THE EPITOME OF THE DIVINE INSTITUTES (CHAP. I TO CHAP. XLV)
THE EPITOME OF THE DIVINE INSTITUTES
ADDRESSED TO HIS BROTHER PENTADIUS.
THE PREFACE.--THE PLAN AND PURPORT OF THE WHOLE EPITOME,[1] AND OF THE
INSTITUTIONS.
ALTHOUGH the books of the Divine Institutions which we wrote a long time
since to illustrate the truth and religion, may so prepare and mould the minds
of the readers, that their length may not produce disgust, nor their copiousness
be burthensome; nevertheless you desire, O brother Pentadius, that an epitome
of them should be made for you, I suppose for this reason, that I may write
something to you, and that your name may be rendered famous by my work, such as it
is. I will comply with your desire, although it seems a difficult matter to
comprise within the compass of one book those things which have been treated of
in seven large volumes.[2] For the whole matter becomes less full when so great
a multitude of subjects is to be compressed within a narrow space; and it
becomes less clear by its very brevity, especially since many arguments and
examples, on which the elucidation of the proofs depends, must of necessity be omitted,
since their copiousness is so great, that even by themselves they are enough
to make up a book. And when these are removed, what can appear useful, what
plain? But I will strive as much as the subject permits, both to contract that
which is diffuse and to shorten that which is long; in such a manner, however, that
in this work, in which truth is to be brought to light, matter may not seem to
be wanting for copiousness, nor clearness for understanding it.[3]
CHAP. I.--OF THE DIVINE PROVIDENCE.
First a question arises: Whether there is any providence which made or
governs the world? That there is, no one doubts, since of almost all the
philosophers, except the school of Epicurus, there is but one voice and one opinion,
that the world could not have been made without a contriver, and that it cannot
exist without a ruler. Therefore Epicurus is refuted not only by the most learned
men, but also by the testimonies and perceptions of all mortals. For who can
doubt respecting a providence, when he sees that the heavens and the earth have
been so arranged and that all things have been so regulated, that they might be
most befittingly adapted, not only to wonderful beauty and adornment, but also
to the use of men, and the convenience of the other living creatures? That,
therefore, which exists in accordance with a plan, cannot have had its beginning
without a plan: thus[4] it is certain that there is a providence.
CHAP. II.--THAT THERE IS BUT ONE GOD, AND THAT THERE CANNOT BE MORE.
Another question follows: Whether there be one God or more? And this
indeed contains much ambiguity. For not only do individuals differ among themselves,
but also peoples and nations. But he who shall follow the guidance of reason
will understand that there cannot be a Lord except one, nor a Father except one.
For if God, who made all things, is also Lord and Father, He must be one only,
so that the same may be the head and source of all things. Nor is it possible
for the world[5] to exist unless all things be referred to one person, unless
one hold the rudder, unless one guide the reins, and, as it were, one mind
direct all the members of the body. If there are many kings in a swarm of bees, they
will perish or be scattered abroad, while
"Discord attacks the kings with great commotion."[6]
If there are several leaders in a herd, they will contend until one gains the
mastery.[7] If there are many commanders in an army, the soldiers cannot obey,
since different commands are given; nor can unity be maintained by themselves,
since each consults his own interests according to his humours. [1] Thus, in
this commonwealth of the world, unless there were one ruler, who was also its
founder, either this mass would be dissolved, or it could not have been put
together at all.
Moreover, the whole authority, could not exist in many deities, since they
separately maintain their own duties and their own prerogatives. No one,
therefore, of them can be called omnipotent, which is the true title of God, since
he will be able to accomplish that only which depends upon himself, and will not
venture to attempt that which depends upon others. Vulcan will not claim for
himself water, nor Neptune fire; nor will Ceres claim acquaintance with the
arts, nor Minerva with fruits; nor will Mercury lay claim to arms, nor Mars to the
lyre; Jupiter will not claim medicine, nor AEsculapius the thunderbolt: he will
more easily endure it when thrown by another, than he will brandish it
himself. If, therefore, individuals cannot do all things, they have less strength and
less power; but he is to be regarded as God who can accomplish the whole, and
not he who can only accomplish the smallest part of the whole.
CHAP. III.--THE TESTIMONIES OF THE POETS CONCERNING THE ONE GOD.
There is, then, one God, perfect, eternal, incorruptible, incapable of
suffering, subject to no circumstance or power, Himself possessing all things,
ruling all things, whom the human mind can neither estimate in thought nor mortal
tongue describe in speech. For He is too elevated and great to be conceived by
the thought, or expressed by the language of man. In short, not to speak of the
prophets, the preachers of the one God, poets also, and philosophers, and
inspired women, [2] utter their testimony to the unity of God. Orpheus speaks of
the surpassing God who made the heaven and the sun, with the other heavenly
bodies; who made the earth and the seas. Also our own Maro calls the Supreme God at
one time a spirit, at another time a mind, and says that it, as though infused
into limbs, puts in motion the body of the whole world; also, that God
permeates the heights of heaven, the tracts of the sea and lands, and that all living
creatures derive their life from Him. Even Ovid was not ignorant that the world
was prepared by God, whom he sometimes calls the framer of all things,
sometimes the fabricator of the world. [3]
CHAP. IV. --THE TESTIMONIES OF THE PHILOSOPHERS TO THE UNITY OF GOD.
But let us come to the philosophers, whose authority is regarded as more
certain than that
of the poets. Plato asserts His monarchy, saying that there is but one God,
by whom the world was prepared and completed with wonderful order. Aristotle,
his disciple, admits that there is one mind which presides over the world.
Antisthenes says that there is one who is God by nature, [4] the governor of the
whole system. It would be a long task to recount the statements which have been
made respecting the Supreme God, either by Thales, or by Pythagoras and Anaximenes
before him, or afterwards by the Stoics Cleanthes and Chrysippus and Zeno, or
of our countrymen, by Seneca following the Stoics, and by Tullius himself,
since all these attempted to define the being of God, [5] and affirmed that the
world is ruled by Him alone, and that He is not subject to any nature, since all
nature derives its origin from Him.
Hermes, who, on account of his virtue and his knowledge of many arts,
deserved the name of Trismegistus, who preceded the philosophers in the antiquity
of his doctrine, and who is reverenced by the Egyptians as a god, in asserting
the majesty of the one God with infinite praises, calls Him Lord and Father. and
says that He is without a name because He does not stand in need of a proper
name, inasmuch as He is alone, and that He has no parents, since He exists of
Himself and by Himself. In writing to his son he thus begins: To understand God
is difficult, to describe Him in speech is impossible, even for one to whom it
is possible to understand Him; for the perfect cannot be comprehended by the
imperfect, nor the invisible by the visible.
CHAP. V.--THAT THE PROPHETIC WOMEN--THAT IS, THE SIBYLS--DECLARE THAT THERE IS
BUT ONE GOD.
It remains to speak of the prophetic women. Varro relates that there were
ten Sibyls, --the first of the Persians, the second the Libyan, the third the
Delphian, the fourth the Cimmerian, the fifth the Erythraean, the sixth the
Samian, the seventh the Cumaean, the eighth the Hellespontian, the ninth the
Phrygian, the tenth the Tiburtine, who has the name of Albunea. Of all these, he says
that there are three books of the Cumaean alone which contain the fates of the
Romans, and are accounted sacred, but that there exist. and are commonly
regarded as separate, books of almost all the others, but that they are entitled, as
though by one name, Sibylline books, excepting that the Erythraean, who is
said to have lived in the times of the Trojan war, placed her name in her book:
the writings of the others are mixed together. [1]
All these Sibyls of whom I have spoken, except the Cumaean, whom none but
the Quindecemviri [2] are allowed to read, bear witness that there is but one
God, the ruler, the maker, the parent, not begotten of any, but sprung from
Himself, who was from all ages, and will be to all ages; and therefore is alone
worthy of being worshipped, alone of being feared, alone of being reverenced, by
all living beings; -- whose testimonies I have omitted because I was unable to
abridge them; but if you wish to see them, you must have recourse to the books
themselves. Now let us follow up the remaining subjects.
CHAP. Vl.--SINCE GOD IS ETERNAL AND IMMORTAL, HE DOES NOT STAND IN NEED OF SEX
AND SUCCESSION.
These testimonies, therefore, so many and so great, clearly teach that
there is but one government in the world, and one power, the origin of which
cannot be imagined, or its force described. They are foolish, therefore, who imagine
that the gods were born of marriage, since the sexes themselves, and the
intercourse between them, were given to mortals by God for this reason, that every
race might be preserved by a succession of offspring. But what need have the
immortals either of sex or succession since neither pleasure nor death affects
them? Those, therefore, who are reckoned as gods, since it is evident that they
were born as men, and that they begat others, were plainly mortals: but they were
believed to be gods, because, when they were great and powerful kings, on
account of the benefits which they had conferred upon men, they deserved to obtain
divine hon-ours after death; and temples and statues being erected to them,
their memory was retained and celebrated as that of immortals.
CHAP. VII. --OF the WICKED LIFE AND DEATH OF HERCULES.
But though almost all nations are persuaded that they are gods, yet their
actions, as related both by poets and historians, declare that they were men.
Who is ignorant of the times in which Hercules lived, since he both sailed with
the Argonauts on their expedition, and having stormed Troy, slew Laomedon, the
father of Priam, on account of his perjury? From that time rather more than
fifteen hundred years are reckoned. He is said not even to have been born
honourably, but to have been sprung from Alcmena by adultery, and to have been himself
addicted to the vices of his father. He never abstained from women, or males,
and traversed the whole world, not so much for the sake of glory as of lust, nor
so much for the slaughter of beasts as for the begetting of children. And
though he was unvanquished, yet he was triumphed over by Omphale alone, to whom he
gave up his club and lion's skin; and being clothed in a woman's garment, and
crouching at a woman's feet, he received his task [3] to execute. He afterwards,
in a transport of frenzy, killed his little children and his wife Megara. At
last, having put on a garment sent by his wife Deianyra, when he was perishing
through ulcers, being unable to endure the pain, he constructed for himself a
funeral pile on Mount (Eta, and burnt himself alive. Thus it is effected, that
although on account of his excellence [4] he might have been believed to be a
god, nevertheless on account of these things be is believed to have been a man.
CHAP. VlIl.--OF AESCULAPIUS, APOLLO, MARS, CASTOR AND POLLUX, AND OF MERCURIUS
AND BACCHUS.
Tarquitius relates that AEsculapius was born of doubtful parents, and that
on this account he was exposed; and being taken up by hunters, and fed by the
teats of a hound, was given to Chiron for instruction. He lived at Epidaurus,
and was buried at Cynosurae, as Cicero says, [5] when he had been killed by
lightning. But Apollo, his father, did not disdain to take charge of another's
flock that he might receive a wife; [6] and when he had unintentionally killed a
boy whom he loved, he inscribed his own lamentations on a flower. Mars, a man of
the greatest bravery, was not free from the charge of adultery, since he was
made a spectacle, being bound with a chain together with the adulteress.
Castor and Pollux carried off the brides of others, but not with impunity,
to whose death and burial Homer bears witness, not with poetical, but simple
faith. Mercurius, who was the father of Androgynus by his intrigue with Venus,
deserved to be a god, because he invented the lyre and the paloestra. Father
Bacchus, after subduing India as a conqueror, having by chance come to Crete, saw
Ariadne on the shore, whom Theseus had forced and deserted. Then, being
inflamed by love, he united her in marriage to himself, and placed her crown, as the
poets say, conspicuously among the stars. The mother of the gods [1] herself,
while she lived in Phrygia after the banishment and death of her husband, though
a widow, and aged, was enamoured of a beautiful youth; and because he was not
faithful, she mutilated, and rendered him effeminate: on which account even now
she delights in the Galli [2] as her priests.
CHAP. IX.- OF THE DISGRACEFUL DEEDS OF THE GODS.
Whence did Ceres bring forth Proserpine, except from debauchery? Whence
did Latona bring forth her twins, except from crime? Venus having been subject to
the lusts of gods and men, when she reigned in Cyprus, invented the practice
of courtesanship, and commanded women to make traffic of themselves, that she
might not alone be infamous. Were the virgins themselves, Minerva and Diana,
chaste? Whence, then, did Erichthonius arise? Did Vulcan shed his seed upon the
ground, and was man born from that as a fungus? Or why did Diana banish Hippolytus
either to a retired place, or give him up to a woman, where he might pass his
life in solitude among unknown groves, and having now changed his name, might
be called Virbius? What do these things signify but impurity, which the poets do
not venture to confess?
CHAP. X.--OF JUPITER, AND HIS LICENTIOUS LIFE.
But respecting the king and father of all these, Jupiter, whom they
believe to possess the chief power in heaven,--what power [3] had he, who banished
his father Saturnus from his kingdom, and pursued him with arms when he fled?
What self-restraint had he, who indulged every kind of lust? For he made Alemena
and Leda, the wives of great men, infamous through his adultery: he also,
captivated with the beauty of a boy, carried him off with violence as he was hunting
and meditating manly things, that he might treat him as a woman. Why should I
mention his debaucheries of virgins? and how great a multitude of these there
was, is shown by the number of his sons. In the case of Thetis alone he was more
temperate. For it bad been predicted that the son whom she should bring forth
would be more powerful than his father. Therefore he struggled with his love,
that one might not be born greater than himself. He knew, therefore, that he was
not of perfect virtue, greatness, and power, since he feared that which he
himself had done to his father. Why, therefore, is he called best and greatest,
since he both contaminated himself with faults, which is the part of one who is
unjust and bad, and feared a greater than himself, which is the part of one who
is weak and inferior?
CHAP. XI. -- THE VARIOUS EMBLEMS UNDER WHICH THE POETS VEILED THE TURPITUDE OF
JUPITER.
But some one will say that these things are feigned by the poets. This is
not the usage of the poets, to feign in such a manner that you fabricate the
whole, but so that you cover the actions themselves with a figure, and, as it
were, with a variegated veil. Poetic licence has this limit, not that it may
invent the whole, which is the part of one who is false and senseless, but that it
may change something consistently with reason. They said that Jupiter changed
himself into a shower of gold, that he might deceive Danae. What is a shower of
gold? Plainly golden coins, by offering a great quantity of which, and pouring
them into her bosom, he corrupted the frailty of her virgin soul by this bribe.
Thus also they speak of a shower of iron, when they wish to signify a multitude
of javelins. He carried off his catamite upon an eagle. What is the eagle?
Truly a legion, since the figure of this animal is the standard of the legion.
He carried Europa across the sea on a bull. What is the bull? Clearly a ship,
which had its tutelary image [4] fashioned in the shape of a bull. So assuredly
the daughter of Inachus was not turned into a cow, nor as such did she swim
across, but she escaped the anger of Juno in a ship which had the form of a cow.
Lastly, when she had been conveyed to Egypt, she became Isis, whose voyage is
celebrated on a fixed day, in memory of her flight.
CHAP. XlI.--THE POETS DO NOT INVENT ALL THOSE THINGS WHICH RELATE TO THE GODS.
You see, then, that the poets did not invent all things, and that they
prefigured some things, that, when they spoke the truth, they might add something
like this of divinity to those whom they called gods; as they did also
respecting their kingdoms. For when they say that Jupiter had by lot the kingdom of
Coelus, they either menu Mount Olympus, on which ancient stories relate that
Saturnus, and afterwards Jupiter, dwelt, or a part of the East, which is, as it
were, higher, because the light arises thence; but the region of the West is lower,
and therefore they say that Pluto obtained the lower regions; but that the sea
was given to Neptune, because he had the maritime coast, with all the islands.
Many things are thus coloured by the poets; and they who are ignorant of this,
censure them as false, but only in word: for in fact they believe them, since
they so fashion the images of the gods, that when they make them male and
female, and confess that some are married, some parents, and some children, they
plainly assent to the poets; for these relations cannot exist without intercourse
and the generation of children.
CHAP. XIII.--THE ACTIONS OF JUPITER ARE RELATED FROM THE HISTORIAN EUHEMERUS.
But let us leave the poets; let us come to history, which is supported
both by the credibility of the facts and by the antiquity of the times. Euhemerus
was a Messenian, a very ancient writer, who gave an account of the origin of
Jupiter, and his exploits, and all his posterity, gathered from the sacred
inscriptions of ancient temples; he also traced out the parents of the other gods,
their countries, actions, commands, and deaths, and even their sepulchres. And
this history Ennius translated into Latin, whose words are these:--
"As these things are written, so is the origin and kindred of Jupiter and
his brothers; after this manner it is handed clown to us in the sacred writing."
The same Euhemerus therefore relates that Jupiter, when he had five times gone
round the world, and had distributed governments to his friends and relatives,
and had given laws to men, and had wrought many other benefits, being endued
with immortal glory and everlasting remembrance, ended his life in Crete, and
departed to the gods, and that his sepulchre is in Crete, in the town of Gnossus,
and that upon it is engraved in ancient Greek letters Zankronou, which is
Jupiter the son of Saturnus. It is plain, therefore, from the things which I have
related, that he was a than, and reigned on the earth.
CHAP. XIV.--THE ACTIONS OF SATURNUS AND URANUS TAKEN FROM THE HISTORIANS.
Let us pass on to former things, that we may discover the origin of the whole
error. Saturnus is said to have been born of Coelus and Terra. This is plainly
incredible; but there is a certain reason why it is thus related, and he who is
ignorant of this rejects it as a fable. That Uranus was the father of
Saturnus, both Hermes affirms, and sacred history teaches. When Trismegistus said that
there were very few men of perfect learning, he enumerated among them Iris
relatives, Uranus, Saturnus. and Mercurius. Euhemerus relates that the same Uranus
was the first who reigned on earth, using these words: "In the beginning Coelus
first had the chief power on earth: he instituted and prepared that kingdom
for himself together with his brothers." [1]
CHAP. XX.--OF THE GODS PECULIAR TO THE ROMANS.
I have spoken of the religious rites which are common to all nations. I
will now speak of the gods which the Romans have peculiar to themselves. Who does
not know that the wife of Faustulus, the nurse of Romulus and Remus, in honour
of whom the Larentinalia were instituted, was a harlot? And for this reason
she was called Lupa, and represented in the form of a wild beast. Faula also and
Flora were harlots, of whom the one was the mistress of Hercules, as Verrius
relates; the other, having acquired great wealth by her person, made the people
her heir, and on this account the games called Floralia are celebrated in her
honour.
Tatius consecrated the statue of a woman which had been found in the
principal sewer, and called it by the name of the goddess Cloacina. The Romans,
being besieged by the Gauls, made engines for throwing weapons of the hair of
women; and on this account they erected an altar and temple to Venus Calva: [2] also
to Jupiter Pistor, [3] because he had advised them in a dream to make all
their corn into bread, and to throw it upon the enemy; and when this had been done,
the Gauls, despairing of being able to reduce the Romans by famine, had
abandoned the siege. Tullus Hostilius made Fear and Pallor gods. Mind is also
worshipped; but if they had possessed it, they would never, I believe, have thought
that it ought to be worshipped. Marcellus originated Honour and Virtue.
CHAP. XXI.--OF THE SACRED RITES OF THE ROMAN GODS.
But the senate also instituted other false gods of this kind,--Hope,
Faith, Concord, Peace, Chastity, Piety; all of which, since they ought truly to be
in the minds of men, they have falsely placed within walls. But although these
have no substantial existence outside of man, nevertheless I should prefer that
they should be worshipped, rather than Blight or Fever, which ought not to be
consecrated, but rather to be execrated; than Fornax, together with her sacred
ovens; than Stercutus, who first showed men to enrich the ground with manure;
than the goddess Muta, who brought forth the Lares; than Cumina, who presides
over the cradles of infants; than Caca, who gave information to Hercules
respecting the stealing of his cattle, that he might slay her brother. How many other
monstrous and ludicrous fictions there are, respecting which it is grievous to
speak! I do not, however, wish to omit notice of Terminus, since it is related
that he did not give way even to Jupiter, though he was an unwrought stone. They
suppose that he has the custody of the boundaries, and public prayers are
offered to him, that he may keep the stone of the Capitol immoveable, and preserve
and extend the boundaries of the Roman empire.
CHAP. XXII.--OF THE SACRED RITES INTRODUCED BY FAUNUS AND NUMA.
Faunas was the first in Latium who introduced these follies, who both
instituted bloody sacrifices to his grandfather Saturnus, and wished that his
father Picus should be worshipped as a god, and placed Fatua Fauna his wife and
sister among the gods, and named her the good goddess. Then at Rome, Numa, who
burthened those rude and rustic then with new superstitions, instituted
priesthoods, and distributed the gods into families and nations, that he might call off
the fierce spirits of the people from the pursuits of arms. Therefore Lucilius,
in deriding the folly of those who are slaves to vain superstitions, introduced
these verses:--
"Those bugbears [1] the Lamiae, which Faunus and Numa Pompilius and others
instituted, at these he trembles; he places everything in this. As infant boys
believe that every statue of bronze is a living man, so these imagine that all
things reigned are true: they believe that statues of bronze contain a heart.
It is a painter's [2] gallery; nothing is real, everything fictitious."
Tullius also, writing of the nature of the gods, complains that false and
fictitious gods have been introduced, and that from thus source have arisen false
opinions, and turbulent errors, and almost old womanly superstitions, which
opinion ought in comparison [3] with others to be esteemed more weighty, because
these things were spoken by one who was both a philosopher and a priest.
CHAP. XXIII.--OF THE GODS AND SACRED RITES OF THE BARBARIANS.
We have spoken respecting the gods: now we will speak of the rites and
practices of their sacred institutions. A human victim used to be immolated to the
Cyprian Jupiter, as Teucer had appointed. Thus also the Tauri used to offer
strangers to Diana; the Latian Jupiter also was propitiated with human blood.
Also before Saturnus, men of sixty years of age, according to the oracle [4] of
Apollo, were thrown from a bridge into the Tiber. And the Carthaginians not only
offered infants to the same Saturnus; but being conquered by the Sicilians, to
make an expiation, they immolated two hundred sons of nobles. And not more mild
than these are those offerings which are even now made to the Great Mother and
to Bellona, in which the priests make an offering, not with the blood of
others, but with their own blood; when, mutilating themselves, they cease to be men,
and yet do not pass over to the women; or, cutting their shoulders, they
sprinkle the loathsome altars with their own blood. But these things are cruel.
Let us come to those which are mild. The sacred rites of Isis show nothing
else than the manner in which she lost and found her little son, who is called
Osiris. For first her priests and attendants, having shaved all their limbs,
and beating their breasts, howl, lament, and search, imitating the manner ill
which his mother was affected; afterwards the boy is found by Cynocephalus. Thus
the mournfuI rites are ended with gladness. The mystery of Ceres also resembles
these, in which torches are lighted, and Proserpine is sought for through the
night; and when she has been found, the whole rite is finished with
congratulations and the throwing about of torches. The people of Lampsacus, offer an ass
to Priapus as an appropriate victim. [5] Lindus is a town of Rhodes, where
sacred rites in honour of Hercules are celebrated with revilings. For when Hercules
had taken away his oxen from a ploughman, and had slain them, he avenged his
injury by taunts; and afterwards having been himself appointed priest, it was
ordained that he himself, and other priests after him, should celebrate
sacrifices with the same revilings. But the mystery of the Cretan Jupiter represents the
manner in which he was withdrawn from his father, or brought up. The goat is
beside him, by the teats of which Amalthea nourished the boy. The sacred rites
of the mother of the gods also show the same thing. For because the Corybantes
then drowned the cry of the boy by the tinkling of their helmets and the
striking of their shields, a representation of this circumstance is now repeated in
the sacred rites; but cumbals are beaten instead of helmets, and drums instead of
shields, that Saturnus may not hear the cries of the boy.
CHAP. XXIV.--OF THE ORIGIN OF SACRED RITES AND SUPERSTITIONS.
These are the mysteries of the gods. Now let us inquire also into the
origin of superstitions, that we may search out by whom and at what times they were
instituted. Didymus, in those books which are inscribed Of the Explanation of
Pindar, relates that Melisseus was king of the Cretans, whose daughters were
Amalthea and Melissa, who nourished Jupiter with goats' milk and honey; that he
introduced new rites and ceremonies of sacred things, and was the first who
sacrificed to gods, that is, to Vesta, who is called Tellus,--whence the poet
says:--
"And the first of the gods,
Tellus,"--
and afterwards to the mother of the gods. But Euhemerus, in his sacred
history, says that Jupiter himself, after that he received the government, erected
temples in honour of himself in many places. For in going about the world, as he
came to each place he united the chiefs of the people to himself in friendship
and the right of hospitality; and that the remembrance of this might be
preserved, he ordered that temples should be built to him, and annual festivals be
celebrated by those connected with him in a league of hospitality. Thus he spread
the worship of himself through all lands. But at what time they lived can easily
be inferred. For Thallus writes in his history, that Belus, the king of the
Assyrians, whom the Babylonians worship, and who was the contemporary and friend
of Saturnus, was three hundred and twenty-two years before the Trojan war, and
it is fourteen hundred and seventy years since the taking of Troy. From which
it is evident, that it is not more than eighteen hundred years from the time
when mankind fell into error by the institution of new forms of divine worship.
CHAP. XXV.--OF THE GOLDEN AGE, OF IMAGES, AND PROMETHEUS, WHO FIRST FASHIONED
MAN.
The poets, therefore, with good reason say that the golden age, which
existed in the reign of Saturnus, was changed. For at that time no gods were
worshipped, but they knew of one God only. After that they subjected themselves to
frail and earthly things, worshipping idols of wood, and brass, and stone, a
change took place from the golden age to that of iron. For having lost the
knowledge of God, and broken off that one bond of human society, they began to
harass one another, to plunder and subdue. But if they would raise their eyes aloft
and behold God, who raised them up to the sight of heaven and Himself, they
never would bend and prostrate themselves by worshipping earthly things, whose
folly Lucretius severely rebukes, saying: [1]
"And they abase their souls with fear of the gods, and weigh and press
them down to the earth."
Wherefore they tremble, and do not understand how foolish it is to fear those
things which you have made, or to hope for any protection from those things
which are dumb and insensible, and neither see nor hear the suppliant. What
majesty, therefore, or deity can they have, which were in the power of a man, that
they should not be made, or that they should be made into some other thing, and
are so even now? For they are liable to injury and might be carried off by
theft, were it not that they are protected by the law and the guardianship of man.
Does he therefore appear to be m possession of his senses, who sacrifices to
such deities the choicest victims, consecrates gifts, offers costly garments, as
if they who are without motion could use them? With reason, then, did Dionysius
the tyrant of Sicily plunder and deride the gods of Greece when he had taken
possession of it as conqueror; and after the sacrilegious acts which he had
committed, he returned to Sicily with a prosperous voyage, and held the kingdom even
to his old age: nor were the injured gods able to punish him.
How much better is it to despise vanities, and to turn to God, to maintain
the condition which you have received from God, to maintain your name! For on
this account he is called anthropos, [3] because he looks upward. But he looks
upward who looks up to the true and living God, who is in heaven; who seeks
after the Maker and Parent of his soul, not only with his perception and mind, but
also with his countenance and eyes raised aloft. But he who enslaves himself
to earthly and humble things, plainly prefers to himself that which is below
him. For since he himself is the workmanship of God, whereas an image is the
workmanship of man, the human workmanship cannot be preferred to the divine; and as
God is the parent of man, so is the man of the statue. Therefore he is foolish
and senseless who adores that which he himself has made, of which detestable
and foolish handicraft Prometheus was the author, who was born from Iapetus the
uncle of Jupiter. For when first of all Jupiter, having obtained supreme
dominion, wished to establish himself as a god, and to found temples, and was seeking
for some one who was able to imitate the human figure, at that time Prometheus
lived, who fashioned the image of a man from thick clay with such close
resemblance, that the novelty and cleverness of the art was a wonder. At length the
men of his own time, and afterwards the poets, handed him down as the maker of a
true and living man; and we, as often as we praise wrought statues, say that
they live and breathe. And he indeed was the inventor of earthenware images. But
posterity, following him, both carved them out of marble, and moulded them out
of bronze; then in process of time ornament was added of gold and ivory, so
that not only the likenesses, but also the gleam itself, might dazzle the eyes.
Thus ensnared by beauty, and forgetful of true majesty, sensible beings
considered that insensible objects, rational beings that irrational objects, living
beings that lifeless objects, were to be worshipped and reverenced by them.
CHAP. XXVI. --OF THE WORSHIP OF THE ELEMENTS AND STARS.
Now let us refute those also who regard the elements of the world as gods,
that is, the heaven, the sun, and the moon; for being ignorant of the Maker of
these things, they admire and adore the works themselves. And this error
belongs not to the ignorant only, but also to philosophers; since the Stoics are of
opinion that all the heavenly bodies are to be considered as among the number
of the gods, since they all have fixed and regular motions, by which they most
constantly preserve the vicissitudes of the times which succeed them. They do
not then possess voluntary motion, since they obey prescribed laws, and plainly
not by their own sense, but by the workmanship of the supreme Creator, who so
ordered them that they should complete unerring [1] courses and fixed circuits,
by which they might vary the alternations of days and nights, of summer and
winter. But if men admire the effects of these, if they admire their courses, their
brightness, their regularity, their beauty, they ought to have understood how
much more beautiful, more illustrious, and more powerful than these is the
maker and con- trivet Himself, even God. But they estimated the Divinity by
objects which fall under the sight of men; [2] not knowing that objects which come
within the sight cannot be eternal, and that those which are eternal cannot be
discerned by mortal eyes.
CHAP. XXVII.--OF THE CREATION, SIN, AND PUNISHMENT OF MAN; AND OF ANGELS, BOTH
GOOD AND BAD.
One subject remains, and that the last: that, since it usually happens, as
we read in histories, that the gods appear to have displayed their majesty by
auguries, by dreams, by oracles, and also by the punishments of those who had
committed sacrilege, I may show what cause produced this effect, so that no one
even now may fall into the same snares into which those of old fell. When God,
according to His excellent majesty, had framed the world out of nothing, and
had decked the heaven with lights, and had filled the earth and the sea with
living creatures, then He formed man out of clay, and fashioned him after the
resemblance of His own likeness, and breathed into him that he might live, [3] and
placed him in a garden [4] which He had planted with every kind of fruit-bearing
tree, and commanded him not to eat of one tree in which He had placed the
knowledge of good and evil, warning him that it would come to pass, that if he did
so he would lose his life, but that if he observed the command of God he would
remain immortal. Then the serpent, who was one of the servants of God, envying
man because he was made immortal, enticed him by stratagem to transgress the
command and law of God. And in this manner he did indeed receive the knowledge of
good and evil, but he lost the life which God had given him to be for ever.
Therefore He drove out the sinner from the sacred place, and banished him
into this world, that he might seek sustenance by labour, that he might
according to his deserts undergo difficulties and troubles; and He surrounded the
garden itself with a fence of fire, that none of men even till the day of judgment
might attempt secretly [5] to enter into that place of perpetual blessedness.
Then death came upon man according to the sentence of God; and yet his life,
though it had begun to be temporary, had as its boundary a thousand years, and
that was the extent of human life even to the deluge. For after the flood the life
of men was gradually shortened, and was reduced to a hundred and twenty years.
But that serpent, who from his deeds received the name of devil, that is,
accuser or informer, did not cease to persecute the seed of man, whom he had
deceived from the beginning. At length he urged him who was first born in this world,
under the impulse of envy, to the murder of his brother, that of the two men
who were first born he might destroy the one, and make the other a parricide.
[6] Nor did he cease upon this from infusing the venom of malice into the breasts
of men through each generation, from corrupting and depraving them; in short,
from overwhelm-inn them with such crimes, that an instance of justice was now
rare, but men lived after the manner of the beasts.
But when God saw this, He sent His angels to instruct the race of men, and
to protect them from all evil. He gave these a command to abstain from earthly
things, lest, being polluted by any taint, they should be deprived of the
honour of angels. But that wily accuser, while they tarried among men, allured
these also to pleasures, so that they might defile themselves with women. Then,
being condemned by the sentence of God, and cast forth on account of their sins,
they lost both the name and substance of angels. Thus, having become ministers
of the devil, that they might have a solace of their ruin, they betook
themselves to the ruining of men, for whose protection they had come. [1]
CHAP. XXVIII.--OF THE DEMONS, AND THEIR EVIL PRACTICES.
These are the demons, of whom the poets often speak in their poems, whom
Hesiod calls the guardians of men. For they so persuaded men by their
enticements and deceits, that they believed that the same were gods. In fine, Socrates
used to give out that he had a demon as the guardian and director of his life
from his first childhood and that he could do nothing without his assent and
command. They attach themselves, therefore, to individuals, and occupy houses under
the name of Genii or Penates. To these temples are built, to these libations
are daily offered as to the Lares, to these honour is paid as to the averters of
evils. These from the beginning, that they might turn away men from the
knowledge of the true God, introduced new superstitions and worship of gods. These
taught that the memory of dead kings should be consecrated, temples be built, and
images made, not that they might lessen the honour of God, or increase their
own, which they lost by sinning, but that they might take away life from men,
deprive them of the hope of true light, lest men should arrive at that heavenly
reward of immortality from which they fell. They also brought to light astrology,
and augury, and divination; and though these things are in themselves false,
yet they themselves, the authors of evils, so govern and regulate them that they
are believed to be true. They also invented the tricks of the magic art, to
deceive the eyes. By their aid it comes to pass, that that which is appears not
to be, and that which is not appears to be. They themselves invented
necromancies, responses, and oracles, to delude the minds of men with lying divination by
means of ambiguous issues. They are present in the temples and at all
sacrifices; and by the exhibition of some deceitful prodigies, to the surprise of those
who are present, they so deceive men, that they believe that a divine power is
present in images and statues. They even enter secretly into bodies. as being
slight spirits; and they excite diseases in the vitiated limbs, which when
appeased with sacrifices and vows they may again remove. They send dreams either
full of terror, [2] that they themselves may be invoked, or the issues of which
may correspond with the truth, that they may increase the veneration paid to
themselves. Sometimes also they put forth something of vengeance against the
sacrilegious, that whoever sees it may become more timid and superstitious. Thus by
their frauds they have drawn darkness over the human race, that truth might be
oppressed, and the name of the supreme and matchless God might be forgotten.
CHAP. XXIX.--OF THE PATIENCE AND PROVIDENCE OF GOD.
But some one says: Why, then, does the true God permit these things to be
done? Why does He not rather remove or destroy the wicked? Why, in truth, did
He from the beginning give power [3] to the demon, so that there should be one
who might corrupt and destroy all things? I will briefly say why He willed that
this should be so. I ask whether virtue is a good or an evil. It cannot be
denied that it is a good. If virtue is a good, vice, on the contrary, is an evil.
If vice is an evil on this account, because it opposes virtue, and virtue is on
this account a good, because it overthrows vice, it follows that virtue cannot
exist without vice; and if you take away vice, the merits of virtue will be
taken away. For there can be no victory without an enemy. Thus it comes to pass,
that good cannot exist without an evil.
Chrysippus, a man of active mind, saw this when discussing the subject of
providence, and charges those with folly who think that good is caused by God,
but say that evil is not thus caused. Aulus Gellius [4] has interpreted his
sentiment in his books of Attic Nights; thus saying: "They to whom it does not
appear that the world was made for the sake of God and men, and that human affairs
are governed by providence, think that they use a weighty argument when they
thus speak: If there were a providence, there would be no evils. For they say
that nothing is less in agreement with providence, than that in this world, on
account of which it is said that God made men, [5] the power of troubles and
evils should be so great. In reply to these things, Chrysippus, when he was
arguing, in his fourth book respecting providence, said: Nothing can be more foolish
than those who think that good things could have existed, if there were not
evils in the same place. For since good things are contrary to evil, they must of
necessity be opposed to, each other, and must stand resting, as it were, on
mutual and opposite support. [6] Thus there is no contrary without another
contrary. For how could there be any perception of justice, unless there were
injuries? or what else is justice, but the removal of injustice? In like manner, the
nature of fortitude cannot be understood. except by placing [1] beside it
cowardice, or the nature of self-control except by intemperance. Likewise, in what
manner would there be prudence, unless there were the contrary, imprudence? On the
same principle, he says, why do the foolish men not require this also, that
there should be truth and not falsehood? For there exist together good and evil
things, prosperity and trouble, pleasure and pain. For the one being bound to
the other at opposite poles, as Plato says, if you take away one, you take away
both." You see, therefore, that which I have often said, that good and evil are
so connected with one another, that the one cannot exist without the other.
Therefore God acted with the greatest foresight in placing the subject-matter of
virtue in evils which He made for this purpose, that He might establish for us
a contest, in which He would crown the victorious with the reward of
immortality. [2]
CHAP.XXX. -- OF FALSE WISDOM.
I have taught, as I imagine, that the honours paid to gods are not only,
impious, but also vain, either because they were men whose memory was
consecrated after death; or because the images themselves are insensible and deaf,
inasmuch as they are formed of earth, and that it is not right for man, who ought to
look up to heavenly things, to subject himself to earthly things; or because
the spirits who claim to themselves those acts of religious service are unholy
and impure, and on this account, being condemned by the sentence of God, fell to
the earth, and that it is not lawful to submit to the power of those to whom
you are superior, if you wish to be a follower of the true God. It remains that,
as we have spoken of false religion, we should also discuss the subject of
false wisdom, which the philosophers profess,--men endued with the greatest
learning and eloquence, but far removed from the truth, because they neither know God
nor the wisdom of God. And although they are clever and learned, yet, because
their wisdom is human, I shall not fear to contend with them, that it may be
evident that falsehood can be easily overcome by truth, and earthly things by
heavenly.
They thus define the nature of philosophy. Philosophy is the love or
pursuit of wisdom. Therefore it is not wisdom itself; for that which loves must be
different from that which is loved. If it is the pursuit of wisdom, not even
thus is philosophy identical with wisdom. For wisdom is the object itself which is
sought, but the pursuit is that which seeks it. Therefore the very definition
or meaning of the word plainly shows that philosophy is not wisdom itself. I
will say that it [3] is not even the pursuit of wisdom, in which wisdom is not
comprised. For who can be said to devote himself to the pursuit of that to which
he can by no means attain? He who gives himself to the pursuit of medicine, or
grammar, or oratory, may be said to be studious of that art which he is
learning; but when he has learned, he is now said to be a physician, a grammarian, or
an orator. Thus also those who are studious of wisdom, after they had learned
it, ought to have been called wise. But since they are called students of wisdom
as long as they live, it is manifest that that is not the pursuit, because it
is impossible to arrive at the object itself which is sought for in the
pursuit, unless by chance they who pursue wisdom even to the end of life are about to
be wise in another world. Now every pursuit is connected with some end. That,
therefore, is not a right pursuit which has no end.
CHAP. XXXI. -- OF KNOWLEDGE AND SUPPOSITION.
Moreover, there are two things which appear to fall under the subject of
philosophy -- knowledge and supposition; and if these are taken away, philosophy
altogether falls to the ground. But the chief of the philosophers themselves have
taken away both from philosophy. Socrates took away knowledge, Zeno
supposition. Let us see whether they were right in doing so. Wisdom is, as Cicero defined
it, [4] the knowledge of divine and human things. Now if this definition is
true, wisdom does not come within the power of man. For who of mortals can assume
this to himself, to profess that he knows divine and human things? I say
nothing of human affairs; for although they are connected with divine, yet, since
they belong to man. let us grant that it is possible for man to know them.
Certainly he cannot know divine things by himself, since he is a man; whereas he who
knows them must be divine, and therefore God. But man is neither divine nor
God. Man, therefore, cannot thoroughly know divine things by himself. No one,
therefore, is wise but God, or certainly that man whom God has taught. But they,
because they are neither gods. nor taught by God. cannot be wise, that is,
acquainted with divine and human things. Knowledge, therefore, is rightly taken
away by Socrates and the Academics. Supposition also does not agree with the wise
man. For every one supposes that of which he is ignorant. Now, to suppose that
you know that of which you are ignorant, is rashness and folly. Supposition,
therefore, was rightly taken away by Zeno. If, therefore. there is no knowledge
in man, and there ought to be no supposition, philosophy is cut up by the roots.
CHAP. XXXII.--OF THE SECTS OF PHILOSOPHERS, AND THEIR DISAGREEMENT.
To this is added, that it [1] is not uniform; but being divided into
sects, and scattered into many and discordant opinions, it has no fixed state. For
since they all separately attack and harass one another, and there is none of
them which is not condemned of folly in the judgment of the rest, while the
members are plainly at variance with one another, the whole body of philosophy is
brought to destruction. Hence the Academy afterwards originated. For when the
leading men of that sect saw that philosophy was altogether overthrown by
philosophers mutually opposing each other, they undertook war against all, that they
might destroy all the arguments of all; while they themselves assert nothing
except one thing -- that nothing can be known. Thus, having taken away knowledge,
they overthrew the ancient philosophy. But they did not even themselves retain
the name of philosophers, since they admitted their ignorance, because to be
ignorant of all things is not only not the part of a philosopher, but not even of
a man. Thus the philosophers, because they have no defence, must destroy one
another with mutual wounds, and philosophy itself must altogether consume and put
an end to itself by its own arms. But they say it is only natural philosophy
which thus gives way. How is it with moral? Does that rest on any firm
foundation? Let us see whether philosophers are agreed in this part at any rate, which
relates to the condition of life.
CHAP. XXXIII.--WHAT IS THE CHIEF GOOD TO BE SOUGHT IN LIFE.
What is the chief good must be an object of inquiry, that our whole life
and actions may be directed to it. When inquiry is made respecting the chief
good of man, it ought to be settled to be of such a kind, first, that it have
reference to man alone; in the next place, that it belong peculiarly to the mind;
lastly, that it be sought by virtue. Let us see, therefore, whether the chief
good which the philosophers mark out be such that it has reference neither to a
dumb animal nor to the body, and cannot be attained without virtue.
Aristippus, the founder of the Cyrenaic sect, who thought that bodily
pleasure was the chief good, ought to be removed from the number of philosophers,
and from the society of men, because he compared himself to a beast. The chief
good of Hieronymus is to be without pain, that of Diodorus to cease to be in
pain. But the other animals avoid pain; and when they are without pain, or cease
to be in pain, are glad. What distinction, then, will be given to man, if his
chief good is judged to be common with the beasts? Zeno thought that the chief
good was to live agreeably to nature. But this definition is a general one. For
all animals live agreeably to nature, and each has its own nature.
Epicurus maintained that it was pleasure of the soul. What is pleasure of
the soul but joy, in which the soul for the most part luxuriates, and unbends
itself either to sport or to laughter? But this good befalls even dumb animals,
which, when they are satisfied with pasture, relax themselves to joy and
wantonness. Dinomachus and Callipho approved of honourable pleasure; but they either
said the same that Epicurus did, that bodily pleasure is dishonourable; or if
they considered bodily pleasures to be partly base and partly honourable, then
that is not the chief good which is ascribed to the body. The Peripatetics make
up the chief good of goods of the soul, and body, and fortune. The goods of the
soul may be approved of; but if they require assistance for the completion of
happiness, they are plainly weak. But the goods of the body and of fortune are
not in the power of man; nor is that now the chief good which is assigned to
the body, or to things placed without us, because this double good extends even
to the cattle, which have need of being well, and of a due supply of food. The
Stoics are believed to have entertained much better views, who said that virtue
was the chief good. But virtue cannot be the chief good, since, if it is the
endurance of evils and of labours, it is not happy of itself; but it ought to
effect and produce the chief good, because it cannot be attained without the
greatest difficulty and labour. But, in truth, Aristotle wandered far from reason,
who connected honour with virtue, as though it were possible for virtue at any
time to be separated from honour, or to be united with baseness.
Herillus the Pyrrhonist made knowledge the chief good. This indeed belongs
to man, and to the soul only, but it may happen to him without virtue. For he
is not to be considered happy who has either learnt anything by hearing, or has
gained the knowledge of it by a little reading; nor is it a definition of the
chief good, because there may be a knowledge either of bad things, or at any
rate of things that are useless. And if it is the knowledge of good and useful
things which you have acquired by labour, nevertheless it is not the chief good,
because knowledge is not sought on its own account, but on account of something
else. For the arts are learnt on this account, that they may be to us the
means of gaining support, or a source of glory, or even of pleasure; and it is
plain that these things cannot be the chief goods. Therefore the philosophers do
not observe the rule even in moral philosophy, inasmuch as they are at variance
with one another on the main point [1] itself, that is, in that discussion by
which the life is moulded. For the precepts cannot be equal, or resembling one
another, when some train men to pleasure, others to honour, others indeed to
nature, others to knowledge; some to the pursuit, others to the avoiding of riches;
some to entire insensibility to pain, others to the endurance of evils: in all
which, as I have shown before, they turn aside from reason, because they are
ignorant of God.
CHAP. XXXIV. -- THAT MEN ARE BORN TO JUSTICE.
Let us now see what is proposed to the wise man as the chief good. [2]
That men are born to justice is not only taught by the sacred writings, but is
sometimes acknowledged even by these same philosophers. Thus Cicero says: "But of
all things which fall under the discussion of learned men, nothing assuredly is
more excellent than that it should be clearly understood that we are born to
justice." This is most true. [3] For we are not born to wickedness, since we are
a social and sociable animal. The wild beasts are produced to exercise their
fierceness; for they are unable to live in any other way than by prey and
bloodshed. These, however, although pressed by extreme hunger, nevertheless refrain
from animals of their own kind. Birds also do the same, which must feed upon the
carcases of others. How much more is it befitting, that man, who is united
with man both in the interchange of language and in communion of feeling, should
spare man, and love him! For this is justice.
But since wisdom has been given to man alone, that he may understand God,
and this alone makes the difference between man and the dumb animals, justice
itself is bound up in two duties. He owes the one to God as to a father, the
other to man as to a brother; for we are produced by the same God. Therefore it
has been deservedly and rightly said, that wisdom is the knowledge of divine and
human affairs. For it is right that we should know what we owe to God, and
what to man; namely, to God religion, to man affection. But the former belongs to
wisdom, the latter to virtue; and justice comprises both. If, therefore, it is
evident that man is born to justice, it is necessary that the just man should
be subject to evils, that he may exercise the virtue with which he is endued.
For virtue is the enduring of evils. He will avoid pleasures as an evil: he will
despise riches, because they are frail; and if he has them, he will liberally
bestow them, to preserve the wretched: he will not be desirous of honours,
because they are short and transitory; he will do injury to no one; if he shall
suffer, he will not retaliate; and he will not take vengeance upon one who
plunders his property. For he will deem it unlawful to injure a man; and if there
shall be any one who would compel him to depart from God, he will not refuse
tortures nor death. Thus it will come to pass, that he must necessarily live in
poverty and lowliness, and in insults, or even tortures.
CHAP. XXXV. --THAT IMMORTALITY IS THE CHIEF GOOD.
What, then, will be the advantage of justice and virtue, if they shall
have nothing but evil in life? But if virtue, which despises all earthly goods,
most wisely endures all evils, and endures death itself in the discharge of duty,
cannot be without a reward, what remains but that immortality alone is its
reward? For if a happy life falls to the lot of man, as the philosophers will have
it, and in this point alone they do not disagree, therefore also immortality
falls to him. For that only is happy which is incorruptible; that only is
incorruptible which is eternal. Therefore immortality is the chief good, because it
belongs both to man, and to the soul, and to virtue. We are only directed to
this; we are born to the attainment of this. Therefore God proposes to us virtue
and justice, that we may obtain that eternal reward for our labours. But
concerning that immortality [4] itself we will speak in the proper place. There
remains the philosophy of Logic, [5] which contributes nothing to a happy life. For
wisdom does not consist in the arrangement of speech, but in the heart and the
feeling. But if natural philosophy is superfluous, and this of logic, and the
philosophers have erred in moral philosophy, which alone is necessary, because
they have been unable in any way to find out the chief good; therefore all
philosophy is found to be empty and useless, which was unable to comprehend the
nature of man, or to fulfil its duty and office.
CHAP. XXXVI. -- OF THE PHILOSOPHERS,-NAMELY, EPICURUS AND PYTHAGORAS.
Since I have spoken briefly of philosophy, now also I will speak a few
things about the philosophers. This is especially the doctrine of Epicurus, that
there is no providence. And at the same time he does not deny the existence of
gods. In both respects he acts contrary to reason. For if there are gods, it
follows that there is a providence. For otherwise we can form no intelligible idea
of God, for it is His peculiar province to foresee. [1] But Epicurus says He
takes no care about anything. Therefore He disregards not only the affairs of
men, but also heavenly things. How, therefore, or from what, do you affirm that
He exists? For when you have taken away the divine providence and care, it would
naturally follow that you should altogether deny the existence of God whereas
now you have left Him in name, but in reality you have taken Him away. Whence,
then, did the world derive its origin, if God takes no care of anything? There
are, he says, minute atoms, which can neither be seen nor touched, and from the
fortuitous meeting of these all things arose, and are continually arising. If
they are neither seen nor perceived by any part of the body, how could you know
of their existence? In the next place, if they exist, with what mind do they
meet together to effect anything? If they are smooth, they cannot cohere: if
they are hooked and angular, then they are divisible; for hooks and angles
project, and can be cut off. But these things are senseless and unprofitable. Why
should I mention that he also makes souls capable of extinction? who is refuted not
only by all philosophers and general persuasion, but also by the answers of
bards, by the predictions of the Sibyls, and lastly, by the divine voices of the
prophets themselves; so that it is wonderful that Epicurus alone existed, who
should place the condition of man on a level with the flocks and beasts.
What of Pythagoras, who was first called a philosopher, who judged that
souls were indeed immortal, but that they passed into other bodies, either of
cattle, or of birds, or of beasts? Would it not have been better that they should
be destroyed, together with their bodies, than thus to be condemned to pass
into the bodies of other animals? Would it not be better not to exist at all,
than, after having had the form of a man, to live as a swine or a dog? And the
foolish man, to gain credit for his saying, said that he himself had been
Euphorbus in the Trojan war, and that, when he had been slain, he passed into other
figures of animals, and at last became Pythagoras. O happy man! to whom alone so
great a memory was given; or rather unhappy, who, when changed into a sheep, was
not permitted to be ignorant of what he was! And would to Heaven that he alone
had been thus senseless! He found also some to believe him, and some indeed
among the learned, [2] to whom the inheritance of folly passed.
CHAP. XXXVII. --OF SOCRATES AND HIS CONTRADICTION.
After him Socrates held the first place in philosophy, who was pronounced
most wise even by the oracle, because he confessed that he knew one thing only,
-- namely, that he knew nothing. And on the authority of this oracle it was
right that the natural philosophers should restrain themselves, lest they should
either inquire into those things which they could not know, or should think
that they knew things which they did not know. Let us, however, see whether
Socrates was most wise, as the Pythian god proclaimed. He often made use of this
proverb, that that which is above us has also no reference to us. He has now passed
beyond the limits of his opinion. For he who said that he knew one thing only,
found another thing to speak of, as though he knew it; but that in vain. For
God, who is plainly above us, is to be sought for; and religion is to be
undertaken, which alone separates us from the brutes, which indeed Socrates not only
rejected, but even derided, in swearing by a goose and a dog, as if in truth he
could not have sworn by AEsculapius, to whom he had vowed a cock. Behold the
sacrifice of a wise man! And because he was unable to offer this in his own
person, since he was at the point of death, he entreated his friends to perform the
vow after his death, lest forsooth he should be detained as a debtor in the
lower regions. He assuredly both pronounced that he knew nothing, and made good
his statement. [3]
CHAP. XXXVIII.--OF PLATO, WHOSE DOCTRINE APPROACHES MORE NEARLY TO THE TRUTH.
His disciple Plato, whom Tully speaks of as the god of philosophers, alone
of all so studied philosophy that he approached nearer to the truth; and yet,
because he was ignorant of God, he so failed in many things, that no one fell
into worse errors, especially because in his books respecting the state he
wished all things to be common to all. This is endurable concerning property, though
it is unjust. For it ought not to be an injury to any one, if he possesses
more than another through his own industry; or to be a profit to any one, if
through his own fault he possesses less. But, as I have said, this is capable of
being endured in some way. Shall there be a community of wives also, and of
children? Shall there be no distinction of blood, or certainty of race? Shall there
be neither families, nor relationships, nor affinities, but all things confused
and indiscriminate, as in herds of cattle? Shall there be no self-restraint in
men, no chastity in women? What conjugal affection can there be in these,
between whom on either side there is no sure or peculiar (1) love? Who will he
dutiful towards a father, when he knows not from whom he was born? Who will love a
son, whom he will reckon as not his own? (2) Moreover, he opened (3) the senate
house to women, and en-trusted to them warfare, magistracies, and commands. (4)
But how great will be the calamity of that city, in which women shall
discharge the duties of men! But of this more fully at another opportunity.
Zeno, the master of the Stoics, who praises virtue, judged that pity,
which is a very great virtue, should be cut away, as though it were a disease of
the mind, whereas it is at the same time dear to God and necessary for men. For
who is there who, when placed in any evil, would be unwilling to be pitied, and
would not desire the assistance of those who might succour them, which is not
called forth so as to render aid, except by the feeling of pity? Although he
calls this humanity and piety, he does not change the matter itself, only the
name. This is the affection which has been given to man alone, that by mutual
assistance we might alleviate our weakness; and he who removes this affection
reduces us to the life of the beasts. For his assertion that all faults are equal,
proceeds from that inhumanity with which also be assails pity as a disease. For
he who makes no difference in faults, either thinks that light offences ought to
be visited with severe punishments, which is the part of a cruel judge, or
that great offences should be visited with slight punishments, which is the part
of a worthless judge. In either case there is injury to the state. For if the
greatest crimes are lightly punished, the boldness of the wicked will increase,
and go on to deeds of greater daring; and if a punishment of too great severity
is inflicted for slight offences, inasmuch as no one can be exempt from fault,
many citizens will incur peril, who by correction might become better.
CHAP. XXXIX. -- OF VARIOUS PHILOSOPHERS, AND OF THE ANTIPODES.
These things, truly, are of small importance, but they arise from the same
falsehood. Xenophanes said that the orb of the moon is eighteen times larger
than this earth of ours; and that within its compass is contained another earth,
which is inhabited by men and animals of every kind. About the antipodes also
one can neither hear nor speak without laughter. It is asserted as something
serious, that we should believe that there are men who have their feet opposite
to ours. The ravings of Anaxagoras are more tolerable, who said that snow was
black. And not only the sayings, but the deeds, of some are ridiculous.
Democritus neglected his land which was left to him by his father, and suffered it to
become a public pasture. Diogenes with his company of dogs, (5) who professes
that great and perfect virtue in the contempt of all things, preferred to beg for
his support, rather than to seek it by honest labour, or to have any property.
Undoubtedly the life of a wise man ought to be to others an example of living.
If all should imitate the wisdom of these, how will states exist? But perhaps
the same Cynics were able to afford an example of modesty, who lived with their
wives in public. I know not how they could defend virtue, who took away modesty.
Nor was Aristippus better than these, who, I believe, that he might please
his mistress Lais, instituted the Cyrenaic system, by which he placed the end
of the chief good in bodily pleasure, that authority might not be wanting to
his faults, or learning to his vices. Are those men of greater fortitude to be
more approved, who, that they might be said to have despised death, died by their
own hands? Zeno, Empedocles. Chrysippus, Cleanthes, Democritus, and Cato,
imitating these, did not know that he who put himself to death is guilty of murder,
according to the divine right and law. For it was God who placed us in this
abode of flesh: it was He who gave us the temporary habitation of the body, that
we should inhabit it as long as He pleased. Therefore it is to be considered
impious, to wish to depart from it without the command of God. Therefore violence
must not be applied to nature. He knows how to destroy (6) His own work. And
if any one shall apply impious bands to that work, and shall tear asunder the
bonds of the divine workmanship, he endeavours to flee from God, whose sentence
no one will be able to escape, whether alive or dead. Therefore they are
accursed and impious, whom I have mentioned above, who even taught what are the
befitting reasons for voluntary death; so that it was not enough of guilt that they
were self-murderers, unless they instructed others also to this wickedness. (7)
CHAP. XL.--OF THE FOOLISHNESS OF THE PHILOSOPHERS.
There are innumerable sayings and doings of the philosophers, by which
their foolishness may be shown. Therefore, since we are unable to enumerate them
all, a few will be sufficient. It is enough that it is understood that the
philosophers were neither teachers of justice, of which they were ignorant, nor of
virtue, of which they falsely boast. For what can they teach, who often confess
their own ignorance? I omit to mention Socrates, whose opinion is well known.
Anaxagoras proclaims that all things are over-spread with darkness. Empedocles
says that the paths for finding out the truth of the senses are narrow.
Democritus asserts that truth lies sunk in a deep well; and because they nowhere find
it, they therefore affirm that no wise man has as yet existed. Since, therefore,
human wisdom has no existence (Socrates says in the writings of Plato), let us
follow that which is divine, and let us give thanks to God, who has revealed
and delivered it to us; and let us congratulate ourselves, that through the
divine bounty we possess the truth and wisdom, which, though sought by so many
intellects through so many ages, philosophy (1) was not able to discover.
CHAP. XLI.--OF TRUE RELIGION AND WISDOM.
Now, since we have refuted false religion, which is in the worship of the
gods, and false wisdom, which is in the philosophers, let us come to true
religion and wisdom. And, indeed, we must speak of them both conjointly, because
they are closely connected. For to worship the true God, that and nothing else is
wisdom. For that God who is supreme and the Maker of all things, who made man
as the image of Himself, on this account conferred on him alone of all animals
the gift of reason, that he might pay back honour to Him as his Father and his
Lord, and by the exercise of this piety and obedience might gain the reward of
immortality. This is a true and divine mystery. But among those, (2) because
they are not true, there is no agreement. Neither are sacred rites performed in
philosophy, nor is philosophy treated of in sacred things; and on this account
their religion is false, because it does not possess wisdom; and on this
account their wisdom is false, because it does not possess religion. But where both
are joined together, there the truth must necessarily be; so that if it is
asked what the truth itself is, it may be rightly said to be either wise religion
or religious wisdom.
CHAP. XLII.--OF RELIGIOUS WISDOM: THE NAME OF CHRIST KNOWN TO NONE, EXCEPT
HIMSELF AND HIS FATHER.
I will now say what wise religion, or religious wisdom, is. God, in the
beginning, before He made the world, from the fountain of His own eternity, and
from the divine and everlasting Spirit, (3) begat for Himself a Son
incorruptible, faithful, corresponding to His Father's excellence and majesty. He is
virtue, He is reason, He is the word of God, He is wisdom. With this artificer, as
Hermes says, and counsellor, as the Sibyl says, He contrived the excellent and
wondrous fabric of this world. In fine, of all the angels, whom the same God
formed from His own breath, (4) He alone was admitted into a participation of His
supreme power, He alone was called God. For all things were through Him, and
nothing was without Him. In fine, Plato, not altogether as a philosopher, but as a
seer, spoke concerning the first and second God, perhaps following
Trismegistus in this, whose words I have translated from the Greek, and subjoined: "The
Lord and Maker of all things, whom we have thought to be called God, created (5)
a second God, who is visible and sensible. But by sensible I mean, not that He
Himself receives sensation, but that He causes sensation and sight. When,
therefore, He had made this, the first, and one, and only one, He appeared to Him
most excellent, and full of all good qualities." The Sibyl also says that God the
guide of all was made by God, and another, that
"God the Son of God must be known,"
as those examples which I have brought forward in my books declare. Him the
prophets, filled with the inspiration of the Divine Spirit, proclaimed; of whom
especially Solomon in the book of Wisdom, and also his father, the writer of
divine hymns--both most renowned kings, who preceded the times of the Trojan war
by a hundred and eighty years (6)--testify that He was born of God. His name is
known to none, except to Himself and the Father, as John teaches in the
Revelation. (7) Hermes says that His name cannot be uttered by mortal mouth. Yet by
men He is called by two names--Jesus, which is Saviour, and Christ, which is
King. He is called Saviour on this account, because He is the health and safety of
all who believe in God through Him. He is called Christ on this account,
because He Himself will come from heaven at the end of this dispensation (1) to judge
the world, and, having raised the dead, to establish for Himself an
everlasting kingdom.
CHAP. XLIII.--OF THE NAME OF JESUS CHRIST, AND HIS TWOFOLD NATIVITY.
But lest by any chance there should be any doubt in your mind why we call
Him Jesus Christ, who was born of God before the world, and who was born of man
three hundred years ago, I will briefly explain to you the reason. The same
person is the son of God and of man. For He was twice born: first of God, in the
spirit, before the origin of the world; afterwards in the flesh of man, in the
reign of Augustus; and in connection with this fact is an illustrious and great
mystery, in which is contained both the salvation of men and the religion of
the Supreme God, and all truth. For when first the accursed and impious worship
of gods crept in through the treachery of the demons, then the religion of God
remained with the Hebrews alone, who, not by any law, but after the manner of
their fathers, observed the worship handed down to them by successive
generations, (2) even until the time when they went forth out of Egypt trader the
leadership of Moses, the first of all the prophets, through whom the law was given to
them from God; and they were afterwards called Jews. Therefore they served God,
being bound by the chains of the taw. But they also, by degrees going astray
to profane rites, undertook the worship of strange gods, and, leaving the
worship of their father, sacrificed to senseless images. Therefore God sent to them
prophets filled with the Divine Spirit, to upbraid them with their sins and
proclaim repentance, to threaten them with the vengeance which would follow, and
announce that it would come to pass, if they persisted in the same faults, that
He would send another as the bearer of a new law; and having removed the
ungrateful people from their inheritance, He would assemble to Himself a more
faithful people from foreign nations. But they not only persisted in their course,
but even slew the messengers themselves. Therefore He condemned them on account
of these deeds: nor did He any longer send messengers to a stubborn people; but
He sent His own Son, to call all nations to the favour of God. Nor, however,
did He shut them out, impious and ungrateful as they were, from the hope of
salvation: but He sent Him to them before all others, (3) that if they should by
chance obey, they might not lose that which they had received; but if they should
refuse to receive their God, then, the heirs being removed, (4) the Gentiles
would come into possession. Therefore the supreme Father ordered Him to descend
to the earth, and to put on a human body, that, being subject to the sufferings
of the flesh, He might teach virtue and patience not only by words, but also
by deeds. Therefore He was born a second time as man, of a virgin, without a
father, that, as in His first spiritual birth, being born of God alone, He was
made a sacred spirit, so in His second and fleshly birth, being born of a mother
only, He might become holy flesh, that through Him the flesh, which had become
subject to sin, might be freed from destruction.
CHAP. XLIV. --THE TWOFOLD NATIVITY OF CHRIST IS PROVED FROM THE PROPHETS.
That these things should thus take place as I have set them forth, the
prophets had before predicted. In the writings of Solomon it is thus written: (5)
"The womb of a virgin was strengthened, and conceived: and a virgin was
impregned, and became a mother in great pity." In Isaiah (6) it is thus written:
"Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and ye shall call His name
Immanuel;" which, being interpreted, is God with us. (7) For He was with us on the
earth, when He assumed flesh; and He was no less God in man, and man in God. That
He was both God and man was declared before by the prophets. That He was God,
Isaiah (8) thus declares: "They shall fall down unto Thee, they shall make
supplication unto Thee; since God is in Thee, and we knew it not, even the God of
Israel. They shall be ashamed and confounded, all of them who oppose themselves
to Thee, and shall go to confusion." Also Jeremiah: (9) "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." Likewise that He was man,
the same Jeremiah (10) says: "And He is man, and who knew Him?" Isaiah also
thus speaks: (11) "And the Lord shall send them a man who shall save them, and
with judgment shall He heal them." Also Moses himself in the book of Numbers:
(12) "There shall come a star out of Jacob, and a man shall arise out of Israel."
For this cause, therefore, being God, He took upon Him flesh, that, becoming a
mediator (13) between God and man, having overcome death, He might by His
guidance lead man to God.
CHAP. XLV. --THE POWER AND WORKS OF CHRIST ARE PROVED FROM THE SCRIPTURES.
We have spoken of His nativity; now let us speak of His power and works,
which, when He wrought them among men, the Jews, seeing them to be great and
wonderful, supposed that they were done by the influence of magic, not knowing
that all those things which were done by Him had been foretold by the prophets. He
gave strength to the sick, and to those languishing under various diseases,
not by any healing remedy, but instantaneously, by the force and power of His
word; He restored the weak, He made the lame to walk, He gave sight to the blind,
He made the dumb to speak, the deaf to hear; He cleansed the polluted and
unclean, He restored their right mind to those who were maddened with the attack of
demons, He recalled to life and light those who were dead or now buried. He
also fed and satisfied (1) five thousand men with five loaves and two fishes. He
also walked upon the sea. He also in a tempest commanded the wind to be still,
and immediately there was a calm; all which things we find predicted both in the
books of the prophets and in the verses of the Sibyls.
When a great multitude resorted to Him on account of these miracles, and,
as He truly was, believed Him to be the Son of God, and sent from God, the
priests and rulers of the Jews, filled with envy, and at the same time excited with
anger, because He reproved their sins and injustice, conspired to put Him to
death; and that this would happen, Solomon had foretold a little more than a
thousand years before, in the book of Wisdom, using these words: (2) "Let us
defraud the righteous, for he is unpleasant to us, and upbraideth us with our
offences against the law. He maketh his boast that he has the knowledge of God, and
he calleth himself the Son of God. He is made to reprove our thoughts: it
grieveth us even to look upon him; for his life is not like the life of others, his
ways are of another fashion. We are counted by him as triflers; he withdraweth
himself from our ways, as from filthiness; he commendeth greatly the latter end
of the just, and boasteth that he has God for his father. Let us see,
therefore, if his words be true; let us prove what end he shall have; let us examine him
with rebukes and torments, that we may know his meekness and prove his
patience; let us condemn him to a shameful death. Such things have they imagined, and
have gone astray; for their own folly hath blinded them, and they do not
understand the mysteries of God."
Therefore, being unmindful of these writings which they read, they incited
the people as though against an impious man, so that they seized and led Him
to trial, and with impious words demanded His death. But they alleged against
Him as a crime this very thing, that He said that He was the Son of God, and that
by healing on the Sabbath He broke the law, which He said that He did not
break, but fulfilled. And when Pontius Pilate, who then as legate had authority in
Syria, perceived that the cause did not belong to the office of the Roman
judge, he sent Him to Herod the Tetrarch, and permitted the Jews themselves to be
the judges of their own law: who, having received the power of punishing His
guilt, sentenced (3) Him to the cross, but first scourged and struck him with their
hands, put on Him a crown of thorns, spat upon His face, gave Him gall and
vinegar to eat and drink; and amidst these things no word was heard to fall from
His lips. Then the executioners, having cast lots over His tunic and mantle,
suspended Him on the cross, and affixed Him to it, though on the next day they
were about to celebrate the Passover, that is, their festival. Which crime was
followed by prodigies, that they might understand the impiety which they had
committed; for at the same moment in which He expired, there was a great earthquake,
and a withdrawing (4) of the sun, so that the day was turned into night.