THE TREATISES OF CYPRIAN: TREATISE V.--AN ADDRESS TO DEMETRIANUS
TREATISE V.(8)
AN ADDRESS TO DEMETRIANUS.
ARGUMENT.--CYPRIAN, IN REPLY TO DEMETRIANUS THE PROCONSUL OF AFRICA, WHO
CONTENDED THAT THE WARS, AND FAMINE, AND PESTILENCE WITH WHICH THE WORLD WAS THEN
PLAGUED MUST BE IMPUTED TO THE CHRISTIANS BECAUSE THEY DID NOT WORSHIP THE GODS;
FAIRLY URGES (HAVING ARGUED THAT ALL THINGS ARE GRADUALLY DETERIORATING WITH
THE OLD AGE OF THE WORLD) THAT IT WAS RATHER THE HEATHENS THEMSELVES WHO WERE THE
CAUSE OF SUCH MISCHIEFS, BECAUSE THEY DID NOT WORSHIP GOD, AND, MOREOVER, WERE
DISTRESSING THE CHRISTIANS WITH UNJUST PERSECUTIONS.(9)
1. I had frequently, Demetrianus, treated with contempt your railing and
noisy clamour with sacrilegious mouth and impious words against the one and true
God, thinking it more modest and better, silently to scorn the ignorance of a
mistaken man, than by speaking to provoke the fury of a senseless one. Neither
did I do this without the authority of the divine teaching,(1) since it is
written, "Speak not in the ears of a fool, lest when he hear thee he should despise
the wisdom of thy words; "(2) and again, "Answer not a fool according to his
folly, lest thou also be like unto him."(3) And we are, moreover, bidden to keep
what is holy within our own knowledge, and not expose it to be trodden down by
swine and dogs, since the Lord speaks, saying, "Give not that which is holy
unto the dogs, neither cast ye your pearls before swine, lest they trample them
under their feet, and turn again and rend you."(4) For when you used often to
come to me with the desire of contradicting rather than with the wish to learn,
and preferred impudently to insist on your own views, which you shouted with
noisy words, to patiently listening to mine, it seethed to me foolish to contend
with you; since it would he an easier and slighter thing to restrain the angry
waves of a turbulent sea with shouts, than to check your madness by arguments.
Assuredly it would be both a vain and ineffectual labour to offer light to a
blind man, discourse to a deaf one, or wisdom to a brute; since neither can a
brute apprehend, nor can a blind man admit the light, nor can a deaf man hear.
2. In consideration of this, I have frequently held my tongue, and
overcome an impatient man with patience; since I could neither teach an unteachable
man, nor check an impious one with religion, nor restrain a frantic man with
gentleness. But yet, when you say that very many are complaining that to us it is
ascribed that wars arise more frequently, that plague, that famines rage, and
that long droughts are suspending the showers and rains, it is not fitting that I
should be silent any longer, lest my silence should begin to be attributed to
mistrust rather than to modesty; and while I am treating the false charges with
contempt, I may seem to be acknowledging the crime. I reply, therefore, as
well to you, Demetrianus, as to others whom perhaps you have stirred up, and many
of whom, by sowing hatred against us with malicious words. you have made your
own partisans, from the budding forth of your own root and origin, who, however,
I believe, will admit the reasonableness of my discourse; for he who is moved
to evil by the deception of a lie, will much more easily be moved to good by
the cogency of truth.
3. You have said that all these things are caused by us, and that to us
ought to be attributed the misfortunes wherewith the world is now shaken and
distressed, because your gods are not worshipped by us. And in this behalf, since
you are ignorant of divine knowledge, and a stranger to the truth, you must in
the first place know this, that the world has now grown old, and does not abide
in that strength in which it formerly stood; nor has it that vigour and force
which it formerly possessed. This, even were we silent, and if we alleged no
proofs from the sacred Scriptures and from the divine declarations, the world
itself is now announcing, and, bearing witness to its decline by the testimony of
its failing estate.(5) In the winter there is not such an abundance of showers
for nourishing the seeds; in the summer the sun has not so much heat for
cherishing the harvest; nor in the spring season are the corn-fields so joyous; nor
are the autumnal seasons so fruitful in their leafy products. The layers of
marble are dug out in less quantity from the disembowelled and wearied mountains;
the diminished quantities of gold and silver suggest the early exhaustion of the
metals, and the impoverished veins are straitened and decreased day by day;
the husbandman is failing in the fields, the sailor at sea, the soldier in the
camp, innocence in the market, justice in the tribunal, concord in friendships,
skilfulness in the arts, discipline in morals. Think you that the substantial
character of a thing that is growing old remains so robust as that wherewith it
might previously flourish in its youth while still new and vigorous? Whatever
is tending downwards to decay, with its end nearly approaching, must of
necessity be weakened. Thus, the sun at his setting darts his rays with a less bright
and fiery splendour; thus, in her declining course, the moon wanes with
exhausted horns; and the tree, which before had been green and fertile, as its
branches dry up, becomes by and by misshapen in a barren old age; and the fountain
which once gushed forth liberally from its overflowing veins, as old age causes it
to fail, scarcely trickles with a sparing moisture. This is the sentence
passed on the world, this is God's law; that everything that has had a beginning
should perish, and things that have grown should become old, and that strong
things should become weak, and great things become small, and that, when they have
become weakened and diminished, they should come to an end.
4. You impute it to the Christians that everything is decaying as the
world grows old. What if old men should charge it on the Christians that they grow
less strong in their old age; that they no longer, as formerly, have the same
facilities, in the hearing of their ears, in the swiftness of their feet, in the
keenness of their eyes, in the vigour of their strength, in the freshness of
their organic powers, in the fulness of their limbs, and that although once the
life of men endured beyond the age of eight and nine hundred years, it can now
scarcely attain to its hundredth year? We see grey hairs in boys--the hair
fails before it begins to grow; and life does not cease in old age, but it begins
with old age. Thus, even at its very commencement, birth hastens to its
close;(1) thus, whatever is now born degenerates with the old age of the world itself;
so that no one ought to wonder that everything begins to fail in the world,
when the whole world itself is already in process of failing, and in its end.
5. Moreover, that wars continue frequently to prevail, that death and
famine accumulate anxiety, that health is shattered by raging diseases, that the
human race is wasted by the desolation of pestilence, know that this was
foretold; that evils should be multiplied in the last times, and that misfortunes
should be varied; and that as the day of judgment is now drawing nigh, the censure
of an indignant God should be more and more aroused for the scourging of the
human race. For these things happen not, as your false complaining and ignorant
inexperience of the truth asserts and repeats, because your gods are not
worshipped by us, but because God is not worshipped by you. For since He is Lord and
Ruler of the world, and all things are carried on by His will and direction, nor
can anything be done save what He Himself has done or allowed to be done,
certainly when those things occur which show the anger of an offended God, they
happen not on account of us by whom God is worshipped, but they are called down by
your sins and deservings, by whom God is neither in any way sought nor feared,
because your vain superstitions are not forsaken, nor the true religion known
in such wise that He who is the one God over all might alone be worshipped and
petitioned.
6. In fine, listen to Himself speaking; Himself with a divine voice at
once instructing and warning us: "Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God," says He,
"and Him only shall thou serve."(2) And again, "Thou shalt have none other gods
but me."(3) And again, "Go not after other gods, to serve them; and worship
them not, and provoke not me to anger with the works of your hands to destroy
you."(14) Moreover, the prophet, filled with the Holy Spirit, attests and denounces
the anger of God, saying, "Thus saith the Lord Almighty: Because of mine house
that is waste, and ye run every man to his own house, therefore the heavens
shall be stayed from dew, and the earth shall withhold her fruits: and I will
bring a sword upon the earth, and upon the corn, and upon the wine, and upon the
oil, and upon men, and upon cattle, and upon all the labours of their hands."(5)
Moreover, another prophet repeats, and says, "And I will cause it to rain upon
one city, and upon another city I will cause it not to rain. One piece shall
be rained upon, and the piece whereon I send no rain shall be withered. And two
and three cities shall be gathered into one city to drink water, and shall not
be satisfied; and ye are not converted unto me, saith the Lord."(6)
7. Behold, the Lord is angry and wrathful, and threatens, because you turn
not unto Him. And you wonder or complain in this your obstinacy and contempt,
if the rain comes down with unusual scarcity; and the earth falls into neglect
with dusty corruption; if the barren glebe hardly brings forth a few jejune and
pallid blades of grass; if the destroying hail weakens the vines; if the
overwhelming whirlwind roots out the olive; if drought stanches the fountain; a
pestilent breeze corrupts the air; the weakness of disease wastes away man;
although all these things come as the consequence of the sins that provoke them, and
God is more deeply indignant when such and so great evils avail nothing! For
that these things occur either for the discipline of the obstinate or for the
punishment of the evil, the same God declares in the Holy Scriptures, saying, "In
vain have [ smitten your children; they have not received correction."(7) And
the prophet devoted and dedicated to God answers to these words in the same
strain, and says, "Thou hast stricken them, but they have not grieved; Thou hast
scourged them, but they have refused to receive correction."(8) Lo, stripes are
inflicted from God, and there is no fear of God. Lo, blows and scourgings from
above are not wanting, and there is no trembling, no fear. What if even no such
rebuke as that interfered in human affairs? How much greater still would be the
audacity in men, if it were secure in the impunity of their crimes!
8. You complain that the fountains are now less plentiful to you, and the
breezes less salubrious, and the frequent showers and the fertile earth afford
you less ready assistance; that the elements no longer subserve your uses and
your pleasures as of old. But do you serve God, by whom all things are ordained
to your service; do you wait upon Him by whose good pleasure all things wait
upon you?(1) From your slave you yourself require service; and though a man, you
compel your fellow-man to submit, and to be obedient to you; and although you
share the same lot in respect of being born, the same condition in respect of
dying; although you have like bodily substance and a common order of souls, and
although you come into this world of ours and depart from it after a time with
equal rights,(2) and by the same law; yet, unless you are served by him
according to your pleasure, unless you are obeyed by him in conformity to your will,
you, as an imperious and excessive exactor of his service, flog and scourge him:
you afflict and torture him with hunger, with thirst and nakedness, and even
frequently with the sword and with imprisonment. And, wretch that you are, do you
not acknowledge the Lord your God while you yourself are thus exercising
lordship?(3)
9. And therefore with reason in these plagues that occur, there are not
wanting God's stripes and scourges; and since they are of no avail in this
matter, and do not convert individuals to God by such terror of destructions, there
remains after all the eternal dungeon, and the continual fire, and the
everlasting punishment; nor shall the groaning of the suppliants be heard there, because
here the terror of the angry God was not heard, crying by His prophet, and
saying, "Hear the word of the Lord, ye children of Israel: for the judgment of the
'Lord is against the inhabitants of the earth; because there is neither mercy,
nor truth, nor knowledge of God upon the earth. But cursing, and lying, and
killing, and stealing, and committing adultery, is broken out over the land, they
mingle blood with blood. Therefore shall the land mourn, with every one that
dwelleth therein, with the beasts of the field, with things that creep on the
earth, and with the fowls of heaven; and the fishes of the sea shall languish, so
that no man shall judge, no man shall rebuke."(4) God says He is wrathful and
angry, because there is no acknowledgment of God in the earth, and God is
neither known nor feared. The sins of lying, of lust, of fraud, of cruelty, of
impiety, of anger, God rebukes and finds fault with, and no one is converted to
innocency. Lo, those things are happening which were before foretold by the words
of God; nor is any one admonished by the belief of things present to take
thought for what is to come. Amongst those very misfortunes wherein the soul, closely
bound and shut up, can scarcely breathe, there is still found opportunity for
men to be evil, and in such great dangers to judge not so much of themselves as
of others. You are indignant that God is angry, as if by an evil life you were
deserving any good, as if all things of that kind which happen were not
infinitely less and of smaller account than your sins.
10. You who judge others, be for once also a judge of yourself; look into
the hiding-places of your own conscience; nay, since now there is not even any
shame in your sins and you are wicked, as if it were rather the very
wickedness itself that pleased you, do you, who are seen clearly and nakedly by all
other men, yourself also look upon yourself. For either you are swollen with pride,
or greedy with avarice, or cruel with anger, or prodigal with gambling, or
flushed with intemperance, or envious with jealousy, or unchaste with lust, or
violent with cruelty; and do you wonder that God's anger increases in punishing
the human race, when the sin that is punished is daily increasing? You complain
that the enemy rises up, as if, though an enemy were wanting, there could be
peace for yon even among the very togas of peace. You complain that the enemy
rises up, as if, even although external arms and dangers from barbarians were
repressed, the weapons of domestic assault from the calumnies and wrongs of powerful
citizens, would not be more ferocious and more harshly wielded within. You
complain of barrenness and famine, as if drought made a greater famine than
rapacity, as if the fierceness of want did not increase more terribly from grasping
at the increase of the year's produce, and the accumulation of their price. You
complain that the heaven is shut up from showers, although in the same way the
barns are shut up on earth. You complain that now less is produced, as if what
had already been produced were given to the indigent. You reproach plague and
disease, while by plague itself and disease the crimes of individuals are either
detected or increased, while mercy is not manifested to the weak, and avarice
and rapine are waiting open-mouthed for the dead. The same men are timid in the
duties of affection, but rash in quest of implores gains; shunning the deaths
of the dying, and craving the spoils of the dead, so that it may appear as if
the wretched are probably forsaken in their sickness for this cause, that they
may not, by being cured, escape: for he who enters so eagerly upon the estate of
the dying, probably desired the sick man to perish.
11. So great a terror of destruction cannot give the teaching of
innocency; and in the midst of a people dying with constant havoc, nobody considers
that he himself is mortal. Everywhere there is scattering, there is seizure, there
is taking possession; no dissimulation about spoiling, and no delay. (1) As if
it were all lawful, as if it were all becoming, as if he who does not rob were
suffering loss and wasting his own property, thus every one hastens to the
rapine. Among thieves there is at any rate some modesty in their crimes. They love
pathless ravines and deserted solitudes; and they do wrong in such a way, that
still the crime of the wrong-doers is veiled by darkness and night. Avarice,
however, rages openly, and, safe by its very boldness, exposes the weapons of
its headlong craving in the light of the market-place. Thence cheats, thence
poisoners, thence assassins in the midst of the city, are as eager for wickedness
as they are wicked with impunity. The crime is committed by the guilty, and the
guiltless who can avenge it is not found. There is no fear from accuser or
judge: the wicked obtain impunity, while modest men are silent; accomplices are
afraid, and those who are to judge are for sale. And therefore by the mouth of the
prophet the truth of the matter is put forth with the divine spirit and
instinct: it is shown in a certain and obvious way that God can prevent adverse
things, but that the evil deserts of sinners prevent His bringing aid. "Is the
Lord's hand," says he, "not strong to save you; or has He made heavy His ear, that
He cannot hear you? But your sins separate between you and God; and because of
your sins He hath hid His face from you, that He may not have mercy." (2)
Therefore let your sins and of-fences be reckoned up; let the wounds of your
conscience be considered; and let each one cease complaining about God, or about
us, if he should perceive that himself deserves what he suffers.
12. Look what that very matter is of which is chiefly our discourse
--that you molest us, although innocent; that, in contempt of God, you attack and
oppress God's servants. It is little, in your account, that your life is stained
with a variety of gross vices, with the iniquity of deadly crimes, with the
summary of all bloody rapines; that true religion is overturned by false
superstitions; that God is neither sought at all, nor feared at all; but over and
above this, you weary (3) God's servants, and those who are dedicated to His
majesty and His name, with unjust persecutions. It is not enough that you yourself
do not worship God, but, over and above, you persecute those who do worship,
with a sacrilegious hostility. You neither worship God, nor do you at all permit
Him to be worshipped; and while others who venerate not only those foolish
idols and images made by man's hands, but even portents and monsters besides, are
pleasing to you, it is only the worshipper of God who is displeasing to you. The
ashes of victims and the piles of cattle everywhere smoke in your temples, and
God's altars are either nowhere or are hidden. Crocodiles, and apes, and
stones, and serpents are worshipped by you; and God alone in the earth is not
worshipped. or if worshipped, not with impunity. You deprive the innocent, the just,
the dear to God, of their home; you spoil them of their estate, you load them
with
chains, you shut them up in prison, you punish them with the sword, with the
wild beasts, with the flames. Nor, indeed, are you content with a brief
endurance of our sufferings, and with a simple and swift exhaustion of pains. You set
on foot tedious tortures, by tearing our bodies; you multiply numerous
punishments, by lacerating our vitals; nor can your brutality and fierceness be content
with ordinary tortures; your ingenious cruelty devises new sufferings.
13. What is this insatiable madness for blood-shedding, what this
interminable lust of cruelty? Rather make your election of one of two alternatives. To
be a Christian is either a crime, or it is not. If it be a crime, why do you
not put the man that confesses it to death? If it be not a crime, why do you
persecute an innocent man? For I ought to be put to the torture if I denied it.
If in fear of your punishment I should conceal, by a deceitful falsehood, what I
had previously been, and the fact that i had not worshipped your gods, then I
might deserve to be tormented, then I ought to be compelled to confession of my
crime by the power of suffering, as in other examinations the guilty, who deny
that they are guilty of the crime of which they are accused, are tortured in
order that the confession of the reality of the crime, which the tell-tale voice
refuses to make, may be wrung out by the bodily suffering. But now, when of my
own free will I confess, and cry out, and with words frequent and repeated to
the same effect bear witness that I am a Christian, why do you apply tortures
to one who avows it, and who destroys your gods, not in hidden and secret
places, but openly, and publicly, and in the very market-place, in the hearing of
your magistrates and governors; so that, although it was a slight thing which you
blamed in me before, that which you ought rather to hate and punish has
increased, that by declaring myself a Christian in a frequented place, and with the
people standing around, I am confounding both you and your gods by an open and
public announcement?
14. Why do you turn your attention to the weakness of our body? why do you
strive with the feebleness of this earthly flesh? Contend rather with the
strength of the mind, break down the power of the soul, destroy our faith, conquer
if you can by discussion, overcome by reason; or, if your gods have any deity
and power, let them themselves rise to their own vindication, let them defend
themselves by their own majesty. But what can they advantage their worshippers,
if they cannot avenge themselves on those who worship them not? For if he who
avenges is of more account than he who is avenged, then you are greater than your
gods. And if you are greater than those whom you worship, you ought not to
worship them, but rather to be worshipped and feared by them as their lord. Your
championship defends them when injured, just as your protection guards them when
shut up from perishing. You should be ashamed to worship those whom you
yourself defend; you should be ashamed to hope for protection from those whom you
yourself protect.
15. Oh, would you but hear and see them when they are adjured by us, and
tortured with spiritual scourges, and are ejected from the possessed bodies with
tortures of words, (1) when howling and groaning at the voice of man and the
power of God, feeling the stripes and blows, they confess the judgment to come!
Come and acknowledge that what we say is true; and since you say that you thus
worship gods, believe even those whom you worship. Or if you will even believe
yourself, he--i.e., the demon--who has now possessed your breast, who has now
darkened your mind with the night of ignorance, shall speak concerning yourself
in your hearing. You will see that we are entreated by those whom you entreat,
that we are feared by those whom you fear, whom you adore. You will see that
under our hands they stand bound, and tremble as captives, whom you took up to
and venerate as lords: assuredly even thus you might be confounded in those
errors of yours, when you see and hear your gods, at once upon our interrogation
betraying what they are, and even in your presence unable to conceal those deceits
and trickeries of theirs.
16. What, then, is that sluggishness of mind; yea, what blind and stupid
madness of fools, to be unwilling to come out of darkness into light, and to be
unwilling, when bound in the toils of eternal death, to receive the hope of
immortality, and not to fear God when He threatens and says, "He that sacrifices
unto any gods, but unto the Lord only, shall be rooted out?" (2) And again:
"They worshipped them whom their fingers made; and the mean man hath bowed down,
and the great man hath humbled himself, and I will not forgive them." (3) Why do
you humble and bend yourself to false gods? Why do you bow your body captive
before foolish images and creations of earth? God made you upright; and while
other animals are downlooking, and are depressed in posture bending towards the
earth, yours is a lofty attitude; and your countenance is raised upwards to
heaven, and to God. Look thither, lift your eyes thitherward, seek God in the
highest, that you may be free from things below; lift your heart to a dependence on
high and heavenly things. Why do you prostrate yourself into the ruin of death
with the serpent whom you worship? Why do you fall into the destruction of the
devil, by his means and in his company ? Keep the lofty estate in which you were
born. Continue such as you were made by God. To the posture of your
countenance and of your body, conform your soul. That you may be able to know God, first
know yourself. Forsake the idols which human error has invented. Be turned to
God, whom if you implore He will aid you. Believe in Christ, whom (4) the Father
has sent to quicken and restore us. Cease to hurt the servants of God and of
Christ with your persecutions, since when they are injured the divine vengeance
defends them.
17. For this reason it is that none of us, when he is apprehended, makes
resistance, nor avenges himself against your unrighteous violence, although our
people are numerous and plentiful. Our certainty of a vengeance to follow makes
us patient. The innocent give place to the guilty; the harmless acquiesce in
punishments and tortures, sure and confident that whatsoever we suffer will not
remain unavenged, and that in proportion to the greatness of the injustice of I
our persecution so will be the justice and the severity of the vengeance
exacted for those persecutions. Nor does the wickedness of the impious ever rise up
against the name we bear, without immediate vengeance from above attending it.
To say nothing of the memories of ancient times, and not to recur with wordy
commemoration to frequently repeated vengeance on behalf of God's worshippers,
the instance of a recent matter is sufficient to prove that our defence, so
speedily, and in its speed so powerfully, followed of late in the ruins of things,
(5) in the destruction of wealth, in the waste of soldiers, and the diminution
of forts. Nor let any one think that this occurred by chance, or think that it
was fortuitous, since long ago Scripture has laid down, and said. "Vengeance is
mine; I will repay, saith the Lord." (1) And again the Holy Spirit forewarns,
and says, "Say not thou, I will avenge myself of mine enemy, but wait on the
Lord, that He may be thy help." (2) Whence it is plain and manifest, that not by
our means, but for our sakes, all those things are happening which come down
from the anger of God.
18. Nor let anybody think that Christians are not avenged by those things
that are happening, for the reason that they also themselves seem to be
affected by their visitation. A man feels the punishment of worldly adversity, when
all his joy and glory are in the world. He grieves and groans if it is ill with
him in this life, with whom it cannot be well after this life, all the fruit of
whose life is received here, all whose consolation is ended here, whose fading
and brief life here reckons some sweetness and pleasure, but when it has
departed hence, there remains for him only punishment added to sorrow. But they have
no suffering from the assault of present evils who have confidence in future
good things. In fact, we are never prostrated by adversity, nor are we broken
down, nor do we grieve or murmur in any external misfortune or weakness of body:
living by the Spirit rather than by the flesh, we overcome bodily weakness by
mental strength. By those very things which torment and weary us, we know and
trust that we are proved and strengthened. (3)
19. Do you think that we suffer adversity equally with yourselves, when
you see that the same adverse things are not borne equally by us and by you?
Among you there is always a clamorous and complaining impatience; with us there
is a strong and religious patience, always quiet and always grateful to God.
Nor does it claim for itself anything joyous or prosperous in this world, but,
meek and gentle and stable against all the gusts of this tossing world, it
waits for the time of the divine promise; for as long as this body endures, it must
needs have a common lot with others, and its bodily condition must be common.
Nor is it given to any of the human race to be separated one from another,
except by withdrawal from this present life. In the meantime, we are all, good and
evil, contained in one household. Whatever happens within the house, we suffer
with equal fate, until, when the end of the temporal life shall be attained,
we shall be distributed among the homes either of eternal death or immortality.
Thus, therefore, we are not on the same level, and equal with you, because,
placed in this present world and in this flesh, we incur equally with you the
annoyances of the world and of the flesh; for since in the sense of pain is all
punishment, it is manifest that he is not a sharer of your punishment who, you
see, does not suffer pain equally with yourselves. (4)
20. There flourishes with us the strength of hope and the firmness of
faith. Among these very ruins of a decaying world our soul is lifted up, and our
courage unshaken: our patience is never anything but joyous; and the mind is
always secure of its God, even as the Holy Spirit speaks through the prophet, and
exhorts us, strengthening with a heavenly word the firmness of our hope and
faith. "The fig-tree," says He, "shall not bear fruit, and there shall be no
blossom in the vines. The labour of the olive shall fail, and the fields shall yield
no meat. The flock shall be cut off from the fold, and there shall be no herd
in the stalls. But I will rejoice in the Lord, and I will joy in the God of my
salvation." (5) He says that the man of God and the worshipper of God, depending
on the truth of his hope, and Corroded on the stedfastness of his faith, is
not moved by the attacks of this world and this life. Although the vine should
fail, and the olive deceive, and the field parched with grass dying with drought
should wither, what is this to Christians? what to God's servants whom paradise
is inviting, whom all the grace and all the abundance of the kingdom of heaven
is waiting for? They always exult in the Lord, and rejoice and are glad in
their God; and the evils and adversities of the world they bravely suffer, because
they are looking forward to gifts and prosperities to come: for we who have
put off our earthly birth, and are now created and regenerated by the Spirit, and
no longer live to the world but to God, shall not receive God's gifts and
promises until we arrive at the presence of God. And yet we always ask for the
repulse of enemies, and for obtaining showers, and either for the removal or the
moderating of adversity; and we pour forth our prayers, and, propitiating and
appeasing God, we entreat constantly and urgently, day and night, for your peace
and salvation.
21. Let no one, however, flatter himself, because there is for the present
to us and to the profane, to God's worshippers and to God's opponents, (6) by
reason of the equality of the flesh and body, a common condition of worldly
troubles, in such a way as to think from this, that all those things which happen
are not drawn down by you; since by the announcement of God Himself, and by
prophetic testimony, it has previously been foretold that upon the unjust should
come the wrath of God, and that persecutions which humanly would hurt us should
not be wanting; but, moreover, that vengeance, which should defend with
heavenly defence those who were hurt, should attend them.
22. And how great, too, are those things which in the meantime are
happening in that respect on our behalf! Something is given for an example, that the
anger of an avenging God may be known. But the day of judgment is still future
which the Holy Scripture denounces, saying, "Howl ye, for the day of the Lord is
at hand, and destruction from God shall come; for, lo, the day of the Lord
cometh, cruel with wrath and anger, to lay the earth desolate, and to destroy the
sinners out of it." (1) And again: "Behold, the day of the Lord cometh, burning
as an oven; and all the aliens and all that do wickedly shall be as stubble,
and the day that cometh shall burn them up, saith the Lord." (2) The Lord
prophesies that the aliens shall be burnt up and consumed; that is, aliens from the
divine race, and the profane, those who are not spiritually new-born, nor made
children of God. For that those only can escape who have been new-born and
signed with the sign of Christ, God says in another place, when, sending forth His
angels to the destruction of the world and the death of the human race, He
threatens more terribly in the last time, saying, "Go ye, and smite, and let not
your eye spare. Have no pity upon old or young, and slay the virgins and the
little ones and the women, that they may be utterly destroyed. But touch not any man
upon whom is written the mark." (3) Moreover, what this mark is, and in what
part of the body it is placed, God sets forth in another place, saying, "Go
through the midst of Jerusalem, and set a mark upon the foreheads of the men that
sigh and that cry for all the abominations that be done in the midst thereof."
(4) And that the sign pertains to the passion and blood of Christ, and that
whoever is found in this sign is kept safe and unharmed, is also proved by God's
testimony, saying, "And the blood shall be to you for a token upon the houses in
which ye shall be; and I will see the blood, and will protect you, and the
plague of diminution shall not be upon you when I smite the land of Egypt." (5)
What previously preceded by a figure in the slain lamb is fulfilled in Christ, the
truth which followed afterwards. As, then, when Egypt was smitten, the Jewish
people could not escape except by the blood and the sign of the lamb; so
also, when the world shall begin to be desolated and smitten, whoever is found in
the blood and the sign of Christ alone shall escape. (6)
23. Look, therefore, (7) while there is time, to the true and eternal
salvation; and since now the end of the world is at hand, turn your minds to God,
in the fear of God; nor let that powerless and vain dominion in the world over
the just and meek delight you, since in the field, even among the cultivated and
fruitful corn, the tares and the darnel have dominion. Nor say ye that ill
fortunes happen because your gods are not worshipped by us; but know that this is
the judgment of God's anger, that He who is not acknowledged on account of His
benefits may at least be acknowledged through His judgments. Seek the Lord even
late; for long ago, God, forewarning by His prophet, exhorts and says, "Seek
ye the Lord, and your soul shall live." (8) Know God even late; for Christ at
His coming admonishes and teaches this, saying, "This is life eternal, that they
might know Thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom Thou hast sent." (9)
Believe Him who deceives not at all. Believe Him who foretold that all these
things should come to pass. Believe Him who will give to all that believe the
reward of eternal life. Believe Him who will call down on them that believe
not, eternal punishments in the fires of Gehenna.
24. What will then be the glory of faith? what the punishment of
faithlessness? When the day of judgment shall come, what joy of believers, what
sorrow of unbelievers; that they should have been unwilling to believe here, and
now that they should be unable to return that they might believe! An
ever-burning Gehenna will burn up the condemned, and a punishment devouring with living
flames; nor will there be any source whence at any time they may have either
respite or end to their torments. Souls with their bodies will be reserved in
infinite tortures for suffering. Thus the man will be for ever seen by us who here
gazed upon us for a season; and the short joy of those cruel eyes in the
persecutions that they made for us will be compensated by a perpetual spectacle,
according to the truth of Holy Scripture, which says, "Their worm shall not die,
and their fire shall not be quenched; and they shall be for a vision to all
flesh." (10) Anti again: "Then shall the righteous men stand in great constancy
before the face of those who have afflicted them, and have taken away their
labours. When they see it, they shall be troubled with horrible fear, and shall be
amazed at the suddenness of their unexpected salvation; and they, repenting
and groaning for anguish of spirit, shall say within themselves, These are they
whom we had some time in derision, and a proverb of reproach; we fools counted
their life madness, and their end to be without honour. How are they numbered
among the children of God, and their lot is among the saints! Therefore have we
erred from the way of truth, and the light of righteousness hath not shined upon
us, and the sun rose not on us. We wearied ourselves in the way of wickedness
and destruction; we have gone through deserts where there lay no way; but we
have not known the way of the Lord. What hath pride profited us, or what good
hath the boasting of riches done us? All those things are passed away like a
shadow." (1) The pain of punishment will then be without the fruit of penitence;
weeping will be useless, and prayer ineffectual. Too late they will believe in
eternal punishment who would not believe in eternal life.
25. Provide, therefore, while you may, for your safety and your life. We
offer you the wholesome help of our mind and advice. And because we may not
hate, and we please God more by rendering no return for wrong, we exhort you while
you have the power, while there yet remains to you something of life, to make
satisfaction to God, and to emerge from the abyss of darkling superstition (2)
into the bright light of true religion. We do not envy your comforts, nor do we
conceal the divine benefits. We repay kindness for your hatred; and for the
torments and penalties which are inflicted on us, we point out to you the ways of
salvation. Believe and live, and do ye who persecute us in tithe rejoice with
us for eternity. When you have once departed thither, there is no longer any
place for repentance, and no possibility of making satisfaction. Here life is
either lost or saved; here eternal safety is provided for by the worship of God
and the fruits of faith. Nor let any one be restrained either by his sins or by
his years from coming to obtain salvation. To him who still remains in this
world no repentance is too late. The approach to God's mercy is open, and the
access is easy to those who seek and apprehend the truth. Do you entreat for your
sins, although it be in the very end of life, and at the setting of the sun of
time; and implore God, who is the one and true God, in confession and faith of
acknowledgment of Him, and pardon is granted to the man who confesses, and
saving mercy is given from the divine goodness to the believer, and a passage is
opened to immortality even in death itself. This grace Christ bestows; this gift
of His mercy He confers upon us, by overcoming death in the trophy of the cross,
by redeeming the believer with the price of His blood, by reconciling man to
God the Father, by quickening our mortal nature with a heavenly regeneration. If
it be possible, let us all follow Him; let us be registered in His sacrament
and sign. He opens to us the way of life; He brings us back to paradise; He
leads us on to the kingdom of heaven. Made by Him the children of God, with Him we
shall ever live; with Him we shall always rejoice, restored by His own blood.
We Christians shall be glorious together with Christ, blessed of God the Father,
always rejoicing with perpetual pleasures in the sight of God, and ever giving
thanks to God. For none can be other than always glad and grateful, who,
having been once subject to death, has been made secure in the possession of
immortality. (3)