THE CITY OF GOD: BOOK VI
BOOK VI.
ARGUMENT.
HITHERTO THE ARGUMENT HAS BEEN CONDUCTED AGAINST THOSE WHO BELIEVE THAT THE
GODS ARE TO BE WORSHIPPED FOR THE SAKE OF TEMPORAL ADVANTAGES, NOW IT IS DIRECTED
AGAINST THOSE WHO BELIEVE THAT THEY ARE TO BE WORSHIPPED FOR THE SAKE OF
ETERNAL LIFE. AUGUSTIN DEVOTES THE FIVE FOLLOWING BOOKS TO THE CONFUTATION OF THIS
LATTER BELIEF, AND FIRST OF ALL SHOWS HOW MEAN AN OPINION OF THE GODS WAS HELD
BY VARRO HIMSELF, THE MOST ESTEEMED WRITER ON HEATHEN THEOLOGY. OF THIS THEOLOGY
AUGUSTIN ADOPTS VARRO'S DIVISION INTO THREE KINDS, MYTHICAL, NATURAL, AND
CIVIL; AND AT ONCE DEMONSTRATES THAT NEITHER THE MYTHICAL NOR THE CIVIL CAN
CONTRIBUTE ANYTHING TO THE HAPPINESS OF THE FUTURE LIFE.
PREFACE.
IN the five former books, I think I have sufficiently disputed against
those who believe that the many false gods, which the Christian truth shows to be
useless images, or unclean spirits and pernicious demons, or certainly
creatures, not the Creator, are to be worshipped for the advantage of this mortal life,
and of terrestrial affairs, with that rite and service which the Greeks call
<greek>latreia</greek>, and which is due to the one true God. And who does not
know that, in the face of excessive stupidity and obstinacy, neither these five
nor any other number of books whatsoever could be enough, when it is esteemed
the glory of vanity to yield to no amount of strength on the side of
truth,--certainly to his destruction over whom so heinous a vice tyrannizes? For,
notwithstanding all the assiduity of the physician who attempts to effect a cure, the
disease remains unconquered, not through any fault of his, but because of the
incurableness of the sick man. But those who thoroughly weigh the things which
they read, having understood and considered them, without any, or with no great
and excessive degree of that obstinacy which belongs to a long-cherished error,
will more readily judge that, in the five books already finished, we have done
more than the necessity of the question demanded, than that we have given it
less discussion than it required. And they cannot have doubted but that all the
hatred which the ignorant attempt to bring upon the Christian religion on
account of the disasters of this life, and the destruction and change which befall
terrestrial things, whilst the learned do not merely dissimulate, but encourage
that hatred, contrary to their own consciences, being possessed by a mad
impiety;--they cannot have doubted, I say, but that this hatred is devoid of right
reflection and reason, and full of most light temerity, and most pernicious
animosity.
CHAP. 1.--OF THOSE WHO MAINTAIN THAT THEY WORSHIP THE GODS NOT FOR THE SAKE OF
TEMPORAL BUT ETERNAL ADVANTAGES.
Now, as, in the next place (as the promised order demands), those are to
be refuted and taught who contend that the gods of the nations, which the
Christian truth destroys, are to be worshipped not on account of this life, but on
account of that which is to be after death, I shall do well to commence my
disputation with the truthful oracle of the holy psalm, "Blessed is the man whose
hope is the Lord God, and who respecteth not vanities and lying follies."(1)
Nevertheless, in all vanities and lying follies the philosophers are to be listened
to with far more toleration, who have repudiated those opinions and errors of
the people; for the people set up images to the deities, and either reigned
concerning those whom they call immortal gods many false and unworthy things, or
believed them, already feigned, and, when believed, mixed them up with their
worship and sacred rites.
With those men who, though not by free avowal of their convictions, do
still testify that they disapprove of those things by their muttering
disapprobation during disputations on the subject, it may not be very far amiss to discuss
the following question: Whether for the sake of the life which is to be after
death, we ought to worship, not the one God who made all creatures spiritual and
corporeal, but those many gods who, as some of these philosophers hold, were
made by that one God, and placed by Him in their respective sublime spheres, and
are therefore considered more excellent and more noble than all the others?(1)
But who will assert that it must be affirmed and contended that those gods,
certain of whom I have mentioned in the fourth book,(2) to whom are distributed,
each to each the charges of minute things, do bestow eternal life? But will
those most skilled and most acute men, who glory in having written for the great
benefit of men, to teach on what account each god is to be worshipped, and what
is to be sought from each, lest with most disgraceful absurdity, such as a
mimic is wont for the sake of merriment to exhibit, water should be sought from
Liber, wine from the Lymphs,--will those men indeed affirm to any man supplicating
the immortal gods, that when he shall have asked wine from the Lymphs, and
they shall have answered him, "We have water, seek wine from Liber," he may
rightly say, "If ye have not wine, at least give me eternal life?" What more
monstrous than this absurdity? Will not these Lymphs,--for they are wont to be very
easily made laugh,(3) --laughing loudly (if they do not attempt to deceive like
demons), answer the suppliant, "O man, dost thou think that we have life (vitam)
in our power, who thou hearest have not even the vine (vitem)?" It is therefore
most impudent folly to seek and hope for eternal life from such gods as are
asserted so to preside over the separate minute concernments of this most
sorrowful and short life, and whatever is useful for supporting and propping it, as
that if anything which is under the care and power of one be sought from another,
it is so incongruous and absurd that it appears very like to mimic
drollery,--which, when it is done by mimics knowing what they are doing, is deservedly
laughed at in the theatre, but when it is done by foolish persons, who do not know
better, is more deservedly ridiculed in the world. Wherefore, as concerns
those gods which the states have established, it has been cleverly invented and
handed down to memory by learned men, what god or goddess is to be supplicated in
relation to every particular thing,--what, for instance, is to be sought from
Liber, what from the Lymphs, what from Vulcan, and so of all the rest, some of
whom I have mentioned in the fourth book, and some I have thought right to omit.
Further, if it is an error to seek wine from Ceres, bread from Liber, water
from Vulcan, fire from the Lymphs, how much greater absurdity ought it to be
thought, if supplication be made to any one of these for eternal life?
Wherefore, if, when we were inquiring what gods or goddesses are to be
believed to be able to confer earthly kingdoms upon men, all things having been
discussed, it was shown to be very far from the truth to think that even
terrestrial kingdoms are established by any of those many false deities, is it not most
insane impiety to believe that eternal life, which is, without any doubt or
comparison, to be preferred to all terrestrial kingdoms, can be given to any one
by any of these gods? For the reason why such gods seemed to us not to be able
to give even an earthly kingdom, was not because they are very great and
exalted, whilst that is something small and abject, which they, in their so great
sublimity, would not condescend to care for, but because, however deservedly any
one may, in consideration of human frailty, despise the falling pinnacles of an
earthly kingdom, these gods have presented such an appearance as to seem most
unworthy to have the granting and preserving of even those entrusted to them;
and consequently, if (as we have taught in the two last books of our work, where
this matter is treated of) no god out of all that crowd, either belonging to,
as it were, the plebeian or to the noble gods, is fit to give mortal kingdoms to
mortals, how much less is he able to make immortals of mortals?
And more than this, if, according to the opinion of those with whom we are
now arguing, the gods are to be worshipped, not on account of the present
life, but of that which is to be after death, then, certainly, they are not to be
worshipped on account of those particular things which are distributed and
portioned out (not by any law of rational truth, but by mere vain conjecture) to
the power of such gods, as they believe they ought to be worshipped, who contend
that their worship is necessary for all the desirable things of this mortal
life, against whom I have disputed sufficiently, as far as I was able, in the five
preceding books. These things being so, if the age itself of those who
worshipped the goddess Juventas should be characterized by remarkable vigor, whilst
her despisers should either die within the years of youth, or should, during that
period, grow cold as with the torpor of old age; if bearded Fortuna should
cover the cheeks of her worshippers more handsomely and more gracefully than all
others, whilst we should see those by whom she was despised either altogether
beardless or ill-bearded; even then we should most rightly say, that thus far
these several gods had power, limited in some way by their functions, and that,
consequently, neither ought eternal life to be sought from Juventas, who could
not give a beard, nor ought any good thing after this life to be expected from
Fortuna Barbara, who has no power even in this life to give the age itself at
which the beard grows. But now, when their worship is necessary not even on
account of those very things which they think are subjected to their power, --for
many worshippers of the goddess Juventas have not been at all vigorous at that
age, and many who do not worship her rejoice in youthful strength; and also many
suppliants of Fortuna Barbara have either not been able to attain to any beard
at all, not even an Ugly one, although they who adore her in order to obtain a
beard are ridiculed by her bearded despisers,--is the human heart really so
foolish as to believe that that worship of the gods, which it acknowledges to be
vain and ridiculous with respect to those very temporal and swiftly passing
gifts, over each of which one of these gods is said to preside, is fruitful in
results with respect to eternal life? And that they are able to give eternal life
has not been affirmed even by those who, that they might be worshipped by the
silly populace, distributed in minute division among them these temporal
occupations, that none of them might sit idle; for they had supposed the existence of n
exceedingly great number.
CHAP. 2.--WHAT WE ARE TO BELIEVE THAT VARRO THOUGHT CONCERNING THE GODS OF THE
NATIONS, WHOSE VARIOUS KINDS AND SACRED RITES HE HAS SHOWN TO BE SUCH THAT HE
WOULD HAVE ACTED MORE REVERENTLY TOWARDS THEM HAD HE BEEN ALTOGETHER SILENT
CONCERNING THEM.
Who has investigated those things more carefully than Marcus Varro? Who
has discovered them more learnedly? Who has considered them more attentively? Who
has distinguished them more acutely? Who has written about them more
diligently and more fully?--who, though he is less pleasing in his eloquence, is
nevertheless so full of instruction and wisdom, that in all the erudition which we
call secular, but they liberal, he will teach the student of things as much as
Cicero delights the student of words. And even Tully himself renders him such
testimony, as to say in his Academic books that he had held that disputation which
is there carried on with Marcus Varro, "a man," he adds, "unquestionably the
acutest of all men, and, without any doubt, the most learned."(1) He does not say
the most eloquent or the most fluent, for in reality he was very deficient in
this faculty, but he says, "of all men the most acute." And in those
books,--that is, the Academic,--where he contends that all things are to be doubted, he
adds of him, "without any doubt the most learned." In truth, he was so certain
concerning this thing, that he laid aside that doubt which he is wont to have
recourse to in all things, as if, when about to dispute in favor of the doubt of
the Academics, he had, with respect to this one thing, forgotten that he was an
Academic. But in the first book, when he extols the literary works of the same
Varro, he says, "Us straying and wandering in our own city like strangers, thy
books, as it were, brought home, that at length we might come to know of who
we were and where we were. Thou has opened up to us the age of the country, the
distribution of seasons, the laws of sacred things, and of the priests; thou
hast opened up to us domestic and public discipline; thou hast pointed out to us
the proper places for religious ceremonies, and hast informed us concerning
sacred places. Thou hast shown us the names, kinds, offices, causes of all divine
and human things."(2)
This man, then, of so distinguished and excellent acquirements, and, as
Terentian briefly says of him in a most elegant verse,
"Varro, a man universally informed,"(3)
who read so much that we wonder when he had time to write, wrote so much that
we can scarcely believe any one could have read it all,--this man, I say, so
great in talent, so great in learning, had he had been an opposer and destroyer
of the so-called divine things of which he wrote, and had he said that they
pertained to superstition rather than to religion, might perhaps, even in that
case, not have written so many things which are ridiculous, contemptible,
detestable. But when he so worshipped these same gods, and so vindicated their worship,
as to say, in that same literary work of his, that he was afraid lest they
should perish, not by an assault by enemies, but by the negligence of the citizens,
and that from this ignominy they are being delivered by him, and are being
laid up and preserved in the memory of the good by means of such books, with a
zeal far more beneficial than that through which Metellus is declared to have
rescued the sacred things of Vesta from the flames, and AEneas to have rescued the
Penates from the burning of Troy; and when he nevertheless. gives forth such
things to be read by succeeding ages as are deservedly judged by wise and unwise
to be unfit to be read, and to be most hostile to the truth of religion; what
ought we to think but that a most acute and learned man,--not, however made free
by the Holy Spirit,--was overpowered by the custom and laws of his state, and,
not being able to be silent about those things by which he was influenced,
spoke of them under pretence of commending religion?
CHAP. 3.--VARRO'S DISTRIBUTION OF HIS BOOK WHICH HE COMPOSED CONCERNING THE
ANTIQUITIES OF HUMAN AND DIVINE THINGS.
He wrote forty-one books of antiquities. These he divided into human and
divine things. Twenty-five he devoted to human things, sixteen to divine things;
following this plan in that division,--namely, to give six books to each of
the four divisions of human things. For he directs his attention to these
considerations: who perform, where they perform, when they perform, what they perform.
Therefore in the first six books he wrote concerning men; in the second six,
concerning places; in the third six, concerning times; in the fourth and last
six, concerning things. Four times six, however, make only twenty-four. But he
placed at the head of them one separate work, which spoke of all these things
conjointly.
In divine things, the same order he preserved throughout, as far as
concerns those things which are performed to the gods. For sacred things are
performed by men in places and times. These four things I have mentioned he embraced in
twelve books, allotting three to each. For he wrote the first three concerning
men, the following three concerning places, the third three concerning times,
and the fourth three concerning sacred rites,--showing who should perform,
where they should perform, when they should perform, what they should perform, with
most subtle distinction. But because it was necessary to say--and that
especially was expected--to whom they should perform sacred rites, he wrote concerning
the gods themselves the last three books; and these five times three made
fifteen. But they are in all, as we have said, sixteen. For he put also at the
beginning of these one distinct book, speaking by way of introduction of all which
follows; which being finished, he proceeded to subdivide the first three in
that five-fold distribution which pertain to men, making the first concerning high
priests, the second concerning augurs, the third concerning the fifteen men
presiding over the sacred ceremonies.(1) The second three he made concerning
places, speaking in one of them concerning their chapels, in the second concerning
their temples, and in the third concerning religious places. The next three
which follow these, and pertain to times,--that is, to festival days,--he
distributed so as to make one concerning holidays,the other concerning the circus
games, and the third concerning scenic plays. Of the fourth three, pertaining to
sacred things, he devoted one to consecrations, another to private, the last to
public, sacred rites. In the three which remain, the gods themselves follow this
pompous train, as it were, for whom all this culture has been expended. In the
first book are the certain gods, in the second the uncertain, in the third, and
last of all, the chief and select gods.
CHAP. 4.--THAT FROM THE DISPUTATION OF VARRO, IT FOLLOWS THAT THE WORSHIPPERS
OF THE GODS REGARD HUMAN THINGS AS MORE ANCIENT THAN DIVINE THINGS.
In this whole series of most beautiful and most subtle distributions and
distinctions, it will most easily appear evident from the things we have said
already, and from what is to be said hereafter, to any man who is not, in the
obstinacy of his heart, an enemy to himself, that it is vain to seek and to hope
for, and even most impudent to wish for eternal life. For these institutions are
either the work of men or of demons,--not of those whom they call good demons,
but, to speak more plainly, of unclean, and, without controversy, malign
spirits, who with wonderful slyness and secretness suggest to the thoughts of the
impious, and sometimes openly present to their understandings, noxious opinions,
by which the human mind grows more and more foolish, and becomes unable to
adapt itself to and abide in the immutable and eternal truth, and seek to confirm
these opinions by every kind of fallacious attestation in their power. This very
same Varro testifies that he wrote first concerning human things, but
afterwards concerning divine things, because the states existed first, and afterward
these things were instituted by them. But the true religion was not instituted by
any earthly state, but plainly it established the celestial city. It, however,
is inspired and taught by the true God, the giver of eternal life to His true
worshippers.
The following is the reason Varro gives when he confesses that he had
written first concerning human things, and afterwards of divine things, because
these divine things were instituted by men:--"As the painter is before the painted
tablet, the mason before the edifice, so states are before those things which
are instituted by states." But he says that he would have written first
concerning the gods, afterwards concerning men, if he had been writing concerning the
whole nature of the gods,--as if he were really writing concerning some portion
of, and not all, the nature of the gods; or as if, indeed, some portion of,
though not all, the nature of the gods ought not to be put before that of men.
How, then, comes it that in those three last books, when he is diligently
explaining the certain, uncertain and select gods, he seems to pass over no portion of
the nature of the gods? Why, then, does he say, "If we had been writing on the
whole nature of the gods, we would first have finished the divine things
before we touched the human?" For he either writes concerning the whole nature of
the gods, or concerning some portion of it, or concerning no part of it at all.
If concerning it all, it is certainly to be put before human things; if
concerning some part of it, why should it not, from the very nature of the case,
precede human things? Is not even some part of the gods to be preferred to the whole
of humanity? But if it is too much to prefer a part of the divine to all human
things, that part is certainly worthy to be preferred to the Romans at least.
For he writes the books concerning human things, not with reference to the whole
world, but only to Rome; which books he says he had properly placed, in the
order of writing, before the books on divine things, like a painter before the
painted tablet, or a mason before the building, most openly confessing that, as a
picture or a structure, even these divine things were instituted by men. There
remains only the third supposition, that he is to be understood to have
written concerning no divine nature, but that he did not wish to say this openly, but
left it to the intelligent to infer; for when one says "not all," usage
understands that to mean "some," but it may be understood as meaning none, because
that which is none is neither all nor some. In fact, as he himself says, if he
had been writing concerning all the nature of the gods, its due place would have
been before human things in the order of writing. But, as the truth declares,
even though Varro is silent, the divine nature should have taken precedence of
Roman things, though it were not all, but only some. But it is properly put
after, therefore it is none. His arrangement, therefore, was due, not to a desire
to give human things priority to divine things, but to his unwillingness to
prefer false things to true. For in what he wrote on human things, he followed the
history of affairs; but in what he wrote concerning those things which they
call divine, what else did he follow but mere conjectures about vain things? This,
doubtless, is what, in a subtle manner, he wished to signify; not only writing
concerning divine things after the human, but even giving a reason why he did
so; for if he had suppressed this, some, perchance, would have defended his
doing so in one way, and some in another. But in that very reason he has rendered,
he has left nothing for men to conjecture at will, and has sufficiently proved
that he preferred men to the institutions of men, not the nature of men to the
nature of the gods. Thus he confessed that, in writing the books concerning
divine things, he did not write concerning the truth which belongs to nature, but
the falseness which belongs to error; which he has elsewhere expressed more
openly (as I have mentioned in the fourth book(1)), saying that, had he been
founding a new city himself, he would have written according to the order of
nature; but as he had only found an old one, he could not but follow its custom.
CHAP. 5.--CONCERNING THE THREE KINDS OF THEOLOGY ACCORDING TO VARRO, NAMELY,
ONE FABULOUS, THE OTHER NATURAL, THE THIRD CIVIL.
Now what are we to say of this proposition of his, namely, that there are
three kinds of theology, that is, of the account which is given of the gods;
and of these, the one is called mythical, the other physical, and the third
civil? Did the Latin usage permit, we should call the kind which he has placed first
in order fabular,(2) but let us call it fabulous,(3) for mythical is derived
from the Greek <greek>muqos</greek>, a fable; but that the second should be
called natural, the usage of speech now admits; the third he himself has designated
in Latin, calling it civil.(1) Then he says, "they call that kind mythical
which the poets chiefly use; physical, that which the philosophers use; civil,
that which the people use. As to the first I have mentioned," says he, "in it are
many fictions, which are contrary to the dignity and nature of the immortals.
For we find in it that one god has been born from the head, another from the
thigh, another from drops of blood; also, in this we find that gods have stolen,
committed adultery, served men; in a word, in this all manner of things are
attributed to the gods, such as may befall, not merely any man, but even the most
contemptible man." He certainty, where he could, where he dared, where he
thought he could do it with impunity, has manifested, without any of the haziness of
ambiguity, how great injury was done to the nature of the gods by lying fables;
for he was speaking, not concerning natural theology, not concerning civil,
but concerning fabulous theology, which he thought he could freely find fault
with.
Let us see, now, what he says concerning the second kind. "The second kind
which I have explained," he says, "is that concerning which philosophers have
left many books, in which they treat such questions as these: what gods there
are, where they are, of what kind and character they are, since what time they
have existed, or if they have existed from eternity; whether they are of fire,
as Heraclitus believes; or of number, as Pythagoras; or of atoms, as Epicurus
says; and other such things, which men's ears can more easily hear inside the
walls of a school than outside in the Forum." He finds fault with nothing in this
kind of theology which they call physical, and which belongs to philosophers,
except that he has related their controversies among themselves, through which
there has arisen a multitude of dissentient sects. Nevertheless he has removed
this kind from the Forum, that is, from the populace, but he has shut it up in
schools. But that first kind, most false and most base, he has not removed from
the citizens. Oh, the religious ears of the people, and among them even those
of the Romans, that are not able to bear what the philosophers dispute
concerning the gods! But when the poets sing and stage-players act such things as are
derogatory to the dignity and the nature of the immortals, such as may befall not
a man merely, but the most contemptible man, they not only bear, but willingly
listen to. Nor is this all, but they even consider that these things please
the gods, and that they are propitiated by them.
But some one may say, Let us distinguish these two kinds of theology, the
mythical and the physical,--that is, the fabulous and the natural,--from this
civil kind about which we are now speaking. Anticipating this, he himself has
distinguished them. Let us see now how he explains the civil theology itself. I
see, indeed, why it should be distinguished as fabulous, even because it is
false, because it is base, because it is unworthy. But to wish to distinguish the
natural from the civil, what else is that but to confess that the civil itself
is false? For if that be natural, what fault has it that it should be excluded?
And if this which is called civil be not natural, what merit has it that it
should be admitted? This, in truth, is the cause why he wrote first concerning
human things, and afterwards concerning divine things; since in divine things he
did not follow nature, but the institution of men. Let us look at this civil
theology of his. "The third kind," says he, "is that which citizens in cities, and
especially the priests, ought to know and to administer. From it is to be
known what god each one may suitably worship, what sacred rites and sacrifices each
one may suitably perform." Let us still attend to what follows. "The first
theology," he says, "is especially adapted to the theatre, the second to the
world, the third to the city." Who does not see to which he gives the palm?
Certainly to the second, which he said above is that of the philosophers. For he
testifies that this pertains to the world, than which they think there is nothing
better. But those two theologies, the first and the third,--to wit, those of the
theatre and of the city,--has he distinguished them or united them? For although
we see that the city is in the world, we do not see that it follows that any
things belonging to the city pertain to the world. For it is possible that such
things may be worshipped and believed in the city, according to false opinions,
as have no existence either in the world or out of it. But where is the
theatre but in the city? Who instituted the theatre but the state? For what purpose
did it constitute it but for scenic plays? And to what class of things do scenic
plays belong but to those divine things concerning which these books of
Varro's are written with so much ability?
CHAP. 6.--CONCERNING THE MYTHIC, THAT IS, THE FABULOUS, THEOLOGY, AND THE
CIVIL, AGAINST VARRO.
O Marcus Varro! thou art the most acute, and without doubt the most
learned, but still a man, not God,--now lifted up by the Spirit of God to see and to
announce divine things, thou seest, indeed, that divine things are to be
separated from human trifles and lies, but thou fearest to offend those most corrupt
opinions of the populace, and their customs in public superstitions, which thou
thyself, when thou considerest them on all sides, perceivest, and all your
literature loudly pronounces to be abhorrent from the nature of the gods, even of
such gods as the frailty of the human mind supposes to exist in the elements of
this world. What can the most excellent human talent do here? What can human
learning, though manifold, avail thee in this perplexity? Thou desirest to
worship the natural gods; thou art compelled to worship the civil. Thou hast found
some of the gods to be fabulous, on whom thou vomitest forth very freely what
thou thinkest, and, whether thou wiliest or not, thou wettest therewith even the
civil gods. Thou sayest, forsooth, that the fabulous are adapted to the
theatre, the natural to the world, and the civil to the city; though the world is a
divine work, but cities and theatres are the works of men, and though the gods
who are laughed at in the theatre are not other than those who are adored in the
temples; and ye do not exhibit games in honor of other gods than those to whom
ye immolate victims. How much more freely and more subtly wouldst thou have
decided these hadst thou said that some gods are natural, others established by
men; and concerning those who have been so established, the literature of the
poets gives one account, and that of the priests another,--both of which are,
nevertheless, so friendly the one to the other, through fellowship in falsehood,
that they are both pleasing to the demons, to whom the doctrine of the truth is
hostile.
That theology, therefore, which they call natural, being put aside for a
moment, as it is afterwards to be discussed, we ask if any one is really content
to seek a hope for eternal life from poetical, theatrical, scenic gods? Perish
the thought! The true God avert so wild and sacrilegious a madness! What, is
eternal life to be asked from those gods whom these things pleased, and whom
these things propitiate, in which their own crimes are represented? No one, as I
think, has arrived at such a pitch of headlong and furious impiety. So then,
neither by the fabulous nor by the civil theology does any one obtain eternal
life. For the one sows base things concerning the gods by feigning them, the other
reaps by cherishing them; the one scatters lies, the other gathers them
together; the one pursues divine things with false crimes, the other incorporates
among divine things the plays which are made up of these crimes; the one sounds
abroad in human songs impious fictions concerning the gods, the other consecrates
these for the festivities of the gods themselves; the one sings the misdeeds
and crimes of the gods, the other loves them; the one gives forth or feigns, the
other either attests the true or delights in the false. Both are base; both are
damnable. But the one which is theatrical teaches public abomination, and that
one which is of the city adorns itself with that abomination. Shall eternal
life be hoped for from these, by which this short and temporal life is polluted?
Does the society of wicked men pollute our life if they insinuate themselves
into our affections, and win our assent? and does not the society of demons
pollute the life, who are worshipped with their own crimes?--if with true crimes,
how wicked the demons! if with false, how wicked the worship!
When we say these things, it may perchance seem to some one who is very
ignorant of these matters that only those things concerning the gods which are
sung in the songs of the poets and acted on the stage are unworthy of the divine
majesty, and ridiculous, and too detestable to be celebrated, whilst those
sacred things which not stage-players but priests perform are pure and free from
all unseemliness. Had this been so, never would any one have thought that these
theatrical abominations should be celebrated in their honor, never would the
gods themselves have ordered them to be performed to them. But men are in nowise
ashamed to perform these things in the theatres, because similar things are
carried on in the temples. In short, when the fore-mentioned author attempted to
distinguish the civil theology from the fabulous and natural, as a sort of third
and distinct kind, he wished it to be understood to be rather tempered by both
than separated from either. For he says that those things which the poets write
are less than the people ought to follow, whilst what the philosophers say is
more than it is expedient for the people to pry into. "Which," says he,
"differ in such a way, that nevertheless not a few things from both of them have been
taken to the account of the civil theology; wherefore we will indicate what
the civil theology has in common with that of the poet, though it ought to be
more closely connected with the theology of philosophers." Civil theology is
therefore not quite disconnected from that of the poets. Nevertheless, in another
place, concerning the generations of the gods, he says that the people are more
inclined toward the poets than toward the physical theologists. For in this
place he said what ought to be done; in that other place, what was really done. He
said that the latter had written for the sake of utility, but the poets for the
sake of amusement. And hence the things from the poets' writings, which the
people ought not to follow, are the crimes of the gods; which, nevertheless,
amuse both the people and the gods. For, for amusement's sake, he says, the poets
write, and not for that of utility; nevertheless they write such things as the
gods will desire, and the people perform.
CHAP. 7.--CONCERNING THE LIKENESS AND AGREEMENT OF THE FABULOUS AND CIVIL
THEOLOGIES.
That theology, therefore, which is fabulous, theatrical, scenic, and full
of all baseness and unseemliness, is taken up into the civil theology; and part
of that theology, which in its totality is deservedly judged to be worthy of
reprobation and rejection, is pronounced worthy to be cultivated and
observed;--not at all an incongruous part, as I have undertaken to show, and one which,
being alien to the whole body, was unsuitably attached to and suspended from it,
but a part entirely congruous with, and most harmoniously fitted to the rest,
as a member of the same body. For what else do those images, forms, ages, sexes,
characteristics of the gods show? If the poets have Jupiter with a beard and
Mercury beardless, have not the priests the same? Is the Priapus of the priests
less obscene than the Priapus of the players? Does he receive the adoration of
worshippers in a different form from that in which he moves about the stage for
the amusement of spectators? Is not Saturn old and Apollo young in the shrines
where their images stand as well as when represented by actors' masks? Why are
Forculus, who presides over doors, and Limentinus, who presides over
thresholds and lintels, male gods, and Cardea between them feminine, who presides over
hinges. Are not those things found in books on divine things, which grave poets
have deemed unworthy of their verses? Does the Diana of · the theatre carry
arms, whilst the Diana of the city is simply a virgin? Is the stage Apollo a
lyrist, but the Delphic Apollo ignorant of this art? But these things are decent
compared with the more shameful things. What was thought of Jupiter himself by
those who placed his wet nurse in the Capitol? Did they not bear witness to
Euhemerus, who, not with the garrulity of a fable-teller, but with the gravity of an
historian who had diligently investigated the matter, wrote that all such gods
had been men and mortals? And they who appointed the Epulones as parasites at
the table of Jupiter, what else did they wish for but mimic sacred rites. For if
any mimic had said that parasites of Jupiter were made use of at his table, he
would assuredly have appeared to be seeking to call forth laughter. Varro said
it,--not when he was mocking, but when he was commending the gods did he say
it. His books on divine, not on human, things testify that he wrote this,--not
where he set forth the scenic games, but where he explained the Capitoline laws.
In a word, he is conquered, and confesses that, as they made the gods with a
human form, so they believed that they are delighted with human pleasures.
For also malign spirits were not so wanting to their own business as not
to confirm noxious opinions in the minds of men by converting them into sport.
Whence also is that story about the sacristan of Hercules, which says that,
having nothing to do, he took to playing at dice as a pastime, throwing them
alternately with the one hand for Hercules, with the other for himself, with this
understanding, that if he should win, he should from the funds of the temple
prepare himself a supper, and hire a mistress; but if Hercules should win the game,
he himself should, at his own expense, provide the same for the pleasure of
Hercules. Then, when he had been beaten by himself, as though by Hercules, he gave
to the god Hercules the supper he owed him, and also the most noble harlot
Larentina. But she, having fallen asleep in the temple, dreamed that Hercules had
had intercourse with her, and had said to her that she would find her payment
with the youth whom she should first meet on leaving the temple, and that she
was to believe this to be paid to her by Hercules. And so the first youth that
met her on going out was the wealthy Tarutius, who kept her a long time, and when
he died left her his heir. She, having obtained a most ample fortune, that she
should not seem ungrateful for the divine hire, in her turn made the Roman
people her heir, which she thought to be most acceptable to the deities; and,
having disappeared, the will was found. By which meritorious conduct they say that
she gained divine honors.
Now had these things been reigned by the poets and acted by the mimics,
they would without any doubt have been said to pertain to the fabulous theology,
and would have been judged worthy to be separated from the dignity of the civil
theology. But when these shameful things,--not of the poets, but of the
people; not of the mimics, but of the sacred things; not of the theatres, but of the
temples, that is, not of the fabulous, but of the civil theology,--are reported
by so great an author, not in vain do the actors represent with theatrical art
the baseness of the gods, which is so great; but surely in vain do the priests
attempt, by rites called sacred, to represent their nobleness of character,
which has no existence. There are sacred rites of Juno; and these are celebrated
in her beloved island, Samos, where she was given in marriage to Jupiter. There
are sacred rites of Ceres, in which Proserpine is sought for, having been
carried off by Pluto. There are sacred rites of Venus, in which, her beloved Adonis
being slain by a boar's tooth, the lovely youth is lamented. There are sacred
rites of the mother of the gods, in which the beautiful youth Atys, loved by
her, and castrated by her through a woman's jealousy, is deplored by men who have
suffered the like calamity, whom they call Galli. Since, then, these things
are more unseemly than all scenic abomination, why is it that they strive to
separate, as it were, the fabulous fictions of the poet concerning the gods, as,
forsooth, pertaining to the theatre, from the civil theology which they wish to
belong to the city, as though they were separating from noble and worthy things,
things unworthy and base? Wherefore there is more reason to thank the
stage-actors, who have spared the eyes of men and have not laid bare by theatrical
exhibition all the things which are hid by the walls of the temples. What good is
to be thought of their sacred rites which are concealed in darkness, when those
which are brought forth into the light are so detestable? And certainly they
themselves have seen what they transact in secret through the agency of mutilated
and effeminate men. Yet they have not been able to conceal those same men
miserably and vile enervated and corrupted. Let them persuade whom they can that
they transact anything holy through such men, who, they cannot deny, are
numbered, and live among their sacred things. We know not what they transact, but we
know through whom they transact; for we know what things are transacted on the
stage, where never, even in a chorus of harlots, hath one who is mutilated or an
effeminate appeared. And, nevertheless, even these things are acted by vile and
infamous characters; for, indeed, they ought not to be acted by men of good
character. What, then, are those sacred rites, for the performance of which
holiness has chosen such men as not even the obscenity of the stage has admitted?
CHAP. 8.--CONCERNING THE INTERPRETATIONS, CONSISTING OF NATURAL EXPLANATIONS,
WHICH THE PAGAN TEACHERS ATTEMPT TO SHOW FOR THEIR GODS.
But all these things, they say, have certain physical, that is, natural
interpretations, showing their natural meaning; as though in this disputation we
were seeking physics and not theology, which is the account, not of nature, but
of God. For although He who is the true God is God, not by opinion, but by
nature, nevertheless all nature is not God; for there is certainly a nature of
man, of a beast, of a tree, of a stone,--none of which is God. For if, when the
question is concerning the mother of the gods, that from which the whole system
of interpretation starts certainly is, that the mother of the gods is the earth,
why do we make further inquiry? why do we carry our investigation through all
the rest of it? What can more manifestly favor them who say that all those gods
were men? For they are earth-born in the sense that the earth is their mother.
But in the true theology the earth is the work, not the mother, of God. But in
whatever way their sacred rites may be interpreted, and whatever reference
they may have to the nature of things, it is not according to nature, but contrary
to nature, that men should be effeminates. This disease, this crime, this
abomination, has a recognized place among those sacred things, though even depraved
men will scarcely be compelled by torments to confess they are guilty of it.
Again, if these sacred rites, which are proved to be fouler than scenic
abominations, are excused and justified on the ground that they have their own
interpretations, by which they are shown to symbolize the nature of things, why are not
the poetical things in like manner excused and justified? For many have
interpreted even these in like fashion, to such a degree that even that which they
say is the most monstrous and most horrible,--namely, that Saturn devoured his
own children,--has been interpreted by some of them to mean that length of time,
which is signified by the name of Saturn, consumes whatever it begets; or that,
as the same Varro thinks, Saturn belongs to seeds which fall back again into
the earth from whence they spring. And so one interprets it in one way, and one
in another. And the same is to be said of all the rest of this theology.
And, nevertheless, it is called the fabulous theology, and is censured,
cast off, rejected, together with all such interpretations belonging to it. And
not only by the natural theology, which is that of the philosophers, but also by
this civil theology, concerning which we are speaking, which is asserted to
pertain to cities and peoples, it is judged worthy of repudiation, because it has
invented unworthy things concerning the gods. Of which, I wot, this is the
secret: that those most acute ant learned men, by whom those things were written,
understood that both theologies ought to be rejected,--to wit, both that
fabulous and this civil one,--but the former they dared to reject, the latter they
dared not; the former they set forth to be censured, the latter they showed to be
very like it; not that it might be chosen to be held in preference to the
other, but that it might be understood to be worthy of being rejected together with
it. And thus, without danger to those who feared to censure the civil
theology, both of them being brought into contempt, that theology which they call
natural might find a place in better disposed minds; for the civil and the fabulous
are both fabulous and both civil. He who shall wisely inspect the vanities and
obscenities of both will find that they are both fabulous; and he who shall
direct his attention to the scenic plays pertaining to the fabulous theology in
the festivals of the civil gods, and in the divine rites of the cities, will find
they are both civil. How, then, can the power of giving eternal life be
attributed to any of those gods whose own images and sacred rites convict them of
being most like to the fabulous gods, which are most openly reprobated, in forms,
ages, sex, characteristics marriages, generations, rites; in all which things
they are understood either to have been men, and to have had their sacred rites
and solemnities instituted in their honor according to the life or death of
each of them, the demons suggesting and confirming this error, or certainly most
foul spirits, who, taking advantage of some occasion or other, have stolen into
the minds of men to deceive them?
CHAP. 9.--CONCERNING THE SPECIAL OFFICES OF THE GODS.
And as to those very offices of the gods, so meanly and so minutely
portioned out, so that they say that they ought to be supplicated, each one according
to his special function,--about which we have spoken much already, though not
all that is to be said concerning it,--are they not more consistent with mimic
buffoonery than divine majesty? If any one should use two nurses for his
infant, one of whom should give nothing but food, the other nothing but drink, as
these make use of two goddesses for this purpose, Educa and Potina, he should
certainly seem to be foolish, and to do in his house a thing worthy of a mimic.
They would have Liber to have been named from "liberation," because through him
males at the time of copulation are liberated by the emission of the seed. They
also say that Libera (the same in their opinion as Venus) exercises the same
function in the case of women, because they say that they also emit seed; and they
also say that on this account the same part of the male and of the female is
placed in the temple, that of the male to Liber, and that of the female to
Libera. To these things they add the women assigned to Liber, and the wine for
exciting lust. Thus the Bacchanalia are celebrated with the utmost insanity, with
respect to which Varro himself confesses that such things would not be done by
the Bacchanals except their minds were highly excited. These things, however,
afterwards displeased a saner senate, and it ordered them to be discontinued.
Here, at length, they perhaps perceived how much power unclean spirits, when held
to be gods, exercise over the minds of men. These things, certainly, were not to
be done in the theatres; for there they play, not rave, although to have gods
who are delighted with such plays is very like raving.
But what kind of distinction is this which he makes between the religious
and the superstitious man, saying that the gods are feared(1) by the
superstitious man, but are reverenced(2) as parents by the religious man, not feared as
enemies; and that they are all so good that they will more readily spare those
who are impious than hurt one who is innocent? And yet he tells us that three
gods are assigned as guardians to a woman after she has been delivered, lest the
god Silvanus come in and molest her; and that in order to signify the presence
of these protectors, three men go round the house during the night, and first
strike the threshold with a hatchet, next with a pestle, and the third time
sweep it with a brush, in order that these symbols of agriculture having been
exhibited, the god Silvanus might be hindered from entering, because neither are
trees cut down or pruned without a hatchet, neither is grain ground without a
pestle, nor corn heaped up without a besom. Now from these three things three gods
have been named: Intercidona, from the cut(3) made by the hatchet; Pilumnus,
from the pestle; Diverra, from the besom;--by which guardian gods the woman who
has been delivered is preserved against the power of the god Silvanus. Thus the
guardianship of kindly-disposed gods would not avail against the malice of a
mischievous god, unless they were three to one, and fought against him, as it
were, with the opposing emblems of cultivation, who, being an inhabitant of the
woods, is rough, horrible, and uncultivated. Is this the innocence of the gods?
Is this their concord? Are these the health-giving deities of the cities, more
ridiculous than the things which are laughed at in the theatres?
When a male and a female are united, the god Jugatinus presides. Well, let
this be borne with. But the married woman must be brought home: the god
Domiducus also is invoked. That she may be in the house, the god Domitius is
introduced. That she may remain with her husband, the goddess Manturnae is used. What
more is required? Let human modesty be spared. Let the lust of flesh and blood
go on with the rest, the secret of shame being respected. Why is the bed-chamber
filled with a crowd of deities, when even the groomsmen(1) have departed? And,
moreover, it is so filled, not that in consideration of their presence more
regard may be paid to chastity, but that by their help the woman, naturally of
the weaker sex, and trembling with the novelty of her situation, may the more
readily yield her virginity. For there are the goddess Virginiensis, and the
god-father Subigus, and the goddess-mother Prema, and the goddess Pertunda, and
Venus, and Priapus.(2) What is this? If it was absolutely necessary that a man,
laboring at this work, should be helped by the gods, might not some one god or
goddess have been sufficient? Was Venus not sufficient alone, who is even said to
be named from this, that without her power a woman does not cease to be a
virgin? If there is any shame in men, which is not in the deities, is it not the
case that, when the married couple believe that so many gods of either sex are
present, and busy at this work, they are so much affected with shame, that the man
is less moved, and the woman more reluctant? And certainly, if the goddess
Virginiensis is present to loose the virgin's zone, if the god Subigus is present
that the virgin may be got under the man, if the goddess Prema is present that,
having been got under him, she may be kept down, and may not move herself,
what has the goddess Pertunda to do there? Let her blush; let her go forth. Let
the husband himself do something. It is disgraceful that any one but himself
should do that from which she gets her name. But perhaps she is tolerated because
she is said to be a goddess, and not a god. For if she were believed to be a
male, and were called Pertundus, the husband would demand more help against him
for the chastity of his wife than the newly-delivered woman against Silvanus. But
why am I saying this, when Priapus, too, is there, a male to excess, upon
whose immense and most unsightly member the newly-married bride is commanded to
sit, according to the most honorable and most religious custom of matrons?
Let them go on, and let them attempt with all the subtlety they can to
distinguish the civil theology from the fabulous, the cities from the theatres,
the temples from the stages, the sacred things of the priests from the songs of
the poets, as honorable things from base things, truthful things from
fallacious, grave from light, serious from ludicrous, desirable things from things to be
rejected, we understand what they do. They are aware that that theatrical and
fabulous theology hangs by the civil, and is reflected back upon it from the
songs of the poets as from a mirror; and thus, that theology having been exposed
to view which they do not dare to condemn, they more freely assail and censure
that picture of it, in order that those who perceive what they mean may detest
this very face itself of which that is the picture,--which, however, the gods
themselves, as though seeing themselves in the same mirror, love so much, that it
is better seen in both of them who and what they are. Whence, also, they have
compelled their worshippers, with terrible commands, to dedicate to them the
uncleanness of the fabulous theology, to put them among their solemnities, and
reckon them among divine things; and thus they have both shown themselves more
manifestly to be most impure spirits, and have made that rejected and reprobated
theatrical theology a member and a part of this, as it were, chosen and
ap-proved theology of the city, so that, though the whole is disgraceful and false,
and contains in it fictitious gods, one part of it is in the literature of the
priests, the other in the songs of the poets. Whether it may have other parts is
another question. At present, I think, I have sufficiently shown, on account of
the division of Varro, that the theology of the city and that of the theatre
belong to one civil theology. Wherefore, because they are both equally
disgraceful, absurd, shameful, false, far be it from religious men to hope for eternal
life from either the one or the other.
In fine, even Varro himself, in his account and enumeration of the gods,
starts from the moment of a man's conception. He commences the series of those
gods who take charge of man with Janus, carries it on to the death of the man
decrepit with age, and terminates it with the goddess Naenia, who is sung at the
funerals of the aged. After that, he begins to give an account of the other
gods, whose province is not man himself, but man's belongings, as food, clothing,
and all that is necessary for this life; and, in the case of all these, he
explains what is the special office of each, and for what each ought to be
supplicated. But with all this scrupulous and comprehensive diligence, he has neither
proved the existence, nor so much as mentioned the name, of any god from whom
eternal life is to be sought,--the one object for which we are Christians. Who,
then, is so stupid as not to perceive that this man, by setting forth and
opening up so diligently the civil theology, and by exhibiting its likeness to that
fabulous, shameful, and disgraceful theology, and also by teaching that that
fabulous sort is also a part of this other, was laboring to obtain a place in the
minds of men for none but that natural theology, which he says pertains to
philosophers, with such subtlety that he censures the fabulous, and, not daring
openly to censure the civil, shows its censurable character by simply exhibiting
it; and thus, both being reprobated by the judgment of men of right
understanding, the natural alone remains to be chosen? But concerning this in its own
place, by the help of the true God, we have to discuss more diligently.
CHAP. 10.--CONCERNING THE LIBERTY OF SENECA, WHO MORE VEHEMENTLY CENSURED THE
CIVIL THEOLOGY THAN VARRO DID THE FABULOUS.
That liberty, in truth, which this man wanted, so that he did not dare to
censure that theology of the city, which is very similar to the theatrical, so
openly as he did the theatrical itself, was, though not fully, yet in part
possessed by Annaeus Seneca, whom we have some evidence to show to have flourished
in the times of our apostles. It was in part possessed by him, I say, for he
possessed it in writing, but not in living. For in that book which he wrote
against superstition,(1) he more copiously and vehemently censured that civil and
urban theology than Varro the theatrical and fabulous. For, when speaking
concerning images, he says, "They dedicate images of the sacred and inviolable
immortals in most worthless and motionless matter. They give them the appearance of
man, beasts, and fishes, and some make them of mixed sex, and heterogeneous
bodies. They call them deities, when they are such that if they should get breath
and should suddenly meet them, they would be held to be monsters." Then, a while
afterwards, when extolling the natural theology, he had expounded the
sentiments of certain philosophers, he opposes to himself a question, and says, "Here
some one says, Shall I believe that the heavens and the earth are gods, and that
some are above the moon and some below it? Shall I bring forward either Plato
or the peripatetic Strato, one of whom made God to be without a body, the other
without a mind?" In answer to which he says, "And, really, what truer do the
dreams of Titus Tatius, or Romulus, or Tullus Hostilius appear to thee? Tatius
declared the divinity of the goddess Cloacina; Romulus that of Picus and
Tiberinus; Tullus Hostilius that of Pavor and Pallor, the most disagreeable affections
of men, the one of which is the agitation of the mind under fright, the other
that of the body, not a disease, indeed, but a change of color." Wilt thou
rather believe that these are deities, and receive them into heaven? But with what
freedom he has written concerning the rites themselves, cruel and shameful !
"One," he says, "castrates himself, another cuts his arms. Where will they find
room for the fear of these gods when angry, who use such means of gaining their
favor when propitious? But gods who wish to be worshipped in this fashion should
be worshipped in none. So great is the frenzy of the mind when perturbed and
driven from its seat, that the gods are propitiated by men in a manner in which
not even men of the greatest ferocity and fable-renowned cruelty vent their
rage. Tyrants have lacerated the limbs of some; they never ordered any one to
lacerate his own. For the gratification of royal lust, some have been castrated;
but no one ever, by the command of his lord, laid violent hands on himself to
emasculate himself. They kill themselves in the temples. They supplicate with
their wounds and with their blood. If any one has time to see the things they do
and the things they suffer, he will find so many things unseemly for men of
respectability, so unworthy of freemen, so unlike the doings of sane men, that no
one would doubt that they are mad, had they been mad with the minority; but now
the multitude of the insane is the defence of their sanity."
He next relates those things which are wont to be done in the Capitol,
and with the utmost intrepidity insists that they are such things as one could
only believe to be done by men making sport, or by madmen. For having spoken with
derision of this, that in the Egyptian sacred rites Osiris, being lost, is
lamented for, but straightway, when found, is the occasion of great joy by his
reappearance, because both the losing and the finding of him are reigned; and yet
that grief and that joy which are elicited thereby from those who have lost
nothing and found nothing are real;--having I say, so spoken of this, he says,
"Still there is a fixed time for this frenzy. It is tolerable to go mad once in
the year. Go into the Capitol. One is suggesting divine commands(1) to a god;
another is telling the hours to Jupiter; one is a lictor; another is an anointer,
who with the mere movement of his arms imitates one anointing. There are women
who arrange the hair of Juno and Minerva, standing far away not only from her
image, but even from her temple. These move their fingers in the manner of
hairdressers. There are some women who hold a mirror. There are some who are calling
the gods to assist them in court. There are some who are holding up documents
to them, and are explaining to them their cases. A learned and distinguished
comedian, now old and decrepit, was daily playing the mimic in the Capitol, as
though the gods would gladly be spectators of that which men had ceased to care
about. Every kind of artificers working for the immortal gods is dwelling there
in idleness." And a little after he says, "Nevertheless these, though they give
themselves up to the gods for purposes superflous enough, do not do so for any
abominable or infamous purpose. There sit certain women in the Capitol who
think they are beloved by Jupiter; nor are they frightened even by the look of
the, if you will believe the poets, most wrathful Juno."
This liberty Varro did not enjoy. It was only the poetical theology he
seemed to censure. The civil, which this man cuts to pieces, he was not bold
enough to impugn. But if we attend to the truth, the temples where these things are
performed are far worse than the theatres where they are represented. Whence,
with respect to these sacred rites of the civil theology, Seneca preferred, as
the best course to be followed by a wise man, to feign respect for them in act,
but to have no real regard for them at heart. "All which things," he says, "a
wise man will observe as being commanded by the laws, but not as being pleasing
to the gods." And a little after he says, "And what of this, that we unite the
gods in marriage, and that not even naturally, for we join brothers and
sisters? We marry Bellona to Mars, Venus to Vulcan, Salacia to Neptune. Some of them
we leave unmarried, as though there were no match for them, which is surely
needless, especially when there are certain unmarried goddesses, as Populonia, or
Fulgora, or the goddess Rumina, for whom I am not astonished that suitors have
been awanting. All this ignoble crowd of gods, which the superstition of ages
has amassed, we ought," he says, "to adore in such a way as to remember all the
while that its worship belongs rather to custom than to reality." Wherefore,
neither those laws nor customs instituted in the civil theology that which was
pleasing to the gods, or which pertained to reality. But this man, whom philosophy
had made, as it were, free, nevertheless, because he was an illustrious
senator of the Roman people, worshipped what he censured, did what he condemned,
adored what he reproached, because, forsooth, philosophy had taught him something
great,--namely, not to be superstitious in the world, but, on account of the
laws of cities and the customs of men, to be an actor, not on the stage, but in
the temples,--conduct the more to be condemned, that those things which he was
deCeitfully acting he so acted that the people thought he was acting sincerely.
But a stage-actor would rather delight people by acting plays than take them in
by false pretences.
CHAP. 11.--WHAT SENECA THOUGHT CONCERNING THE JEWS.
Seneca, among the other superstitions of civil theology, also found fault
with the sacred things of the Jews, and especially the sabbaths, affirming that
they act uselessly in keeping those seventh days, whereby they lose through
idleness about the seventh part of their life, and also many things which demand
immediate attention are damaged. The Christians, however, who were already most
hostile to the Jews, he did not dare to mention, either for praise or blame,
lest, if he praised them, he should do so against the ancient custom of his
country, or, perhaps, if he should blame them, he should do so against his own will.
When he was speaking concerning those Jews, he said, "When, meanwhile, the
customs of that most accursed nation have gained such strength that they have
been now received in all lands, the conquered have given laws to the
conquerors." By these words he expresses his astonishment; and, not knowing what the
providence of God was leading him to say, subjoins in plain words an opinion by
which he showed what he thought about the meaning of those sacred institutions:
"For," he says, "those, however, know the cause of their rites, whilst the
greater part of the people know not why they perform theirs." But concerning the
solemnities of the Jews, either why or how far they were instituted by divine
authority, and afterwards, in due time, by the same authority taken away from the
people of God, to whom the mystery of eternal life was revealed, we have both
spoken elsewhere, especially when we were treating against the Manichaeans, and
also intend to speak in this work in a more suitable place.
CHAP. 12.--THAT WHEN ONCE THE VANITY OF THE GODS OF THE NATIONS HAS BEEN
EXPOSED, IT CANNOT BE DOUBTED THAT THEY ARE UNABLE TO BESTOW ETERNAL LIFE ON ANY
ONE, WHEN THEY CANNOT AFFORD HELPEVEN WITH RESPECTTO THE THINGS OFTHIS TEMPORAL
LIFE.
Now, since there are three theologies, which the Greeks call respectively
mythical, physical, and political, and which may be called in Latin fabulous,
natural, and civil; and since neither from the fabulous, which even the
worshippers of many and false gods have themselves most freely censured, nor from the
civil, of which that is convicted of being a part, or even worse than it, can
eternal life be hoped for from any of these theologies,--if any one thinks that
what has been said in this book is not enough for him, let him also add to it
the many and various dissertations concerning God as the giver of felicity,
contained in the former books, especially the fourth one.
For to what but to felicity should men consecrate themselves, were
felicity a goddess? However, as it is not a goddess, but a gift of God, to what God
but the giver of happiness ought we to consecrate ourselves, who piously love
eternal life, in which there is true and full felicity? But I think, from what has
been said, no one ought to doubt that none of those gods is the giver of
happiness, who are worshipped with such shame, and who, if they are not so
worshipped, are more shamefully enraged, and thus confess that they are most foul
spirits. Moreover, how can he give eternal life who cannot give happiness? For we
mean by eternal life that life where there is endless happiness. For if the soul
live in eternal punishments, by which also those unclean spirits shall be
tormented, that is rather eternal death than eternal life. For there is no greater or
worse death than when death never dies. But because the soul from its very
nature, being created immortal, cannot be without some kind of life, its utmost
death is alienation from the life of God in an eternity of punishment. So, then,
He only who gives true happiness gives eternal life, that is, an endlessly
happy life. And since those gods whom this civil theology worships have been proved
to be unable to give this happiness, they ought not to be worshipped on
account of those temporal and terrestrial things, as we showed in the five former
books, much less on account of eternal life, which is to be after death, as we
have sought to show in this one book especially, whilst the other books also lend
it their co-operation. But since the strength of inveterate habit has its roots
very deep, if any one thinks that I have not disputed sufficiently to show
that this civil theology ought to be rejected and shunned, let him attend to
another book which, with God's help, is to be joined to this one.