THE PRESCRIPTION AGAINST HERETICS
I. THE PRESCRIPTION AGAINST HERETICS.(1)
[TRANSLATED BY THE REV. PETER HOLMES, D.D., F.R.A.S., ETC., ETC.]
CHAP. I.--INTRODUCTORY. HERESIES MUST EXIST, AND EVEN ABOUND; THEY ARE A
PROBATION TO FAITH.
THE character of the times in which we live is such as to call forth from
us even this admonition, that we ought not to be astonished at the heresies
(which abound)(2) neither ought their existence to surprise us, for it was
foretold that they should come to pass;(3) nor the fact that they subvert the faith
of some, for their final cause is, by affording a trial to faith, to give it
also the opportunity of being "approved."(4) Groundless, therefore, and
inconsiderate is the offence of the many(5) who are scandalized by the very fact that
heresies prevail to such a degree. How great (might their offence have been) if
they had not existed.(6) When it has been determined that a thing must by all
means be, it receives the (final) cause for which it has its being. This secures
the power through which it exists, in such a way that it is impossible for it
not to have existence.
CHAP, II.--ANALOGY BETWEEN FEVERS AND HERESIES. HERESIES NOT TO BE WONDERED
AT: THEIR STRENGTH DERIVED FROM WEAKNESS OF MEN'S FAITH. THEY HAVE NOT THE TRUTH.
SIMILE OF PUGILISTS AND GLADIATORS IN ILLUSTRATION.
Taking the similar case(7) of fever, which is appointed a place amongst
all other deadly and excruciating issues (of life) for destroying man: we are not
surprised either that it exists, for there it is, or that it consumes man, for
that is the purpose of its existence. In like manner, with respect to
heresies, which are produced for the weakening and the extinction of faith, since we
feel a dread because they have this power, we should first dread the fact of
their existence; for as long as they exist, they have they have their power; and as
long as they have their power, they, have their existence. But still fever, as
being an evil both in its cause(8) and in its power, as all know, we rather
loathe than wonder at, and to the best of our power guard against, not having its
extirpation in our power. Some men prefer wondering at heresies, however,
which bring with them eternal death and the heat of a stronger fire, for possessing
this power, instead of avoiding their power when they have the means of
escape: but heresies would have no power, if (men) would cease to wonder that they
have such power. For it either happens that, while men wonder, they fall into a
snare, or, because they are ensnared, they cherish their surprise, as if
heresies were so powerful because of some truth which belonged to them. It would no
doubt be a wonderful thing that evil should have any force of its own, were it
not that heresies are strong in those persons who are not strong in faith. In a
combat of boxers and gladiators, generally speaking, it is not because a man is
strong that he gains the victory, or loses it because he is not strong, but
because he who is vanquished was a man of no strength; and indeed this very
conqueror, when afterwards matched against a really powerful man, actually retires
crest-fallen from the contest. In precisely the same way, heresies derive such
strength as they have from the infirmities of individuals--having no strength
whenever they encounter a really powerful faith.
CHAP. III.--WEAK PEOPLE FALL AN EASY PREY TO HERESY, WHICH DERIVES STRENGTH
FROM THE GENERAL FRAILTY OF MANKIND. EMINENT MEN HAVE FALLEN FROM FAITH; SAUL,
DAVID, SOLOMON.THE CONSTANCY OF CHRIST.
It is usual, indeed, with persons of a weaker character, to be so built up
(in confidence) by certain individuals who are caught by heresy, as to topple
over into ruin themselves. How comes it to pass, (they ask), that this woman or
that man, who were the most faithful, the most prudent, and the most
approved(1) in the church, have gone over to the other side? Who that asks such a
question does not in fact reply to it himself, to the effect that men whom heresies
have been able to pervert(2) ought never to have been esteemed prudent, or
faithful, or approved? This again is, I suppose, an extraordinary thing, that one
who has been approved should afterwards fall back? Saul, who was good beyond all
others, is afterwards subverted by envy.(3) David, a good man "after the Lord's
own heart,"(4) is guilty afterwards of murder and adultery.(5) Solomon,
endowed by the Lord with all grace and wisdom, is led into idolatry, by women.(6) For
to the Son of God alone was it reserved to persevere to the last without
sin.(7) But what if a bishop, if a deacon, if a widow, if a virgin, if a doctor, if
even a martyr,(8) have fallen from the rule (of faith), will heresies on that
account appear to possess(9) the truth? Do we prove the faith(10) by the
persons, or the persons by the faith? No one is wise, no one is faithful, no one
excels in dignity,(11) but the Christian; and no one is a Christian but he who
perseveres even to the end.(12) You, as a man, know any other man from the outside
appearance. You think as you see. And you see as far only as you have eyes. But
says (the Scripture), "the eyes of the Lord are lofty."(13) "Man looketh at the
outward appearance, but God looketh at the heart."(14) "The Lord (beholdeth
and) knoweth them that are His;"(15) and "the plant which (my heavenly Father)
hath not planted, He rooteth up;"(16) and "the first shall," as He shows, "be
last;"(17) and He carries "His fan in His hand to purge His threshing-floor."(18)
Let the chaff of a fickle faith fly off as much as it will at every blast of
temptation, all the purer will be that heap of corn which shall be laid up in the
garner of the Lord. Did not certain of the disciples turn back from the Lord
Himself,(19) When they were offended? Yet the rest did not therefore think that
they must turn away from following Him,(20) but because they knew that He was
the Word of Life, and was come from God,(21) they continued in His company to
the very last, after He had gently inquired of them whether they also would go
away.(22) It is a comparatively small thing,(23) that certain men, like
Phygellus, and Hermogenes, and Philetus, and Hymenaeus, deserted His apostle:(24) the
betrayer of Christ was himself one of the apostles. We are surprised at seeing
His churches forsaken by some men, although the things which we suffer after the
example of Christ Himself, show us to be Christians. "They went out from us,"
says (St. John,) "but they were not of us. If they had been of us, they would no
doubt have continued with us."(25)
CHAP. IV.--WARNINGS AGAINST HERESY GIVEN US IN THE NEW TESTAMENT. SUNDRY
PASSAGES ADDUCED. THESE IMPLY THE POSSIBILITY OF FALLING INTO HERESY.
But let us rather be mindful of the sayings of the Lord, and of the
letters of the apostles; for they have both told us beforehand that there shall be
heresies, and have given us, in anticipation, warnings to avoid them; and
inasmuch as we are not alarmed because they exist, so we ought not to wonder that they
are capable of doing that, on account of which they must be shunned. The Lord
teaches us that many "ravening wolves shall come in sheep's clothing."(1) Now,
what are these sheep's clothing's, but the external surface of the Christian
profession? Who are the ravening wolves but those deceitful senses and spirits
which are lurking within to waste the flock of Christ? Who are the false prophets
but deceptive predictors of the future? Who are the false apostles but the
preachers of a spurious gospel?(2) Who also are the Antichrists, both now and
evermore, but the men who rebel against Christ?(3) Heresies, at the present time,
will no less rend the church by their perversion of doctrine, than will
Antichrist persecute her at that day by the cruelty of his attacks,(4) except that
persecution makes even martyrs, (but) heresy only apostates. And therefore
"heresies must needs be in order that they which are approved might be made
manifest,(5) both those who remained stedfast under persecution, and those who did not
wander out of their way(6) into heresy. For the apostle does not mean(7) that
those persons should be deemed approved who exchange their creed for heresy;
although they contrariously interpret his words to their own side, when he says in
another passage, "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good;"(8) as if,
after proving all things amiss, one might not through error make a determined
choice of some evil thing.
CHAP. V.--HERESY, AS WELL AS SCHISM AND DISSENSION, DISAPPROVED BY ST. PAUL,
WHO SPEAKS OF THE NECESSITY OF HERESIES, NOT AS A GOOD, BUT, BY THE WILL OF GOD,
SALUTARY TRIALS FOR TRAINING AND APPROVING THE FAITH OF CHRISTIANS.
Moreover, when he blames dissensions and schisms, which undoubtedly are
evils, he immediately adds heresies likewise. Now, that which he subjoins to evil
things, he of course confesses to be itself an evil; and all the greater,
indeed, because he tells us that his belief of their schisms and dissensions was
grounded on his knowledge that "there must be heresies also."(9) For he shows us
that it was owing to the prospect of the greater evil that he readily
believed the existence of the lighter ones; and so far indeed was he from believing,
in respect of evils (of such a kind), that heresies were good, that his object
was to forewarn us that we ought not to be surprised at temptations of even a
worse stamp, since (he said) they tended "to make manifest all such as were
approved;"(10) in other words, those whom they were unable to pervert.(11) In
short, since the whole passage(12) points to the maintenance of unity and the
checking of divisions, inasmuch as heresies sever men from unity no less than
schisms and dissensions, no doubt he classes heresies under the same head of censure
as he does schisms also and dissensions. And by so doing, he makes those to be
"not approved," who have fallen into heresies; more especially when with
reproofs he exhorts(13) men to turn away from such, teaching them that they should
"all speak and think the selfsame thing,"(14) the very object which heresies do
not permit.
CHAP. VI.--HERETICS ARE SELF-CONDEMNED. HERESY. IS SELF-WILL, WHILST FAITH IS
SUBMISSION OF OUR WILL TO THE DIVINE AUTHORITY. THE HERESY OF APELLES.
On this point, however, we dwell no longer, since it is the same Paul who,
in his Epistle to the Galatians, counts "heresies" among "the sins of the
flesh,"(15) who also intimates to Titus, that "a man who is a heretic" must be
"rejected after the first admonition," on the ground that "he that is such is
perverted, and committeth sin, as a self-condemned man."(16) Indeed, in almost every
epistle, when enjoining on us (the duty) of avoiding false doctrines, he
sharply condemns(17) heresies. Of these the practical effects(18) are false
doctrines, called in Greek heresies,(19) a word used in the sense of that choice which
a man makes when he either teaches them(to others)(20) or takes up with them
(for himself).(21) For this reason it is that he calls the heretic
condemned,(22) because he has himself chosen that for which he is condemned.
We, however, are not permitted to cherish any object(1) after our own will, nor
yet to make choice of that which another has introduced of his private fancy.
In the Lord's apostles we possess our authority; for even they did not of
themselves choose to introduce anything, but faithfully delivered to the nations (of
mankind) the doctrine(2) which they had received from Christ. If, therefore,
even "an angel from heaven should preach any other gospel" (than theirs), he
would be called accursed(3) by us. The Holy Ghost had even then foreseen that there
would be in a certain virgin (called) Philumene(4) an angel of deceit,
"transformed into an angel of light,"(5) by whose miracles and illusions(6) Apelles
was led (when) he introduced his new heresy.
CHAP. VII.--PAGAN PHILOSOPHY THE PARENT OF HERESIES. THE CONNECTION BETWEEN
DEFLECTIONS FROM CHRISTIAN FAITH AND THE OLD SYSTEMS OF PAGAN PHILOSOPHY.
These are "the doctrines" of men and "of demons"(7) produced for itching
ears of the spirit of this world's wisdom: this the Lord called
"foolishness,"(8) and "chose the foolish things of the world" to confound even philosophy
itself. For (philosophy) it is which is the material of the world's wisdom, the rash
interpreter of the nature and the dispensation of God. Indeed(9) heresies are
themselves instigated(10) by philosophy. From this source came the AEons, and I
known not what infinite forms,(11) and the trinity of man(12) in the system of
Valentinus, who was of Plato's school. From the same source came Marcion's
better god, with all his tranquillity; he came of the Stoics. Then, again, the
opinion that the soul dies is held by the Epicureans; while the denial of the
restoration of the body is taken from the aggregate school of all the philosophers;
also, when matter is made equal to God, then you have the teaching of Zeno;
and when any doctrine is alleged touching a god of fire, then Heraclitus comes
in. The same subject-matter is discussed over and over again(13) by the heretics
and the philosophers; the same arguments(14) are involved. Whence comes evil?
Why is it permitted? What is the origin of man? and in what way does he come?
Besides the question which Valentinus has very lately proposed--Whence comes God?
Which he settles with the answer: From enthymesis and ectroma.(15) Unhappy
Aristotle! who invented for these men dialectics, the art of building up and
pulling down; an art so evasive in its propositions,(16) so far-fetched in its
conjectures, so harsh, in its arguments, so productive of
contentions--embarrassing(17) even to itself, retracting everything, and really treating of(18) nothing!
Whence spring those "fables and endless genealogies,"(19) and "unprofitable
questions,"(20) and "words which spread like a cancer?"(21) From all these, when
the apostle would restrain us, he expressly names philosophy as that which he
would have us be on our guard against. Writing to the Colossians, he says, "See
that no one beguile you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition
of men, and contrary to the wisdom of the Holy Ghost."(22) He had been at
Athens, and had in his interviews (with its philosophers) become acquainted with
that human wisdom which pretends to know the truth, whilst it only corrupts it,
and is itself divided into its own manifold heresies, by the variety of its
mutually repugnant sects. What indeed has Athens to do with Jerusalem? What concord
is there between the Academy and the Church? what between heretics and
Christians? Our instruction comes from "the porch of Solomon,"(23) who had himself
taught that "the Lord should be sought in simplicity of heart."(24) Away with(25)
all attempts to produce a mottled Christianity of Stoic, Platonic, and
dialectic composition! We want no curious disputation after possessing Christ Jesus, no
inquisition after enjoying the gospel! With our faith, we desire no further
belief. For this is our palmary faith, that there is nothing which we ought to
believe besides.
CHAP. VIII.--CHRIST'S WORD, SEEK, AND YE SHALL FIND, NO WARRANT FOR HERETICAL
DEVIATIONS FROM THE FAITH. ALL CHRIST'S WORDS TO THE JEWS ARE FOR US, NOT
INDEED AS SPECIFIC COMMANDS, BUT AS PRINCIPLES TO BE APPLIED.
I come now to the point which (is urged both by our own brethren and by
the heretics). Our brethren adduce it as a pretext for entering on curious
inquiries,(1) and the heretics insist on it for importing the scrupulosity (of their
unbelief).(2) It is written, they say, "Seek, and ye shall find."(3) Let us
remember at what time the Lord said this. I think it was at the very outset of His
teaching, when there was still a doubt felt by all whether He were the Christ,
and when even Peter had not yet declared Him to be the Son of God, and John
(Baptist) had actually ceased to feel assurance about Him.(4) With good reason,
therefore, was it then said, "Seek, and ye shall find," when inquiry was still
be to made of Him who was not yet become known. Besides, this was said in
respect of the Jews. For it is to them that the whole matter(5) of this reproof(6)
pertains, seeing that they had (a revelation) where they might seek Christ.
"They have," says He, "Moses and Elias,"(7)--in other words, the law and
the prophets, which preach Christ; as also in another place He says plainly,
"Search the Scriptures, in which ye expect (to find) salvation; for they testify
of me;"(8) which will be the meaning of "Seek, and ye shall find." For it is
clear that the next words also apply to the Jews: "Knock, and it shall be opened
unto you."(9) The Jews had formerly been in covenant with(10) God; but being
afterwards cast off on account of their sins, they began to be(11) without God.
The Gentiles, on the contrary, had never been in covenant with God; they were
only as "a drop from a bucket," and "as dust from the threshing floor,(12) and
were ever outside the door. Now, how shall he who was always outside knock at the
place where he never was? What door does he know of, when he has passed through
none, either by entrance or ejection? Is it not rather he who is aware that he
once lived within and was thrust out, that (probably) found the door and
knocked thereat? In like manner, "Ask, and ye shall receive,"(13) is suitably
said(14) to one who was aware from whom he ought to ask,--by whom also some promise
had been given; that is to say, "the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob."
Now, the Gentiles knew nothing either of Him, or of any of His promises.
Therefore it was to Israel that he spake when He said, "I am not sent but to the lost
sheep of the house of Israel."(15) Not yet had He "cast to the dogs the
children's bread;"(16) not yet did He charge them to "go into the way of the
Gentiles."(17) It is only at the last that He instructs them to "go and teach all
nations, and baptize them,"(18) when they were so soon to receive "the Holy Ghost, the
Comforter, who should guide them into all the truth."(19) And this, too, makes
towards the the same conclusion. If the apostles, who were ordained(20) to be
teachers to the Gentiles, were themselves to have the Comforter for their
teacher, far more needless(21) was it to say to us, "Seek, and ye shall find," to
whom was to come, without research,(22) our instruction(23) by the apostles, and
to the apostles themselves by the Holy Ghost. All the Lord's sayings, indeed,
are set forth for all men; through the ears of the Jews have they passed on to
us. Still most of them were addressed to Jewish persons;(24) they therefore did
not constitute instruction properly designed(25) for ourselves, but rather an
example.(26)
CHAP. IX.--THE RESEARCH AFTER DEFINITE TRUTH ENJOINED ON US. WHEN WE HAVE
DISCOVERED THIS, WE SHOULD BE CONTENT.
I now purposely(27) relinquish this ground of argument. Let it be granted,
that the words, "Seek, and ye shall find," were addressed to all men
(equally). Yet even here one's aim is(28) carefully to determine(29) the sense of the
words(30) consistently with(31) (that reason),(32) which is the guiding
principle(33) in all interpretation. (Now) no divine saying is so unconnected(34) and
diffuse, that its words only are to be insisted on, and their connection left
undetermined. But at the outset I lay down (this position) that there is some
one, and therefore definite, thing taught by Christ, which the Gentiles are by
all means bound to believe, and for that purpose to "seek," in order that they
may be able, when they have "found" it, to believe. However,(1) there can be no
indefinite seeking for that which has been taught as one only definite thing.
You must "seek" until you "find," and believe when you have found; nor have you
anything further to do but to keep what you have believed provided you believe
this besides, that nothing else is to be believed, and therefore nothing else is
to be sought, after you have found and believed what has been taught by Him
who charges you to seek no other thing than that which He has taught.(2) When,
indeed, any man doubts about this, proof will be forthcoming,(3) that we have in
our possession(4) that which was taught by Christ. Meanwhile, such is my
confidence in our proof, that I anticipate it, in the shape of an admonition to
certain persons, not "to seek" anything beyond what they have believed--that this is
what they ought to have sought, how to avoid(5) interpreting, "Seek, and ye
shall find," without regard to the rule of reason.
CHAP. X.--ONE HAS SUCCEEDED IN FINDING DEFINITE TRUTH, WHEN HE BELIEVES.
HERETICAL WITS ARE ALWAYS OFFERING MANY THINGS FOR VAIN DISCUSSION, BUT WE ARE NOT
TO BE ALWAYS SEEKING.
Now the reason of this saying is comprised in three points: in the matter,
in the time, in the limit.(6) In the matter, so that you must consider what it
is you have to seek; in the time, when you have to seek; in the limit, how
long. What you have "to seek," then, is that which Christ has taught,(7) (and you
must go on seeking) of course for such time as you fail to find,(8)--until
indeed you find(9) it. But you have succeeded in finding (10) when you have
believed. For you would not have believed if you had not found; as neither would you
have sought except with a view to find. Your object, therefore, in seeking was
to find; and your object in finding was to believe, All further delay for
seeking and finding you have prevented(11) by believing. The very fruit of your
seeking has determined for you this limit. This boundary(12) has He set for you
Himself, who is unwilling that you should believe anything else than what He has
taught, or, therefore, even seek for it. If, however, because so many other
things have been taught by one and another, we are on that account bound to go on
seeking, so long as we are able to find anything, we must (at that rate) be ever
seeking, and never believe anything at all. For where shall be the end of
seeking? where the stop's in believing? where the completion in finding? (Shall it
be) with Marcion? But even Valentinus proposes (to us the) maxim, "Seek, and ye
shall find." Then shall it be) with Valentinus? Well, but Apelles, too, will
assail me with the same quotation; Hebion also, and Simon, and all in turn, have
no other argument wherewithal to entice me, and draw me over to their side.
Thus I shall be nowhere, and still be encountering(14) (that challenge), "Seek,
and ye shall find," precisely as if I had no resting-place;(15) as if (indeed) I
had never found that which Christ has taught--that which ought(16) to be
sought, that which must needs(17) be believed.
CHAP. XI.--AFTER WE HAVE BELIEVED, SEARCH SHOULD CEASE; OTHERWISE IT MUST END
IN A DENIAL OF WHAT WE HAVE BELIEVED. NO OTHER OBJECT PROPOSED FOR OUR FAITH.
There is impunity in erring, if there is no delinquency; although indeed
to err it is itself an act of delinquency.(18) With impunity, I repeat, does a
man ramble,(19) when he (purposely) deserts nothing. But yet, if I have believed
what I was bound to believe, and then afterwards think that there is something
new to be sought after, I of course expect that there is something else to be
found, although I should by no means entertain such expectation, unless it were
because I either had not believed, although I apparently had become a
believer, or else have ceased to believe. If I thus desert my faith, I am found to be a
denier thereof. Once for all I would say, No man seeks, except him who either
never possessed, or else has lost (what he sought). The old woman (in the
Gospel)(1) had lost one of her ten pieces of silver, and therefore she sought it;(2)
when, however, she found it, she ceased to look for it. The neighbour was
without bread, and therefore he knocked; but as soon as the door was opened to him,
and he received the bread, he discontinued knocking.(3) The widow kept asking
to be heard by the judge, because she was not admitted; but when her suit was
heard, thenceforth she was silent.(4) So that there is a limit both to seeking,
and to knocking, and to asking. "For to every one that asketh," says He, "it
shall be given, and to him that knocketh it shall be opened, and by him that
seeketh it shall be found."(5) Away with the man(6) who is ever seeking because he
never finds; for he seeks there where nothing can be found. Away with him who
is always knocking because it will never be opened to him; for he knocks where
there is none (to open). Away with him who is always asking because he will
never be heard; for he asks of one who does not hear.
CHAP. XII.--A PROPER SEEKING AFTER DIVINE KNOWLEDGE, WHICH WILL NEVER BE OUT
OF PLACE OR EXCESSIVE, IS ALWAYS WITHIN THE RULE OF FAITH.
As for us, although we must still seek, and that always, yet where ought
our search to be made? Amongst the heretics, where all things are foreign(7) and
opposed to our own verity, and to whom we are forbidden to draw near? What
slave looks for food from a stranger, not to say an enemy of his master? What
soldier expects to get bounty and pay from kings who are unallied, I might almost
say hostile--unless forsooth he be a deserter, and a runaway, and a rebel? Even
that old woman(8) searched for the piece of silver within her own house. It was
also at his neighbour's door that the persevering assailant kept knocking. Nor
was it to a hostile judge, although a severe one, that the widow made her
appeal. No man gets instruction(9) from that which tends to destruction.(10) No man
receives illumination from a quarter where all is darkness. Let our "seeking,"
therefore be in that which is our own, and from those who are our own: and
concerning that which is our own,--that, and only that,(12) which can become an
object of inquiry without impairing the rule of faith.
CHAP. XIII.--SUMMARY OF THE CREED, OR RULE OF FAITH. NO QUESTIONS EVER RAISED
ABOUT IT BY BELIEVERS. HERETICS ENCOURAGE AND PERPETUATE THOUGHT INDEPENDENT OF
CHRIST'S TEACHING.
Now, with regard to this rule of faith--that we may from this point(12)
acknowledge what it is which we defend--it is, you must know, that which
prescribes the belief that there is one only God, and that He is none other than the
Creator of the world, who produced all things out of nothing through His own
Word, first of all sent forth;(13) that this Word is called His Son, and, under the
name of God, was seen "in diverse manners" by the patriarchs, heard at all
times in the prophets, at last brought down by the Spirit and Power of the Father
into the Virgin Mary, was made flesh in her womb, and, being born of her, went
forth as Jesus Christ; thenceforth He preached the new law and the new promise
of the kingdom of heaven, worked miracles; having been crucified, He rose again
the third day; (then) having ascended(14) into the heavens, He sat at the
right hand of the Father; sent instead of Himself(15) the Power of the Holy Ghost
to lead such as believe; will come with glory to take the saints to the
enjoyment of everlasting life and of the heavenly promises, and to condemn the wicked
to everlasting fire, after the resurrection of both these classes shall have
happened, together with the restoration of their flesh. This rule, as it will be
proved, was taught by Christ, and raises amongst ourselves no other questions
than those which heresies introduce, and which make men heretics.(16)
CHAP. XIV.--CURIOSITY OUGHT NOT RANGE BEYOND THE RULE OF FAITH. RESTLESS
CURIOSITY, THE FEATURE OF HERESY.
So long, however, as its form exists in its proper order, you may seek and
discuss as much as you please, and give full rein to(1) your curiosity, in
whatever seems to you to hang in doubt, or to be shrouded in obscurity. You have
at hand, no doubt, some learned(2) brother gifted with the grace of knowledge,
some one of the experienced class, some one of your close acquaintance who is
curious like yourself; although with yourself, a seeker he will, after all,(3) be
quite aware(4) that it is better for you to remain in ignorance, lest you
should come to know what you ought not, because you have acquired the knowledge of
what you ought to know.(5) "Thy faith," He says, "hath saved thee"(6) not
observe your skill(7) in the Scriptures. Now, faith has been deposited in the rule;
it has a law, and (in the observance thereof) salvation. Skill,(7) however,
consists in curious art, having for its glory simply the readiness that comes from
knack.(8) Let such curious art give place to faith; let such glory yield to
salvation. At any rate, let them either relinquish their noisiness.(9) or else be
quiet. To know nothing in opposition to the rule (of faith), is to know all
things. (Suppose) that heretics were not enemies to the truth, so that we were
not forewarned to avoid them, what sort of conduct would it be to agree with men
who do themselves confess that they are still seeking? For if they are still
seeking, they have not as yet found anything amounting to certainty; and
therefore, whatever they seem for a while(10) to hold, they betray their own
scepticism,(11) whilst they continue seeking. You therefore, who seek after their
fashion, looking to those who are themselves ever seeking, a doubter to doubters, a
waverer to waverers, must needs be "led, blindly by the blind, down into the
ditch."(12) But when, for the sake of deceiving us, they pretend that they are
still seeking, in order that they may palm(13) their essays(14) upon us by the
suggestion of an anxious sympathy,(15)--when, in short (after gaining an access to
us), they proceed at once to insist on the necessity of our inquiring into such
points as they were in the habit of advancing, then it is high time for us in
moral obligation(16) to repel(17) them, so that they may know that it is not
Christ, but themselves, whom we disavow. For since they are still seekers, they
have no fixed tenets yet;(18) and being not fixed in tenet, they have not yet
believed; and being not yet believers, they are not Christians. But even though
they have their tenets and their belief, they still say that inquiry is
necessary in order to discussion.(19) Previous, however, to the discussion, they deny
what they confess not yet to have believed, so long as they keep it an object
of inquiry. When men, therefore, are not Christians even on their own
admission,(20) how much more (do they fail to appear such) to us! What sort of truth is
that which they patronize,(21) when they commend it to us with a lie? Well, but
they actually(22) treat of the Scriptures and recommend(their opinions) out of
the Scriptures! To be sure they do.(23) From what other source could they
derive arguments concerning the things of the faith, except from the records of the
faith?
CHAP. XV.--HERETICS NOT TO BE ALLOWED TO ARGUE OUT OF THE SCRIPTURES. THE
SCRIPTURES, IN FACT, DO NOT BELONG TO THEM.(24)
We are therefore come to (the gist of) our position; for at this point we
were aiming, and for this we were preparing in the preamble of our address
(which we have just completed),--so that we may now join issue on the contention to
which our adversaries challenge us. They put forward(25) the Scriptures, and
by this insolence(26) of theirs they at once influence some. In the encounter
itself, however, they weary the strong, they catch the weak, and dismiss waverers
with a doubt. Accordingly, we oppose to them this step above ,all others, of
not admitting them to any discussion of the Scriptures.(27)
If in these lie their resources, before they can use them, it ought to be
clearly seen to whom belongs the possession of the Scriptures, that none may be
admitted to the use thereof who has no title at all to the privilege.
CHAP. XVI.--APOSTOLIC SANCTION TO THIS EXCLUSION OF HERETICS FROM THE USE OF
THE SCRIPTURES, HERETICS, ACCORDING TO THE APOSTLE, ARE NOT TO BE DISPUTED WITH,
BUT TO BE ADMONISHED.
I might be thought to have laid down this position to remedy distrust in
my case,(1) or from a desire of entering on the contest(2) in some other way,
were there not reasons on my side, especially this, that our faith owes
deference(3) to the apostle, who forbids us to enter on "questions," or to lend our ears
to new-fangled statements,(4) or to consort with a heretic "after the first
and second admonition,"(5) not, (be it observed,) after discussion. Discussion he
has inhibited in this way, by designating admonition as the purpose of dealing
with a heretic, and the first one too, because he is not a Christian; in order
that he might not, after the manner of a Christian, seem to require correction
again and again, and "before two or three witnesses,"(6) seeing that he ought
to be corrected, for the very reason that he is not to be disputed with; and in
the next place, because a controversy over the Scriptures can, clearly,(7)
produce no other effect than help to upset either the stomach or the brain.
CHAP. XVII.--HERETICS, IN FACT, DO NOT USE BUT ONLY ABUSE, SCRIPTURE. NO
COMMON GROUND BETWEEN THEM AND YOU.
Now this heresy of yours(3) does not receive certain Scriptures; and
whichever of them it does receive, it perverts by means of additions and
diminutions, for the accomplishment of it own purpose; and such as it does receive, it
receives not in their entirety; but even when it does receive any up to a certain
point(9) as entire, it nevertheless perverts even these by the contrivance of
diverse interpretations. Truth is just as much opposed by an adulteration of its
meaning as it is by a corruption of its text.(10) Their vain presumptions must
needs refuse to acknowledge the (writings) whereby they are refuted. They rely
on those which they have falsely put together, and which they have selected,
because their ambiguity. Though most skilled(12) in the Scriptures, you will
make no progress,(13) when everything which you maintain is denied on the other
side, and whatever you deny is (by them) maintained. As for yourself, indeed, you
will lose nothing but your breath, and gain nothing but vexation from their
blasphemy.
CHAP. XVIII.--GREAT EVIL ENSUES TO THE WEAK IN FAITH, FROM ANY DISCUSSION OUT
OF THE SCRIPTURES. CONVICTION NEVER COMES TO THE HERETIC FROM SUCH A PROCESS.
But with respect to the man for whose sake you enter on the discussion of
the Scriptures,(14) with the view of strengthening him when afflicted with
doubts, (let me ask) will it be to the truth, or rather to heretical opinions that
he will lean? Influenced by the very fact that he sees you have made no
progress, whilst the other side is on an equal footing(15) (with yourself) in denying
and in defence, or at any rate on a like standing(16) he will go away confirmed
in his uncertainty(17) by the discussion, not knowing which side to adjudge
heretical. For, no doubt, they too are able(18) to retort these things on us. It
is indeed a necessary consequence that they should go so far as to say that
adulterations of the Scriptures, and false expositions thereof, are rather
introduced by ourselves, inasmuch as they, no less than we(19) maintain that truth is
on their side.
CHAP. XIX. APPEAL, IN DISCUSSION OF HERESY, LIES NOT TO THE SCRIPTURES. THE
SCRIPTURES BELONG ONLY TO THOSE WHO HAVE THE RULE OF FAITH
Our appeal, therefore, must not be made to the Scriptures; nor must
controversy be admitted on points in which victory will either be impossible,(20) or
uncertain, or not certain enough.(21) But even if a discussion from the
Scriptures(22) should not turn out in such a way as to place both sides on a par,
(yet) the natural order of things would require that this point should be first
proposed, which is now the only one which we must discuss: "With whom lies that
very faith to which the Scriptures belong.(23) From what and through whom, and
when, and to whom, has been handed down that rule,(24) by which men become
Christians?" For wherever it shall be manifest that the true Christian rule and
faith shall be, there will likewise be the true Scriptures and expositions thereof,
and all the Christian traditions.
CHAP. XX.--CHRIST FIRST DELIVERED THE FAITH. THE APOSTLES SPREAD IT; THEY
FOUNDED CHURCHES AS THE DEPOSITORIES THEREOF. THAT FAITH, THEREFORE, IS APOSTOLIC,
WHICH DESCENDED FROM THE APOSTLES, THROUGH APOSTOLIC CHURCHES.
Christ Jesus our Lord (may He bear with me a moment in thus expressing
myself!), whosoever He is, of what God soever He is the Son, of what substance
soever He is man and God, of what faith soever He is the, teacher, of what reward
soever He is the Promiser, did, whilst He lived on earth, Himself declare what
He was, what He had been, what the Father's will was which He was
administering, what the duty of man was which He was prescribing; (and this declaration He
made,) either openly to the people, or privately to His disciples, of whom He
had chosen the twelve chief ones to be at His side,(1) and whom He destined to be
the teachers of the nations. Accordingly, after one of these had been struck
off, He commanded the eleven others, on His departure to the Father, to "go and
teach all nations, who were to be baptized into the Father, and into the Son,
and into the Holy Ghost."(2) Immediately, therefore, so did the apostles, whom
this designation indicates as "the sent." Having, on the authority of a
prophecy, which occurs in a psalm of David,(3) chosen Matthias by lot as the twelfth,
into the place of Judas, they obtained the promised power of the Holy Ghost for
the gift of miracles and of utterance; and after first bearing witness to the
faith in Jesus Christ throughout Judaea, and rounding churches (there), they
next went forth into the world and preached the same doctrine of the same faith to
the nations. They then in like manner rounded churches in every city, from
which all the other churches, one after another, derived the tradition of the
faith,(4) and the seeds of doctrine, and are every day deriving them,(5) that they
may become churches. Indeed, it is on this account only that they will be able
to deem themselves apostolic, as being the offspring of apostolic churches.
Every sort of thing(6) must necessarily revert to its original for its
classification.(7) Therefore the churches, although they are so many and so great,
comprise but the one primitive church, (rounded) by the apostles, from which they all
(spring). In this way all are primitive, and all are apostolic, whilst they are
all proved to be one, in (unbroken) unity, by their peaceful communion,(8) and
title of brotherhood, and bond(9) of hospitality,--privileges(10) which no
other rule directs than the one tradition of the selfsame mystery.(11)
CHAP. XXI.--ALL DOCTRINE TRUE WHICH COMES THROUGH THE CHURCH FROM THE
APOSTLES, WHO WERE TAUGHT BY GOD THROUGH CHRIST. ALL OPINION WHICH HAS NO SUCH DIVINE
ORIGIN AND APOSTOLIC TRADITION TO SHOW, IS IPSO FACTO FALSE.
From this, therefore, do we draw up our rule. Since the Lord Jesus Christ
sent the apostles to preach, (our rule is) that no others ought to be received
as preachers than those whom Christ appointed; for "no man knoweth the Father
save the Son, and he to whomsoever the Son will reveal Him."(12) Nor does the
Son seem to have revealed Him to any other than the apostles, whom He sent forth
to preach--that, of course, which He revealed to them. Now, what that was which
they preached--in other words, what it was which Christ revealed to them--can,
as I must here likewise prescribe, properly be proved in no other way than by
those very churches which the apostles rounded in person, by declaring the
gospel to them directly themselves, both rivet race, as the phrase is, and
subsequently by their epistles. If, then, these things are so, it is in the same
degree(13) manifest that all doctrine which agrees with the apostolic churches--those
moulds(14) and original sources of the faith must be reckoned for truth, as
undoubtedly containing that which the (said) churches received from the apostles,
the apostles from Christ, Christ from God. Whereas all doctrine must be
prejudged(15) as false(16) which savours of contrariety to the truth of the churches
and apostles of Christ and God. It remains, then, that we demonstrate whether
this doctrine of ours, of which we have now given the rule, has its origin(17)
in the tradition of the apostles, and whether all other doctrines do not ipso
facto(18) proceed from falsehood. We hold communion with the apostolic churches
because our doctrine is in no respect different from theirs. This is our witness
of truth.
CHAP. XXII.--ATTEMPT TO INVALIDATE THIS RULE OF FAITH REBUTTED. THE APOSTLES
SAFE TRANSMITTERS OF THE TRUTH. SUFFICIENTLY TAUGHT AT FIRST, AND FAITHFUL IN
THE TRANSMISSION.
But inasmuch as the proof is so near at hand,(1) that if it were at once
produced there would be nothing left to be dealt with, let us give way for a
while to the opposite side, if they think that they can find some means of
invalidating this rule, just as if no proof were forthcoming from us. They usually
tell us that the apostles did not know all things: (but herein) they are impelled
by the same madness, whereby they turn round to the very opposite point,(2) and
declare that the apostles certainly knew all things, but did not deliver all
things to all persons,--in either case exposing Christ to blame for having sent
forth apostles who had either too much ignorance, or too little simplicity.
What man, then, of sound mind can possibly suppose that they were ignorant of
anything, whom the Lord ordained to be masters (or teachers),(3) keeping them, as
He did, inseparable (from Himself) in their attendance, in their discipleship,
in their society, to whom, "when they were alone, He used to expound" all
things(4) which were obscure, telling them that "to them it was given to know those
mysteries,"(5) which it was not permitted the people to understand? Was anything
withheld from the knowledge of Peter, who is called "the rock on which the
church should be built,"(6) who also obtained "the keys of the kingdom of
heaven,"(7) with the power of "loosing and binding in heaven and on earth?"(8) Was
anything, again, concealed from John, the Lord's most beloved disciple, who used to
lean on His breast(9) to whom alone the Lord pointed Judas out as the
traitor,(10) whom He commended to Mary as a son in His own stead?(11) Of what could He
have meant those to be ignorant, to whom He even exhibited His own glory with
Moses and Elias, and the Father's voice moreover, from heaven?(12) Not as if He
thus disapproved(13) of all the rest, but because "by three witnesses must
every word be established."(14) After the same fashion,(15) too, (I suppose,) were
they ignorant to whom, after His resurrection also, He vouchsafed, as they were
journeying together, "to expound all the Scriptures."(16) No doubt(17) He had
once said, "I have yet many things to say unto you, but ye cannot hear them
now;" but even then He added, "When He, the Spirit of truth, shall come, He will
lead you into all truth."(18) He (thus) shows that there was nothing of which
they were ignorant, to whom He had promised the future attainment of all truth by
help of the Spirit of truth. And assuredly He fulfilled His promise, since it
is proved in the Acts of the Apostles that the Holy Ghost did come down. Now
they who reject that Scripture(19) can neither belong to the Holy Spirit, seeing
that they cannot acknowledge that the Holy Ghost has been sent as yet to the
disciples, nor can they presume to claim to be a church themselves(20) who
positively have no means of proving when, and with what swaddling-clothes(21) this
body was established. Of so much importance is it to them not to have any proofs
for the things which they maintain, lest along with them there be introduced
damaging exposures(22) of those things which they mendaciously devise.
CHAP. XXIII.--THE APOSTLES NOT IGNORANT. THE HERETICAL PRETENCE OF ST. PETER'S
IMPERFECTION BECAUSE HE WAS REBUKED BY ST. PAUL. ST. PETER NOT REBUKED FOR
ERROR IN TEACHING.
Now, with the view of branding(23) the apostles with some mark of
ignorance, they put forth the case of Peter and them that were with him having been
rebuked by Paul. "Something therefore," they say, "was wanting in them." (This
they allege,) in order that they may from this construct that other position of
theirs, that a fuller knowledge may possibly have afterwards come over(the
apostles,) such as fell to the share of Paul when he rebuked those who preceded him.
I may here say to those who reject The Acts of the Apostles: "It is first
necessary that you shows us who this Paul was,--both what he was before he was an
apostle, and how he became an apostle,"--so very great is the use which they make
of him in respect of other questions also. It is true that he tells us himself
that he was a persecutor before he became an apostle,(1) still this is not
enough for any man who examines before he believes, since even the Lord Himself
did not bear witness of Himself.(2) But let them believe without the Scriptures,
if their object is to believe contrary to the Scriptures.(3) Still they should
show, from the circumstance which they allege of Peter's being rebuked by Paul,
that Paul added yet another form of the gospel besides that which Peter and
the rest had previously set forth. But the fact is,(4) having been converted from
a persecutor to a preacher, he is introduced as one of the brethren to
brethren, by brethren--to them, indeed, by men who had put on faith from the apostles'
hands. Afterwards, as he himself narrates, he "went up to Jerusalem for the
purpose of seeing Peter,"(5) because of his office, no doubt,(6) and by right of
a common belief and preaching. Now they certainly would not have been surprised
at his having become a preacher instead of a persecutor, if his preaching were
of something contrary; nor, moreover, would they have "glorified the Lord,"(7)
because Paul had presented himself as an adversary to Him They accordingly
even gave him "the right hand of fellowship,"(3) as a sign of their agreement with
him, and arranged amongst themselves a distribution of office, not a diversity
of gospel, so that they should severally preach not a different gospel, but
(the same), to different persons,(9) Peter to the circumcision, Paul to the
Gentiles. Forasmuch, then, as Peter was rebuked because, after he had lived with the
Gentiles, he proceeded to separate himself from their company out of respect
for persons, the fault surely was one of conversation, not of preaching.(10) For
it does not appear from this, that any other God than the Creator, or any
other Christ than (the son) of Mary, or any other hope than the resurrection, was
(by him) announced.
CHAP. XXIV.--ST. PETER'S FURTHER VINDICATION. ST. PAUL NOT SUPERIOR TO ST.
PETER IN TEACHING. NOTHING IMPARTED TO THE FORMER IN THE THIRD HEAVEN ENABLED HIM
TO ADD TO THE FAITH. HERETICS BOAST AS IF FAVOURED WITH SOME OF THE SECRETS
IMPARTED TO HIM.
I have not the good fortune,(11) or, as I must rather say,(12) I have not
the unenviable task,(13) of setting apostles by the ears.(14) But, inasmuch as
our very perverse cavillers obtrude the rebuke in question for the set purpose
of bringing the earlier(15) doctrine into suspicion, I will put in a defence,
as it were, for Peter, to the effect that even Paul said that he was "made all
things to all men--to the Jews a Jew," to those who were not Jews as one who was
not a Jew--"that he might gain all."(16) Therefore it was according to times
and persons and causes that they used to censure certain practices, which they
would not hesitate themselves to pursue, in like conformity to times and persons
and causes. Just (e.g.) as if Peter too had censured Paul, because, whilst
for-bidding circumcision, he actually circumcised Timothy himself. Never mind(17)
those who pass sentence on apostles! It is a happy fact that Peter is on the
same level with Paul in the very glory(18) of martyrdom. Now, although Paul was
carried away even to the third heaven, and was caught up to paradise,(19) and
heard certain revelations there, yet these cannot possibly seem to have qualified
him for(teaching) another doctrine, seeing that their very nature was such as
to render them communicable to no human being.(20) If, however, that
unspeakable mystery(21) did leak out,(22) and become known to any man, and if any heresy
affirms that it does itself follow the same, (then) either Paul must be charged
with having betrayed the secret, or some other man must actually(23) be shown
to have been afterwards "caught up into paradise," who had permission to speak
out plainly what Paul was not allowed (even) to mutter.
CHAP. XXV.--THE APOSTLES DID NOT KEEP BACK ANY OF THE DEPOSIT OF DOCTRINE
WHICH CHRIST HAD ENTRUSTED TO THEM. ST. PAUL OPENLY COMMITTED HIS WHOLEDOCTRINE TO
TIMOTHY.
But here is, as we have said,(24) the same madness, in their allowing indeed
that the apostles were ignorant of nothing, and preached not any (doctrines)
which contradicted one another, but at the same time insisting that they did not
reveal all to all men, for that they proclaimed some openly and to all the
world, whilst they disclosed others (only) in secret and to a few, because Paul
addressed even this expression to Timothy: "O Timothy, guard that which is
entrusted to thee;"(1) and again: "That good thing which was committed unto thee
keep."(2) What is this deposit? Is it so secret as to be supposed to characterize(3)
a new doctrine? or is it a part of that charge of which he says, "This charge I
commit unto thee, son Timothy?"(4) and also of that precept of which he says,
"I charge thee in the sight of God, who quickeneth all things, and before Jesus
Christ who witnessed a good confession under Pontius Pilate, that thou keep
this commandment?"(5) Now, what is (this) commandment and what is (this) charge?
From the preceding and the succeeding contexts, it will be manifest that there
is no mysterious(6) hint darkly suggested in this expression about (some)
far-fetched(7) doctrine, but that a warning is rather given against receiving any
other (doctrine) than that which Timothy had heard from himself, as I take it
publicly: "Before many witnesess" is his phrase. (8) Now, if they refuse to allow
that the church is meant by these "many witnesses," it matters nothing, since
nothing could have been secret which was produced "before many witnesses." Nor,
again, must the circumstance of his having wished him to "commit these things
to faithful men, who should be able to teach others also,"(9) be construed into
a proof of there being some occult gospel. For, when he says "these things," he
refers to the things of which he is writing at the moment. In reference,
however, to occult subjects, he would have called them, as being absent, those
things, not these things, to one who had a joint knowledge of them with himself.(10)
CHAP. XXVI.--THE APOSTLES DID IN ALL CASES TEACH THE WHOLE TRUTH TO THE WHOLE
CHURCH. NO RESERVATION, NOR PARTIAL COMMUNICATION TO FAVOURITE FRIENDS.
Besides which, it must have followed, that, for the man to whom he
committed the ministration of the gospel, he would add the injunction that it be not
ministered in all places,(11) and without respect to persons,(12) in accordance
with the Lord's saying, "Not to cast one's pearls before swine, nor that which
is holy unto dogs."(13) Openly did the Lord speak,(14) without any intimation
of a hidden mystery. He had Himself commanded that, "whatsoever they had heard
in darkness" and in secret, they should "declare in the light and on the
house-tops."(15) He had Himself fore-shown, by means of a parable, that they should
not keep back in secret, fruitless of interest,(16) a single pound, that is, one
word of His. He used Himself to tell them that a candle was not usually "pushed
away under a bushel, but placed on a candlestick," in order to "give light to
all who are in the house."(17) These things the apostles either neglected, or
failed to understand, if they fulfilled them not, by concealing any portion of
the light, that is, of the word of God and the mystery of Christ. Of no man, I
am quite sure, were they afraid,--neither of Jews nor of Gentiles in their
violence;(18) with all the greater freedom, then, would they certainly preach in
the church, who held not their tongue in synagogues and public places. Indeed
they would have found it impossible either to convert Jews or to bring in
Gentiles, unless they "set forth in order"(19) that which they would have them believe.
Much less, when churches were advanced in the faith, would they have withdrawn
from them anything for the purpose of committing it separately to some few
others. Although, even supposing that among intimate friends,(20) so to speak,
they did hold certain discussions, yet it is incredible that these could have
been such as to bring in some other rule of faith, differing from and contrary to
that which they were proclaiming through the Catholic churches,(21)--as if they
spoke of one God in the Church, (and) another at home, and described one
substance of Christ, publicly, (and) another secretly, and announced one hope of the
resurrection before all men, (and) another before the few; although they
themselves, in their epistles, besought men that they would all speak one and the
same thing, and that there should be no divisions and dissensions in the
church,(22) seeing that they, whether Paul or others, preached the same things.
Moreover, they remembered the words): "Let your communication be yea, yea; nay, nay;
for whatsoever is more than this cometh of evil;"(1) so that they were not to
handle the gospel in a diversity of treatment.
CHAP. XXVII.--GRANTED THAT THE APOSTLES TRANSMITTED THE WHOLE DOCTRINE OF
TRUTH, MAY NOT THE CHURCHES HAVE BEEN UNFAITHFUL IN HANDING IT ON? INCONCEIVABLE
THAT THIS CAN HAVE BEEN THE CASE.
Since, therefore, it is incredible that the apostles were either ignorant
of the whole scope of the message which they had to declare,(2) or failed to
make known to all men the entire rule of faith, let us see whether, while the
apostles proclaimed it, perhaps, simply and fully, the churches, through their own
fault, set it forth otherwise than the apostles had done. All these
suggestions of distrust(3) you may find put forward by the heretics. They bear in mind
how the churches were rebuked by the apostle: "O foolish Galatians, who hath
bewitched you?"(4) and, "Ye did run so well; who hath hindered you?"(5) and how the
epistle actually begins: "I marvel that ye are so soon removed from Him, who
hath called you as His own in grace, to another gospel."(6) That they likewise
(remember), what was written to the Corinthians, that they "were yet carnal,"
who "required to be fed with milk," being as yet "unable to bear strong meat;"(7)
who also "thought that they knew somewhat, whereas they knew not yet anything,
as they ought to know."(8) When they raise the objection that the churches
were rebuked, let them suppose that they were also corrected; let them also
remember those (churches), concerning whose faith and knowledge and conversation the
apostle "rejoices and gives thanks to God," which nevertheless even at this
day, unite with those which were rebuked in the privileges of one and the same
institution.
CHAP. XXVIII.--THE ONE TRADITION OF THE FAITH, WHICH IS SUBSTANTIALLY ALIKE IN
THE CHURCHES EVERYWHERE, A GOOD PROOF THAT THE TRANSMISSION HAS BEEN TRUE AND
HONEST IN THE MAIN.
Grant, then, that all have erred; that the apostle was mistaken in giving
his testimony; that the Holy Ghost had no such respect to any one (church) as
to lead it into truth, although sent with this view by Christ,(9) and for this
asked of the Father that He might be the teacher of truth;(10) grant, also, that
He, the Steward of God, the Vicar of Christ,(11) neglected His office,
permitting the churches for a time to understand differently, (and) to believe
differently, what He Himself was preaching by the apostles,--is it likely that so
many churches, and they so great, should have gone astray into one and the same
faith? No casualty distributed among many men issues in one and the same result.
Error of doctrine in the churches must necessarily have produced various
issues. When, however, that which is deposited among many is found to be one and the
same, it is not the result of error, but of tradition. Can any one, then, be
reckless(12) enough to say that they were in error who handed on the tradition?
CHAP. XXIX.--THE TRUTH NOT INDEBTED TO THE CARE OF THE HERETICS; IT HAD FREE
COURSE BEFORE THEY APPEARED. PRIORITY OF THE CHURCH'S DOCTRINE A MARK OF ITS
TRUTH.
In whatever manner error came,it reigned of course(13) only as long as
there was an absence of heresies? Truth had to wait for certain Marcionites and
Valentinians to set it free. During the interval the gospel was wrongly(14)
preached; men wrongly believed; so many thousands were wrongly baptized; so many
works of faith were wrongly wrought; so many miraculous gifts,(15) so many
spiritual endowments,(16) were wrongly set in operation; so many priestly functions,
so many ministries,(17) were wrongly executed; and, to sum up the whole, so many
martyrs wrongly received their crowns! Else, if not wrongly done, and to no
purpose, how comes it to pass that the things of God were on their course before
it was known to what God they belonged? that there were Christians before
Christ was found? that there were heresies before true doctrine? Not so; for in all
cases truth precedes its copy, the likeness succeeds the reality. Absurd
enough, however, is it, that heresy should be deemed to have preceded its own prior
doctrine, even on this account, because it is that (doctrine) itself which
foretold that there should be heresies against which men would have to guard! To a
church which possessed this doctrine, it was written--yea, the doctrine itself
writes to its own church--"Though an angel from heaven preach any other gospel
than that which we have preached, let him be accursed."(1)
CHAP. XXX.--COMPARATIVE LATENESS OF HERESIES. MARClON'S HERESY. SOME PERSONAL
FACTS ABOUT HIM. THE HERESY OF APELLES. CHARACTER OF THIS MAN; PHILUMENE;
VALENTINUS; NIGIDIUS, AND HERMOGENES.
Where was Marcion then, that shipmaster of Pontus, the zealous student of
Stoicism? Where was Valentinus then, the disciple of Platonism? For it is
evident that those menlived not so long ago,--in the reign of Antoninus for the most
part,(2)--and that they at first were believers in the doctrine of the
Catholic Church, in the church of Rome under the episcopate of the blessed
Eleutherus,(3) until on account of their ever restless curiosity,with which they even
infected the brethren, they were more than once expelled. Marcion, indeed, [went]
with the two hundred sesterces which which he had brought into the church,
and,(4) when banished at last to a permanent excommunication, they scattered abroad
the poisons of their doctrines. Afterwards, it is true, Mar-cion professed
repentance, and agreed to the conditions granted to him--that he should receive
reconciliation if he restored to the church all the others whom he had been
training for perdition: he was prevented, however, by death. It was indeed(5)
necessary that there should be heresies;(6) and yet it does not follow from that
necessity, that heresies are a good thing. As if it has not been necessary also that
there should be evil! It was even necessary that the Lord should be betrayed;
but woe to the traitor!(7) So that no man may from this defend heresies. If we
must likewise touch the descent(8) of Apelles, he is far from being" one of the
old school,"(9) like his instructor and moulder, Marcion; he rather forsook
the continence of Marcion, by resorting to the company of a woman, and withdrew
to Alexandria, out of sight of his most abstemious(10) master. Returning
therefrom, after some years, unimproved, except that he was no longer a Marcionite, he
clave(11) to another woman, the maiden Philumene (whom we have already(12)
mentioned), who herself afterwards became an enormous prostitute. Having been
imposed on by her vigorous spirit,(13) he committed to writing the revelations
which he had learned of her. Persons are still living who remember them,--their own
actual disciples and successors,--who cannot therefore deny the lateness of
their date. But, in fact, by their own works they are convicted, even as the Lord
said.(14) For since Marcion separated the New Testament from the Old, he is
(necessarily) subsequent to that which he separated, inasmuch as it was only in
his power to separate what was (previously) united. Having then been united
previous to its separation, the fact of its subsequent separation proves the
subsequence also of the man who effected the separation. In like manner Valentinus,
by his different expositions and acknowledged(15) emendations, makes these
changes on the express ground of previous faultiness, and therefore demonstrates the
difference(16) of the documents. These corrupters of the truth we mention as
being more notorious and more public(17) than others. There is, however, a
certain man(18) named Nigidius, and Hermogenes, and several others, who still pursue
the course(19) of perverting the ways of the Lord. Let them show me by what
authority they come! If it be some other God they preach, how comes it that they
employ the things and he writings and the names of that God against whom they
preach? If it be the same God, why treat Him in some other way? Let them prove
themselves to be new apostles!(20) Let them maintain that Christ has come down a
second time, taught in person a second time, has been twice crucified, twice
dead, twice raised! For thus has the apostle described (the order of events in
the life of Christ); for thus, too, is He(21) accustomed to make His
apostles--to give them, (that is), power besides of working the same miracles which He
worked Himself.(22) I would therefore have their mighty deeds also brought
forward; except that I allow their mightiest deed to be that by which they perversely
vie with the apostles. For whilst they used to raise men to life from the dead,
these consign men to death from their living state.
CHAP. XXXI.--TRUTH FIRST, FALSEHOOD AFTER WARDS, AS ITS PERVERSION. CHRIST'S
PARABLE PUTS THE SOWING OF THE GOOD SEED BEFORE THE USELESS TARES.
Let me return, however, from this digression(1) to discuss(2) the priority
of truth, and the comparative lateness(3) of falsehood, deriving support for
my argument even from that parable which puts in the first place the sowing by
the Lord of the good seed of the wheat, but introduces at a later stage the
adulteration of the crop by its enemy the devil with the useless weed of the wild
oats. For herein is figuratively described the difference of doctrines, since in
other passages also the word of God is likened unto seed. From the actual
order, therefore, it becomes clear, that that which was first delivered is of the
Lord and is true, whilst that is strange and false which was afterwards
introduced. This sentence will keep its ground in opposition to all later heresies,
which have no consistent quality of kindred knowledge(4) inherent in them--to
claim the truth as on their side.
CHAP.XXXII.--NONE OF THE HERETICS CLAIM SUCCESSION FROM THE APOSTLES. NEW
CHURCHES STILL APOSTOLIC, BECAUSE THEIR FAITH IS THAT WHICH THE APOSTLES TAUGHT AND
HANDED DOWN. THE HERETICS CHALLENGED TO SHOW ANY APOSTOLIC CREDENTIALS.
But if there be any (heresies) which are bold enough to plant themselves
in the midst Of the apostolic age, that they may thereby seem to have been
handed down by the apostles, because they existed in the time of the apostles, we
can say: Let them produce the original records(5) of their churches; let them
unfold the roll of their bishops, running down in due succession from the
beginning in such a manner that [that first bishop of theirs(6)] bishop shall be able
to show for his ordainer and predecessor some one of the apostles or of
apostolic men,--a man, moreover, who continued stedfast with the apostles. For this is
the manner in which the apostolic churches transmit(7) their registers:(8) as
the church of Smyrna, which records that Polycarp was placed therein by John; as
also the church of Rome, which makes Clement to have been ordained in like
manner by Peter.(9) In exactly the same way the other churches likewise exhibit
(their several worthies), whom, as having been appointed to their episcopal
places by apostles, they regard as transmitters of the apostolic seed. Let the
heretics contrive(10) something of the same kind. For after their blasphemy, what is
there that is unlawful for them (to attempt)? But should they even effect the
contrivance, they will not advance a step. For their very doctrine, after
comparison with that of the apostles, will declare, by its own diversity and
contrariety, that it had for its author neither an apostle nor an apostolic man;
because, as the apostles would never have taught things which were
self-contradictory, so the apostolic men would not have inculcated teaching different from the
apostles, unless they who received their instruction from the apostles went and
preached in a contrary manner. To this test, therefore will they be submitted
for proof(11) by those churches, who, although they derive not their founder
from apostles or apostolic men (as being of much later date, for they are in fact
being founded daily), yet, since they agree in the same faith, they are
accounted as not less apostolic because they are akin in doctrine.(12) Then let all
the heresies, when challenged to these two(13) tests by our apostolic church,
offer their proof of how they deem themselves to be apostolic. But in truth they
neither are so, nor are they able to prove themselves to be what they are not.
Nor are they admitted to peaceful relations and communion by such churches as
are in any way connected with apostles, inasmuch as they are in no sense
themselves apostolic because of their diversity as to the mysteries of the faith.(14)
CHAP. XXXIII.--PRESENT HERESIES (SEEDLINGS OF THE TARES NOTED BY THE SACRED
WRITERS) ALREADY CONDEMNED IN SCRIPTURE. THIS DESCENT OF LATER HERESY FROM THE
EARLIER TRACED IN SEVERAL INSTANCES.
Besides all this, I add a review of the doctrines themselves, which,
existing as they did in the days of the apostles, were both exposed and denounced by
the said apostles. For by this method they will be more easily reprobated,(1)
when they are detected to have been even then in existence, or at any rate to
have been seedlings(2) of the (tares) which then were. Paul, in his first
epistle to the Corinthians, sets his mark on certain who denied and doubted the
resurrection.(3) This opinion was the especial property of the Sadducees.(4) A part
of it, however, is maintained by Marcion and Apelles and Valentinus, and all
other impugners of the resurrection. Writing also to the Galatians, he inveighs
against such men as observed and defend circumcision and the (Mosaic) law.(5)
Thus runs Hebion's heresy. Such also as "forbid to marry" he reproaches in his
instructions to Timothy.(6) Now, this is the teaching of Marcion and his follower
Apelles. (The apostle) directs a similar blow(7) against those who said that
"the resurrection was past already."(8) Such an opinion did the Valentinians
assert of themselves. When again he mentions "endless genealogies,"(9) one also
recognises Valentinus, in whose system a certain AEon, whosoever he be,(10) of a
new name, and that not one only, generates of his own grace(11) Sense and
Truth; and these in like manner produce of themselves Word(12) and Life, while these
again afterwards beget Man and the Church. From these primary eight(13) ten
other AEons after them spring, and then the twelve others arise with their
wonderful names, to complete the mere story of the thirty AEons. The same apostle,
when disapproving of those who are "in bondage to elements,"(14) points us to
some dogma of Hermogenes, who introduces matter as having no beginning,(15) and
then compares it with God, who has no beginning.(16) By thus making the mother of
the elements a goddess, he has it in his power "to be in bondage" to a being
which he puts on a par with(17) God. John, however, in the Apocalypse is charged
to chastise those "who eat things sacrificed to idols," and "who commit
fornication."(18) There are even now another sort of Nicolaitans. Theirs is called
the Gaian(19) heresy. But in his epistle he especially designates those as
"Antichrists" who "denied that Christ was come in the flesh,"(20) and who refused to
think that Jesus was the Son of God. The one dogma Marcion maintained; the
other, Hebion.(21) The doctrine, however, of Simon's sorcery, which inculcated the
worship of angels,(22) was itself actually reckoned amongst idolatries and
condemned by the Apostle Peter in Simon's own person.
CHAP. XXXIV.--NO EARLY CONTROVERSY RESPECTING THE DIVINE CREATOR; NO SECOND
GOD INTRODUCED AT FIRST. HERESIES CONDEMNED ALIKE BY THE SENTENCE AND THE SILENCE
OF HOLY SCRIPTURE.
These are, as I suppose, the different kinds of spurious doctrines, which
(as we are informed by the apostles themselves) existed in their own day. And
yet we find amongst so many various perversions of truth, not one school(23)
which raised any controversy concerning God as the Creator of all things. No man
was bold enough to surmise a second god. More readily was doubt felt about the
Son than about the Father, until Marcion introduced, in addition to the Creator,
another god of goodness only. Apelles made the Creator of some nondescript(24)
glorious angel, who belonged to the superior God, the god (according to him,)
of the law and of Israel, affirming that he was fire.(25) Valentinus
disseminated his AEons, and traced the sin of one AEon(26) to the production of God the
Creator. To none, forsooth, except these, nor prior to these, was revealed the
truth of the Divine Nature; and they obtained this especial honour and fuller
favour from the devil, we cannot doubt,(27) because he wished even in this
respect to rival God, that he might succeed, by the poison of his doctrines, in doing
himself what the Lord said could not be done--making "the disciples above
their Master."(28) Let the entire mass(29) of heresies choose, therefore, for
themselves the times when they should appear, provided that the when be an
unimportant point; allowing, too, that they be not of the truth, and (as a matter of
course(30)) that such as had no existence in the time of the apostles could not
possibly have had any connection with the apostles. If indeed they had then
existed, their names would be extant,(1) with a view to their own repression
likewise. Those (heresies) indeed which did exist in the days of the apostles, are
condemned in their very mention.(2) If it be true, then, that those heresies,
which in the apostolic times were in a rude form, are now found to be the same,
only in a much more polished shape, they derive their condemnation from this very
circumstance Or if they were not the same, but arose afterwards in a different
form, and merely assumed from them certain tenets, then, by sharing with them
an agreement in their teaching,(3) they must needs partake in their
condemnation, by reason of the above-mentioned definition,(4) of lateness of date, which
meets us on the very threshold.(5) Even if they were free from any participation
in condemned doctrine, they would stand already judged(6) on the mere ground of
time, being all the more spurious because they were not even named by the
apostles. Whence we have the firmer assurance, that these were (the heresies) which
even then,(7) were announced as about to arise.
CHAP. XXXV.--LET HERETICS MAINTAIN THEIR CLAIMS BY A DEFINITE AND INTELLIGIBLE
EVIDENCE.THIS THE ONLY METHOD OF SOLVING THEIR QUESTIONS. CATHOLICS APPEAL
ALWAYS TO EVIDENCE TRACEABLE TO APOSTOLIC SOURCES.
Challenged and refuted by us, according to these definitions, let all the
heresies boldly on their part also advance similar rules to these against our
doctrine, whether they be later than the apostles or contemporary with the
apostles, provided they be different from them; provided also they were, by either a
general or a specific censure, precondemned by them. For since they deny the
truth of (our doctrine), they ought to prove that it also is heresy, refutable
by the same rule as that by which they are themselves refuted; and at the same
time to show us where we must seek the truth, which it is by this time evident
has no existence amongst them. Our system(8) is not behind any in date; on the
contrary, it is earlier than all; and this fact will be the evidence of that
truth which everywhere occupies the first place. The apostles, again, nowhere
condemn it; they rather defend it,--a fact which will show that it comes from
themselves.(9) For that doctrine which they refrain from condemning, when they have
condemned every strange opinion, they show to be their own, and on that ground
too they defend it.
CHAP. XXXVI.--THE APOSTOLIC CHURCHES THE VOICE OF THE APOSTLES, LET THE
HERETICS EXAMINE THEIR APOSTOLIC CLAIMS, IN EACH CASE, INDISPUTABLE. THE CHURCH OF
ROME DOUBLY APOSTOLIC; ITS EARLY EMINENCE AND EXCELLENCE. HERESY, AS PERVERTING
THE TRUTH, IS CONNECTED THEREWITH.
Come now, you who would indulge a better curiosity, if you would apply it
to the business of your salvation, run over the apostolic churches, in which
the very thrones (10) of the apostles are still pre-eminent in their places,(11)
in which their own authentic writings(12) are read, uttering the voice and
representing the face of each of them severally. Achaia is very near you, (in
which) you find Corinth. Since you are not far from Macedonia, you have Philippi;
(and there too) you have the Thessalonians. Since you are able to cross to Asia,
you get Ephesus. Since, moreover, you are close upon Italy,(13) you have Rome,
from which there comes even into our own hands the very authority (of apostles
themselves).(14) How happy is its church, on which apostles poured forth all
their doctrine along with their blood! where Peter endures a passion like his
Lord's! where Paul wins his crown in a death like John's(15) where the Apostle
John was first plunged, unhurt, into boiling oil, and thence remitted to his
island-exile! See what she has learned, what taught, what fellowship has had with
even (our) churches in Africa!(16) One Lord God does she acknowledge, the Creator
of the universe, and Christ Jesus (born) of the Virgin Mary, the Son of God
the Creator; and the Resurrection of the flesh; the law and the prophets she
unites(17) in one volume with the writings of evangelists and apostles, from which
she drinks in her faith. This she seals with the water (of baptism), arrays
with the Holy Ghost, feeds with the Eucharist, cheers with martyrdom,(1) and
against such a discipline thus (maintained) she admits no gainsayer. This is the
discipline which I no longer say foretold that heresies should come, but from(2)
which they proceeded. However, they were not of her, because they were opposed
to her.(3) Even the rough wild-olive arises from the germ(4) of the fruitful,
rich, and genuine(5) olive; also from the seed(6) of the mellowest and sweetest
fig there springs the empty and useless wild-fig. In the same way heresies, too,
come from our plant,(7) although not of our kind; (they come) from the grain
of truth,(8) but, owing to their falsehood, they have only wild leaves to
show.(9)
CHAP. XXXVII.--HERETICS NOT BEING CHRISTIANS, BUT RATHER PERVERTERS OF
CHRIST'S TEACHING, MAY NOT CLAIM THE CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES. THESE ARE A DEPOSIT,
COMMITTED TO AND CAREFULLY KEPT BY THE CHURCH.
Since this is the case, in order that the truth may be adjudged to belong
to us, "as many as walk according to the rule," which the church has handed
down from the apostles, the apostles from Christ, and Christ from God, the reason
of our position is clear, when it determines that heretics ought not to be
allowed to challenge an appeal to the Scriptures, since we, without the Scriptures,
prove that they have nothing to do with the Scriptures. For as they are
heretics, they cannot be true Christians, because it is not from Christ that they get
that which they pursue of their own mere choice, and from the pursuit incur
and admit the name of heretics.(10) Thus, not being Christians, they have
acquired(11) no right to the Christian Scriptures; and it may be very fairly said to
them, "Who are you? When and whence did you come? As you are none of mine, what
have you to do with that which is mine? Indeed, Marcion, by what right do you
hew my wood? By whose permission, Valentinus, are you diverting the streams of
my fountain? By what power, Apelles, are you removing my landmarks? This is my
property. Why are you, the rest, sowing and feeding here at your own pleasure?
This (I say) is my property. I have long possessed it; I possessed it before
you. I hold sure title-deeds from the original owners themselves, to whom the
estate belonged. I am the heir of the apostles. Just as they carefully prepared
their will and testament, and committed it to a trust, and adjured (the trustees
to be faithful to their charge),(12) even so do I hold it. As for you, they
have, it is certain, always held you as disinherited, and rejected you as
strangers--as enemies. But on what ground are heretics strangers and enemies to the
apostles, if it be not from the difference of their teaching, which each individual
of his own mere will has either advanced or received in opposition to the
apostles?"
CHAP.XXXVIII.--HARMONY OF THE CHURCH AND THE SCRIPTURES.HERETICS HAVE TAMPERED
WITH THE SCRIPTURES, AND MUTILATED, AND ALTERED THEM. CATHOLICS NEVER CHANGE
THE SCRIPTURES, WHICH ALWAYS TESTIFY FOR THEM.
Where diversity of doctrine is found, there, then, must the corruption
both of the Scriptures and the expositions thereof be regarded as existing. On
those whose purpose it was to teach differently, lay the necessity of differently
arranging the instruments of doctrine.(13) They could not possibly have
effected their diversity of teaching in any other way than by having a difference in
the means whereby they taught. As in their case, corruption in doctrine could
not possibly have succeeded without a corruption also of its instruments, so to
ourselves also integrity of doctrine could not have accrued, without integrity
in those means by which doctrine is managed. Now, what is there in our
Scriptures which is contrary to us?(14) What of our own have we introduced, that we
should have to take it away again, or else add to it, or alter it, in order to
restore to its natural soundness anything which is contrary to it, and contained in
the Scriptures?(15) What we are ourselves, that also the Scriptures are (and
have been) from the beginning.(16) Of them we have our being, before there was
any other way, before they were interpolated by you. Now, inasmuch as all
interpolation must be believed to be a later process, for the express reason that it
proceeds from rivalry which is never in any case previous to nor home-born(1)
with that which it emulates, it is as incredible to every man of sense that we
should seem to have introduced any corrupt text into the Scriptures, existing,
as we have been, from the very first, and being the first, as it is that they
have not in fact introduced it who are both later in date and opposed (to the
Scriptures). One man perverts the Scriptures with his hand, another their meaning
by his exposition. For although Valentinus seems to use the entire volume,(2)
he has none the less laid violent hands on the truth only with a more cunning
mind and skill(3) than Marcion. Marcion expressly and openly used the knife, not
the pen, since he made such an excision of the Scriptures as suited his own
subject-matter.(4) Valentinus, however, abstained from such excision, because he
did not invent Scriptures to square with his own subject-matter, but adapted his
matter to the Scriptures; and yet he took away more, and added more, by
removing the proper meaning of every particular word, and adding fantastic
arrangements of things which have no real existence.(5)
CHAP. XXXIX.--WHAT ST. PAUL CALLS SPIRITUAL WICKEDNESSES DISPLAYED BY PAGAN
AUTHORS, AND BY HERETICS, IN NO DISSIMILAR MANNER. HOLY SCRIPTURE ESPECIALLY
LIABLE TO HERETICAL MANIPULATION. AFFORDS MATERIAL FOR HERESIES, JUST AS VIRGIL HAS
BEEN THE GROUNDWORK OF LITERARY PLAGIARISMS, DIFFERENT IN PURPORT FROM THE
ORIGINAL.
These were the ingenious arts of "spiritual wickednesses,"(6) wherewith we
also, my brethren, may fairly expect to have "to wrestle," as necessary for
faith, that the elect may be made manifest,(and) that the reprobate may be
discovered. And therefore they possess influence, and a facility in thinking out
and fabricating(7) errors, which ought not to be wondered at as if it were a
difficult and inexplicable process, seeing that in profane writings also an example
comes ready to hand of a similar facility. You see in our own day, composed
out of Virgil,(8) a story of a wholly different character, the subject-matter
being arranged according to the verse, and the verse according to the
subject-matter. In short,(9) Hosidius Geta has most completely pilfered his tragedy of
Medea from Virgil. A near relative of my own, among some leisure productions(10) of
his pen, has composed out of the same poet The Table of Cebes. On the same
principle, those poetasters are commonly called Homerocentones, "collectors of
Homeric odds and ends," who stitch into one piece, patchwork fashion, works of
their own from the lines of Homer, out of many scraps put together from this
passage and from that (in miscellaneous confusion). Now, unquestionably, the Divine
Scriptures are more fruitful in resources of all kinds for this sort of
facility. Nor do I risk contradiction in saying(11) that the very Scriptures were even
arranged by the will of God in such a manner as to furnish materials for
heretics, inasmuch as I read that "there must be heresies,(12) which there cannot be
without the Scriptures.
CHAP. XL.--NO DIFFERENCE IN THE SPIRIT OF IDOLATRY AND OF HERESY. IN THE RITES
OF IDOLATRY, SATAN IMITATED AND DISTORTED THE DIVINE INSTITUTIONS OF THE OLDER
SCRIPTURES. THE CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES CORRUPTED BY HIM IN THE PERVERSIONS OF
THE VARIOUS HERETICS.
The question will arise, By whom is to be interpreted(13) the sense of the
passages which make for heresies? By the devil, of course, to whom pertain
those wiles which pervert the truth, and who, by the mystic rites of his idols,
vies even with the essential portions(14) of the sacraments of God.(15) He, too,
baptizes some--that is, his own believers and faithful followers;(17) he
promises the putting away(17) of sins by a layer (of his own); and if my memory still
serves me, Mithra there, (in the kingdom of Satan,) sets his marks on the
foreheads of his soldiers; celebrates also the oblation of bread, and introduces an
image of a resurrection, and before a sword wreathes a crown.(1) What also
must we say to (Satan's) limiting his chief priest(2) to a single marriage? He,
too, has his virgins; he, too, has his proficients in continence.(3) Suppose now
we revolve in our minds the superstitions of Numa Pompilius, and consider his
priestly offices and badges and privileges, his sacrificial services, too, and
the instruments and vessels of the sacrifices themselves, and the curious rites
of his expiations and vows: is it not clear to us that the devil imitated the
well-known(4) moroseness of the Jewish law? Since, therefore he has Shown such
emulation in his great aim of expressing, in the concerns of his idolatry, those
very things of which consists the administration of Christ's sacraments, it
follows, of course, that the same being, possessing still the same genius, both
set his heart upon,(5) and succeeded in, adapting(6) to his profane and rival
creed the very documents of divine things and of the Christian saints(7)--his
interpretation from their interpretations, his words from their words, his
parables from their parables. For this reason, then, no one ought to doubt, either
that "spiritual wickednesses," from which also heresies come, have been introduced
by the devil, or that there is any real difference between heresies and
idolatry, seeing that they appertain both to the same author and the same work that
idolatry does. They either pretend that there is another god in opposition to
the Creator, or, even if they acknowledge that the Creator is the one only God,
they treat of Him as a different being from what He is in truth. The consequence
is, that every lie which they speak of God is in a certain sense a sort of
idolatry
CHAP. XLI.--THE CONDUCT OF HERETICS: ITS FRIVOLITY, WORLDLINESS, AND
IRREGULARITY. THE NOTORIOUS WANTONNESS OF THEIR WOMEN.
I must not omit an account of the conduct(8) also of the heretics--how
frivolous it is, how worldly, how merely human, without seriousness, without
authority, without discipline, as suits their creed. To begin with, it is doubtful
who is a catechumen, and who a believer; they have all access alike, they hear
alike, they pray alike--even heathens, if any such happen to come among them.
"That which is holy they will cast to the dogs, and their pearls," although (to
be sure) they are not real ones, "they will fling to the swine." (9) Simplicity
they will have to consist in the overthrow of discipline, attention to which on
our part they call brothelry.(10) Peace also they huddle up(11) anyhow with
all comers; for it matters not to them, however different be their treatment of
subjects, provided only they can conspire together to storm the citadel of the
one only Truth. All are puffed up, all offer you knowledge. Their catechumens
are perfect before they are full-taught.(12) The very women of these heretics,
how wanton they are! For they are bold enough to teach, to dispute, to enact
exorcisms, to undertake(13) cures--it may be even to baptize.(14) Their
ordinations, are carelessly. administered,(15) capricious, changeable.(16) At one time
they put novices in office; at another time, men who are bound to some secular
employment;(17) at another, persons who have apostatized from us, to bind them by
vainglory, since they cannot by the truth. Nowhere is promotion easier than in
the camp of rebels, where the mere fact of being there is a foremost
service.(18) And so it comes to pass that to-day one man is their bishop, to-morrow
another; to-day he is a deacon who to-morrow is a reader; to-day he is a presbyter
who tomorrow is a layman. For even on laymen do they impose the functions of
priesthood.
CHAP. XLII.--HERETICS WORK TO PULL DOWN AND TO DESTROY, NOT TO EDIFY AND
ELEVATE. HERETICS DO NOT ADHERE EVEN TO THEIR OWN TRADITIONS, BUT HARBOUR DISSENT
EVEN FROM THEIR OWN FOUNDERS.
But what shall I say concerning the ministry of the word, since they make
it their business not to convert the heathen, but to subvert our people? This
is rather the glory which they catch at, to compass the fall of those who stand,
not the raising of those who are down. Accordingly, since the very work which
they purpose to themselves comes not from the building up of their own society,
but from the demolition of the truth, they undermine our edifices, that they
may erect their own. Only deprive them of the law of Moses, and the prophets,
and the divinity of the Creator, and they have not another objection to talk
about. The consequence is, that they more easily accomplish the ruin of standing
houses than the erection of fallen ruins. It is only when they have such objects
in view that they show themselves humble and bland and respectful. Otherwise
they know no respect even for their own leaders. Hence it is [supposed] that
schisms seldom happen among heretics, because, even when they exist, they are not
obvious.(1) Their very unity, however,(2) is schism. I am greatly in error if
they do not amongst themselves swerve even from their own regulations, forasmuch
as every man, just as it suits his own temper, modifies the traditions he has
received after the same fashion as the man who handed them down did, when he
moulded them according to his own will. The progress of the matter is an
acknowledgment at once of its character and of the manner of its birth. That was
allowable to the Valentinians which had been allowed to Valentinus; that was also fair
for the Marcionites which had been done by Marcion--even to innovate on the
faith, as was agreeable to their own pleasure. In short, all heresies, when
throughly looked into, are detected harbouring dissent in many particulars even from
their own founders. The majority of them have not even churches.(3)
Motherless, houseless, creedless, outcasts, they wander about in their own essential
worthlessness.(4)
CHAP. XLIII.--LOOSE COMPANY PREFERRED BY HERETICS. UNGODLINESS THE EFFECT OF
THEIR TEACHING THE VERY OPPOSITE OF CATHOLIC TRUTH, WHICH PROMOTES THE FEAR OF
GOD, BOTH IN RELIGIOUS ORDINANCES AND PRACTICAL LIFE.
It has also been a subject of remark, how extremely frequent is the
intercourse which heretics hold with magicians, with mountebanks, with astrologers,
with philosophers; and the reason is,(5) that they are men who devote themselves
to curious questions. "Seek, and ye shall find," is everywhere in their minds.
Thus, from the very nature of their conduct, may be estimated the quality of
their faith. In their discipline we have an index of their doctrine. They say
that God is not to be feared; therefore all things are in their view free and
unchecked. Where, however is God not feared, except where He is not? Where God is
not, there truth also is not. Where there is no truth, then, naturally enough,
there is also such a discipline as theirs. But where God is, there exists "the
fear of God, which is the beginning of wisdom."(6) Where the fear of God is,
there is seriousness, an honourable and yet thoughtful(7) diligence, as well as
an anxious carefulness and a well-considered admission (to the sacred
ministry)(8) and a safely-guarded(9) communion, and promotion after good service, and a
scrupulous submission (to authority), and a devout attendance,(10) and a modest
gait, and a united church, and God in all things.
CHAP. XLIV.--HERESY LOWERS RESPECT FOR CHRIST, AND DESTROYS ALL FEAR OF HIS
GREAT JUDGMENT. THE TENDENCY OF HERETICAL TEACHING ON THIS SOLEMN ARTICLE OF THE
FAITH. THE PRESENT TREATISE AN INTRODUCTION TO CERTAIN OTHER ANTI-HERETICAL
WORKS OF OUR AUTHOR.
These evidences, then, of a stricter discipline existing among us, are an
additional proof of truth, from which no man can safely turn aside, who bears
in mind that future judgment, when "we must all stand before the judgment-seat
of Christ,(11) to render an account of our faith itself before all things. What,
then, will they say who shall have defiled it, even the virgin which Christ
committed to them with the adultery of heretics? I suppose they will allege that
no injunction was ever addressed to them by Him or by His apostles concerning
depraved(12) and perverse doctrines assailing them,(13) or about their avoiding
and abhorring the same. (He and His apostles, perhaps,) will acknowledge(14)
that the blame rather lies with themselves and their disciples, in not having
given us previous warning and instruction! They(15) will, besides, add a good deal
respecting the high authority of each doctor of heresy,--how that these
mightily strengthened belief in their own doctrine; how that they raised the dead,
restored the sick, foretold the future, that so they might deservedly be regarded
as apostles. As if this caution were not also in the written record: that many
should come who were to work even the greatest miracles, in defence of the
deceit of their corrupt preaching. So, forsooth, they will deserve to be forgiven!
If, however, any, being mindful of the writings and the denunciations of the
Lord and the apostles, shall have stood firm in the integrity of the faith, I
suppose they will run great risk of missing pardon, when the Lord answers: I
plainly forewarned you that there should be teachers of false doctrine in my name,
as well as that of the prophets and apostles also; and to my own disciples did
I give a charge, that they should preach the same things to you. But as for
you, it was not, of course, to be supposed(1) that you would believe me! I once
gave the gospel and the doctrine of the said rule (of life and faith) to my
apostles; but afterwards it was my pleasure to make considerable changes in it! I
had promised a resurrection, even of the flesh; but, on second thoughts, it
struck me(2) that I might not be able to keep my promise! I had shown myself to have
been born of a virgin; but this seemed to me afterwards to be a discreditable
thing.(3) I had said that He was my Father, who is the Maker of the sun and the
showers; but another and better father has adopted me! I had forbidden you to
lend an ear to heretics; but in this I erred! Such (blasphemies), it is
possible,(4) do enter the minds of those who go out of the right path,(5) and who do
not defend(6) the true faith from the danger which besets it. On the present
occasion, indeed, our treatise has rather taken up a general position against
heresies, (showing that they must) all be refuted on definite, equitable, and
necessary rules, without(7) any comparison with the Scriptures. For the rest, if God
in His grace permit, we shall prepare answers to certain of these heresies in
separate treatises.(8) To those who may devote their leisure in reading through
these (pages), in the belief of the truth, be peace, and the grace of our God
Jesus Christ for ever.(9)
ELUCIDATIONS.
I. (Prescription, Chap. I., p. 243, Supra.)
In adopting this expression from the Roman Law, Tertullian has simply
puzzled beginners to get at his idea. Nor do they learn much when it is called a
demurrer, which, if I comprehend the word as used in law-cases, is a rejoinder to
the testimony of the other party, amounting to--"Well, what of it? It does not
prove your case." Something like this is indeed in Tertullian's use of the
term proescription; but Dr. Holmes furnishes what seems to me the best
explanation,(though he only half renders it,) "the Prescriptive Rule against Heresies." In
a word, it means, "the Rule of Faith asserted against Heresies." And his
practical point is, it is useless to discuss Scripture with convicted(Titus iii. 10,
11.) heretics; every one of them is ready with "his psalm, his doctrine, his
interpretation," and you may argue fruitlessly till Doomsday. But bring them to
the test of (Quod Semper, etc.), the apostolic proescription (I. Cor. xi.
16).--We have no such custom neither the Churches of God. State this Rule of Faith,
viz. Holy Scripture, as interpreted from the apostolic day: if it proves the
doctrine or custom a novelty, then it has no foundation, and even if it be
harmless, it cannot be innocently professed against the order and peace of the
churches.
II. (Semler, cap. x., note 15, p. 248.)
The extent to which Bp. Kaye has stretched his notice of this critic is to
be accounted for by the fact that, for a time, the German School of the last
century exerted a sad influence in England. In early life Dr. Pusey came near to
being led away by it, and Hugh James Rose was raised up to resist it. Semler
lived (at Halle and elsewhere) from A.D. 1725 to 1791. Kahnis in his invaluable
manual, named below, thus speaks of his Patristic theories: "The history of the
Kingdom of God became, under his hands, a world of atoms, which crossed each
other as chaotically as the masses of notes which lay heaped up in the memory of
Semler. . . . Under his pragmatical touches the halo of the martyrs faded,
etc." Internal Hist. of German Protestantism (since circa 1750,) by Ch. Fred. Aug.
Kahnis, D.D. (Lutheran) Professor at Leipzig. Translated. T. and F. Clark,
Edinburgh, 1856.
III. (Peter, cap. xxii. note 6, p. 253.)
In the treatise of Cyprian, De Unitate, we shall have occasion to speak
fully on this interesting point. The reference to Kaye may suffice, here. But,
since the inveterate confusion of all that is said of Peter with all that is
claimed by a modern bishop for himself promotes a false view of this passage, it
may be well to note (1) that St. Peter's name is expounded by himself (I. Peter,
ii. 4, 5,) so as to make Christ the Rock and all believers "lively stones"--or
Peters--by faith in Him. St. Peter is often called the rock, most justly, in
this sense, by a rhetorical play on his name: Christ the Rock and all believers
"lively stones," being cemented with Him by the Spirit. But, (2.) this specialty
of St. Peter, as such, belongs to him (Cephas) only. (3.) So far as
transmitted it belongs to no particular See. (4.) The claim of Rome is disproved by
Proescription. (5.) Were it otherwise, it would not justify that See in making new
articles of Faith. (6.) Nor in its Schism with the East. (7.) When it restores
St. Peter's Doctrine and Holiness, to the Latin Churches, there will be no
quarrel about pre-eminence.Meantime, Rome's fallibility is expressly taught in
Romans xi. 18-21.
IV. (The Apostles, cap. xxv. p. 254.)
Nothing less than a new incarnation of Christ and a new commission to new
apostles can give us anything new in religion. This proescription is our
Catholic answer to the Vatican oracles of our own time. These give us a new
revelation, prefacing the Gospels (1) by defining the immaculate conception of Mary in
the womb of her mother; and (2) adding a new chapter to the Acts of the
Apostles, in defining the infallibility of a single bishop.
Clearly, had Tertullian known anything of this last dogma of Latin
Novelty, he would not have taken the trouble to write this treatise. He would have
said to heretics, We can neither discuss Scripture nor Antiquity with you. Rome is
the touchstone of dogma, and to its bishop we refer you.
V. (Truth and Peace, cap. xliv. p. 265.)
The famous appeal of Bishop Jewel, known as "the Challenge at Paul's
Cross," which he made in a sermon preached there on Passion Sunday, A.D. 1560, is an
instance of "Proescription against heresies," well worthy of being recalled,
in a day which has seen Truth and Peace newly sacrificed to the ceaseless
innovations of Rome. It is as follows:--"If any learned man of all our adversaries,
or, if all the learned men that be alive, be able to bring any one sufficient
sentence out of any old Catholic doctor or father; or out of any old general
Council; or out of the Holy Scriptures of God;(1) or, any one example of the
primitive Church, whereby it may be clearly and plainly proved, that--1. There was
any private mass in the whole world at that time, for the space of six hundred
years after Christ; or that--2. There was then any communion ministered unto the
people under one kind; or that--3. The people had their common prayers, then,
in a strange tongue that they understood not; or that--4. The bishop of Rome was
then called an universal bishop, or the head of the universal Church; or
that--5. The people was then taught to believe that Christ's body is really,
substantially, corporally, carnally or naturally in the Sacrament; or that--6. His
body is, or may be, in a thousand places or more, at one time; or that--7. The
priest did then hold up the Sacrament over his head; or that--8. The people did
then fall down and worship it with godly honour; or that--9. The Sacrament was
then, or now ought to be, hanged up under a canopy; or that--10. In the Sacrament
after the words of consecration there remaineth only the accidents and shews,
without the substance of bread and wine; or that--11. The priest then divided
the Sacrament in three parts and afterwards received himself, alone; or
that--12. Whosoever had said the Sacrament is a pledge, a token, or a remembrance of
Christ's body, had therefore been judged a heretic; or that--13. It was lawful,
then, to have thirty, twenty, fifteen, ten, or five masses said in one Church,
in one day; or that--14. Images were then set up in churches to the intent the
people might worship them; or that--15. The lay people was then forbidden to
read the word of God, in their own tongue:
"If any man alive be able to prove any of these articles, by any one clear
or plain clause or sentence, either of the Scriptures, or of the old doctors,
or of any old General Council, or by any Example of the Primitive Church; I
promise, then, that I will give over and subscribe unto him."
All this went far beyond the concession of proescription which makes
little of any one saying of any one Father, and demands the general consent of
Antiquity; but, it is needless to say that Jewel's challenge has remained unanswered
for more than three hundred years, and so it will be to all Eternity
With great erudition Jewel enlarged his propositions and maintained all
his points. See his works, vol. I., p. 20 et seqq. Cambridge University Press,
1845.