THE SOUL'S TESTIMONY
VIII. THE SOUL'S TESTIMONY.(1)
[BY THE REV S. THELWALL.]
CHAP. I.
IF, with the object of convicting the rivals and persecutors of Christian
truth, from their own authorities, of the crime of at once being untrue to
themselves and doing injustice to us, one is bent on gathering testimonies in its
favour from the writings of the philosophers, or the poets, or other masters of
this world's learning and wisdom, he has need of a most inquisitive spirit, and
a still greater memory to carry out the research. Indeed, some of our people,
who still continued their inquisitive labours in ancient literature, and still
occupied memory with it, have published works we have in our hands of this very
sort; works in which they relate and attest the nature and origin of their
traditions, and the grounds on which opinions rest, and from which it may be seen
at once that we have embraced nothing new or monstrous--nothing for which we
cannot claim the support of ordinary and well-known writings, whether in ejecting
error from our creed, or admitting truth into it. But the unbelieving hardness
of the human heart leads them to slight even their own teachers, otherwise
approved and in high renown, whenever they touch upon arguments which are used in
defence of Christianity. Then the poets are fools, when they describe the gods
with human passions and stories; then the philosophers are without reason, when
they knock at the gates of truth. He will thus far be reckoned a wise and
sagacious man who has gone the length of uttering sentiments that are almost
Christian; while if, in a mere affectation of judgment and wisdom, he sets himself to
reject their ceremonies, or to convicting the world of its sin, he is sure to
be branded as a Christian. We will have nothing, then, to do with the
literature and the teaching, perverted in its best results, which is believed in its
errors rather than its truth. We shall lay no stress on it, if some of their
authors have declared that there is one God, and one God only. Nay, let it be
granted that there is nothing in heathen writers which a Christian approves, that it
may be put out of his power to utter a single word of reproach. For all are not
familiar with their teachings; and those who are, have no assurance in regard
to their truth. Far less do men assent to our writings, to which no one comes
for guidance unless he is already a Christian. I call in a new testimony, yea,
one which is better known than all literature, more discussed than all doctrine,
more public than all publications, greater than the whole man--I mean all
which is man's. Stand forth, O soul, whether thou art a divine and eternal
substance, as most philosophers believe if it be so, thou wilt be the less likely to
lie,--or whether thou art the very opposite of divine, because indeed a mortal
thing, as Epicurus alone thinks--in that case there will be the less temptation
for thee to speak falsely in this case: whether thou art received from heaven,
or sprung from earth; whether thou art formed of numbers, or of atoms; whether
thine existence begins with that of the body, or thou art put into it at a
later stage; from whatever source, and in whatever way, thou makest man a rational
being, in the highest degree capable of thought and knowledge,--stand forth and
give thy witness. But I call thee not as when, fashioned in schools, trained
in libraries, fed in Attic academies and porticoes, thou belchest wisdom. I
address thee simple, rude, uncultured and untaught, such as they have thee who have
thee only; that very thing of the road, the street, the work-shop, wholly. I
want thine inexperience, since in thy small experience no one feels any
confidence. I demand of thee the things thou bringest with thee into man, which thou
knowest either from thyself, or from thine author, whoever he may be. Thou art
not, as I well know, Christian; for a man becomes a Christian, he is not born
one. Yet Christians earnestly press thee for a testimony; they press thee, though
an alien, to bear witness against thy friends, that they may be put to shame
before thee, for hating and mocking us on account of things which convict thee as
an accessory.
CHAP. II.
We give offence by proclaiming that there is one God, to whom the name of
God alone belongs, from whom all things come, and who is Lord of the whole
universe.(1) Bear thy testimony, if thou knowest this to be the truth; for openly
and with a perfect liberty, such as we do not possess, we hear thee both in
private and in public exclaim, "Which may God grant," and, "If God so will." By
expressions such as these thou declarest that there is one who is distinctively
God, and thou con-fessest that all power belongs to him to whose will, as
Sovereign, thou dost look. At the same time, too, thou deniest any others to be truly
gods, in calling them by their own names of Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, Minerva; for
thou affirmest Him to be God alone to whom thou givest no other name than God;
and though thou sometimes callest these others gods, thou plainly usest the
designation as one which does not really belong to them, but is, so to speak, a
borrowed one. Nor is the nature of the God we declare unknown to thee: "God is
good, God does good," thou art wont to say; plainly suggesting further, "But man
is evil." In asserting an antithetic proposition, thou, in a sort of indirect
and figurative way, reproachest man with his wickedness in departing from a God
so good. So, again, as among us, as belonging to the God of benignity and
goodness, "Blessing" is a most sacred act in our religion and our life, thou too
sayest as readily as a Christian needs, "God bless thee;" and when thou turnest
the blessing of God into a curse, in like manner thy very words confess with us
that His power over us is absolute and entire. There are some who, though they
do not deny the existence of God, hold withal that He is neither Searcher, nor
Ruler, nor Judge; treating with especial disdain those of us who go over to
Christ out of fear of a coming judgment, as they think, honouring God in freeing
Him from the cares of keeping watch, and the trouble of taking note,--not even
regarding Him as capable of anger. For if God, they say, gets angry, then He is
susceptible of corruption and passion; but that of which passion and corruption
can be affirmed may also perish, which God cannot do. But these very persons
elsewhere, confessing that the soul is divine, and bestowed on us by God,
stumble against a testimony of the soul itself, which affords an answer to these
views. For if either divine or God-given, it doubtless knows its giver; and if it
knows Him, it undoubtedly fears Him too, and especially as having been by Him
endowed so amply. Has it no fear of Him whose favour it is so desirous to
possess, and whose anger it is so anxious to avoid? Whence, then, the soul's natural
fear of God, if God cannot be angry? How is there any dread of Him whom nothing
offends? What is feared but anger? Whence comes anger, but from observing what
is done? What leads to watchful oversight, but judgment in prospect? Whence is
judgment, but from power? To whom does supreme authority and power belong, but
to God alone? So thou art always ready, O soul, from thine own knowledge,
nobody casting scorn upon thee, and no one preventing, to exclaim, "God sees all,"
and "I commend thee to God," and "May God repay," and "God shall judge between
us." How happens this, since thou art not Christian? How is it that, even with
the garland of Ceres on the brow, wrapped in the purple cloak of Saturn, wearing
the white robe of the goddess Isis, thou invokest God as judge? Standing under
the statue of AEsculapius, adorning the brazen image of Juno, arraying the
helmet of Minerva with dusky figures, thou never thinkest of appealing to any of
these deities. In thine own forum thou appealest to a God who is elsewhere; thou
permittest honour to be rendered in thy temples to a foreign god. Oh, striking
testimony to truth, which in the very midst of demons obtains a witness for us
Christians!
CHAP. III.
But when we say that there are demons--as though, in the simple fact that
we alone expel them from the men's bodies,(2) we did not also prove their
existence--some disciple of Chrysippus begins to curl the lip. Yet thy curses
sufficiently attest that there are such beings, and that they are objects of thy
strong dislike.(3) As what comes to thee as a fit expression of thy strong hatred
of him, thou callest the man a daemon who annoys thee with his filthiness, or
malice, or insolence, or any other vice which we ascribe to evil spirits. In
expressing vexation, contempt, or abhorrence, thou hast Satan constantly upon thy
lips;(1) the very same we hold to be the angel of evil, the source of error, the
corrupter of the whole world, by whom in the beginning man was entrapped into
breaking the commandment of God. And (the man) being given over to death on
account of his sin, the entire human race, tainted in their descent from him, were
made a channel for transmitting his condemnation. Thou seest, then, thy
destroyer; and though he is fully known only to Christians, or to whatever sect(2)
confesses the Lord, yet, even thou hast some acquaintance with him while yet thou
abhorrest him!
CHAP. IV.
Even now, as the matter refers to thy opinion on a point the more closely
belonging to thee, in so far as it bears on thy personal well-being, we
maintain that after life has passed away thou still remainest in existence, and
lookest forward to a day of judgment, and according to thy deserts art assigned to
misery or bliss, in either way of it for ever; that, to be capable of this, thy
former substance must needs return to thee, the matter and the memory of the
very same human being: for neither good nor evil couldst thou feel if thou wert
not endowed again with that sensitive bodily organization, and there would be no
grounds for judgment without the presentation of the very person to whom the
sufferings of judgment were due. That Christian view, though much nobler than the
Pythagorean, as it does not tranfser thee into beasts; though more complete
than the Platonic, since it endows thee again with a body; though more worthy of
honour than the Epicurean, as it preserves thee from annihilation,--yet,
because of the name connected with it, it is held to be nothing but vanity and folly,
and, as it is called, a mere presumption. But we are not ashamed of ourselves
if our presumption is found to have thy support. Well, in the first place, when
thou speakest of one who is dead, thou sayest of him, "Poor man"--poor,
surely, not because he has been taken from the good of life, but because he has been
given over to punishment and condemnation. But at another time thou speakest of
the dead as free from trouble; thou professest to think life a burden, and
death a blessing. Thou art wont, too, to speak of the dead as in repose,(3) when,
returning to their graves beyond the city gates(4) with food and dainties, thou
art wont to present offerings to thyself rather than to them; or when, coming
from the graves again, thou art staggering under the effects of wine. But I
want thy sober opinion. Thou callest the dead poor when thou speakest thine own
thoughts, when thou art at a distance from them. For at their feast, where in a
sense they are present and recline along with thee, it would never do to cast
reproach upon their lot. Thou canst not but adulate those for whose sake thou art
feasting it so sumptuously. Dost thou then speak of him as poor who feels not?
How happens it that thou cursest, as one capable of suffering from thy curse,
the man whose memory comes back on thee with the sting in it of some old
injury? It is thine imprecation that "the earth may lie heavy on him," and that there
may be trouble "to his ashes in the realm of the dead." In like manner, in thy
kindly feeling to him to whom thou art indebted for favours, thou entreatest
"repose to his bones and ashes," and thy desire is that among the dead he may
"have pleasant rest." If thou hast no power of suffering after death, if no
feeling remains,--if, in a word, severance from the body is the annihilation of
thee, what makes thee lie against thyself, as if thou couldst suffer in another
state? Nay, why dost thou fear death at all? There is nothing after death to be
feared, if there is nothing to be felt. For though it may be said that death is
dreadful not for anything it threatens afterwards, but because it deprives us
of the good of life; yet, on the other hand, as it puts an end to life's
discomforts, which are far more numerous, death's terrors are mitigated by a gain that
more than outweighs the loss. And there is no occasion to be troubled about a
loss of good things, which is amply made up for by so great a blessing as
relief from every trouble. There is nothing dreadful in that which delivers from all
that is to be dreaded. If thou shrinkest from giving up life because thy
experience of it has been sweet, at any rate there is no need to be in any alarm
about death if thou hast no knowledge that it is evil. Thy dread of it is the
proof that thou art aware of its evil.
Thou wouldst never think it evil--thou wouldst have no fear of it at
all--if thou weft not sure that after it there is something to make it evil, and
so a thing of terror.(1) Let us leave unnoted at this time that natural way
of fearing death. It is a poor thing for any one to fear what is inevitable. I
take up the other side, and argue on the ground of a joyful hope beyond our term
of earthly life; for desire of posthumous fame is with almost every class an
inborn thing.(2) I have not time to speak of the Curtii, and the Reguli, or the
brave men of Greece, who afford us innumerable cases of death despised for
after renown. Who at this day is without the desire that he may be often remembered
when he is dead? Who does not give all endeavour to preserve his name by works
of literature, or by the simple glory of his virtues, or by the splendour even
of his tomb? How is it the nature of the soul to have these posthumous
ambitions and with such amazing effort to prepare the things it can only use after
decease? It would care nothing about the future, if the future were quite unknown
to it. But perhaps thou thinkest thyself surer, after thy exit from the body,
of continuing still to feel, than of any future resurrection, which is a
doctrine laid at our door as one of our presumptuous suppositions. But it is also the
doctrine of the soul; for if any one inquires about a person lately dead as
though he were alive, it occurs at once to say, "He has gone." He is expected to
return, then.
CHAP. V.
These testimonies of the soul are simple as true, commonplace as simple,
universal as commonplace, natural as universal, divine as natural. I don't think
they can appear frivolous or feeble to any one, if he reflect on the majesty
of nature, from which the soul derives its authority.(3) If you acknowledge the
authority of the mistress, you will own it also in the disciple. Well, nature
is the mistress here, and her disciple is the soul. But everything the one has
taught or the other learned, has come from God--the Teacher of the teacher. And
what the soul may know from the teachings of its chief instructor, thou canst
judge from that which is within thee. Think of that which enables thee to think;
reflect on that which in forebodings is the prophet, the augur in omens, the
foreseer of coming events. Is it a wonderful thing, if, being the gift of God to
man, it knows how to divine? Is it anything very strange, if it knows the God
by whom it was bestowed? Even fallen as it is, the victim of the great
adversary's machinations, it does not forget its Creator, His goodness and law, and the
final end both of itself and of its foe. Is it singular then, if, divine in
its origin, its revelations agree with the knowledge God has given to His own
people? But he who does not regard those outbursts of the soul as the teaching of
a congenital nature and the secret deposit of an inborn knowledge, will say
that the habit and, so to say, the vice of speaking in this way has been acquired
and confirmed from the opinions of published books widely spread among men.
Unquestionably the soul existed before letters, and speech before books, and ideas
before the writing of them, and man himself before the poet and
philosopher.(4) Is it then to be believed, that before literature and its publication no
utterances of the sort we have pointed out came from the lips of men? Did nobody
speak of God and His goodness, nobody of death, nobody of the dead? Speech went
a-begging, I suppose; nay,(the subjects being still awanting, without which it
cannot even exist at this day, when it is so much more copious, and rich, and
wise), it could not exist at all if the things which are now so easily suggested,
that cling to us so constantly, that are so very near to us, that are somehow
born on our very lips, had no existence in ancient times, before letters had
any existence in the world--before there was a Mercury, I think, at all. And
whence was it, I pray, that letters themselves came to know, and to disseminate for
the use of speech, what no mind had ever conceived, or tongue put forth, or
ear taken in? But, clearly, since the Scriptures of God, whether belonging to
Christians or to Jews, into whose olive tree we have been grafted--are much more
ancient than any secular literature, (or, let us only say, are of a somewhat
earlier date, as we have shown in its proper place when proving their
trustworthiness); if the soul have taken these utterances from writings at all, we must
believe it has taken them from ours, and not from yours, its instruction coming
more naturally from the earlier than the later works. Which latter indeed waited
for their own instruction from the former, and though we grant that light has
come from you, still it has flowed from the first fountainhead originally; and
we claim as entirely ours, all you may have taken from us and handed down. Since
it is thus, it matters little whether the soul's knowledge was put into it by
God or by His book. Why, then, O man, wilt thou maintain a view so groundless,
as that those testimonies of the soul have gone forth from the mere human
speculations of your literature, and got hardening of common use?
CHAP. VI.
Believe, then, your own books, and as to our Scriptures so much the more
believe writings which are divine, but in the witness of the soul itself give
like confidence to Nature. Choose the one of these you observe to be the most
faithful friend of truth. If your own writings are distrusted, neither God nor
Nature lie. And if you would have faith in God and Nature, have faith in the soul;
thus you will believe yourself. Certainly you value the soul as giving you
your true greatness,--that to which you belong; which is all things to you;
without which you can neither live nor die; on whose account you even put God away
from you. Since, then, you fear to become a Christian, call the soul before you,
and put her to the question. Why does she worship another? why name the name of
God? Why does she speak of demons, when she means to denote spirits to be held
accursed? Why does she make her protestations towards the heavens, and
pronounce her ordinary execrations earthwards? Why does she render service in one
place, in another invoke the Avenger? Why does she pass judgments on the dead? What
Christian phrases are those she has got, though Christians she neither desires
to see nor hear? Why has she either bestowed them On us, or received them from
us? Why has she either taught us them, or learned them as our scholar? Regard
with suspicion this accordance in words, while there is such difference in
practice. It is utter folly--denying a universal nature--to ascribe this
exclusively to our language and the Greek, which are regarded among us as so near akin.
The soul is not a boon from heaven to Latins and Greeks alone. Man is the one
name belonging to every nation upon earth: there is one soul and many tongues,
one spirit and various sounds; every country has its own speech, but the subjects
of speech are common to all. God is everywhere, and the goodness of God is
everywhere; demons are everywhere, and the cursing of them is everywhere; the
invocation of divine judgment is everywhere, death is everywhere, and the sense of
death is everywhere, and all the world over is found the witness of the soul.
There is not a soul of man that does not, from the light that is in itself,
proclaim the very things we are not permitted to speak above our breath. Most
justly, then, every soul is a culprit as well as a witness: in the measure that it
testifies for truth, the guilt of error lies on it; and on the day of judgment
it will stand before the courts of God, without a word to say. Thou proclaimedst
God, O soul, but thou didst not seek to know Him: evil spirits were detested
by thee, and yet they were the objects of thy adoration; the punishments of hell
were foreseen by thee, but no care was taken to avoid them; thou hadst a
savour of Christianity, and withal wert the persecutor of Christians.
ELUCIDATIONS.
I. (Recognition of the Supreme God, cap, ii., p. 176.)
THE passage referred to in the note, begins thus in Jowett's rendering:
"The Ruler of the Universe has ordered all things with a view to the preservation
and perfection of the whole etc." So, in the same book: "Surely God must not
be supposed to have a nature which he himself hates." Again: "Let us not, then,
deem God inferior to human workmen, who in proportion to their skill finish and
perfect their works .... or that God, the wisest of beings, who is willing and
able to extend his care to all things, etc." Now, it is a sublime plan which
our author here takes up, (making only slight reference to the innumerable
citations which were behind his apostrophe to the soul if any one should dispute it)
to bid the soul stand forth and confess its consciousness of God.
II. (Daemons, cap. vi. p. 176.)
Those who would pursue the subject of Demonology, which Tertullian opens
in this admirable treatise, should follow it up in a writer whom Tertullian
greatly influenced, in many particulars, even when he presents a remarkable
contrast. The Ninth Book of the City of God is devoted to inquiries which throw
considerable light on some of the startling sayings of our author as to the heathen
systems, and their testimony to the Soul's Consciousness of God and of the great
enemy of God and the inferior spirit of Evil.