THE CITY OF GOD: BOOK II
BOOK II.
ARGUMENT.
IN THIS BOOK AUGUSTIN REVIEWS THOSE CALAMITIES WHICH THE ROMANS SUFFERED
BEFORE THE TIME OF CHRIST, AND WHILE THE WORSHIP OF THE FALSE GODS WAS UNIVERSALLY
PRACTISED; AND DEMONSTRATES THAT, FAR FROM BEING PRESERVED FROM MISFORTUNE BY
THE GODS, THE ROMANS HAVE BEEN BY THEM OVERWHELMED WITH THE ONLY, OR AT LEAST THE
GREATEST, OF ALL CALAMITIES--THE CORRUPTION OF MANNERS, AND THE VICES OF THE
SOUL.
CHAP. I.--OF THE LIMITS WHICH MUST BE PUT TO THE NECESSITY OF REPLYING TO AN
ADVERSARY.
IF the feeble mind of man did not presume to resist the clear evidence of
truth, but yielded its infirmity to wholesome doctrines, as to a health-giving
medicine, until it obtained from God, by its faith and piety, the grace needed
to heal it, they who have just ideas, and express them in suitable language,
would need to use no long discourse to refute the errors of empty conjecture. But
this mental infirmity is now more prevalent and hurtful than ever, to such an
extent that even after the truth has been as fully demonstrated as man can
prove it to man, they hold for the very truth their own unreasonable fancies,
either on account of their great blindness, which prevents them from seeing what is
plainly set before them, or on account of their opinionative obstinacy, which
prevents them from acknowledging the force of what they do see. There therefore
frequently arises a necessity of speaking more fully on those points which are
already clear, that we may, as it were, present them not to the eye, but even
to the touch, so that they may be felt even by those who close their eyes
against them. And yet to what end shall we ever bring our discussions, or what bounds
can be set to our discourse, if we proceed on the principle that we must
always reply to those who reply to us? For those who are either unable to understand
our arguments, or are so hardened by the habit of contradiction, that though
they understand they cannot yield to them, reply to us, and, as it is written,
"speak hard things,''(1) and are incorrigibly vain. Now, if we were to propose
to confute their objections as often as they with brazen face chose to disregard
our arguments, and so often as they could by any means contradict our
statements, you see how endless, and fruitless, and painful a task we should be
undertaking. And therefore I do not wish my writings to be judged even by you, my son
Marcellinus, nor by any of those others at whose service this work of mine is
freely and in all Christian charity put, if at least you intend always to
require a reply to every exception which you hear taken to what you read in it; for
so you would become like those silly women of whom the apostle says that they
are "always learning, and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth."(2)
CHAP. 2.--RECAPITULATION OF THE CONTENTS OF THE FIRST BOOK.
In the foregoing book, having begun to speak of the city of God, to which
I have resolved, Heaven helping me, to consecrate the whole of this work, it
was my first endeavor to reply to those who attribute the wars by which the world
is being devastated, and especially the recent sack of Rome by the barbarians,
to the religion of Christ, which prohibits the offering of abominable
sacrifices to devils. I have shown that they ought rather to attribute it to Christ,
that for His name's sake the barbarians, in contravention of all custom and law
of war, threw open as sanctuaries the largest churches, and in many instances
showed such reverence to Christ, that not only His genuine servants, but even
those who in their terror feigned themselves to be so, were exempted from all
those hardships which by the custom of war may lawfully be inflicted. Then out of
this there arose the question, why wicked and ungrateful men were permitted to
share in these benefits; and why, too, the hardships and calamities of war were
inflicted on the godly as well as on the ungodly. And in giving a suitably full
answer to this large question, I occupied some considerable space, partly that
I might relieve the anxieties which disturb many when they observe that the
blessings of God, and the common and daily human casualties, fall to the lot of
bad men and good without distinction; but mainly that I might minister some
consolation to those holy and chaste women who were outraged by the enemy. in such
a way as to shock their modesty, though not to sully their purity, and that I
might preserve them from being ashamed of life, though they have no guilt to be
ashamed of. And then I briefly spoke against those who with a most shameless
wantonness insult over those poor Christians who were subjected to those
calamities, and especially over those broken-hearted and humiliated, though chaste and
holy women; these fellows themselves being most depraved and unmanly
profligates, quite degenerate from the genuine Romans, whose famous deeds are abundantly
recorded in history, and everywhere celebrated, but who have found in their
descendants the greatest enemies of their glory. In truth, Rome, which was founded
and increased by the labors of these ancient heroes, was more shamefully
ruined by their descendants, while its walls were still standing, than it is now by
the razing of them. For in this ruin there fell stones and timbers; but in the
ruin those profligates effected, there fell, not the mural, but the moral
bulwarks and ornaments of the city, and their hearts burned with passions more
destructive than the flames which consumed their houses. Thus I brought my first
book to a close. And now I go on to speak of those calamities which that city
itself, or its subject provinces, have suffered since its foundation; all of which
they would equally have attributed to the Christian religion, if at that early
period the doctrine of the gospel against their false and deceiving gods had
been as largely and freely proclaimed as now.
CHAP. 3.--THAT WE NEED ONLY TO READ HISTORY IN ORDER TO SEE WHAT CALAMITIES
THE ROMANS SUFFERED BEFORE THE RELIGION OF CHRIST BEGAN TO COMPETE WITH THE
WORSHIP OF THE GODS.
But remember that, in recounting these things, I have still to address
myself to ignorant men; so ignorant, indeed, as to give birth to the common
saying, "Drought and Christianity go hand in hand."' There are indeed some among them
who are thoroughly well-educated men, and have a taste for history, in which
the things I speak of are open to their observation; but in order to irritate
the uneducated masses against us, they feign ignorance of these events, and do
what they can to make the vulgar believe that those disasters, which in certain
places and at certain times uniformly befall mankind, are the result of
Christianity, which is being everywhere diffused, and is possessed of a renown and
brilliancy which quite eclipse their own gods,(2) Let them then, along with us,
call to mind with what various and repeated disasters the prosperity of Rome was
blighted, before ever Christ had come in the flesh, and before His name had been
blazoned among the nations with that glory which they vainly grudge. Let them,
if they can, defend their gods in this article, since they maintain that they
worship them in order to be preserved from these disasters, which they now
impute to us if they suffer in the least degree. For why did these gods permit the
disasters I am to speak of to fall on their worshippers before the preaching of
Christ's name offended them, and put an end to their sacrifices?
CHAP. 4.-- THAT THE WORSHIPPERS OF THE GODS NEVER RECEIVED FROM THEM ANY
HEALTHY MORAL PRECEPTS, AND THAT IN CELEBRATING THEIR WORSHIP ALL SORTS OF
IMPURITIES WERE PRACTICED.
First of all, we would ask why their gods took no steps to improve the
morals of their worshippers. That the true God should neglect those who did not
seek His help, that was but justice; but why did those gods, from whose worship
ungrateful men are now complaining that they are prohibited, issue no laws which
might have guided their devotees to a virtuous life? Surely it was but just,
that such care as men showed to the worship of the gods, the gods on their part
should have to the conduct of men. But, it is replied, it is by his own will a
man goes astray. Who denies it? But none the less was it incumbent on these
gods, who were men's guardians, to publish in plain terms the laws of a good life,
and not to conceal them from their worshippers. It was their part to send
prophets to reach and convict such as broke these laws, and publicly to proclaim
the punishments which await evil-doers, and the rewards which may be looked for
by those that do well. Did ever the walls of any of their temples echo to any
such warning voice? I myself, when I was a young man, used sometimes to go to the
sacrilegious entertainments and spectacles; I saw the priests raving in
religious excitement, and heard the choristers; I took pleasure in the shameful games
which were celebrated in honor of gods and goddesses, of the virgin
Coelestis,(1) and Berecynthia,(2) the mother of all the gods And on the holy day
consecrated to her purification, there were sung before her couch productions so
obscene and filthy for the ear--I do not say of the mother of the gods, but of the
mother of any senator or honest man--nay, so impure, that not even the mother of
the foul-mouthed players themselves could have formed one of the audience. For
natural reverence for parents is a bond which the most abandoned cannot ignore.
And, accordingly, the lewd actions and filthy words with which these players
honored the mother of the gods, in presence of a vast assemblage and audience of
both sexes, they could not for very shame have rehearsed at home in presence
of their own mothers. And the crowds that were gathered from all quarters by
curiosity, offended modesty must, I should suppose, have scattered in the
confusion of shame. If these are sacred rites, what is sacrilege? If this is
purification, what is pollution? This festivity was called the Tables,(3) as if a banquet
were being given at which unclean devils might find suitable refreshment. For
it is not difficult to see what kind of spirits they must be who are delighted
with such obscenities, unless, indeed, a man be blinded by these evil spirits
passing themselves off under the name of gods, and either disbelieves in their
existence, or leads such a life as prompts him rather to propitiate and fear
them than the true God.
CHAP. 5.--OF THE OBSCENITIES PRACTICED IN HONOR OF THE MOTHER OF THE GODS.
In this matter I would prefer to have as my assessors in judgment, not
those men who rather take pleasure in these infamous customs than take pains to
put an end to them, but that same Scipio Nasica who was chosen by the senate as
the citizen most worthy to receive in his hands the image of that demon Cybele,
and convey it into the city. He would tell us whether he would be proud to see
his own mother so highly esteemed by the state as to have divine honors
adjudged to her; as the Greeks and Romans and other nations have decreed divine honors
to men who had been of material service to them, and have believed that their
mortal benefactors were thus made immortal, and enrolled among the gods.(4)
Surely he would desire that his mother should enjoy such felicity were it
possible. But if we proceeded to ask him whether, among the honors paid to her, he
would wish such shameful rites as these to be celebrated, would he not at once
exclaim that he would rather his mother lay stone-dead, than survive as a goddess
to lend her ear to these obscenities? Is it possible that he who was of so
severe a morality, that he used his influence as a Roman senator to prevent the
building of a theatre in that city dedicated to the manly virtues, would wish his
mother to be propitiated as a goddess with words which would have brought the
blush to her cheek when a Roman matron? Could he possibly believe that the
modesty of an estimable woman would be so transformed by her promotion to divinity,
that she would suffer herself to be invoked and celebrated in terms so gross and
immodest, that if she had heard the like while alive upon earth, and had
listened without stopping her ears and hurrying from the spot, her relatives, her
husband, and her children would have blushed for her? Therefore, the mother of
the gods being such a character as the most profligate man would be ashamed to
have for his mother, and meaning to enthral the minds of the Romans, demanded for
her service their best citizen, not to ripen him still more in virtue by her
helpful counsel, but to entangle him by her deceit, like her of whom it is
written, "The adulteress will hunt for the precious soul."(5) Her intent was to puff
up this high-souled man by an apparently divine testimony to his excellence,
in order that he might rely upon his own eminence in virtue, and make no further
efforts after true piety and religion, without which natural genius, however
brilliant, vapors into pride and comes to nothing. For what but a guileful
purpose could that goddess demand the best man seeing that in her own sacred
festivals she requires such obscenities as the best men would be covered with shame to
hear at their own tables?
CHAP. 6.--THAT THE GODS OF THE PAGANS NEVER INCULCATED HOLINESS OF LIFE.
This is the reason why those divinities quite neglected the lives and
morals of the cities and nations who worshipped them, and threw no dreadful
prohibition in their way to hinder them from becoming utterly corrupt, and to preserve
them from those terrible and detestable evils which visit not harvests and
vintages, not house and possessions, not the body which is subject to the soul,
but the soul itself, the spirit that rules the whole man If there was any such
prohibition, let it be produced, let it be proved. They will tell us that purity
and probity were inculcated upon those who were initiated in the mysteries of
religion, and that secret incitements to virtue were whispered in the ear of the
élite; but this is art idle boast. Let them shower name to us the places which
were at any time consecrated to assemblages in which, instead of the obscene
songs and licentious acting of players, instead of the celebration of those most
filthy and shameless Fugalia(1) (well called Fugalia, since they banish
modesty and right feeling), the people were commanded in the name of the gods to
restrain avarice, bridle impurity, and conquer ambition; where, in short, they
might learn in that school which Persius vehemently lashes them to, when he says:
"Be taught, ye abandoned creatures, and ascertain the causes of things; what we
are, and for what end we are born; what is the law of our success in life; and
by what art we may turn the goal without making shipwreck; what limit we
should put to our wealth, what we may lawfully desire, and what uses filthy lucre
serves; how much we should bestow upon our country and our family; learn, in
short, what God meant thee to be, and what place He has ordered you to fill."(2)
Let them name to us the places where such instructions were wont to be
communicated from the gods, and where the people who worshipped them were accustomed to
resort to hear them, as we can point to our churches built for this purpose in
every land where the Christian religion is received.
CHAP. 7.--THAT THE SUGGESTIONS OF PHILOSOPHERS ARE PRECLUDED FROM HAVING ANY
MORAL EFFECT, BECAUSE THEY HAVE NOT THE AUTHORITY WHICH BELONGS TO DIVINE
INSTRUCTION, AND BECAUSE MAN'S NATURAL BIAS TO EVIL INDUCES HIM RATHER TO FOLLOW THE
EXAMPLES OF THE GODS THAN TO OBEY THE PRECEPTS OF MEN.
But will they perhaps remind us of the schools of the philosophers, and
their disputations? In the first place, these belong not to Rome, but to Greece;
and even if we yield to them that they are now Roman, because Greece itself has
become a Roman province, still the teachings of the philosophers are not the
commandments of the gods, but the discoveries of men, who, at the prompting of
their own speculative ability, made efforts to discover the hidden laws of
nature, and the right and wrong in ethics, and in dialectic what was consequent
according to the rules of logic, and what was inconsequent and erroneous. And some
of them, by God's help, made great discoveries; but when left to themselves
they were betrayed by human infirmity, and fell into mistakes. And this was
ordered by divine providence, that their pride might be restrained, and that by their
example it might be pointed out that it is humility which has access to the
highest regions. But of this we shall have more to say, if the Lord God of truth
permit, in its own place.(3) However, if the philosophers have made any
discoveries which are sufficient to guide men to virtue and blessedness, would it not
have been greater justice to vote divine honors to them? Were it not more
accordant with every virtuous sentiment to read Plato's writings in a "Temple of
Plato," than to be present in the temples of devils to witness the priests of
Cybele(4) mutilating themselves, the effeminate being consecrated, the raving
fanatics cutting themselves, and whatever other cruel or shameful, or shamefully
cruel or cruelly shameful, ceremony is enjoined by the ritual of such gods as
these? Were it not a more suitable education, and more likely to prompt the youth
to virtue, if they heard public recitals of the laws of the gods, instead of the
vain laudation of the customs and laws of their ancestors? Certainly all the
worshippers of the Roman gods, when once they are possessed by what Persius
calls "the burning poison of lust,"(1) prefer to witness the deeds of Jupiter
rather than to hear what Plato taught or Cato censured. Hence the young profligate
in Terence, when he sees on the wall a fresco representing the fabled descent of
Jupiter into the lap of Danaë in the form of a golden shower, accepts this as
authoritative precedent for his own licentiousness, and boasts that he is an
imitator of God. "And what God?" he says. "He who with His thunder shakes the
loftiest temples. And was I, a poor creature compared to Him, to make bones of it?
No; I did it, and with all my heart."(2)
CHAP. 8.--THAT THE THEATRICAL EXHIBITIONS PUBLISHING THE SHAMEFUL ACTIONS OF
THE GODS, PROPITIATED RATHER THAN OFFENDED THEM.
But, some one will interpose, these are the fables of poets, not the
deliverances of the gods themselves. Well, I have no mind to arbitrate between the
lewdness of theatrical entertainments and of mystic rites; only this I say, and
history bears me out in making the assertion, that those same entertainments,
in which the fictions of poets are the main attraction, were not introduced in
the festivals of the gods by the ignorant devotion of the Romans, but that the
gods themselves gave the most urgent commands to this effect, and indeed
extorted from the Romans these solemnities and celebrations in their honor. I touched
on this in the preceding book, and mentioned that dramatic entertainments were
first inaugurated at Rome on occasion of a pestilence, and by authority of the
pontiff. And what man is there who is not more likely to adopt, for the
regulation of his own life, the examples that are represented in plays which have a
divine sanction, rather than the precepts written and promulgated with no more
than human authority? If the poets gave a false representation of Jove in
describing him as adulterous, then it were to be expected that the chaste gods should
in anger avenge so wicked a fiction, in place of encouraging the games which
circulated it. Of these plays, the most inoffensive are comedies and tragedies,
that is to say, the dramas which poets write for the stage, and which, though
they often handle impure subjects, yet do so without the filthiness of language
which characterizes many other performances; and it is these dramas which boys
are obliged by their seniors to read and learn as a part of what is called a
liberal and gentlemanly education.(3)
CHAP. 9.--THAT THE POETICAL LICENSE WHICH THE GREEKS, IN OBEDIENCE TO THEIR
GODS, ALLOWED, WAS RESTRAINED BY THE ANCIENT ROMANS.
The opinion of the ancient Romans on this matter is attested by Cicero in
his work De Republica, in which Scipio, one of the interlocutors, says, "The
lewdness of comedy could never have been suffered by audiences, unless the
customs of society had previously sanctioned the same lewdness." And in the earlier
days the Greeks preserved a certain reasonableness in their license, and made it
a law, that whatever comedy wished to say of any one, it must say it of him by
name. And so in the same work of Cicero's, Scipio says, "Whom has it not
aspersed? Nay, whom has it not worried? Whom has it spared? Allow that it may assail
demagogues and factions, men injurious to the commonwealth--a Cleon, a
Cleophon, a Hyperbolus. That is tolerable, though it had been more seemly for the
public censor to brand such men, than for a poet to lampoon them; but to blacken
the fame of Pericles with scurrilous verse, after he had with the utmost dignity
presided over their state alike in war and in peace, was as unworthy of a poet,
as if our own Plautus or Naevius were to bring Publius and Cneius Scipio on
the comic stage, or as if Caecilius were to caricature Cato." And then a little
after he goes on: "Though our Twelve Tables attached the penalty of death only
to a very few offences, yet among these few this was one: if any man should have
sung a pasquinade, or have composed a satire calculated to bring infamy or
disgrace on another person. Wisely decreed. For it is by the decisions of
magistrates, and by a well-informed justice, that our lives ought to be judged, and not
by the flighty fancies of poets; neither ought we to be exposed to hear
calumnies, save where we have the liberty of replying, and defending ourselves before
an adequate tribunal." This much I have judged it advisable to quote from the
fourth book of Cicero's De Republica; and I have made the quotation word for
word, with the exception of some words omitted, and some slightly transposed, for
the sake of giving the sense more readily. And certainly the extract is
pertinent to the matter I am endeavoring to explain. Cicero makes some further
remarks, and concludes the passage by showing that the ancient Romans did not permit
any living man to be either praised or blamed on the stage. But the Greeks, as
I said, though not so moral, were more logical in allowing this license which
the Romans forbade; for they saw that their gods approved and enjoyed the
scurrilous language of low comedy when directed not only against men, but even
against themselves; and this, whether the infamous actions imputed to them were the
fictions of poets, or were their actual iniquities commemorated and acted in the
theatres. And would that the spectators had judged them worthy only of
laughter, and not of imitation! Manifestly it had been a stretch of pride to spare the
good name of the leading men and the common citizens, when the very deities
did not grudge that their own reputation should be blemished.
CHAP. 10.--THAT THE DEVILS, IN SUFFERING EITHER FALSE OR TRUE CRIMES TO BE
LAID TO THEIR CHARGE, MEANT TO DO MEN A MISCHIEF.
It is alleged, in excuse of this practice, that the stories told of the
gods are not true, but false, and mere inventions, but this only makes matters
worse, if we form our estimate by the morality our religion teaches; and if we
consider the malice of the devils, what more wily and astute artifice could they
practise upon men? When a slander is uttered against a leading statesman of
upright and useful life, is it not reprehensible in proportion to its untruth and
groundlessness? What punishment, then, shall be sufficient when the gods are
the objects of so wicked and outrageous an injustice? But the devils, whom these
men repute gods, are content that even iniquities they are guiltless of should
be ascribed to them, so long as they may entangle men's minds in the meshes of
these opinions, and draw them on along with themselves to their predestinated
punishment: whether such things were actually committed by the men whom these
devils, delighting in human infatuation, cause to be worshipped as gods, and in
whose stead they, by a thousand malign and deceitful artifices, substitute
themselves, and so receive worship; or whether, though they were really the crimes
of men, these wicked spirits gladly allowed them to be attributed to higher
beings, that there might seem to be conveyed from heaven itself a sufficient
sanction for the perpetration of shameful wickedness. The Greeks, therefore, seeing
the character of the gods they served, thought that the poets should certainly
not refrain from showing up human vices on the stage, either because they
desired to be like their gods in this, or because they were afraid that, if they
required for themselves a more unblemished reputation than they asserted for the
gods, they might provoke them to anger.
CHAP. 11.--THAT THE GREEKS ADMITTED PLAYERS TO OFFICES OF STATE, ON THE GROUND
THAT MEN WHO PLEASED THE GODS SHOULD NOT BE CONTEMPTUOUSLY TREATED BY THEIR
FELLOWS.
It was a part of this same reasonableness of the Greeks which induced them
to bestow upon the actors of these same plays no inconsiderable civic honors.
In the above-mentioned book of the De Republica, it is mentioned that Æschines,
a very eloquent Athenian, who had been a tragic actor in his youth, became a
statesman, and that the Athenians again and again sent another tragedian,
Aristodemus, as their plenipotentiary to Philip. For they judged it unbecoming to
condemn and treat as infamous persons those who were the chief actors in the
scenic entertainments which they saw to be so pleasing to the gods. No doubt this
was immoral of the Greeks, but there can be as little doubt they acted in
conformity with the character of their gods; for how could they have presumed to
protect the conduct of the citizens from being cut to pieces by the tongues of poets
and players, who were allowed, and even enjoined by the gods, to tear their
divine reputation to tatters? And how could they hold in contempt the men who
acted in the theatres those dramas which, as they had ascertained, gave pleasure
to the gods whom they worshipped? Nay, how could they but grant to them the
highest civic honors? On what plea could they honor the priests who offered for
them acceptable sacrifices to the gods, if they branded with infamy the actors who
in behalf of the people gave to the gods that pleasure or honour which they
demanded, and which, according to the account of the priests, they were angry at
not receiving. Labeo,(1) whose learning makes him an authority on such points,
is of opinion that the distinction between good and evil deities should find
expression in a difference of worship; that the evil should be propitiated by
bloody sacrifices and doleful rites, but the good with a joyful and pleasant
observance, as, e.g. (as he says himself), with plays, festivals, and banquets.(1)
All this we shall, with God's help, hereafter discuss. At present, and speaking
to the subject on hand, whether all kinds of offerings are made
indiscriminately to all the gods, as if all were good (and it is an unseemly thing to conceive
that there are evil gods; but these gods of the pagans are all evil, because
they are not gods, but evil spirits), or whether, as Labeo thinks, a distinction
is made between the offerings presented to the different gods the Greeks are
equally justified in honoring alike the priests by whom the sacrifices are
offered, and the players by whom the dramas are acted, that they may not be open to
the charge of doing an injury to all their gods, if the plays are pleasing to
all of them, or (which were still worse) to their good gods, if the plays are
relished only by them.
CHAP. 12.--THAT THE ROMANS, BY REFUSING TO THE POETS THE SAME LICENSE IN
RESPECT OF MEN WHICH THEY ALLOWED THEM IN THE CASE OF THE GODS, SHOWED A MORE
DELICATE SENSITIVENESS REGARDING THEMSELVES THAN REGARDING THE GODS.
The Romans, however, as Scipio boasts in that same discussion, declined
having their conduct and good name subjected to the assaults and slanders of the
poets, and went so far as to make it a capital crime if any one should dare
to compose such verses. This was a very honorable course to pursue, so far as
they themselves were concerned, but in respect of the gods it was proud and
irreligious: for they knew that the gods not only tolerated, but relished, being
lashed by the injurious expressions of the poets, and yet they themselves would
not suffer this same handling; and what their ritual prescribed as acceptable to
the gods, their law prohibited as injurious to themselves. How then, Scipio,
do you praise the Romans for refusing this license to the poets, so that no
citizen could be calumniated, while you know that the gods were not included trader
this protection? Do you count your senate-house worthy of so much higher a
regard than the Capitol? Is the one city of Rome more valuable in your eyes than
the whole heaven of gods, that you prohibit your poets from uttering any
injurious words against a citizen, though they may with impunity cast what imputations
they please upon the gods, without the interference of senator, censor,
prince, or pontiff? It was, forsooth, intolerable that Plautus or Naevus should
attack Publius and Cneius Scipio, insufferable that Caecilius should lampoon Cato;
but quite proper that your Terence should encourage youthful lust by the wicked
example of supreme Jove.
CHAP. 13.--THAT THE ROMANS SHOULD HAVE UNDERSTOOD THAT GODS WHO DESIRED TO BE
WORSHIPPED IN LICENTIOUS ENTERTAINMENTS WERE UNWORTHY OF DIVINE HONOR.
But Scipio, were he alive, would possibly reply: "How could we attach a
penalty to that which the gods themselves have consecrated? For the theatrical
entertainments in which such things are said, and acted, and performed, were
introduced into Roman society by the gods, who ordered that they should be
dedicated and exhibited in their honor." But was not this, then, the plainest proof
that they were no true gods, nor in any respect worthy of receiving divine honours
from the republic? Suppose they had required that in their honor the citizens
of Rome should be held up to ridicule, every Roman would have resented the
hateful proposal. How then, I would ask, can they be esteemed worthy of worship,
when they propose that their own crimes be used as material for celebrating their
praises? Does not this artifice expose them, and prove that they are
detestable devils? Thus the Romans, though they were superstitious enough to serve as
gods those who made no secret of their desire to be worshipped in licentious
plays, yet had sufficient regard to their hereditary dignity and virtue, to prompt
them to refuse to players any such rewards as the Greeks accorded them. On this
point we have this testimony of Scipio, recorded in Cicero: "They [the Romans]
considered comedy and alI theatrical performances as disgraceful, and
therefore not only debarred players from offices and honors open to ordinary citizens,
but also decreed that their names should be branded by the censor, and erased
from the roll of their tribe." An excellent decree, and another testimony to the
sagacity of Rome; but I could wish their prudence had been more thorough-going
and consistent. For when I hear that if any Roman citizen chose the stage as
his profession, he not only closed to himself every laudable career, but even
became an outcast from his own tribe, I cannot but exclaim: This is the true
Roman spirit, this is worthy of a state jealous of its reputation. But then some
one interrupts my rapture, by inquiring with what consistency players are
debarred from all honors, while plays are counted among the honors due to the gods?
For a long while the virtue of Rome was uncontaminated by theatrical
exhibitions;(1) and if they had been adopted for the sake of gratifying the taste of the
citizens, they would have been introduced hand in hand with the relaxation of
manners. But the fact is, that it was the gods who demanded that they should be
exhibited to gratify them. With what justice, then, is the player excommunicated
by whom God is worshipped? On what pretext can you at once adore him who
exacts, and brand him who acts these plays? This, then, is the controversy in which
the Greeks and Romans are engaged. The Greeks think they justly honor players,
because they worship the gods who demand plays; the Romans, on the other hand,
do not suffer an actor to disgrace by his name his own plebeian tribe, far less
the senatorial order. And the whole of this discussion may be summed up in the
following syllogism. The Greeks give us the major premise: If such gods are to
be worshipped, then certainly such men may be honored. The Romans add the
minor: But such men must by no means be honoured. The Christians draw the
conclusion: Therefore such gods must by no means be worshipped.
CHAP. 14.--THAT PLATO, WHO EXCLUDED POETS FROM A WELL-ORDERED CITY, WAS BETTER
THAN THESE GODS WHO DESIRE TO BE HONOURED BY THEATRICAL PLAYS.
We have still to inquire why the poets who write the plays, and who by the
law of the twelve tables are prohibited from injuring the good name of the
citizens, are reckoned more estimable than the actors, though they so shamefully
asperse the character of the gods? Is it right that the actors of these poetical
and God-dishonoring effusions be branded, while their authors are honored?
Must we not here award the palm to a Greek, Plato, who, in framing his ideal
republic,(2) conceived that poets should be banished from the city as enemies of the
state? He could not brook that the gods be brought into disrepute, nor that
the minds of the citizens be depraved and besotted, by the fictions of the poets.
Compare now human nature as you see it in Plato, expelling poets from the city
that the citizens be uninjured, with the divine nature as you see it in these
gods exacting plays in their own honor. Plato strove, though unsuccessfully, to
persuade the light-minded and lascivious Greeks to abstain from so much as
writing such plays; the gods used their authority to extort the acting of the same
from the dignified and sober-minded Romans. And not content with having them
acted, they had them dedicated to themselves, consecrated to themselves,
solemnly celebrated in their own honor. To which, then, would it be more becoming in a
state to decree divine honors,--to Plato, who prohibited these wicked and
licentious plays, or to the demons who delighted in blinding men to the truth of
what Plato unsuccessfully sought to inculcate?
This philosopher, Plato, has been elevated by Labeo to the rank of a
demigod, and set thus upon a level with such as Hercules and Romulus. Labeo ranks
demigods higher than heroes, but both he counts among the deities. But I have no
doubt that he thinks this man whom he reckons a demigod worthy of greater
respect not only than the heroes, but also than the gods themselves. The laws of the
Romans and the speculations of Plato have this resemblance, that the latter
pronounce a wholesale condemnation of poetical fictions, while the former
restrain the license of satire, at least so far as men are the objects of it. Plato
will not suffer poets even to dwell in his city: the laws of Rome prohibit actors
from being enrolled as citizens; and if they had not feared to offend the gods
who had asked the services of the players, they would in all likelihood have
banished them altogether. It is obvious, therefore, that the Romans could not
receive, nor reasonably expect to receive, laws for the regulation of their
conduct from their gods, since the laws they themselves enacted far surpassed and
put to shame the morality of the gods. The gods demand stageplays in their own
honor; the Romans exclude the players from all civic honors;(3) the former
commanded that they should be celebrated by the scenic representation of their own
disgrace; the latter commanded that no poet should dare to blemish the reputation
of any citizen. But that demigod Plato resisted the lust of such gods as
these, and showed the Romans what their genius had left incomplete; for he
absolutely excluded poets from his ideal state, whether they composed fictions with no
regard to truth, or set the worst possible examples before wretched men under
the guise of divine actions. We for our part, indeed, reckon Plato neither a god
nor a demigod; we would not even compare him to any of God's holy angels; nor
to the truth-speaking prophets, nor to any of the apostles or martyrs of Christ,
nay, not to any faithful Christian man. The reason of this opinion of ours we
will, God prospering us, render in its own place. Nevertheless, since they wish
him to be considered a demigod, we think he certainly is more entitled to that
rank, and is every way superior, if not to Hercules and Romulus (though no
historian could ever narrate nor any poet sing of him that he had killed his
brother, or committed any crime), yet certainly to Priapus, or a Cynocephalus,(1) or
the Fever,(2)--divinities whom the Romans have partly received from
foreigners, and partly consecrated by home-grown rites. How, then, could gods such as
these be expected to promulgate good and wholesome laws, either for the prevention
of moral and social evils, or for their eradication where they had already
sprung up?--gods who used their influence even to sow and cherish profligacy, by
appointing that deeds truly or falsely ascribed to them should be published to
the people by means of theatrical exhibitions, and by thus gratuitously fanning
the flame of human lust with the breath of a seemingly divine approbation. In
vain does Cicero, speaking of poets, exclaim against this state of things in
these words: "When the plaudits and acclamation of the people, who sit as
infallible judges, are won by the poets, what darkness benights the mind, what fears
invade, what passions inflame it!"(3)
CHAP. 15.--THAT IT WAS VANITY, NOT REASON, WHICH CREATED SOME OF THE ROMAN
GODS,
But is it not manifest that vanity rather than reason regulated the choice
of some of their false gods? This Plato, whom they reckon a demigod, and who
used all his eloquence to preserve men from the most dangerous spiritual
calamities, has yet not been counted worthy even of a little shrine; but Romulus,
because they can call him their own, they have esteemed more highly than many gods,
though their secret doctrine can allow him the rank only of a demigod. To him
they allotted a flamen, that is to say, a priest of a class so highly esteemed
in their religion (distinguished, too, by their conical mitres), that for only
three of their gods were flamens appointed,--the Flamen Dialis for Jupiter,
Martialis for Mars, and Quirinalis for Romulus (for when the ardor of his
fellow-citizens had given Romulus a seat among the gods, they gave him this new name
Quirinus). And thus by this honor Romulus has been preferred to Neptune and
Pluto, Jupiter's brothers, and to Saturn himself, their father. They have assigned
the same priesthood to serve him as to serve Jove; and in giving Mars (the
reputed father of Romulus) the same honor, is this not rather for Romulus' sake than
to honor Mars?
CHAP. 16.--THAT IF THE GODS HAD REALLY POSSESSED ANY REGARD FOR RIGHTEOUSNESS,
THE ROMANS SHOULD HAVE RECEIVED GOOD LAWS FROM THEM, INSTEAD OF HAVING TO
BORROW THEM FROM OTHER NATIONS.
Moreover, if the Romans had been able to receive a rule of life from their
gods, they would not have borrowed Solon's laws from the Athenians, as they
did some years after Rome was rounded; and yet they did not keep them as they
received them, but endeavored to improve and amend them.(4) Although Lycurgus
pretended that he was authorized by Apollo to give laws to the Lacedemonians, the
sensible Romans did not choose to believe this, and were not induced to borrow
laws from Sparta. Numa Pompilius, who succeeded Romulus in the kingdom, is said
to have framed some laws, which, however, were not sufficient for the
regulation of civic affairs. Among these regulations were many pertaining to religious
observances, and yet he is not reported to have received even these from the
gods. With respect, then, to moral evils, evils of life and conduct,--evils which
are so mighty, that, according to the wisest pagans,(5) by them states are
ruined while their cities stand uninjured,--their gods made not the smallest
provision for preserving their worshippers from these evils, but, on the contrary,
took special pains to increase them, as we have previously endeavored to prove.
CHAP. 17. -- OF THE RAPE OF THE SABINE WOMEN, AND OTHER INIQUITIES PERPETRATED
IN ROME'S PALMIEST DAYS.
But possibly we are to find the reason for this neglect of the Romans by
their gods, in the saying of Sallust, that "equity and virtue prevailed among
the Romans not more by force of laws than of nature."(1) I presume it is to this
inborn equity and goodness of disposition we are to ascribe the rape of the
Sabine women. What, indeed, could be more equitable and virtuous, than to carry
off by force, as each man was fit, and without their parents' consent, girls who
were strangers and guests, and who had been decoyed and entrapped by the
pretence of a spectacle! If the Sabines were wrong to deny their daughters when the
Romans asked for them, was it not a greater wrong in the Romans to carry them
off after that denial? The Romans might more justly have waged war against the
neighboring nation for having refused their daughters in marriage when they first
sought them, than for having demanded them back when they had stolen them. War
should have been proclaimed at first; it was then that Mars should have helped
his warlike son, that he might by force of arms avenge the injury done him by
the refusal of marriage, and might also thus win the women he desired. There
might have been some appearance of "right of war" in a victor carrying off, in
virtue of this right, the virgins who had been without any show of right denied
him; whereas there was no "right of peace" entitling him to carry off those who
were not given to him, and to wage an unjust war with their justly enraged
parents. One happy circumstance was indeed connected with this. act of violence,
viz., that though it was commemorated by the games of the circus, yet even this
did not constitute it a precedent in the city or realm of Rome. If one would
find fault with the results of this act, it must rather be on the ground that the
Romans made Romulus a god in spite of his perpetrating this iniquity; for one
cannot reproach them with making this deed any kind of precedent for the rape of
women.
Again, I presume it was due to this natural equity and virtue, that after
the expulsion of King Tarquin, whose son had violated Lucretia, Junius Brutus
the consul forced Lucius Tarquinius Collatinus, Lucretia's husband and his own
colleague, a good and innocent man, to resign his office and go into banishment,
on the one sole charge that he was of the name and blood of the Tarquins.
This injustice was perpetrated with the approval, or at least connivance, of the
people, who had themselves raised to the consular office both Collatinus and
Brutus. Another instance of this equity and virtue is found in their treatment of
Marcus Camillus. This eminent man, after he had rapidly conquered the Veians,
at that time the most formidable of Rome's enemies, and who had maintained a
ten years' war, in which the Roman army had suffered the usual calamities
attendant on bad generalship, after he had restored security to Rome, which had begun
to tremble for its safety, and after he had taken the wealthiest city of the
enemy, had charges brought against him by the malice of those that envied his
success, and by the insolence of the tribunes of the people; and seeing that the
city bore him no gratitude for preserving it, and that he would certainly be
condemned, he went into exile, and even in his absence was fined 10,000 asses.
Shortly after, however, his ungrateful country had again to seek his protection
from the Gauls. But I cannot now mention all the shameful and iniquitous acts
with which Rome was agitated, when the aristocracy attempted to subject the
people, and the people resented their encroachments, and the advocates of either
party were actuated rather by the love of victory than by any equitable or virtuous
consideration.
CHAP. 18.--WHAT THE HISTORY OF SALLUST REVEALS REGARDING THE LIFE OF THE
ROMANS, EITHER WHEN STRAITENED BY ANXIETY OR RELAXED IN SECURITY.
I will therefore pause, and adduce the testimony of Sallust himself, whose
words in praise of the Romans (that "equity and virtue prevailed among them
not more by force of laws than of nature") have given occasion to this
discussion. He was referring to that period immediately after the expulsion of the kings,
in which the city became great in an incredibly short space of time. And yet
this same writer acknowledges in the first book of his history, in the very
exordium of his work, that even at that time, when a very brief interval had
elapsed after the government had passed from kings to consuls, the more powerful men
began to act unjustly, and occasioned the defection of the people from the
patricians, and other disorders in the city. For after Sallust had stated that the
Romans enjoyed greater harmony and a purer state of society between the second
and third Punic wars than at any other time, and that the cause of this was not
their love of good order, but their fear lest the peace they had with Carthage
might be broken (this also, as we mentioned, Nasica contemplated when he
opposed the destruction of Carthage, for he supposed that fear would tend to repress
wickedness, and to preserve wholesome ways of living), he then goes on to say:
"Yet, after the destruction of Carthage, discord, avarice, ambition, and the
other vices which are commonly generated by prosperity, more than ever
increased." If they "increased," and that" more than ever," then already they had
appeared, and had been increasing. And so Sallust adds this reason for what he said
"For," he says, "the oppressive measures of the powerful, and the consequent
secessions of the plebs from the patricians, and other civil dissensions, had
existed from the first, and affairs were administered with equity and well-tempered
justice for no longer a period than the short time after the expulsion of the
kings, while the city was occupied with the serious Tuscan war and Tarquin's
vengeance." You see how, even in that brief period after the expulsion of the
kings, fear, he acknowledges, was the cause of the interval of equity and good
order. They were afraid, in fact, of the war which Tarquin waged against them,
after he had been driven from the throne and the city, and had allied himself with
the Tuscans. But observe what he adds: "After that, the patricians treated the
people as their slaves, ordering them to be scourged or beheaded just as the
kings had done, driving them from their holdings, and harshly tyrannizing over
those who had no property to lose. The people, overwhelmed by these oppressive
measures, and most of all by exorbitant usury, and obliged to contribute both
money and personal service to the constant wars, at length took arms and seceded
to Mount Aventine and Mount Sacer, and thus obtained for themselves tribunes
and protective laws. But it was only the second Punic war that put an end on both
sides to discord and strife." You see what kind of men the Romans were, even
so early as a few years after the expulsion of the kings; and it is of these men
he says, that "equity and virtue prevailed among them not more by force of law
than of nature."
Now, if these were the days in which the Roman republic shows fairest and
best, what are we to say or think of the succeeding age, when, to use the words
of the same historian, "changing little by little from the fair and virtuous
city it was, it became utterly wicked and dissolute?" This was, as he mentions,
after the destruction of Carthage. Sallust's brief sum and sketch of this
period may be read in his own history, in which he shows how the profligate manners
which were propagated by prosperity resulted at last even in civil wars. He
says: "And from this time the primitive manners, instead of undergoing an
insensible alteration as hitherto they had done, were swept away as by a torrent: the
young men were so depraved by luxury and avarice, that it may justly be said
that no father had a son who could either preserve his own patrimony, or keep his
hands off other men's." Sallust adds a number of particulars about the vices of
Sylla, and the debased condition of the republic in general; and other writers
make similar observations, though in much less striking language.
However, I suppose you now see, or at least any one who gives his
attention has the means of seeing, in what a sink of iniquity that city was plunged
before the advent of our heavenly King. For these things happened not only before
Christ had begun to teach, but before He was even born of the Virgin. If, then,
they dare not impute to their gods the grievous evils of those former times,
more tolerable before the destruction of Carthage, but intolerable and dreadful
after it, although it was the gods who by their malign craft instilled into the
minds of men the conceptions from which such dreadful vices branched out on
all sides, why do they impute these present calamities to Christ, who teaches
life-giving truth, and forbids us to worship false and deceitful gods, and who,
abominating and condemning with His divine authority those wicked and hurtful
lusts of men, gradually withdraws His own people from a world that is corrupted by
these vices, and is falling into ruins, to make of them an eternal city, whose
glory rests not on the acclamations of vanity, but on the judgment of truth?
CHAP. 19.--OF THE CORRUPTION WHICH HAD GROWN UPON THE ROMAN REPUBLIC BEFORE
CHRIST ABOLISHED THE WORSHIP OF THE GODS.
Here, then, is this Roman republic, "which has changed little by little
from the fair and virtuous city it was, and has become utterly wicked and
dissolute." It is not I who am the first to say this, but their own authors, from whom
we learned it for a fee, and who wrote it long before the coming of Christ.
You see how, before the coming of Christ, and after the destruction of Carthage,
"the primitive manners, instead of undergoing insensible alteration, as
hitherto they had done, were swept away as by a torrent; and how depraved by luxury
and avarice the youth were." Let them now, on their part, read to us any laws
given by their gods to the Roman people, and directed against luxury and avarice.
And would that they had only been silent on the subjects of chastity and
modesty, and had not demanded from the people indecent and shameful practices, to
which they lent a pernicious patronage by their so-called divinity. Let them read
our commandments in the Prophets, Gospels, Acts of the Apostles or Epistles;
let them peruse the large number of precepts against avarice and luxury which are
everywhere read to the congregations that meet for this purpose, and which
strike the ear, not with the uncertain sound of a philosophical discussion, but
with the thunder of God's own oracle pealing from the clouds. And yet they do not
impute to their gods the luxury and avarice, the cruel and dissolute manners,
that had rendered the republic utterly wicked and corrupt, even before the
coming of Christ; but whatever affliction their pride and effeminacy have exposed
them to in these latter days, they furiously impute to our religion. If the
kings of the earth and all their subjects, if all princes and judges of the earth,
if young men and maidens, old and young, every age, and both sexes; if they
whom the Baptist addressed, the publicans and the soldiers, were all together to
hearken to and observe the precepts of the Christian religion regarding a just
and virtuous life, then should the republic adorn the whole earth with its own
felicity, and attain in life everlasting to the pinnacle of kingly glory. But
because this man listens and that man scoffs, and most are enamored of the
blandishments of vice rather than the wholesome severity of virtue, the people of
Christ, whatever be their condition--whether they be kings, princes, judges,
soldiers, or provincials, rich or poor, bond or free, male or female--are enjoined
to endure this earthly republic, wicked and dissolute as it is, that so they may
by this endurance win for themselves an eminent place in that most holy and
august assembly of angels and republic of heaven, in which the will of God is the
law.
CHAP. 20.--OF THE KIND OF HAPPINESS AND LIFE TRULY DELIGHTED IN BY THOSE WHO
INVEIGH AGAINST THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION.
But the worshippers and admirers of these gods delight in imitating their
scandalous iniquities, and are nowise concerned that the republic be less
depraved and licentious. Only let it remain undefeated, they say, only let it
flourish and abound in resources; let it be glorious by its victories, or still
better, secure in peace; and what matters it to us? This is our concern, that every
man be able to increase his wealth so as to supply his daily prodigalities, and
so that the powerful may subject the weak for their own purposes. Let the poor
court the rich for a living, and that under their protection they may enjoy a
sluggish tranquillity; and let the rich abuse the poor as their dependants, to
minister to their pride. Let the people applaud not those who protect their
interests, but those who provide them with pleasure. Let no severe duty be
commanded, no impurity forbidden. Let kings estimate their prosperity, not by the
righteousness, but by the servility of their subjects. Let the provinces stand
loyal to the kings, not as moral guides, but as lords of their possessions and
purveyors of their pleasures; not with a hearty reverence, but a crooked and
servile fear. Let the laws take cognizance rather of the injury done to another man's
property, than of that done to one's own person. If a man be a nuisance to his
neighbor, or injure his property, family, or person, let him be actionable;
but in his own affairs let everyone with impunity do what he will in company with
his own family, and with those who willingly join him. Let there be a
plentiful supply of public prostitutes for every one who wishes to use them, but
specially for those who are too poor to keep one for their private use. Let there be
erected houses of the largest and most ornate description: in these let there
be provided the most sumptuous banquets, where every one who pleases may, by day
or night, play, drink, vomit,(1) dissipate. Let there be everywhere heard the
rustling of dancers, the loud, immodest laughter of the theatre; let a
succession of the most cruel and the most voluptuous pleasures maintain a perpetual
excitement. If such happiness is distasteful to any, let him be branded as a
public enemy; and if any attempt to modify or put an end to it let him be silenced,
banished, put an end to. Let these be reckoned the true gods, who procure for
the people this condition of things, and preserve it when once possessed. Let
them be worshipped as they wish; let them demand whatever games they please, from
or with their own worshippers; only let them secure that such felicity be not
imperilled by foe, plague, or disaster of any kind. What sane man would compare
a republic such as this, I will not say to the Roman empire, but to the palace
of Sardanapalus, the ancient king who was so abandoned to pleasures, that he
caused it to be inscribed on his tomb, that now that he was dead, he possessed
only those things which he had swallowed and consumed by his appetites while
alive? If these men had such a king as this, who, while self-indulgent, should lay
no severe restraint on them, they would more enthusiastically consecrate to
him a temple and a flamen than the ancient Romans did to Romulus.
CHAP. 21--CICERO'S OPINION OF THE ROMAN REPUBLIC.
But if our adversaries do not care how foully and disgracefully the Roman
republic be stained by corrupt practices, so long only as it holds together and
continues in being, and if they therefore pooh-pooh the testimony of Sallust
to its "utterly wicked and profligate" condition, what will they make of
Cicero's statement, that even in his time it had become entirely extinct, and that
there remained extant no Roman republic at all? He introduces Scipio (the Scipio
who had destroyed Carthage) discussing the republic, at a time when already
there were presentiments of its speedy ruin by that corruption which Sallust
describes. In fact, at the time when the discussion took place, one of the Gracchi,
who, according to Sallust, was the first great instigator of seditions, had
already been put to death. His death, indeed, is mentioned in the same book. Now
Scipio, at the end of the second book, says: "As among the different sounds which
proceed from lyres, flutes, and the human voice, there must be maintained a
certain harmony which a cultivated ear cannot endure to hear disturbed or
jarring, but which may be elicited in full and absolute concord by the modulation even
of voices very unlike one another; so, where reason is allowed to modulate the
diverse elements of the state, there is obtained a perfect concord from the
upper, lower, and middle classes as from various sounds; and what musicians call
harmony in singing, is concord in matters of state, which is the strictest bond
and best security of any republic, and which by no ingenuity can be retained
where justice has become extinct." Then, when he had expatiated somewhat more
fully, and had more copiously illustrated the benefits of its presence and the
ruinous effects of its absence upon a state, Pilus, one of the company present at
the discussion, struck in and demanded that the question should be more
thoroughly sifted, and that the subject of justice should be freely discussed for the
sake of ascertaining what truth there was in the maxim which was then becoming
daily more current, that "the republic cannot be governed without injustice."
Scipio expressed his willingness to have this maxim discussed and sifted, and
gave it as his opinion that it was baseless, and that no progress could be made
in discussing the republic unless it was established, not only that this maxim,
that "the republic cannot be governed without injustice," was false, but also
that the truth is, that it cannot be governed without the most absolute
justice. And the discussion of this question, being deferred till the next day, is
carried on in the third book with great animation. For Pilus himself undertook to
defend the position that the republic cannot be governed. without injustice, at
the same time being at special pains to clear himself of any real
participation in that opinion. He advocated with great keenness the cause of injustice
against justice, and endeavored by plausible reasons and examples to demonstrate
that the former is beneficial, the latter useless, to the republic. Then, at the
request of the company, Laelius attempted to defend justice, and strained every
nerve to prove that nothing is so hurtful to a state as injustice; and that
without justice a republic can neither be governed, nor even continue to exist.
When this question has been handled to the satisfaction of the company,
Scipio reverts to the original thread of discourse, and repeats with commendation
his own brief definition of a republic, that it is the weal of the people.
"The people" he defines as being not every assemblage or mob, but an assemblage
associated by a common acknowledgment of law, and by a community of interests.
Then he shows the use of definition in debate; and from these definitions of his
own he gathers that a republic, or "weal of the people," then exists only when
it is well and justly governed, whether by a monarch, or an aristocracy, or by
the whole people. But when the monarch is unjust, or, as the Greeks say, a
tyrant; or the aristocrats are unjust, and form a faction; or the people themselves
are unjust, and become, as Scipio for want of a better name calls them,
themselves the tyrant, then the republic is not only blemished (as had been proved
the day before), but by legitimate deduction from those definitions, it
altogether ceases to be. For it could not be the people's weal when a tyrant factiously
lorded it over the state; neither would the people be any longer a people if
it were unjust, since it would no longer answer the definition of a people--" an
assemblage associated by a common acknowledgment of law, and by a community of
interests."
When, therefore, the Roman republic was such as Sallust described it, it
was not "utterly wicked and profligate," as he says, but had altogether ceased
to exist, if we are to admit the reasoning of that debate maintained on the
subject of the republic by its best representatives. Tully himself, too, speaking
not in the person of Scipio or any one else, but uttering his own sentiments,
uses the following language in the beginning of the fifth book, after quoting a
line from the poet Ennius, in which he said, "Rome's severe morality and her
citizens are her safeguard." "This verse," says Cicero, "seems to me to have all
the sententious truthfulness of an oracle. For neither would the citizens have
availed without the morality of the community, nor would the morality of the
commons without outstanding men have availed either to establish or so long to
maintain in vigor so grand a republic with so wide and just an empire.
Accordingly, before our day, the hereditary usages formed our foremost men, and they on
their part retained the usages and institutions of their fathers. But our age,
receiving the republic as a chef-d'oeuvre of another age which has already begun
to grow old, has not merely neglected to restore the colors of the original,
but has not even been at the pains to preserve so much as the general outline and
most outstanding features. For what survives of that primitive morality which
the poet called Rome's safeguard? It is so obsolete and forgotten, that, far
from practising it, one does not even know it. And of the citizens what shall I
say? Morality has perished through poverty of great men; a poverty for which we
must not only assign a reason, but for the guilt of which we must answer as
criminals charged with a capital crime. For it is through our vices, and not by
any mishap, that we retain only the name of a republic, and have long since lost
the reality."
This is the confession of Cicero, long indeed after the death of
Africanus, whom he introduced as an interlocutor in his work De Republica, but still
before the coming of Christ. Yet, if the disasters he bewails had been lamented
after the Christian religion had been diffused, and had begun to prevail, is
there a man of our adversaries who would not have thought that they were to be
imputed to the Christians? Why, then, did their gods not take steps then to prevent
the decay and extinction of that republic, over the loss of which Cicero, long
before Christ had come in the flesh, sings so lugubrious a dirge? Its admirers
have need to inquire whether, even in the days of primitive men and morals,
true justice flourished in it; or was it not perhaps even then, to use the casual
expression of Cicero, rather a colored painting than the living reality? But,
if God will, we shall consider this elsewhere. For I mean in its own place to
show that--according to the definitions in which Cicero himself, using Scipio as
his mouthpiece, briefly propounded what a republic is, and what a people is,
and according to many testimonies, both of his own lips and of those who took
part in that same debate--Rome never was a republic, because true justice had
never a place in it. But accepting the more feasible definitions of a republic, I
grant there was a republic of a certain kind, and certainly much better
administered by the more ancient Romans than by their modern representatives. But the
fact is, true justice has no existence save in that republic whose founder and
ruler is Christ, if at least any choose to call this a republic; and indeed we
cannot deny that it is the people's weal. But if perchance this name, which has
become familiar in other connections, be considered alien to our common
parlance, we may at all events say that in this city is true justice; the city of
which Holy Scripture says, "Glorious things are said of thee, O city of God."
CHAP. 22.--THAT THE ROMAN GODS NEVER TOOK ANY STEPS TO PREVENT THE REPUBLIC
FROM BEING RUINED BY IMMORALITY.
But what is relevant to the present question is this, that however
admirable our adversaries say the republic was or is, it is certain that by the
testimony of their own most learned writers it had become, long before the coming of
Christ, utterly wicked and dissolute, and indeed had no existence, but had been
destroyed by profligacy. To prevent this, surely these guardian gods ought to
have given precepts of morals and a rule of life to the people by whom they
were worshipped in so many temples, with so great a variety of priests and
sacrifices, with such numberless and diverse rites, so many festal solemnities, so
many celebrations of magnificent games. But in all this the demons only looked
after their own interest, and cared not at all how their worshippers lived, or
rather were at pains to induce them to lead an abandoned life, so long as they
paid these tributes to their honor, and regarded them with fear. If any one denies
this, let him produce, let him point to, let him read the laws which the gods
had given against sedition, and which the Gracchi transgressed when they threw
everything into confusion; or those Marius, and Cinna, and Carbo broke when
they involved their country in civil wars, most iniquitous and unjustifiable in
their causes, cruelly conducted, and yet more cruelly terminated; or those which
Sylla scorned, whose life, character, and deeds, as described by Sallust and
other historians, are the abhorrence of all mankind. Who will deny that at that
time the republic had become extinct?
Possibly they will be bold enough to suggest in defence of the gods, that
they abandoned the city on account of the profligacy of the citizens, according
to the lines of Virgil:
"Gone from each fane, each sacred shrine, Are those who made this realm
divine."(1)
But, firstly, if it be so, then they cannot complain against the Christian
religion, as if it were that which gave offence to the gods ant caused them to
abandon Rome, since the Roman immorality had long ago driven from the altars of
the city a cloud of little gods, like as many flies. And yet where was this host
of divinities, when, long before the corruption of the primitive morality, Rome
was taken and burnt by the Gauls? Perhaps they were present, but asleep? For
at that time the whole city fell into the hands of the enemy, with the single
exception of the Capitoline hill; and this too would have been taken, had
not--the watchful geese aroused the sleeping gods! And this gave occasion to the
festival of the goose, in which Rome sank nearly to the superstition of the
Egyptians, who worship beasts and birds. But of these adventitious evils which are
inflicted by hostile armies or by some disaster, and which attach rather to the
body than the soul, I am not meanwhile disputing. At present I speak of the decay
of morality, which at first almost imperceptibly lost its brilliant hue, but
afterwards was wholly obliterated, was swept away as by a torrent, and involved
the republic in such disastrous ruin, that though the houses and wails remained
standing the leading writers do not scruple to say that the republic was
destroyed. Now, the departure of the gods "from each fane, each sacred shrine," and
their abandonment of the city to destruction, was an act of justice, if their
laws inculcating justice and a moral life had been held in contempt by that city.
But what kind of gods were these, pray, who declined to live with a people who
worshipped them, and whose corrupt life they had done nothing to reform?
CHAP. 23.--THAT THE VICISSITUDES OF THIS LIFE ARE DEPENDENT NOT ON THE FAVOR
OR HOSTILITY OF DEMONS, BUT ON THE WILL OF THE TRUE GOD.
But, further, is it not obvious that the gods have abetted the fulfilment
of men's desires, instead of authoritatively bridling them? For Marius, a
low-born and self-made man, who ruthlessly provoked and conducted civil wars, was so
effectually aided by them, that he was seven times consul, and died full of
years in his seventh consulship, escaping the hands of Sylla, who immediately
afterwards came into power. Why, then, did they not also aid him, so as to
restrain him from so many enormities? For if it is said that the gods had no hand in
his success, this is no trivial admission that a man can attain the dearly
coveted felicity of this life even though his own gods be not propitious; that men
can be loaded with the gifts of fortune as Marius was, can enjoy health, power,
wealth, honours, dignity, length of days, though the gods be hostile to him;
and that, on the other hand, men can be tormented as Regulus was, with captivity,
bondage, destitution, watchings, pain, and cruel death, though the gods be his
friends. To concede this is to make a compendious confession that the gods are
useless, and their worship superfluous. If the gods have taught the people
rather what goes clean counter to the virtues of the soul, and that integrity of
life which meets a reward after death; if even in respect of temporal and
transitory blessings they neither hurt those whom they hate nor profit whom they
love, why are they worshipped, why are they invoked with such eager homage? Why do
men murmur in difficult and sad emergencies, as if the gods had retired in
anger? and why, on their account, is the Christian religion injured by the most
unworthy calumnies? If in temporal matters they have power either for good or for
evil, why did they stand by Marius, the worst of Rome's citizens, and abandon
Regulus, the best? Does this not prove themselves to be most unjust and wicked?
And even if it be supposed that for this very reason they are the rather to be
feared and worshipped, this is a mistake; for we do not read that Regulus
worshipped them less assiduously than Marius. Neither is it apparent that a wicked
life is to be chosen, on the ground that the gods are supposed to have favored
Marius more than Regulus. For Metellus, the most highly esteemed of all the
Romans, who had five sons in the consulship, was prosperous even in this life; and
Catiline, the worst of men, reduced to poverty and defeated in the war his own
guilt had aroused, lived and perished miserably. Real and secure felicity is
the peculiar possession of those who worship that God by whom alone it can be
conferred.
It is thus apparent, that when the republic was being destroyed by
profligate manners, its gods did nothing to hinder its destruction by the direction or
correction of its manners, but rather accelerated its destruction by
increasing the demoralization and corruption that already existed. They need not pretend
that their goodness was shocked by the iniquity of the city, and that they
withdrew in anger. For they were there, sure enough; they are detected, convicted:
they were equally unable to break silence so as to guide others, and to keep
silence so as to conceal themselves. I do not dwell on the fact that the
inhabitants of Minturnae took pity on Marius, and commended him to the goddess Marica
in her grove, that she might give him success in all things, and that from the
abyss of despair in which he then lay he forthwith returned unhurt to Rome, and
entered the city the ruthless leader of a ruthless army; and they who wish to
know how bloody was his victory, how unlike a citizen, and how much more
relentlessly than any foreign foe he acted, let them read the histories. But this, as
I said, I do not dwell upon; nor do I attribute the bloody bliss of Marius to,
I know not what Minturnian goddess [Marica], but rather to the secret
providence of God, that the mouths of our adversaries might be shut, and that they who
are not led by passion, but by prudent consideration of events, might be
delivered from error. And even if the demons have any power in these matters, they
have only that power which the secret decree of the Almighty allots to them, in
order that we may not set too great store by earthly prosperity, seeing it is
oftentimes vouchsafed even to wicked men like Marius; and that we may not, on the
other hand, regard it as an evil, since we see that many good and pious
worshippers of the one true God are, in spite of the demons pre-eminently successful;
and, finally, that we may not suppose that these unclean spirits are either to
be propitiated or feared for the sake of earthly blessings or calamities: for
as wicked men on earth cannot do all they would, so neither can these demons,
but only in so far as they are permitted by the decree of Him whose judgments
are fully comprehensible, justly reprehensible by none.
CHAP. 24.--OF THE DEEDS OF SYLLA, IN WHICH THE DEMONS BOASTED THAT HE HAD
THEIR HELP.
It is certain that Sylla--whose rule was so cruel that, in comparison with
it, the preceding state of things which he came to avenge was regretted--when
first he advanced towards Rome to give battle to Marius, found the auspices so
favourable when he sacrificed, that, according to Livy's account, the augur
Postumius expressed his willingness to lose his head if Sylla did not, with the
help of the gods, accomplish what he designed. The gods, you see, had not
departed from "every fane and sacred shrine," since they were still predicting the
issue of these affairs, and yet were taking no steps to correct Sylla himself.
Their presages promised him great prosperity but no threatenings of theirs subdued
his evil passions. And then, when he was in Asia conducting the war against
Mithridates, a message from Jupiter was delivered to him by Lucius Titius, to the
effect that he would conquer Mithridates; and so it came to pass. And
afterwards, when he was meditating a return to Rome for the purpose of avenging in the
blood of the citizens injuries done to himself and his friends, a second
message from Jupiter was delivered to him by a soldier of the sixth legion, to the
effect that it was he who had predicted the victory over Mithridates, and that
now he promised to give him power to recover the republic from his enemies,
though with great bloodshed. Sylla at once inquired of the soldier what form had
appeared to him; and, on his reply, recognized that it was the same as Jupiter had
formerly employed to convey to him the assurance regarding the victory over
Mithridates. How, then, can the gods be justified in this matter for the care
they took to predict these shadowy successes, and for their negligence in
correcting Sylla, and restraining him from stirring up a civil war so lamentable and
atrocious, that it not merely disfigured, but extinguished, the republic? The
truth is, as I have often said, and as Scripture informs us, and as the facts
themselves sufficiently indicate, the demons are found to look after their own ends
only, that they may be regarded and worshipped as gods, and that men may be
induced to offer to them a worship which associates them with their crimes, and
involves them in one common wickedness and judgment of God.
Afterwards, when Sylla had come to Tarentum, and had sacrificed there, he
saw on the head of the victim's liver the likeness of a golden crown. Thereupon
the same soothsayer Postumius interpreted this to signify a signal victory,
and ordered that he only should eat of the entrails. A little afterwards, the
slave of a certain Lucius Pontius cried out, "I am Bellona's messenger; the
victory is yours, Sylla!" Then he added that the Capitol should be burned. As soon as
he had uttered this prediction he left the camp, but returned the following
day more excited than ever, and shouted, "The Capitol is fired!" And fired indeed
it was. This it was easy for a demon both to foresee and quickly to announce.
But observe, as relevant to our subject, what kind of gods they are under whom
these men desire to live, who blaspheme the Saviour that delivers the wills of
the faithful from the dominion of devils. The man cried out in prophetic
rapture, "The victory is yours, Sylla!" And to certify that he spoke by a divine
spirit, he predicted also an event which was shortly to happen, and which indeed
did fall out, in a place from which he in whom this spirit was speaking was far
distant. But he never cried, "Forbear thy villanies, Sylla!"--the villanies
which were committed at Rome by that victor to whom a golden crown on the calf's
liver had been shown as the divine evidence of his victory. If such signs as this
were customarily sent by just gods, and not by wicked demons, then certainly
the entrails he consulted should rather have given Sylla intimation of the cruel
disasters that were to befall the city and himself. For that victory was not
so conducive to his exaltation to power, as it was fatal to his ambition; for by
it he became so insatiable in his desires, and was rendered so arrogant and
reckless by prosperity, that he may be said rather to have inflicted a moral
destruction on himself than corporal destruction on his enemies. But these truely
woeful and deplorable calamities the gods gave him no previous hint of, neither
by entrails, augury, dream, nor prediction. For they feared his amendment more
than his defeat. Yea, they took good care that this glorious conqueror of his
own fellow-citizens should be conquered and led captive by his own infamous
vices, and should thus be the more submissive slave of the demons themselves.
CHAP. 25.--HOW POWERFULLY THE EVIL SPIRITS INCITE MEN TO WICKED ACTIONS, BY
GIVING THEM THE QUASI-DIVINE AUTHORITY OF THEIR EXAMPLE.
Now, who does not hereby comprehend,-unless he has preferred to imitate
such gods rather than by divine grace to withdraw himself from their
fellowship,--who does not see how eagerly these evil spirits strive by their example to
lend, as it were, divine authority to crime? Is not this proved by the fact that
they were seen in a wide plain in Campania rehearsing among themselves the
battle which shortly after took place there with great bloodshed between the armies
of Rome? For at first there were heard loud crashing noises, and afterwards
many reported that they had seen for some days together two armies engaged. And
when this battle ceased, they found the ground all indented with just such
footprints of men and horses as a great conflict would leave. If, then, the deities
were veritably fighting with one another, the civil wars of men are sufficiently
justified; yet, by the way, let it be observed that such pugnacious gods must
be very wicked or very wretched. If, however, it was but a sham-fight, what did
they intend by this, but that the civil wars of the Romans should seem no
wickedness, but an imitation of the gods? For already the civil wars had begun; and
before this, some lamentable battles and execrable massacres had occurred.
Already many had been moved by the story of the soldier, who, on stripping the
spoils of his slain foe, recognized in the stripped corpse his own brother, and,
with deep curses on civil wars, slew himself there and then on his brother's
body. To disguise the bitterness of such tragedies, and kindle increasing ardor in
this monstrous warfare, these malign demons, who were reputed and worshipped
as gods, fell upon this plan of revealing themselves in a state of civil war,
that no compunction for fellow-citizens might cause the Romans to shrink from
such battles, but that the human criminality might be justified by the divine
example. By a like craft, too, did these evil spirits command that scenic
entertainments, of which I have already spoken, should be instituted and dedicated to
them. And in these entertainments the poetical compositions and actions of the
drama ascribed such iniquities to the gods, that every one might safely imitate
them, whether he believed the gods had actually done such things, or, not
believing this, yet perceived that they most eagerly desired to be represented as
having done them. And that no one might suppose, that in representing the gods as
fighting with one another, the poets had slandered them, and imputed to them
unworthy actions, the gods themselves, to complete the deception, confirmed the
compositions of the poets by exhibiting their own battles to the eyes of men,
not only through actions in the theatres, but in their own persons on the actual
field.
We have been forced to bring forward these facts, because their authors
have not scrupled to say and to write that the Roman republic had already been
ruined by the depraved moral habits of the citizens, and had ceased to exist
before the advent of our Lord Jesus Christ. Now this ruin they do not impute to
their own gods, though they impute to our Christ the evils of this life, which
cannot ruin good men, be they alive or dead. And this they do, though our Christ
has issued so many precepts inculcating virtue and restraining vice; while their
own gods have done nothing whatever to preserve that republic that served
them, and to restrain it from ruin by such precepts, but have rather hastened its
destruction, by corrupting its morality through their pestilent example. No one,
I fancy, will now be bold enough to say that the republic was then ruined
because of the departure of the gods "from each fane, each sacred shrine," as if
they were the friends of virtue, and were offended by the vices of men. No, there
are too many presages from entrails, auguries, soothsayings, whereby they
boastingly proclaimed themselves prescient of future events and controllers of the
fortune of war,--all which prove them to have been present. And had they been
indeed absent the Romans would never in these civil wars have been so far
transported by their own passions as they were by the instigations of these gods.
CHAP, 26.--THAT THE DEMONS GAVE IN SECRET CERTAIN OBSCURE INSTRUCTIONS IN
MORALS, WHILE IN PUBLIC THEIR OWN SOLEMNITIES INCULCATED ALL WICKEDNESS.
Seeing that this is so,--seeing that the filthy and cruel deeds, the
disgraceful and criminal actions of the gods, whether real or reigned, were at their
own request published, and were consecrated, and dedicated in their honor as
sacred and stated solemnities; seeing they vowed vengeance on those who refused
to exhibit them to the eyes of all, that they might be proposed as deeds worthy
of imitation, why is it that these same demons, who by taking pleasure in such
obscenities, acknowledge themselves to be unclean spirits, and by delighting
in their own villanies and iniquities, real or imaginary, and by requesting from
the immodest, and extorting from the modest, the celebration of these
licentious acts, proclaim themselves instigators to a criminal and lewd life;--why, I
ask, are they represented as giving some good moral precepts to a few of their
own elect, initiated in the secrecy of their shrines? If it be so, this very
thing only serves further to demonstrate the malicious craft of these pestilent
spirits. For so great is the influence of probity and chastity, that all men, or
almost all men, are moved by the praise of these virtues; nor is any man so
depraved by vice, but he hath some feeling of honor left in him. So that, unless
the devil sometimes transformed himself, as Scripture says, into an angel of
light, (1) he could not compass his deceitful purpose. Accordingly, in public, a
bold impurity fills the ear of the people with noisy clamor; in private, a
reigned chastity speaks in scarce audible whispers to a few: an open stage is
provided for shameful things, but on the) praiseworthy the curtain fails: grace
hides disgrace flaunts: a wicked deed draws an overflowing house, a virtuous speech
finds scarce a hearer, as though purity were to be blushed at, impurity
boasted of. Where else can such confusion reign, but in devils' temples? Where, but
in the haunts of deceit? For the secret precepts are given as a sop to the
virtuous, who are few in number; the wicked exam-pies are exhibited to encourage the
vicious, who are countless.
Where and when those initiated in the mysteries of Coelestis received any
good instructions, we know not. What we do know is, that before her shrine, in
which her image is set, and amidst a vast crowd gathering from all quarters,
and standing closely packed together, we were intensely interested spectators of
the games which were going on, and saw, as we pleased to turn the eye, on this
side a grand display of harlots, on the other the virgin goddess; we saw this
virgin worshipped with prayer and with obscene rites. There we saw no
shame-faced mimes, no actress over-burdened with modesty; all that the obscene rites
demanded was fully complied with. We were plainly shown what was pleasing to the
virgin deity, and the matron who witnessed the spectacle returned home from the
temple a wiser woman. Some, indeed, of the more prudent women turned their faces
from the immodest movements of the players, and learned the art of wickedness
by a furtive regard. For they were restrained, by the modest demeanor due to
men, from looking boldly at the immodest gestures; but much more were they
restrained from condemning with chaste heart the sacred rites of her whom they
adored. And yet this licentiousness--which, if practised in one's home, could only be
done there in secret--was practised as a public lesson in the temple; and if
any modesty remained in men, it was occupied in marvelling that wickedness which
men could not unrestrainedly commit should be part of the religious teaching
of the gods, and that to omit its exhibition should incur the anger of the gods.
What spirit can that be, which by a hidden inspiration stirs men's corruption,
and goads them to adultery, and feeds on the full-fledged iniquity, unless it
be the same that finds pleasure in such religious ceremonies, sets in the
temples images of devils, and loves to see in play the images of vices; that
whispers in secret some righteous sayings to deceive the few who are good, and
scatters in public invitations to profligacy, to gain possession of the millions who
are wicked?
CHAP. 27.--THAT THE OBSCENITIES OF THOSE PLAYS WHICH THE ROMANS CONSECRATED IN
ORDER TO PROPITIATE THEIR GODS, CONTRIBUTED LARGELY TO THE OVERTHROW OF PUBLIC
ORDER.
Cicero, a weighty man, and a philosopher in his way, when about to be made
edile, wished the citizens to understand(1) that, among the other duties of
his magistracy, he must propitiate Flora by the celebration of games. And these
games are reckoned devout in proportion to their lewdness. In another place,(2)
and when he was now consul, and the state in great peril, he says that games
had been celebrated for ten days together, and that nothing had been omitted
which could pacify the gods: as if it had not been more satisfactory to irritate
the gods by temperance, than to pacify them by debauchery; and to provoke their
hate by honest living, than soothe it by such unseemly grossness. For no matter
how cruel was the ferocity of those men who were threatening the state, and on
whose account the gods were being propitiated, it could not have been more
hurtful than the alliance of gods who were won with the foulest vices. To avert the
danger which threatened men's bodies, the gods were conciliated in a fashion
that drove virtue from their spirits; and the gods did not enrol themselves as
defenders of the battlements against the besiegers, until they had first stormed
and sacked the morality of the citizens. This propitiation of such
divinities,--a propitiation so wanton, so impure, so immodest, so wicked, so filthy, whose
actors the innate and praiseworthy virtue of the Romans disabled from civic
honors, erased from their tribe, recognized as polluted and made infamous;--this
propitiation, I say, so foul, so detestable, and alien from every religious
feeling, these fabulous and ensnaring accounts of the criminal actions of the
gods, these scandalous actions which they either shamefully and wickedly committed,
or more shamefully and wickedly reigned, all this the whole city learned in
public both by the words and gestures of the actors. They saw that the gods
delighted in the commission of these things, and therefore believed that they wished
them not only to be exhibited to them, but to be imitated by themselves. But
as for that good and honest instruction which they speak of, it was given in
such secrecy, and to so few (if indeed given at all), that they seemed rather to
fear it might be divulged, than that it might not be practised.
CHAP. 28. --THAT THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION IS HEALTH-GIVING.
They, then, are but abandoned and ungrateful wretches, in deep and fast
bondage to that malign spirit, who complain and murmur that men are rescued by
the name of Christ from the hellish thraldom of these unclean spirits, and from a
participation in their punishment, and are brought out of the night of
pestilential ungodliness into the light of most healthful piety. Only such men could
murmur that the masses flock to the churches and their chaste acts of worship,
where a seemly separation of the sexes is observed; where they learn how they
may so spend this earthly life, as to merit a blessed eternity hereafter; where
Holy Scripture and instruction in righteousness are proclaimed from a raised
platform in presence of all, that both they who do the word may hear to their
salvation, and they who do it not may hear to judgment. And though some enter who
scoff at such precepts, all their petulance is either quenched by a sudden
change, or is restrained through fear or shame. For no filthy and wicked action is
there set forth to be gazed at or to be imitated; but either the precepts of
the true God are recommended, His miracles narrated, His gifts praised, or His
benefits implored.
CHAP. 29.--AN EXHORTATION TO THE ROMANS TO RENOUNCE PAGANISM.
This, rather, is the religion worthy of your desires, O admirable Roman
race,--the progeny of your Scaevolas and Scipios, of Regulus, and of Fabricius.
This rather covet, this distinguish from that foul vanity and crafty malice of
the devils. If there is in your nature any eminent virtue, only by true piety is
it purged and perfected, while by impiety it is wrecked and punished. Choose
now what you will pursue, that your praise may be not in yourself, but in the
true God, in whom is no error. For of popular glory you have had your share; but
by the secret providence of God, the true religion was not offered to your
choice. Awake, it is now day; as you have already awaked in the persons of some in
whose perfect virtue and sufferings for the true faith we glory: for they,
contending on all sides with hostile powers, and conquering them all by bravely
dying, have purchased for us this country of ours with their blood; to which
country we invite you, and exhort you to add yourselves to the number of the
citizens of this city, which also has a sanctuary(3) of its own in the true remission
of sins.
Do not listen to those degenerate sons of thine who slander Christ and
Christians, and impute to them these disastrous times, though they desire times in
which they may enjoy rather impunity for their wickedness than a peaceful
life. Such has never been Rome's ambition even in regard to her earthly country.
Lay hold now on the celestial country, which is easily won, and in which you will
reign truly and for ever. For there shall thou find no vestal fire, no
Capitoline stone, but the one true God.
"No date, no goal will here ordain:
But grant an endless, boundless reign."(1)
No longer, then, follow after false and deceitful gods; abjure them
rather, and despise them, bursting forth into true liberty. Gods they are not, but
malignant spirits, to whom your eternal happiness will be a sore punishment.
Juno, from whom you deduce your origin according to the flesh, did not so bitterly
grudge Rome's citadels to the Trojans, as these devils whom yet ye repute gods,
grudge an everlasting seat to the race of mankind. And thou thyself hast in no
wavering voice passed judgment on them, when thou didst pacify them with
games, and yet didst account as infamous the men by whom the plays were acted.
Suffer us, then, to assert thy freedom against the unclean spirits who had imposed
on thy neck the yoke of celebrating their own shame and filthiness. The actors
of these divine crimes thou hast removed from offices of honor; supplicate the
true God, that He may remove from thee those gods who delight in their
crimes,--a most disgraceful thing if the crimes are really theirs, and a most malicious
invention if the. crimes are feigned. Well done, in that thou hast
spontaneously banished from the number of your citizens all actors and players. Awake more
fully: the majesty of God cannot be propitiated by that which defiles the
dignity of man How, then, can you believe that gods who take pleasure in such lewd
plays, belong to the number of the holy powers of heaven, when the men by whom
these plays are acted are by yourselves refused admission into the number of
Roman citizens even of the lowest grade? Incomparably more glorious than Rome, is
that heavenly city in which for victory you have truth; for dignity, holiness;
for peace, felicity; for life, eternity. Much less does it admit into its
society such gods, if thou dost blush to admit into thine such men. Wherefore, if
thou wouldst attain to the blessed city, shun the society of devils. They who are
propitiated by deeds of shame, are unworthy of the worship of right-hearted
men. Let these, then, be obliterated from your worship by the cleansing of the
Christian religion, as those men were blotted from your citizenship by the
censor's mark.
But, so far as regards carnal benefits, which are the only blessings the
wicked desire to enjoy, and carnal miseries, which alone they shrink from
enduring, we will show in the following book that the demons have not the power they
are supposed to have; and although they had it, we ought rather on that account
to despise these blessings, than for the sake of them to worship those gods,
and by worshipping them to miss the attainment of these blessings they grudge
us. But that they have not even this power which is ascribed to them by those who
worship them for the sake of temporal advantages, this, I say, I will prove in
the following book; so let us here close the present argument.