THE SEVEN BOOKS OF ARNOBIUS AGAINST THE HEATHEN. BOOK III
BOOK III.
1. All these charges, then, which might truly be better termed abuse, have
been long answered with sufficient fulness and accuracy by men of distinction
in this respect, and worthy to have learned the truth; and not one point of any
inquiry has been passed over, without being determined in a thousand ways, and
on the strongest grounds. We need not, therefore, linger further on this part
of the case. For neither is the Christian religion unable to stand though it
found no advocates, nor will it be therefore proved true if it found many to
agree with it, and gained weight through its adherents.(1) Its own strength is
sufficient for it, and it rests on the foundations of its own truth, without losing
its power, though there were none to defend it, nay, though all voices
assailed and opposed it, and united with common rancour to destroy all faith(2) in it.
2. Let us now return to the order from which we were a little ago
compelled to diverge, that our defence may not, through its being too long broken off,
be said to have given our detractors cause to triumph in the establishing of
their charge. For they propose these questions: If you are in earnest about
religion, why do you not serve and worship the other gods with us, or share your
sacred rites with your fellows, and put the ceremonies of the different religions
on an equality? We may say for the present: In essaying to approach the divine,
the Supreme Deity(3) suffices us,--the Deity, I say, who is supreme, the
Creator and Lord of the universe, who orders and rules all things: in Him we serve
all that requires our service; in Him we worship all that should be
adored,--venerate(4) that which demands the homage of our reverence. For as we lay hold of
the source of the divine itself from which the very divinity of all gods
whatever is derived,(5) we think it an idle task to approach each personally, since
we neither know who they are, nor the names by which they are called; and are
further unable to learn, and discover, and establish their number.
3. And as in the kingdoms of earth we are in no wise constrained expressly
to do reverence to those who form the royal family as well as to the
sovereigns, but whatever honour belongs to them is found to be tacitly(6) implied in the
homage offered to the kings themselves; in just the same way, these gods,
whoever they be, for whose existence you vouch, if they are a royal race, and
spring from the Supreme Ruler, even though we do not expressly do them reverence,
yet feel that they are honoured in common with their Lord, and share in the
reverence shown to Him. Now it must be remembered that we have made this statement,
on the hypothesis only that it is clear and undeniable, that besides the Ruler
and Lord Himself, there are still other beings,(7) who, when arranged and
disposed in order, form, as it were, a kind of plebeian mass. But do not seek to
point out to us pictures instead of gods in your temples, and the images which you
set up, for you too know, but are unwilling and refuse to admit, that these
are formed of most worthless clay, and are childish figures made by mechanics.
And when we converse with you on religion, we ask you to prove this, that there
are other gods than the one Supreme Deity in nature, power, name, not as we see
them manifested in images, but in such a substance as it might fittingly be
supposed that perfection of so great dignity should reside.
4. But we do not purpose delaying further on this part of the subject,
lest we seem desirous to stir up most violent strife, and engage in agitating
contests.
Let there be, as you affirm, that crowd of deities, let there be
numberless families of gods; we assent, agree, and do not examine too closely, nor in
any part of the subject do we assail the doubtful and uncertain positions you
hold. This, however, we demand, and ask you to tell us, whence you have
discovered, or how you have learned, whether there are these gods,(8) whom you believe to
be in heaven and serve, or some others unknown by reputation and name? For it
may be that beings exist whom you do not believe to do so; and that those of
whose existence you feel assured, are found nowhere in the universe. For you have
at no time been borne aloft to the stars of heaven, at no time have seen the
face and countenance of each; and then established here the worship of the same
gods, whom you remembered to be there, as having been known and seen by you.
But this, too, we again would learn from you, whether they have received these
names by which you call them, or assumed them themselves on the days of
purification.(1) If these are divine and celestial names, who reported them to you? But
if, on the other hand, these names have been applied to them by you, how could
you give names to those whom you never saw, and whose character or
circumstances you in no wise(2) knew?
5. But let it be assumed that there are these gods, as you wish and
believe, and are persuaded; let them be called also by those names by which the
common people suppose that those meaner gods(3) are known.(4) Whence, however, have
you learned who make up the list of gods under these names?(5) have any ever
become familiar and known to others with whose names you were not acquainted?(6)
For it cannot be easily known whether their numerous body is settled and fixed
in number; or whether their multitude cannot be summed up and limited by the
numbers of any computation. For let us suppose that you do reverence to a
thousand, or rather five thousand gods; but in the universe it may perhaps be that
there are a hundred thousand; there may be even more than this,--nay, as we said a
little before, it may not be possible to compute the number of the gods, or
limit them by a definite number. Either, then, you are yourselves impious who
serve a few gods, but disregard the duties which you owe to the rest;(7) or if you
claim that your ignorance of the rest should be pardoned, you will procure for
us also a similar pardon, if in just the same way(8) we refuse to worship
those of whose existence we are wholly ignorant.
6. And yet let no one think that we are perversely determined not to
submit to(9) the other deities, whoever they are! For we lift up pious minds, and
stretch forth our hands in prayer,(10) and do not refuse to draw near
whithersoever you may have summoned us; if only we learn who those divine beings are whom
you press upon us, and with whom it may be right to share the reverence which
we show to the king and prince who is over all. It is Saturn, my opponent says,
and Janus, Minerva, Juno, Apollo, Venus, Triptolemus, Hercules, Aesculapius,
and all the others, to whom the reverence of antiquity dedicated magnificent
temples in almost every city. You might, perhaps, have been able to attract us to
the worship of these deities you mention, had you not been yourselves the first,
with foul and unseemly fancies, to devise such tales about them as not merely
to stain their honour, but, by the natures assigned to them, to prove that they
did not exist at all. For, in the first place, we cannot be led to believe
this,--that that immortal and supreme nature has been divided by sexes, and that
there are some male, others female. But this point, indeed, has been long ago
fully treated of by men of ardent genius, both in Latin and Greek; and Tullius,
the most eloquent among the Romans, without dreading the vexatiousness of a
charge of impiety, has above all, with greater piety,(11) declared--boldly, firmly,
and frankly--what he thought of such a fancy; and if you would proceed to
receive from him opinions written with true discernment, instead of merely
brilliant sentences, this case would have been concluded; nor would it require at our
weak hands(12) a second pleading,(13) as it is termed.
7. But why should I say that men seek from him subtleties of expression
and splendour of diction, when I know that there are many who avoid and flee from
his books on this subject, and will not hear his opinions read,(14)
overthrowing their prejudices; and when I hear others muttering angrily, and saying that
the senate should decree the destruction(15) of these writings by which the
Christian religion is maintained, and the weight of antiquity overborne? But,
indeed, if you are convinced that anything you say regarding your gods is beyond
doubt, point out Cicero's error, refute, rebut his rash and impious words,(16)
and show that they are so. For when you would carry off writings, and suppress a
book given forth to the public, you are not defending the gods, but dreading
the evidence of the truth.
8. And yet, that no thoughtless person may raise a false accusation
against us, as though we believed God whom we worship to be male,--for this reason,
that is, that when we speak of Him we use a masculine word,--let him understand
that it is not sex which is expressed, but His name, and its meaning according
to custom, and the way in which we are in the habit of using words.(1) For the
Deity is not male, but His name is of the masculine gender: but in your
ceremonies you cannot say the same; for in your prayers you have been wont to say
whether thou art god or goddess,(2) and this uncertain description shows, even by
their opposition, that you attribute sex to the gods. We cannot, then, be
prevailed on to believe that the divine is embodied; for bodies must needs be
distinguished by difference of sex, if they are male and female. For who, however
mean his capacity,(3) does not know that the sexes of different gender have been
ordained and formed by the Creator of the creatures of earth, only that, by
intercourse and union of bodies, that which is fleeting and transient may endure
being ever renewed and maintained?(4)
9. What, then, shall we say? That gods beget and are begotten?(5) and that
therefore they have received organs of generation, that they might be able to
raise up offspring, and that, as each new race springs up, a substitution,
regularly occurring,(6) should make up for all which had been swept away by the
preceding age? If, then, it is so,--that is, if the gods above beget other gads,
and are subject to these conditions of sex,(7) and are immortal, and are not
worn out, by the chills of age,--it follows, as a consequence, that the world(8)
should be full of gods, and that countless heavens could not contain their
multitude, inasmuch as they are both themselves ever begetting, and the countless
multitude of their descendants, always being increased, is augumented by means of
their offspring; or if, as is fitting, the gods are not degraded by being
subjected to sexual impulses,(9) what cause or reason will be pointed out for their
being distinguished by those members by which the sexes are wont to recognise
each other at the suggestion of their own desires? For it is not likely that
they have these members without a purpose, or that nature had wished in them to
make sport of its own improvidence,(10) in providing them with members for which
there would be no use. For as the hands, feet, eyes, and other members which
form our body,(11) have been arranged for certain uses, each for its own end, so
we may well(12) believe that these members have been provided to discharge
their office; or it must be confessed that there is something without a purpose in
the bodies of the gods, which has been made uselessly and in vain.
10. What say you, ye holy and pure guardians of religion? Have the gods,
then, sexes; and are they disfigured by those parts, the very mention of whose
names by modest lips is disgraceful? What, then, now remains, but to believe
that they, as unclean beasts, are transported with violent passions, rush with
maddened desires into mutual embraces, and at last, with shattered and ruined
bodies, are enfeebled by their sensuality? And since some things are peculiar to
the female sex, we must believe that the goddesses, too, submit to these
conditions at the proper time, conceive and become pregnant with loathing, miscarry,
carry the full time, and sometimes are prematurely delivered. O divinity, pure,
holy, free from and unstained by any dishonourable blot! The mind longs(13) and
burns to see, in the great halls and palaces of heaven, gods and goddesses,
with bodies uncovered and bare, the full-breasted Ceres nursing Iacchus,(14) as
the muse of Lucretius sings, the Hellespontian Priapus bearing about among the
goddesses, virgin and matron, those parts(15) ever prepared for encounter. It
longs, I say, to see goddesses pregnant, goddesses with child, and, as they daily
increase in size, faltering in their steps, through the irksomeness of the
burden they bear about with them; others, after long delay, bringing to birth, and
seeking the midwife's aid; others, shrieking as they are attacked by keen pangs
and grievous pains, tormented,(16) and, under all these influences, imploring
the aid of Juno Lucina. Is it not much better to abuse, revile, and otherwise
insult the gods, than, with pious pretence, unworthily to entertain such
monstrous beliefs about them?
11. And you dare to charge us with offending the gods, although, on
examination, it is found that the ground of offence is most clearly in ourselves, and
that it is not occasioned by the insult which you think(1) we offer them. For
if the gods are, as you say, moved by anger, and burn with rage in their minds,
why should we not suppose that they take it amiss, even in the highest degree,
that you attribute to them sexes, as dogs and swine have been created, and
that, since this is your belief, they are so represented, and openly exposed in a
disgraceful manner? This, then, being the case, you are the cause of all
troubles--you lead the gods, you rouse them to harass the earth with every ill, and
every day to devise all kinds of fresh misfortunes, that so they may avenge
themselves, being irritated at suffering so many wrongs and insults from you. By
your insults and affronts, I say, partly in the vile stories, partly in the
shameful beliefs which your theologians, your poets, you yourselves too, celebrate
in disgraceful ceremonies, you will find that the affairs of men have been
ruined, and that the gods have thrown away the helm, if indeed it is by their care
that the fortunes of men are guided and arranged. For with us, indeed, they have
no reason to be angry, whom they see and perceive neither to mock, as it is
said, nor worship them, and to think,(2) to believe much more worthily than you
with regard to the dignity of their name.
12. Thus far of sex. Now let us come to the appearance and shapes by which
yon believe that the gods above have been represented, with which, indeed, you
fashion, and set them up in their most splendid abodes, your temples. And let
no one here bring up against us Jewish fables and those of the sect of the
Sadducees,(3) as though we, too, attribute to the Deity forms;(4) for this is
supposed to be taught in their writings, and asserted as if with assurance and
authority. For these stories either do not concern us, and have nothing at all in
common with us, or if they are shared in by us, as you believe, you must seek out
teachers of greater wisdom, through whom you may be able to learn how best to
overcome the dark and recondite sayings of those writings. Our opinion on the
subject is as follows:--that the whole divine nature, since it neither came into
existence at any time, nor will ever come to an end of life, is devoid of
bodily features, and does not have anything like the forms with which the
termination of the several members usually. completes the union of parts.(5) For
whatever is of this character, we think mortal and perishable; nor do we believe that
that can endure for ever which an inevitable end shuts in, though the
boundaries enclosing it be the remotest.
13. But it is not enough that you limit the gods by forms:--you even
confine them to the human figure, and with even less decency enclose them in earthly
bodies. What shall we say then? that the gods have a head modelled with
perfect symmetry,(6) bound fast by sinews to the back and breast, and that, to allow
the necessary bending of the neck, it is supported by combinations of
vertebrae, and by an osseous foundation? But if we believe this to be true, it follows
that they have ears also, pierced by crooked windings; rolling eyeballs,
overshadowed by the edges of the eyebrows; a nose, placed as a channel,(7) through
which waste fluids and a current of air might easily pass; teeth to masticate
food, of three kinds, and adapted to three services; hands to do their work, moving
easily by means of joints, fingers, and flexible elbows; feet to support their
bodies, regulate their steps, and prompt the first motions in walking. But if
the gods hear these things which are seen, it is fitting that they should bear
those also which the skin conceals under the framework of the ribs, and the
membranes enclosing the viscera; windpipes, stomachs, spleens, lungs, bladders,
livers, the long-entwined intestines, and the veins of purple blood, joined with
the air-passages,(8) coursing through the whole viscera.
14. Are, then, the divine bodies free from these deformities? and since
they do not eat the food of men, are we to believe that, like children, they are
toothless, and, having no internal parts, as if they were inflated bladders,
are without strength, owing to the hollowness of their swollen bodies? Further,
if this is the case, you must see whether the gods are all alike, or are marked
by a difference in the contour of their forms. For if each and all have one and
the same likeness of shape, there is nothing ridiculous in believing that they
err, and are deceived in recognising each other.(9) But if, on the other hand,
they are distinguished by their countenances, we should, consequently,
understand that these differences have been implanted for no other reason than that
they might individually be able to recognise themselves by the peculiarites of
the different marks. We should therefore say that some have big heads, prominent
brows, broad brows, thick lips; that others of them have long chins, moles, and
high noses; that these have dilated nostrils, those are snubnosed; some chubby
from a swelling of their jaws or growth of their cheeks, dwarfed, tall, of
middle size, lean, sleek, fat; some with crisped and curled hair, others shaven,
with bald and smooth heads. Now your workshops show and point out that our
opinions are not false, inasmuch as, when you form and fashion gods, you represent
some with long hair, others smooth and bare, as old, as youths, as boys,
swarthy, grey-eyed, yellow, half-naked, bare; or, that cold may not annoy them,
covered with flowing garments thrown over them.
15. Does any man at all possessed of judgment, believe that hairs and down
grow on the bodies of the gods? that among them age is distinguished? and that
they go about clad in dresses and garments of various shapes, and shield
themselves from heat and cold? But if any one believes that, he must receive this
also as true, that some gods are fullers, some barbers; the former to cleanse the
sacred garments, the latter to thin their locks when matted with a thick
growth of hair. Is not this really degrading, most impious, and insulting, to
attribute to the gods the features of a frail and perishing animal? to furnish them
with those members which no modest person would dare to recount, and describe,
or represent in his own imagination, without shuddering at the excessive
indecency? Is this the contempt you entertain,--this the proud wisdom with which you
spurn us as ignorant, and think that all knowledge of religion is yours? You
mock the mysteries of the Egyptians, because they ingrafted the forms of dumb
animals upon their divine causes, and because they worship these very images with
much incense, and whatever else is used in such rites: you yourselves adore
images of men, as though they were powerful gods, and are not ashamed to give to
these the countenance of an earthly creature, to blame others for their mistaken
folly, and to be detected in a similarly vicious error.
16. But you will, perhaps, say that the gods have indeed other forms, and
that you have given the appearance of men to them merely by way of honour, and
for form's sake(1) which is much more insulting than to have fallen into any
error through ignorance. For if you confessed that you had ascribed to the
divine forms that which you had supposed and believed, your error, originating in
prejudice, would not be so blameable. But now, when you believe one thing and
fashion another, you both dishonour those to whom yon ascribe that which you
confess does not belong to them, and show your impiety in adoring that which you
fashion, not that which you think really is, and which is in very truth. If
asses, dogs, pigs,(2) had any human wisdom and skill in contrivance, and wished to
do us honour also by some kind of worship, and to show respect by dedicating
statues to us, with what rage would they inflame us, what a tempest of passion
would they excite, if they determined that our images should bear and assume the
fashion of their own bodies? How would they, I repeat, fill us with rage, and
rouse our passions, if the founder of Rome, Romulus, were to be set up with an
ass's face, the revered Pompilius with that of a dog, if under the image of a
pig were written Cato's or Marcus Cicero's name? So, then, do you think that your
stupidity is not laughed at by your deities, if they laugh at all? or, since
you believe that they may be enraged, do you think that they are not roused,
maddened to fury, and that they do not wish to be revenged for so great wrongs and
insults, and to hurl on you the punishments usually dictated by chagrin, and
devised by bitter hatred? How much better it had been to give to them the forms
of elephants, panthers, or tigers, bulls, and horses! For what is there
beautiful in man,--what, I pray you, worthy of admiration, or comely,--unless that
which, some poet(3) has maintained, he possesses in common with the ape?
17. But, they say, if you are not satisfied with our opinion, do you point
out, tell us yourselves, what is the Deity's form. If you wish to hear the
truth, either the Deity has no form; or if He is embodied in one, we indeed know
not what it is. Moreover, we think it no disgrace to be ignorant of that which
we never saw; nor are we therefore prevented from disproving the opinions of
others, because on this we have no opinion of our own to bring forward. For as, if
the earth be said to be of glass, silver, iron, or gathered together and made
from brittle clay, we cannot hesitate to maintain that this is untrue, although
we do not know of what it is made; so, when the form of God is discussed, we
show that it is not what you maintain, even if we are still able to explain what
it is.
18. What, then, some one will say, does the Deity not hear? does He not
speak? does He not see what is put before Him? has He not sight? He may in His
own, but not in our way. But in so great a matter we cannot know the truth at
all, or reach it by speculations; for these are, it is clear, in our case,
baseless, deceitful, and like vain dreams. For if we said that He sees in the same way
as ourselves, it follows that it should be understood that He has eyelids
placed as coverings on the pupils of the eyes, that He closes them, winks, sees by
rays or images, or, as is the case in all eyes, can see nothing at all without
the presence of other light. So we must in like manner say of hearing, and form
of speech, and utterance of words. If He nears by means of ears, these, too,
we must say, He has, penetrated by winding paths, through which the sound may
steal, bearing the meaning of the discourse; or if His words are poured forth
from a mouth, that He has lips and teeth, by the contact and various movement of
which His tongue utters sounds distinctly, and forms His voice to words.
19. If you are willing to hear our conclusions, then learn that we are so
far from attributing bodily shape to the Deity, that we fear to ascribe to so
great a being even mental graces, and the very excellences by which a few have
been allowed with difficulty to distinguish themselves. For who will say that
God is brave, firm, good, wise? who will say that He has integrity, is temperate,
even that He has knowledge, understanding, forethought? that He directs
towards fixed moral ends the actions on which He determines? These things are good in
man; and being opposed to vices, have deserved the great reputation which they
have gained. But who is so foolish, so senseless, as to say that God is great
by merely human excellences? or that He is above all in the greatness of His
name, because He is not disgraced by vice? Whatever you say, whatever in unspoken
thought you imagine concerning God, passes and is corrupted into a human
sense, and does not carry its own meaning, because it is spoken in the words which
we use, and which are suited only to human affairs. There is but one thing man
can be assured of regarding God's nature, to know and perceive that nothing can
be revealed in human language concerning God.
20. This, then, this matter of forms and sexes, is the first affront which
you, noble advocates in sooth, and pious writers, offer to your deities. But
what is the next, that you represent to us(1) the gods, some as artificers, some
physicians, others working in wool, as sailors,(2) players on the harp and
flute, hunters, shepherds, and, as there was nothing more, rustics? And that god,
he says, is a musician, and this other can divine; for the other gods
cannot,(3) and do not know how to foretell what will come to pass, owing to their want
of skill and ignorance of the future. One is instructed in obstetric arts,
another trained up in the science of medicine. Is each, then, powerful in his own
department; and can they give no assistance, if their aid is asked, in what
belongs to another? This one is eloquent in speech, and ready in linking words
together; for the others are stupid, and can say nothing skilfully, if they must
speak.
21. And, I ask, what reason is there, what unavoidable necessity, what
occasion for the gods knowing and being acquainted with these handicrafts as
though they were worthless mechanics? For, are songs sung and music played in
heaven, that the nine sisters may gracefully combine and harmonize pauses and rhythms
of tones? Are there on the mountains(4) of the stars, forests, woods, groves,
that(5) Diana may be esteemed very mighty in hunting expeditions? Are the gods
ignorant of the immediate future; and do they live and pass the time according
to the lots assigned them by fate, that the inspired son of Latona may explain
and declare what the morrow or the next hour bears to each? Is he himself
inspired by another god, and is he urged and roused by the power of a greater
divinity, so that he may be rightly said and esteemed to be divinely inspired? Are
the gods liable to be seized by diseases; and is there anything by which they may
be wounded and hurt, so that, when there is occasion, he(6) of Epidaurus may
come to their assistance? Do they labour, do they bring forth, that Juno may
soothe, and Lucina abridge the terrible pangs of childbirth? Do they engage in
agriculture, or are they concerned with the duties of war, that Vulcan, the lord
of fire, may form for them swords, or forge their rustic implements? Do they
need to be covered with garments, that the Tritonian(7) maid may, with nice
skill,(8) spin, weave cloth for them, and make(9) them tunics to suit the season,
either triple-twilled, or of silken fabric? Do they make accusations and refute
them, that the descendant(10) of Atlas may carry off the prize for eloquence,
attained by assiduous practice?
22. You err, my opponent says, and are deceived; for the gods are not
themselves artificers, but suggest these arts to ingenious men, and teach mortals
what they should know, that their mode of life may be more civilized. But he who
gives any instruction to the ignorant and unwilling, and strives to make him
intelligently expert in some kind of work, must himself first know that which he
sets the other to practise. For no one can be capable of teaching a science
without knowing the rules of that which he teaches, and having grasped its method
most thoroughly. The gods are, then, the first artificers; whether because
they inform the minds of men with knowledge, as you say yourselves, or because,
being immortal and unbegotten, they surpass the whole race of earth by their
length of life.(1) This, then, is the question; there being no occasion for these
arts among the gods, neither their necessities nor nature requiring in them any
ingenuity or mechanical skill, why you should say that they are skilled,(2) one
in one craft, another in another, and that individuals are pre-eminently
expert(3) in particular departments in which they are distinguished by acquaintance
with the several branches of science?
23. But you will, perhaps, say that the gods are not artificers, but that
they preside over these arts, and have their oversight; nay, that under their
care all things have been placed, which we manage and conduct, and that their
providence sees to the happy and fortunate issue of these. Now this would
certainly appear to be said justly, and with some probability, if all we engage in,
all we do, or all we attempt in human affairs, sped as we wished and purposed.
But since every day the reverse is the case, and the results of actions do not
correspond to the purpose of the will, it is trifling to say that we have, set as
guardians over as, gods invented by our superstitious fancy, not grasped with
assured certainty. Portunus(4) gives to the sailor perfect safety in traversing
the seas; but why has the raging sea cast up so many cruelly-shattered wrecks?
Consus suggests to our minds courses safe and serviceable; and why does an
unexpected change perpetually issue in results other than were looked for? Pales
and Inuus(5) are set as guardians over the flocks and herds; why do they, with
hurtful laziness,(6) not take care to avert from the herds in their summer
pastures, cruel, infectious, and destructive diseases? The harlot Flora,(7)
venerated in lewd sports, sees well to it that the fields blossom; and why are buds
and tender plants daily nipt and destroyed by most hurtful frost? Juno presides
over childbirth, and aids travailing mothers; and why are a thousand mothers
every day cut off in murderous throes? Fire is under Vulcan's care, and its source
is placed under his control; and why does he, very often, suffer temples and
parts of cities to fall into ashes devoured by flames? The soothsayers receive
the knowledge of their art from the Pythian god; and why does he so often give
and afford answers equivocal, doubtful, steeped in darkness and obscurity?
Aesculapius presides over the duties and arts of medicine; and why cannot men in
more kinds of disease and sickness be restored to health and soundness of body?
while, on the contrary, they become worse under the hands of the physician.
Mercury is occupied with(8) combats, and presides over boxing and wrestling matches;
and why does he not make all invincible who are in his charge? why, when
appointed to one office, does he enable some to win the victory, while he suffers
others to be ridiculed for their disgraceful weakness?
24. No one, says my opponent, makes supplication to the tutelar deities,
and they therefore withhold their usual favours and help. Cannot the gods, then,
do good, except they receive incense and consecrated offerings?(9) and do they
quit and renounce their posts, unless they see their altars anointed with the
blood of cattle? And vet I thought but now that the kindness of the gods was of
their own free will, and that the unlooked-for gifts of benevolence flowed
unsought from them. Is, then, the King of the universe solicited by any libation
or sacrifice to grant to the races of men all the comforts of life? Does the
Deity not impart the sun's fertilizing warmth, and the season of night, the winds,
the rains, the fruits, to all alike,--the good and the bad, the unjust and the
just,(10) the free-born and the slave, the poor and the rich? For this belongs
to the true and mighty God, to show kindness, unasked, to that which is weary
and feeble, and always encompassed by misery, of many kinds. For to grant your
prayers on the offering of sacrifices, is not to bring help to those who ask
it, but to sell the riches of their beneficence. We men trifle, and are foolish
in so great a matter; anti, forgetting what(11) God is, and the majesty of His
name, associate with the tutelar deities whatever meanness or baseness our
morbid credulity can invent.
25. Unxia, my opponent says, presides over the anointing of door-posts;
Cinxia over the loosening of the zone; the most venerable Victa(12) and Potua
attend to eating and drinking. O rare and admirable interpretation of the divine
powers! would gods not have names(1) if brides did not besmear their husbands'
door-posts with greasy ointment; were it not that husbands, when now eagerly
drawing near, unbind the maiden-girdle; if men did not eat and drink? Moreover,
not satisfied to have subjected and involved the gods in cares so unseemly, you
also ascribe to them dispositions fierce, cruel, savage, ever rejoicing in the
ills and destruction of mankind.god-
26. We shall not here mention Laverna, goddess of thieves, the Bellonae,
Discordiae, Furiae thieves, the Bellonae, Discordiae Furiae; and we pass by in
utter silence the unpropitious deities whom you have set up. We shall bring
forward Mars himself, and the fair mother of the Desires; to one of whom you
commit wars, to the other love and passionate desire. My opponent says that Mars has
power over wars; whether to quell those which are raging, or to revive them
when interrupted, and kindle them in time of peace? For if he clams the madness
of war, why do wars rage every day? but if he is their author, we shall then say
that the god, to satisfy his own inclination, involves the whole world in
strife; sows the seeds of discord and variance between far-distant peoples; gathers
so many thousand men from different quarters, and speedily heaps up the field
with dead bodies; makes the streams flow with blood, sweeps away the most
firmly-founded empires, lays cities in the dust, robs the free of their liberty, and
makes them slaves; rejoices in civil strife, in the bloody death of brothers
who die in conflict, and, in fine, in the dire, murderous contest of children
with their fathers.
27. Now we may apply this very argument to Venus in exactly the same way.
For if, as you maintain and believe, she fills men's minds with lustful
thoughts, it must be held in consequence that any disgrace and misdeed arising from
such madness should be ascribed to the instigation of Venus. Is it, then, under
compulsion of the goddess that even the noble too often betray their own
reputation into the hands of worthless harlots; that the firm bonds of marriage are
broken; that near relations burn with incestuous lust; that mothers have their
passions madly kindled towards their children; that fathers turn to themselves
their daughters' desires; that old men, bringing shame upon their grey hairs,
sigh with the ardour of youth for the gratification of filthy desires; that wise
and brave(2) men, losing in effeminacy the strength of their manhood, disregard
the biddings of constancy; that the noose is twisted about their necks; that
blazing pyres are ascended;(3) and that in different places men, leaping
voluntarily, cast themselves headlong over very high and huge precipices?(4)
28. Can any man, who has accepted the first principles even of reason, be
found to mar or dishonour the unchanging nature of Deity with morals so vile?
to credit the gods with natures such as human kindness has often charmed away
and moderated in the beasts of the field? How,(5) I ask, can it be said that the
gods are far removed from any feeling of passion? that they are gentle, lovers
of peace, mild? that in the completeness of their excellence they reach(6) the
i height of perfection, and the highest wisdom also? or, why should we pray
them to avert from us misfortunes and calamities, if we find that they are
themselves the authors of all the ills by which we are daily harassed? Call us impious
as much as you please, contemners of religion, or atheists, you will never
make us believe in gods of love and war, that there are gods to sow strife, and to
disturb the mind by the stings of the furies. For either they are gods in very
truth, and do not do what you have related; or if(7) they do the things which
you say, they are doubtless no gods at all.
29. We might, however, even yet be able to receive from you these
thoughts, most full of wicked falsehoods, if it were not that you yourselves, in
bringing forward many things about the gods so inconsistent and mutually destructive,
compel us to withhold our minds from assenting. For when you strive
individually to excel each other in reputation for more recondite knowledge, you both
overthrow the very gods in whom you believe, and replace them by others who have
clearly no existence; and different men give different opinions on the same
subjects,(8) and you write that those whom general consent has ever received as
single persons are infinite in number. Let us, too, begin duty, then, with father
Janus, whom certain of you have declared to be the world, others the year, some
the sun. But if we are to believe that this is true, it follows as a
consequence, that it should be understood that there never was any Janus, who, they say,
being sprung from Coelus and Hecate, reigned first in Italy, founded the town
Janiculum, was the father of Forts,(9) the son-in-law of Vulturnus, the husband
of Juturna; and thus you erase the name of the god to whom in all prayers you
give the first place, and whom you believe to procure for you a hearing from
the gods. But, again, if Janus be the year, neither thus can he be a god. For who
does not know that the year is a fixed space(1) of time, and that there is
nothing divine in that which is formed(2) by the duration of months and lapse of
days? Now this very argument may, in like manner, be applied to Saturn. For if
time is meant under this title, as the expounders of Grecian ideas think, so
that that is regarded as Kronos,(3) which is chronos,(4) there is no such deity as
Saturn. For who is so senseless as to say that time is a god, when it is but a
certain space measured off(5) in the unending succession of eternity? And thus
will be removed from the rank of the immortals that deity too, whom the men of
old declared, and handed down to their posterity, to be born of father Coelus,
the progenitor of the dii magni, the planter of the vine, the bearer of the
pruning-knife.(6)
30. But what shall we say of Jove himself, whom the wise have repeatedly
asserted to be the sun, driving a winged chariot, followed by a crowd of
deities;(7) some, the ether, blazing with mighty flames, and wasting fire which cannot
be extinguished? Now if this is clear and certain, there is, then, according
to you, no Jupiter at all; who, born of Saturn his father and Ops his mother, is
reported to have been concealed in the Cretan territory, that he might escape
his father's rage. But now, does not a similar mode of thought remove Juno from
the list of gods? For if she is the air, as you have been wont to jest and
say, repeating in reversed order the syllables of the Greek name,(8) there will be
found no sister and spouse of almighty Jupiter, no Fluonia,(9) no Pomona, no
Ossipagina, no Februtis, Populonia, Cinxia, Caprotina; and thus the invention of
that name, spread abroad with a frequent but vain(10) belief, will be found to
be wholly(11) useless.
31. Aristotle, a man of most powerful intellect, and distinguished for
learning, as Granius tells, shows by plausible arguments that Minerva is the moon,
and proves it by the authority of learned men. Others have said that this very
goddess is the depth of ether, and utmost height; some have maintained that
she is memory, whence her name even, Minerva, has arisen, as if she were some
goddess of memory. But if this is credited, it follows that there is no daughter
of Mens, no daughter of Victory, no discoverer of the Olive, born from the head
of Jupiter, no goddess skilled in the knowledge of the arts, and in different
branches of learning. Neptune, they say, has received his name and title
because he covers the earth with water. If, then, by the use of this name is meant
the outspread water, there is no god Neptune at all; and thus is put away, and
removed from us, the full brother of Pluto and Jupiter, armed with the iron
trident, lord of the fish, great and small, king of the depths of the sea, and
shaker of the trembling earth.(12)
32. Mercury, also, has been named as though he were a kind of go-between;
and because conversation passes between two speakers, and is exchanged by them,
that which is expressed by this name has been produced.(13) If this, then, is
the case, Mercury is not the name of a god, but of speech and words exchanged
by two persons; and in this way is blotted out and annihilated the noted
Cyllenian bearer of the caduceus, born on the cold mountain top,(14) contriver of
words and names, the god who presides over markets, and over the exchange of goods
and commercial intercourse. Some of you have said that the earth is the Great
Mother,(15) because it provides all things living with food; others declare that
the same earth is Ceres, because it brings forth crops of useful fruits;(16)
while some maintain that it is Vesta, because it alone in the universe is at
rest, its other members being, by their constitution, ever in motion. Now if this
is propounded and maintained on sure grounds, in like manner, on your
interpretation, three deities have no existence: neither Ceres nor Vesta are to be
reckoned in the number(17) of the gods; nor, in fine, can the mother of the gods
herself, whom Nigidius thinks to have been married to Saturn, be rightly declared
a goddess, if indeed these are all names of the one earth, and it alone is
signified by these titles.
33. We here leave Vulcan unnoticed, to avoid prolixity; whom you all
declare to be fire, with one consenting voice. We pass by Venus, named because lust
assails all, and Proserpina, named because plants steal gradually forth into
the light,--where, again, you do away with three deities; if indeed the first is
the name of an element, and does not signify a living power; the second, of a
desire common to all living creatures; while the third refers to seeds rising
above ground, and the upward movements(18) of growing crops. What! when you
maintain that Bacchus, Apollo, the Sun, are one deity, increased in number by the
use of three names, is not the number of the gods lessened, and their vaunted
reputation overthrown, by your opinions? For if it is true that the sun is also
Bacchus and Apollo, there can consequently be in the universe no Apollo or
Bacchus; and thus, by yourselves, the son of Semele and the Pythian god are blotted
out and set aside,--one the giver of drunken merriment, the other the destroyer
of Sminthian mice.
34. Some of your learned men(1)--men, too, who do not chatter merely
because their humour leads them--maintain that Diana, Ceres, Luna, are but one deity
in triple union;(2) and that there are not three distinct persons, as there
are three different names; that in all these Luna is invoked, and that the others
are a series of surnames added to her name. But if this is sure, if this is
certain, and the facts of the case show it to be so, again is Ceres but an empty
name, and Diana: and thus the discussion is brought to this issue, that you
lead and advise us to believe that she whom you maintain to be the discoverer of
the earth's fruits has no existence, and Apollo is robbed of his sister, whom
once the horned hunter(3) gazed upon as she washed her limbs from impurity in a
pool, and paid the penalty of his curiosity.
35. Men worthy to be remembered in the study of philosophy, who have been
raised by your praises to its highest place, declare, with commendable
earnestness, as their conclusion, that the whole mass of the world, by whose folds we
all are encompassed, covered, and upheld, is one animal(4) possessed of wisdom
and reason; yet if this is a true, sure, and certain opinion,(5) they also will
forthwith cease to be gods whom you set up a little ago in its parts without
change of name.(6) For as one man cannot, while his body remains entire, be
divided into many men; nor can many men, while they continue to be distinct and
separate from each other,(7) be fused into one sentient individual: so, if the
world is a single animal, and moves from the impulse of one mind, neither can it be
dispersed in several deities; nor, if the gods are parts of it, can they be
brought together and changed into one living creature, with unity of feeling
throughout all its parts. The moon, the sun, the earth, the ether, the stars, are
members and parts of the world; but if they are parts and members, they are
certainly not themselves(8) living creatures; for in no thing can parts be the very
thing which the whole is, or think and feel for themselves, for this cannot be
effected by their own actions, without the whole creature's joining in; and
this being established and settled, the whole matter comes back to this, that
neither Sol, nor Luna, nor AEther, Tellus, and the rest, are gods. For they are
parts of the world, not the proper names of deities; and thus it is brought about
that, by your disturbing and confusing all divine things, the world is set up
as the sole god in the universe, while all the rest are cast aside, and that as
having been set up vainly, uselessly, and without any reality.
36. If we sought to subvert the belief in your gods in so many ways, by so
many arguments, no one would doubt that, mad with rage and fury, you would
demand for us the stake, the beasts, and swords, with the other kinds of torture
by which you usually appease your thirst in its intense craving for our blood.
But while you yourselves put away almost the whole race of deities with a
pretence of cleverness and wisdom, you do not hesitate to assert that, because of
us, men suffer ill at the hands of the gods;(9) although, indeed, if it is true
that they anywhere exist, and burn with anger and(10) rage, there can be no
better reason for their showing anger against you,(11) than that you deny their
existence, anti say that they are not found in any part of the universe.
37. We are told by Mnaseas that the Muses are the daughters of Tellus and
Coelus; others declare that they are Jove's by his wife Memory, or Mens; some
relate that they were virgins, others that they were matrons. For now we wish to
touch briefly on the points where you are shown, from the difference of your
opinions, to make different statements about the same thing. Ephorus, then, says
that they are three(12) in number; Mnaseas, whom we mentioned, that they are
four;(13) Myrtilus(14) brings forward seven; Crates asserts that there are
eight; finally Hesiod, enriching heaven and the stars with gods, comes forward with
nine names.(15)
If we are not mistaken, such want of agreement marks those who are wholly
ignorant of the truth, and does not spring from the real state of the case. For
if their number were clearly known, the voice of all would be the same, and
the agreement of all would tend to and find issue in the same conclusion.(1)
38. How, then, can you give to religion its whole power, when you fill
into error about the gods themselves? or summon us to their solemn worship, while
you give us no definite information how to conceive of the deities themselves?
For, to take no notice of the other(2) authors, either the first(3) makes away
with and destroys six divine Muses, if they are certainly nine; or the last(4)
adds six who have no existence to the three who alone really are; so that it
cannot be known or understood what should be added, what taken away; and in the
performance of religious rites we are in danger(5) of either worshipping that
which does not exist, or passing that by which, it may be, does exist. Piso
believes that the Novensiles are nine gods, set up among the Sabines at Trebia.(6)
Granius thinks that they are the Muses, agreeing with AElius; Varro teaches that
they are nine,(7) because, in doing anything, that number is always reputed
most powerful and greatest; Cornificius,(8) that they watch over the renewing of
things,(9) because, by their care, all things are afresh renewed in strength,
and endure; Manilius, that they are the nine gods to whom alone Jupiter gave
power to wield his thunder.(10) Cincius declares them to be deities brought from
abroad, named from their very newness, because the Romans were in the habit of
sometimes individually introducing into their families the rites(11) of
conquered cities, while some they publicly consecrated; and lest, from their great
number, or in ignorance, any god should be passed by, all alike were briefly and
compendiously invoked under one name--Novensiles.
39. There are some, besides, who assert that those who from being men
became gods, are denoted by this name,--as Hercules, Romulus, AEculapius, Liber,
AEneas. These are all, as is clear, different opinions; and it cannot be, in the
nature of things, that those who differ in opinion can be regarded as teachers
of one truth. For if Piso's opinion is true, AElius and Granius say what is
false; if what they say is certain, Varro, with all his skill,(12) is mistaken,
who substitutes things most frivolous and vain for those which really exist. If
they are named Novensiles because their number is nine,(13) Cornificius is shown
to stumble, who, giving them might and power not their own, makes them the
divine overseers of renovation.(14) But if Cornificius is right in his belief,
Cincius is found to be not wise, who connects with the power of the dii Novensiles
the gods of conquered cities. But if they are those whom Cincius asserts them
to be, Manilius will be found to speak falsely, who comprehends those who wield
another's thunder under this name.(15) But if that which Manilius holds is
true and certain, they are utterly mistaken who suppose that those raised to
divine honours, and deified mortals, are thus named because of the novelty of
their rank. But if the Novensiles are those who have deserved to be raised to the
stars after passing through the life of men,(16) there are no dii Novensiles at
all. For as slaves, soldiers, masters, are not names of persons comprehended
under them,(17) but of officers, ranks, and duties, so, when we say that
Novensiles is the name(18) of gods who by their virtues have become(19) gods from being
men, it is clear and evident that no individual persons are marked out
particularly, but that newness itself is named by the title Novensiles.
40. Nigidius taught that the dii Penates were Neptune and Apollo, who
once, on fixed terms, girt Ilium(20) with walls. He himself again, in his sixteenth
book, following Etruscan teaching, shows that there are four kinds of Penates;
and that one of these pertains to Jupiter, another to Neptune, the third to
the shades below, the fourth to mortal men, making some unintelligible
assertion. Caesius himself, also, following this teaching, thinks that they are Fortune,
and Ceres, the genius Jovialis,(21) and Pales, but not the female deity
commonly received,(22) but some male attendant and steward of Jupiter. Varro thinks
that they are the gods of whom we speak who are within, and in the inmost
recesses of heaven, and that neither their number nor names are known. The Etruscans
say that these are the Consentes and Complices,(23) and name them because they
rise and fall together, six of them being male, and as many female, with
unknown names and pitiless dispositions,(1) but they are considered the counsellors
and princes of Jove supreme. There were some, too, who said that Jupiter, Juno,
and Minerva were the dii Penates, without whom we cannot live and be wise, and
by whom we are ruled within in reason, passion, and thought. As you see, even
here, too, nothing is said harmoniously, nothing is settled with the consent of
all, nor is there anything reliable on which the mind can take its stand,
drawing by conjecture very near to the truth. For their opinions are so doubtful,
and one supposition so discredited(2) by another, that there is either no truth
in them all, or if it is uttered by any, it is not recognised amid so many
different statements.
41. We can, if it is thought proper, speak briefly of the Lares also, whom
the mass think to be the gods of streets and ways, because the Greeks name
streets lauroe. In different parts of his writings, Nigidius speaks of them now as
the guardians of houses and dwellings; now as the Curetes, who are said to
have once concealed, by the clashing of cymbals,(3) the infantile cries of
Jupiter; now the five Digiti Samothracii, who, the Greeks tell us, were named Idoei
Dactyli. Varro, with like hesitation, says at one time that they are the
Manes,(4) and therefore the mother of the Lares was named Mania; at another time,
again, he maintains that they are gods of the air, and are termed heroes; at
another, following the opinion of the ancients, he says that the Lares are ghosts, as
it were a kind of tutelary demon, spirits of dead(5) men.
42. It is a vast and endless task to examine each kind separately, and
make it evident even from your religious books that you neither hold nor believe
that there is any god concerning whom you have not(6) brought forward doubtful
and inconsistent statements, expressing a thousand different beliefs. But, to be
brief, and avoid prolixity,(7) it is enough to have said what has been said;
it is, further, too troublesome to gather together many things into one mass,
since it is made manifest and evident in different ways that you waver, and say
nothing with certainty of these things which you assert. But you will perhaps
say, Even if we have no personal knowledge of the Lares, Novensiles, Penates,
still the very agreement of our authors proves their existence, and that such a
race(8) takes rank among the celestial gods. And how can it be known whether
there is any god, if what he is shall be wholly unknown?(9) or how can it avail
even to ask for benefits, if it is not settled and determined who should be
invoked at each inquiry?(10) For every one who seeks to obtain an answer from any
deity, should of necessity know to whom he makes supplication, on whom he calls,
from whom he asks help for the affairs and occasions of human life; especially
as you yourselves declare that all the gods do not have all power, and(11) that
the wrath and anger of each are appeased by different rites.
43. For if this deity(12) requires a black, that(13) a white skin; if
sacrifice must be made to this one with veiled, to that with uncovered head;(14)
this one is consulted about marriages,(15) the other relieves distresses,--may it
not be of some importance whether the one or the other is Novensills, since
ignorance of the facts and confusion of persons displeases the gods, and leads
necessarily to the contraction of guilt? For suppose that I myself, to avoid some
inconvenience and peril, make supplication to any one of these deities,
saying, Be present, be near, divine Penates, thou Apollo, and thou, O Neptune, and in
your divine clemency turn away all these evils, by which I am annoyed,(16)
troubled, and tormented: will there be any hope that I shall receive help from
them, if Ceres, Pales, Fortune, or the genius Jovialis,(17) not Neptune and
Apollo, shall be the dii Penates? Or if I invoked the Curetes instead of the Lares,
whom some of your writers maintain to he the Digiti Samothracii, how shall I
enjoy their help and favour, when I have not given them their own names, and have
given to the others names not their own? Thus does our interest demand that we
should rightly know the gods, and not hesitate or doubt about the power, the
name of each; lest,(1) if they be invoked with rites and titles not their own,
they have at once their ears stopped against our prayers, and hold us involved in
guilt which may not be forgiven.
44. Wherefore, if you are assured that in the lofty palaces of heaven
there dwells, there is, that multitude of deities whom you specify, you should make
your stand on one proposition,(2) and not, divided by different and
inconsistent opinions, destroy belief in the very things which you seek to establish. If
there is a Janus, let Janus be; if a Bacchus, let Bacchus be; if a Summanus,(3)
let Summanus be: for this is to confide, this to hold, to be settled in the
knowledge of something ascertained, not to say after the manner of the blind and
erring, The Novensiles are the Muses, in truth they are the Trebian gods, nay,
their number is nine, or rather, they are the protectors of cities which have
been overthrown; and bring so important matters into this danger, that while you
remove some, and put others in their place, it may well be doubted of them all
if they anywhere exist.