THE DIVINE INSTITUTES. REST OF BOOK II
CHAP. X.--OF THE WORLD, AND ITS PARTS, THE ELEMENTS AND SEASONS.
Now, having refitted those who entertain false sentiments respecting the
world and God its Maker, let us return to the divine workmanship of the world,
concerning which we are informed in the sacred' writings of our holy religion.
Therefore, first of all, God made the heaven, and suspended it on high, that it
might be the seat of God Himself, the Creator. Then He founded the earth, and
placed it under the heaven, as a dwelling-place for man, with the other races of
animals. He willed that it should be surrounded and held together by water.
But He adorned and filled His own dwelling-place with bright lights; He decked it
with the sun, and the shining orb of the moon, and with the glittering signs
of the twinkling stars; but He placed on the earth the darkness, which is
contrary to these. For of itself the earth contains no light, unless it receives it
from the heaven, in which He placed perpetual light, and the gods above, and
eternal life; and, on the contrary, He placed on the earth darkness, and the
inhabitants of the lower regions, and death. For these things are as far removed
from the former ones, as evil things are from good, and vices from virtues. He
also established two parts of the earth itself opposite to one another, and of a
different character,--namely, the east and the west; and of these the east is
assigned to God, because He Himself is the fountain of light, and the
enlightener, of all things, and because He makes us rise to eternal life. But the west is
ascribed to that disturbed and depraved mind, because it conceals the light,
because it always brings on darkness, and because it makes men die and perish in
their sins. For as light belongs to the east, and the whole course of life
depends upon the light, so darkness belongs to the west: but death and destruction
are contained in darkness.(3) Then He measured out in the same way the other
parts,--namely, the south and the north, which parts are closely united with the
two former. For that which is more glowing with the warmth of the sun, is
nearest to and closely united with the east; but that which is torpid with colds and
perpetual ice belongs to the same division as the extreme west. For as
darkness is opposed to light, so is cold to heat. As, therefore, heat is nearest to
light, so is the south to the east; and as cold is nearest to darkness, so is the
northern region to the west. And He assigned to each of these parts its own
time,--namely, the spring to the east, the summer to the southern region, the
autumn belongs to the west, and the winter to the north. In these two parts also,
the southern and the northern, is contained a figure of life and death, because
life consists in heat, death in cold. And as heat arises from fire, so does
cold from water. And according to the division of these parts He also made day
and night, to complete by alternate succession with each other the courses(4) and
perpetual revolutions of time, which we call years. The day, which the first
east supplies, must belong to God, as all things do, which are of a better
character. But the night, which the extreme west brings on, belongs, indeed, to him
whom we have said to be the rival of God.
And even in the making of these God had regard to the future; for He made
them so, that a representation of true religion and of false superstitions
might be shown from these. For as the sun, which rises daily, although it is but
one,--from which Cicero would have it appear that it was called Sol,(5) because
the stars are obscured, and it alone is seen,--yet, since it is a true light,
and of perfect fulness, and of most powerful heat, and enlightens all things with
the brightest splendour; so God, although He is one only, is possessed of
perfect majesty, and might, and splendour. But night, which we say is assigned to
that depraved adversary of God,(6) shows by a resemblance the many and various
superstitions which belong to him. For although innumerable stars appear to
glitter and shine,(7) yet, because they are not full and solid lights, and send
forth no heat, nor overpower the darkness by their multitude, therefore these two
things are found to be of chief importance, which have power differing from and
opposed to one another--heat and moisture, which God wonderfully designed for
the support and production of all things. For since the power of God consists
in heat and fire, if He had not tempered its ardour and force by mingling matter
of moisture and cold, nothing could have been born or have existed, but
whatever had begun to exist must immediately have been destroyed by conflagration.
From which also some philosophers and poets said that the world was made up of a
discordant concord; but they did not thoroughly understand the matter.
Heraclitus said that all things were produced from fire Thales of Miletus from water.
Each saw something of the truth, and yet each was in error: for if one element
only had existed, water could not have been produced from fire, nor, on the
other hand, could fire from water; but it is more true that all things were
produced from a mingling of the two. Fire, indeed, cannot be mixed with water, because
they are opposed to each other; and if they came into collision, the one which
proved superior must destroy the other. But their substances may be mingled.
The substance of fire is heat; of water, moisture. Rightly therefore does Ovid
say:(1)--
"For when moisture and heat have become mingled, they conceive, and all
things arise from these two. And though fire is at variance with water, moist
vapour produces all things, and discordant concord(2) is adapted to production."
For the one element is, as it were, masculine; the other, as it were,
feminine: the one active, the other passive. And on this account it was appointed by
the ancients that marriage contracts should be ratified by the solemnity(3) of
fire and water, because the young of animals are furnished with a body by heat
and moisture, and are thus animated to life.
For, since every animal consists of soul(4) and body, the material of the
body is contained in moisture, that of the soul in heat: which we may know from
the offspring of birds; for though these are full of thick moisture, unless
they are cherished by creative(5) heat, the moisture cannot become a body, nor
can the body be animated with life. Exiles also were accustomed to be forbidden
the use of fire and water: for as yet it seemed unlawful to inflict capital
punishment on any, however guilty, inasmuch as they were men. When, therefore, the
use of those things in which the life of men consists was forbidden, it was
deemed to be equivalent to the actual infliction of death on him who had been thus
sentenced. Of such importance were these two elements considered, that they
believed them to be essential for the production of man, and for the sustaining
of his life. One of these is common to us with the other animals, the other has
been assigned to man alone. For we, being a heavenly and immortal race,(6) make
use of fire, which is given to us as a proof of immortality, since fire is
from heaven; and its nature, inasmuch as it is moveable and rises upward, contains
the principle of life. But the other animals, inasmuch as they are altogether
mortal, make use of water only, which is a corporeal and earthly element. And
the nature of this, because it is moveable, and has a downward inclination,
shows a figure of death. Therefore the cattle do not look up to heaven, nor do they
entertain religious sentiments, since the use of fire is removed from them.
But from what source or in what manner God lighted up or caused(7) to flow these
two principal elements, fire and water, He who made them alone can know.(8)
CHAP. XI.--OF LIVING CREATURES, OF MAN; PROMETHEUS, DEUCALION, THE PARCAE.
Therefore, having finished the world, He commanded that animals of various
kinds and of dissimilar forms should be created, both great and smaller. And
they were made in pairs, that is, one of each sex; from the offspring of which
both the air and the earth and the seas were filled. And God gave nourishment to
all these by their kinds(9) from the earth, that they might be of service to
men: some, for instance, were for food, others for clothing; but those which are
of great strength He gave, that they might assist in cultivating the earth,
whence they were called beasts of burthen.(10) And thus, when all things had been
settled with a wonderful arrangement, He determined to prepare for Himself an
eternal kingdom, and to create innumerable souls, on whom He might bestow
immortality. Then He made for Himself a figure endowed with perception and
intelligence, that is, after the likeness of His own image, than which nothing can be
more perfect: He formed man out of the dust of the ground, from which he was
called man,(11) because He was made from the earth. Finally, Plato says that the
human form(12) was godlike; as does the Sibyl, who says,--
"Thou art my image, O man, possessed of right reason."(13)
The poets also have not given a different account respecting this formation of
man, however they may have corrupted it; for they said that man was made by
Prometheus from clay. They were not mistaken in the matter itself, but in the
name of the artificer. For they had never come into contact with a line of the
truth; but the things which were handed down by the oracles of the prophets, and
contained in the sacred book(14) of God; those things collected from fables and
obscure opinion, and distorted, as the truth is wont to be corrupted by the
multitude when spread abroad by various conversations, every one adding something
to that which he had heard,--those things they comprised in their poems; and
in this, indeed, they acted foolishly, in that they attributed so wonderful and
divine a work to man. For what need was there that man should be formed of
clay, when he might he generated in the same way in which Prometheus himself was
born from Iapetus? For if he was a man, he was able to beget a man, but not to
make one. But his punishment on Mount Caucasus declares that he was not of the
gods. But no one reckoned his father Iapetus or his uncle(1) Titan as gods,
because the high dignity of the kingdom was in possession of Saturn only, by which
he obtained divine honours, together with all his descendants. This invention of
the poets admits of refutation by many arguments. It is agreed by all that the
deluge took place for the destruction of wickedness, and for its removal from
the earth. Now, both philosophers and poets, and writers of ancient history,
assert the same, and in this they especially agree with the language of the
prophets. If, therefore, the flood took place for the purpose of destroying
wickedness, which had increased through the excessive multitude of men, how was
Prometheus the maker of man, when his son Deucalion is said by the same writers to
have been the only one who was preserved on account of his righteousness? How
could a single descent(2) and a single generation have so quickly filled the world
with men? But it is plain that they have corrupted this also, as they did the
former account; since they were ignorant both at what time the flood happened on
the earth, and who it was that deserved on account of his righteousness to be
saved when the human race perished, and how and with whom he was saved: all of
which are taught by the inspired(3) writings. It is plain, therefore, that the
account which they give respecting the work of Prometheus is false.
But because I had said(4) that the poets are not accustomed to speak that
which is altogether untrue, but to wrap up in figures and thus to obscure their
accounts, I do not say that; they spoke falsely in this, but that first of all
Prometheus made the image of a man of rich and soft clay, and that he first
originated the art of making statues and images; inasmuch as he lived in the
times of Jupiter, during which temples began to be built, and new modes of
worshipping the gods introduced. And thus the truth was corrupted by falsehood; and
that which was said to have been made by God began also to be ascribed to man, who
imitated the divine work. But the making of the true and living man from clay
is the work of God. And this also is related by Hermes,(5) who not only says
that man was made by God, after the image of God, but he even tried to explain in
how skilful a manner He formed each limb in the human body, since there is
none of them which is not as available for the necessity of use as for beauty. But
even the Stoics, when they discuss the subject of providence, attempt to do
this; and Tully followed them in many places. But, however, he briefly treats of
a subject so copious and fruitful, which I now pass over on this account,
because I have lately written a particular book on this subject to my disciple
Demetrianus. But I cannot here omit that which some erring philosophers say, that
men and the other animals arose from the earth without any author; whence that
expression of Virgil:(6)--
"And the earth-born(7) race of men raised its head from the hard fields."
And this opinion is especially entertained by those who deny the existence of
a divine providence. For the Stoics attribute the formation of animals to
divine skill. But Aristotle freed himself from labour and trouble, by saying that
the world always existed, and therefore that the human race, and the other things
which are in it, had no beginning, but always had been, and always would be.
But when we see that each animal separately, which had no previous existence,
begins to exist, and ceases to exist, it is necessary that the whole race must at
some time have begun to exist, and must cease at some time because it had a
beginning.
For all things must necessarily be comprised in three periods of time--the
past, the present, and the future. The commencement(8) belongs to the past,
existence to the present, dissolution to the future. And all these things are
seen in the case of men individually: for we begin when we are born; and we exist
while we live; and we cease when we die. On which account they would have it
that there are three Parcae:(9) one who warps the web of life for men; the
second, who weaves it; the third, who cuts and finishes it. But in the whole race of
men, because the present time only is seen, yet from it the past also, that is,
the commencement, and the future, that is, the dissolution, are inferred. For
since it exists, it is evident that at some time it began to exist, for nothing
can exist without a beginning; and because it had a beginning, it is evident
that it will at some time have an end. For that cannot, as a whole, be immortal,
which consists of mortals. For as we all die individually, it is possible
that, by some calamity, all may perish simultaneously: either through the
unproductiveness of the earth, which sometimes happens in particular cases; or through
the general spread of pestilence, which often desolates separate cities and
countries; or by the conflagration of the world, as is said to have happened in the
case of Phaethon; or by a deluge, as is reported in the time of Deucalion,
when the whole race was destroyed with the exception of one man. And if this
deluge happened by chance, it might assuredly have happened that he who was the
only survivor should perish. But if he was reserved by the will of divine
providence, as it cannot be denied, to recruit mankind, it is evident that the life
and the destruction of the human race are in the power of God. And if it is
possible for it to die altogether, because it dies in parts, it is evident that it
had an origin at some time; and as the liability to decay(1) bespeaks a
beginning, so also it gives proof of an end. And if these things are true, Aristotle
will be unable to maintain that the world also itself had no beginning. But if
Plato and Epicurus extort this from Aristotle, yet Plato and Aristotle, who
thought that the world would be everlasting, will, notwithstanding their
eloquence, be deprived of this also by Epicurus, because it follows, that, as it had a
beginning, it must also have an end. But we will speak of these things at
greater length in the last book. Now let us revert to the origin of man.
CHAP. XII.--THAT ANIMALS WERE NOT PRODUCED SPONTANEOUSLY, BUT BY A DIVINE
ARRANGEMENT, OF WHICH GOD WOULD HAVE GIVEN US THE KNOWLEDGE, IF IT WERE
ADVANTAGEOUS FOR US TO KNOW IT.
They say that at certain changes of the heaven, and motions of the stars,
there existed a kind of maturity(2) for the production of animals; and thus
that the new earth, retaining the productive seed, brought forth of itself certain
vessels(3) after the likeness of wombs, respecting which Lucretius(4) says,--
"Wombs grew attached to the earth by roots;"
and that these, when they had become mature, being rent by the compulsion of
nature, produced tender animals; afterwards, that the earth itself abounded with
a kind of moisture which resembled milk, and that animals were supported by
this nourishment. How, then, were they able to endure or avoid the force of the
cold or of heat, or to be born at all, since the sun would scorch them or the
cold contract them? But, they say, at the beginning of the world there was no
winter nor summer, but a perpetual spring of an equable temperature.(5) Why, then,
do we see that none of these things now happens? Because, they say, it was
necessary that it should once happen, that animals might be born; but after they
began to exist, and the power of generation was given to them, the earth ceased
to bring forth, and the condition of time(6) was changed. Oh, how easy it is to
refute falsehoods! In the first place, nothing can exist in this world which
does not continue permanent, as it began. For neither were the sire and moon and
stars then uncreated; nor. having been created, were they without their
motions; nor did that divine government, which manages and rules their courses, fail
to begin its exercise together with them. In the next place, if it is as they
say, there must of necessity be a providence, and they fall into that very
condition which they especially avoid. For while the animals were yet unborn, it is
plain that some one provided that they should be born, that the world might not
appear gloomy(7) with waste and desolation. But, that they might be produced
from the earth without the office of parents, provision must have been made with
great judgment; and in the next place, that the moisture condensed from the
earth might be formed into the various figures of bodies; and also that, having
received from the vessels with which they were covered the power of life and
sensation, they might be poured forth, as it were, from the womb of mothers, is a
wonderful and indescribable(8) provision. But let us suppose that this also
happened by chance; the circumstances which follow assuredly cannot be by
chance,--that the earth should at once flow with milk, and that the temperature of the
atmosphere should be equable. And if these things plainly happened, that the
newly born animals might have nourishment, or be free from danger, it must be
that some one provided these things by some divine counsel.
But who is able to make this provision except God? Let us, however, see
whether the circumstance itself which they assert could have taken place, that
men should be born from the earth. If any one considers during how long a time
and in what manner an infant is reared, he will assuredly understand that those
earth-born children could not possibly have been reared without some one to
bring them up. For they must have lain for many months cast forth, until their
sinews were strengthened, so that they had power to move themselves and to change
their place, which can scarcely happen within the space of one year. Now see
whether an infant could have lain through many months in the same manner and in
the same place where it was cast forth, without dying, overwhelmed and
corrupted by that moisture of the earth which it supplied for the sake of nourishment,
and by the excrements of its own body mixed together. Therefore it is
impossible but that it was reared by some one; unless, indeed, all animals are born not
in a tender condition, but grown up: and it never came into their mind to say
this. Therefore the whole of that method is impossible and vain; if that can be
called method by which it is attempted that there shall be no method. For he
who says that all things are produced of their own accord, and attributes nothing
to divine providence, he assuredly does not assert, but overthrows method. But
if nothing can be done or produced without design, it is plain that there is a
divine providence, to which that which is called design peculiarly belongs.
Therefore God, the Contriver of all things, made man. And even Cicero, though
ignorant of the sacred writings, saw this, who in his treatise on the Laws, in the
first book,(1) handed down the same thing as the prophets; and I add his
words: "This animal, foreseeing, sagacious, various, acute, gifted with memory, full
of method and design, which we call man, was produced by the supreme Deity
under remarkable circumstances; for this alone of so many kinds and natures of
animals, partakes of judgment and reflection, when all other animals are destitute
of them." Do you see that the man, although far removed from the knowledge of
the truth, yet, inasmuch as he held the image of wisdom, understood that man
could not be produced except by God? But, however, there is need of divine(2)
testimony, lest that of man should be insufficient. The Sibyl testifies that man
is the work of God:--
"He who is the only God being the invincible Creator, He Himself fixed(3)
the figure of the form of men, He Himself mixed the nature of all belonging to
the generation of life."
The sacred writings contain statements to the same effect. Therefore God
discharged the office of a true father. He Himself formed the body; He Himself
infused the soul with which we breathe. Whatever we are, it is altogether His work.
In what manner He effected this He would have taught us, if it were right for
us to know; as He taught us other things, which have conveyed to us the
knowledge both of ancient error and of true light.
CHAP. XIII.--WHY MAN IS OF TWO SEXES; WHAT IS HIS FIRST DEATH, AND WHAT THE
SECOND AND OF THE FAULT AND PUNISHMENT OF OUR FIRST PARENTS.
When, therefore, He had first formed the male after His own likeness, then
He also fashioned woman after the image of the man himself, that the two by
their union might be able to perpetuate their race, and to fill the whole earth
with a multitude. But in the making of man himself He concluded and completed
the nature of those two materials which we have spoken of as contrary to each
other, fire and water. For having made the body, He breathed into it a soul from
the vital source of His own Spirit, which is everlasting, that it might bear
the similitude of the world itself, which is composed of opposing elements. For
he(4) consists of soul and body, that is, as it were, of heaven and earth: since
the soul by which we live, has its origin, as it were, out of heaven from God,
the body out of the earth, of the dust of which we have said that it was
formed. Empedocles--whom you cannot tell whether to reckon among poets or
philosophers, for he wrote in verse respecting the nature of things, as did Lucretius and
Varro among the Romans--determined that there were four elements, that is,
fire, air, water, and earth; perhaps following Trismegistus, who said that our
bodies were composed of these four elements by God, for he said that they
contained in themselves something of fire, something of air, something of water, and
something of earth, and yet that they were neither fire, nor air, nor water, nor
earth. And these things indeed are not false; for the nature of earth is
contained in the flesh, that of moisture in the blood, that of air in the breath,
that of fire in the vital heat. But neither can the blood be separated from the
body, as moisture is from the earth; nor the vital heat from the breath, as fire
from the air: so that of all things only two elements are found, the whole
nature of which is included in the formation of our body. Man, therefore, was
made from different and opposite substances, as the world itself was made from
light and darkness, from life and death; and he has admonished us that these two
things contend against each other in man: so that if the soul, which has its
origin from God, gains the mastery, it is immortal, and lives in perpetual light;
if, on the other hand, the body shall overpower the soul, and subject it to
its dominion, it is in everlasting darkness and death.(5) And the force of this
is not that it altogether annihilates(6) the souls of the unrighteous, but
subjects them to everlasting punishment.(7)
We term that punishment the second death, which is itself also perpetual,
as also is immortality. We thus define the first death: Death is the
dissolution of the nature of living beings; or thus: Death is the separation of body and
soul. But we thus define the second death: Death is the suffering of eternal
pain; or thus: Death is the condemnation of souls for their deserts to eternal
punishments. This does not extend to the dumb cattle, whose spirits, not being
composed of God,(1) but of the common air, are dissolved by death. Therefore in
this union of heaven and earth, the image of which is developed(2) in man,
those things which belong to God occupy the higher part, namely the soul, which
has dominion over the body; but those which belong to the devil occupy the
lower(3) part, manifestly the body: for this, being earthly, ought to be subject to
the soul, as the earth is to heaven. For it is, as it were, a vessel which this
heavenly spirit may employ as a temporary dwelling. The duties of both are--for
the latter, which is from heaven and from God, to command; but for the former,
which is from the earth and the devil, to obey. And this, indeed, did not
escape the notice of a dissolute man, Sallust,(4) who says: "But all our power
consists in the soul and body; we use the soul to command, the body rather to
obey." It had been well if he had lived in accordance with his words; for he was a
slave to the most degrading pleasures, and he destroyed the efficacy of his
sentiment by the depravity of his life. But if the soul is fire, as we have shown,
it ought to mount up to heaven as fire, that it may not be extinguished; that
is, it ought to rise to the immortality which is in heaven. And as fire cannot
burn and be kept alive unless it be nourished(5) by some rich fuel(6) in which
it may have sustenance, so the fuel and food of the soul is righteousness alone,
by which it is nourished unto life. After these things, God, having made man
in the manner in which I have pointed out, placed him in paradise,(7) that is,
in a most fruitful and pleasant garden, which He planted in the regions of the
East with every kind of wood and tree, that he might be nourished by their
various fruits; and being free from all labours.(8) might devote himself entirely to
the service of God his Father.
Then He gave to him fixed commands, by the observance of which he might
continue immortal; or if he transgressed them, be punished with death. It was
enjoined that he should not taste of one tree only which was in the midst of the
garden,(9) in which He had placed the knowledge of good and evil. Then the
accuser, envying the works of God, applied all his deceits and artifices to
beguile(10) the man, that he might deprive him of immortality. And first he enticed the
woman by fraud to take the forbidden fruit, and through her instrumentality he
also persuaded the man himself to transgress the law of God. Therefore, having
obtained the knowledge of good and evil, he began to be ashamed of his
nakedness, and hid himself from the face of God, which he was not before accustomed to
do. Then God drove out the man from the garden, having passed sentence upon
the sinner, that he might seek support for himself by labour. And He
surrounded(11) the garden itself with fire, to prevent the approach of the man until He
execute the last judgment on earth; and having removed death, recall righteous
men, His worshippers, to the same place; as the sacred writers teach. and the
Erythraean Sibyl, when she says: "But they who honour the true God inherit
everlasting life, themselves inhabiting together paradise, the beautiful garden, for
ever." But since these are the last things,(12) we will treat of them in the
last part of this work. Now let us explain those which are first. Death
therefore followed man, according to the sentence of God, which even the Sibyl teaches
in her verse, saying:"Man made by the very hands of God, whom the serpent
treacherously beguiled that he might come to the fate of death, and receive the
knowledge of good and evil." Thus the life of man became limited in
duration;(13) but still, however, long, inasmuch as it was extended to a thousand(14)
years. And when Varro was not ignorant of this, handed down as it is in the sacred
writings, and spread abroad by the knowledge of all, he endeavoured to give
reasons why the ancients were supposed to have lived a thousand years. For he says
that among the Egyptians months are accounted(15) as years: so that the circuit
of the sun through the twelve signs of the zodiac does not make a year, but
the moon, which traverses that sign-bearing circle in the space of thirty days;
which argument is manifestly false. For no one then exceeded the thousandth
year. But now they who attain to the hundredth year, which frequently happens,
undoubtedly live a thousand and two hundred months. And competent(1) authorities
report that men are accustomed to reach one hundred and twenty years.(2) But
because Varro did not know why or when the life of man was shortened, he himself
shortened it, since he knew that it was possible for man to live a thousand and
four hundred months.
CHAP. XIV.--OF NOAH THE INVENTOR OF WINE, WHO FIRST HAD KNOWLEDGE OF THE
STARS, AND OF THE ORIGIN OF FALSE RELIGIONS.
But afterwards God, when He saw the earth filled with wickedness and
crimes, determined to destroy mankind with a deluge; but, however, for renewing the
multitude, He chose one man, who,(3) when all were corrupted, stood forth
pre-eminent, as a remarkable example of righteousness. He, when six hundred years
old, built an ark, as God had commanded him, in which he himself was saved,
together with his wife and three sons, and as many daughters-in-law, when the water
had covered all the loftiest mountains. Then when the earth was dry, God,
execrating the wickedness of the former age, that the length of life might not again
be a cause of meditating evils, gradually diminished the age of man by each
successive generation, and placed a limit at a hundred and twenty years,(4) which
it might not be permitted to exceed. But he, when he went forth from the ark,
as the sacred writings inform us, diligently cultivated the earth, and planted
a vineyard with his own hand. From which circumstance they are refuted who
regard Bacchus as the author of wine. For he not only preceded Bacchus, but also
Saturn and Uranus, by many generations. And when he had first taken the fruit
from the vineyard, having become merry, he drank even to intoxication, and lay
naked. And when one of his sons, whose name was Cham,(5) had seen this, he did not
cover his father's nakedness, but went out and told the circumstance to his
brothers also. But they, having taken a garment, entered with their faces turned
backwards, and covered their father.(6) And when their father became aware of
what had been done he disowned and sent away his son. But he went into exile,
and settled in a part of that land which is now called Arabia; and that land was
called from him Chanaan, and his posterity Chanaanites. This was the first
nation which was ignorant of God, since its prince and founder did not receive from
his father the worship of God, being cursed by him;(7) and thus he left to his
descendants ignorance of the divine nature.(8)
From this nation all the nearest people flowed as the multitude increased.
But the descendants of his father were called Hebrews, among whom the religion
of the true God was established.(9) But from these also in after times, when
their number was multiplied exceedingly, since the mall extent of their
settlements could not contain them, then young men, either sent by their parents or of
their own accord, by the compulsion of poverty, leaving their own lands to seek
for themselves new settlements, were scattered in all directions, and filled
all the islands and the whole earth; and thus being torn away from the stem of
their sacred root, they established for themselves at their own discretion new
customs and institutions. But they who occupied Egypt were the first of all who
began to look up to and adore the heavenly bodies. And because they did not
shelter themselves in houses on account of the quality of the atmosphere, and the
heaven is not overspread with any clouds in that country, they observed the
courses of the stars, and their obscurations,(10) while in their frequent
adorations they more carefully and freely beheld them. Then afterwards, induced by
certain prodigies, they invented monstrous figures of animals, that they might
worship them; the authors of which we will presently disclose. But the others, who
were scattered over the earth, admiring the elements of the world, began to
worship the heaven, the sun, the earth, the sea, without any images and temples,
and offered sacrifices to them in the open air, until in process of time they
erected temples and statues to the most powerful kings, and originated the
practice of honouring them with victims and odours; and thus wandering from the
knowledge of God, they began to be heathens. They err, therefore, who contend that
the worship of the gods was from the beginning of the world, and that heathenism
was prior to the religion of God: for they think that this was discovered
afterwards, because they are ignorant of the source and origin of the truth. Now
let us return to the beginning of the world.
CHAP. XV.--OF THE CORRUPTION OF ANGELS, AND THE TWO KINDS OF DEMONS.
When, therefore, the number of men had begun to increase, God in His
forethought, lest the devil, to whom from the beginning He had given power over the
earth, should by his subtilty either corrupt or destroy men, as he had done at
first, sent angels for the protection and improvement(1) of the human race; and
inasmuch as He had given these a free will, He enjoined them above all things
not to defile themselves with contamination from the earth, and thus lose the
dignity of their heavenly nature.(2) He plainly prohibited them from doing that
which He knew that they would do, that they might entertain no hope of pardon.
Therefore, while they abode among men, that most deceitful ruler(3) of the
earth, by his very association, gradually enticed them to vices, and polluted them
by intercourse with women. Then, not being admitted into heaven on account of
the sins into which they had plunged themselves, they fell to the earth. Thus
from angels the devil makes them to become his satellites and attendants. But
they who were born from these, because they were neither angels nor men, but
bearing a kind of mixed(4) nature, were not admitted into hell, as their fathers
were not into heaven. Thus there came to be two kinds of demons; one of heaven,
the other of the earth. The latter are the wicked(5) spirits, the authors of all
the evils which are done, and the same devil is their prince. Whence
Trismegistus calls him the ruler of the demons. But grammarians say that they are called
demons, as though demoenes,(6) that is, skilled and acquainted with matters:
for they think that these are gods. They are acquainted, indeed, with many future
events, but not all, since it is not permitted them entirely to know the
counsel of God; and therefore they are accustomed to accommodate(7) their answers to
ambiguous results. The poets both know them to be demons, and so describe
them. Hesiod thus speaks:--
"These are the demons according to the will of Zeus, Good, living on the
earth, the guardians of mortal men."
And this is said for this purpose, because God had sent them as guardians to
the human race; but they themselves also, though they are the destroyers of men,
yet wish themselves to appear as their guardians, that they themselves may be
worshipped, and God may not be worshipped. The philosophers also discuss the
subject of these beings. For Plato attempted even to explain their natures in his
"Banquet;" and Socrates said that there was a demon continually about him, who
had become attached to him when a boy, by whose will and direction his life
was guided. The art also and power of the Magi altogether consists in the
influences(8) of these; invoked by whom they deceive the sight of men with deceptive
illusions,(9) so that they do not see those things which exist, and think that
they see those things which do not exist. These contaminated and abandoned
spirits, as I say, wander over the whole earth, and contrive a solace for their own
perdition by the destruction of men. Therefore they fill every place with
snares, deceits, frauds, and errors; for they cling to individuals, and occupy whole
houses from door to door, and assume to themselves the name of genii; for by
this word they translate demons in the Latin language. They consecrate these in
their houses, to these they daily pour out(10) libations of wine, and worship
the wise demons as gods of the earth, and as averters of those evils which they
themselves cause and impose. And these, since spirits are without substance(11)
and not to be grasped, insinuate themselves into the bodies of men; and
secretly working in their inward parts, they corrupt the health, hasten diseases,
terrify their souls with dreams, harass their minds with phrenzies, that by these
evils they may compel men to have recourse to their aid.
CHAP. XVI.--THAT DEMONS HAVE NO POWER OVER THOSE WHO ARE ESTABLISHED IN THE
FAITH.
And the nature of all these deceits(12) is obscure to those who are without
the truth. For they think that those demons profit them when they cease to
injure, whereas they have no power except to injure.(13) Some one may perchance say
that they are therefore to be worshipped, that they may not injure, since they
have the power to injure. They do indeed injure, but those only by whom they
are feared, whom the powerful and lofty hand of God does not protect, who are
uninitiated in the mystery(1) of truth. But they fear the righteous,(2) that is,
the worshippers of God, adjured by whose name they depart(3) from the bodies of
the possessed: for, being lashed by their words as though by scourges, they not
only confess themselves to be demons, but even utter their own names--those
which are adored in the temples--which they generally do in the presence of their
own worshippers; not, it is plain, to the disgrace of religion, but(4) to the
disgrace of their own honour, because they cannot speak falsely to God, by whom
they are adjured, nor to the righteous, by whose voice they are tortured.
Therefore ofttimes having uttered the greatest howlings, they cry out that they
are beaten, and are on fire, and that they are just on the point of coming forth:
so much power has the knowledge of God, and righteousness! Whom, therefore,
can they injure, except those whom they have in their own power? In short,
Hermes affirms that those who have known God are not only safe from the attacks of
demons, but that they are not even bound by fate. "The only protection," he
says, "is piety, for over a pious man neither evil demon nor fate has any power:
for God rescues the pious man from all evil; for the one and only good thing
among men is piety." And what piety is, he testifies in another place, in these
words: "For piety is the knowledge of God." Asclepius also, his disciple, more
fully expressed the same sentiment in that finished discourse which he wrote to
the king. Each of them, in truth, affirms that the demons are the enemies and
harassers of men, and on this account Trismegistus calls them wicked angels; so
far was he from being ignorant that from heavenly beings they were corrupted, and
began to be earthly.
CHAP. XVII.--THAT ASTROLOGY, SOOTHSAYING, AND SIMILAR ARTS ARE THE INVENTION
OF DEMONS.
These were the inventors of astrology, and soothsaying, and divination,
and those productions which are called oracles, and necromancy, and the art of
magic, and whatever evil practices besides these men exercise, either openly or
in secret. Now all these things are false of themselves, as the Erythraean Sibyl
testifies:--
"Since all these things are erroneous,
Which foolish men search after day by day."
But these same authorities by their countenance(5) cause it to be believed
that they are true. Thus they delude the credulity of men by lying divination,
because it is not expedient for them to lay open the truth. These are they who
taught men to make images and statues; who, in order that they might turn away the
minds of men from the worship of the true God, cause the countenances of dead
kings, fashioned and adorned with exquisite beauty, to be erected and
consecrated, and assumed to themselves their names, as though they were assuming some
characters. But the magicians, and those whom the people truly call
enchanters,(6) when they practise their detestable arts, call upon them by their true names,
those heavenly names which are read in the sacred writings. Moreover, these
impure and wandering spirits, that they may throw all things into confusion, and
overspread the minds of men with errors, interweave and mingle false things
with true. For they themselves feigned that there are many heavenly beings, and
one king of all, Jupiter; because there are many spirits of angels in heaven, and
one Parent and Lord of all, God. But they have concealed the truth under false
names, and withdrawn it from sight.
For God, as I have shown in the beginning,(7) does not need a name, since
He is alone; nor do the angels, inasmuch as they are immortal, either suffer or
wish themselves to be called gods: for their one and only duty is to submit to
the will of God, and not to do anything at all except at His command. For we
say that the world is so governed by God, as a province is by its ruler; and no
one would say that his attendants(8) are his sharers in the administration of
the province, although business is carried on by their service. And yet these
can effect something contrary to the commands of the ruler, through his
ignorance; which is the result of man's condition. But that guardian of the world and
ruler of the universe, who knows all things, from whose divine eyes nothing is
concealed,(9) has alone with His Son the power over all things; nor is there
anything in the angels except the necessity of obedience. Therefore they wish no
honour to be paid to them, since all their hononr is in God. But they who have
revolted from the service of God, because they are enemies of the truth, and
betrayers(10) of God attempt to claim for themselves the name and worship of gods;
not that they desire any honour (for what honour is there to the lost?), nor
that they may injure God, who cannot be injured, but that they may injure men,
whom they strive to turn away from the worship and knowledge of the true Majesty,
that they may not be able to obtain immortality, which they themselves have
lost through their wickedness. Therefore they draw on darkness, and overspread
the truth with obscurity, that men may not know their Lord and Father. And that
they may easily entice them, they conceal themselves in the temples, and are
close at hand at all sacrifices; and they often give prodigies, that men,
astonished by them, may attach to images a belief in their divine power and influence.
Hence it is that the stone was cut by the augur with a razor; that Juno of Veii
answered that she wished to remove to Rome; that Fortuna Muliebris(1)
announced the threatening danger; that the ship followed the hand of Claudia; that Juno
when plundered, and the Locrian Proserpine, and the Milesian Ceres, punished
the sacrilegious; that Hercules exacted vengeance from Appius, and Jupiter from
Atinius, and Minerva from Caesar. Hence it was that the serpent sent for from
Epidaurus freed the city of Rome from pestilence. For the chief of the demons
was himself carried thither in his own form, without any dissembling; if indeed
the ambassadors who were sent for that purpose brought with them a serpent of
immense size.
But they especially deceive in the case of oracles, the juggleries of
which the profane(2) cannot distinguish from the truth; and therefore they imagine
that commands,(3) and victories, and wealth, and prosperous issues of affairs,
are bestowed by them,--in short, that the state has often been freed from
imminent dangers by their interposition;(4) which dangers they have both announced,
and when appeased with sacrifices, have averted. But all these things are
deceits. For since they have a presentiment(5) of the arrangements of God, inasmuch
as they have been His ministers, they interpose themselves in these matters,
that whatever things have been accomplished or are in the course of
accomplishment by God, they themselves may especially appear to be doing or to have done;
and as often as any advantage is hanging over any people or city, according to
the purpose of God, either by prodigies, or dreams, or oracles, they promise that
they will bring it to pass, if temples, honours, and sacrifices are given to
them. And on the offering of these, when the necessary(6) result comes to pass,
they acquire for themselves the greatest veneration. Hence temples are vowed,
and new images consecrated; herds of victims are slain; and when all these
things are done, yet the life and safety of those who have performed them are not
the less sacrificed. But as often as dangers threaten, they profess that they are
angry on account of some light and trifling cause; as Juno was with Varro,
because he had placed a beautiful boy on the carriage(7) of Jupiter to guard the
dress, and on this account the Roman name was almost destroyed at Cannae. But if
Juno feared a second Ganymede, why did the Roman youth suffer punishment? Or
if the gods regard the leaders only, and neglect the rest of the multitude, why
did Varro alone escape who acted thus, and why was Paulus, who was innocent,(8)
slain? Assuredly nothing then happened to the Romans by "the fates of the
hostile Juno,"(9) when Hannibal by craft and valour despatched two armies of the
Roman people. For Juno did not venture either to defend Carthage, where were her
arms and chariot, or to injure the Romans; for
"She had heard that sons of Troy
Were born her Carthage to destroy."(10)
But these are the delusions of those who, concealing themselves under the
names of the dead, lay snares for the living. Therefore, whether the impending
danger can be avoided, they wish it to appear that they averted it, having been
appeased; or if it cannot be avoided, they contrive that it may appear to have
happened through disregard(11) of them. Thus they acquire to themselves authority
and fear from men, who are ignorant of them. By this subtilty and by these arts
they have caused the knowledge of the true and only God to fail(12) among all
nations. For, being destroyed by their own vices, they rage and use violence
that they may destroy others. Therefore these enemies of the human race even
devised human victims, to devour as many lives as possible.
CHAP. XVIII.--OF THE PATIENCE AND VENGEANCE OF GOD, THE WORSHIP OF DEMONS, AND
FALSE RELIGIONS.
Some one will say, Why then does God permit these things to be done, and
not apply a remedy to such disastrous errors? That evils may be at variance with
good; that vices may be opposed to virtues; that He may have some whom He may
punish, and others whom He may honour. For He has determined at the last times
to pass judgment on the living and the dead, concerning which judgment I shall
speak in the last book. He delays,(1) therefore, until the end of the times
shall come, when He may pour out His wrath with heavenly power and might, as
"Prophecies of pious seers
Ring terror in the 'wildered ears."(2)
But now He suffers men to err, and to be impious even towards Himself, just,
and mild, and patient as He is. For it is impossible that He in whom is perfect
excellence should not also be of perfect patience. Whence some imagine, that
God is altogether free from anger, because He is not subject to affections, which
are perturbations of the mind; for every animal which is liable to affections
and emotions is frail. But this persuasion altogether takes away truth and
religion. But let this subject of discussing the anger of God be laid aside for the
present; because the matter is very copious, and to be more widely treated in
a work devoted to the subject. Whoever shall have worshipped and followed these
most wicked spirits, will neither enjoy heaven nor the light, which are God's;
but will fall into those things which we have spoken of as being assigned in
the distribution of things to the prince of the evil ones himself,--namely, into
darkness, and hell, and everlasting punishment.
I have shown that the religious rites of the gods are vain in a threefold
manner: In the first place, because those images which are worshipped are
representations of men who are dead; and that is a wrong and inconsistent thing,
that the image of a man should be worshipped by the image of God, for that which
worships is lower and weaker than that which is worshipped: then that it is an
inexpiable crime to desert the living in order that you may serve memorials of
the dead, who can neither give life nor light to any one, for they are
themselves without it: and that there is no other God but one, to whose judgment and
power every soul is subject. In the second place, that the sacred images
themselves, to which most senseless men do service, are destitute of all perception,
since they are earth. But who cannot understand that it is unlawful for an upright
animal to bend itself that it may adore the earth? which is placed beneath our
feet for this purpose, that it may be trodden. upon, and not adored by us, who
have been raised from it, and have received an elevated position beyond the
other living creatures, that we may not turn ourselves again downward, nor cast
this heavenly countenance to the earth, but may direct our eyes to that quarter
to which the condition of their nature has directed, and that we may adore and
worship nothing except the single deity of our only Creator and Father, who
made man of an erect figure, that we may know that we are called forth to high
and heavenly things. In the third place, because the spirits which preside over
the religious rites themselves, being condemned and cast off by God, wallow(3)
over the earth, who not only are unable to afford any advantage to their
worshippers, since the power of all things is in the hands of one alone, but even
destroy them with deadly attractions and errors; since this is their daily
business, to involve men in darkness, that the true God may not be sought by them.
Therefore they are not to be worshipped, because they lie under the sentence of
God. For it is a very great crime to devote(4) one's self to the power of those
whom, if you follow righteousness, you are able to excel in power, and to drive
out and put to flight by adjuration of the divine name. But if it appears that
these religious rites are vain in so many ways as I have shown, it is manifest
that those who either make prayers to the dead,(5) or venerate the earth, or
make over(6) their souls to unclean spirits, do not act as becomes men, and that
they will suffer punishment for their impiety and guilt, who, rebelling against
God, the Father of the human race, have undertaken inexpiable rites, and
violated every sacred law.
CHAP. XIX.--OF THE WORSHIP OF IMAGES AND EARTHLY OBJECTS.
Whoever, therefore, is anxious to observe the obligations to which man is
liable, and to maintain a regard for his nature, let him raise himself from the
ground, and, with mind lifted up, let him direct his eyes to heaven: let him
not seek God under his feet, nor dig up from his footprints an object of
veneration, for whatever lies beneath man must necessarily be inferior to man; but let
him seek it aloft, let him seek it in the highest place: for nothing can be
greater than man, except that which is above man. But God is greater than man:
therefore He is above, and not below; nor is He to be sought in the lowest, but
rather in the highest region. Wherefore it is undoubted that there is no
religion wherever there is an image.(1) For if religion consists of divine things, and
there is nothing divine except in heavenly things; it follows that images are
without religion, because there can be nothing heavenly in that which is made
from the earth. And this, indeed, may be plain to a wise man from the very
name.(2) For whatever is an imitation, that must of necessity be false; nor can
anything receive the name of a true object which counterfeits the truth by
deception and imitation. But if all imitation is not particularly a serious matter, but
as it were a sport and jest, then there is no religion in images, but a
mimicry of religion. That which is true is therefore to be preferred to all things
which are false; earthly things are to be trampled upon, that we may obtain
heavenly things. For this is the state of the case, that whosoever shall prostrate
his soul, which has its origin from heaven, to the shades(3) beneath, and the
lowest things, must fall to that place to which he has cast himself. Therefore he
ought to be mindful of his nature and condition, and always to strive and aim
at things above. And whoever shall do this, he will be judged altogether wise,
he just, he a man: he, in short, will be judged worthy of heaven whom his
Parent will recognise not as abject, nor cast down to the earth after the manner of
the beasts,(4) but rather standing and upright as He made him.
CHAP. XX.--OF PHILOSOPHY AND THE TRUTH.
A great and difficult portion of the work which I have undertaken, unless
I am deceived, has been completed; and the majesty of heaven supplying the
power of speaking, we have driven away inveterate errors. But now a greater and
more difficult contest with philosophers is proposed to us, the height of whose
learning and eloquence, as some massive structure, is opposed to me. For as in
the former(5) case we were oppressed by a multitude, and almost by the universal
agreement of all nations, so in this subject we are oppressed by the authority
of men excelling in every kind of praise. But who can be ignorant that there is
more weight in a smaller number of learned men than in a greater number of
ignorant persons?(6) But we must not despair that, under the guidance of God and
the truth, these also may be turned aside from their opinion; nor do I think
that they will be so obstinate as to deny that they behold with sound and open
eyes the sun as he shines in his brilliancy. Only let that be true which they
themselves are accustomed to profess, that they are possessed with the desire of
investigation, and I shall assuredly succeed in causing them to believe that the
truth which they have long sought for has been at length found, and to confess
that it could not have been found by the abilities of man.