METHODIUS. THE BANQUET OF THE TEN VIRGINS; OR, CONCERNING CHASTITY. DISCOURSES
I & II
METHODIUS
[TRANSLATED BY THE REV. WILLIAM R. CLARK, M.A., VICAR OF ST. MARY MAGDALEN,
TAUNTON.]
THE BANQUET OF THE TEN VIRGINS;(1)
OR,
CONCERNING CHASTITY.
PERSONS OF THE DIALOGUE: EUBOULIOS,(2) GREGORION, ARETE; MARCELLA, THEOPHILA,
THALEIA, THEOPATRA, THALLOUSA, AGATHE, PROCILLA, THEKLA, TUSIANE, DOMNINA.
INTRODUCTION.
PLAN OF THE WORK; WAY TO PARADISE; DESCRIPTION AND PERSONIFICATION OF VIRTUE;
THE AGNOS A SYMBOL OF CHASTITY; MARCELLA, THE ELDEST AND FOREMOST AMONG THE
VIRGINS OF CHRIST.
EUBOULIOS. You have arrived most seasonably, Gregorion, for I have just
been looking for you, wanting to hear of the meeting of Marcella and Theopatra,
and of the other virgins who were present at the banquet, and of the nature of
their discourses on the subject of chastity; for it is said that they argued
with such ability and power that there was nothing lacking to the full
consideration of the subject. If, therefore, you have come here for any other purpose,
put that off to another time, and do not delay to give us a complete and
connected account of the matter of which we are inquiring.
GREGORION.(3) I seem to be disappointed of my hope, as some one else has
given you intelligence beforehand on the subject respecting which you ask me.
For I thought that you had heard nothing of what had happened, and I was
flattering myself greatly with the idea that I should be the first to tell you of it.
And for this reason I made all haste to come here to you, fearing the very thing
which has happened, that some one might anticipate me.
EUBOULIOS. Be comforted, my excellent friend, for we have had no precise
information respecting anything which happened; since the person who brought us
the intelligence had nothing to tell us, except that there had been dialogues;
but when he was asked what they were, and to what purpose, he did not know.
GREGORION. Well then, as I came here for this reason, do you want to hear
all that was said from the beginning; or shall I pass by parts of it, and
recall only those points which I consider worthy of mention?
EUBOULIOS. By no means the latter; but first, Gregorion, relate to us from
the very beginning where the meeting was, and about the setting forth of the
viands, and about yourself, how you poured out the wine
"They in golden cups
Each other pledged, while towards broad heaven they looked."(4)
GREGORION. You are always skilful in discussions, and excessively powerful
in argument--thoroughly confuting all your adversaries.
EUBOULIOS. It is not worth while, Gregorion, to contend about these things
at present; but do oblige us by simply telling us what happened from the
beginning.
GREGORION. Well, I will try. But first answer me this: You know, I
presume, Arete,(5) the daughter of Philosophia?
EUBOULIOS. Why do you ask?
GREGORION. "We went by invitation to a garden of hers with an eastern
aspect, to enjoy the fruits of the season, myself, and Procilla, and Tusiane." I am
repeating the words of Theopatra, for it was of her I obtained the
information. "We went, Gregorion, by a very rough, steep, and arduous path: when we drew
near to the place," said Theopatra, "we were met by a tall and beautiful woman
walking along quietly and gracefully, clothed in a shining robe as white as
snow. Her beauty was something altogether inconceivable and divine. Modesty,
blended with majesty, bloomed on her countenance. It was a face," she said, "such as
I know not that I had ever seen, awe-inspiring, yet tempered with gentleness
and mirth; for it was wholly unadorned by art, and had nothing counterfeit. She
came up to us, and, like a mother who sees her daughters after a long
separation, she embraced and kissed each one of us with great joy, saying, 'O, my
daughters you have come with toil and pain to me who am earnestly longing to conduct
you to the pasture of immortality; toilsomely have you come by a way abounding
with many frightful reptiles; for, as I looked, I saw you often stepping aside,
and I was fearing lest you should turn back and slip over the precipices. But
thanks to the Bridegroom to whom I have espoused(1) you, my children, for having
granted an effectual answer to all our prayers.' And, while she is thus
speaking," said Theopatra, "we arrive at the enclosure, the doors not being shut as
yet, and as we enter we come upon Thekla and Agathe and Marcella preparing to
sup. And Arete immediately said, 'Do you also come hither, and sit down here in
your place along with these your fellows.' Now," said she to me, "we who were
there as guests were altogether, I think, ten in number; and the place was
marvellously beautiful, and abounding in the means of recreation. The air was
diffused in soft and regular currents, mingled with pure beams of light, and a
stream flowing as gently as oil through the very middle of the garden, threw up a
most delicious drink; and the water flowing from it, transparent and pure,
formed itself into fountains, and these, overflowing like rivers, watered all the
garden with their abundant streams; and there were different kinds of trees
there, full of fresh fruits, and the fruits that hung joyfully from their branches
were of equal beauty; and there were ever-blooming meadows strewn with
variegated and sweet-scented flowers, from which came a gentle breeze laden with
sweetest odour. And the agnos(2) grew near, a lofty tree, under which we reposed, from
its being exceedingly wide-spreading and shady."
EUBOULIOS. You seem to me, my good friend, to be making a revelation of a
second paradise.(3)
GREGORION. You speak truly and wisely. "When there," she said, "we had all
kinds of food and a variety of festivities, so that no delight was wanting.
After this Arete,(4) entering, gave utterance to these words:--
"'Young maidens, the glory of my greatness, beautiful virgins, who tend
the undefiled meadows of Christ with unwedded hands, we have now had enough of
food and feasting, for all things are abundant and plentiful with us.(5) What is
there, then, besides which I wish and expect? That each of you shall pronounce
a discourse in praise of virginity. Let Marcella begin, since she sits in the
highest place, and is at the same time the eldest. I shall be ashamed of myself
if I do not make the successful disputant an object of envy, binding her with
the unfading flowers of wisdom.'
"And then," I think she said, "Marcella immediately began to speak as
follows."
DISCOURSE I.--MARCELLA.
CHAP. I.--THE DIFFICULTY AND EXCELLENCE OF VIRGINITY; THE STUDY OF DOCTRINE
NECESSARY FOR VIRGINS.
Virginity is something supernaturally great, wonderful, and glorious; and,
to speak plainly and in accordance with the Holy Scriptures, this best and
noblest manner of life alone is the root(6) of immortality, and also its flower
and first-fruits; and for this reason the Lord promises that those shall enter
into the kingdom of heaven who have made themselves eunuchs, in that passage(7)
of the Gospels in which He lays down the various reasons for which men have made
themselves eunuchs. Chastity with men is a very rare thing, and difficult of
attainment, and in proportion to its supreme excellence and magnificence is the
greatness of its dangers.(8)
For this reason, it requires strong and generous natures, such as,
vaulting over the stream of pleasure, direct the chariot of the soul upwards from the
earth, not turning aside from their aim, until having, by swiftness of thought,
lightly bounded above the world, and taken their stand truly upon the vault of
heaven, they purely contemplate immortality itself as it springs forth(9) from
the undefiled bosom of the Almighty.
Earth could not bring forth this draught; heaven alone knew the fountain
from whence it flows; for we must think of virginity as walking indeed upon the
earth, but as also reaching up to heaven. And hence some who have longed for
it, and considering only the end of it, have come, by reason of coarseness of
mind, ineffectually with unwashed feet, and have gone aside out of the way, from
having conceived no worthy idea of the virginal manner of life. For it is not
enough to keep the body only undefiled, just as we should not show that we think
more of the temple than of the image of the god; but we should care for the
souls of men as being the divinities of their bodies, and adorn them with
righteousness. And then do they most care for them and tend them when, striving
untiringly to hear divine discourses, they do not desist until, wearing the doors of
the wise,(1) they attain to the knowledge of the truth.
For as the putrid humours and matter of flesh, and all those things which
corrupt it, are driven out by salt, in the same manner all the irrational
appetites of a virgin are banished from the body by divine teaching. For it must
needs be that the soul which is not sprinkled with the words of Christ, as with
salt, should stink and breed worms, as King David, openly confessing with tears
in the mountains, cried out, "My wounds stink and are corrupt,"(2) because he
had not salted himself with the exercises of self-control, and so subdued his
carnal appetites, but self-indulgently had yielded to them, and became corrupted
in adultery. And hence, in Leviticus,(3) every gift, unless it be seasoned with
salt, is forbidden to be offered as an oblation to the Lord God. Now the whole
spiritual meditation of the Scriptures is given to us as salt which stings in
order to benefit, and which disinfects, without which it is impossible for a
soul, by means of reason, to be brought to the Almighty; for "ye are the salt of
the earth,"(4) said the Lord to the apostles. It is fitting, then, that a virgin
should always love things which are honourable, and be distinguished among the
foremost for wisdom and addicted to nothing slothful or luxurious, but should
excel, and set her mind upon things worthy of the state of virginity, always
putting away, by the word, the foulness of luxury, lest in any way some slight
hidden corruption should breed the worm of incontinence; for "the unmarried woman
careth for the things of the Lord," how she may please the Lord, "that she may
be holy both in body and in spirit,"(5) says the blessed Paul. But many of
them who consider the hearing of the word quite a secondary matter, think they do
great things if they give their attention to it for a little while. But
discrimination must be exercised with respect to these; for it is not fitting to
impart divine instruction to a nature which is careful about trifles, and low, and
which counterfeits wisdom. For would it not be laughable to go on talking to
those who direct all their energy towards things of little value, in order that
they may complete most accurately those things which they want to bring to
perfection, but do not think that the greatest pains are to be taken with those
necessary things by which most of all the love of chastity would be increased in
them?
CHAP. II. -- VIRGINITY A PLANT FROM HEAVEN, INTRODUCED LATE; THE ADVANCEMENT
OF MANKIND TO PERFECTION, HOW ARRANGED.
For truly by a great stretch of power the plant of virginity was sent down
to men from heaven, and for this reason it was not revealed to the first
generations. For the race of mankind was still very small in number; and it was
necessary that it should first be increased in number, and then brought to
perfection. Therefore the men of old times thought it nothing unseemly to take their
own sisters for wives, until the law coming separated them, and by forbidding
that which at first had seemed to be right, declared it to be a sin, calling him
cursed who should "uncover the nakedness" of his sister; (6) God thus
mercifully bringing to our race the needful help in due season, as parents do to their
children. For they do not at once set masters over them, but allow them, during
the period of childhood, to amuse themselves like young animals, and first
send them to teachers stammering like themselves, until they cast off the youthful
wool of the mind, and go onwards to the practice of greater things, and from
thence again to that of greater still. And thus we must consider that the God
and Father of all acted towards our forefathers. For the world, while still
unfilled with men, was like a child, and it was necessary that it should first be
filled with these, and so grow to manhood. But when hereafter it was colonized
from end to end, the race of man spreading to a boundless extent, God no longer
allowed man to remain in the same ways, considering how they might now proceed
from one point to another, and advance nearer to heaven, until, having attained
to the very greatest and most exalted lesson of virginity, they should reach to
perfection; that first they should abandon the intermarriage of brothers and
sisters, and marry wives from other families; and then that they should no
longer have many wives, like brute beasts, as though born for the mere propagation
of the species; and then that they should not be adulterers; and then again that
they should go on to continence, and from continence to virginity, when,
having trained themselves to despise the flesh, they sail fearlessly into the
peaceful haven of immortality.(1)
CHAP. III.--BY THE CIRCUMCISION OF ABRAHAM, MARRIAGE WITH SISTERS FORBIDDEN;
IN THE TIMES OF THE PROPHETS POLYGAMY PUT A STOP TO; CONJUGAL PURITY ITSELF BY
DEGREES ENFORCED.
If, however, any one should venture to find fault with our argument as
destitute of Scripture proof, we will bring forward the writings of the prophets,
and more fully demonstrate the truth of the statements already made. Now
Abraham, when he first received the covenant of circumcision, seems to signify, by
receiving circumcision in a member of his own body, nothing else than this, that
one should no longer beget children with one born of the same parent; showing
that every one should abstain from intercourse with his own sister, as his own
flesh. And thus, from the time of Abraham, the custom of marrying with sisters
has ceased; and from the times of the prophets the contracting of marriage with
several wives has been done away with; for we read, "Go not after thy lusts,
but refrain thyself front thine appetites;"(2) for "wine and women will make men
of understanding to fall away;"(3) and in another place, "Let thy fountain be
blessed; and rejoice with the wife of thy youth,"(4) manifestly forbidding a
plurality of wives. And Jeremiah clearly gives the name of "fed horses"(5) to
those who lust after other women; and we read, "The multiplying brood of the
ungodly shall not thrive, nor take deep rooting from bastard slips, nor lay any fast
foundation."(6)
Lest, however, we should seem prolix in collecting the testimonies of the
prophets, let us again point out how chastity succeeded to marriage with one
wife, taking away by degrees the lusts of the flesh, until it removed entirely
the inclination for sexual intercourse engendered by habit. For presently one is
introduced earnestly deprecating, from henceforth, this seduction, saying, "O
Lord, Father, and Governor of my life, leave me not to their counsels; give me
not a proud look; let not the greediness of the belly, nor lust of the flesh,
take hold of me."(7) And in the Book of Wisdom, a book full of all virtue, the
Holy Spirit, now openly drawing His hearers to continence and chastity, sings on
this wise, "Better it is to have no children, and to have virtue, for the
memorial thereof is immortal; because it is known with God and with men. When it is
present men take example at it; and when it is gone they desire it: it weareth
a crown and triumpheth for ever, having gotten the victory, striving for
undefiled rewards."(8)
CHAP. IV.--CHRIST ALONE TAUGHT VIRGINITY, OPENLY PREACHING THE KINGDOM OF
HEAVEN; THE LIKENESS OF GOD TO BE ATTAINED IN THE LIGHT OF THE DIVINE VIRTUES.
We have already spoken of the periods of the human race, and how,
beginning with the intermarriage of brothers and sisters, it went on to continence; and
we have now left for us the subject of virginity. Let us then endeavour to
speak of this as well as we can. And first let us inquire for what reason it was
that no one of the many patriarchs and prophets and righteous men, who taught
and did many noble things, either praised or chose the state of virginity.
Because it was reserved for the Lord alone to he the first to teach this doctrine,
since He alone, coming down to us, taught man to draw near to God; for it was
fitting that He who was first and chief of priests, of prophets, and of angels,
should also be saluted as first and chief of virgins.(9) For in old times man was
not yet perfect, and for this reason was unable to receive perfection, which
is virginity. For, being made in the Image of God, he needed to receive that
which was according to His Likeness;(10) which the Word being sent down into the
world to perfect. He first took upon Him our form, disfigured as it was by many
sins, in order that we, for whose sake He bore it, might be able again to
receive the divine form. For it is then that we are truly fashioned in the likeness
of God, when we represent His features in a human life, like skilful painters,
stamping them upon ourselves as upon tablets, learning the path which He showed
us. And for this reason He, being God, was pleased to put on human flesh, so
that we, beholding as on a tablet the divine Pattern of our life, should also be
able to imitate Him who painted it. For He was not one who, thinking one
thing, did another; nor, while He considered one thing to be right, taught another.
But whatever things were truly useful and right, these He both taught and did.
CHAP. V.--CHRIST, BY PRESERVING HIS FLESH IN-CORRUPT IN VIRGINITY, DRAWS TO
THE EXERCISE OF VIRGINITY; THE SMALL NUMBER OF VIRGINS IN PROPORTION TO THE
NUMBER OF SAINTS.
What then did the Lord, who is the Truth and the Light, take in hand when
He came down from heaven? He preserved the flesh which He had taken upon Him
incorrupt in virginity, so that we also, if we world come to the likeness of God
and Christ, should endeavour to honour virginity. For the likeness of God is
the avoiding of corruption. And that the Word, when He was incarnate, became
chief Virgin, in the same way as He was chief Shepherd and chief Prophet of the
Church, the Christ-possessed John shows us, saying, in the Book of the
Revelation, "And I looked, and, lo, a Lamb stood on the mount Sion, and with Him an
hundred forty and four thousand, having His name and His Father's name written in
their foreheads. And I heard a voice from heaven, as the voice of many waters,
and as the voice of a great thunder; and I heard the voice of harpers harping
with their harps: And they sung as it were a new song before the throne, and
before the four beasts, and the elders: and no man could learn that song but the
hundred and forty and four thousand, which were redeemed from the earth. These
are they which were not defiled with women; for they are virgins. These are they
who follow the Lamb whithersoever He goeth;"(1) showing that the Lord is leader
of the choir of virgins. And remark, in addition to this, how very great in
the sight of God is the dignity of virginity: "These were redeemed from among
men, being the first-fruits unto God and to the Lamb. And in their mouth was found
no guile: for they are without fault,"(2) he says, "and they follow the Lamb
whithersoever He goeth." And he clearly intends by this to teach us that the
number of virgins was, from the beginning, restricted to so many, namely, a
hundred and forty and four thousand, while the multitude of the other saints is
innumerable. For let us consider what he means when discoursing of the rest. "I
beheld a great multitude, which no man could number, of all nations, and kindreds,
and people, and tongues."(3) It is plain, therefore, as I said, that in the
case of the other saints he introduces an unspeakable multitude, while in the case
of those who are in a state of virginity he mentions only a very small number,
so as to make a strong contrast with those who make up the innumerable
number.(4)
This, O Arete, is my discourse to you on the subject of virginity. But, if
I have omitted anything, let Theophila, who succeeds me, supply the omission.
DISCOURSE II.--THEOPHILA.
CHAP. I.--MARRIAGE NOT ABOLISHED BY THE COMMENDATION OF VIRGINITY.
And then, she said, Theophila spoke:--Since Marcella has excellently begun
this discussion without sufficiently completing it, it is necessary that I
should endeavour to put a finish to it. Now, the fact that man has advanced by
degrees to virginity, God urging him on from time to time, seems to me to have
been admirably proved; but I cannot say the same as to the assertion that from
henceforth they should no longer beget children. For I think I have perceived
clearly from the Scriptures that, after He had brought in virginity, the Word did
not altogether abolish the generation of children; for although the moon may be
greater than the stars, the light of the other stars is not destroyed by the
moonlight.
Let us begin with Genesis, that we may give its place of antiquity and
supremacy to this scripture. Now the sentence and ordinance of God respecting the
begetting of children(5) is confessedly being fulfilled to this day, the
Creator still fashioning man. For this is quite manifest, that God, like a painter,
is at this very time working at the world, as the Lord also taught, "My Father
worketh hitherto."(6) But when the rivers shall cease to flow and fall into the
reservoir of the sea, and the light shall be perfectly separated from the
darkness,--for the separation is still going on,--and the dry laud shall henceforth
cease to bring forth its fruits with creeping things and four-footed beasts,
and the predestined number of men shall be fulfilled; then from henceforth shall
men abstain from the generation of children. But at present man must cooperate
in the forming of the image of God, while the world exists and is still being
formed; for it is said, "Increase and multiply."(5) And we must not be offended
at the ordinance of the Creator, from which, moreover, we ourselves have our
being. For the casting of seed into the furrows of the matrix is the beginning of
the generation of men, so that bone taken from bone, and flesh from flesh, by
an invisible power, are fashioned into another man. And in this way we must
consider that the saying is fulfilled, "This is now bone of my bone, and flesh of
my flesh."(7)
CHAP. II.--GENERATION SOMETHING AKIN TO THE FIRST FORMATION OF EVE FROM THE
SIDE AND NATURE OF ADAM; GOD THE CREATOR OF MEN IN ORDINARY GENERATION.
And this perhaps is what was shadowed forth by the sleep and trance of the
first man, which prefigured the embraces of connubial love. When thirsting for
children a man falls into a kind of trance,(1) softened and subdued by the
pleasures of generation as by sleep, so that again something drawn from his flesh
and from his bones is, as I said, fashioned into another man. For the harmony
of the bodies being disturbed in the embraces of love, as those tell us who have
experience of the marriage state, all the marrow-like and generative part of
the blood, like a kind of liquid bone, coming together from all the members,
worked into foam and curdled, is projected through the organs of generation into
the living body of the female. And probably it is for this reason that a man is
said to leave his father and his mother, since he is then suddenly unmindful of
all things when united to his wife in the embraces of love, he is overcome by
the desire of generation, offering his side to the divine Creator to take away
from it, so that the father may again appear in the son.
Wherefore, if God still forms man, shall we not be guilty of audacity if
we think of the generation of children as something offensive, which the
Almighty Himself is not ashamed to make use of in working with His undefiled hands;
for He says to Jeremiah, "Before I formed thee in the belly I knew thee;"(2)
and to Job, "Didst thou take clay and form a living creature, and make it speak
upon the earth?"(3) and Job draws near to Him in supplication, saying, "Thine
hands have marie me and fashioned me."(4) Would it not, then, be absurd to
forbid marriage unions, seeing that we expect that after us there will be
martyrs, and those who shall oppose the evil one, for whose sake also the Word
promised that He would shorten those days?(5) For if the generation of children
henceforth had seemed evil to God, as you said, for what reason will those who have
come into existence in opposition to the divine decree and will be able to
appear well-pleasing to God? And must not that which is begotten be something
spurious, and not a creature of God, if, like a counterfeit coin, it is moulded apart
from the intention and ordinance of the lawful authority? And so we concede to
men the power of forming men.
CHAP. III.--AN AMBIGUOUS PASSAGE OF SCRIPTURE; NOT ONLY THE FAITHFUL BUT EVEN
PRELATES SOMETIMES ILLEGITIMATE.
But Marcella, interrupting, said, "O Theophila, there appears here a great
mistake, and something contrary to what you have said; and do you think to
escape under cover of the cloud which you have thrown around you? For there comes
that argument, which perhaps any one who addresses you as a very wise person
will bring forward: What do you say of those who are begotten unlawfully in
adultery? For you laid it down that it was inconceivable and impossible for any one
to enter into the world unless he was introduced by the will of the divine
Ruler, his frame being prepared for him by God. And that you may not take refuge
behind a safe wall, bringing forward the Scripture which says, 'As for the
children of the adulterers, they shall not come to their perfection,'(6) he will
answer you easily, that we often see those who are unlawfully begotten coming to
perfection like ripe fruit.
And if, again, you answer sophistically, 'O, my friend, by those who come
not to perfection I understand being perfected in Christ-taught righteousness;'
he will say, 'But, indeed, my worthy friend, very many who are begotten of
unrighteous seed are not only numbered among those who are gathered into the flock
of the brethren, but are often called even to preside over them.(7) Since,
then, it is clear, and all testify, that those who are born of adultery do come to
perfection, we must not imagine that the Spirit was teaching respecting
conceptions and births, but rather perhaps concerning those who adulterate the truth,
who, corrupting the Scriptures by false doctrines, bring forth an imperfect
and immature wisdom, mixing their error with piety.' And, therefore, this plea
being taken away from you, come now and tell us if those who are born of adultery
are begotten by the will of God; for you said that it was impossible that the
offspring of a man should be brought to perfection unless the Lord formed it
and gave it life."
CHAP. IV.--HUMAN GENERATION, AND THE WORK OF GOD THEREIN SET FORTH.
Theophila, as though caught round the middle by a strong antagonist, grew
giddy, and with difficulty recovering herself, replied, "You ask a question,
my worthy friend, which needs to be solved by an example, that you may still
better understand how the creative power of God, pervading all things, is more
especially the real cause in the generation of men, making those things to grow
which are planted in the productive earth. For that which is sown is not to be
blamed, but he who sows in a strange soil by unlawful embraces, as though
purchasing a slight pleasure by shamefully selling his own seed. For imagine our
birth into the world to be like some such thing as a house having its entrance
lying close to lofty mountains; and that the house extends a great way down, far
from the entrance, and that it has many holes behind, and that in this part it
has circular." "I imagine it," said Marcella. "Well, then, suppose that a
modeller r seated within is fashioning many statues; imagine, again, that the
substance of clay is incessantly brought to him from without, through the holes, by
many men who do not any of them see the artist himself. Now suppose the house to
be covered with mist and clouds, and nothing visible to those who are outside
but only the holes." "Let this also be supposed," she said. "And that each one of
those who are labouring together to provide the clay has one hole allotted to
himself, into which he alone has to bring and deposit his own clay, not
touching any other hole. And if, again, he shall officiously endeavour to open that
which is allotted to another, let him be threatened with fire and scourges.
"Well, now, consider further what comes after this: the modeller within
going round to the holes and taking privately for his modelling the clay which he
finds at each hole, and having in a certain number of months made his model,
giving it back through the same hole; having this for his rule, that every lump
of clay which is capable of being moulded shall be worked up indifferently,
even if it be unlawfully thrown by any one through another's hole, for the clay
has done no wrong, and, therefore, as being blameless, should be moulded and
formed; but that he who, in opposition to the ordinance and law, deposited it in
another's hole, should be punished as a criminal and transgressor. For the clay
should not be blamed, but he who did this in violation of what is right; for,
through incontinence, having carried it away, he secretly, by violence, deposited
it in another's hole." "You say most truly."
CHAP. V.--THE HOLY FATHER FOLLOWS UP THE SAME ARGUMENT.
And now that these things are completed, it remains for you to apply this
picture, my wisest of friends, to the things which have been already spoken of;
comparing the house to the invisible nature of our generation, and the
entrance adjacent to the mountains to the sending down of our souls from heaven, and
their descent into the bodies; the holes to the female sex, and the modeller to
the creative power of God, which, under the cover of generation, making use of
our nature, invisibly forms us men within, working the garments for the souls.
Those who carry the clay represent the male sex in the comparison; when
thirsting for children, they bring and east in seed into the natural channels of the
female, as those in the comparison cast clay into the holes. For the seed,
which, so to speak, partakes of a divine creative power, is not to be thought
guilty of the incentives to incontinence; and art always works up the matter
submitted to it; and nothing is to be considered as evil in itself, but becomes so by
the act of those who used it in such a way; for when properly and purely made
use of, it comes out pure, but if disgracefully and improperly, then it becomes
disgraceful. For how did iron, which was discovered for the benefit of
agriculture and the arts, injure those who sharpened it for murderous battles? Or how
did gold, or silver, or brass, and, to take it collectively, the whole of the
workable earth, injure those who, ungratefully towards their Creator, make a
wrong use of them by turning parts of them into various kinds of idols? And if any
one should supply wool from that which had been stolen to the weaving art, that
art, regarding this one thing only, manufactures the material submitted to it,
if it will receive the preparation, rejecting nothing of that which is
serviceable to itself, since that which is stolen is here not to be blamed, being
lifeless. And, therefore, the material itself is to be wrought and adorned, but he
who is discovered to have abstracted it unjustly should be punished. So, in
like manner, the violators of marriage, and those who break the strings of the
harmony of life, as of a harp, raging with lust, and letting loose their
desires in adultery, should themselves be tortured and punished, for they do a great
wrong stealing from the gardens of others the embraces of generation; but the
seed itself, as in the case of the wool, should be formed and endowed with life.
CHAP. VI.--GOD CARES EVEN FOR ADULTEROUS BIRTHS; ANGELS GIVEN TO THEM AS
GUARDIANS.
But what need is there to protract the argument by using such examples?
for nature could not thus, in a little time, accomplish so great a work without
divine help. For who gave to the bones their fixed nature? and who bound the
yielding members with nerves, to be extended and relaxed at the joints? or who
prepared channels for the blood, and a soft windpipe for the breath? or what god
caused the humours to ferment, mixing them with blood and forming the soft flesh
out of the earth, but only the Supreme Artist making us to be man, the
rational and living image of Himself, and forming it like wax, in the womb, from
moist slight seed? or by whose providence was it that the foetus was not suffocated
by damp when shut up within, in the connexion of the vessels? or who, after it
was brought forth and had come into the light, changed it from weakness and
smallness to size, and beauty, and strength, unless God Himself, the Supreme
Artist, as I said, making by His creative power copies of Christ, and living
pictures? Whence, also, we have received from the inspired writings, that those who
are begotten, even though it be in adultery, are committed to guardian angels.
But if they came into being in opposition to the will and the decree of the
blessed nature of God, how should they be delivered over to angels, to be nourished
with much gentleness and indulgence? and how, if they had to accuse their own
parents, could they confidently, before the judgment seat of Christ, invoke Him
and say, "Thou didst not, O Lord, grudge us this common light; but these
appointed us to death, despising Thy command?" "For," He says, "children begotten of
unlawful beds are witnesses of wickedness against their parents at their
trial."(1)
CHAP. VII.--THE RATIONAL SOUL FROM GOD HIMSELF; CHASTITY NOT THE ONLY GOOD,
ALTHOUGH THE BEST AND MOST HONOURED.
And perhaps there will be room for some to argue plausibly among those who
are wanting in discrimination and judgment, that this fleshly garment of the
soul, being planted by men, is shaped spontaneously apart from the sentence of
God. If, however, he should teach that the immortal being of the soul also is
sown along with the mortal body, he will not be believed; for the Almighty alone
breathes into man the undying and undecaying part, as also it is He alone who
is Creator of the invisible and indestructible. For, He says, He "breathed into
his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul."(2) And those
artificers who, to the destruction of men, make images in human form, not
perceiving and knowing their own Maker, are blamed by the Word, which says, in the
Book of Wisdom, a book full of all virtue,(3) "his heart is ashes, his hope is
more vile than earth, and his life of less value than clay; forasmuch as he knew
not his Maker, and Him that inspired into him an active soul, and breathed in
a living spirit;"(4) that is, God, the Maker of all men; therefore, also,
according to the apostle, He "will have all men to be saved, and to come unto the
knowledge of the truth."(5) And now, although this subject be scarcely
completed, yet there are others which remain to be discussed. For when one thoroughly
examines and understands those things which happen to man according to his
nature, he will know not to despise the procreation of children, although he applauds
chastity, and prefers it in honour. For although honey be sweeter and more
pleasant than other things, we are not for that reason to consider other things
bitter which are mixed up in the natural sweetness of fruits. And, in support of
these statements, I will bring forward a trustworthy witness, namely, Paul, who
says, "So then he that giveth her(6) in marriage doeth well; but he that
giveth her not in marriage doeth bet ter."(7) Now the word, in setting forth that
which is better and sweeter, did not intend to take away the inferior, but
arranges so as to assign to each its own proper use and advantage. For there are
some to whom it is not given to attain virginity; and there are others whom He no
longer wills to be excited by procreations to lust, and to be defiled, but
henceforth to meditate and to keep the mind upon the transformation of the body
to the likeness of angels, when they "neither marry nor are given in
marriage,"(8) according to the infallible words of the Lord; since it is not given to
all to attain that undefiled state of being a eunuch for the sake of the kingdom
of heaven,(9) but manifestly to those only who are able to preserve the
ever-blooming and unfading flower of virginity. For it is the custom of the prophetic
Word to compare the Church to a flower covered and variegated meadow, adorned
and crowned not only with the flowers of virginity, but also with those of
child-bearing and of continence; for it is written, "Upon thy(10) right hand did
stand the queen in a vesture of gold, wrought about with divers colours."(11)
These words, O Arete, I bring according to my ability to this discussion in behalf
of the truth. And when TheophiIa had thus spoken, Theopatra said that applause
arose from all the virgins approving of her discourse; and that when they
became silent, after a long pause, Thaleia arose, for to her had been assigned the
third place in the contest, that which came after Theophila. And she then, as I
think, followed, and spoke.