A TREATISE ON THE ANGER OF GOD
A TREATISE ON THE ANGER OF GOD
ADDRESSED TO DONATUS.(1)
CHAP. I.--OF DIVINE AND HUMAN WISDOM.
I HAVE often observed, Donatus, that many persons hold this opinion, which
some philosophers also have maintained, that God is not subject to anger;
since the divine nature is either altogether beneficent, and that it is
inconsistent with His surpassing and excellent power to do injury to any one; or, at any
rate, He takes no notice of us at all, so that no advantage comes to us from His
goodness, and no evil from His ill-will. But the error of these men, because
it is very great, and tends to overthrow the condition of human life, must be
refuted by us, lest you yourself also should be deceived, being incited by the
authority of men who deem themselves wise. Nor, however, are we so arrogant as to
boast that the truth is comprehended by our intellect; but we follow the
teaching of God, who alone is able to know and to reveal secret things. But the
philosophers, being destitute of this teaching, have imagined that the nature of
things can be ascertained by conjecture. But this is impossible; because the mind
of man, enclosed in the dark abode of the body, is far removed from the
perception of truth: and in this the divine nature differs from the human, that
ignorance is the property of the human, knowledge of the divine nature. On which
account we have need of some light to dispel the darkness by which the reflection
of man is overspread, since, while we live in mortal flesh, we are unable to
divine by our senses. But the light of the human mind is God, and he who has
known and admitted Him into his breast will acknowledge the mystery of the truth
with an enlightened heart; but when God and heavenly instruction are removed, all
things are full of errors. And Socrates, though he was the most learned of all
the philosophers, yet, that he might prove the ignorance of the others, who
thought that they possessed something, rightly said that he knew nothing, except
one thing--that he knew nothing. For he understood that that learning had
nothing certain, nothing true in itself; nor, as some imagine, did he pretend, to
learning that he might refute others, but he saw the truth in some measure. And
he testified even on his trial (as is related by Plato) that there was no human
wisdom. He so despised, derided, and cast aside the learning in which the
philosophers then boasted, that he professed that very thing as the greatest
learning, that he had learnt that he knew nothing. If, therefore, there is no human
wisdom, as Socrates taught, as Plato handed down, it is evident that the
knowledge of the truth is divine, and belongs to no other than to God. Therefore God
must be known, in whom alone is the truth. He is the Parent of the world, and
the Framer of all things; who is not seen with the eyes, and is scarcely
distinguished by the mind; whose religion is accustomed to be attacked in many ways by
those who have neither been able to attain true wisdom, nor to comprehend the
system of the great and heavenly secret.
CHAP. II.--OF THE TRUTH AND ITS STEPS, AND OF GOD.
For since there are many steps by which the ascent is made to the abode of
truth, it is not easy for any one to reach the summit. For when the eyes are
darkened by the brightness of the truth, they who are unable to maintain a firm
step fall back to the level ground.(3) Now the first step is to understand
false religions, and to throw aside the impious worship of gods which are made by
the hand of man. But the second step is to perceive with the mind that there is
but one Supreme God, whose power and providence made the world from the
beginning, and afterwards continues to govern it. The third step is to know His
Servant and Messenger,(4) whom He sent as His ambassador to the earth, by whose
teaching being freed from the error in which we were held entangled, and formed to
the worship of the true God, we might learn righteousness. From all of these
steps, as I have said, there is a rapid and easy gliding to a downfall,(1) unless
the feet are firmly planted with unshaken stedfastness.
We see those shaken off from the first step, who, though they understand
things which are false, do not, however, discover that which is true; and though
they despised earthly and frail images, do not betake themselves to the
worship of God, of whom they are ignorant. But viewing with admiration the elements
of the universe, they worship the heaven, the earth, the sea, the sun, the moon,
and the other heavenly bodies.
But we have already reproved their ignorance in the second book of the
Divine Institutes.(2) But we say that those fall from the second step, who, though
they understand that there is but one Supreme God, nevertheless, ensnared by
the philosophers, and captivated by false arguments, entertain opinions
concerning that excellent majesty far removed from the truth; who either deny that God
has any figure, or think that He is moved by no affection, because every
affection is a sign of weakness, which has no existence in God. But they are
precipitated from the third step, who, though they know the Ambassador of God, who is
also the Builder of the divine and immortal temple,(3) either do not receive
Him, or receive Him otherwise than faith demands; whom we have partly refuted in
the fourth book of the above-named work.(4) And we will hereafter refute more
carefully, when we shall begin to reply to all the sects, which, while they
dispute,(5) have destroyed the truth.
But now we will argue against those who, falling from the second step,
entertain wrong sentiments respecting the Supreme God. For some say that He
neither does a kindness to any one, nor becomes angry, but in security and quietness
enjoys the advantages of His own immortality. Others, indeed, take away anger,
but leave to God kindness; for they think that a nature excelling in the
greatest virtue, while it ought not to be malevolent, ought also to be benevolent.
Thus all the philosophers are agreed on the subject of anger, but are at variance
respecting kindness. But, that my speech may descend in order to the proposed
subject, a division of this kind must be made and followed by me, since anger
and kindness are different, and opposed to one another. Either anger must be
attributed to God, and kindness taken from Him; or both alike must be taken from
Him; or anger must be taken away, and kindness attributed to Him; or neither
must be taken away. The nature of the case admits of nothing else besides these;
so that the truth, which is sought for, must necessarily be found in some one of
these. Let us consider them separately, that reason and arrangement may
conduct us to the hiding-place of truth.
CHAP. III.--OF THE GOOD AND EVIL THINGS IN HUMAN AFFAIRS, AND OF THEIR AUTHOR.
First, no one ever said this respecting God, that He is only subject to
anger, and is not influenced by kindness. For it is unsuitable to God, that He
should be endowed with a power of this kind, by which He may injure and do harm,
but be unable to profit and to do good. What means, therefore, what hope of
safety, is proposed to men, if God is the author of evils only? For if this is so,
that venerable majesty will now be drawn out, not to the power of the judge,
to whom it is permitted to preserve and set at liberty, but to the office of the
torturer and executioner. But whereas we see that there are not only evils in
human affairs, but also goods, it is plain that if God is the author of evils,
there must be another who does things contrary to God, and gives to us good
things. If there is such a one, by what name must he be called? Why is he who
injures us more known to us than He who benefits us? But if this can be nothing
besides God, it is absurd and vain to suppose that the divine power, than which
nothing is greater or better, is able to injure, but unable to benefit; and
accordingly no one has ever existed who ventured to assert this, because it is
neither reasonable nor in any way credible. And because this is agreed upon, let us
pass on and seek after the truth elsewhere.
CHAP. IV.--OF GOD AND HIS AFFECTIONS, AND THE CENSURE OF EPICURUS.
That which follows is concerning the school of Epicurus; that as there is
no anger in God, so indeed there is no kindness. For when Epicurus thought that
it was inconsistent with God to injure and to inflict harm, which for the most
part arises from the affection of anger, he took away from Him beneficence
also, since he saw that it followed that if God has anger, He must also have
kindness. Therefore, lest he should concede to Him a vice, he deprived Him also of
virtue? From this, he says, He is happy and uncorrupted, because He cares about
nothing, and neither takes trouble Himself nor occasions it to another.
Therefore He is not God, if He is neither moved, which is peculiar to a living being,
nor does anything impossible for man, which is peculiar to God, if He has no
will at all, no action, in short, no administration, which is worthy of God. And
what greater, what more worthy administration can be attributed to God, than
the government of the world, and especially of the human race, to which all
earthly things are subject?
What happiness, then, can there be in God, if He is always inactive, being
at rest and un-moveable? if He is deaf to those who pray to Him, and blind to
His worshippers? What is so worthy of God, and so befitting to Him, as
providence? But if He cares for nothing, and foresees nothing, He has lost all His
divinity. What else does he say, who takes from God all power and all substance,
except that there is no God at all? In short, Marcus Tullius relates that it was
said by Posidonius, (1) that Epicurus understood that there were no gods, but
that he said those things which he spoke respecting the gods for the sake of
driving away odium; and so that he leaves the gods in words, but takes them away
in reality, since he gives them no motion, no office. But if this is so, what
can be more deceitful than him? And this ought to be foreign to the character of
a wise and weighty man. But if he understood one thing and spoke another, what
else is he to be called than a deceiver, double-tongued, wicked, and moreover
foolish? But Epicurus was not so crafty as to say those things with the desire
of deceiving, when he consigned these things also by his writings to everlasting
remembrance; but he erred through ignorance of the truth. For, being led from
the beginning by the probability (2) of a single opinion, he necessarily fell
into those things which followed. For the first opinion was, that anger was not
consistent with the character of God. And when this appeared to him to be true
and unassailable, (3) he was unable to refuse the consequences; because one
affection being removed, necessity itself compelled him to remove from God the
other affections also. Thus, he who is not subject to anger is plainly
uninfluenced by kindness, which is the opposite feeling to anger. Now, if there is neither
anger nor kindness in Him, it is manifest that there is neither fear, nor joy,
nor grief, nor pity. For all the affections have one system, one motion, (4)
which cannot he the case with God. But if there is no affection in God, because
whatever is subject to affections is weak, it follows that there is in Him
neither the care of anything, nor providence.
The disputation of the wise man (5) extends thus far: he was silent as to
the other things which follow; namely, that because there is in Him neither
care nor providence, therefore there is no reflection nor any perception in Him,
by which it is effected that He has no existence at all. Thus, when he had
gradually descended, he remained on the last step, because he now saw the
precipice. But what does it avail to have remained silent, and concealed the danger?
Necessity compelled him even against his will to fall. For he said that which he
did not mean, because he so arranged his argument that he necessarily came to
that point which he wished to avoid. You see, therefore, to what point he
comes, when anger is removed and taken away from God. In short, either no one
believes that, or a very few, and they the guilty and the wicked, who hope for
impunity for their sins. But if this also is found to be false, that there is neither
anger nor kindness in God, let us come to that which is put in the third place.
CHAP. V.--THE OPINION OF THE STOICS CONCERNING GOD; OF HIS ANGER AND KINDNESS.
The Stoics and some others are supposed to have entertained much better
sentiments respecting the divine nature, who say that there is kindness in God,
but not anger. A very pleasing and popular speech, that God is not subject to
such littleness of mind as to imagine that He is injured by any one, since it is
impossible for Him to be injured; so that that serene and holy majesty is
excited, disturbed, and maddened, which is the part of human frailty. For they say
that anger is a commotion and perturbation of the mind, which is inconsistent
with God. Since, when it fails upon the mind of any one, as a violent tempest it
excites such waves that it changes the condition of the mind, the eyes gleam,
the countenance trembles, the tongue stammers, the teeth chatter, the
countenance is alternately stained now with redness spread over it, now with white
paleness. But if anger is unbecoming to a man, provided he be of wisdom and
authority, how much more is so foul a change unbecoming to God! And if man, when he has
authority and power, inflicts widespread injury through anger, sheds blood,
overthrows cities, destroys communities, reduces provinces to desolation, bow much
more is it to be believed that God, since He has power over the whole human
race, and over the universe itself, would have been about to destroy all things
if He were angry.
Therefore they think that so great and so pernicious an evil ought to be
absent from Him. And if anger and excitement are absent from Him, because it is
disfiguring and injurious, and He inflicts injury on no one, they think that
nothing else remains, except that He is mild calm, propitious, beneficent, the
preserver. For thus at length He may be called the common Father of all, and the
best and greatest, which His divine and heavenly nature demands. For if among
men it appears praiseworthy to do good rather than to injure, to restore to life
(1) rather than to kill, to save rather than to destroy, and innocence is not
undeservedly numbered among the virtues,--and he who does these things is
loved, esteemed, honoured, and celebrated with all blessings and vows,--in short, on
account of his deserts and benefits is judged to be most like to God; how much
more right is it that God Himself, who excels in divine and perfect virtues,
and who is removed from all earthly taint, should conciliate (2) the whole race
of man by divine and heavenly benefits! Those things are spoken speciously and
in a popular manner, and they allure many to believe them but they who
entertain these sentiments approach nearer indeed to the truth, but they partly fail,
not sufficiently considering the nature of the case. For if God is not angry
with the impious and the unrighteous, it is clear that He does not love the pious
and the righteous. Therefore the error of those is more consistent who take
away at once both anger and kindness. For in opposite matters it is necessary to
be moved to both sides or to neither. Thus, he who loves the good also hates the
wicked, and he who does not hate the wicked does not love the good; because
the loving of the good arises from the hatred of the wicked, and the hating of
the wicked has its rise from the love of the good. There is no one who loves life
without a hatred of death, nor who is desirous of light, but he who avoids
darkness. These things are so connected by nature, that the one cannot exist
without the other.
If any master has in his household a good and a bad servant, it is evident
that he does not hate them both, or confer upon both benefits and honours; for
if he does this, he is both unjust and foolish. But he addresses the one who
is good with friendly words, and honours him and sets him over his house and
household, and all his affairs; but punishes the bad one with reproaches, with
stripes, with nakedness, with hunger, with thirst, with fetters: so that the
latter may be an example to others to keep them from sinning, and the former to
conciliate them; so that fear may restrain some, and honour may excite others. He,
therefore, who loves also hates, and he who hates also loves; for there are
those who ought to be loved, and there are those who ought to be hated. And as he
who loves confers good things on those whom he loves, so he who hates inflicts
evils upon those whom he hates; which argument, because it is true, can in no
way be refuted. Therefore the opinion of those is vain and false, who, when they
attribute the one to God, take away the other, not less than the opinion of
those who take away both. But the latter, (3) as we have shown, in part do not
err, but retain that which is the better of the two; whereas the former, (4) led
on by the accurate method of their reasoning, fall into the greatest error,
because they have assumed premises which are altogether false. For they ought not
to have reasoned thus: Because God is not liable to anger, therefore He is not
moved by kindness; but in this manner: Because God is moved by kindness,
therefore He is also liable to anger. For if it had been certain and undoubted that
God is not liable to anger, then the other point would necessarily be arrived
at. But since the question as to whether God is angry is more open to doubt,
while it is almost perfectly plain that He is kind, it is absurd to wish to subvert
that which is certain by means of an uncertainty, since it is easier to
confirm uncertain things by means of those which are certain.
CHAP. VI.-- THAT GOD IS ANGRY.
These are the opinions entertained by the philosophers respecting God. But
if we have discovered that these things which have been spoken are false,
there remains that one last resource, in which alone the truth can be found, which
has never been embraced by philosophers, nor at any time defended: that it
follows that God is angry, since He is moved by kindness. This opinion is to be
maintained and asserted by us; for (5) this is the sum and turning-point on which
the whole of piety and religion depend: and no honour can be due to God, if He
affords nothing to His worshippers; and no fear, if He is not angry with him
who does not worship Him. (6)
CHAP. VII.--OF MAN, AND THE BRUTE ANIMALS, AND RELIGION.
Though philosophers have often turned aside from reason through their
ignorance of the truth, and have fallen into inextricable errors (for that is wont
to happen to these which happens to a traveller ignorant of the way, and not
confessing that he is ignorant, --namely, that he wanders about, while he is
ashamed to inquire from those whom he meets), no philosopher, however, has ever
made the assertion that there is no difference between man and the brutes. Nor has
any one at all, provided that he wished to appear wise, reduced a rational
animal to the level of the mute and irrational; which some ignorant persons do,
resembling the brutes themselves, who, wishing to give themselves up to the
indulgence of their appetite and pleasure, say that they are born on the same
principle as all living animals, which it is impious for man to say. For who is so
unlearned as not to know, who is so void of understanding as not to perceive,
that there is something divine in man? I do not as yet come to the excellences of
the soul and of the intellect, by which there is a manifest affinity between
man and God. Does not the position of the body itself, and the fashion of the
countenance, declare that we are not on a level with the dumb creation? Their
nature is prostrated to the ground and to their pasture, and has nothing in common
with the heaven, which they do not look upon. But man, with his erect position,
with his elevated countenance raised to the contemplation of the universe,
compares his features with God, and reason recognises reason. (1)
And on this account there is no animal, as Cicero says, (2) except man,
which has any knowledge of God. For he alone is furnished with wisdom, so that he
alone understands religion; and this is the chief or only difference between
man and the dumb animals. For the other things which appear to be peculiar to
man, even if there are not such in the dumb animals, nevertheless may appear to
be similar. Speech is peculiar to man; yet even in these there is a certain
resemblance to speech. For they both distinguish one another by their voices; and
when they are angry, they send forth a sound resembling altercation; and when
they see one another after an interval of time, they show the office of
congratulation by their voice. To us, indeed, their voices appear uncouth, (3) as ours
perhaps do to them; but to themselves, who understand one another, they are
words. In short, in every affection they utter distinct expressions of voice (4)
by which they may show their state of mind. Laughter also is peculiar to man;
and yet we see certain indications of joy in other animals, when they use
passionate gestures (5) with a view to sports, hang down (6) their ears, contract
their mouth, smooth their forehead, relax their eyes to sportiveness. What is so
peculiar to man as reason and the foreseeing of the future? But there are animals
which open several outlets in different directions from their lairs, that if
any danger comes upon them, an escape may be open for them shut in; but they
would not do this unless they possessed intelligence and re flection. Others are
provident for the future, as
"Ants, when they plunder a great heap of corn, mindful of the winter, and
lay it up in their dwelling;" (7)
again, --
"As bees, which alone know a country and fixed abodes; and mindful of the
winter which is to come, they practise labour in the summer, and lay up their
gains as a common stock." (3)
It would be a long task if I should wish to trace out the things most
resembling the skill of man, which are accustomed to be done by the separate tribes
of animals. But if, in the case of all these things which are wont to be
ascribed to man, there is found to be some resemblance even in the dumb animals, it
is evident that religion is the only thing of which no trace can be found in
the dumb animals, nor any indication. For justice is peculiar to religion, and to
this no other animal attains. For man alone bears rule; the other animals are
subjected (9) to him. But the worship of God is ascribed to justice; and he
who does not embrace this, being far removed from the nature of man, will live
the life of the brutes under the form of man. But since we differ from the other
animals almost in this respect alone, that we alone of all perceive the divine
might and power, while in the others there is no understanding of God, it is
surely impossible that in this respect either the dumb animals should have more
wisdom, or human nature should be unwise, since all living creatures, and the
whole system of nature, are subject to man on account of his wisdom. Wherefore if
reason, if the force of man in this respect, excels and surpasses the rest of
living creatures, inasmuch as he alone is capable of the knowledge of God, it
is evident that religion can in no way be overthrown.
CHAP. VIII.--OF RELIGION.
But religion is overthrown if we believe Epicurus speaking thus:--
"For the nature of gods must ever in itself of necessity enjoy immortality
together with supreme repose, far removed and withdrawn from our concerns; since,
exempt from every pain, exempt from all dangers, strong in its own resources,
not wanting aught of us, it is neither gained by favours nor moved by anger."
(10)
Now, when he says these things, does he think that any worship is to be paid
to God, or does he entirely overthrow religion ? For if God confers nothing good
on any one, if He repays the obedience of His worshipper with no favour, what
is so senseless, what so foolish, as to build temples, to offer sacrifices, to
present gifts, to diminish our property, that we may obtain nothing? (1) But
(it will be said) it is right that an excellent nature should be honoured. What
honour can be due to a being who pays no regard to us, and is ungrateful? Can we
be bound in any manner to him who has nothing in common with us? "Farewell to
God," says Cicero, (2) "if He is such as to be influenced by no favour, and by
no affection of men. For why should I say 'may He be propitious? (1) for He can
be propitious to no one." What can be spoken more contemptible with respect to
God? Farewell to Him, he says, that is, let Him depart anti retire, since He
is able to profit no one. But if God takes no trouble, nor occasions trouble to
another, why then should we not commit crimes as often as it shall be in our
power to escape the notice of men? and to cheat the public laws? Wherever we
shall obtain a favourable opportunity of escaping notice, let us take advantage of
the occasion: let us take away the property of others, either without bloodshed
or even with blood, if there is nothing else besides the laws to be reverenced.
While Epicurus entertains these sentiments, he altogether destroys
religion; and when this is taken away, confusion and perturbation of life will follow.
But if religion cannot be taken away without destroying our hold of wisdom, by
which we are separated from the brutes, and of justice, by which the public
life may be more secure, how can religion itself be maintained or guarded without
fear? For that which is not feared is despised, and that which is despised is
plainly not reverenced. Thus it comes to pass that religion, and majesty, and
honour exist together with fear; but there is no fear where no one is angry.
Whether, therefore, you take away from God kindness, or anger, or both, religion
must be taken away, without which the life of men is full of folly, of
wickedness, and enormity. For conscience greatly curbs men, if we believe that we are
living in the sight of God; if we imagine not only that the actions which we
perform are seen from above, but also that our thoughts and our words are heard by
God. But it is profitable to believe this, as some imagine, not for the sake of
the truth, but of utility, since laws cannot punish conscience unless some
terror from above hangs over to restrain offences. Therefore religion is
altogether false, and there is no divinity; but all things are made up by skilful men,
in order that they may live more uprightly and innocently. This is a great
question, and foreign to the subject which we have proposed; but because it
necessarily occurs, it ought to be handled, however briefly.
CHAP. IX.--OF THE PROVIDENCE OF GOD, AND OF OPINIONS OPPOSED TO IT.
When the philosophers of former times had agreed in their opinions
respecting providence, and there was no doubt but that the world was set in order by
God and reason, and was governed by reason, Protagoras, in the times of
Socrates, was the first of all who said that it was not clear to him whether there was
any divinity or not. And this disputation of his was judged so impious, and so
contrary to the truth and to religion, that the Athenians both banished him
from their territories, and burnt in a public assembly those books of his in which
these statements were contained. But there is no need to speak respecting his
opinions, because he pronounced nothing certain. After these things Socrates
and his disciple Plato, and those who flowed forth from the school of Plato like
rivulets into different directions, namely, the Stoics and Peripatetics, were
of the same opinion as those who went before them. (4)
Afterwards Epicurus said that there was indeed a God, because it was
necessary that there should be in the world some being of surpassing excellence,
distinction, and blessedness; yet that there was no providence, and thus that the
world itself was ordered by no plan, nor art, nor workmanship, but that the
universe was made up of certain minute and indivisible seeds. But I do not see
what can be said more repugnant to the truth. For if there is a God, as God He is
manifestly provident; nor can divinity be attributed to Him in any other way
than if He retains the past, and knows the present, and foresees the future.
Therefore, in taking away providence, he also denied the existence of God. But
when he openly acknowledged the existence of God, at the same time he also
admitted His providence for the one cannot exist at all, or be understood, without
the other. But in those later times in which philosophy had now lost its vigour,
(5) there lived a certain Diagoras of Melos, (6) who altogether denied the
existence of God, and on account of this sentiment was called atheist; (7) also
Theodorus (6) of Cyrene: both of whom, because they were unable to discover
anything new, all things having already been said and found out, preferred even, in
opposition to the truth, to deny that in which all preceding philosophers had
agreed without any ambiguity. These are they who attacked providence, which had
been asserted and defended through so many ages by so many intellects. What
then? Shall we refute those trifling and inactive philosophers by reason, or by the
authority of distinguished men, or rather by both? But we must hasten onwards,
lest our speech should wander too far from our subject.
CHAP. X.--OF THE ORIGIN OF THE WORLD, AND THE NATURE OF AFFAIRS, AND THE
PROVIDENCE OF GOD.
They who do not admit that the world was made by divine providence, either
say that it is composed of first principles coming together at random, or that
it suddenly came into existence by nature, but hold, as Straton (1) does, that
nature has in itself the power of production and of diminution, but that it
has neither sensibility nor figure, so that we may understand that all things
were produced spontaneously, without any artificer or author. Each opinion is vain
and impossible. But this happens to those who are ignorant of the truth, that
they devise anything, rather than perceive that which the nature of the subject
(2) requires. First of all, with respect to those minute seeds, by the meeting
together of which they say that the whole world came into existence, (3) I ask
where or whence they are. Who has seen them at any time? Who has perceived
them? Who has heard them? Had none but Leucippus (4) eyes? Had he alone a mind,
who assuredly alone of all men was blind and senseless, since he spoke those
things which no sick man could have uttered in his ravings, (5) or one asleep in
his dreams?
The ancient philosophers argued that all things were made up of four
elements. (6) He would not admit this, lest he should appear to tread in the
footsteps of others; but he held that there were other first principles of the
elements themselves, which can neither be seen, nor touched, nor be perceived by any
part of the body. They are so minute, he says, that there is no edge of a sword
so flue that they can be cut and divided by it. From which circumstance he gave
them the name of atoms. But it occurred to him, that if they all had one and
the same nature, they could not make up different objects of so great a variety
as we see to be present in the world. He said, therefore, that there were
smooth and rough ones, and round, and angular, and hooked. How much better had it
been to be silent, than to have a tongue for such miserable and empty uses! And,
indeed, I fear lest he who thinks these things worthy of refutation, should
appear no less to rave. Let us, however, reply as to one who says something. (7)
If they are soft s and round, it is plain that they cannot lay hold of one
another, so as to make some body; as, though any one should wish to bind together
millet into one combination, (9) the very softness of the grains would not permit
them to come together into a mass. If they are rough, and angular, and hooked,
so that they may be able to cohere, then they are divisible, and capable of
being cut; for hooks and angles must project, (10) so that they may possibly be
cut off.
Therefore that which is able to be cut off and torn away, will be able
both to be seen and held. "These," he says, "flutter about with restless motions
through empty space, and are carried hither and thither, just as we see little
particles of dust in the sun when it has introduced its rays and light through a
window. From these there arise trees and herbs, and all fruits of the earth;
from these, animals, and water, and fire, and all things are produced, and are
again resolved into the same elements." This can be borne as long as the inquiry
is respecting small matters. Even the world itself was made up of these. He
has reached to the full extent of perfect madness: it seems impossible that
anything further should be said, and yet he found something to add. "Since
everything," he says, "is infinite, and nothing can be empty, it follows of necessity
that there are innumerable worlds." What force of atoms had been so great, that
masses so incalculable should be collected from such minute elements? And first
of all I ask, What is the nature or origin of those seeds? For if all things
are from them, whence shall we say that they themselves are? What nature supplied
such an abundance of matter for the making of innumerable worlds? But let us
grant that he raved with impunity concerning worlds; let us speak respecting
this in which we are, and which we see. He says that all things are made from
minute bodies which are incapable of division.
If this were so, no object would ever need the seed of its own kind. Birds
would be born without eggs, or eggs without bringing forth; likewise the rest
of the living creatures without coition: trees and the productions of the earth
would not have their own seeds, which we daily handle and sow. Why does a
corn-field arise from grain, and again grain from a corn-field? In short, if the
meeting together and collecting of atoms would effect all things, all things
would grow together in the air, since atoms flutter about through empty space. Why
cannot the herb, why cannot the tree or grain, arise or be increased without
earth, without roots, without moisture, without seed? From which it is evident
that nothing is made up from atoms, since everything has its own peculiar and
fixed nature, its own seed, its own law given from the beginning. Finally,
Lucretius, as though forgetful of atoms, (1) which he was maintaining, in order that
he might refute those who say that all things are produced from nothing,
employed these arguments, which might have weighed against himself. For he thus spoke:
--
"If things came from nothing, any kind might be born of anything; nothing
would require seed." (2)
Likewise afterwards: --
"We must admit, therefore, that nothing can come from nothing, since
things require seed before they can severally be born, and be brought out into the
buxom fields of air." (3)
Who would imagine that he had brain when he said these things, and did not see
that they were contrary to one another? For that nothing is made by means of
atoms, is apparent from this, that everything has a definite (4) seed, unless by
chance we shall believe that the nature both of fire and water is derived from
atoms. Why should I say, that if materials of the greatest hardness are struck
together with a violent blow, fire is struck out? Are atoms concealed in the
steel, or in the flint? Who shut them in? Or why do they not leap forth
spontaneously? Or how could the seeds of fire remain in a material of the greatest
coldness?
I leave the subject of the flint and steel. If you hold in the sun an orb
of crystal filled with water, fire is kindled from the light which is reflected
from the water, even in the most severe cold. Must we then believe that fire
is contained in the water? And yet fire cannot be kindled from the sun even in
summer. If you shall breathe upon wax, or if a light vapour shall touch anything
-- either the hard surface s of marble or a plate of metal --water is
gradually condensed by means of the most minute drops. Also from the exhalation of the
earth or sea mist is formed, which either, being dispersed, moistens whatever
it has covered, or being collected, is carried aloft by the wind to high
mountains, and compressed into cloud, and sends down great rains. Where, then, do we
say that fluids are produced? Is it in the vapour? Or in the exhalation? Or in
the wind? But nothing can be formed in that which is neither touched nor seen.
Why should I speak of animals, in whose bodies we see nothing formed without
plan, without arrangement, without utility, without beauty, so that the most
skilful and careful marking out (6) of all the parts and members repels the idea of
accident and chance? But let us suppose it possible that the limbs, and bones,
and nerves, and blood should be made up of atoms. What of the senses, the
reflection, the memory, the mind, the natural capacity: from what seeds can they be
compacted? (7) He says, From the most minute. There are therefore others of
greater size. How, then, are they indivisible?
In the next place, if the things which are not seen are formed from
invisible seeds, it follows that those which are seen are from visible seeds. Why,
then, does no one see them? But whether any one regards the invisible parts which
are in man, or the parts which can be touched, and which are visible, who does
not see that both parts exist in accordance with design? (8) How, then, can
bodies which meet together without design effect anything reasonable? (9) For we
see that there is nothing in the whole world which has not in itself very great
and wonderful design. And since this is above the sense and capacity of man,
to what can it be more rightly attributed than to the divine providence? If a
statue, the resemblance of man, is made by the exercise of design and art, shall
we suppose that man himself is made up of fragments which come together at
random? And what resemblance to the truth is there in the thing produced, (10) when
the greatest and most surpassing skill (11) can imitate nothing more than the
mere outline and extreme lineaments (12) of the body? Was the skill of man able
to give to his production any motion or sensibility? I say nothing of the
exercise of the sight, of hearing, and of smelling, and the wonderful uses of the
other members, either those which are in sight or those which are hidden from
view. What artificer could have fabricated either the heart of man, or the voice,
or his very wisdom? Does any man of sound mind, therefore, think that that
which man cannot do by reason and judgement, may be accomplished by a meeting
together of atoms everywhere adhering to each other? You see into what foolish
ravings they have fallen, while they are unwilling to assign to God the making and
the care of all things
Let us, however, concede to them that the things which are earthly are
made froth atoms: are the things also which are heavenly? They say that the gods
are without contamination, eternal, and blessed; and they grant to them alone an
exemption, so that they do not appear to be made up of a meeting together of
atoms. For if the gods also had been made up of these, they would be liable to
be dispersed, the seeds at length being resolved, and returning to their own
nature. Therefore, if there is something which the atoms could not produce, why
may we not judge in the same way of the others? But I ask why the gods did not
build for themselves a dwelling-place before those first elements produced the
world? It is manifest that, unless the atoms had come together and made the
heaven, the gods would still be suspended through the midst of empty space. By what
counsel, then, by what plan, did the atoms from a confused mass collect
themselves, so that from some the earth below was formed into a globe, and the heaven
stretched out above, adorned with so great a variety of constellations that
nothing can be conceived more embellished? Can he, therefore, who sees such and
so great objects, imagine that they were made without any design, without any
providence, without any divine intelligence, but that such great and wonderful
things arose out of fine and minute atoms? Does it not resemble a prodigy, that
there should be any human being who might say these things, or that there
should be those who might believe them--as Democritus, who was his hearer, or
Epicurus, to whom all folly flowed forth from the fountain of Leucippus? But, as
others say, the world was made by Nature, which is without perception and figure.
(1) But this is much more absurd. If Nature made the world, it must have made it
by judgment and intelligence; for it is lie that makes something who has
either the inclination to make it, or knowledge. If nature is without perception and
figure, how can that be made by it which has both perception and figure,
unless by chance any one thinks that the fabric of animals, which is so delicate,
could have been formed and animated by that which is without perception, or that
that figure of heaven, which is prepared with such foresight for the uses of
living beings, suddenly came into existence by some accident or other, without a
builder, without an artificer? (2)
"If there is anything," says Chrysippus, "which effects those things which
man, though he is endowed with reason, cannot do, that assuredly is greater,
and stronger, and wiser than man." But man cannot make heavenly things;
therefore that which shall produce or has produced these things surpasses man in art,
in design, in skill, and in power. Who, therefore, can it be but God? But
Nature, which they suppose to be, as it were, the mother of all things, if it has not
a mind, will effect nothing, will contrive nothing; for where there is no
reflection there is neither motion nor efficacy. But if it uses counsel for the
commencement of anything, reason for its arrangement, art for its accomplishment,
energy for its consummation, and power to govern and control, why should it be
called Nature rather than God? Or if a concourse of atoms, or Nature without
mind, made those things which we see, I ask why it was able to make the heaven,
but unable to make a city or a house? (3) Why it made mountains of marble, but
did not make columns and statues? But ought not atoms to have come together to
effect these things, since they leave no position untried? For concerning
Nature, which has no mind, it is no wonder that it forgot to do these things. What,
then, is the case? It is plain that God, when He commenced this work of the
world,--than which nothing can be better arranged with respect to order, nor more
befitting as to utility, nor more adorned as to beauty, nor greater as to
bulk,--Himself made the things which could not be made by man; and among these also
man himself, to whom He gave a portion of His own wisdom, and furnished him with
reason, as much as earthly frailty was capable of receiving, that he might
make for himself the things which were necessary for his own uses.
But if in the commonwealth of this world, so to speak, there is no
providence which rules, no God who administers, no sense at all prevails in this
nature of things. From what source therefore will it be believed that the human
mind, with its skill and its intelligence, had its origin? For if the body of man
was made from the ground, from which circumstance man received his name; (4) it
follows that the soul, which has intelligence, and is the ruler of the body,
which the limbs obey as a king and commander, which can neither be looked upon
nor comprehended, could not have come to man except from a wise nature. But as
mind and soul govern everybody, so also does God govern the world. For it is not
probable that lesser and humble things bear rule, but that greater and highest
things do not bear rule. In short, Marcus Cicero, in his Tusculan Disputations,
(5) and in his Consolation, says: "No origin of souls can be found on earth.
For there is nothing, he says, mixed and compound (6) in souls, or which may
appear to be produced and made up from the earth; nothing moist or airy, (7) or of
the nature of fire. For in these natures there is nothing which has the force
of memory, of mind and reflection, which both retains the past and foresees the
future, and is able to comprise the present; which things alone are divine.
For no source will ever be found from which they are able to come to man, unless
it be from God." Since, therefore, with the exception of two or three vain
calumniators, it is agreed upon that the world is governed by providence, as also
it was made, and there is no one who ventures to prefer the opinion of Diagoras
and Theodorus, or the empty fiction of Leucippus, or the levity of Democritus
and Epicurus, either to the authority of those seven ancient men who were called
wise, (1) or to that of Pythagoras or of Socrates or Plato, and the other
philosophers who judged that there is a providence; therefore that opinion also is
false, by which they think that religion was instituted by wise men for the
sake of terror and fear, in order that ignorant men might abstain from sins.
But if this is true, it follows that we are derided by the wise men of
old. But if they invented religion for the sake of deceiving us, and moreover of
deceiving the whole human race, therefore they were not wise, because falsehood
is not consistent with the character of the wise man. But grant that they were
wise; what great success in falsehood was it, that they were able to deceive
not only the unlearned, but Plato also, and Socrates, and so easily to delude
Pythagoras, Zeno, and Aristotle, the chiefs of the greatest sects? There is
therefore a divine providence, as those men whom I have named perceived, by the
energy and power of which all things which we see were both made and are governed.
For so vast a system of things? such arrangement and such regularity in
preserving the settled orders and times, could neither at first have arisen without a
provident artificer, or have existed so many ages without a powerful
inhabitant, or have been perpetually governed without a skilful and intelligent (3)
ruler; and reason itself declares this. For whatever exists which has reason, must
have arisen from reason. Now reason is the part of an intelligent and wise
nature; but a wise and intelligent nature can be nothing else than God. Now the
world, since it has reason, by which it is both governed and kept together, was
therefore made by God. But if God is the maker and ruler of the world, then
religion is rightly and truly established; for honour and worship are due to the
author and common parent of all things.
CHAP. XI. --OF GOD, AND THAT THE ONE GOD, AND BY WHOSE PROVIDENCE THE WORLD IS
GOVERNED AND EXISTS.
Since it is agreed upon concerning providence, it follows that we show
whether it is to be believed that it belongs to many, or rather to one only. We
have sufficiently taught, as I think, in our Institutions, that there cannot be
many gods; because, if the divine energy and power be distributed among several,
it must necessarily be diminished. But that which is lessened is plainly
mortal; but if He is not mortal, He can neither be lessened nor divided. Therefore
there is but one God, in whom complete energy and power can neither be lessened
nor increased. But if there are many, while they separately have something of
power and authority, the sum itself decreases; nor will they separately be able
to have the whole, which they have in corn-moN with others: so much will be
wanting to each as the others shall possess. There cannot therefore be many rulers
in this world, nor many masters in one house, nor many pilots in one ship, nor
many leaders in one herd or flock, nor many queens in one swarm. But there
could not have been many suns in heaven, as there are not several souls in one
body; so entirely does the whole of nature agree in unity.But if the world
"Is nourished by a soul, A spirit whose celestial flame
Glows IN each member of the frame,
And stirs the mighty whole," (4)
it is evident from the testimony of the poet, that there is one God who
inhabits the world, since the whole body cannot be inhabited and governed except by
one mind. Therefore all divine power must be in one person, by whose will and
command all things are ruled; and therefore He is so great, that He cannot be
described in words by man, or estimated by the senses. From what source,
therefore, did the opinion or persuasion s respecting many gods come to men? Without
doubt, all those who are worshipped as gods were men, and were also the earliest
and greatest kings; but who is ignorant that they were invested with divine
honours after death, either on account of the virtue by which they had profited the
race of men, or that they obtained immortal memory on account of the benefits
and inventions by which they had adorned human life? And not only men, but
women also. And this, both the most ancient writers of Greece, whom they call
theologi, (6) and also Roman writers following and imitating the Greeks, teach; of
whom especially Euhemerus and our Ennius, who point out the birthdays,
marriages, offspring, governments, exploits, deaths, and tombs (1) of all of them. And
Tullius, following them, in his third book, On the Nature of the Gods, destroyed
the public religions; but neither he himself nor any other person was able to
introduce the true one, of which he was ignorant. And thus he himself testified
that that which was false was evident; that the truth, however, lay concealed.
"Would to heaven," he says, "that I could as easily discover true things as
refute those that are false!" (2) And this he proclaimed not with dissimulation
as an Academic, but truly and in accordance with the feeling of his mind,
because the truth cannot be uprooted from human perceptions: that which the foresight
of man was able to attain to, he attained to, that he might expose false
things. For whatever is fictitious and false, because it is supported by no reason,
is easily destroyed. There is therefore one God, the source and origin of all
things, as Plato both felt and taught in the Timoeus, whose majesty he declares
to be so great, that it can neither be comprehended by the mind nor be
expressed by the tongue.
Hermes bears the same testimony, whom Cicero asserts (3) to be reckoned by
the Egyptians among the number of the gods. I speak of him who, on account of
his excellence and knowledge of many arts, was called Trismegistus; and he was
far more ancient not only than Plato, but than Pythagoras, and those seven wise
men. (4) In Xenophon, (5) Socrates, as he discourses, says that "the form of
God ought not to be inquired about:" and Plato, in his Book Laws, (6) says:
"What God is, ought not to be the subject of inquiry, because it can neither be
found out nor related." Pythagoras also admits that there is but one God, saying
that there is an incorporeal mind, which, being diffused and stretched through
all nature, gives vital perception to all living creatures; but Antisthenes, in
his Physics, said that there was but one natural God, although the nations and
cities have gods of their own people. Aristotle, with his followers the
Peripatetics, and Zeno with his followers the Stoics, say nearly the same things.
Truly it would be a long task to follow up the opinions of all separately, who,
although they used different names, nevertheless agreed in one power which
governed the world. But, however, though philosophers and poets, and those, in short,
who worship the gods, often acknowledge the Supreme God, yet no one ever
inquired into, no one discussed, the subject of His worship and honours; with that
persuasion, in truth, with which, always believing Him to be bounteous and
incorruptible, they think (7) that He is neither angry with any one, nor stands in
need of any worship. Thus there can be no religion where there is no fear. (8)
CHAP. XII.--OF RELIGION AND THE FEAR OF GOD.
Now, since we have replied to the impious and detestable wisdom, (9) or
rather senselessness of some, let us return to our proposed subject. We have said
that, if religion is taken away, neither wisdom nor justice can be retained:
wisdom, because the understanding of the divine nature, in which we differ from
the brutes, is found in man alone; justice, because unless God, who cannot
be deceived, shall restrain our desires, we shall live wickedly and impiously.
Therefore, that our actions should be viewed by God, pertains not only to the
usefulness of common life, but even to the truth; because, if religion and
justice are taken away, having lost our reason, we either descend to the
senselessness (10) of the herds; or to the savageness of the beasts, yea, even more so,
since the beasts spare animals of their own kind. What will be more savage,
what more unmerciful, than man, if, the fear of a superior being taken away, he
shall be able either to escape the notice of or to despise the might of the laws?
It is therefore the fear of God alone which guards the mutual society of men,
by which life itself is sustained, protected, and governed. But that fear is
taken away if man is persuaded that God is without anger; for that He is moved
and indignant when unjust actions are done, not only the common advantage, but
even reason itself, and truth, persuade us. We must again return to the former
subjects, that, as we have taught that the world was made by God, we may teach
why it was made.
CHAP. XllI.-- OF THE ADVANTAGE AND USE OF THE WORLD AND OF THE SEASONS.
If any one considers the whole government of the world, he will certainly
understand how true is the opinion of the Stoics, who say that the world was
made on our account. For all the things of which the world is composed, and which
it produces from itself, are adapted to the use of man. Man, accordingly, uses
fire for the purpose of warmth and light, and of softening his food, and for
the working of iron; he uses springs for drinking, and for baths; he uses rivers
for irrigating the fields, and assigning boundaries to countries; he uses the
earth for receiving a variety of fruits, the hills for planting vineyards, the
mountains for the use of trees and firewood, (1) the plains for crops of grain;
he uses the sea not only for commerce, and for receiving supplies from distant
countries, but also for abundance of every kind of fish. But if he makes use
of these elements to which he is nearest, there is no doubt that he uses the
hear-en also, since the offices even of heavenly things are regulated for the
fertility of the earth from which we live. The sun, with its ceaseless courses and
unequal intervals, (2) completes its annual circles, and either at his rising
draws forth the day for labour, or at his setting brings on the night for
repose; and at one time by his departure farther towards the south, at another time
by his approach nearer towards the north, he causes the vicissitudes of winter
and summer, so that both by the moistures and frosts of winter the earth becomes
enriched for fruitfulness, and by the heats of summer either the produce of
grass (3) is hardened by maturity, or that which is in moist places, being
seethed and heated, becomes ripened. The moon also, which governs the time of night,
regulates her monthly courses by the alternate loss and recovery of light, (4)
and by the brightness of her shining illumines the nights obscure with gloomy
darkness, so that journeys in the summer heat, and expeditions, and works, may
be performed without labour and inconvenience; since
"By night the light stubble, by night
The dry meadows are better mown." (5)
The other heavenly bodies also, either at their rising or setting, supply
favourable times (6) by their fixed positions. (7) Moreover, they also afford
guidance to ships, that they may not wander through the boundless deep with
uncertain course, since the pilot duly observing them arrives at the harbour of the
shore at which he aims. (8) Clouds are attracted by the breath of the winds,
that the fields of sown grain may be watered with showers, that the vines may
abound with produce, and the trees with fruits. And these things are exhibited by a
succession of changes throughout the year, that nothing may at any time be
wanting by which the life of men is sustained. But (9) (it is said) the same earth
nourishes the other living creatures, and by the produce of the same even the
dumb animals are fed. Has not God laboured also for the sake of the dumb
animals? By no means; because they are void of reason. On the contrary, we understand
that even these themselves in the same manner were made by God for the use of
man, partly for food, partly for clothing, partly to assist him in his work; so
that it is manifest that the divine providence wished to furnish and adorn the
life of men with an abundance of objects and resources, and on this account He
both filled the air with birds, and the sea with fishes, and the earth with
quadrupeds. But the Academics, arguing against the Stoics, are accustomed to ask
why, if God made all things for the sake of men, many things are found even
opposed, and hostile, and injurious to us, as well in the sea as on the land. And
the Stoics, without any regard to the truth, most foolishly repelled this. For
they say that there are many things among natural productions, (10) and
reckoned among animals, the utility of which hitherto (11) escapes notice, but that
this is discovered in process of the times, as necessity and use have already
discovered many things which were unknown in former ages. What utility, then, can
be discovered in mice, in beetles, in serpents, which are troublesome and
pernicious to man? Is it that some medicine lies concealed in them? If there is any,
it will at some time be found out, namely, as a remedy against evils, whereas
they complain that it is altogether evil. They say that the viper, when burnt
and reduced to ashes, is a remedy for the bite of the same beast. How much
better had it been that it should not exist at all, than that a remedy should be
required against it drawn from itself?
They might then have answered with more conciseness and truth after this
manner. When God had formed man as it were His own image, that which was the
completion of His workmanship, He breathed wisdom into him alone, so that he might
bring all things into subjection to his own authority and government, and make
use of all the advantages of the world. And yet He set before him both good
and evil things, inasmuch as He gave to him wisdom, the whole nature of which is
employed in discerning things evil and good: for no one can choose better
things, and know what is good, unless he at the same time knows to reject and avoid
the things which are evil. (12) They are both mutually connected with each
other, so that, the one being taken away, the other must also be taken away.
Therefore, good and evil things being set before it, then at length wisdom discharges
its office, and desires the good for usefulness, but rejects the evil for
safety. Therefore, as innumerable good things have been given which it might enjoy,
so also have evils, against which it might guard. For if there is no evil, no
danger--nothing, in short, which can injure man--all the material of wisdom is
taken away, and will be unnecessary for man. For if only good things are placed
in sight, what need is there of reflection, of understanding, of knowledge, of
reason? since, wherever he shall extend his hand, that is befitting and
adapted to nature; so that if any one should wish to place a most exquisite dinner
before infants, who as yet have no taste, it is plain that each will desire that
to which either impulse, or hunger, or even accident, shall attract them; and
whatever they shall take, it will be useful and salutary to them. What injury
will it therefore be for them always to remain as they are, and always to be
infants and unacquainted with affairs? But if you add a mixture either of bitter
things, or things useless, or even poisonous, they are plainly deceived through
their ignorance of good and evil, unless wisdom is added to them, by which they
may have the rejection of evil things and the choice of good things. You see,
therefore, that we have greater need of wisdom on account of evils; and unless
these things had been proposed to us, we should not be a rational animal. But if
this account is true, which the Stoics were in no manner able to see, that
argument also of Epicurus is done away. God, he says, either wishes to take away
evils, and is unable; or He is able, and is unwilling; or He is neither willing
nor able, or He is both willing and able. If He is willing and is unable, He is
feeble, which is not in accordance with the character of God; if He is able
and unwilling, He is envious, which is equally at variance with God; if He is
neither willing nor able, He is both envious and feeble, and therefore not God; if
He is both willing and able, which alone is suitable to God, from what source
then are evils? or why does He not remove them? I know that many of the
philosophers, who defend providence, are accustomed to be disturbed by this argument,
and are almost driven against their will to admit that God takes no interest in
anything, which Epicurus especially aims at; but having examined the matter,
we easily do away with this formidable argument. For God is able to do whatever
He wishes, and there is no weakness or envy in God. He is able, therefore, to
take away evils; but He does not wish to do so, and yet He is not on that
account envious. For on this account He does not take them away, because He at the
same time gives wisdom, as I have shown; and there is more of goodness and
pleasure in wisdom than of annoyance in evils. For wisdom causes us even to know God,
and by that knowledge to attain to immortality, which is the chief good.
Therefore, unless we first know evil, we shall be unable to know good. But Epicurus
did not see this, nor did any other, that if evils are taken away, wisdom is in
like manner taken away; and that no traces of virtue remain in man, the nature
of which consists in enduring and overcoming the bitterness of evils. And
thus, for the sake of a slight gain (1) in the taking away of evils, we should be
deprived of a good, which is very great, and true, and peculiar to us. It is
plain, therefore, that all things are proposed for the sake of man, as well evils
as also goods.
CHAP. XIV.--WHY GOD MADE MAN.
It follows that I show for what purpose God made man himself. As He
contrived the world for the sake of man, so He formed man himself t on His own
account, as it were a priest of a divine temple, a spectator of His works and of
heavenly objects. For he is the only being who, since he is intelligent and capable
of reason, is able to understand God, to admire His works, and perceive His
energy and power; for on this account he is furnished with judgment,
intelligence, and prudence. On this account he alone, beyond the other living creatures,
has been made with an upright body and attitude, so that he seems to have been
raised up for the contemplation of his Parent. (2) On this account he alone has
received language, and a tongue the interpreter of his thought, that he may be
able to declare the majesty of his Lord. Lastly, for this cause all things were
placed under his control, that he himself might be under the control of God,
their Maker and Creator. If God, therefore, designed man to be a worship per of
Himself, and on this account gave him so much honour, that he might rule over
all things; it is plainly most just that he should worship Him (3) who bestowed
upon him such great gifts, and love man, who is united with us in the
participation of the divine justice. For it is not right that a worshipper of God should
he injured by a worshipper of God. From which it is understood that man was
made for the sake of religion and justice. And of this matter Marcus Tullius is a
witness in his books respecting the Laws, since he thus speaks: (4) "But of all
things concerning which learned men dispute, nothing is of greater consequence
than that it should be altogether understood that we are born to justice." And
if this is most true, it follows that God will have all men to be just, that
is, to have God and man as objects of their affection; to honour God in truth as
a Father, and to love man as a brother: for m these two things the whole of
justice is comprised. But he who either fails to acknowledge God or acts
injuriously to man, lives unjustly and contrary to his nature, and in this manner
disturbs the divine institution and law.
CHAP. XV.--WHENCE SINS EXTENDED TO MAN.
Here perhaps some one may ask, Whence sins extended to man, or what
perversion distorted the rule of the divine institution to worse things, so that,
though he was born to justice, he nevertheless performs unjust works. I have
already in a former place explained, that God at the same time set before him good
and evil, and that He loves the good, and hates the evil which is contrary to
this; but that He permitted the evil on this account, that the good also might
shine forth, since, as I have often taught, we understand that the one cannot
exist without the other; in short, that the world itself is made up of two
elements opposing and connected with one another, of fire and moisture, and that light
could not have been made unless there has also been darkness, since there
cannot be a higher place without a lower, nor a rising without a setting, nor
warmth without cold, nor softness without hardness. Thus also we are composed of two
substances equally opposed to one another -- soul and body: the one of which
is assigned to the heaven, because it is slight and not to be handled; the other
to the earth, because it is capable of being laid hold of: the one is firm (1)
and eternal, the other frail and mortal. Therefore good clings to the one, and
evil to the other: light, life, and justice to the one; darkness, death, anti
injustice to the other. Hence there arose among men the corruption of their
nature, so that it was necessary that a law should be established, by which vices
might be prohibited, and the duties of virtue be en-joined. Since, therefore,
there are good and evil things in the affairs of men, the nature of which I have
set forth, it must be that God is moved to both sides, both to favour when He
sees that just things are done, and to anger when He perceives unjust things.
But Epicurus opposes us, and says: "If there is in God the affection of
joy leading Him to favour, and of hatred influencing Him to anger, He must of
necessity have both fear, and inclination, and desire, and the other affections
which belong to human weakness." It does not follow that he who is angry must
fear, or that he who feels joy must grieve; in short, they who are liable to anger
are less timid, and they who are of a joyful temperament are less affected
with grief. What need is there to speak of the affections of humanity, to which
our nature yields? Let us weigh the divine necessity; for I am unwilling to speak
of nature, since it is believed that our God was never born. The affection of
fear has a subject-matter in man, but it has none in God. Man, inasmuch as he
is liable to many accidents and dangers, fears lest any greater violence should
arise which may strike, despoil, lacerate, dash down, and destroy him. But God,
who is liable neither to want, nor injury, nor pain, nor death, can by no
means fear, because there is nothing which can offer violence to Him. Also the
reason and cause of desire is manifest in man. For, inasmuch as he was made frail
and mortal, it was necessary that another and different sex should be made, by
union with which offspring might be produced to continue the perpetuity of his
race. But this desire has no place in God, because frailty and death are far
removed from Him; nor is there with Him any female in whose union He is able to
rejoice; nor does He stand in need of succession, since He will live for ever.
The same things may be said respecting envy and passion, to which, from sure and
manifest causes, man is liable, but to which God is by no means liable. But, in
truth, favour and anger and pity have their substance (2) in God, and that
greatest and matchless power employs them for the preservation of the world.
CHAP. XVI. --OF GOD, AND HIS ANGER AND AFFECTIONS.
Some one will ask what this substance is. First of all, when evils befall
them, men in their dejected state for the most part have recourse to God: they
appease and entreat Him, believing that He is able to repel injuries from them.
He has therefore an occasion of exercising pity; for He is not so unmerciful
and a despiser of men as to refuse aid to those who are in distress. Very many,
also, who are persuaded that justice is pleasing to God, both worship Him who
is Lord and Parent of all, and with continual prayers and repeated vows offer
gifts and sacrifices, follow up His name with praises, striving to gain His
favour by just and good works. There is therefore a reason, on account of which God
may and ought to favour them. For if there is nothing so befitting God as
beneficence, and nothing so unsuited to His character as to be ungrateful, it is
necessary that He should make some return for the services of those who are
excellent, and who lead a holy life, that He may not be liable to the charge of
ingratitude which is worthy of blame (3) even in the case of a man. But, on the
contrary, others are daring (1) and wicked, who pollute all things with their
lusts, harass with slaughters, practise fraud, plunder, commit perjury, neither
spare relatives nor parents, neglect the laws, and even God Himself. Anger,
therefore, has a befitting occasion (2) in God.
For it is not right that, when He sees such things, He should not be
moved, and arise to take vengeance upon the wicked, and destroy the pestilent and
guilty, so as to promote the interests of all good men. Thus even in anger
itself there is also contained a showing of kindness. (3) Therefore the arguments
are found to be empty and false, either of those who, when they will not admit
that God is angry, will have it that He shows kindness, because this, indeed,
cannot take place without anger; or of those who think that there is no emotion of
the mind in God. And because there are some affections to which God is not
liable, as desire, fear, avarice, grief, and envy, they have said that He is
entirely free from all affection. For He is not liable to these, because they are
vicious affections; but as to those which belong to virtue,--that is, anger
towards the wicked, regard towards the good, pity towards the afflicted, -- inasmuch
as they are worthy of the divine power, He has affections of His own, (4) both
just and true. And if He is not possessed of them, the life of man will be
thrown into confusion, and the condition of things will come to such disturbance
that the laws will be despised and overpowered, and audacity alone reign, so
that no one can at length be in safety unless he who excels (5) in strength. Thus
all the earth will be laid waste, as it were, by a common robbery. But now,
since the wicked expect punishment, and the good hope for favour, and the
afflicted look for aid, there is place for virtues, and crimes are more rare. But (6)
it is said, ofttimes the wicked are more prosperous, and the good more wretched,
and the just are harassed with impunity by the unjust. We will hereafter
consider why these things happen. In the meantime let us explain respecting anger,
whether there be any in God; whether He takes no notice at all, and is unmoved
at those things which are done with impiety.
CHAP. XVII.--OF GOD, HIS CARE AND ANGER.
God, says Epicurus, regards nothing; therefore He has no power. For he who
has power must of necessity regard affairs. For if He has power, and does not
use it, what so great cause is there that, I will not say our race, but even
the universe itself, should be contemptible in His sight? On this account he says
He is pure (7) and happy, because He is always at rest. (8) To whom, then, has
the administration of so great affairs been entrusted, (9) if these things
which we see to be governed by the highest judgment are neglected by God? or how
can he who lives and perceives be at rest? For rest belongs either to sleep or
to death. But sleep has not rest. For when we are asleep, the body indeed is at
rest, but the soul is restless and agitated: it forms for itself images which
it may behold, so that it exercises its natural power of motion by a variety of
visions, and calls itself away from false things, until the limbs are satiated,
and receive vigour from rest. Therefore eternal rest belongs to death alone.
Now if death does not affect God, it follows that God is never at rest. But in
what can the action of God consist, but in the administration of the world? But
if God carries on the care of the world, it follows that He cares for the life
of men, and takes notice of the acts of individuals, and He earnestly desires
that they should be wise and good. This is the will of God, this the divine law;
and he who follows and observes this is beloved by God. It is necessary that
He should be moved with anger against the man who has broken or despised this
eternal and divine law. If, he says, God does harm to any one, therefore He is
not good. They are deceived by no slight error who defame all censure, whether
human or divine, with the name of bitterness and malice, thinking that He ought
to be called injurious (10) who visits the injurious with punishment. But if
this is so, it follows that we have injurious laws, which enact punishment for
offenders, and injurious judges who inflict capital punishments on those convicted
of crime. But if the law is just which awards to the transgressor his due, and
if the judge is called upright and good when he punishes crimes, -- for he
guards the safety of good men who punishes the evil,--it follows that God, when He
opposes the evil, is not injurious; but he himself is injurious who either
injures an innocent man, or spares an injurious person that he may injure many.
I would gladly ask from those who represent God as immoveable, (11) if any
one had property, a house, a household" of slaves, and his slaves, despising
the forbearance of their master, should attack all things, and themselves take
the enjoyment of his goods, if his household should honour them, while the
master was despised by all, insulted, and deserted: could he be a wise man who
should not avenge the insults, but permit those over whom he had power to have the
enjoyment of his property? Can such forbearance be found in any one? If, indeed,
it is to be called forbearance, and not rather a kind of insensible stupor.
But it is easy to endure contempt. What if those things were done which are
spoken of by Cicero? (1) "For I ask, if any head of a family, (2) when his children
had been put to death by a slave, his wife slain and his house set on fire,
should not exact most severe punishment from that slave, whether he would appear
to be kind and merciful, or inhuman and most cruel?" But if to pardon deeds of
this kind is the part of cruelty rather than of kindness, (3) it is not
therefore the part of goodness in God not to be moved at those things which are done
unjustly. For the world is, as it were, the house of God, and men, as it were,
His slaves; and if His name is a mockery to them, what kind or amount of
forbearance is it to give (4) up His own honours, to see wicked and unjust things done,
and not to be indignant, which is peculiar and natural to Him who is
displeased with sins! To be angry, therefore, is the part of reason: for thus faults are
removed, and licentiousness is curbed; and this is plainly in accordance with
justice and wisdom.
But the Stoics did not see that there is a distinction between right and
wrong, that there is a just and also an unjust anger; and because they did not
find a remedy for the matter, they wished altogether to remove it. But the
Peripatetics said that it was not to be cut out, but moderated; to whom we have made
a sufficient reply in the sixth book of the Institutions. (5) Now, that the
philosophers were ignorant of the nature of anger, is plain from their
definitions, which Seneca enumerated in the books which he composed on the subject of
anger. "Anger is," he says, "the desire of avenging an injury." Others, as
Posidonius says, describe it as the desire of punishing him by whom you think that you
have been unfairly injured. Some have thus defined it: "Anger is an incitement
of the mind to injure him who either has committed an injury, or who has
wished to do so." The definition of Aristotle does not differ greatly from ours; (6)
for he says that "anger is the desire of requiting pain." This is the unjust
anger, con- coming which we spoke before, which is contained even in the dumb
animals; but it is to be restrained in man, lest he should rush to some very
great evil through rage. This cannot exist in God, because He cannot be injured;
(7) but it is found in man, inasmuch as he is frail. For the inflicting (8) of
injury inflames (9) anguish, and anguish produces a desire of revenge. Where,
then, is that just anger against offenders? For this is evidently not the desire
of revenge, inasmuch as no injury precedes. I do not speak of those who sin
against the laws; for although a judge may be angry with these without incurring
blame, let us, however, suppose that he ought to be of a sedate mind when he
sentences the guilty to punishment, because he is the executor (10) of the laws,
not of his own spirit or power; for so they wish it who endeavour to extirpate
anger. But I speak of those in particular who are in our own power, as slaves,
children, wives, and pupils; for when we see these offend, we are incited to
restrain them.
For it cannot fail to be, that he who is just and good is displeased with
things which are bad, and that he who is displeased with evil is moved when he
sees it practised. Therefore we arise to take vengeance, not because we have
been injured, but that discipline may be preserved, morals may be corrected, and
licentiousness be suppressed. This is just anger; and as it is necessary in man
for the correction of wickedness, so manifestly is it necessary in God, from
whom an example comes to man. For as we ought to restrain those who are subject
to our power, so also ought God to restrain the of-fences of all. And in order
that He may do this, He must be angry; because it is natural for one who is
good to be moved and incited at the fault of another. Therefore they ought to have
given this definition: Anger is an emotion of the mind arousing itself for the
restraining of faults. (11) For the definition given by Cicero, "Anger is the
desire of taking vengeance," does not differ much from those already mentioned.
(12) But that anger which we may call either fury or rage ought not to exist
even in man, because it is altogether vicious; but the anger which relates to
the correction of vices ought not to be taken away from man; nor can it be taken
away from God, because it is both serviceable for the affairs of men, and
necessary.
CHAP. XVIII.--OF THE PUNISHMENT OF FAULTS, THAT IT CANNOT TAKE PLACE WITHOUT
ANGER.
What need is there, they say, of anger, since faults can be corrected
without this affection? But there is no one who can calmly see any one committing
an offence. This may perhaps be possible in him who presides over the laws,
because the deed is not committed before his eyes, but it is brought before him as
a doubtful matter from another quarter. Nor can any wickedness be so manifest,
that there is no place for a de-fence; and therefore it is possible that a
judge may not be moved against him who may possibly be found to be innocent; and
when the detected crime shall have come to light, he now no longer uses his own
opinion, but that of the laws. It may be granted that he does that which he does
without anger; for he has that which he may follow. We, undoubtedly, when an
offence is committed by our household at home, whether we see or perceive it,
must be indignant; for the very sight of a sin is unbecoming. For he who is
altogether unmoved either approves of faults, which is more disgraceful and unjust,
or avoids the trouble of reproving them, which a tranquil spirit and a quiet
mind despises and refuses, unless anger shall have aroused and incited it. But
when any one is moved, and yet through unseasonable leniency grants pardon more
frequently than is necessary, or at all times, he evidently both destroys the
life of those whose audacity he is fostering for greater crimes, and furnishes
himself with a perpetual source of annoyances. Therefore the restraining of one's
anger in the case of sins is faulty.
Archytas of Tarentum is praised, who, when he had found everything ruined
(1) on his estate, rebuking the fault of his bailiff, said, "Wretch, I would
have beaten you to death if I had not been angry." They consider this to be a
singular example of forbearance; but influenced by authority, they do not see how
foolishly he spoke and acted. For if (as Plato says) no prudent man punishes
because there is an offence, but to prevent the occurrence of an offence, it is
evident how evil an example this wise man put forth. For if slaves shall
perceive that their master uses violence when he is not angry, and abstains from
violence (2) when he is angry, it is evident that they will not commit slight
offences, lest they should be beaten; but will commit the greatest offences, that
they may arouse the anger of the perverse man, and escape with impunity. But I
should praise him if, when he was enraged, he? had given space to his anger,
that the excitement of his mind might calm down through the interval of time, and
his chastisement might be confined within moderate limits. Therefore, on
account of the magnitude of the anger, punishment ought not to have been inflicted,
but to have been delayed, lest it should inflict (3) upon the offender pain
greater than is just, or occasion an outburst of fury in the punisher. But now,
how is it equitable or wise, that any one should be punished on account of a
slight offence, and should be unpunished on account of a very great one? But if he
had learned the nature and causes of things, he never would have professed so
unsuitable a forbearance, that a wicked slave should rejoice that his master
has been angry with him. For as God has furnished the human body with many and
various senses which are necessary for the use of life, so also He has assigned
to the soul various affections by which the course of life might be regulated;
and as He has given desire for the sake of producing offspring, so has He given
anger for the sake of restraining faults.
But they who are ignorant of the ends of good and evil things, as they
employ sensual desire for the purposes of corruption and pleasure, in the same
manner make use of anger and passion for the inflicting of injury, while they are
angry with those whom they regard with hatred. Therefore they are angry even
with those who commit no offence, even with their equals, or even with their
superiors. Hence they daily rush to monstrous (4) deeds; hence tragedies often
arise. Therefore Archytas would be deserving of praise, if, when he had been
enraged against any citizen or equal who injured him, he had curbed himself, and by
forbearance mitigated the impetuosity of his fury. This self-restraint is
glorious, by which any great evil which impends is restrained; but it is a fault not
to check the faults of slaves and children; for through their escaping without
punishment they will proceed to greater evil. In this case anger is not to be
restrained; but even if it is in a state of inactivity, (5) it must be aroused.
But that which we say respecting man, we also say respecting God, who made man
like to Himself. I omit making mention of the figure of God, because the Stoics
say that God has no form, and another great subject will arise if we should
wish to refute them. I only speak respecting the soul. If it belongs (6) to God
to reflect, to be wise, to understand, to foresee. to excel, and of all animals
man alone has these qualities, it follows that he was made after the likeness
of God; but on this account he goes on to vice, because, being mingled with
frailty derived from earth, he is unable to preserve pure and uncontaminated that
which he has received from God, unless he is imbued with the precepts of justice
by the same God.
CHAP. XIX.--OF THE SOUL AND BODY, AND OF PROVIDENCE.
But since he is made up, as we have said, of two parts, soul and body, the
virtues are contained in the one, and vices in the other, and they mutually
oppose each other. For the good properties of the soul, which consist in
restraining lusts, are contrary to the body; and the good properties of the body, which
consist in every kind of pleasure, are hostile to the soul. But if the virtue
of the soul shall have resisted the desires, and suppressed them, he will be
truly like to God. From which it is evident that the soul of man, which is
capable of divine virtue, is not mortal. But there is this distinction, that since
virtue is attended with bitterness, and the attraction of pleasure is sweet,
great numbers are overcome and are drawn aside to the pleasantness; but they who
have given themselves up to the body and earthly things are pressed to the earth,
and are unable to attain to the favour of the divine bounty, because they have
polluted themselves with the defilements of vices. But they who, following
God, and in obedience to Him, have despised the desires of the body, and,
preferring virtue to pleasures, have preserved innocence and righteousness, these God
recognises as like to Himself.
Since, therefore, He has laid down a most holy law, and wishes all men to
be innocent and beneficent, is it possible that He should not be angry when He
sees that His law is despised, that virtue is rejected, and pleasure made the
object of pursuit? But if He is the governor of the world, as He might to be, He
surely does not despise that which is even of the greatest importance in the
whole world. If He has fore- sight, as it is befitting that God should have, it
is plain that He consults the interests of the human race, in order that our
life may be more abundantly supplied, and better, and safer. If He is the Father
and God of all, He is undoubtedly delighted with the virtues of men, and
provoked by their vices. Therefore He loves the just, and hates the wicked. There is
no need (one says) of hatred; for He once for all has fixed a reward for the
good, and punishment for the wicked. But if any one lives justly and innocently,
and at the same time neither worships God nor has any regard for Him, as
Aristides, and Timon, (1) and others of the philosophers, will he escape (2) with
impunity, because, though he has obeyed the law of God, he has nevertheless
despised God Himself? There is therefore something on account of which God may be
angry with one rebelling against Him, as it were, in reliance upon His integrity.
If He can be angry with this man on account of his pride, why not more so with
the sinner, who has despised the law together with the Lawgiver? The judge
cannot pardon offences, because he is subject to the will of another. But God can
pardon, because He is Himself the arbitrator (3) and judge of His own law; and
when He laid down this, He did not surely deprive Himself of all power, but He
has the liberty of bestowing pardon.
CHAP. XX.--OF OFFENCES, AND THE MERCY OF GOD.
If He is able to pardon, He is therefore able also to be angry. Why, then,
some one will say, does it often occur, that they who sin are prosperous, and
they who live piously are wretched? Because fugitives and disinherited (4)
persons live without restraint, and they who are under the discipline of a father
or master live in a more strict and frugal manner. For virtue is proved and
fixed s by means of ills; vices by means of pleasure. Nor, however, ought he who
sins to hope for lasting impunity, because there is no lasting happiness.
"But, in truth, the last day is always to be looked for by man and no one
ought to be called happy before his death and last funeral rites," (6)
as the not inelegant poet says. It is the end which proves happiness, and no
one is able to escape the judgment of God, either when alive or after death. For
He has the power both to cast down the living from on high, and to punish the
dead with eternal torments. Nay, he says, if God is angry, He ought to have
inflicted vengeance at once, and to have punished every one according to his
desert. But (it is replied) if He had done this, no one would survive. For there is
no one who offends in no respect, and there are many things which excite to the
commission of sin--age, intemperance, want, opportunity, reward. To such an
extent is the frailty of the flesh with which we are clothed liable to sin, that
unless God were indulgent to this necessity, perhaps too few would live. On
this account He is most patient, and restrains His anger. For because there is in
Him perfect virtue, it follows of necessity that His patience also is perfect,
which is itself also a virtue. How many men, from having been sinners, have
afterwards become righteous; from being injurious, have become good; from being
wicked, have become temperate! How many who were in early life base, and
condemned by the judgment of all, afterwards have turned out praiseworthy? But it is
plain that this could not happen if punishment followed every offence.
The public laws condemn those who are manifestly guilty; but there are
great numbers whose offences are concealed, great numbers who restrain the accuser
either by entreaties or by reward, great numbers who elude justice by favour
or influence. But if the divine censure should condemn all those who escape the
punishment of men, there would be few or even no men on the earth. In short,
even that one reason for destroying the human race might have been a just one,
that men, despising the living God, pay divine honour to earthly and frail
images, as though they were of heaven, adoring works made by human hands. And though
God their Creator made them of elevated countenance and upright figure, and
raised them to the contemplation of the heaven and the knowledge of God, they have
preferred, like cattle, to bend themselves to the earth. (1) For he is low,
and curved, and bent downward, who, turning away from the sight of heaven and God
his Father, worships things of the earth, which he ought to have trodden upon,
that is, things made and fashioned from earth. Therefore, amidst such great
impiety and such great sins of men, the forbearance of God attains this object,
that men, condemning the errors of their past life, correct themselves. In
short, there are many who are just and good; and these, having laid aside the
worship of earthly things, acknowledge the majesty of the one and only God. But
though the forbearance of God is very great and most useful; yet, although late, He
punishes the guilty, and does not suffer them to proceed further, when He sees
that they are incorrigible.
CHAP. XXI.--OF THE ANGER OF GOD AND MAN.
There remains one question, and that the last. For some one will perhaps
say, that God is so far from being angry, that in His precepts He even forbids
man to be angry. I might say that the anger of man ought to be curbed, because
he is often angry unjustly; and he has immediate emotion, because he is only for
a time. (2) Therefore, lest those things should be done which the low, and
those of moderate station, and great kings do in their anger, his rage ought to
have been moderated and suppressed, lest, being out of his mind, (3) he should
commit some inexpiable crime. But God is not angry for a short time, (4) because
He is eternal and of perfect virtue, and He is never angry unless deservedly.
But, however, the matter is not so; for if He should altogether prohibit anger,
He Himself would have been in some measure the censurer of His own
workmanship, since He from the beginning had inserted anger in the liver s of man, since
it is believed that the cause of this emotion is contained in the moisture of
the gall. Therefore He does not altogether prohibit anger, because that affection
is necessarily given, but He forbids us to persevere in anger. For the anger
of mortals ought to be mortal; for if it is lasting, enmity is strengthened to
lasting destruction. Then, again, when He enjoined us to be angry, and yet not
to sin, (6) it is plain that He did not tear up anger by the roots, but
restrained it, that in every correction we might preserve moderation and justice.
Therefore He who commands us to be angry is manifestly Himself angry; He who enjoins
us to be quickly appeased is manifestly Himself easy to be appeased: for He
has enjoined those things which are just and useful for the interests of society.
(7)
But because I had said that the anger of God is not for a time (8) only,
as is the case with man, who becomes inflamed with an immediate (9) excitement,
and on account of his frailty is unable easily to govern himself, we ought to
understand that because God is eternal, His anger also remains to eternity; but,
on the other hand, that because He is endued with the greatest excellence, He
controls His anger, and is not ruled by it, but that He regulates it according
to His will. And it is plain that this is not opposed to that which has just
been said. For if His anger had been altogether immortal, there would be no place
after a fault for satisfaction or kind feeling, though He Himself commands men
to be reconciled before the setting of the sun.(10) But the divine anger
remains for ever against those who ever sin. Therefore God is appeased not by
incense or a victim, not by costly offerings, which things are all corruptible, but
by a reformation of the morals: and he who ceases to sin renders the anger of
God mortal. For this reason He does not immediately (11) punish every one who is
guilty, that man may have the opportunity of coming to a right mind, (12) and
correcting himself.
CHAP. XXII.--OF SINS, AND THE VERSES OF THE SIBYLS RESPECTING THEM RECITED.
This is what I had to say, most beloved Donatus, respecting the anger of
God, that you might know how to refute those who represent God as being without
emotions. (13) It only remains that, after the practice of Cicero, I should use
an epilogue by way of peroration. As he did in the Tusculan Disputations, (1)
when discoursing on the subject of death, so we in this work ought to bring
forward divine testimonies, which may be believed, to refute the persuasion of
those who, believing that God is without anger, destroy all religion, without
which, as we have shown, we are either equal to the brutes in savageness, or to the
cattle in foolishness; for it is in religion only--that is, in the knowledge
of the Supreme God--that wisdom consists. All the prophets, being filled with
the Divine Spirit, speak nothing else than of the favour of God towards the
righteous, and His anger against the ungodly. And their testimony is indeed
sufficient for us; but because it is not believed by those who make a display of wisdom
by their hair and dress, (2) it was necessary to refute them by reason and
arguments. For they act so pre-posterously, (3) that human things give authority
to divine things, whereas divine things ought rather to give authority to
human. But let us now leave these things, lest we should produce no effect upon
them, and the subject should be indefinitely drawn out. Let us therefore seek
those testimonies which they can either believe, or at any rate not oppose.
Authors of great number and weight have made mention of the Sibyls; of the
Greeks, Aristo the Chian, and Apollodorus the Erythraean; of our writers,
Varro and Fenestella. All these relate that the Erythraean Sibyl was
distinguished and noble beyond the rest. Apollodorus, indeed, boasts of her as his own
citizen and countrywoman. But Fenestella also relates that ambassadors were sent by
the senate to Erythrae, that the verses of this Sibyl might be conveyed to
Rome, and that the consuls Curio and Octavius might take care that they should be
placed in the Capitol, which had then been restored under the care of Quintus
Catulus. In her writings, verses of this kind are found respecting the Supreme
God and Maker of the world: --
"The incorruptible and eternal Maker who dwells in the heaven, holding
forth good to the good, a much greater reward, but stirring up anger and rage
against the evil and unjust."
Again, in another place, enumerating the deeds by which God is especially
moved to anger, she introduced these things: --
"Avoid unlawful services, and serve the living God. Abstain from adultery
and impurity; bring up a pure generation of children; do not kill: for the
Immortal will be angry with every one who may sin."
Therefore He is angry with sinners.
CHAP. XXIII.--OF THE ANGER OF GOD AND THE PUNISHMENT OF SINS, AND A RECITAL OF
THE VERSES OF THE SIBYLS RESPECTING IT; AND, MOREOVER, A REPROOF AND
EXHORTATION.
But because it is related by most learned men that there have been many
Sibyls, the testimony of one may not be sufficient to confirm the truth, as we
purpose to do. The volumes, indeed, of the Cumaean Sibyl, in which are written
the fates of the Romans are kept secret; but the writings of all the others are,
for the most part, not prohibited from being in common use. And of these
another, denouncing the anger of God against all nations on account of the impiety of
men, thus began:--
"Since great anger is coming upon a disobedient world, I disclose the
commands of God to the last age, prophesying to all men from city to city."
Another Sibyl also said, that the deluge was caused by the indignation of
God against the unrighteous in a former age, that the wickedness of the human
race might be extinguished:--
"From the time when, the God of heaven being enraged against the cities
themselves and all men, a deluge having burst forth, the sea covered the earth."
In like manner she foretold a conflagration about to take place hereafter, in
which the impiety of men should again be destroyed:--
" And at some time, God no longer soothing His anger, but increasing it,
and destroying the race of men, and laying waste the whole of it by fire."
From which mention is thus made concerning Jupiter by Ovid: (4) --
"He remembers also that it is fated that the time shall come in which the
sea, the earth, and the palace of heaven, being caught by fire, shall be burnt,
and the curiously wrought framework of the world (5) be in danger."
And this must come to pass at the time when the honour and worship of the
Supreme shall have perished among men. The same Sibyl, however, testifying that He
was appeased by reformation (6) of conduct and self-improvement, added these
things :--
"But, ye mortals, in pity (7) turn yourselves now, and do not lead the
great God to every kind of auger."
And also a little later: --
"He will not destroy, but will again restrain His anger, if you all
practise valuable piety in your minds."
Then another Sibyl declares that the Father of heavenly and earthly things
ought to be loved, lest His indignation should arise, to the destruction of men: --
"Lest by chance the immortal God should be angry, and destroy the whole
race of men, their life and shameless race, it is befitting that we love the
wise, ever-living God the Father."
From these things it is evident that the arguments of the philosophers are
vain, who imagine that God is without anger, and among His other praises
reckon that which is most useless, detracting from Him that which is most salutary
for human affairs, by which majesty itself exists. For this earthly, kingdom and
government, unless guarded by fear, is broken down. Take away anger from a
king, and he will not only cease to be obeyed, but he will even be cast down
headlong from his height. Yea, rather take away this affection from any person of
low degree, and who will not plunder him? Who will not deride him? Who will not
treat him with injury? Thus he will be able to have neither clothing, nor an
abode, nor food, since others will deprive him of whatever he has; much less can
we suppose that the majesty of the heavenly government can exist without anger
and fear. The Milesian Apollo being consulted concerning the religion of the
Jews, inserted these things in his answer:--
"God, the King and Father of all, before whom the earth trembles, and the
heaven and sea, and whom the recesses of Tartarus and the demons dread."
If He is so mild, as the philosophers will have it, how is it that not
only the demons and ministers of such great power, but even the heaven and earth,
and the whole system of the universe, tremble at His presence? For if no one
submits to the service of another except by compulsion, it follows that all
government exists by fear, and fear by anger. For if any one is not aroused against
one who is unwilling to obey, it will not be possible for him to be compelled
to obedience. Let any one consult his own feelings; he will at once understand
that no one can be subdued to the command of another without anger and
chastisement. Therefore, where there shall be no anger, there will be no authority. But
God has authority; therefore also He must have anger, in which authority
consists. Therefore let no one, induced by the empty prating(1) of the philosophers,
train himself to the contempt of God, which is the greatest impiety. We all are
bound both to love Him, because He is our Father; and to reverence Him,
because He is our Lord: both to pay Him honour, because He is bounteous; and to fear
Him, because He is severe: each character in Him is worthy of reverence.(2) Who
can preserve his piety, and yet fail to love the parent of his life? or who
can with impunity despise Him who, as ruler of all things, has true and
everlasting power over all? If you consider Him in the character of Father, He supplies
to us our entrance to the light which we enjoy: through Him we live, through
Him we have entered into the abode(3) of this world. If you contemplate Him as
God, it is. He who nourishes us with innumerable re sources: it is He who
sustains us, we dwell in His house, we are His household;(4) and if we are less
obedient than was befitting, and less attentive to our duty(5) than the endless
merits of our Master and Parent demanded: nevertheless it is of great avail to our
obtaining pardon, if we retain the worship and knowledge of Him; if, laying
aside low and earthly affairs and goods, we meditate upon heavenly and divine
things which are everlasting. And that we may be able to do this, God must be
followed by us, God must be adored and loved; since there is in Him the
substance(6) of things, the principle(7) of the virtues, and the source of all that is
good. For what is greater in power than God, or more perfect in reason, or
brighter in clearness? And since He begat us to wisdom, and produced us to
righteousness, it is not allowable for man to forsake God, who is the giver of
intelligence and life and to serve earthly and frail things, or, intent upon seeking
temporal goods, to turn aside from innocence and piety. Vicious and deadly
pleasures do not render a man happy; nor does opulence, which is the inciter of lusts;
nor empty ambition; nor frail honours, by which the human soul, being ensnared
and enslaved to the body, is condemned(8) to eternal death: but innocence and
righteousness alone, the lawful and due reward of which is immortality, which
God from the beginning appointed for holy and uncorrupted minds, which keep
themselves pure and uncontaminated from vices, and from every earthly impurity. Of
this heavenly and eternal reward they cannot be partakers, who have polluted
their conscience by deeds of violence, frauds, rapine, and deceits; and who, by
injuries inflicted upon men, by impious actions, have branded themselves(9)
with indelible stains. Accordingly it is befitting that all who wish deservedly to
be called wise, who wish to be called men, should despise frail things, should
trample upon earthly things, and should look down upon base(10) things, that
they may be able to be united in a most blissful relationship with God.
Let impiety and discords be removed; let turbulent and deadly dissensions
be allayed,(11) by which human societies and the divine union of the public
league are broken in upon, divided, and dispersed; as far as we can, let "us aim
at being good and bounteous: if we have a supply of wealth and resources, let it
not be devoted to the pleasure of a single person, but bestowed on the welfare
of many. For pleasure is as shortlived as the body to which it does service.
But justice and kindness are as immortal as the mind and soul, which by good
works attain to the likeness of God. Let God be consecrated by us, not in temples,
but in our heart. All things which are made by the hand are destructible.(1)
Let us cleanse this temple, which is defiled not by smoke or dust, but by evil
thoughts which is lighted not by blazing tapers? but by the brightness and
light of wisdom. And if we believe that God is always present in this temple, to
whose divinity the secrets of the heart are open, we shall so live as always to
have Him propitious, and never to fear His anger.
NOTE BY THE AMERICAN EDITOR
It is worth while to direct attention to (book vi. cap. 2) what our author
has said of "true worship," just now, when the most violent and persistent
efforts are made to sensualize Christian worship, and to explain away the
testimony of the Ante-Nicene Fathers on this important subject. The argument of our
author, in its entire drift, is as applicable to our own times as to his; and,
deeply as I value beauty in the public worship of God, I cannot, as a Nicene
Catholic, do less than adopt the universal sentiment of the early Fathers as to the
limits of decoration.