THE DIVINE INSTITUTES. REST OF BOOK V
CHAP. XIII.--OF THE INCREASE AND THE PUNISHMENT OF THE CHRISTIANS.(4)
But since our number is continually increased from the worshippers of
gods, but is never lessened, not even in persecution itself,--since men may commit
sin, and be defiled by sacrifice, but they cannot be turned away from God, for
the truth prevails by its own power,--who is there, I pray, so foolish and so
blind as not to see on which side wisdom is? But they are blinded by malice and
fury, that they cannot see; and they think that those are foolish who, when
they have it in their power to avoid punishments, nevertheless prefer to be
tortured and to be put to death; whereas they might see from this very circumstance,
that it is not folly to which so many thousands throughout the world agree with
one and the same mind. For if women fall into error through the weakness of
their sex (for these persons sometimes call it a womanish and anile
superstition), men doubtless are wise. If boys, if youths are improvident through their age,
the mature and aged doubtless have a fixed judgment. If one city is unwise, it
is evident that the other innumerable cities cannot be foolish. If one
province or one nation is without prudence, the rest must have understanding of that
which is right. But since the divine law has been received from the rising even
to the setting of the sun, and each sex, every age, and nation, and country,
with one and the same mind obeys God--since there is everywhere the same patient
endurance, the same contempt of death--they ought to have understood that there
is some reason in that matter, that it is not without a cause that it is
defended even to death, that there is some foundation and solidity, which not only
frees that religion from injuries and molestation, but always increases and
makes it stronger. For in this respect also the malice of those is brought to
light, who think that they have utterly overthrown the religion of God if they have
corrupted men, when it is permitted them to make satisfaction also to God; and
there is no worshipper of God so evil who does not, when the opportunity is
given him, return to appease God, and that, too, with greater devotedness. For the
consciousness of sin and the fear of punishment make a man more religious, and
the faith is always much stronger which is replaced through repentance. If,
therefore, they themselves, when they think that the gods are angry with them,
nevertheless believe that they are appeased by gifts, and sacrifices, and
incense, what reason is there why they should imagine our God to be so unmerciful and
implacable, that it should appear impossible for him to be a Christian, who by
compulsion and against his will has poured a libation to their gods? Unless by
chance they think that those who are once contaminated are about to change
their mind, so that they may now begin of their own accord to do that which they
have done under the influence of torture. Who would willingly undertake that duty
which began with injury? Who, when he sees the scars on his own sides, would
not the more hate the gods, on account of whom he bears the traces of lasting
punishment, and the marks imprinted upon his flesh? Thus it comes to pass, that
when peace is given from heaven, those who were estranged (1) from us return,
and a fresh crowd(2) of others are added on account of the wonderful nature(3) of
the virtue displayed. For when the people see that men are lacerated by
various kinds of tortures, and that they retain their patience unsubdued while the
executioners are wearied, they think, as is really the case, that neither the
agreement of so many nor the constancy of the dying is without meaning, and that
patience itself could not surmount such great tortures without the aid of God.
Robbers and men of robust frame are unable to endure lacerations of this kind:
they utter exclamations, and send forth groans; for they are overcome by pain,
because they are destitute of patience infused(4) into them. But in our case
(not to speak of men), boys and delicate women in silence overpower their
torturers, and even the fire is unable to extort from them a groan. Let the Romans go
and boast in their Mutius or Regulus,--the one of whom gave himself up to be
slain by the enemy, because he was ashamed to live as a captive; the other being
taken by the enemy, when he saw that he could not escape death, laid his hand
upon the burning hearth, that he might make atonement for his crime to the enemy
whom he wished to kill, and by that punishment received the pardon which he had
not deserved. Behold, the weak sex and fragile age endure to be lacerated in
the whole body, and to be burned: not Of necessity, for it is permitted them to
escape if they wished to do so; but of their own will, because they put their
trust in God.(5)
CHAP. XIV.--OF THE FORTITUDE OF THE CHRISTIANS.
But this is true virtue, which the vaunting philosophers also boast of,
not in deed, but with empty words, saying that nothing is so befitting the
gravity and constancy of a wise man as to be able to be driven away from his
sentiment and purpose by no torturers, but that it is worth his while(6) to suffer
torture and death rather than betray a trust or depart from his duty, or, overcome
by fear of death or severity of pain, commit any injustice. Unless by chance
Flaccus appears to them to rave in his lyrics, when he says,
"Not the rage of the million commanding things evil;
Not the doom frowning near in the brows of the tyrant,
Shakes the upright and resolute man
In his solid completeness of soul."(7)
And nothing can be more true than this, if it is referred to those who
refuse no tortures, no kind of death, that they may not turn aside from faith and
justice; who do not tremble at the commands of tyrants nor the swords of
rulers,(8) so as not to maintain true and solid liberty with constancy of mind, which
wisdom is to be observed in this alone. For who is so arrogant, who so lifted
up, as to forbid me to raise my eyes to heaven? Who can impose upon me the
necessity either of worshipping that which I am unwilling to worship, or of
abstaining from the worship of that which I wish to worship? What further will now be
left to us, if even this, which must be done of one's own will,(9) shall be
extorted from me by the caprice of another? No one will effect this, if we have
any courage to despise death and pain. But if we possess this constancy, why are
we judged foolish when we do those things which philosophers praise? Seneca, in
charging men with inconsistency, rightly says the highest virtue appears to
them to consist in greatness of spirit; and yet the same persons regard him who
despises death as a madman, which is plainly a mark of the greatest
perverseness. But those followers of vain religions urge this with the same folly with
which they fail to understand the true God; and these the Erythraean Sibyl calls
"deaf and senseless,"(1) since they neither hear nor perceive divine things, but
fear and adore an earthen image moulded by their own fingers.
CHAP. XV.--OF FOLLY, WISDOM, PIETY, EQUITY, AND JUSTICE.
But the reason on account of which they imagine those who are wise to be
foolish has strong grounds of support (for they are not deceived without
reason). And this must be diligently explained by us, that they may at length (if it
is possible) recognise their errors. Justice by its own nature has a certain
appearance of folly, and I am able to confirm this both by divine and human
testimonies. But perhaps we should not succeed with them, unless we should teach them
from their own authorities that no one can be just, a matter which is united
with true wisdom, unless he also appears to be foolish. Carneades was a
philosopher of the Academic sect; and one who knows not what power he had in
discussion, what eloquence, what sagacity, will nevertheless understand the character of
the man himself from the praises of Cicero or of Lucilius, in whose writings
Neptune, discoursing on a subject of the greatest difficulty, shows that it
cannot be explained, even if Orcus should restore Carneades himself to life. This
Carneades, when he had been sent by the Athenians as ambassador to Rome, disputed
copiously on the subject of justice, in the hearing of Galba and Cato, who had
been censor, who were at that time the greatest of orators. But on the next
day the same man overthrew his own argument by a disputation to the contrary
effect, and took away the justice which he had praised on the preceding day, not
indeed with the gravity of a philosopher, whose prudence ought to be firm and his
opinion settled, but as it were by an oratorical kind of exercise of disputing
on both sides. And he was accustomed to do this, that he might be able to
refute others who asserted anything. L. Furius, in Cicero, makes mention of that
discussion in which justice is overthrown.(2) I believe, inasmuch as he was
discussing the subject of the state, he did it that he might introduce the defence
and praise of that without which he thought that a state could not be governed.
But Carneades, that he might refute Aristotle and Plato, the advocates of
justice, in that first disputation collected all the arguments which were alleged in
behalf of justice, that he might be able to overthrow them, as he did. For it
was very easy to shake justice, having no roots, inasmuch as there was then
none on the earth, that its nature or qualities might be perceived by
philosophers. And I could wish that men, so many and of such a character, had possessed
knowledge also, in proportion to their eloquence and spirit, for completing the
defence of this greatest virtue, which has its origin in religion, its principle
in equity! But those who were ignorant of that first part could not possess the
second. But I wish first to show, summarily and concisely, what it is, that it
may be understood that the philosophers were ignorant of justice, and were
unable to defend that with which they were unacquainted. Although justice embraces
all the virtues together, yet there are two, the chief of all, which cannot be
torn asunder and separated from it--piety and equity. For fidelity,
temperance, uprightness, innocence, integrity, and the other things of this kind, either
naturally or through the training of parents, may exist in those men who are
ignorant of justice, as they have always existed; for the ancient Romans, who
were accustomed to glory in justice, used evidently to glory in those virtues
which (as I have said) may proceed from justice, and be separated from the very
fountain itself. But piety and equity are, as it were, its veins: for in these two
fountains the whole of justice is contained; but its source and origin is in
the first, all its force and method in the second. But piety is nothing else but
the conception(3) of God, as Trismegistus most truly defined it, as we have
said in another place. If, therefore, it is piety to know God, and the sum of
this knowledge is that you worship Him, it is plain that he is ignorant of justice
who does not possess the knowledge of God. For how can he know justice itself,
who is ignorant of the source from which it arises? Plato, indeed, spoke many
things respecting the one God, by whom he said that the world was framed; but
he spoke nothing respecting religion: for he had dreamed of God, but had not
known Him. But if either he himself or any other person had wished to complete the
defence of justice, he ought first of all to have overthrown the religions of
the gods, because they are opposed to piety. And because Socrates indeed tried
to do this, he was thrown into prison; that even then it might be seen what was
about to happen to those men who had begun to defend true justice, and to
serve the only God.
The other part of justice, therefore, is equity; and it is plain that I am
not speaking of the equity of judging well, though this also is praiseworthy
in a just man, but of making himself equal to others, which Cicero calls
equability.(4) For God, who produces and gives breath to men, willed that all should
be equal, that is, equally matched.(1) He has imposed on all the same condition
of living; He has produced all to wisdom; He has promised immortality to all;
no one is cut off from His heavenly benefits. For as He distributes to all alike
His one light, sends forth His fountains to all, supplies food, and gives the
most pleasant rest of sleep; so He bestows on all equity and virtue. In His
sight no one is a slave, no one a master; for if all have the same Father, by an
equal right we are all children. No one is poor in the sight of God, but he who
is without justice; no one is rich, but he who is full of virtues; no one, in
short, is excellent, but he who has been good and innocent; no one is most
renowned, but he who has abundantly performed works of mercy; no one is most
perfect, but he who has filled all the steps of virtue. Therefore neither the Romans
nor the Greeks could possess justice, because they had men differing from one
another by many degrees, from the poor to the rich, from the humble to the
powerful; in short, from private persons to the highest authorities of kings. For
where all are not equally matched, there is not equity; and inequality of itself
excludes justice, the whole force of which consists in this, that it makes those
equal who have by an equal lot arrived at the condition of this life.
CHAP. XVI.--OF THE DUTIES OF THE JUST MAN, AND THE EQUITY OF CHRISTIANS.
Therefore, since those two fountains of justice are changed, all virtue
and all truth are taken away, and justice itself returns to heaven. And on this
account the true good was not discovered by philosophers, because they were
ignorant both of its origin and effects: which has been revealed to no others but
to our people.(2) Some one will say, Are there not among you some poor, and
others rich; some servants, and others masters? Is there not some difference
between individuals? There is none; nor is there any other cause why we mutually
bestow upon each other the name of brethren, except that we believe ourselves to be
equal. For since we measure all human things not by the body, but by the
spirit, although the condition of bodies is different, yet we have no servants, but
we both regard and speak of them as brothers in spirit, in religion as
fellow-servants. Riches also do not render men illustrious, except that(3) they are
able to make them more conspicuous by good works. For men are rich, not because
they possess riches, but because they employ them on works of justice; and they
who seem to be poor, on this account are rich, because they are not(4) in want,
and desire nothing.
Though, therefore, in lowliness of mind we are on an equality, the free
with slaves, and the rich with the poor, nevertheless in the sight of God we are
distinguished by virtue. And every one is more elevated in proportion to his
greater justice. For if it is justice for a man to put himself on a level even
with those of lower rank, although he excels in this very thing, that he made
himself equal to his inferiors; yet if he has conducted himself not only as an
equal, but even as an inferior, he will plainly obtain a much higher rank of
dignity in the judgment of God(5) For assuredly, since all things in this temporal
life are frail and liable to decay, men both prefer themselves to others, and
contend about dignity; than which nothing is more foul, nothing mere arrogant,
nothing more removed from the conduct of a wise man: for these earthly things
are altogether opposed to heavenly things. For as the wisdom of men is the
greatest foolishness with God, and foolishness is (as I have shown) the greatest
wisdom; so he is low and abject in the sight of God who shall have been conspicuous
and elevated on earth. For, not to mention that these present earthly goods to
which great honour is paid are contrary to virtue, and enervate the vigour of
the mind, what nobility, I pray, can be so firm, what resources, what power,
since God is able to make kings themselves even lower than the lowest? And
therefore God has consulted our interest in placing this in particular among the
divine precepts: "He that exalteth himself shall be abased; and he that humbleth
himself shall be exalted."(6) And the wholesomeness of this precept teaches that
he who shall simply place himself on a level with other men, and carry himself
with humility, is esteemed excellent and illustrious in the sight of God. For
the sentiment is not false which is brought forward in Euripides to this
effect:--"The things which are here considered evil are esteemed good in heaven."
CHAP. XVII.--OF THE EQUITY, WISDOM, AND FOOLISHNESS OF CHRISTIANS.
I have explained the reason why philosophers were unable either to find or
to defend justice. Now I return to that which I had purposed. Carneades,
therefore, since the arguments of the philosophers were weak, undertook the bold
task of refuting them, because he understood that they were capable of refutation.
The substance of his disputation was this: "That men(7) enacted laws for
themselves, with a view to their own advantage, differing indeed according to their
characters, and in the case of the same persons often changed according to the
times: but that there was no natural law: that all, both men and other animals,
were borne by the guidance of nature to their own advantage; therefore that
there was no justice, or if any did exist, it was the greatest folly, because it
injured itself by promoting the interests of others." And he brought forward
these arguments: "That all nations which flourished with dominion, even the
Romans themselves, who were masters of the whole world, if they wish to be just,
that is, to restore the possessions of others, must return to cottages, and lie
down in want and miseries." Then, leaving general topics, he came to particulars.
"If a good man," he says, "has a runaway slave, or an unhealthy and infected
house, and he alone knows these faults, and on this account offers it for sale,
will he give out that the slave is a runaway, and the house which he offers for
sale is infected, or will he conceal it from the purchaser? If he shall give
it out, he is good indeed, because he will not deceive; but still he will be
judged foolish, because he will either sell at a low price or not sell at all. If
he shall conceal it, he will be wise indeed, because he will consult his own
interest; but he will be also wicked, because he will deceive. Again, if he
should find any one who supposes that he is selling copper ore when it is gold, or
lead when it is silver, will he be silent, that he may buy it at a small price;
or will he give information of it, so that he may buy it at a great price? It
evidently appears foolish to prefer to buy it at a great price." From which he
wished it to be understood, both that he who is just and good is foolish, and
that he who is wise is wicked; and yet that it may possibly happen without ruin,
for men to be contented with poverty. Therefore he passed to greater things,
in which no one could be just without danger of his life. For he said:
"Certainly it is justice not to put a man to death, not to take the property of another.
What, then, will the just man do, if he shall happen to have suffered
shipwreck, and some one weaker than himself shall have seized a plank? Will he not
thrust him from the plank, that he himself may get upon it, and supported by it may
escape, especially since there is no witness in the middle of the sea? If he
is wise, he will do so; for he must himself perish unless he shall thus act. But
if he choose rather to die than to inflict violence upon another, in this case
he is just, but foolish, in not sparing his own life while he spares the life
of another. Thus also, if the army of his own people shall have been routed,
and the enemy have begun to press upon them, and that just man shall have met
with a wounded man on horseback, will he spare him so as to be slain himself, or
will he throw him from his horse, that he himself may escape from the enemy?
If he shall do this, he will be wise, but also wicked; if he shall not do it, he
will be just, but also of necessity foolish." When, therefore, he had thus
divided justice into two parts, saying that the one was civil, the other natural,
he subverted both: because the civil part is wisdom, but not justice; but the
natural part is justice, but not wisdom. These arguments are altogether subtle
and acute,(1) and such as Marcus Tullius was unable to refute. For when he
represents Laelius as replying to Furius, and speaking in behalf of justice, he
passed them by as a pitfall without refuting them; so that the same Laelius
appears not to have defended natural justice, which bad fallen under the charge of
folly, but that civil justice which Furius had admitted to be wisdom, but
unjust.(2)
CHAP. XVIII.--OF JUSTICE, WISDOM, AND FOLLY.
With reference to our present discussion, I have shown how justice bears
the resemblance of folly, that it may appear that those are not deceived without
reason who think that men of our religion are foolish in appearing to do such
things as he proposed. Now I perceive that a greater undertaking is required
from me, to show why God wished to enclose justice under the appearance of folly,
and to remove it from the eyes of men, when I shall have first replied to
Furius, since Laelius has not sufficiently replied to him; who, although he was a
wise man, as he was called, yet could not be the advocate of true justice,
because he did not possess the source and fountain of justice. But this defence is
easier for us, to whom by the bounty of Heaven this justice is familiar and well
known, and who know it not in name, but in reality. For Plato and Aristotle
desired with an honest will to defend justice, and would have effected something,
if their good endeavours, their eloquence, and vigour of intellect had been
aided also by a knowledge of divine things. Thus their work, being vain and
useless, was neglected: nor were they able to persuade any of men to live according
to their precept, because that system had no foundation from heaven. But our
work must be more certain, since we are taught of God. For they represented
justice in words, and pictured it when it was not in sight; nor were they able to
confirm their assertions by present examples. For the hearers might have answered
that it was impossible to live as they prescribed in their disputation; so
that none have as yet existed who followed that course of life. But we show the
truth of our statements not only by words, but also by examples derived from the
truth. Therefore Carneades understood what is the nature of justice, except
that he did not sufficiently perceive that it was not folly; although I seem to
myself to understand with what intention he did this. For he did not really think
that he who is just is foolish; but when he knew that he was not so, but did
not comprehend the cause why he appeared so, he wished to show that the truth
lay hidden, that he might maintain the dogma of his own sect,(1) the chief
opinion of which is, "that nothing can be fully comprehended."
Let us see, therefore, whether justice has any agreement with folly. The
just man, he says, if he does not take away from the wounded man: his horse, and
from the shipwrecked man his plank, in order that he may preserve his own
life, is foolish. First of all, I deny that it can in any way happen that a man who
is truly just should be in circumstances of this kind; for the just man is
neither at enmity with any human being, nor desires anything at all which is the
property of another. For why should he take a voyage, or what should he seek
from another land, when his own is sufficient for him? Or why should he carry on
war, and mix himself with the passions of others, when his mind is engaged in
perpetual peace with men? Doubtless he will be delighted with foreign merchandise
or with human blood, who does not know how to seek gain, who is satisfied with
his mode of living, and considers it unlawful not only himself to commit
slaughter, but to be present with those who do it, and to behold it ! But I omit
these things, since it is possible that a man may be compelled even against his
will to undergo these things. Do you then, O Furius--or rather O Carneades, for
all this speech is his--think that justice is so useless, so superfluous, and so
despised by God, that it has no power and no influence in itself which may
avail for its own preservation? But it is evident that they who are ignorant of
the mystery(2) of man, and who therefore refer all things to this present life,
cannot know how great is the force of justice. For when they discuss the subject
of virtue, although they understand that it is very full of labours and
miseries, nevertheless they say that it is to be sought for its own sake; for they by
no means see its rewards, which are eternal and immortal. Thus, by referring
all things to the present life, they altogether reduce virtue to folly, since it
undergoes such great labours of this life in vain and to no purpose. But more
on this subject at another opportunity.
In the meanwhile let us speak of justice, as we began, the power of which
is so great, that when it has raised its eyes to heaven, it deserves all things
from God. Flaccus therefore rightly said, that the power of innocence is so
great, that wherever it journeys, it needs neither arms nor strength for its
protection:--
"He whose life hath no flaw, pure from guile, need not borrow
Or the bow or the darts of the Moor, O my Fuscus !
He relies for defence on no quiver that teems with
Poison-steept arrows.
Though his path be along sultry African Syrtes,
Or Caucasian ravines, where no guest finds a shelter,
Or the banks which Hydaspes, the stream weird(3) with fable,
Licks languid-flowing."(4)
It is impossible, therefore, that amidst the dangers of tempests and of wars
the just man should be unprotected by the guardianship of Heaven; and that even
if he should be at sea in company with parricides and guilty men, the wicked
also should not be spared, that this one just and innocent soul may be freed from
danger, or at any rate may be alone preserved while the rest perish. But let
us grant that the case which the philosopher proposes is possible: what, then,
will the just man do, if he shall have met with a wounded man on a horse, or a
shipwrecked man on a plank? I am not unwilling to confess he will rather die
than put another to death. Nor will justice, which is the chief good of man, on
this account receive the name of folly. For what ought to be better and dearer to
man than innocence? And this must be the more perfect, the more you bring it
to extremity, and choose to die rather than to detract from the character of
innocence. It is folly, he says, to spare the life of another in a case which
involves the destruction of one's own life. Then do you think it foolish to perish
even for friendship?
Why, then, are those Pythagorean friends praised by you, of whom the one
gave himself to the tyrant as a surety for the life of the other, and the other
at the appointed time, when his surety was now being led to execution,
presented himself, and rescued him by his own interposition? Whose virtue would not be
held in such glory, when one of them was willing to die for his friend, the
other even for his word(5) which had been pledged, if they were regarded as fools.
In fine, on account of this very virtue the tyrant rewarded them by preserving
both, and thus the disposition of a most cruel man was changed. Moreover, it
is even said that he entreated(6) them to admit him as a third party to their
friendship, from which it is plain that he regarded them not as fools, but as
good and wise men. Therefore I do not see why, since it is reckoned the highest
glory to die for friendship and for one's word, it is not glorious to a man to
die even for his innocence. They are therefore most foolish who impute it as a
crime to us that we are willing to die for God, when they themselves extol to
the heavens with the highest praises him who was willing to die for a man. In
short, to conclude this disputation, reason itself teaches that it is impossible
for a man to be at once just and foolish, wise and unjust. For he who is foolish
is unacquainted with that which is just and good, and therefore always errs.
For he is as it were, led captive by his vices ; nor can he in any way resist
them, because he is destitute of the virtue of which he is ignorant. But the
just man abstains from all fault, because he cannot do otherwise, although he has
the knowledge of right and wrong.
But who is able to distinguish right from wrong except the wise man? Thus
it comes to pass, that he can never be just who is foolish, nor wise who is
unjust. And if this is most true, it is plain that he who has not taken away a
plank from a shipwrecked man, or a horse from one who is wounded, is not foolish;
because it is a sin to do these things, and the wise man abstains from sin.
Nevertheless I myself also confess that it has this appearance, through the error
of men, who are ignorant of the peculiar character(1) of everything. And thus
the whole of this inquiry is refuted not so much by arguments as by definition.
Therefore folly is the erring in deeds and words, through ignorance of what is
right and good. Therefore he is not a fool who does not even spare himself to
prevent injury to another, which is an evil. And this, indeed, reason and the
truth itself dictate.(2) For we see that in all animals, because they are
destitute of wisdom, nature is the provider of supplies for itself. Therefore they
injure others that they may profit themselves, for they do not understand that
the(3) committing an injury is evil. But man, who has the knowledge of good and
evil, abstains from committing an injury even to his own damage, which an animal
without reason is unable to do; and on this account innocence is reckoned among
the chief virtues of man. Now by these things it appears that he is the wisest
man who prefers to perish rather than to commit an injury, that he may
preserve that sense of duty(4) by which he is distinguished from the dumb creation.
For he who does not point out the error of one who is offering the gold for sale,
in order that he may buy it for a small sum, or he who does not avow that he
is offering for sale a runaway slave or an infected house, having an eye to his
own gain or advantage, is not a wise man, as Carneades wished it to appear,
but crafty and cunning. Now craftiness and cunning exist in the dumb animals
also: either when they lie in wait for others, and take them by deceit, that they
may devour them; or when they avoid the snares of others in various ways. But
wisdom falls to man alone. For wisdom is understanding either with the purpose
of doing that which is good and right, or for the abstaining from improper
words and deeds. Now a wise man never gives himself to the pursuit of gain, because
he despises these earthly advantages: nor does he allow any one to be
deceived, because it is the duty of a good man to correct the errors of men, and to
bring them back to the right way; since the nature of man is social and
beneficent, in which respect alone he bears a relation to God.
CHAP. XIX.--OF VIRTUE AND THE TORTURES OF CHRISTIANS, AND OF THE RIGHT OF A
FATHER AND MASTER.
But undoubtedly this is the cause(5) why he appears to be foolish who
prefers to be in want. or to die rather than to inflict injury or take away the
property of another,--namely, because they think that man is destroyed by death.
And from this persuasion all the errors both of the common people and also of
the philosophers arise. For if we have no existence after death, assuredly it is
the part of the most foolish man not to promote the interests of the present
life, that it may be long-continued, and may abound with all advantages. But he
who shall act thus must of necessity depart from the rule of justice. But if
there remains to man a longer and a better life--and this we learn both from the
!arguments of great philosophers, and from the answers of seers, and the divine
words of prophets--it is the part of the wise man to despise this present life
with its advantages, since its entire loss is compensated by immortality. The
same defender of justice, Laelius, says in Cicero:(6) "Virtue altogether wishes
for honour; nor is there any other reward of virtue." There is indeed another,
and that most worthy of virtue, which you, O Laelius, could never have
supposed; for you had no knowledge of the sacred writings. And this reward it easily
receives, and does not harshly demand. You are greatly mistaken, if you think
that a reward can be paid to virtue by man, since you yourself most truly said in
another place: "What riches will you offer to this man? what commands? what
kingdoms? He who regards these things as human, judges his own advantages to be
divine." Who, therefore, can think you a wise man, O Laelius, when you contradict
yourself, and after a short interval take away from virtue that which you have
given to her? But it is manifest that ignorance of the truth makes your
opinion uncertain and wavering.
In the next place, what do you add? "But if all the ungrateful, or the
many who are envious, or powerful enemies, deprive virtue of its rewards." Oh how
frail, how worthless, have you represented virtue to be, if it can be deprived
of its reward ! For if it judges its goods to be divine, as you said, how can
there be any so ungrateful, so envious, so powerful, as to be able to deprive
virtue of those goods which were conferred upon it by the gods? "Assuredly it
delights itself," he says, "by many comforts, and especially supports itself by
its own beauty." By what comforts? by what beauty? since that beauty is often
charged upon it as a fault, and turned into a punishment. For what if, as Furius
said,(1) a man should be dragged away, harassed, banished, should be in want, be
deprived of his hands, have his eyes put out, be condemned, put into chains,
be burned, be miserably tortured also? will virtue lose its reward, or rather,
will it perish itself? By no means. But it will both receive its reward from God
the Judge, and it will live, and always flourish. And if you take away these
things, nothing in the life of man can appear to be so useless, so foolish, as
virtue, the natural goodness and honour of which may teach us that the soul is
not mortal, and that a divine reward is appointed for it by God. But on this
account God willed that virtue itself should be concealed under the character of
folly, that the mystery of truth and of His religion might be secret; that He
might show the vanity and error of these superstitions, and of that earthly
wisdom which raises itself too highly, and exhibits great self-complacency, that its
difficulty being at length set forth, that most narrow path might lead to the
lofty reward of immortality. I have shown, as I think, why our people are
esteemed foolish by the foolish. For to choose to be tortured and slain, rather than
to take incense in three fingers, and throw it upon the hearth,(2) appears as
foolish as, in a case where life is endangered, to be more careful of the life
of another than of one's own. For they do not know how great an act of impiety
it is to adore any other object than God, who made heaven and earth, who
fashioned the human race, breathed into them the breath of life, and gave them light.
But if he is accounted the most worthless of slaves who runs away and deserts
his master, and if he is judged most deserving of stripes and chains, and a
prison, and the cross, and of all evil; and if a son, in the same manner, is
thought abandoned and impious who deserts his father, that he may not pay him
obedience, and on this account is considered deserving of being disinherited, and of
having his name removed for ever from his family,--how much more so does he who
forsakes God, in whom the two names entitled to equal reverence, of Lord and
Father, alike meet? For what benefit does he who buys a slave bestow upon him,
beyond the nourishment with which he supplies him for his own advantage? And he
who begets a son has it not in his power to effect that he shall be conceived,
or born, or live ; from which it is evident that he is not the father, but
only the instrument(3) of generation. Of what punishments, therefore, is he
deserving, who forsakes Him who is both the true Master and Father, but those which
God Himself has appointed? who has prepared everlasting fire for the wicked
spirits; and this He Himself threatens by His prophets to the impious and the
rebellious.(4)
CHAP. XX.--OF THE VANITY AND CRIMES IMPIOUS SUPERSTITIONS, AND OF THE TORTURES
OF THE CHRISTIANS.
Therefore, let those who destroy their own souls and the souls of others
learn what an inexpiable crime they commit; in the first place, because they
cause their own death by serving most abandoned demons, whom God has condemned to
everlasting punishments; in the next place, because they do not permit God to
be worshipped by others, but endeavour to turn men aside to deadly rites, and
strive with the greatest diligence that no life may be without injury on earth,
which looks to heaven with its condition secured. What else shall I call them
but miserable men, who obey the instigations of their own plunderers,(5) whom
they think to be gods? of whom they neither know the condition, nor origin, nor
names, nor nature; but, clinging to the persuasion of the people, they willingly
err, and favour their own folly. And if you should ask them the grounds of
their persuasion, they can assign none, but have recourse to the judgment of their
ancestors, saying that they were wise, that they approved them, that they knew
what was best; and thus they deprive themselves of all power of perception:
they bid adieu to reason, while they place confidence in the errors of others.
Thus, involved in ignorance of all things, they neither know themselves nor their
gods. And would to heaven that they had been willing to err by themselves, and
to be unwise by themselves ! But they hurry away others also to be companions
of their evil, as though they were about to derive comfort from the destruction
of many. But this very ignorance causes them to be so cruel in persecuting the
wise; and they pretend that they are promoting their welfare, that they wish
to recall them to a good mind.
Do they then strive to effect this by conversation, or by giving some
reason? By no means; but they endeavour to effect it by force and tortures. O
wonderful and blind infatuation ! It is thought that there is a bad mind in those
who endeavour to preserve their faith, but a good one in executioners. Is there,
then, a bad mind in those who, against every law of humanity, against every
principle of justice, are tortured, or rather, in those who inflict on the bodies
of the innocent such things, as neither the most cruel robbers, nor the most
enraged enemies, nor the most savage barbarians have ever practised? Do they
deceive themselves to such an extent, that they mutually transfer and change the
names of good and evil? Why, therefore, do they not call day night--the sun
darkness? Moreover, it is the same impudence to give to the good the name of evil,
to the wise the name of foolish, to the just the name of impious. Besides this,
if they have any confidence in philosophy or in eloquence, let them arm
themselves, and refute these arguments of ours if they are able; let them meet us hand
to hand, and examine every point. It is befitting that they should undertake
the defence of their gods, lest, if our affairs should increase (as they do
increase daily), theirs should be deserted, together with their shrines and their
vain mockeries;(1) and since they can effect nothing by violence (for the
religion of God is increased the more it is oppressed), let them rather act by the
use of reason and exhortations.
Let their priests come forth into the midst, whether the inferior ones or
the greatest; their flamens, augurs, and also sacrificing kings, and the
priests and ministers of their superstitions. Let them call us together to an
assembly; let them exhort us to undertake the worship of their gods; let them
persuade us that there are many g beings by whose deity and providence all things are
governed; let them show how the origins and beginnings of their sacred rites
and gods were handed down to mortals; let them explain what is their source and
principle; let them set forth what reward there is in their worship, and what
punishment awaits neglect; why they wish to be worshipped by men; what the piety
of men contributes to them, if they are blessed: and let them confirm all
these things not by their own assertion (for the authority of a mortal man is of no
weight), but by some divine testimonies, as we do. There is no occasion for
violence and injury, for religion cannot be imposed by force; the matter must be
carried on by words rather than by blows, that the will may be affected. Let
them unsheath the weapon of their intellect; if their system is true, let it be
asserted. We are prepared to hear, if they teach; while they are silent, we
certainly pay no credit to them, as we do not yield to them even in their rage. Let
them imitate us in setting forth the system of the whole matter: for we do not
entice, as they say; but we teach, we prove, we show. And thus no one is
detained by us against his will, for he is unserviceable to God who is destitute of
faith and devotedness; and yet no one departs from us, since the truth itself
detains him. Let them teach in this manner, if they have any confidence in the
truth; let them speak, let them give utterance; let them venture, I say, to
discuss with us something of this nature; and then assuredly their error and folly
will be ridiculed by the old women, whom they despise, and by our boys. For,
since they are especially clever, they know from books the race of the gods, and
their exploits, and commands, and deaths, and tombs; they may also know that
the rites themselves, in which they have been initiated, had their origin either
in human actions, or in casualties, or in deaths.(2) It is the part of
incredible madness to imagine that they are gods, whom they cannot deny to have been
mortal; or if they should be So shameless as to deny it, their own writings, and
those of their own people, will refute them; in short, the very beginnings of
the sacred rites will convict them.(3) They may know, therefore, even from this
very thing, how great a difference there is between truth and falsehood; for
they themselves with all their eloquence are unable to persuade, whereas the
unskilled and the uneducated are able, because the matter itself and the truth
speaks.
Why then do they rage, so that while they wish to lessen their folly, they
increase it? Torture(4) and piety are widely different; nor is it possible for
truth to be united with violence, or justice with cruelty. But with good
reason they do not venture to teach anything concerning divine things, lest they
should both be derided by our people and be deserted by their own. For the common
people for the most part, if they ascertain that these mysteries were
instituted in memory of the dead, will condemn them, and seek for some truer object of
worship.
"Hence rites of mystic awe "(1)
were instituted by crafty men, that the people may not know what they worship.
But since we are acquainted with their systems, why do they either not believe
us who are acquainted with both, or envy us because we have preferred truth to
falsehood? But, they say, the public rites of religion(2) must be defended. Oh
with what an honourable inclination the wretched men go astray ! For they are
aware that there is nothing among men more excellent than religion, and that
this ought to be defended with the whole of our power; but as they are deceived
in the matter of religion itself, so also are they in the manner of its defence.
For religion is to be defended, not by putting to death, but by dying; not by
cruelty, but by patient endurance; not by guilt, but by good faith: for the
former; belong to evils, but the latter to goods; and it is necessary for that
which is good to have place in religion, and not that which is evil. For if you
wish to defend religion by bloodshed, and by tortures, and by guilt, it will no
longer be defended, but will be polluted and profaned. For nothing is so much a
matter of free-will as religion; in which, if the mind of the worshipper is
disinclined to it, religion is at once taken away, and ceases to exist. The right
method therefore is, that you defend religion by patient endurance or by death;
in which the preservation of the faith is both pleasing to God Himself, and
adds authority to religion. For if he who in this earthly warfare preserves his
faith to his king in some illustrious action, if he shall continue to live,
because more beloved and acceptable, and if he shall fall, obtains the highest
glory, because he has undergone death for his leader; how much more is faith to be
kept towards God, the Ruler of all, who is able to pay the reward of virtue,
not only to the living, but also to the dead! Therefore the worship of God, since
it belongs to heavenly warfare, requires the greatest devotedness and
fidelity. For how will God either love the worshipper, if He Himself is not loved by
him, or grant to the petitioner whatever he shall ask, when he draws nigh to
offer his prayer without sincerity or reverence? But these men, when they come to
offer sacrifice, present to their gods nothing from within, nothing of their
own--no uprightness of mind, no reverence or fear. Therefore, when the worthless
sacrifices i are completed, they leave their religion altogether i in the
temple, and with the temple, as they had found it; and neither bring with them
anything of it, nor take anything back. Hence it is that religious observances of
this kind are neither able to make men good, nor to be firm and unchangeable. And
thus men are easily led away from them, because nothing is learned in them
relating to the life, nothing relating to wisdom, nothing to faith.(3) For what is
the religion of those gods? what is its power? what its discipline? what its
origin? what its principle? what its foundation? what its substance? what is its
tendency? or what does it promise, so that it may be faithfully preserved and
boldly defended by man? I see nothing else in it than a rite pertaining to the
fingers only.(4) But our religion is on this account firm, and solid, and
unchangeable, because it teaches justice, because it is always with us, because it
has its existence altogether in the soul of the worshipper, because it has the
mind itself for a sacrifice. In that religion nothing else is required but the
blood of animals, and the smoke of incense, and the senseless pouring out of
libations; but in this of ours, a good mind, a pure breast, an innocent life:
those rites are frequented by unchaste adulteresses without any discrimination, by
impudent procuresses, by filthy harlots; they are frequented by gladiators,
robbers, thieves, and sorcerers, who pray for nothing else but that they may
commit crimes with impunity. For what can the robber ask when he sacrifices, or the
gladiator, but that they may slay? what the poisoner, but that he may escape
notice? what the harlot, but that she may sin to the uttermost? what the
adulteress, but either the death of her husband, or that her unchastity may be
concealed? what the procuress, but that she may deprive many of their property? what
the thief, but that he may commit more peculations? But in our religion there is
no place even for a slight and ordinary offence; and if any one shall come to a
sacrifice without a sound conscience, he hears what threats God denounces
against him: that God, I say, who sees the secret places of the heart, who is alway
hostile to sins, who requires justice, who demands fidelity. What place is
there here for an evil mind or for an evil prayer? But those unhappy men neither
understand from their own crimes how evil it is to worship, since, defiled by
all crimes, they come to offer prayer; and they imagine that they offer a pious
sacrifice if they wash their skin; as though any streams could wash away, or any
seas purify, the lusts which are shut up within their breast. How much better
it is rather to cleanse the mind, which is defiled by evil desires, and to
drive away all vices by the one layer of virtue and faith! For he who shall do
this, although he bears a body which is defiled and sordid, is pure enough.
CHAP. XXI.--OF THE WORSHIP OF OTHER GODS AND THE TRUE GOD, AND OF THE ANIMALS
WHICH THE EGYPTIANS WORSHIPPED.
But they, because they know not the object or the mode of worship, blindly
and unconsciously fall into the contrary practice. Thus they adore their
enemies, they appease with victims their robbers and murderers, and they place their
own souls to be burned with the very incense on detestable altars. The
wretched men are also angry, because others do not perish in like manner, with
incredible blindness of minds. For what can they see who do not see the sun? As
though, if they were gods, they would need the assistance of men against their
despisers. Why, therefore, are they angry with us, if they have no power to effect
anything? Unless it be that they destroy their gods, whose power they distrust,
they are more irreligious than those who do not worship them at all. Cicero, in
his Laws,(1) enjoining men to approach with holiness to the sacrifices, says,
"Let them put on piety, let them lay aside riches; if any one shall act
otherwise, God Himself will be the avenger." This is well spoken; for it is not right
to despair about God, whom you worship on this account, because you think Him
powerful. For how can He avenge the wrongs of His worshippers, if He is unable to
avenge His own? I wish therefore to ask them to whom especially they think
that they are doing a service in compelling them to sacrifice against their will,
Is it to those whom they compel? But that is not a kindness which is done to
one who refuses it. But we must consult their interests, even against their will,
since they know not what is good. Why, then, do they so cruelly harass,
torture, and weaken them, if they wish for their safety? or whence is piety so
impious, that they either destroy in this wretched manner, or render useless, those
whose welfare they wish to promote? Or do they do service to the gods? But that
is not a sacrifice which is extorted from a person against his will. For unless
it is offered spontaneously, and from the soul, it is a curse; when men
sacrifice, compelled by proscription, by injuries, by prison, by tortures. If they
are gods who are worshipped in this manner, if for this reason only, they ought
not to be worshipped, because they wish to be worshipped in this manner: they
are doubtless worthy of the detestation of men, since libations are made to them
with tears, with groaning, and with blood flowing from all the limbs.
But we, on the contrary, do not require that any one should be compelled,
whether he is willing or unwilling, to worship our God, who is the God of all
men; nor are we angry if any one does not worship Him. For we trust in the
majesty of Him who has power to avenge contempt shown towards Himself, as also He
has power to avenge the calamities and injuries inflicted on His servants. And
therefore, when we suffer such impious things, we do not resist even in word; but
we remit vengeance to God, not as they act who would have it appear that they
are defenders of their gods, and rage without restraint against those who do
not worship them. From which it may be understood how it is not good to worship
their gods, since men ought to have been led to that which is good by good, and
not by evil; but because this is evil, even its office is destitute of good.
But they who destroy religious systems must be punished. Have we destroyed them
in a worse manner than the nation of the Egyptians, who worship the most
disgraceful figures of beasts and cattle, and adore as gods some things which it is
even shameful to speak of? Have we done worse than those same who, when they say
that they worship the gods, yet publicly and shamefully deride them?--for they
even allow pantomimic(2) representations of them to be acted with laughter and
pleasure. What kind of a religion is this, or how great must that majesty be
considered, which is adored in temples and mocked in theatres? And they who have
done these things do not suffer the vengeance of the injured deity, but even go
away honoured and praised. Do we destroy them in a worse manner than certain
philosophers, who say that there are no gods at all, but that all things are
spontaneously produced, and that all things which are done happen by chance? Do we
destroy them in a worse manner than the Epicureans, who admit the existence of
gods, but deny that they regard anything, and say that they are neither angry
nor are influenced by favour? By which words they plainly persuade men that
they are not to be worshipped at all, inasmuch as they neither regard their
worshippers, nor are angry with those who do not worship them. Moreover, when they
argue against fears, they endeavour to effect nothing else than that no one
should fear the gods. And yet these things are willingly heard by men, and discussed
with impunity.
CHAP. XXII.--OF THE RAGE OF THE DEMONS AGAINST CHRISTIANS, AND THE ERROR OF
UNBELIEVERS.
They do not therefore rage against us on this account, because their gods
are not worshipped by us, but because the truth is on our side, which (as it
has been said most truly) produces hatred. What, then, shall we think, but that
they are ignorant of what they suffer? For they act(1) with a blind and
unreasonable fury, which we see, but of which they are ignorant. For it is not the men
themselves who persecute, for they have no cause of anger against the innocent;
but those contaminated and abandoned spirits by whom the truth is both known
and hated insinuate themselves into their minds, and goad them in their
ignorance to fury. For these, as long as there is peace among the people of God, flee
from the righteous, and fear them; and when they seize upon the bodies of men,
and harass their souls, they are adjured by them, and at the name of the true
God are put to flight. For when they hear this name they tremble, cry out, and
assert that they are branded and beaten; and being asked who they are, whence
they are come, and how they have insinuated themselves into a man, confess it.
Thus, being tortured and excruciated by the power of the divine name, they come
out of the man.(2) On account of these blows and threats, they always hate holy
and just men; and because they are unable of themselves to injure them, they
pursue with public hatred those whom they perceive to be grievous to them, and
they exercise cruelty, with all the violence which they can employ, that they may
either weaken their faith by pain, or, if they are unable to effect that, may
take them away altogether from the earth, that there may be none to restrain
their wickedness. It does not escape my notice what reply can be made on the other
side. Why, then, does that God of surpassing power, that mighty One, whom you
confess to preside over all things, and to be Lord of all, permit these things
to be done, and neither avenge nor defend His worshippers? Why, in short, are
they who do not worship Him rich, and powerful, and happy? and why do they enjoy
honours and kingly state, and have these very persons(3) subject to their
power and sway?
We must also give a reason for this, that no error may remain. For this is
especially the cause why it is thought that religion has not the power of God,
because men are influenced by the appearance of earthly and present goods,
which in no way have reference to the care of the mind; and because they see that
the righteous are without these goods, and that the unrighteous abound in them,
they both judge that the worship of God is worthless, in which they do not
see these things contained, and they imagine that the rites of other gods are
true, since their worshippers enjoy riches and honours and kingdoms. But they who
are of this opinion do not attentively consider the power and method of man,
which consists altogether in the mind, and not in the body. For they see nothing
more than is seen, namely the body; and because this is to be seen and
handled,(4) it is weak, frail, and mortal; and to this belong all those goods which
are their desire and admiration, wealth, honours, and governments, since they
bring pleasures to the body, and therefore are as liable to decay as the body
itself. But the soul, in which alone man consists since it is not exposed to the
sight of the eyes, and its goods cannot be seen, for they are placed in virtue
only, must t therefore be as firm, and constant, and lasting as virtue itself,
in which the good of the soul consists.
CHAP. XXIII.--OF THE JUSTICE AND PATIENCE OF THE CHRISTIANS.
It would be a lengthened task to draw forth all the appearances of virtue,
to show respecting each how necessary it is for a wise and just man to be far
removed from those goods, the enjoyment of which by the unjust causes the
worship of their gods to be regarded as true and efficacious. As our present inquiry
is concerned, it will be sufficient to prove our point from the case of a
single virtue. For instance, patience is a great and leading virtue, which the
public voices of the people and philosophers and orators alike extol with the
highest praises. But if it cannot be denied that this is a virtue of the highest
kind, it is necessary that the just and wise man should be in the power of the
unjust, for obtaining patience; for patience is the bearing with equanimity of the
evils which are either inflicted or happen to fall upon us. Therefore the just
and wise man, because he exercises virtue, has patience in himself; but he
will be altogether free from this if he shall suffer no adversity. On the other
hand, the man who lives in prosperity is impatient, and is without the greatest
virtue. I call him impatient, because he suffers nothing. He is also unable to
preserve innocency, which virtue is peculiar to the just and wise man. But he
often acts unjustly also, and desires the property of others, and seizes upon
that which he has desired by injustice, because he is without virtue, and is
subject to vice and sin; and forgetful of his frailty, he is puffed up with a mind
elated with insolence.
From this cause the unjust, and those who are ignorant of God, abound with
riches, and power, and honours. For all these things are the rewards of
injustice, because they cannot be perpetual, and they are sought through lust and
violence. But the just and wise man, because he deems all these things as human,
as it has been said by Laelius, and his own goods as divine, neither desires
anything which belongs to another, lest he should injure any one at all in
violation of the law of humanity; nor does he long for any power or honour, that he
may not do an injury to any one. For he knows that all are produced by the same
God, and in the same condition, and are joined together by the right of
brotherhood.(1) But being contented with his own, and that a little, because he is
mindful of his frailty, he does not seek for anything beyond that which may
support his life; and even from that which he has he bestows a share on the
destitute, because he is pious; but piety is a very great virtue. To this is added, that
he despises frail and vicious pleasures, for the sake of which riches are
desired; since he is temperate, and master of his passions. He also, having no
pride or insolence, does not raise himself too highly, nor lift up his head with
arrogance; but he is calm and peaceful, lowly(2) and courteous, because he knows
his own condition. Since, therefore, he does injury to none, nor desires the
property of others, and does not even defend his own if it is taken from him by
violence, since he knows how even to bear with moderation an injury inflicted
upon him, because he is endued with virtue; it is necessary that the just man
should be subject to the unjust, and that the wise should be insulted by the
foolish, that the one may sin because he is unjust, and the other may have virtue in
himself because he is just.
But if any one shall wish to know more fully why God permits the wicked
and the unjust to become powerful, happy, and rich, and, on the other hand,
suffers the pious to be humble, wretched, and poor, let him take the book of Seneca
which has the title, "Why many evils happen to good men, though there is a
providence;" in which book he has said many things, not assuredly with the
ignorance of this world, but wisely, and almost with divine inspiration.(3) "God," he
says, "regards men as His children, but He permits the corrupt and vicious to
live in luxury and delicacy, because He does not think them worthy of His
correction. But He often chastises the good whom He loves, and by continual labours
exercises them to the practice of virtue: nor does He permit them to be corrupted
and depraved by frail and perishable goods." From which it ought to appear
strange to no one if we are often chastised by God for our faults. Yea, rather,
when we are harassed and pressed, then we especially give thanks to our most
indulgent Father, because He does not permit our corruption to proceed to greater
lengths, but corrects it with stripes and blows. From which we understand that
we r are an object of regard to God, since He is angry when we sin. For when He
might have bestowed upon His people both riches and kingdoms, as He had
before given them to the Jews, whose successors and posterity we are; on this
account He would have them live under the power and government of others, lest,
being corrupted by the happiness of prosperity, they should glide into luxury and
despise the precepts of God; as those ancestors of ours, who, ofttimes enervated
by these earthly and frail goods, departed from discipline and burst the bonds
of the law. Therefore He foresaw how far He would afford rest to His
worshippers if they should keep His commandments, and yet correct them if they did not
obey His precepts. Therefore, lest they should be as much corrupted by ease as
their fathers had been by indulgence,(4) it was His will that they should be
oppressed by those in whose power He placed them, that He may both confirm them
when wavering, and renew them to fortitude when corrupted, and try and prove them
when faithful. For how can a general prove the valour of his soldiers, unless
he shall have an enemy? And yet there arises an adversary to him against his
will, because he is mortal, and is able to be conquered; but because God cannot
be opposed, He Himself stirs up adversaries to His name, not to fight against
God Himself, but against His soldiers, that He may either prove the devotedness
and fidelity of His servants, or may strengthen them, until He corrects their
wasting discipline by the stripes of affliction.(5)
There is also another cause why He permits persecutions to be carried on
against us, that the people of God may be increased.(6) Nor is it difficult to
show why or how this happens. First of all, great numbers are driven from the
worship of the false gods by their hatred of cruelty. For who would not shrink
from such sacrifices? In the next place, some are pleased with virtue and faith
itself. Some suspect that it is not without reason that the worship of the gods
is considered evil by so many men, so that they would rather die than do that
which others do that they may preserve their life. Some one desires to know what
that good is which is defended even to death, which is preferred to all
things which are pleasant and beloved in this life, from which neither the loss of
goods, nor of the light, nor bodily pain, nor tortures of the vitals deter
them. These things have great effect; but these causes have always especially
increased the number of our followers. The people who stand around hear them saying
in the midst of these very torments that they do not sacrifice to stones
wrought by the hand of man, but to the living God, who is in heaven: many understand
that this is true, and admit it into their breast. In the next place, as it is
accustomed to happen in matters of uncertainty while they make inquiry of one
another, what is the cause of this perseverance, many things which relate to
religion, being spread abroad and carefully observed by rumour among one another,
are learned; and because these are good they cannot fail to please. Moreover,
the revenge which follows, as always happens, greatly impels men to believe.
Nor, indeed, is it a slight cause that the unclean spirits of demons, having
received permission, throw themselves into the bodies of many; and when these have
afterwards been driven out, they who have been healed cling to the religion,
the power of which they have experienced. These numerous causes being collected
together, wonderfully gain over a great multitude to God.(1)
CHAP. XXIV.--OF THE DIVINE VENGEANCE INFLICTED ON THE TORTURERS OF THE
CHRISTIANS.
Whatever, therefore, wicked princes plan against us, God Himself permits
to be done. And yet most unjust persecutors, to whom the name of God was a
subject of reproach and mockery, must not think that they will escape with impunity,
because they have been, as it were, the ministers of His indignation against
us. For they will be punished with the judgment of God, who, having received
power, have abused it to an inhuman degree, and have even insulted God in their
arrogance, and placed His eternal name beneath their feet, to be impiously and
wickedly trampled upon. On this account He promises that He will quickly take
vengeance upon them, and exterminate the evil monsters(2) from the earth. But He
also, although He is accustomed to avenge the persecutions(3) of His people even
in the present world, commands us, however, to await patiently that day of
heavenly judgment, in which He Himself will honour or punish every man according
to his deserts. Therefore let not the souls of the sacrilegious expect that
those whom they thus trample upon will be despised and unavenged. Those ravenous
and voracious wolves who have tormented just and innocent souls, without the
commission of any crimes, will surely meet with their reward. Only let us labour,
that nothing else in us may be punished by men but righteousness alone: let us
strive with all our power that we may at once deserve at the hands of God the
avenging of our suffering and a reward.