APPENDIX TO THE WORKS OF HIPPOLYTUS CONTAINING DUBIOUS AND SPURIOUS PIECES
APPENDIX TO THE WORKS OF HIPPOLYTUS. CONTAINING DUBIOUS AND SPURIOUS PIECES.
A DISCOURSE(1) BY THE MOST BLESSED HIPPOLYTUS, BISHOP AND MARTYR, ON THE END
OF THE WORLD, AND ON ANTICHRIST, AND ON THE SECOND COMING OF OUR LORD JESUS
CHRIST.
I.
SINCE, then, the blessed prophets have been eyes to us, setting forth for
our behoof the clear declaration of things secret, both through life, and
through declaration, and through inspiration(2) of the Holy Spirit, and discoursing,
too, of things not yet come to pass,(3) in this way also(4) to all generations
they have pictured forth the grandest subjects for contemplation and for
action. Thus, too, they preached of the advent of God(5) in the flesh to the world,
His advent by the spotless and God-bearing(6) Mary in the way of birth and
growth, and the manner of His life and conversation with men, and His manifestation
by baptism, and the new birth that was to be to all men, and the regeneration
by the layer; and the multitude of His miracles, and His blessed passion on the
cross, and the insults which He bore at the hands of the Jews, and His burial,
and His descent to Hades, and His ascent again, and redemption of the spirits
that were of old,(7) and the destruction of death, and His life-giving awaking
from the dead, and His re-creation of the whole world, and His assumption and
return to heaven, and His reception of the Spirit, of which the apostles were
deemed worthy, and again the second coming, that is destined to declare all
things. For as being designated seers,(8) they of necessity signified and spake of
these things beforetime.
II.
Hence, too, they indicated the day of the consummation to us, and
signified beforehand the day of the apostate that is to appear and deceive men at the
last times, and the beginning and end of his kingdom, and the advent of the
Judge, and the life of the righteous, and the punishment of the sinners, in order
that we all, bearing these things in mind day by day and hour by hour, as
children of the Church, might know that "not one jot nor one tittle of these things
shall fail,"(9) as the Saviour's own word announced. Let all of you, then, of
necessity, open the eyes of your hearts and the ears of your soul, and receive
the word which we are about to speak. For I shall unfold to you to-day a
narration full of horror and fear, to wit, the account of the consummation, and in
particular, of the seduction of the whole world by the enemy and devil; and after
these things, the second coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.
III.
Where, then, ye friends of Christ, shall I begin? and with what shall I
make my commencement, or what shall I expound? and what witness shall I adduce
for the things spoken? But let us take those (viz., the prophets) with whom we
began this discourse, and adduce them as credible witnesses, to confirm our
exposition of the matters discussed; and after them the teaching, or rather the
prophecy, of the apostles, (so as to see) how throughout the whole world they
herald the day of the consummation. Since these, then, have also shown beforetime
things not vet come to pass, and have declared the devices and deceits of wicked
men, who are destined to be made manifest, come and let us bring forward Isaiah
as our first witness, inasmuch as he instructs us in the times of the
consummation. What, then, does he say? "Your country is desolate, your cities are
burned with fire: your land, strangers devour it in your presence: the daughter of
Zion shall be left as a cottage in a vineyard, and as a lodge in a garden of
cucumbers, as a besieged city."(1) You see, beloved, the prophet's illumination,
whereby he announced that time so many generations before. For it is not of the
Jews that he spake this word of old, nor of the city of Zion, but of the
Church. For all the prophets have declared Sion to be the bride brought from the
nations.
IV.
Wherefore let us direct our discourse to a second witness. And of what
sort is this one? Listen to Osea, as he speaks thus grandly: "In those days the
Lord shall bring on a burning wind from the desert against them, and shall make
their veins dry, and shall make their springs desolate; and all their goodly
vessels shall be spoiled. Because they rose up against God, they shall fall by the
sword, and their women with child shall be ripped up."(2) And what else is
this burning wind from the east, than the Antichrist that is to destroy and dry up
the veins of the waters and the fruits of the trees in his times, because men
set their hearts on his works? For which reason he shall indeed destroy them,
and they shall serve him in his pollution.
V.
Mark the agreement of prophet with prophet. Acquaint yourself also with
another prophet who expresses himself in like manner. For Amos prophesied of the
same things in a manner quite in accordance: "Thus saith the Lord, Forasmuch
therefore as ye have beaten the poor with the fist,(3) and taken choice gifts
from him: ye have built houses, but ye shall not dwell in them: ye have planted
pleasant vineyards, but ye shall not drink wine of them. For I know your manifold
transgressions, in trampling justice beneath your foot, and taking a bribe,
and turning aside the poor in the gate from their right. Therefore the prudent
shall keep silence in that time, for it is an evil time."(4) Learn, beloved, the
wickedness of the men of that time, how they spoil houses and fields, and take
even justice from the just; for when these things come to pass, ye may know
that it is the end. For this reason art thou instructed in the wisdom of the
prophet, and the revelation that is to be in those days. And all the prophets, as we
bare already said, have clearly signified the things that are to come to pass
in the last times, just as they also have declared things of old.
VI.
But not to expend our argument entirely in going over the words of all the
prophets,(5) after citing one other, let us revert to the matter in hand. What is
it, then, that Micah says in his prophecy? "Thus saith the Lord concerning the
prophets that make my people err, that bite with their teeth, and cry to him,
Peace; and if it was not put into their mouth,(6) they prepared(7) war against
him. Therefore night shall be unto you, that ye shall not have a vision;(8)
and it shall be dark unto you, that ye shall not divine; and the sun shall not go
down over the prophets, and the day shall be dark over them. And the seers
shall be ashamed, and the diviners confounded."(9) These things we have recounted
beforehand, in order that ye may know the pain that is to be in the last times,
and the perturbation, and the manner of life on the part of all men toward
each other,(10) and their envy, and hate, and strife, and the negligence of the
shepherds toward the sheep, and the unruly disposition of the people toward the
priests.(11) VII. Wherefore all shall walk after their own will. And the
children will lay hands on their parents. The wife will give up her own husband to
death, and the husband will bring his own wife to judgment like a criminal.
Masters will lord it over their servants savagely,(12) and servants will assume an
unruly demeanour toward their masters. None will reverence the grey hairs of the
elderly, and none will have pity upon the comeliness of the youthful. The
temples of God will be like houses, and there will be overturnings of the churches
everywhere.The Scriptures will be despised, and everywhere they will sing the
songs of the adversary.(13) Fornications, and adulteries, and perjuries will
fill the land; sorceries, and incantations, and divinations will follow after I
these with all force and zeal. And, on the whole, from among those who profess to
be Christians will rise up then false prophets, false apostles, impostors,
mischief-makers, evil-doers, liars against each other, adulterers, fornicators,
robbers, grasping, perjured, mendacious, hating each other. The shepherds will be
like wolves; the priests will embrace falsehood; the monks(1) will lust after
the things of the world; the rich will assume hardness of heart; the rulers
will not help the poor; the powerful will cast off all pity; the judges will
remove justice from the just, and, blinded with bribes, they will call in
unrighteousness.
VIII.
And what am I to say with respect to men,(2) when the very elements
themselves will disown their order? There will be earthquakes in every city, and
plagues in every country; and monstrous(3) thunderings and frightful lightnings
will burn up both houses and fields. Storms of winds will disturb both sea and
land excessively; and there will be unfruitfulness on the earth, and a roaring in
the sea, and an intolerable agitation on account of souls and the destruction
of men.(4) There will be signs in the sun, and signs in the moon, deflections in
the stars, distresses of nations, intemperateness in the atmosphere,
discharges of hail upon the face of the earth, winters of excessive severity,
different(5) frosts, inexorable scorching winds, unexpected thunderings, unlooked-for
conflagrations; and in general, lamentation and mourning in the whole earth,
without consolation. For, "because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax
cold."(6) By reason of the agitation and confusion of all these, the Lord of
the universe cries in the Gospel, saying, "Take heed that ye be not deceived;
for many shall come in my name, saying, I am Christ, and the time draweth near:
go ye not therefore after them. But when ye shall hear of wars and commotions,
be not terrified: for these things must first come to pass; but the end is not
yet by and by."(7) Let us observe the word of the Saviour, how He always
admonished us with a view to our security: "Take heed that ye be not deceived: for
many shall come in my name, saying, I am Christ."
IX.
Now after He was taken up again to the Father, there arose some, saying,
"I am Christ," like Simon Magus and the rest, whose names we have not time at
present to mention. Wherefore also in the last day of the consummation, it must
needs be that false Christs will arise again, saying, "I am Christ," and they
will deceive many. And multitudes of men will run from the east even to the west,
and from the north even to the sea, saying, Where is Christ here? where is
Christ there? But being possessed of a vain conceit, and failing to read the
Scriptures carefully, and not being of an upright mind, they will seek for a name
which they shall be unable to find. For these things must first be; and thus the
son of perdition--that is to say, the devil--must be seen.
X.
And the apostles, who speak of God,(8) in establishing the truth of the
advent of the Lord Jesus Christ, have each of them indicated the appearing of
these abominable and ruin-working men, and have openly announced their lawless
deeds. First of all Peter, the rock of the faith, whom Christ our God called
blessed, the teacher of the Church, the first disciple, he who has the keys of the
kingdom, has instructed us to this effect: "Know this first, children, that
there shall come in the last days scoffers, walking after their own lusts.(9) And
there shall be false teachers among you, who privily shall bring in damnable
heresies."(10) After him, John the theologian,(11) and the beloved of Christ, in
harmony with him, cries, "The children of the devil are manifest;(12) and even
now are there many antichrists;(13) but go not after them.(14) Believe not every
spirit, because many false prophets are gone out into the world."(15) And then
Jude, the brother of James, speaks in like manner: "In the last times there
shall be mockers, walking after their own ungodly lusts. There be they who,
without fear, feed(16) themselves."(17) You have observed the concord of the
theologians and apostles, and the harmony of their doctrine.
XI.
Finally, hear Paul as he speaks boldly, and mark how clearly he discovers
these: "Beware of evil workers, beware of the concision.(18) Beware lest any
man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit.(19) See that ye walk
circumspectly, because the days are evil."(20) In fine then, what man shall have any
excuse who hears these things in the Church from prophets and apostles, and from
the Lord Himself, and yet will give no heed to the care of his soul, and to the
time of the consummation, and to that approaching hour when we shall have to
stand at the judgmentseat of Christ?
XII.
But having now done with this account of the consummation, we shall turn
our exposition to those matters which fall to be stated by us next in order. I
adduce, therefore, a witness altogether worthy of credit,-- namely, the prophet
Daniel, who interpreted the vision of Nabuchodonosor, and from the beginning of
the kings down to their end indicated the right(1) way to those who seek to
walk therein--to wit, the manifestation of the truth. For what saith the prophet?
He presignified the matter clearly to Nabuchodonosor in the following terms:
"Thou. O king, sawest, and behold a great image standing before thee, whose head
was of gold, its arms anti shoulders of silver, its belly and thighs of brass,
its legs of iron, its feet part of iron and part of clay. Thou sawest till
that a stone was cut out without hand; and it smote the image upon its feet, which
were part of iron and part of clay, and brake them to pieces. Then was the
clay, and the iron, and the brass, and the silver, and the gold broken to pieces
together, and became like the chaff of the summer threshing-floor; and the stone
that smote the image became a great mountain, and filled the whole earth."(2)
XIII.
Wherefore, bringing the visions of Daniel into conjunction with these, we
shall make one narrative of the two, and show how true and consistent were the
things seen in vision by the prophet with those which Nabuchodonosor saw
beforehand. For the prophet speaks thus: "I Daniel saw, and, behold, the four winds
of the heaven strove upon the great sea. And four great beasts came up from the
sea, diverse one from another. The first was like a lioness, and had eagle's
wings: I beheld till the wings thereof were plucked, and it was lifted up from
the earth, and made stand upon the feet as a man, and a man's heart was given it.
And behold a second beast, like to a bear, and it raised up itself on one
side, and it had three ribs in the mouth of it between the teeth of it: and they
said thus unto it, Arise, devour much flesh. After this I beheld, and lo a third
beast, like a leopard, which had upon the back of it four wings of a fowl: the
beast had also four heads. After this I saw, and behold a fourth beast,
dreadful and terrible, and strong exceedingly; its great iron teeth and its claws of
brass(3) devoured and brake in pieces, and it stamped the residue with the feet
of it: and it was diverse exceedingly from all the beasts that were before it;
and it had ten horns. I considered its horns, and, behold, there came up among
them a little horn, and before it there were three of the first horns plucked
up by the roots: and, behold, in this horn were eyes like the eyes of man, and a
mouth speaking great things."(4)
XIV.
Now, since these things which are thus spoken mystically by the prophet
seem to all to be hard to understand, we shall conceal none of them from those
who are possessed of sound mind. By mentioning the first beast, namely the
lioness that comes up out of the sea, Daniel means the kingdom of the Babylonians
which was set up in the world; and that same is also the "golden head" of this
image. And by speaking of its "wings like an eagle," he shows that king
Nabuchodonosor was elevated and exalted himself against God. Then he says that its "wings
were plucked out," and means by this that his glory was subverted: for he was
driven from his kingdom. And in stating that a "man's heart was given it, and
it was made stand upon the feet like a man," he means that he repented, and
acknowledged that he was himself but a man, and gave the glory to God. Lo, I have
thus unfolded the similitude of the first beast.
XV.
Then after the lioness, the prophet sees a second beast like a bear, which
denoted the Persians; for after the Babylonians the Persians had the
sovereignty. And in saying, "I saw three ribs in the mouth of it," he referred to three
nations, the Persians, Medes, and Babylonians, which were also expressed by the
silver that came after the gold in the image. Behold, we have explained the
second beast too. Then the third was the leopard, by which were meant the Greeks.
For after the Persians, Alexander king of the Macedonians held the
sovereignty, when he had destroyed Darius; and this is expressed by the brass in the
image. And in speaking of "four wings of a fowl, and four heads in the beast," he
showed most clearly how the kingdom of Alexander was divided into four parts. For
it had four heads, --namely, the four kings that rose out of it. For on his
death-bed(5) Alexander divided his kingdom into four parts. Behold, we have
discussed the third also.
XVI.
Next he tells us of the "fourth beast, dreadful and terrible; its teeth
were of iron, and its claws of brass." And what is meant by these but the kingdom
of the Romans, which also is meant by the iron, by which it will crush all the
seats of empire that were before it, and will lord it over the whole earth?
After this, then, what is left for us to interpret of all that the prophet saw,
but the "toes of the image, in which part was of iron and part of clay, mingled
together in one?" For by the ten toes of the image he meant figuratively the
ten kings who sprang out of it, as Daniel also interpreted the matter. For he
says, "I considered the beast, namely the fourth; and behold ten horns after it,
among which another horn arose like an offshoot; and it will pluck up by the
root three of those before it." And by this offshoot horn none other is signified
than the Antichrist that is to restore the kingdom of the Jews. And the three
horns which are to be rooted out by it signify three kings, namely those of
Egypt, Libya, and Ethiopia, whom he will destroy in the array of war; and when he
has vanquished them all, being a savage tyrant, he will raise tribulation and
persecution against the saints, exalting himself against them.
XVII.
You see how Daniel interpreted to Nabuchodonosor the dominion of the
kingdoms; you see how he explained the form of the image in all its parts;(1) you
have observed how he indicated prophetically the meaning of the coming up of the
four beasts out of the sea. It remains that we open up to you the things done
by the Antichrist in particular; and, as far as in our power, declare to you by
means of the Scriptures and the prophets, his wandering over the whole earth,
and his lawless advent.
XVIII.
As the Lord Jesus Christ made His sojourn with us in the flesh (which He
received) from the holy, immaculate Virgin, and took to Himself the tribe of
Judah, and came forth from it, the Scripture declared His royal lineage in the
word of Jacob, when in his benediction he addressed himself to his son in these
terms: "Judah, thou art he whom thy brethren shall praise: thy hands shall be on
the neck of thine enemies; thy father's children shall bow down before thee.
Judah is a lion's whelp; from a sprout,(2) my son, thou art gone up: he stooped
down, he couched as a lion, and as a lion's whelp:(3) who shall rouse him up? A
ruler(4) shall not depart from Judah, nor a leader s from his thighs,(6) until
what is in store for him(7) shall come, and he is the expectation(8) of the
nations."(9) Mark these words of Jacob which were spoken to Judah, and are
fulfilled in the Lord. To the same effect, moreover, does the patriarch express
himself regarding Antichrist. Wherefore, as he prophesied with respect to Judah, so
did he also with respect to his son Dan. For Judah was his fourth son; and Dan,
again, was his seventh son. And what, then, did he say of him? "Let Dan be a
serpent sitting by the way, that biteth the horse's heel?"(10) And what serpent
was there but the deceiver from the beginning, he who is named in Genesis, he
who deceived Eve, and bruised Adam in the heel?(11)
XIX.
But seeing now that we must make proof of what is alleged at greater
length, we shall not shrink from the task. For it is certain that he is destined to
spring from the tribe of Dan,(12) and to range himself in opposition like a
princely tyrant, a terrible judge and accuser,(13) as the prophet testifies when
he says, "Dan shall judge his people, as one tribe in lsrael."(14) But some one
may say that this was meant of Samson, who sprang from the tribe of Dan, and
judged his people for twenty years. That, however, was only partially made good
in the case of Samson; but this shall be fulfilled completely in the case of
Antichrist. For Jeremiah, too, speaks in this manner: "From Dan we shall hear the
sound of the sharpness(15) of his horses; at the sound of the neighing(16) of
his horses the whole land trembled."(17) And again, Moses says: "Dan is a lion's
whelp, and he shall leap from Bashan."(18) And that no one may fall into the
mistake of thinking that this is spoken of the Saviour, let him attend to this.
"Dan," says he, "is a lion's whelp;" and by thus naming the tribe of Dan as the
one whence the accuser is destined to spring, he made the matter in hand quite
clear. For as Christ is born of the tribe of Judah, so Antichrist shall be
born of the tribe of Dan. And as our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, the Son of
God, was spoken of in prophecy as a lion on account or His royalty and glory, in
the same manner also has the Scripture prophetically described the accuser as a
lion, on account of his tyranny and violence.
XX.
For in every respect that deceiver seeks to make himself appear like the
Son of God. Christ is a lion, and Antichrist is a lion. Christ is King of things
celestial and things terrestrial, and Antichrist will be king upon earth. The
Saviour was manifested as a lamb; and he, too, will appear as a lamb, while he
is a wolf within. The Saviour was circumcised, and he in like manner will
appear in circumcision. The Saviour sent the apostles unto all the nations, and he
in like manner will send false apostles. Christ gathered together the dispersed
sheep, and he in like manner will gather together the dispersed people of the
Hebrews. Christ gave to those who believed on Him the honourable and life-giving
cross, and he in like manner will give his own sign. Christ appeared in the
form of man, and he in like manner will come forth in the form of man. Christ
arose from among the Hebrews, and he will spring from among the Jews. Christ
displayed His flesh like a temple, and raised it up on the third day; and he too
will raise up again the temple of stone in Jerusalem. And these deceits fabricated
by him will become quite intelligible to those who listen to us attentively,
from what shall be set forth next in order.
XXI.
For through the Scriptures we are instructed in two advents of the Christ
and Saviour. And the first after the flesh was in humiliation, because He was
manifested in lowly estate. So then His second advent is declared to be in
glory; for He comes from heaven with power, and angels, and the glory of His Father.
His first advent had John the Baptist as its forerun-her; and His second, in
which He is to come in glory, will exhibit Enoch, and Elias, and John the
Divine.(1) Behold, too, the Lord's kindness to man; how even in the last times He
shows His care for mortals, and pities them. For He will not leave us even then
without prophets, but will send them to us for our instruction and assurance,
and to make us give heed to the advent of the adversary, as He intimated also of
old in this Daniel. For he says, "I shall make a covenant of one week, and in
the midst of the week my sacrifice and libation will be removed." For by one
week he indicates the showing forth of the seven years which shall be in the last
times.(2) And the half of the week the two prophets, along with John, will
take for the purpose of proclaiming to all the world the advent of Antichrist,
that is to say, for a "thousand two hundred and sixty days clothed in
sackcloth;"(3) and they will work signs and wonders with the object of making men ashamed
and repentant, even by these means, on account of their surpassing lawlessness
and impiety. "And if any man will hurt them, fire will proceed out of their
mouth, and devour their enemies. These have power to shut heaven, that it rain not
in the days of the advent of Antichrist, and to turn waters into blood, and to
smite the earth with all plagues as often as they will."(4) And when they have
proclaimed all these things they will fall on the sword, cut off by the
accuser(5). And they will fulfil their testimony, as Daniel also says; for he foresaw
that the beast that came up out of the abyss would make war with them, namely
with Enoch, Elias, and John, and would overcome them, and kill them, because of
their refusal to give glory to the accuser. that is the little horn that sprang
up.(6) And he, being lifted up in heart, begins in the end to, exalt himself
and glorify himself as God, persecuting the saints and blaspheming Christ.
XXII.
But as, in accordance with the train of our discussion, we have been
constrained to come to the matter of the days of the dominion of the adversary, it
is necessary to state in the first place what concerns his nativity and growth;
and then we must turn our discourse, as we have said before, to the expounding
of this matter, viz., that in all respects the accuser and son of
lawlessness(7) is to make himself like our Saviour. Thus also the demonstration makes the
matter clear to us. Since the Saviour of the world, with the purpose of saving
the race of men, was born of the immaculate and virgin Mary,(8) and in the form
of the flesh trod the enemy trader foot, in the exercise of the power of His own
proper divinity; in the same manner also will the accuser come forth from an
impure woman upon the earth, but shall be born of a virgin spuriously.(1) For
our God sojourned with us in the flesh, after that very flesh of ours which He
made for Adam and all Adam's posterity, yet without sin. But the accuser, though
he take up the flesh, will do it only in appearance; for how should we wear
that flesh which he did not make himself, but against which he warreth daily? And
it is my opinion, beloved, that he will assume this phenomenal kind of flesh(2)
as an instrument.(3) For this reason also is he to be horn of a virgin, as if
a spirit, and then to the rest he will be manifested as flesh. For as to a
virgin bearing, this we have known only in the case of the all-holy Virgin, who
bore the Saviour verily clothed in flesh.(4) For Moses says, "Every male that
openeth the womb shall be called holy unto the Lord."(5) This is by no means the
case with him;(6) but as the adversary will not open the womb, so neither will he
take to himself real flesh, and be circumcised as Christ was circumcised. And
even as Christ chose His apostles, so will he too assume a whole people of
disciples like himself in wickedness.
XXIII.
Above all, moreover, he will love the nation of the Jews. And with all
these he will work signs and terrible wonders, false wonders and not true, in
order to deceive his impious equals. For if it were possible, he would seduce even
the elect(7) from the love of Christ. But in his first steps he will be gentle,
loveable, quiet, pious, pacific, hating injustice, detesting gifts, not
allowing idolatry; loving, says he, the Scriptures, reverencing priests, honouring
his elders, repudiating fornication, detesting adultery, giving no heed to
slanders, not admitting oaths, kind to strangers, kind to the poor, compassionate.
And then he will work wonders, cleansing lepers, raising paralytics, expelling
demons, proclaiming things remote just as things present, raising the dead,
helping widows, defending orphans, loving all, reconciling in love men who contend,
and saying to such, "Let not the sun go down upon your wrath;"(8) and he will
not acquire gold, nor love silver, nor seek riches.
XXIV.
And all this he will do corruptly and deceitfully, and with the purpose of
deluding all to make him king. For when the peoples and tribes see so great
virtues and so great powers in him, they will all with one mind meet together to
make him king. And above all others shall the nation of the Hebrews be dear to
the tyrant himself, while they say one to another, Is there found indeed in our
generation such a man, so good and just? That shall be the way with the race
of the Jews pre-eminently, as I said before, who, thinking, as they do, that
they shall behold the king himself in such power, will approach him to say, We all
confide in thee, and acknowledge thee to be just upon the whole earth; we all
hope to be saved by thee; and by thy mouth we have received just and
incorruptible judgment.
XXV.
And at first, indeed, that deceitful and lawless one, with crafty
deceitfulness, will refuse such glory; but the men persisting, and holding by him, will
declare him king. And thereafter he will be lifted up in heart, and he who was
formerly gentle will become violent, and he who pursued love will become
pitiless, and the humble in heart will become haughty and inhuman, and the hater of
unrighteousness will persecute the righteous. Then, when he is elevated to his
kingdom, he will marshal war; and in his wrath he will smite three mighty
kings,-- those, namely, of Egypt, Libya, and Ethiopia. And after that he will build
the temple in Jerusalem, and will restore it again speedily, and give it over
to the Jews. And then he will be lifted up in heart against every man; yea, he
will speak blasphemy also against God, thinking in his deceit that he shall be
king upon the earth hereafter for ever; not knowing, miserable wretch, that his
kingdom is to be quickly brought to nought, and that he will quickly have to
meet the fire which is prepared for him, along with all who trust him and serve
him. For when Daniel said, "I shall make my covenant for one week,"(9) he
indicated seven years; and the one half of the week is for the preaching of the
prophets, and for the other half of the week--that is to say, for three years and a
half--Antichrist will reign upon the earth. And after this his kingdom and his
glory shall be taken away. Behold, ye who love God, what manner of tribulation
there shall rise in those days, such as has not been from the foundation of the
world, no, nor ever shall be, except in those days alone. Then the lawless
one, being lifted up in heart, will gather together his demons in man's form, and
will abominate those who call him to the kingdom, and will pollute many souls.
XXVI.
For he will appoint princes over them from among the demons. And he will
no longer seem to be pious, but altogether and in all things he will be harsh,
severe, passionate, wrathful, terrible, inconstant, dread, morose, hateful,
abominable, savage, vengeful, iniquitous. And, bent on casting the whole race of
men into the pit of perdition, he will multiply false signs. For when all the
people greet him with their acclamations at his displays, he will shout with a
strong voice, so that the place shall be shaken in which the multitudes stand by
him: "Ye peoples, and tribes, and nations, acquaint yourselves with my mighty
authority and power, and the strength of my kingdom. What prince is there so
great as I am? What great God is there but I? Who will stand up against my
authority?" Under the eye of the spectators he will remove mountains from their places,
he will walk on the sea with dry feet, he will bring down fire from heaven, he
will turn the day into darkness and the night into day, he will turn the sun
about wheresoever he pleases; and, in short, in presence of those who behold
him, he will show all the elements of earth and sea to be subject to him in the
power of his specious manifestation. For if, while as yet he does not exhibit
himself as the son of perdition, he raises and excites against us open war even to
battles and slaughters, at that time when he shall come in his own proper
person, and men shall see him as he is in reality, what machinations and deceits
and delusions will he not bring into play, with the purpose of seducing all men,
and leading them off from the way of truth, and from the gate of the kingdom?
XXVII.
Then, after all these things, the heavens will not give their dew, the
clouds will not give their rain, the earth will refuse to yield its fruits, the
sea shall be filled with stench, the rivers shall be dried up, the fish of the
sea shall die, men shall perish of hunger and thirst; and father embracing son,
and mother embracing daughter, will die together, and there will be none to bury
them. But the whole earth will be filled with the stench arising from the dead
bodies cast forth. And the sea, not receiving the floods of the rivers, will
become like mire, and will be filled with an unlimited smell and stench. Then
there will be a mighty pestilence upon the whole earth, and then, too,
inconsolable lamentation, and measureless weeping, and unceasing mourning Then men will
deem those happy who are dead before them, and will say to them, "Open your
sepulchres, and take us miserable beings in; open your receptacles for the
reception of your wretched kinsmen and acquaintances. Happy are ye, in that ye have not
seen our days. Happy are ye, in that ye have not had to witness this painful
life of ours, nor this irremediable pestilence, nor these straits that possess
our souls."
XXVIII.
Then that abominable one will send his commands throughout every
government by the hand at once of demons and of visible men, who shall say, "A mighty
king has arisen upon the earth; come ye all to worship him; come ye all to see
the strength of his kingdom: for, behold, he will give you corn; and he will
bestow upon you wine, and great riches, and lofty honours. For the whole earth and
sea obeys his command. Come ye all to him." And by reason of the scarcity of
food, all will go to him and worship him; and he will put his mark on their right
hand and on their forehead, that no one may put the sign of the honourable
cross upon his forehead with his right hand; but his hand is bound. And from that
time he shall not have power to seal any one of his members, but he shall be
attached to the deceiver, and shall serve him; and in him there is no repentance.
But such an one is lost at once to God and to men, and the deceiver will give
them scanty food by reason of his abominable seal. And his seal upon the
forehead and upon the right hand is the number, "Six hundred threescore and six."(1)
And I have an opinion as to this number, though I do not know the matter for
certain; for many names have been found in this number when it is expressed in
writing.(2) Still we say that perhaps the scription of this same seal will give
us the word I deny.(3) For even in recent days, by means of his ministers--that
is to say, the idolaterse--that bitter adversary took up the word deny, when
the lawless pressed upon the witnesses of Christ, with the adjuration, "Deny thy
God, the crucified One."(4)
XXIX.
Of such kind, in the time of that hater of all good, will be the seal, the
tenor of which will be this: I deny the Maker of heaven and earth, I deny the
baptism, I deny my (former) service, and attach myself to thee, and I believe
in thee. For this is what the prophets Enoch and Elias will preach: Believe not
the enemy who is to come and be seen; for he is an adversary(5) and corrupter
and son of perdition, and deceives you;(1) and for this reason he will kill you,
and smite them with the sword. Behold the deceit of the enemy, know the
machinations of the beguiler, how he seeks to darken the mind of men utterly. For he
will show forth his demons brilliant like angels, and he will bring in hosts of
the incorporeal without number. And in the presence of all he exhibits himself
as taken up into heaven with trumpets and sounds, and the mighty shouting of
those who hail him with indescribable hymns; the heir of darkness himself
shining like light, and at one time soaring to the heavens, and at another descending
to the earth with great glory, and again charging the demons, like angels, to
execute his behests with much fear and trembling. Then will he send the cohorts
of the demons among mountains and caves and dens of the earth, to track out
those who have been concealed from his eyes, and to bring them forward to worship
him. And those who yield to him he will seal with his seal; but those who
refuse to submit to him he will consume with incomparable pains and bitterest
torments and machinations, such as never have been, nor have reached the ear of man,
nor have been seen by the eye of mortals.
Blessed shall they be who overcome the tyrant then. For they shall be set
forth as more illustrious and loftier than the first witnesses; for the former
witnesses overcame his minions only, but these overthrow and conquer the
accuser himself, the son of perdition. With what eulogies and crowns, therefore, will
they not be adorned by our King, Jesus Christ!
XXXI.
But let us revert to the matter in hand. When men have received the seal,
then, and find neither food nor water, they will approach him with a voice of
anguish, saying, Give us to eat and drink, for we all faint with hunger and all
manner of straits;(2) and bid the heavens yield us water, and drive off from us
the beasts that devour men. Then will that crafty one make answer, mocking
them with absolute inhumanity, and saying, The heavens refuse to give rain, the
earth yields not again its fruits; whence then can I give you food? Then, on
hearing the words of this deceiver, these miserable men will perceive that this is
the wicked accuser, and will mourn in anguish, and weep vehemently, and beat
their face with their hands, and tear their hair, and lacerate their cheeks with
their nails, while they say to each other: Woe for the calamity! woe for the
bitter contract! woe for the deceitful covenant! woe for the mighty mischance!
How have we been beguiled by the deceiver! how have we been joined to him! how
have we been caught in his toils! how have we been taken in his abominable net!
how have we heard the Scriptures, and understood them not! For truly those who
are engrossed with the affairs of life, and with the lust of this world, will be
easily brought over to the accuser then, and sealed by him.
XXXII.
But many who are hearers of the divine Scriptures,(3) and have them in
their hand, and keep them in mind with understanding, will escape his imposture.
For they will see clearly through his insidious appearance and his deceitful
imposture, and will flee from his hands, and betake themselves to the mountains,
and hide themselves in the caves of the earth; and they will seek after the
Friend of man with tears and a contrite heart; and He will deliver them out of his
toils, and with His right hand He will save those from his snares who in a
worthy and righteous manner make their supplication to Him.
XXXIII.
You see in what manner of fasting and prayer the saints will exercise
themselves at that time. Observe, also, how hard the season and the times will be
that are to come upon those in city and country alike. At that time they will be
brought from the east even unto the west; and they will come up from the west
even unto the east, and will weep greatly and wail vehemently. And when the day
begins to dawn they will long for the night, in order that they may find rest
from their labours; and when the night descends upon them, by reason of the
continuous earthquakes and the tempests in the air, they will desire even to
behold the light of the day, anti will seek how they may hereafter meet a bitter
death.(4) At that time the whole earth will bewail the life of anguish, and the
sea and air in like manner will bewail it; and the sun, too, will wail; and the
wild beasts, together with the fowls, will wail; mountains and hills, and the
trees of the plain, will wail on account of the race of man, because all have
turned aside from the holy God, and obeyed the deceiver, and received the mark of
that abominable one, the enemy of God, instead of the quickening cross of the
Saviour.
XXXIV.
And the churches, too, will wail with a mighty lamentation, because
neither "oblation nor incense" is attended to, nor a service acceptable to God;(1)
but the sanctuaries of the churches will become like a garden-watcher's hut,(2)
and the holy body and blood of Christ will not be shown in those days. The
public service of God shall be extinguished, psalmody shall cease, the reading of
the Scriptures shall not be heard;(3) but for men there shall be darkness, and
lamentation on lamentation, and woe on woe. At that time silver and gold shall be
cast out in the streets, and none shall gather them; but all things shall be
held an offence. For all shall be eager to escape and to hide themselves, and
they shall not be able anywhere to find concealment from the woes(4) of the
adversary; but as they carry his mark about them, they shall be readily recognised
and declared to be his. Without there shall be fear, and within trembling, both
by night and by day. In the street and in the houses there shall be the dead;
in the streets and in the houses there shall be hunger and thirst; in the
streets there shall be tumults, and in the houses lamentations. And beauty of
countenance shall be withered, for their forms shall be like those of the dead; and
the beauty of women shall fade, and the desire of all men shall vanish.
XXXV.
Notwithstanding, not even then will the merciful and benignant God leave
the race of men without all comfort; but He will shorten even those days and the
period of three years and a half, and He will curtail those times on account
of the remnant of those who hide themselves in the mountains and caves, that the
phalanx of all those saints fail not utterly. But these days shall run their
course rapidly; and the kingdom of the deceiver and Antichrist shall be speedily
removed. And then, in fine, in the glance of an eye shall the fashion of this
world pass away, and the power of men(5) shall be brought to nought, and all
these visible things shall be destroyed.
XXXVI.
As these things, therefore, of which we have spoken before are in the
future, beloved, when the one week is divided into parts, and the abomination of
desolation has arisen then, and the forerunners of the Lord have finished their
proper course, and the whole world, in fine, comes to the consummation, what
remains but the manifestation(6) of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, the Son of
God, from heaven, for whom we have hoped; who shall bring forth fire and all
just judgment against those who have refused to believe in Him? For the Lord
says, "For as the lightning cometh out of the east, and shineth even unto the west,
so shall also the coming of the Son of man be; for wheresoever the carcase is,
there will the eagles be gathered together."(7) For the sign of the cross(8)
shall arise from the east even unto the west, in brightness exceeding that of
the sun, and shall announce the advent and manifestation of the Judge, to give to
every one according to his works. For concerning the general resurrection and
the kingdom of the saints, Daniel says: "And many of them that sleep in the
dust of the earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and
everlasting contempt."(9) And Isaiah says: "The dead shall rise, and those in the
tombs shall awake, and those in the earth shall rejoice."(10) And our Lord
says: "Many(11) in that day shall hear the voice of the Son of God, and they that
hear shall live."(12)
XXXVII.
For at that time the trumpet shall sound,(13) and awake those that sleep
from the lowest parts of the earth, righteous and sinners alike. And every
kindred, and tongue, and nation, and tribe shall be raised in the twinkling of an
eye;(14) and they shall stand upon the face of the earth, waiting for the coming
of the righteous and terrible Judge, in fear and trembling unutterable. For the
river of fire shall come forth in fury like an angry sea, and shall burn up
mountains and hills, and shall make the sea vanish, and shall dissolve the
atmosphere with its heat like wax.(15) The stars of heaven shall fall,(16) the sun
shall be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood.(17) The heaven shall be
rolled together like a scroll:(18) the whole earth shall be burnt up by reason
of the deeds done in it, which men did corruptly,(19) in fornications, in
adulteries, and in lies and uncleanness, and in idolatries, and in murders, and in
battles. For there shall be the new heaven and the new earth.(20)
XXXVIII.
Then shall the holy angels run on their commission to gather together all
the nations, whom that terrible voice of the trumpet shall awake out of sleep.
And before the judgment-seat of Christ shall stand those who once were kings
and rulers, chief priests and priests; and they shall give an account of their
administration, and of the fold, whoever of them through their negligence have
lost one sheep out of the flock. And then shall be brought forward soldiers who
were riot content with their provision,(1) but oppressed widows and orphans and
beggars. Then shall be arraigned the collectors of tribute, who despoil the
poor man of more than is ordered, and who make real gold like adulterate, in order
to mulct the needy, in fields and in houses and in the churches. Then shall
rise up the lewd with shame, who have not kept their bed undefiled, but have been
ensnared by all manner of fleshly beauty, and have gone in the way of their
own lusts. Then shall rise up those who have not kept the love of the Lord, mute
and gloomy, because they contemned the light commandment of the Saviour, which
says, Thou shalt love try neighbour as thyself. Then they, too, shall weep who
have possessed the unjust balance, and unjust weights and measures, and dry
measures, as they wait for the righteous Judge.
XXXIX.
And why should we add many words concerning those who are sisted before
the bar? Then the righteous shall shine forth like the sun, while the wicked
shall be shown to be mute and gloomy. For both the righteous and the wicked shall
be raised incorruptible: the righteous, to be honoured eternally, and to taste
immortal joys; and the wicked, to be punished in judgment eternally. Each
ponders(2) the question as to what answer he shall give to the righteous Judge for
his deeds, whether good or bad. With all men each one's actions shall environ
him, whether he be good or evil. For the powers of the heavens shall be shaken,(3)
and fear and trembling shall consume all things, both heaven and earth and
things under the earth. And every tongue shall confess Him openly,(4) and shall
confess Him who comes to judge righteous judgment, the mighty God and Maker of
all things. Then with fear and astonishment shall come angels, thrones, powers,
principalities, dominions,(5) and the cherubim and seraphim with their many eyes
and six wings, all crying aloud with a mighty voice, "Holy, holy, holy is the
Lord of hosts, omnipotent; the heaven and the earth are full of Thy glory."(6)
And the King of kings and Lord of lords, the Judge who accepts no man's person,
and the Jurist who distributes justice to every man, shall be revealed upon
His dread and lofty throne; and all the flesh of mortals shall see His face with
great fear and trembling, both the righteous and the sinner.
XL.
Then shall the son of perdition be brought forward, to wit, the accuser,
with his demons and with his servants, by angels stern and inexorable. And they
shall be given over to the fire that is never quenched, and to the worm that
never sleepeth, and to the outer darkness. For the people of the Hebrews shall
see Him in human form, as He appeared to them when He came by the holy Virgin in
the flesh, and as they crucified Him. And He will show them the prints of the
nails in His hands and feet, and His side pierced with the spear, and His head
crowned with thorns, and His honourable cross. And once for all shall the people
of the Hebrews see all these things, and they shall mourn and weep, as the
prophet exclaims, "They shall look on Him whom they have pierced;"(7) and there
shall be none to help them or to pity them, because they repented not, neither
turned aside from the wicked way. And these shall go away into everlasting
punishment with the demons and the accuser.
XLI.
Then He shall gather together all nations, as the holy Gospel so
strikingly declares. For what says Matthew the evangelist, or rather the Lord Himself,
in the Gospel? "When the Son of man shall come in His glory, and all the holy
angels with Him, then shall He sit upon the throne of His glory: and before Him
shall be gathered all nations; and He shall separate them one from another, as a
shepherd divideth his sheep from the goats: and He shall set the sheep on His
right hand, but the goats on the left. Then shall the King say unto them on His
right hand, Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for
you from the foundation of the world."(8) Come, ye prophets, who were cast out
for my name's sake. Come, ye patriarchs, who before my advent were obedient to
me, and longed for my kingdom. Come, ye apostles, who were my fellows in my
sufferings in my incarnation, and suffered with me in the Gospel. Come, ye martyrs,
who confessed me before despots, and endured many torments and pains. Come, ye
hierarchs, who did me sacred service blamelessly day and night, and made the
oblation of my honourable body and blood daily.(9)
XLII.
Come, ye saints, who disciplined yourselves in mountains and caves and
dens of the earth, who honoured my name by continence and prayer and virginity.
Come, ye maidens, who desired my bride-chamber, and loved no other bridegroom
than me, who by your testimony and habit of life were wedded to me, the immortal
and incorruptible Bridegroom. Come, ye friends of the poor and the stranger.
Come, ye who kept my love, as I am love. Come, ye who possess peace, for I own
that peace. Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you,
ye who esteemed not riches, ye who had compassion on the poor, who aided the
orphans, who helped the widows, who gave drink to the thirsty, who fed the hungry,
who received strangers, who clothed the naked, who visited the sick, who
comforted those in prison, who helped the blind, who kept the seal of the faith
inviolate, who assembled yourselves together in the churches, who listened to my
Scriptures, who longed for my words, who observed my law day and night, who
endured hardness with me like good soldiers, seeking to please me, your heavenly
King. Come, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world.
Behold, my kingdom is made ready; behold, paradise is opened; behold, my
immortality is shown in its beauty.(1) Come all, inherit the kingdom prepared for
you from the foundation of the world.
XLIII.
Then shall the righteous answer, astonished at the mighty and wondrous
fact that He, whom the hosts of angels cannot look upon openly, addresses them as
friends, and shall cry out to Him, Lord, when saw we Thee an hungered, and fed
Thee? Master,(2) when saw we Thee thirsty, and gave Thee drink? Thou Terrible
One,(3) when saw we Thee naked, and clothed Thee? Immortal,(4) when saw we Thee
a stranger, and took Thee in? Thou Friend of man,(5) when saw we Thee sick or
in prison, and came unto Thee?(6) Thou art the ever-living One. Thou art without
beginning, like the Father,(7) and co-eternal with the Spirit. Thou art He who
made all things out of nothing. Thou art the prince of the angels. Thou art He
at whom the depths tremble.(8) Thou art He who is covered with light as with a
garment.(9) Thou art He who made us, and fashioned us of earth. Thou art He
who formed(10) things invisible." From Thy presence the whole earth fleeth
away,(12) and how have we received hospitably Thy kingly power and lordship?
XLIV.
Then shall the King of kings make answer again, and say to them, Inasmuch
as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it
unto me. Inasmuch as ye have received those of whom I have already spoken to
you, and clothed them, and fed them, and gave them to drink, I mean the poor who
are my members, ye have done it unto me. But come ye into the kingdom prepared
for you from the foundation of the world; enjoy for ever and ever that which is
given you by my Father in heaven, and the holy and quickening Spirit. And what
mouth then will be able to tell out those blessings which eye hath not seen,
nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God
hath prepared for them that love Him?(13)
XLV.
Ye have heard of the ceaseless joy, ye have heard of the immoveable
kingdom, ye have heard of the feast of blessings without end. Learn now, then, also
the address of anguish with which the just Judge and the benignant God shall
speak to those on the left hand in unmeasured anger and wrath, Depart from me, ye
cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels. Ye have
prepared these things for yourselves; take to yourselves also the enjoyment of
them. Depart from me, ye cursed, into the outer darkness, and into the
unquenchable fire, prepared for the devil and his angels. I made you, and ye gave
yourselves to another. I am He who brought you forth from your mother's womb, and ye
rejected me. I am He who fashioned you of earth by my word of command, and ye
gave yourselves to another. I am He who nurtured you, and ye served another. I
ordained the earth and the sea for your maintenance and the bound 14) of your
life, and ye listened not to my commandments. I made the light for you, that ye
might enjoy the day, and the night also, that ye might have rest; and ye vexed
me, and set me at nought with your wicked words, and opened the door to the
passions. Depart from me, ye workers of iniquity. I know you not, I recognise you
not: ye made yourselves the workmen of another lord--namely, the devil. With him
inherit ye the darkness, and the fire that is not quenched, and the worm that
sleepeth not, and the gnashing of teeth.
XLVI.
For I was an hungered, and ye gave me no meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave
me no drink; I was a stranger, and ye took me not in; naked, and ye clothed me
not; sick, and ye visited me not: I was in prison, and ye came not unto me. I
made your ears that ye might hear the Scriptures; and ye prepared them for the
songs of demons, and lyres, and jesting. I made your eyes that you might see the
light of my commandments, and keep them; and ye called in fornication and
wantonness, and opened them to all other manner of uncleanness. I prepared your
mouth for the utterance of adoration, and praise, and psalms, and spiritual odes,
and for the exercise of continuous reading; and ye fitted it to railing, and
swearing, and blasphemies, while ye sat and spoke evil of your neighbours. I made
your hands that ye might stretch them forth in prayers and supplications, and
ye put them forth to robberies, and murders, and the killing of each other. I
ordained your feet to walk in the preparation of the Gospel of peace, both in
the churches and the houses of my saints; and ye taught them to run to
adulteries, and fornications, and theatres, and dancings, and elevations.(1)
XLVII.
At last the assembly is dissolved, the spectacle of this life ceaseth: its
deceit and its semblance are passed away. Cleave to me, to whom every knee
boweth, of things in heaven, and things on earth, and things under the earth. For
all who have been negligent, and have not shown pity in well-doing there, have
nothing else due them than the unquenchable fire. For I am the friend of man,
but yet also a righteous Judge to all. For I shall award the recompense
according to desert; I shall give the reward to all, according to each man's labour; I
shall make return to all, according to each man's conflict. I wish to have
pity, but I see no oil in your vessels. I desire to have mercy, but ye have passed
through life entirely without mercy. I long to have compassion, but your lamps
are dark by reason of your hardness of heart. Depart from me. For judgment is
without mercy to him that hath showed no mercy.(2)
XLVIII.
Then shall they also make answer to the dread Judge, who accepteth no
man's person: Lord, when saw we Thee an hungered, or athirst, or a stranger, or
naked, or sick, or in prison, and ministered not unto Thee? Lord, dost Thou know
us not? Thou didst form us, Thou didst fashion us, Thou didst make us of four
elements, Thou didst give us spirit and soul. On Thee we believed; Thy seal we
received, Thy baptism we obtained; we acknowledged Thee to be God, we knew Thee
to be Creator; in Thee we wrought sights, through Thee we cast out demons, for
Thee we mortified the flesh, for Thee we preserved virginity, for Thee we
practised chastity, for Thee we became strangers on the earth; and Thou sayest, I
know you not, depart from me! Then shall He make answer to them, and say, Ye
acknowledged me as Lord, but ye kept not my words. Ye were marked with the seal of
my cross, but ye deleted it by your hardness of heart. Ye obtained my baptism,
but ye observed not my commandments. Ye subdued your body to virginity, but ye
kept not mercy, but ye did not cast the hatred of your brother out of your
souls. For not every, one that saith to me, Lord, Lord, shall be saved, but he that
doeth my will.(3) And these shall go away into everlasting punishment, but the
righteous into life eternal.(4)
XLIX.
"Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee the crown of life."
Ye have heard, beloved, the answer of the Lord; ye have learned the
sentence of the Judge; ye have been given to understand what kind of awful scrutiny
awaits us, and what day and what hour are before us. Let us therefore ponder
this every day; let us meditate on this both day and night, both in the house, and
by the way, and in the churches, that we may not stand forth at that dread and
impartial judgment condemned, abased, and sad, but with purity of action,
life, conversation, and confession; so that to us also the merciful and benignant
God may say, "Thy faith hath saved thee, go in peace;"(5) and again, "Well done,
good and faithful servant; thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will
make thee ruler over many, things: enter thou into the joy of thy Lord."(6)
Which joy may it be ours to reach, by the grace and kindness of our Lord Jesus
Christ, to whom pertain glory, honour, and adoration, with His Father, who is
without beginning, and His holy, and good, and quickening Spirit, now and ever, and
to the ages of the ages. Amen.(7)