fulness of the time was come, God
sent forth His Son;"(8) and again, "This I say, brethren, that the time is
short"(9)), it evidently follows in connection with this prediction of the last days,
that this gift of the Spirit belongs to Him who is the Christ of the
predicters. Now compare the Spirit's specific graces, as they are described by the
apostle, and promised by the prophet Isaiah. "To one is given," says he, "by the
Spirit the word of wisdom;" this we see at once is what Isaiah declared to be "the
spirit of wisdom." "To another, the word of knowledge;" this will be "the
(prophet's) spirit of understanding and counsel." "To another, faith by the same
Spirit;" this will be "the spirit of religion and the fear of the Lord." "To
another, the gifts of healing, and to another the working of miracles;" this will
be "the spirit of might." "To another prophecy, to another discerning of
spirits, to another divers kinds of tongues, to another the interpretation of
tongues;" this will be "the spirit of knowledge."(10) See how the apostle agrees with
the prophet both in making the distribution of the one Spirit, and in
interpreting His special graces. This, too, I may confidently say: he who has likened the
unity of our body throughout its manifold and divers members to the compacting
together of the various gifts of the Spirit,(11) shows also that there is but
one Lord of the human body and of the Holy Spirit. This Spirit, (according to
the apostle's showing,)(12) meant not(13) that the service(14) of these gifts
should be in the body,(15) nor did He place them in the human body); and on the
subject of the superiority of love(16) above all these gifts, He even taught the
apostle that it was the chief commandment,(17) just as Christ has shown it to
be: "Thou shalt love the Lord with all thine heart and soul,(18) with all thy
strength, and with all thy mind, and thy neighbour as thine own self."(19) When
he mentions the fact that "it is written in the law,"(20) how that the Creator
would speak with other tongues and other lips, whilst confirming indeed the
gift of tongues by such a mention, he yet cannot be thought to have affirmed that
the gift was that of another god by his reference to the Creator's
prediction.(21) In precisely the same manner,(22) when enjoining on women silence in the
church, that they speak not for the mere sake(23) of learning(24) (although that
even they have the right of prophesying, he has already shown(25) when he
covers the woman that prophesies with a veil), he goes to the law for his sanction
that woman should be under obedience.(26) Now this law, let me say once for all,
he ought to have made no other acquaintance with, than to destroy it. But that
we may now leave the subject of spiritual gifts, facts themselves will be
enough to prove which of us acts rashly in claiming them for his God, and whether
it is possible that they are opposed to our side, even if(27) the Creator
promised them for His Christ who is not yet revealed, as being destined only for the
Jews, to have their operations in His time, in His Christ, and among His
people. Let Marcion then exhibit, as gifts of his god, some prophets, such as have
not spoken by human sense, but with the Spirit of God, such as have both
predicted things to come, and have made manifest(1) the secrets of the heart;(2) let
him produce a psalm, a vision, a prayer(3)--only let it be by the Spirit,(4) in
an ecstasy, that is, in a rapture,(5) whenever an interpretation of tongues has
occurred to him; let him show to me also, that any woman of boastful tongue(6)
in his community has ever prophesied from amongst those specially holy sisters
of his. Now all these signs (of spiritual gifts) are forthcoming from my side
without any difficulty, and they agree, too, with the rules, and the
dispensations, and the instructions of the Creator; therefore without doubt the Christ,
and the Spirit, and the apostle, belong severally(7) to my God. Here, then, is my
frank avowal for any one who cares to require it.
CHAP. IX.--THE DOCTRINE OF THE RESURRECTION. THE BODY WILL RISE AGAIN.
CHRIST'S JUDICIAL CHARACTER. JEWISH PERVERSIONS OF PROPHECY EXPOSED AND CONFUTED.
MESSIANIC PSALMS VINDICATED. JEWISH AND RATIONALISTIC INTERPRETATIONS ON THIS POINT
SIMILAR. JESUS--NOT HEZEKIAH OR SOLOMON--THE SUBJECT OF THESE PROPHECIES IN
THE PSALMS. NONE BUT HE IS THE CHRIST OF THE OLD AND THE NEW TESTAMENTS.
Meanwhile the Marcionite will exhibit nothing of this kind; he is by this
time afraid to say which side has the better right to a Christ who is not yet
revealed. Just as my Christ is to be expected,(8) who was predicted from the
beginning, so his Christ therefore has no existence, as not having been announced
from the beginning. Ours is a better faith, which believes in a future Christ,
than the heretic's, which has none at all to believe in. Touching the
resurrection of the dead,(9) let us first inquire how some persons then denied it. No
doubt in the same way in which it is even now denied, since the resurrection of
the flesh has at all times men to deny it. But many wise men claim for the soul
a divine nature, and are confident of its undying destiny, and even the
multitude worship the dead(10) in the presumption which they boldly entertain that
their souls survive. As for our bodies, however, it is manifest that they perish
either at once by fire or the wild beasts,(11) or even when most carefully kept
by length of time. When, therefore, the apostle refutes those who deny the
resurrection of the flesh, he indeed defends, in opposition to them, the precise
matter of their denial, that is, the resurrection of the body. You have the
whole answer wrapped up in this.(12) All the rest is superfluous. Now in this very
point, which is called the resurrection of the dead, it is requisite that the
proper force of the words should be accurately maintained.(13) The word dead
expresses simply what has lost the vital principle,(14) by means of which it used
to live. Now the body is that which loses life, and as the result of losing it
becomes dead. To the body, therefore, the term dead is only suitable. Moreover,
as resurrection accrues to what is dead, and dead is a term applicable only to
a body, therefore the body alone has a resurrection incidental to it. So again
the word Resurrection, or (rising affairs), embraces only that which has
fallen down. "To rise," indeed, can be predicated of that which has never fallen
down, but had already been always lying down. But "to rise again" is predicable
only of that which has fallen down; because it is by rising again, in consequence
of its having fallen down, that it is said to have re-risen.(15) For the
syllable RE always implies iteration (or happening again). We say, therefore, that
the body falls to the ground by death, as indeed facts themselves show, in
accordance with the law of God. For to the body it was said, ("Till thou return to
the ground, for out of it wast thou taken; for) dust thou art, and unto dust
shalt thou return."(16) That, therefore, which came from the ground shall return
to the ground. Now that falls down which returns to the ground; and that rises
again which falls down. "Since by man came death, by man came also the
resurrection."(17) Here in the word man, who consists of bodily sub stance, as we have
often shown already, is presented to me the body of Christ. But if we are all
so made alive in Christ, as we die in Adam, it follows of necessity that we are
made alive in Christ as a bodily substance, since we died in Adam as a bodily
substance. The similarity, indeed, is not complete, unless our revival(18) in
Christ concur in identity of substance with our mortality(1) in Adam. But at this
point(2) (the apostle) has made a parenthetical statement(3) concerning
Christ, which, bearing as it does on our present discussion, must not pass unnoticed.
For the resurrection of the body will receive all the better proof, in
proportion as I shall succeed in showing that Christ belongs to that God who is
believed to have provided this resurrection of the flesh in His dispensation. When he
says, "For He must reign, till He hath put all enemies under His feet,"(4) we
can see at once(5) from this statement that he speaks of a God of vengeance,
and therefore of Him who made the following promise to Christ: "Sit Thou at my
right hand, until I make Thine enemies Thy footstool. The rod of Thy strength
shall the Lord send forth from Sion, and He shall rule along with Thee in the
midst of Thine enemies."(6) It is necessary for me to lay claim to those Scriptures
which the Jews endeavour to deprive us of, and to show that they sustain my
view. Now they say that this Psalm(7) was a chant in honour of Hezekiah,(8)
because "he went up to the house of the Lord,"(9) and God turned back and removed
his enemies. Therefore, (as they further hold,) those other words, "Before the
morning star did I beget thee from the womb,"(10) are applicable to Hezekiah, and
to the birth of Hezekiah. We on our side(11) have published Gospels (to the
credibility of which we have to thank(12) them(13) for having given some
confirmation, indeed, already in so great a subject(14)); and these declare that the
Lord was born at night, that so it might be "before the morning star," as is
evident both from the star especially, and from the testimony of the angel, who at
night announced to the shepherds that Christ had at that moment been born,(15)
and again from the place of the birth, for it is towards night that persons
arrive at the (eastern)" inn." Perhaps, too, there was a mystic purpose in
Christ's being born at night, destined, as He was, to be the light of the truth
amidst the dark shadows of ignorance. Nor, again, would God have said, "I have
begotten Thee," except to His true Son. For although He says of all the people
(Israel), "I have begotten(16) children,"(17) yet He added not "from the womb."
Now, why should He have added so superfluously this phrase "from the womb" (as if
there could be any doubt about any one's having been born from the womb),
unless the Holy Ghost had wished the words to be with especial care(18) understood
of Christ? "I have begotten Thee from the womb," that is to say, from a womb
only, without a man's seed, making it a condition of a fleshly body(19) that it
should come out of a womb. What is here added (in the Psalm), "Thou art a priest
for ever,"(20) relates to (Christ) Himself. Hezekiah was no priest; and even if
he had been one, he would not have been a priest for ever. "After the order,"
says He, "of Melchizedek." Now what had Hezekiah to do with Melchizedek, the
priest of the most high God, and him uncircumcised too, who blessed the
circumcised Abraham, after receiving from him the offering of tithes? To Christ,
however, "the order of Melchizedek" will be very suitable; for Christ is the proper
and legitimate High Priest of God. He is the Pontiff of the priesthood of the
uncircumcision, constituted such, even then, for the Gentiles, by whom He was to
be more fully received, although at His last coming He will favour with His
acceptance and blessing the circumcision also, even the race of Abraham, which by
and by is to acknowledge Him. Well, then, there is also another Psalm, which
begins with these words: "Give Thy judgments, O God, to the King," that is, to
Christ who was to come as King, "and Thy righteousness unto the King's son,"(21)
that is, to Christ's people; for His sons are they who are born again in Him.
But it will here be said that this Psalm has reference to Solomon. However, will
not those portions of the Psalm which apply to Christ alone, be enough to teach
us that all the rest, too, relates to Christ, and not to Solomon? "He shall
come down," says He, "like rain upon a fleece,(1) and like dropping showers upon
the earth,"(2) describing His descent from heaven to the flesh as gentle and
unobserved.(3) Solomon, however, if he had indeed any descent at all, came not
down like a shower, because he descended not from heaven. But I will set before
you more literal points.(4) "He shall have dominion," says the Psalmist, "from
sea to sea, and from the river unto the ends of the earth."(5) To Christ alone
was this given; whilst Solomon reigned over only the moderately-sized kingdom of
Judah. "Yea, all kings shall fall down before Him." Whom, indeed, shall they
all thus worship, except Christ? "All nations shall serve Him."(6) To whom shall
all thus do homage, but Christ? "His name shall endure for ever." Whose name
has this eternity of fame, but Christ's? "Longer than the sun shall His name
remain," for longer than the sun shall be the Word of God, even Christ. "And in
Him shall all nations be blessed."(7) In Solomon was no nation blessed; in Christ
every nation. And what if the Psalm proves Him to be even God? "They shall
call Him blessed."(8) (On what ground?) Because blessed Is the Lord God of
Israel, who only doeth wonderful things."(9) "Blessed also is His glorious name, and
with His glory shall all the earth be filled."(10) On the contrary, Solomon (as
I make bold to affirm) lost even the glory which he had from God, seduced by
his love of women even into idolatry. And thus, the statement which occurs in
about the middle of this Psalm, "His enemies shall lick the dust"(11) (of course,
as having been, (to use the apostle's phrase,) "put under His feet"(12)), will
bear upon the very object which I had in view, when I both introduced the
Psalm, and insisted on my opinion of its sense,--namely, that I might demonstrate
both the glory of His kingdom and the subjection of His enemies in pursuance of
the Creator's own plans, with the view of laying down(13) this conclusion, that
none but He can be believed to be the Christ of the Creator.
CHAP.X.--DOCTRINE OF THE RESURRECTION OF THE BODY, CONTINUED. HOW ARE THE DEAD
RAISED? AND WITH WHAT BODY DO THEY COME? THESE QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN SUCH A
SENSE AS TO MAINTAIN THE TRUTH OF THE RAISED BODY, AGAINST MARCION. CHRIST AS THE
SECOND ADAM CONNECTED WITH THE CREATOR OF THE FIRST MAN. LET US BEAR THE IMAGE
OF THE HEAVENLY. THE TRIUMPH OVER DEATH IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROPHETS. HOSEA
AND ST. PAUL COMPARED.
Let us now return to the resurrection, to the defence of which against
heretics of all sorts we have given indeed sufficient attention in another work of
ours.(14) But we will not be wanting (in some defence of the doctrine) even
here, in consideration of such persons as are ignorant of that little treatise.
"What," asks he, "shall they do who are baptized for the dead, if the dead rise
not?"(15) Now, never mind(16) that practice, (whatever it may have been.) The
Februarian lustrations(17) will perhaps(18) answer him (quite as well), by
praying for the dead.(19) Do not then suppose that the apostle here indicates some
new god as the author and advocate of this (baptism for the dead. His only aim
in alluding to it was) that he might all the more firmly insist upon the
resurrection of the body, in proportion as they who were vainly baptized for the dead
resorted to the practice from their belief of such a resurrection. We have the
apostle in another passage defining "but one baptism."(20) To be "baptized for
the dead" therefore means, in fact, to be baptized for the body;(21) for, as we
have shown, it is the body which becomes dead. What, then, shall they do who
are baptized for the body,(1) if the body(2) rises not again? We stand, then, on
firm ground (when we say) that(3) the next question which the apostle has
discussed equally relates to the body. But "some man will say, 'How are the dead
raised up? With what body do they come?'"(4) Having established the doctrine of
the resurrection which was denied, it was natural(5) to discuss what would be
the sort of body (in the resurrection), of which no one had an idea. On this
point we have other opponents with whom to engage, For Marcion does not in any wise
admit the resurrection of the flesh, and it is only the salvation of the soul
which he promises; consequently the question which he raises is not concerning
the sort of body, but the very substance thereof. Notwithstanding,(6) he is
most plainly refuted even from what the apostle advances respecting the quality of
the body, in answer to those who ask, "How are the dead raised up? with what
body do they come?" For as he treated of the sort of body, he of course ipso
facto proclaimed in the argument that it was a body which would rise again.
Indeed, since he proposes as his examples "wheat grain, or some other grain, to which
God giveth a body, such as it hath pleased Him;"(7) since also he says, that
"to every seed is its own body;"(8) that, consequently,(9) "there is one kind of
flesh of men, whilst there is another of beasts, and (another) of birds; that
there are also celestial bodies and bodies terrestrial; and that there is one
glory of the sun, and another glory of the moon, and another glory of the
stars"(10)--does he not therefore intimate that there is to be(11) a resurrection of
the flesh or body, which he illustrates by fleshly and corporeal samples? Does
he not also guarantee that the resurrection shall be accomplished by that God
from whom proceed all the (creatures which have served him for) examples? "So
also," says he, "is the resurrection of the dead."(12) How? Just as the grain,
which is sown a body, springs up a body. This sowing of the body he called the
dissolving thereof in the ground, "because it is sown in corruption," (but "is
raised) to honour and power."(13) Now, just as in the case of the grain, so here:
to Him will belong the work in the revival of the body, who ordered the
process in the dissolution thereof. If, however, you remove the body from the
resurrection which you submitted to the dissolution, what becomes of the diversity in
the issue? Likewise, "although it is sown a natural body, it is raised a
spiritual body."(14) Now, although the natural principle of life(15) and the spirit
have each a body proper to itself, so that the "natural body" may fairly be
taken(16) to signify the soul,(17) and "the spiritual body" the spirit, yet that is
no reason for supposing(18) the apostle to say that the soul is to become
spirit in the resurrection, but that body (which, as being born along with the
soul, and as retaining its life by means of the soul,(19) admits of being called
animal (or natural(20)) will became spiritual, since it rises through the Spirit
to an eternal life. In short, since it is not the soul, but the flesh which is
"sown in corruption," when it turns to decay in the ground, it follows that
(after such dissolution) the soul is no longer the natural body, but the flesh,
which was the natural body, (is the subject of the future change), forasmuch as
of a natural body it is made a spiritual body, as he says further down, "That
was not first which is spiritual."(21) For to this effect he just before remarked
of Christ Himself: "The first man Adam was made a living soul, the last Adam
was made a quickening spirit."(22) Our heretic, however, in the excess of his
folly, being unwilling that the statement should remain in this shape, altered
"last Adam" into "last Lord;"(23) because he feared, of course, that if he
allowed the Lord to be the last (or second) Adam, we should contend that Christ,
being the second Adam, must needs belong to that God who owned also the first Adam.
But the falsification is transparent. For why is there a first Adam, unless it
be that there is also a second Adam? For things are not classed together
unless they be severally alike, and have an identity of either name, or substance,
or origin.(24) Now, although among things which are even individually diverse,
one must be first and another last, yet they must have one author. If, however,
the author be a different one, he himself indeed may be called the last. But
the thing which he introduces is the first, and that only can be the last, which
is like this first in nature.(1) It is, however, not like the first in nature,
when it is not the work of the same author. In like manner (the heretic) will
be refuted also with the word "man:" "The first man is of the earth, earthy; the
second man is the Lord from heaven."(2) Now, since the first was a how can
there be a second, unless he is a man also? Or, else, if the second is" Lord," was
the first "Lord" also?(3) It is, however, quite enough for me, that in his
Gospel he admits the Son of man to be both Christ and Man; so that he will not be
able to deny Him (in this passage), in the "Adam" and the "man" (of the
apostle). What follows will also be too much for him. For when the apostle says, "As
is the earthy," that is, man, "such also are they that are earthy"-men again, of
course; "therefore as is the heavenly," meaning the Man, from heaven, "such
are the men also that are heavenly." For he could not possibly have opposed to
earthly men any heavenly beings that were not men also; his object being the more
accurately to distinguish their state and expectation by using this name in
common for them both. For in respect of their present state and their future
expectation he calls men earthly and heavenly, still reserving their parity of
name, according as they are reckoned (as to their ultimate conditions) in Adam or
in Christ. Therefore, when exhorting them to cherish the hope of heaven, he
says: "As we have borne the image of the earthy, so let us also bear the image of
the heavenly,"(6)--language which relates not to any condition of resurrection
life, but to the rule of the present time. He says, Let us bear, as a precept;
not We shall bear, in the sense of a promise--wishing us to walk even as he
himself was walking, and to put off the likeness of the earthly, that is, of the
old man, in the works of the flesh. For what are this next words? "Now this I
say, brethren, that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God."(7) He
means the works of the flesh and blood, which, in his Epistle to the Galatians,
deprive men of the kingdom of God.(8) In other passages also he is accustomed to
put the natural condition instead of the works that are done therein, as when he
says, that "they who are in the flesh cannot please God."(9) Now, when shall
we be able to please God except whilst we are in this flesh? There is, I
imagine, no other time wherein a man can work. If, however, whilst we are even
naturally living in the flesh, we yet eschew the deeds of the flesh, then we shall
not be in the flesh; since, although we are not absent from the substance of the
flesh, we are notwithstanding strangers to the sin thereof. Now, since in the
word flesh we are enjoined to put off, not the substance, but the works of the
flesh, therefore in the use of the same word the kingdom of God is denied to the
works of the flesh, not to the substance thereof. For not that is condemned in
which evil is done, but only the evil which is done in it. To administer
poison is a crime, but the cup in which it is given is not guilty. So the body is
the vessel of the works of the flesh, whilst the soul which is within it mixes
the poison of a wicked act. How then is it, that the soul, which is the real
author of the works of the flesh, shall attain to(10) the kingdom of God, after the
deeds done in the body have been stoned for, whilst the body, which was
nothing but (the soul's) ministering agent, must remain in condemnation? Is the cup
to be punished, but the poisoner to escape? Not that we indeed claim the kingdom
of God for the flesh: all we do is, to assert a resurrection for the substance
thereof, as the gate of the kingdom through which it is entered. But the
resurrection is one thing, and the kingdom is another. The resurrection is first,
and afterwards the kingdom. We say, therefore, that the flesh rises again, but
that when changed it obtains the kingdom. "For the dead shall be raised
incorruptible," even those who had been corruptible when their bodies fell into decay;
"and we shall be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye.(11) For this
corruptible"--and as he spake, the apostle seemingly pointed to his own
flesh--" must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality."(12) in
order, indeed, that it may be rendered a fit substance for the kingdom of God.
"For we shall be like the angels."(13) This will be the perfect change of our
flesh--only after its resurrection.(1) Now if, on the contrary,(2) there is to be
no flesh, how then shall it put on incorruption and immortality? Having then
become something else by its change, it will obtain the kingdom of God, no longer
the (old) flesh and blood, but the body which God shall have given it. Rightly
then does the apostle declare, "Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of
God;"(3) for this (honour) does he ascribe to the changed condition(4) which
ensues on the resurrection. Since, therefore, shall then be accomplished the word
which was written by the Creator, "O death, where is thy victory"--or thy
struggle?(5) "O death, where is thy sting?"(6) --written, I say, by the Creator,
for He wrote them by His prophet(7)--to Him will belong the gift, that is, the
kingdom, who proclaimed the word which is to be accomplished in the kingdom. And
to none other God does he tell us that "thanks" are due, for having enabled us
to achieve "the victory" even over death, than to Him from whom he received
the very expression(8) of the exulting and triumphant challenge to the mortal foe.