THE DIVINE INSTITUTES. BOOK IV--OF TRUE WISDOM AND RELIGION (CHAP. I TO CHAP.
XV)
THE DIVINE INSTITUTES
BOOK IV.
OF TRUE WISDOM AND RELIGION.
CHAP. I.--OF THE FORMER RELIGION OF MEN, AND HOW ERROR WAS SPREAD OVER EVERY
AGE, AND OF THE SEVEN WISE MEN OF GREECE.
WHEN I reflect, O Emperor Constantine, and often revolve in my mind the
original condition of men, it is accustomed to appear alike wonderful and
unworthy that, by the folly of one age embracing various superstitions, and believing
in the existence of many gods, they suddenly arrived at such ignorance of
themselves, that the truth being taken away from their eyes, the religion of the
true God was not observed, nor the condition of human nature, since men did not
seek the chief good in heaven, but on earth. And on this account assuredly the
happiness of the ancient ages was changed. For, having left God, the parent and
founder of all things, men began to worship the senseless works(1) of their own
hands. And what were the effects of this corruption, or what evils it
introduced, the subject itself sufficiently declares. For, turning away from the chief
good, which is blessed and everlasting on this account, because it cannot be
seen,(2) or touched, or comprehended, and from the virtues which are in agreement
with that good, and which are equally immortal, gliding down to these corrupt
and frail gods, and devoting themselves to those things by which the body only
is adorned, and nourished, and delighted, they sought eternal death for
themselves, together with their gods and goods relating to the body, because all bodies
are subject to death. Superstitions of this kind, therefore, were followed by
injustice and impiety, as must necessarily be the case. For men ceased to raise
their countenances to the heaven; but, their minds being depressed downwards,
clung to goods of the earth, as they did to earth-born superstitions. There
followed the disagreement of mankind, and fraud, and all wickedness; because,
despising eternal and incorruptible goods, which alone ought to be desired by man,
they rather chose temporal and short-lived things, and greater trust was
placed by men in evil, inasmuch as they preferred vice to virtue, because it had
presented itself as nearer at hand.(3)
Thus human life, which in former ages had been occupied with the clearest
light, was overspread with gloom and darkness; and in conformity with this
depravity, when wisdom was taken away, then at length men began to claim for
themselves the name of wise. For at the time when all were wise, no one was called by
that name. And would that this name, once common to all the class, though
reduced to a few, still retained its power! For those few might perhaps be able,
either by talent, or by authority, or by continual exhortations, to free the
people from vices and errors. But so entirely had wisdom died out, that it is
evident, from the very arrogance of the name, that no one of those who were so
called was really wise. And yet, before the discovery of this philosophy, as it is
termed, there are said to have been seven,(4) who, because they ventured to
inquire into and discuss natural subjects, deserved to be esteemed and called wise
men.
O wretched and calamitous age, in which through the whole world there were
only seven who were called by the name of men, for no one can justly be called
a man unless he is wise! But if all the others besides themselves were
foolish, even they themselves were not wise, because no one can be truly wise in the
judgment of the foolish. So far were they removed from wisdom, that not even
afterwards, when learning increased, and many and great intellects were always
intent upon this very subject, could the truth be perceived and ascertained. For,
after the renown of those seven wise men, it is incredible with how great a
desire of inquiring into the truth all Greece was inflamed. And first of all, they
thought(1) the very name of wisdom arrogant, and did not call themselves wise
men, but desirous of wisdom. By which deed they both condemned those who had
rashly arrogated to themselves the name of wise men, of error and folly, and
themselves also of ignorance, which indeed they did not deny. For wherever the
nature of the subject had, as it were, laid its hands upon their minds, so that
they were unable to give any account, they were accustomed to testify that, they
knew nothing, and discerned nothing.
Wherefore they are found to be much wiser, who in some degree saw themselves,
than those who had believed that they were wise.
CHAP. II.--WHERE WISDOM IS TO BE FOUND; WHY PYTHAGORAS AND PLATO DID NOT
APPROACH THE JEWS.
Wherefore, if they were not wise who were so called, nor those of later
times, who did not hesitate to confess their want of wisdom, what remains but
that wisdom is to be sought elsewhere, since it has not been found where it was
sought. But what can we suppose to have been the reason why it was not found,
though sought with the greatest earnestness and labour by so many intellects, and
during so many ages, unless it be that philosophers sought for it out of their
own limits? And since they traversed and explored all parts, but nowhere found
any wisdom, and it must of necessity be somewhere, it is evident that it ought
especially to be sought there where the title of folly(2) appears; under the
covering of which God hides the treasury of wisdom and truth, lest the secret of
His divine work should be exposed to view.(3) Whence I am accustomed to wonder
that, when Pythagoras, and after him Plato, inflamed with the love of searching
out the truth, had penetrated as far as to the Egyptians, and Magi, and
Persians, that they might become acquainted with their religious rites and
institutions (for they suspected that wisdom was concerned with religion), they did not
approach the Jews only, in whose possession alone it then was, and to whom they
might have gone more easily. But I think that they were turned away from them
by divine providence, that they might not know the truth, because it was not yet
permitted for the religion of the true God and righteousness to become known
to men of other nations.(4) For God had determined, as the last time drew
near,(5) to send from heaven a great leader,(6) who should reveal to foreign nations
that which was taken away from a perfidious(7) and ungrateful people. And I
will endeavour to discuss the subject in this book, if I shall first have shown
that wisdom is so closely united with religion, that the one cannot be separated
from the other.
CHAP. III.--WISDOM AND RELIGION CANNOT BE SEPARATED: THE LORD OF NATURE MUST
NECESSARILY BE THE FATHER OF EVERY ONE.
The worship of the gods, as I have taught in the former book, does not
imply wisdom; not only because it gives up man, who is a divine animal, to earthly
and frail things, but because nothing is fixed in it which may avail for the
cultivation of the character and the framing of the life; nor does it contain
any investigation of the truth, but only the rite of worship, which does not
consist in the service of the mind, but in the employment of the body. And
therefore that is not to be deemed true religion, because it instructs and improves men
by no precepts of righteousness and virtue. Thus philosophy, inasmuch as it
does not possess true religion, that is, the highest piety, is not true wisdom.
For if the divinity which governs this world supports mankind with incredible
beneficence, and cherishes it as with paternal indulgence, wishes truly that
gratitude should be paid, and honour given to itself, man cannot preserve his piety
if he shall prove ungrateful for the heavenly benefits; and this is certainly
not the part of a wise man. Since, therefore, as I have said, philosophy and
the religious system of the gods are separated, and far removed from each other;
seeing that some are professors of wisdom, through whom it is manifest that
there is no approach to the gods, and that others are priests of religion, through
whom wisdom is not learned; it is manifest that the one is not true wisdom,
and that the other is not true religion. Therefore I philosophy was not able to
conceive the truth, nor was the religious system of the gods able to give an
account of itself, since it is without it.
But where wisdom is joined by an inseparable connection with religion, both
must necessarily be true; because in our worship we ought to be wise, that is,
to know the proper object and mode of worship, and in our wisdom to worship,
that is, to complete our knowledge by deed and action.
Where, then, is wisdom joined with religion? There, indeed, where the one
God is worshipped, where life and every action is referred to one source, and
to one supreme authority: in short, the teachers of wisdom are the same, who are
also the priests of God.(1) Nor, however, let it affect any one, because it
often has happened, and may happen, that some philosopher may undertake a
priesthood of the gods; and when this happens, philosophy is not, however, joined with
religion; but philosophy will both be unemployed amidst sacred rites, and
religion will be unemployed when philosophy shall be treated of. For that system of
religious rites is dumb, not only because it relates to gods who are dumb, but
also because its observance is by the hand and the fingers, not by the heart
and tongue, as is the case with ours, which is true. Therefore religion is
contained in wisdom, and wisdom in religion. The one, then, cannot be separated from
the other; because wisdom is nothing else but the worship of the true God with
just and pious adoration. But that the worship of many gods is not in
accordance with nature, may be inferred and conceived even by this argument: that every
god who is worshipped by man must, amidst the solemn rites and prayers, be
invoked as father, not only for the sake of honour, but also of reason; because he
is both more ancient than man, and because he affords life, safety, and
sustenance, as a father does. Therefore Jupiter is called father by those who pray
to him, as is Saturnus, and Janus, and Liber, and the rest in order; which
Lucilius(2) laughs at in the council of the gods: "So that there is none of us who
is not called excellent father of the gods; so that father Neptunus, Liber,
father Saturnus, Mars, Janus, father Quirinus, are called after one name." But
if nature does not permit that one man should have many fathers (for he is
produced from one only), therefore the worship of many gods is contrary to nature,
and contrary to piety.
One only, therefore, is to be worshipped, who can truly be called Father.
He also must of necessity be Lord, because as He has power to indulge, so also
has He power to restrain. He is to be called Father on this account, because He
bestows upon us many and great things; and Lord on this account, because He
has the greatest power of chastising and punishing. But that He who is Father is
also Lord, is shown even by reference to civil law.(3) For who will be able to
bring up sons, unless he has the power of a lord over them? Nor without reason
is he called father of a household,(4) although he only has sons: for it is
plain that the name of father embraces also slaves(5), because "household"
follows; and the name of "household" comprises also sons, because the name of "father"
precedes: from which it is evident, that the same person is both father of his
slaves s and lord of his sons. Lastly, the son is set at liberty as if he were
a slave; and the liberated slave receives the name(6) of his patron, as if he
were a son. But if a man is named father of a household, that it may appear
that he is possessed of a double power, because as a father he ought to indulge,
and as a lord to restrain, it follows that he who is a son is also a slave, and
that he who is a father is also a lord. As, therefore, by the necessity of
nature, there cannot be more than one father, so there can only be one lord. For
what will the slave do if many lords(7) shall give commands at variance with each
other? Therefore the worship of many gods is contrary to reason and to nature,
since there cannot be many fathers or lords; but it is necessary to consider
the gods both as fathers and lords.
Therefore the truth cannot be held where the same man is subject to many
fathers and lords, where the mind, drawn in different directions to many
objects, wanders to and fro, hither and thither. Nor can religion have any firmness,
when it is without a fixed and settled dwelling-place. Therefore there can be no
true worship of many gods; just as that cannot be called matrimony, in which
one woman has many husbands, but she will either be called a harlot or an
adulteress. For when a woman is destitute of modesty, chastity, and fidelity, she
must of necessity be without virtue. Thus also the religious system of the gods is
unchaste and unholy, because it is destitute of faith, for that unsettled and
uncertain honour has no source or origin.
CHAP. IV.--OF WISDOM LIKEWISE, AND RELIGION, AND OF THE RIGHT OF FATHER AND
LORD.
By these things it is evident how closely connected are wisdom and
religion. Wisdom relates to sons, and this relation requires love; religion to
servants, and this relation requires fear. For as the former are bound to love and
honour their father, so are the latter bound to respect and venerate their lord.
But with respect to God, who is one only, inasmuch as He sustains the twofold
character both of Father and Lord, we are bound both to love Him, inasmuch as we
are sons, and to fear Him, inasmuch as we are servants.(1) Religion, therefore,
cannot be divided from wisdom, nor can wisdom be separated from religion;
because it is the same God, who ought to be understood, which is the part of
wisdom, and to be honoured, which is the part of religion. But wisdom precedes,
religion follows; for the knowledge of God comes first, His worship is the result of
knowledge. Thus in the two names there is but one meaning, though it seems to
be different in each case. For the one is concerned with the understanding, the
other with action. But, however, they resemble two streams flowing from one
fountain. But the fountain of wisdom and religion is God; and if these two
streams shall turn aside from Him, they must be dried up: for they who are ignorant
of Him cannot be wise or religious.
Thus it comes to pass that philosophers, and those who worship many gods,
either resemble disinherited sons or runaway slaves, because the one do not
seek their father, nor the other their master. And as they who are disinherited do
not attain to the inheritance of their father, nor runaway slaves impunity, so
neither will philosophers receive immortality, which is the inheritance of the
heavenly kingdom, that is, the chief good, which they especially seek; nor
will the worshippers of gods escape the penalty of everlasting death, which is the
punishment of the true Master against those who are deserters(2) of His
majesty and name. But that God is Father and also Lord was unknown to both, to the
worshippers of the gods as well as to the professors of wisdom themselves:
inasmuch as they either thought that nothing at all was to be worshipped; or they
approved of false religions or, although they understood the strength and power of
the Supreme God (as Plato, who says that there is one God, Creator of the
world, and Marcus Tullius, who acknowledges that man has been produced by the
Supreme God in an excellent condition), nevertheless they did not render the worship
due to Him as to the supreme Father, which was their befitting and necessary
duty. But that the gods cannot be fathers or lords, is declared not only by
their multitude, as I have shown above,(3) but also by reason: because it is not
reported that man was made by gods, nor is it found that the gods themselves
preceded the origin of man, since it appears that there were men on the earth
before the birth of Vulcan, and Liber, and Apollo, and Jupiter himself. But the
creation of man is not accustomed to be assigned to Saturnus, nor to his father
Coelus.
But if none of those who are worshipped is said to have originally formed
and created man, it follows that none of these can be called the father of man,
and so none of them can be God. Therefore it is not lawful to worship those by
whom man was not produced, for he could not be produced by many. Therefore the
one and only God ought to be worshipped, who was before Jupiter, and Saturnus,
and Coelus himself, and the earth. For He must have fashioned man, who, before
the creation of man, finished the heaven and the earth. He alone is to be
called Father who created us; He alone is to be considered Lord who rules, who has
the true and perpetual power of life and death. And he who does not adore Him
is a foolish servant, who flees from or does not know his Master; and an
undutiful son, who either hates or is ignorant of his true Father.
CHAP. V.--THE ORACLES OF THE PROPHETS MUST BE LOOKED INTO; AND OF THEIR TIMES,
AND THE TIMES OF THE JUDGES AND KINGS.
Now, since I have shown that wisdom and religion cannot be separated, it
remains that we speak of religion itself, and wisdom. I am aware, indeed, how
difficult it is to discuss heavenly subjects; but still the attempt must be
ventured, that the truth may be made clear and brought to light, and that many may
be freed from error and death, who despise and refuse the truth, while it is
concealed under a covering of folly. But before I begin to speak of God and His
works, I must first speak a few things concerning the prophets, whose testimony I
must now use, which I have refrained from doing in the former books. Above all
things, he who desires to comprehend the truth ought not only to apply his
mind to understand the utterances of the prophets, but also most diligently to
inquire into the times during which each one of them existed, that he may know
what future events they predicted, and after how many years their predictions were
fulfilled.(4) Nor is there any difficulty in making these computations; for
they testified under what king each of them received the inspiration of the
Divine Spirit. And many have written and published books respecting the times,
making their commencement from the prophet Moses, who lived about seven hundred
years before the Trojan war. But he, when he had governed the people for forty
years, was succeeded by Joshua, who held the chief place twenty-seven years.
After this they were under the government of judges during three hundred
anti seventy years. Then their condition was changed, and they began to have
kings; and when they had ruled during four hundred and fifty years, until the
reign of Zedekiah, the Jews having been besieged by the king of Babylon, and
carried into captivity,(1) endured a long servitude, until, in the seventieth year
afterwards, the captive Jews were restored to their own lands and settlements by
Cyrus the elder, who attained the supreme power over the Persians, at the time
when Tarquinius Superbus reigned at Rome. Wherefore, since the whole series of
times may be collected both from the Jewish histories and from those of the
Greeks and Romans, the times of the prophets individually may also be collected;
the last of whom was Zechariah, and it is agreed on that he prophesied in the
time of King Darius, in the second year of his reign, and in the eighth month. Of
so much greater antiquity(2) are the prophets found to be than the Greek
writers. And I bring forward all these things, that they may perceive their error
who endeavour to refute Holy Scripture, as though it were new and recently
composed, being ignorant from what fountain the origin of our holy religion flowed.
But if any one, having put together arid examined the times, shall duly lay the
foundation of learning, and fully ascertain the truth, he will also lay aside
his error when he has gained the knowledge of the truth.
CHAP. VI.--ALMIGHTY GOD BEGAT HIS SON; AND THE TESTIMONIES OF THE SIBYLS AND
OF TRISMEGISTUS CONCERNING HIM.
God, therefore, the contriver and founder of all things, as we have said
in the second hook, before He commenced this excellent work of the world,
begat a pure and incorruptible Spirit, whom He called His Son. And although He had
afterwards created by Himself innumerable other beings, whom we call angels,
this first-begotten, however, was the only one whom He considered worthy of
being called by the divine name, as being pewerful in His Father's excellence and
majesty. But that there is a Son of the Most High God, who is possessed of the
greatest power, is shown not only by the unanimous utterances of the prophets,
but also by the declaration of Trismegistus and the predictions of the Sibyls.
Hermes, in the book which is entitled The Perfect Word, made use of these
words: "The Lord and Creator of all things, whom we have thought right to call God,
since He made the second God visible and sensible. But I use the term sensible,
not because He Himself perceives (for the question is not whether He Himself
perceives), but because He leads(3) to perception and to intelligence. Since,
therefore, He made Him first, and alone, and one only, He appeared to Him
beautiful, and most full of all good things; and He hallowed Him, and altogether loved
Him as His own Son." The Erythraean Sibyl, in the beginning of her poem, which
she commenced with the Supreme God, proclaims the Son of God as the leader and
commander of all, in these verses:--
"The nourisher and creator of all things, who placed the sweet breath in
all, and made God the leader of all."
And again, at the end of the same poem:--
"But whom God gave for faithful men to honour."
And another Sibyl enjoins that He ought to be known:--
"Know Him as your God, who is the Son of God."
Assuredly He is the very Son of God, who by that most wise King Solomon, full
of divine inspiration, spake these things which we have added:(4) "God
founded(5) me in the beginning of His ways, in His work before the ages. He set me up
in the beginning, before He made the earth, and before He established the
depths, before the fountains of waters came forth: the Lord begat me before all the
hills; He made the regions, and the uninhabitable(6) boundaries under the
heaven. When He prepared the heaven, I was by Him: and when He separated His own
seat, when He made the strong clouds above the winds, and when He strengthened the
mountains, and placed them under heaven; when He laid the strong foundations of
the earth, I was with Him arranging all things. I was He in whom He delighted:
I was daily delighted, when He rejoiced, the world being completed." But on
this account Trismegistus spoke of Him as "the artificer of God," and the Sibyl
calls Him "Counsellor," because He is endowed by God the Father with such wisdom
and strength, that God employed both His wisdom and hands in the creation of
the world.
CHAP. VII.--OF THE NAME OF SON, AND WHENCE HE IS CALLED JESUS AND CHRIST.
Some one may perhaps ask who this is who is so powerful, so beloved by
God, and what name He has, who was not only begotten at first before the world,(7)
but who also arranged it by His wisdom and constructed it by His might. First
of all, it is befitting that we should know that His name is not known even to
the angels who dwell in heaven, but to Himself only, and to God the Father; nor
will that name be published, as the sacred writings relate, before that the
purpose of God shall be fulfilled. In the next place, we must know that this name
cannot be uttered by the mouth of man, as Hermes teaches, saying these things:
"Now the cause of this cause is the will of the divine good which produced
God, whose name cannot be uttered by the mouth of man." And shortly afterwards to
His Son: "There is, O Son, a secret word of wisdom, holy respecting the only
Lord of all things, and the God first perceived(1) by the mind, to speak of whom
is beyond the power of man." But although His name, which the supreme Father
gave Him from the beginning, is known to none but Himself, nevertheless He has
one name among the angels, and another among men since He is called Jesus(2)
among men: for Christ is not a proper name, but a title of power and dominion; for
by this the Jews were accustomed to call their kings. But the meaning of this
name must be set forth, on account of the error of the ignorant, who by the
change of a letter are accustomed to call Him Chrestus.(3) The Jews had before been
directed to compose a sacred oil, with which those who were called to the
priesthood(4) or to the kingdom might be anointed. And as now the robe of purple(5)
is a sign of the assumption of royal dignity among the Romans, so with them
the anointing with the holy oil conferred the title and power of king. But since
the ancient Greeks used the word <greek>kriesqai</greek> to express the art of
anointing, which they now express by <greek>aleifesqai</greek>, as the verse of
Homer shows,
"But the attendants washed, and anointed(6) them with oil;"
on this account we call Him Christ, that is, the Anointed, who in Hebrew is
called the Messias. Hence in some Greek writings, which are badly translated(7)
from the Hebrew, the word eleimmenos(8) is found written, from the word
aleiphesthai,(9) anointing. But, however, by either name a king is signified: not that
He has obtained this earthly kingdom, the time for receiving which has not yet
arrived, but that He sways a heavenly and eternal kingdom, concerning which we
shall speak in the last book. But now let us speak of His first nativity.
CHAP. VIII.--OF THE BIRTH OF JESUS IN THE SPIRIT AND IN THE FLESH: OF SPIRITS
AND THE TESTIMONIES OF PROPHETS.
For we especially testify that He was twice born, first in the spirit, and
afterwards in the flesh. Whence it is thus spoken by Jeremiah:(10) "Before I
formed Thee in the womb I knew Thee." And likewise by the same: "Who was blessed
before He was born;"(11) which was the case with no one else but Christ. For
though He was the Son of God from the beginning,(12) He was born again(13) a
second time(14) according to the flesh: and this twofold birth of His has
introduced great terror into the minds of men, and overspread with darkness even those
who retained the mysteries of true religion. But we will show this plainly and
clearly, that they who love wisdom may be more easily and diligently
instructed. He who hears the Son of God mentioned ought not to conceive in his mind so
great impiety as to think that God begat Him by marriage and union with a woman,
which none does but an animal possessed of a body, and subject to death. But
with whom could God unite Himself, since He is alone? or since His power was so
great, that He accomplished whatever He wished, assuredly He did not require the
co-operation .s of another for procreation. Unless by chance we shall
[profanely] imagine, as Orpheus supposed, that God is both male and female, because
otherwise He would have been unable to beget, unless He had the power of each sex,
as though He could have intercourse with Himself, or without such intercourse
be unable to produce.
But Hermes also was of the same opinion, when he says that He was "His own
father," and "His own mother."(16) But if this were so, as He is called by the
prophets father, so also He would be called mother. In what manner, then, did
He beget Him? First of all, divine operations cannot be known or declared(17)
by any one; but nevertheless the sacred writings teach us, in which it is laid
down(18) that this Son of God is the speech, or even the reason(19) of God, and
also that the other angels are spirits(1) of God. For speech is breath sent
forth with a voice signifying something. But, however, since breath and speech are
sent forth from different parts, inasmuch as breath proceeds from the
nostrils, speech from the mouth, the difference between the Son of God and the other
angels is great. For they proceeded from God as silent spirits, because they were
not created to teach(2) the knowledge of God, but for His service. But though
He is Himself also a spirit, yet He proceeded from the mouth of God with voice
and sound, as the Word, on this account indeed, because He was about to make
use of His voice to the people; that is, because He was about to be a teacher of
the knowledge of God, and of the heavenly mystery(3) to be revealed to man:
which word also God Himself first spoke, that through Him He might speak to us,
and that He might reveal to us the voice and will of God.
With good reason, therefore, is He called the Speech and the Word of God,
because God, by a certain incomprehensible energy and power of His majesty,
enclosed the vocal spirit proceeding from His mouth, which he had not conceived in
the womb, but in His mind, within a form which has life through its own
perception and wisdom, and He also fashioned other spirits of His into angels. Our
spirits(4) are liable to dissolution, because we are mortal: but the spirits of
God both live, and are lasting, and have perception; because He Himself is
immortal, and the Giver both of perception(5) and life. Our expressions, although
they are mingled with the air, and fade away, yet generally remain comprised in
letters; how much more must we believe that the voice of God both remains for
ever, and is accompanied with perception and power, which it has derived from God
the Father, as a stream from its fountain! But if any one wonders that God
could be produced from God by a putting forth of the voice and breath, if he is
acquainted with the sacred utterances of the prophets he will cease to wonder.
That Solomon and his father David were most powerful kings, and also
prophets, may perhaps be known even to those who have not applied themselves to the
sacred writings; the one of whom, who reigned subsequently to the other, preceded
the destruction of the city of Troy by one hundred and forty years. His
father, the writer of sacred hymns, thus speaks in the thirty-second Psalm:(6) "By
the word of God we, re the heavens made firm; and all their power(7) by the
breath of His mouth." And also again in the forty-fourth Psalm:(8) "My heart hath
given utterance to a good word; I speak of my doings towards the king;"
testifying, in truth, that the works of God are known to no other than to the Son alone,
who is the Word of God, and who must reign for ever. Solomon also shows that
it is the Word of God, and no other,(9) by whose hands these works of the world
were made. "I," He says, "came forth out of the mouth of the Most High before
all creatures: I caused the light that faileth not to arise in the heavens, and
covered the whole earth with a cloud. I have dwelt in the height, and my throne
is in the pillar of the cloud."(10) John also thus taught: "In the beginning
was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in
the beginning with God. All things were made by Him, and without Him was not
anything made."(11)
CHAP. IX.--OF THE WORD OF GOD.
But the Greeks speak of Him as the Logos,(12) more befittingly than we do
as the word, or speech: for Logos signifies both speech and reason, inasmuch as
He is both the voice and the wisdom of God. And of this divine speech not even
the philosophers were ignorant, since Zeno represents the Logos as the
arranger of the established order of things, and the framer of the universe: whom also
He calls Fate, and the necessity of things, and God, and the soul of Jupiter,
in accordance with the custom, indeed, by which they are wont to regard Jupiter
as God. But the words are no obstacle, since the sentiment is in agreement
with the truth. For it is the spirit of God which he named the soul of Jupiter.
For Trismegistus, who by some means or other searched into almost all truth,
often described the excellence and majesty of the word, as the instance before
mentioned declares, in which he acknowledges that there is an ineffable and sacred
speech, the relation of which exceeds the measure of man's ability. I have
spoken briefly, as I have been able, concerning the first nativity. Now I must more
fully discuss the second, since this is the subject most controverted, that we
may hold forth the light of understanding to those who desire to know the
truth.
CHAP. X.--OF THE ADVENT OF JESUS; OF THE FORTUNES OF THE JEWS, AND THEIR
GOVERNMENT, UNTIL THE PASSION OF THE LORD.
In the first place, then, men ought to know that the arrangements of the
Most High God have so advanced from the beginning, that it was necessary, as the
end of the world(1) approached, that the Son of God should descend to the
earth, that He might build a temple for God, and teach righteousness; but, however,
not with the might of an angel or with heavenly power, but in the form of man
and in the condition of a mortal, that when He had discharged the office of His
ministry,(2) He might be delivered into the hands of wicked men, and might
undergo death, that, having subdued this also by His might, He might rise again,
and bring to man, whose nature He had put on(3) and represented, the hope of
overcoming death, and might admit him to the rewards of immortality. And that no
one may be ignorant of this arrangement, we will show that all things were
foretold which we see fulfilled in Christ. Let no one believe our assertion unless I
shall show that the prophets before a long series of ages published that it
should come to pass at length that the Son of God should be born as a man, and
perform wonderful deeds, and sow(4) the worship of God throughout the whole
earth, and at last be crucified, and on the third day rise again. And when I shall
have proved all these things by the writings of those very men who treated with
violence their God who had assumed a mortal body, what else will prevent it
from being manifest that true wisdom is conversant with this religion only? Now
the origin of the whole mystery is to be related.
Our ancestors,(5) who were chiefs of the Hebrews, when they were
distressed by famine and want, passed over into Egypt, that they might obtain a supply
of corn; and sojourning there a long time, they were oppressed with an
intolerable yoke of slavery. Then God pitied them, and led them out, and freed them from
the hand of the king of the Egyptians, after four hundred and thirty(6) years,
under the leadership of Moses, through whom the law was afterwards given to
them by God; and in this leading out God displayed the power of His majesty. For
He made His people to pass through the midst of the Red Sea, His angel(7)
going before and dividing the water, so that the people might walk over the dry
land, of whom it might more truly be said (as the poet says(8)), that "the wave,
closing over him after the appearance of a mountain, stood around him." And
when he heard of this, the tyrant of the Egyptians followed with this great host
of his men, and rashly entering the sea which still lay open, was destroyed,
together with his whole army, by the waves returning(9) to their place. But the
Hebrews, when they had entered into the wilderness, saw many wonderful deeds. For
when they suffered thirst, a rock having been struck with a rod, a fountain of
water sprung forth and refreshed the people. And again, when they were hungry,
a shower(10) of heavenly nourishment descended. Moreover, also, the wind(11)
brought quails into their camp, so that they were not only satisfied with
heavenly bread, but also with more choice banquets. And yet, in return for these
divine benefits, they did not pay honour to God; but when slavery had been now
removed from them, and their thirst and hunger laid aside, they fell away into
luxury, and transferred their minds to the profane rites of the Egyptians. For when
Moses, their leader, had ascended into the mountain, and there tarried forty
days, they made the head(12) of an ox in gold, which they call Apis,(13) that
it might go before them as a standard.(14) With which sin and crime God was
offended, and justly visited the impious and ungrateful people with severe
punishments, and made them subject to the law(15) which He had given by Moses.
But afterwards, when they had settled in a desert part of Syria, the
Hebrews(16) lost their ancient name; and since the leader of their host(17) was
Judas, they were called Jews,(18) and the land which they inhabited Judaea. And at
first, indeed, they were not subject to the dominion of Kings, but civil Judges
presided over the people and the law: they were not, however, appointed only
for a year, as the Roman consuls, but supported by a perpetual jurisdiction.
Then, the name of Judges being taken away, the kingly power was introduced. But
during the government of the Judges the people had often undertaken corrupt
religious rites; and God, offended by them, as often brought them into bondage to n
strangers, until again, softened by the repentance of the people, He freed
them from bondage. Likewise under the Kings, being oppressed by wars with their
neighbours on account of their iniquities, and at last taken captive and led to
Babylon, they suffered punishment for their impiety by oppressive slavery,
until Cyrus came to the kingdom, who immediately restored the Jews by an edict.
Afterwards they had tetrarchs until the time of Herod, who was in the reign of
Tiberius Caesar; in whose fifteenth year, in the consulship of the two Gemini,
on the 23d of March,(1) the Jews crucified Christ. This series of events, this
order, is contained in the secrets of the sacred writings. But I will first show
for what reason Christ came to the earth, that the foundation and the system
of divine religion may be manifest.
CHAP. XI.--OF THE CAUSE OF THE INCARNATION OF CHRIST.
When the Jews often resisted wholesome precepts, and departed from the
divine law, going astray to the impious worship of false gods, then God filled
just and chosen men with the Holy Spirit, appointing them as prophets in the midst
of the people, by whom He might rebuke with threatening words the sins of the
ungrateful people, and nevertheless exhort them to repent of their wickedness;
for unless they did this, and, laying aside their vanities, return to their
God, it would come to pass that He would change His covenant,(2) that is,
bestow(3) the inheritance of eternal life upon foreign nations, and collect to Himself
a more faithful people out of those who were aliens(4) by birth. But they, when
rebuked by the prophets, not only rejected their words; but being offended
because they were upbraided for their sins, they slew the prophets themselves with
studied(5) tortures: all which things are sealed up and preserved in the
sacred writings. For the prophet Jeremiah says:(6) "I sent to you my servants the
prophets; I sent them before the morning light; but ye did not hearken, nor
incline your ears to hear, when I spake unto you: let every one of you turn from his
evil way, and from your most corrupt affections; and ye shall dwell in the
land which I gave to you and to your fathers for ever.(7) Walk ye not after
strange gods, to serve them; and provoke me not to anger with the works of your
hands, that I should destroy you." The prophet Ezra(8) also, who was in the times of
the same Cyrus by whom the Jews were restored, thus speaks: They rebelled
against Thee, and cast Thy law behind their backs, and slew Thy prophets which
testified against them, that they might turn unto Thee."
The prophet Elias also, in the third book of Kings:(9) "I have been very
jealous(10) for the Lord God of hosts, because the children of Israel have
forsaken Thee, thrown down Thine altars, and slain Thy prophets with the sword; and
I only am left, and they seek my life to take it away." On account of these
impieties of theirs He cast them off for ever;(11) and so He ceased to send to
them prophets. But He commanded His own Son, the first-begotten,(12) the maker of
all things, His own counsellor, to descend from heaven, that He might transfer
the sacred religion of God to the Gentiles,(13) that is, to those who were
ignorant of God, and might teach them righteousness, which the perfidious people
had cast aside· And He had long before threatened that He would do this, as the
prophet Malachi(14) shows, saying: "I have no pleasure in you, saith the Lord,
and I will not accept an offering from your hands; for from the rising of the
sun even unto its setting, my name shall be great(15) among the Gentiles." David
also in the seventeenth Psalm(16) says: "Thou wilt make me the head of the
heathen; a people whom I have not known shall serve me" Isaiah(17) also thus
speaks: "I come to gather all nations and tongues; and they shall come and see my
glory; and I will send among them a sign, and I will send those that escape of
them unto the nations which are afar off, which have not heard my fame; and they
shall declare my glory among the Gentiles." Therefore, when God wished to send
to the earth one who should measure(1) His temple, He was unwilling to send him
with heavenly power and glory, that the people who had been ungrateful towards
God might be led into the greatest error, and suffer punishment for their
crimes, since they had not received their Lord and God, as the prophets had before
foretold that it would thus happen. For Isaiah whom the Jews most cruelly slew,
cutting him asunder with a saw,(2) thus speaks:(3) "Hear, O heaven; and give
ear, O earth: for the Lord hath spoken, I have begotten sons, and lifted(4) them
up on high, and they have rejected me. The ox knoweth his owner, and the ass
his master's stall; but Israel hath not known, my people has not understood."
Jeremiah also says, in like manner:(5) "The turtle and the swallow hath known her
time, and the sparrows of the field have observed(6) the tithes of their
coining: but my people have not known the judgment of the Lord. How do you say, We
are wise, and the law of the Lord is with us? The meting out(7) is in vain; the
scribes are deceived and confounded: the wise men are dismayed and taken, for
they have rejected the word of the Lord."
Therefore (as I had begun to say), when God had determined to send to men
a teacher of righteousness, He commanded Him to be born again a second time in
the flesh, and to be made in the likeness of man himself, to whom he was about
to be a guide, and companion, and teacher. But since God is kind and
merciful(8) to His people, He sent Him to those very persons whom He hated,(9) that He
might not close the way of salvation against them for ever, but might give them a
free opportunity of following God, that they might both gain the reward of
life if they should follow Him (which many of them do, and have done), and that
they might incur the penalty of death by their fault if they should reject their
King. He ordered Him therefore to be born again among them, and of their seed,
lest, if He should be born of another nation, they might be able to allege a
just excuse from the law for their rejection of Him; and at the same time, that
there might be no nation at all under heaven to which the hope of immortality
should be denied.
CHAP. XII.--OF THE BIRTH OF JESUS FROM THE VIRGIN; OF HIS LIFE, DEATH, AND
RESURRECTION, AND THE TESTIMONIES OF THE PROPHETS RESPECTING THESE THINGS.
Therefore the Holy Spirit of God, descending from heaven, chose the holy
Virgin, that He might enter into her womb.(10) But she, I being filled by the
possession(11) of the Divine Spirit, conceived; and without any intercourse with
a man, her virgin womb was suddenly impregned. But if it is known to all that
certain animals are accustomed to conceive(12) by the wind and the breeze, why
should any one think it wonderful when we say that a virgin was made fruitful by
the Spirit of God, to whom whatever He may wish is easy? And this might have
appeared incredible, had not the prophets many ages previously foretold its
occurrence. Thus Solomon speaks:(13) "The womb of a virgin was strengthened, and
conceived; and a virgin was made fruitful, and became a mother in great pity."
Likewise the prophet Isaiah,(14) whose words are these: "Therefore God Himself
shall give you a sign: Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son; and ye
shall call His name Emmanuel." What can be more manifest than this? This was read
by the Jews, who denied Him. If any one thinks that these things are invented
by us, let him inquire of them, let him take especially from them: the
testimony is sufficiently strong to prove the truth, when it is alleged by enemies
themselves, But He was never called Emmanuel, but Jesus, who in Latin is called
Saving, or Saviour,(15) because He comes bringing salvation to all nations. But by
this name the prophet declared that God incarnate was about to come to men.
For Emmanuel signifies God with us; because when He was born of a virgin, men
ought to confess that God was with them, that is, on the earth and in mortal
flesh. Whence David(16) says in the eighty-fourth Psalm, "Truth has sprung out of
the earth;" because God, in whom is truth, hath taken a body of earth, that He
might open a way of salvation to those of the earth. In like manner Isaiah
also:(17) "But they disbelieved, and vexed His Holy Spirit; and He was turned to be
their enemy. And He Himself fought against them, and He remembered the days of
old,(1) who raised up from the earth a shepherd of the sheep." But who this
shepherd was about to be, he declared in another place,(2) saying: "Let the
heavens rejoice, and let the clouds put on righteousness; let the earth open, and put
forth a Saviour. For I the Lord have begotten Him." But the Saviour is, as we
have said before, Jesus. But in another place the same prophet also thus
proclaimed:(3) "Behold, unto us a child is born, unto us a Son is given, whose
dominion is upon His shoulders, and His name is called Messenger of great counsel."
For on this account He was sent by God the Father, that He might reveal to all
the nations which are under heaven the sacred mystery of the only true God,
which was taken away from the perfidious people, who ofttimes sinned against God.
Daniel also foretold similar things:(4) "I saw," he said, "in a vision of the
night, and, behold, one like the Son of man coming with the clouds of heaven, and
He came even to the Ancient of days. And they who stood by brought Him near(5)
s before Him. And there was given unto Him a kingdom, and glory, and dominion;
and all people, tribes, and languages shall serve Him: and His dominion is
everlasting, which shall never pass away, and His kingdom shall not be destroyed."
How then do the Jews both confess and expect the Christ of God? who rejected
Him on this account, because He was born of man. For since it is so arranged by
God that the same Christ should twice come to the earth, once to announce to
the nations the one God, then again to reign, why do they who did not believe in
His first advent believe in the second?
But the prophet comprises both His advents in few words. Behold, he says,
one like the Son of man coming with the clouds of heaven. He did not say, like
the Son of God, but the Son of man, that he might show that He had(6) to be
clothed with flesh on the earth, that having assumed the form of a man and the
condition of mortality, He might teach men righteousness; and when, having
completed the commands of God, He had revealed the truth to the nations, He might also
suffer death, that He might overcome and lay open(7) the other world also, and
thus at length rising again, He might proceed to His Father borne aloft on a
cloud.(8) For the prophet said in addition: And came even to the Ancient of
days, and was presented to Him. He called the Most High God the Ancient of days,
whose age and origin cannot be comprehended; for He alone was from generations,
and He will be always to generations.(9) But that Christ, after His passion and
resurrection, was about to ascend to God the Father, David bore witness in
these words in the cixth Psalm:(10) "The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit Thou at my
right hand, until I make Thine enemies Thy footstool." Whom could this prophet,
being himself a king, call his Lord, who sat at the right hand of God, but Christ
the Son of God, who is King of kings and Lord of lords? And this is more
plainly shown by Isaiah,(11) when he says: "Thus saith the Lord God to my Lord
Christ, whose right hand I have holden; I will subdue nations before Him, and will
break the strength of kings. I will open before Him gates, and the cities shall
not be closed. I will go before Thee, and will make the mountains level; and I
will break in pieces the gates of brass, and shatter the bars of iron; and I
will give Thee the hidden and invisible treasures, that Thou mayest know that I
am the Lord God, which call Thee by Thy name, the God of Israel." Lastly, on
account of the goodness and faithfulness which He displayed towards God on
earth, there was given to Him a kingdom, and glory, and dominion; and all people,
tribes, and languages shall serve Him; and His dominion is everlasting, and that
which shall never pass away, and His kingdom shall not be destroyed. And this
is understood in two ways: that even now He has an everlasting dominion, when
all nations and all languages adore His name, confess His majesty, follow His
teaching, and imitate His goodness: He has power and glory, in that all tribes of
the earth obey His precepts. And also, when He shall come again with majesty
and glory to judge every soul, and to restore the righteous to life, then He
shall truly have the government of the whole earth: then, every evil having been
removed from the affairs of men, a golden age (as the poets call it), that is, a
time of righteousness and peace, will arise. But we will speak of these things
more fully in the last book, when we shall speak of His second advent; now let
us treat of His first advent, as we began.
CHAP. XIII.--OF JESUS, GOD AND MAN; AND THE TESTIMONIES OF THE PROPHETS
CONCERNING HIM.
Therefore the Most High God, and Parent of all, when He had purposed to
transfer(12) His religion, sent from heaven a teacher of righteousness, that in
Him or through Him He might give a new law to new worshippers; not as He had
before done, by the instrumentality of man. Nevertheless it was His pleasure that
He should be born as a man, that in all things He might be like His supreme
Father· For God the Father Himself, who is the origin and source of all things,
inasmuch as He is without parents, is most truly named by Trismegistus
"fatherless" and "motherless,"(1) because He was born from no one. For which reason it
was befitting that the Son also should be twice born, that He also might become
"fatherless" and "motherless." For in His first nativity, which was spiritual,
He was "motherless," because He was begotten by God the Father alone, without
the office of a mother. But in His second, which was in the flesh, He was born of
a virgin's womb without the office of a father, that, bearing a middle
substance between God and man, He might be able, as it were, to take by the hand this
frail and weak nature of ours, and raise it to immortality. He became both the
Son of God through the Spirit, and the Son of man through the flesh,--that is,
both God and man. The power of God was displayed in Him, from the works which
He performed; the frailty of the man, from the passion which He endured: on what
account He undertook it I will mention a little later. In the meantime, we
learn from the predictions of the prophets that He was both God and man--
composed(2) of both natures. Isaiah testifies that He was God in these words:(3) "Egypt
is wearied,(4) and the merchandise of Ethiopia, and the Sabaeans, men of
stature, shall come over unto Thee, and shall be Thy servants: and they shall walk
behind Thee; in chains they shall fall down unto Thee, and shall make
supplication unto Thee, Since God is in Thee, and there is no other God besides Thee. For
Thou art God, and we knew Thee not, the God of lsrael, the Savour. They shall
all be confounded and ashamed who oppose Thee, and shall fall into confusion."
In like manner the prophet Jeremiah(5) thus speaks: "This is our God, and there
shall none other be compared unto Him. He hath found out all the way of
knowledge, and hath given it unto Jacob His servant, and to Israel His beloved.
Afterward He was seen upon earth, and dwelt among men." David also, in the
forty-fourth Psalm:(6) "Thy throne, O God, is for ever and ever; a sceptre of
righteousness is the sceptre of Thy kingdom. Thou hast loved righteousness, and hated
wickedness l therefore God, Thy God, hath anointed Thee with the oil of gladness."
By which word he also shows His name, since (as I have shown above) He was
called Christ from His anointing. Then, that He was also man, Jeremiah teaches,
saying:(7) "And He is a man, and who hath known Him?" Also Isaiah:(8) "And God
shall send to them a man, who shall save them, shall save them by judging." But
Moses also, in Numbers,(9) thus speaks: "There shall arise a star out of Jacob,
and a man(10) shall spring forth from Israel." On which account the Milesian
Apollo,(11) being asked whether He was God or man, replied in this manner: "He
was mortal as to His body, being wise with wondrous works; but being taken with
arms under Chaldean judges, with nails and the cross He endured a bitter
end." In the first verse he spoke the truth, but he skilfully deceived him who
asked the question, who was entirely ignorant of the mystery of the truth. For he
appears to have denied that He was God. But when he acknowledges that He was
mortal as to the flesh, which we also declare, it follows that as to the spirit
He was God, which we affirm. For why would it have been necessary to make
mention of the flesh, since it was sufficient to say that He was mortal? But being
pressed by the truth, he could not deny the real state of the case; as that
which he says, that He was wise.
What do you reply to this, Apollo? If he is wise, then his system of
instruction is wisdom, and no other; and they are wise who follow it, and no others.
Why then are we commonly esteemed as foolish, and visionary, and senseless,
who follow a Master who is wise even by the confession of the gods themselves?
For in that he said that He wrought wonderful deeds, by which He especially
claimed faith is His divinity, he now appears to assent to us, when he says the same
things in which we boast. But, however, he recovers himself, and again has
recourse to demoniacal frauds. For when he had been compelled to speak the truth,
he now appeared to be a betrayer of the gods and of himself, unless he had, by
a deceptive falsehood, concealed that which the truth had extorted from him. He
says, therefore, that He did indeed perform wonderful works, yet not by divine
power, but by magic. What wonder if Apollo thus persuaded men ignorant of the
truth, when the Jews also, worshippers (as they seemed to be) of the Most High
God, entertained the same opinion, though they had every day before their eyes
those mira- cles which the prophets had foretold to them as about to happen,
and yet they could not be induced by the contemplation of such powers to believe
that He whom they saw was God? On this account, David, whom they especially
read above the other prophets, in the twenty-seventh Psalm(1) thus condemns them:
"Render to them their desert, because they regard not the works of the Lord."
Both David himself and other prophets announced that of the house of this very
David, Christ should be born according to the flesh. Thus it is written in
Isaiah:(2) "And in that day there shall be a root of Jesse, and He who shall arise
to rule over the nations, in Him shall the Gentiles trust; and His rest shall
be glorious." And in another place:(3) "There shall come forth a rod out of the
stem of Jesse, and a blossom(4) shall grow out of his root; and the Spirit of
God shall rest upon Him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of
counsel and of might, the spirit of knowledge and of piety; and He shall be
filled(5) with the spirit of fear of the Lord." Now Jesse was the father of David,
from whose root he foretold that a blossom would arise; namely him of whom the
Sibyl speaks, "A pure blossom shall spring forth."
Also in the second book of Kings, the prophet Nathan was sent to David,
who wished to build a temple for God; and this was the word of the Lord to
Nathan, saying:(6) "Go and tell my servant David, Thus saith the Lord Almighty, Thou
shall not build me a house for me to dwell in; but when thy days be fulfilled,
and thou shalt sleep with thy fathers, I will raise up thy seed after thee, and
I will establish His kingdom. He shall build me a house for my name, and I
will set up His throne for ever; and I will be to Him for a father, and He shall
be to me for a son; and His house shall be established,(7) and His kingdom for
ever." But the reason why the Jews did not understand these things was this,
because Solomon the son of David built a temple for God, and the city which he
called from his own name, Jerusalem.(8) Therefore they referred the predictions of
the prophets to him. Now Solomon received the government of the kingdom from
his father himself. But the prophets spoke of Him who was then born after that
David had slept with his fathers. Besides, the reign of Solomon was not
everlasting; for he reigned forty years. In the next place, Solomon was never called
the son of God, but the son of David; and the house which he built was not firmly
established,(9) as the Church, which is the true temple of God, which does not
consist of walls, but of the heart(10) and faith of the men who believe on
Him, and are called faithful. But that temple of Solomon, inasmuch as it was built
by the hand, fell by the hand. Lastly, his father, in the cxxvith Psalm,
prophesied in this manner respecting the works of his son:(11) "Except the Lord
build the house, they have laboured in vain that built it; except the Lord keep the
city, the watchman hath waked but in vain."
CHAP. XIV.--OF THE PRIESTHOOD OF JESUS FORETOLD BY THE PROPHETS.
From which things it is evident that all the prophets declared concerning
Christ, that it should come to pass at some time, that being born with a
body(12) of the race of David, He should build an eternal temple in honour of God,
which is called the Church, and assemble all nations to the true worship of God.
This is the faithful house, this is the everlasting temple; and if any one hath
not sacrificed in this, he will not have the reward of immortality. And since
Christ was the builder of this great and eternal temple, He must also have an
everlasting priesthood in it; and there can be no approach to the shrine of the
temple, and to the sight of God, except through Him who built the temple. David
in the cixth Psalm teaches the same, saying:(13) "Before the morning-star I
begat Thee. The Lord hath sworn, and will not repent; Thou art a priest for
ever, after the order of Melchisedec." Also in the first book of Kings:(14) "And
I will raise me up a faithful Priest, who shall do all things that are in mine
heart; and I will build him a sure(15) house; and he shall walk in my sight(16)
all his days." But who this was about to be, to whom God promised an
everlasting priesthood, Zechariah most plainly teaches, even mentioning His name:(17)
"And the Lord God showed me Jesus(1) the great Priest standing before the face of
the angel of the Lord, and the adversary(2) was standing at His right hand to
resist Him. And the Lord said unto the adversary, The Lord who hath chosen
Jerusalem rebuke thee; and lo, a brand plucked out of the fire. And Jesus was
clothed with filthy garments, and He was standing before the face of the angel. And
He answered and spake unto those that stood around before His face, saying,
Take away the filthy garments from Him, and clothe Him with a flowing(3) garment,
and place a fair mitre(4) upon His head; and they clothed Him with a garment,
and placed a fair mitre upon His head. And the angel of the Lord stood, and
protested, saying to Jesus: Thus saith the Lord of hosts, If Thou wilt walk in my
ways, and keep my precepts, Thou shalt judge my house, and I will give Thee
those that may walk with Thee in the midst of these that stand by. Hear, therefore,
O Jesus, Thou great Priest."
Who, therefore, would not believe that the Jews were then deprived of
understanding, who, when they read and heard these things, laid impious hands upon
their God? But from the time in which Zechariah lived, until the fifteenth year
of the reign of Tiberius Caesar, in which Christ was crucified, nearly five
hundred years are reckoned; since he flourished in the time of Darius and
Alexander,(5) who lived not long after the banishment of Tarquinius Superbus. But they
were again misled and deceived in the same manner, in supposing that these
things were spoken concerning Jesus(6) the son of Nave, who was the successor of
Moses, or concerning Jesus the high priest the son of Josedech; to whom none of
those things which the prophet related was suited. For they were never clothed
in filthy garments, since one of them was a most powerful prince, and the other
high priest; or suffered any adversity, so that they should be regarded as a
brand plucked from the fire: not did they ever stand in the presence of God and
the angels; nor did the prophet speak of the past so much as of the future. He
spoke, therefore, of Jesus the Son of God, to show that He would first come in
humility and in the flesh. For this is the filthy garment, that He might
prepare a temple for God, and might be scorched(7) as a brand with fire--that is,
might endure tortures from men, and at last be extinguished. For a haft-burnt
brand drawn forth from the hearth and extinguished, is commonly so called,(8) But
in what manner and with what commands He was sent by God to the earth, the
Spirit of God declared through the prophet, teaching us that when He had faithfully
and uniformly fulfilled the will of His supreme Father, He should receive
judgment(9) and an everlasting dominion. If, He says, Thou wilt walk in my ways, and
keep my precepts, then Thou shalt judge my house. What these ways of God
were, and what His precepts, is neither doubtful nor obscure. For God, when He saw
that wickedness and the worship of false gods had so prevailed throughout the
world, that His name had now also been taken away from the memory of men (since
even the Jews, who alone had been entrusted with the secret of God, had
deserted the living God, and, ensared by the deceits of demons, had gone astray, and
turned aside to the worship of images, and when rebuked by the prophets did not
choose to return to God), He sent His Son(10) as an ambassador to men, that He
might turn them from their impious and vain worship to the knowledge and
worship of the true God; and also that He might turn their minds from foolishness to
wisdom, and from wickedness to deeds of righteousness. These are the ways of
God, in which He enjoined Him to walk. These are the precepts which He ordered
to be observed. But He exhibited faith towards God. For He taught that there is
but one God, and that He alone ought to be worshipped. Nor did He at any time
say that He Himself was God; for He would not have maintained His faithfulness,
if, when sent to abolish the false gods, and to assert the existence of the one
God, He had introduced another besides that one. This would have been not to
proclaim one God, nor to do the work of Him who sent Him, but to discharge a
peculiar office for Himself, and to separate Himself from Him whom He came to
reveal. On which account, because He was so faithful, because He arrogated nothing
at all to Himself, that He might fulfil the commands of Him who sent Him, He
received the dignity of everlasting Priest, and the honour of supreme King, and
the authority of Judge, and the name of God.
CHAP. XV.--OF THE LIFE AND MIRACLES OF JESUS, AND TESTIMONIES CONCERNING THEM.
Having spoken of the second nativity, in which, He showed Himself in the
flesh to men, let us come to those wonderful works, on account of which, though
they were signs of heavenly power, the Jews esteemed Him a magician. When He
first began to reach maturity(1) He was baptized by the prophet John in the river
Jordan, that He might wash(2) away in the spiritual layer not His own sins,
for it is evident that He had none, but those of the flesh,(3) which He bare;
that as He saved the Jews by undergoing circumcision, so He might save the
Gentiles also by baptism--that is, by the pouring forth(4) of the purifying dew. Then
a voice from heaven was heard: " Thou art my Son, to-day have I begotten
Thee."(5) Which voice is found to have been foretold by David. And the Spirit of God
descended upon Him, formed after the appearance of a white dove.(6) From that
time He began to perform the greatest miracles, not by magical tricks, which
display nothing true and substantial, but by heavenly strength and power, which
were foretold even long ago by the prophets who announced Him; which works are so
many, that a single book is not sufficient to comprise them all. I will
therefore enumerate them briefly and generally, without any designation of persons
and places, that I may be able to come to the setting forth of His passion and
cross, to which my discourse has long been hastening. His powers were those which
Apollo called wonderful:(7) that wherever He journeyed, by a single word, and
in a single moment, He healed the sick and infirm, and those afflicted with
every kind of disease: so that those who were deprived of the use of all their
limbs, having suddenly received power, were strengthened, and themselves carried
their couches, on which they had a little time before been carried. But to the
lame, and to those afflicted with some defect(8) of the feet, He not only gave
the power of walking, but also of running. Then, also, if any had their eyes
blinded in the deepest darkness, He restored them to their former sight. He also
loosened the tongues of the dumb, so that(9) they discoursed and spoke
eloquently. He also opened the ears of the deaf, and caused them to hear;(10) He
cleansed the polluted and the blemished.(11) And He performed all these things not by
His hands, or the application of any remedy,(12) but by His word and command,
as also the Sibyl had foretold:
"Doing all things by His word, and healing every disease."
Nor, indeed, is it wonderful that He did wonderful things by His word,
since He Himself was the Word of God, relying upon heavenly strength and power.
Nor was it enough that He gave strength to the feeble, soundness of body to the
maimed, health to the sick and languishing, unless He also raised the dead, as
it were unbound from sleep, and recalled them to life.
And the Jews, then, when they saw these things, contended that they were
done by demoniacal power, although it was contained in their secret writings
that all things should thus come to pass as they did. They read indeed the words
of other prophets, and of Isaiah,(13) saying: "Be strong, ye hands that are
relaxed; and ye weak knees, be comforted. Ye who are of a fearful(14) heart, fear
not, be not afraid: our Lord shall execute judgment; He Himself shall come and
save us. Then shall the eyes of the blind be opened, and the ears of the deaf
shall hear: then shall the lame man leap as a deer, and the tongue of the dumb
speak plainly:(15) for in the wilderness water hath broken forth, and a stream
in the thirsty land." But the Sibyl also foretold the same things in these
verses:--
"And there shall be a rising again of the dead; and the course of the lame
shall be swift, and the deaf shall hear, and the blind shall see,the dumb
shall speak."
On account of these powers and divine works wrought by Him when a great
multitude followed Him of the maimed, or sick, or of those who desired to present
their sick to be healed, He went up into a desert mountain to pray there. And when
He had tarried there three days, and the people were suffering from hunger, He
called His disciples, and asked what quantity of food(16) they had with them.
But they said that they had five loaves and two fishes in a wallet. Then He
commanded that these should be brought forward, and that the multitude,
distributed by riffles, should recline an the ground. When the disciples did this, He
Himself broke the bread in pieces, and divided the flesh of the fishes, and in His
hands both of them were increased. And when He had ordered the disciples to
set them before the people, five thousand men were satisfied, and moreover
twelve baskets(17) were filled from the fragments which remained. What can be more
wonderful, either in narration or in action? But the Sibyl had before foretold
that it would take place, whose verses are related to this effect:--
"With five loaves at the same time, and with two fishes, He shallsatisfy
five thousand men in the wilderness; And afterwards taking allthe fragments that
remain, He shall fill twelve baskets to the hope ofmany."
I ask, therefore, what the art of magic could have contrived in this case, the
skill of which is of avail for nothing else than for deceiving(1) the eves? He
also, when He was about to retire to a mountain, as He was wont, for the sake
of prayer, directed His disciples to take a small ship and go before Him. But
they, setting out when evening was now coming on, began to be distressed(2)
through a contrary wind. And when they were now in the midst of the sea,(3) then,
setting His feet on the sea,(4) He came up to them, walking as though on the
solid ground,(5) not as the poets fable Orion walking on the sea, who, while a
part of his body was sunk in the water,
"With his shoulder rises above the waves."(6)
And again, when He had gone to sleep in the ship, and the wind had begun to
rage, even to the extremity of danger, being aroused from sleep, He immediately
ordered the wind to be silent; and the waves, which were borne with great
violence, were still, and immediately at His word there followed a calm.
But perhaps the sacred writings(7) speak falsely, when they teach that
there was such power in Him, that by His command He compelled the winds to obey,
the seas to serve Him, diseases to depart, the dead to be submissive. Why should
I say that the Sibyls before taught the same things in their verses? one of
whom, already mentioned, thus speaks:--
"He shall still the winds by His word, and calm the sea
As it rages, treading with feet of peace and in faith."
And again another, which says:--
"He shall walk on the waves, He shall release men from disease.
He shall raise the dead, and drive away many pains;
And from the bread of one wallet there shall be a satisfying of men."
Some, refuted by these testimonies, are accustomed to have recourse to the
assertion that these poems were not by the Sibyls, but made up and composed by our
own writers. But he will assuredly not think this who has read Cicero,(8) and
Varro, and other ancient writers, who make mention of the Erythraean and the
other Sibyls, from whose books we bring forward these examples; and these authors
died before the birth of Christ according to the flesh. But I do not doubt
that these poems were in former times regarded as ravings, since no one then
understood them. For they announced some marvellous wonders, of which neither the
manner, nor the time, nor the author was signified. Lastly, the Erythraean Sibyl
says that it would come to pass that she would be called mad and deceitful. But
assuredly
"They will say that the Sibyl
Is mad, and deceitful: but when all things shall come to pass,
Then ye will remember me; and no one will any longer
Say that I, the prophetess of the great God, am mad."
Therefore they were(9) neglected for many ages; but they received attention
after the nativity and passion of Christ had revealed secret things. Thus it was
also with the utterances of the prophets, which were read by the people of the
Jews for fifteen hundred years and more, but yet were not understood until
after Christ had explained(10) them both by His word and by His works. For the
prophets spoke of Him; nor could the things which they said have been in any way
understood, unless they had been altogether fulfilled.