THE CITY OF GOD: BOOK XV
BOOK XV.
ARGUMENT.
HAVING TREATED IN THE FOUR PRECEDING BOOKS OF THE ORIGIN OF THE TWO CITIES,
THE EARTHLY AND THE HEAVENLY, AUGUSTIN EXPLAINS THEIR GROWTH AND PROGRESS IN THE
FOUR BOOKS WHICH FOLLOW; AND, IN ORDER TO DO SO, HE EXPLAINS THE CHIEF PASSAGES
OF THE SACRED HISTORY WHICH BEAR UPON THIS SUBJECT. IN THIS FIFTEENTH BOOK HE
OPENS THIS PART OF HIS WORK BY EXPLAINING THE EVENTS RECORDED IN GENESIS FROM
THE TIME OF CAIN AND ABEL TO THE DELUGE.
CHAP. 1.--OF THE TWO LINES OF THE HUMAN RACE WHICH FROM FIRST TO LAST DIVIDE
IT.
OF the bliss of Paradise, of Paradise itself, and of the life of our first
parents there, and of their sin and punishment, many have thought much, spoken
much, written much. We ourselves, too, have spoken of these things in the
foregoing books, and have written either what we read in the Holy Scriptures, or
what we could reasonably deduce from them. And were we to enter into a more
detailed investigation of these matters, an endless number of endless questions
would arise, which would involve us in a larger work than the present occasion
admits. We cannot be expected to find room for replying to every question that may
be started by unoccupied and captious men, who are ever more ready to ask
questions than capable of understanding the answer. Yet I trust we have already done
justice to these great and difficult questions regarding the beginning of the
world, or of the soul, or of the human race itself. This race we have
distributed into two parts, the one consisting of those who live according to man, the
other of those who live according to God. And these we also mystically call the
two cities, or the two communities of men, of which the one is predestined to
reign eternally with God, and the other to suffer eternal punishment with the
devil. This, however, is their end, and of it we are to speak afterwards. At
present, as we have said enough about their origin, whether among the angels, whose
numbers we know not, or in the two first human beings, it seems suitable to
attempt an account of their career, from the time when our two first parents
began to propagate the race until all human generation shall cease. For this whole
time or world-age, in which the dying give place and those who are born
succeed, is the career of these two cities concerning which we treat.
Of these two first parents of the human race, then, Cain was the
first-born, and he belonged to the city of men; after him was born Abel, who belonged to
the city of God. For as in the individual the truth of the apostle's statement
is discerned, "that is not first which is spiritual, but that which is
natural, and afterward that which is spiritual,"(1) whence it comes to pass that each
man, being derived from a condemned stock, is first of all born of Adam evil
and carnal, and becomes good and spiritual only afterwards, when he is grafted
into Christ by regeneration: so was it in the human race as a whole. When these
two cities began to run their course by a series of deaths and births, the
citizen of this world was the first-born, and after him the stranger in this world,
the citizen of the city of God, predestinated by grace, elected by grace, by
grace a stranger below, and by grace a citizen above. By grace,--for so far as
regards himself he is sprung from the same mass, all of which is condemned in
its origin: but God, like a potter (for this comparison is introduced by the
apostle judiciously, and not without thought), of the same lump made one vessel to
honor, another to dishonor.(1) But first the vessel to dishonor was made, and
after it another to honor. For in each individual, as I have already said, there
is first of all that which is reprobate, that from which we must begin, but in
which we need not necessarily remain; afterwards is that which is
well-approved, to which we may by advancing attain, and in which, when we have reached it
we may abide. Not, indeed, that every wicked man shall be good, but that no one
will be good who was not first of all wicked but the sooner any one becomes a
good man, the more speedily does he receive this title, and abolish the old name
in the new. Accordingly, it is recorded of Cain that he built a city,(2) but
Abel, being a sojourner, built none. For the city of the saints is above,
although here below it begets citizens, in whom it sojourns till the time of its
reign arrives, when it shall gather together all in the day of the resurrection;
and then shall the promised kingdom be given to them, in which they shall reign
with their Prince, the King of the ages, time without end.
CHAP. 2.--OF THE CHILDREN OF THE FLESH AND THE CHILDREN OF THE PROMISE.
There was indeed on earth, so long as it was needed, a symbol and
foreshadowing image of this city, which served the purpose of reminding men that such a
city was to be rather than of making it present; and this image was itself
called the holy city, as a symbol of the future city, though not itself the
reality. Of this city which served as an image, and of that free city it typified,
Paul writes to the Galatians in these terms: "Tell me, ye that desire to be under
the law, do ye not hear the law? For it is written, that Abraham had two sons,
the one by a bond maid, the other by a free woman. But he who was of the bond
woman was born after the flesh, but he of the free woman was by promise. Which
things are an allegory:(3) for these are the two covenants; the one from the
mount Sinai, which gendereth to bondage, which is Agar. For this Agar is mount
Sinai in Arabia, and answereth to Jerusalem which now is, and is in bondage with
her children. But Jerusalem which is above is free, which is the mother of us
all. For it is written, Rejoice, thou barren that bearest not; break forth and
cry, thou that travailest not for the desolate hath many more children than she
which hath an husband. Now we, brethren, as Isaac was, are the children of
promise. But as then he that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was
born after the Spirit, even so it is now. Nevertheless, what saith the Scripture?
Cast out the bond woman and her son: for the son of the bond woman shall not
be heir with the son of the free woman. And we, brethren, are not children of
the bond woman, but of the free, in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us
free."(4) This interpretation of the passage, handed down to us with apostolic
authority, shows how we ought to understand the Scriptures of the two
covenants--the old and the new. One portion of the earthly city became an image of the
heavenly city, not having a significance of its own, but signifying another city,
and therefore serving, or" being in bondage." For it was founded not for its own
sake, but to prefigure another city; and this shadow of a city was also itself
foreshadowed by another preceding figure. For Sarah's handmaid Agar, and her
son, were an image of this image. And as the shadows were to pass away when the
full light came, Sarah, the free woman, who prefigured the free city (which
again was also prefigured in another way by that shadow of a city Jerusalem),
therefore said, "Cast out the bond woman and her son; for the son of the bond woman
shall not be heir with my son Isaac," or, as the apostle says, "with the son
of the free woman." In the earthly city, then, we find two things--its own
obvious presence, and its symbolic presentation of the heavenly city. Now citizens
are begotten to the earthly city by nature vitiated by sin, but to the heavenly
city by grace freeing nature from sin; whence the former are called "vessels of
wrath," the latter "vessels of mercy."(5) And this was typified in the two
sons of Abraham,--Ishmael, the son of Agar the handmaid, being born according to
the flesh, while Isaac was born of the free woman Sarah, according to the
promise. Both, indeed, were of Abraham's seed; but the one was begotten by natural
law, the other was given by gracious promise. In the one birth, human action is
revealed; in the other, a divine kindness comes to light.
CHAP. 3.--THAT SARAH'S BARRENNESS WAS MADE PRODUCTIVE BY GOD'S GRACE.
Sarah, in fact, was barren; and, despairing of offspring, and being
resolved that she would have at least through her handmaid that blessing she saw she
could not in her own person procure, she gave her handmaid to her husband, to
whom she herself had been unable to bear children. From him she required this
conjugal duty, exercising her own right in another's womb. And thus Ishmael was
born according to the common law of human generation, by sexual intercourse.
Therefore it is said that he was born "according to the flesh,"--not because such
births are not the gifts of God, nor His handiwork, whose creative wisdom"
reaches," as it is written, "from one end to another mightily, and sweetly cloth
she order all things,"(1) but because, in a case in which the gift of God, which
was not due to men and was the gratuitous largess of grace, was to be
conspicuous, it was requisite that a son be given in a way which no effort of nature
could compass. Nature denies children to persons of the age which Abraham and
Sarah had now reached; besides that, in Sarah's case, she was barren even in her
prime. This nature, so constituted that offspring could not be looked for,
symbolized the nature of the human race vitiated by sin and by just consequence
condemned. which deserves no future felicity. Fitly, therefore, does Isaac, the
child of promise, typify the children of grace, the citizens of the free city, who
dwell together in everlasting peace, in which self-love and self-will have no
place, but a ministering love that rejoices in the common joy all, of many
hearts makes one, that is to say, secures a perfect concord.
CHAP. 4.--OF THE CONFLICT AND PEACE OF THE EARTHLY CITY.
But the earthly city, which shall not be everlasting (for it will no
longer be a city when it has been committed to the extreme penalty), has its good in
this world, and rejoices in it with such joy as such things can afford. But as
this is not a good which can discharge its devotees of all distresses, this
city is often divided against itself by litigations, wars, quarrels, and such
victories as are either life-destroying or short-lived. For each part of it that
arms against another part of it seeks to triumph over the nations through itself
in bondage to vice. If, when it has conquered, it is inflated with pride, its
victory is life-destroying; but if it turns its thoughts upon the common
casualties of our mortal condition, and is rather anxious concerning the disasters
that may befall it than elated with the successes already achieved, this victory,
though of a higher kind, is still only shot-lived; for it cannot abidingly
rule over those whom it has victoriously subjugated. But the things which this
city desires cannot justly be said to be evil, for it is itself, in its own kind,
better than all other human good. For it desires earthly peace for the sake of
enjoying earthly goods, and it makes war in order to attain to this peace;
since, if it has conquered, and there remains no one to resist it, it enjoys a
peace which it had not while there were opposing parties who contested for the
enjoyment of those things which were too small to satisfy both. This peace is
purchased by toilsome wars; it is obtained by what they style a glorious victory.
Now, when victory remains with the party which had the juster cause, who
hesitates to congratulate the victor, and style it a desirable peace? These things,
then, are good things, and without doubt the gifts of God. But if they neglect
the better things of the heavenly city, which are secured by eternal victory and
peace never-ending, and so inordinately covet these present good things that
they believe them to be the only desirable things, or love them better than
those things which are believed to be better,--if this be so, then it is necessary
that misery follow and ever increase.
CHAP. 5.--OF THE FRATRICIDAL ACT OF THE FOUNDER OF THE EARTHLY CITY, AND THE
CORRESPONDING CRIME OF THE FOUNDER OF ROME.
Thus the founder of the earthly city was a fratricide. Overcome with envy,
he slew his own brother, a citizen of the eternal city, and a sojourner on
earth. So that we cannot be surprised that this first specimen, or, as the Greeks
say, archetype of crime, should, long afterwards, find a corresponding crime at
the foundation of that city which was destined to reign over so many nations,
and be the head of this earthly city of which we speak. For of that city also,
as one of their poets has mentioned, "the first walls were stained with a
brother's blood,"(2) or, as Roman history records, Remus was slain by his brother
Romulus. And thus there is no difference between the foundation of this city and
of the earthly city, unless it be that Romulus and Remus were both citizens of
the earthly city. Both desired to have the glory of founding the Roman
republic, but both could not have as much glory as if one only claimed it; for he who
wished to have the glory of ruling would certainly rule less if his power were
shared by a living consort. In order, therefore, that the whole glory might be
enjoyed by one, his consort was removed; and by this crime the empire was made
larger indeed, but inferior, while otherwise it would have been less, but
better. Now these brothers, Cain and Abel, were not both animated by the same earthly
desires, nor did the murderer envy the other because he feared that, by both
ruling, his own dominion would be curtailed,--for Abel was not solicitous to
rule in that city which his brother built,--he was moved by that diabolical,
envious hatred with which the evil regard the good, for no other reason than because
they are good while themselves are evil. For the possession of goodness is by
no means diminished by being shared with a partner either permanent or
temporarily assumed; on the contrary, the possession of goodness is increased in
proportion to the concord and charity of each of those who share it. In short, he who
is unwilling to share this possession cannot have it; and he who is most
willing to admit others to a share of it will have the greatest abundance to
himself. The quarrel, then, between Romulus and Remus shows how the earthly city is
divided against itself; that which fell out between Cain and Abel illustrated the
hatred that subsists between the two cities, that of God and that of men. The
wicked war with the wicked; the good also war with the wicked. But with the
good, good men, or at least perfectly good men, cannot war; though, while only
going on towards perfection, they war to this extent, that every good man resists
others in those points in which he resists himself. And in each individual "the
flesh lusteth against the spirit, and the spirit against the flesh."(1) This
spiritual lusting, therefore, can be at war with the carnal lust of another man;
or carnal lust may be at war with the spiritual desires of another, in some
such way as good and wicked men are at war; or, still more certainly, the carnal
lusts of two men, good but not yet perfect, contend together, just as the
wicked contend with the wicked, until the health of those who are under the
treatment of grace attains final victory.
CHAP. 6.--OF THE WEAKNESSES WHICH EVEN THE CITIZENS OF THE CITY OF GOD SUFFER
DURING THIS EARTHLY PILGRIMAGE IN PUNISHMENT OF SIN, AND OF WHICH THEY ARE
HEALED BY GOD'S CARE.
This sickliness--that is to say, that disobedience of which we spoke in
the fourteenth book--is the punishment of the first disobedience. It is therefore
not nature, but vice; and therefore it is said to the good who are growing in
grace, and living in this pilgrimage by faith, "Bear ye one another's burdens,
and so fulfill the law of Christ."(2) In like manner it is said elsewhere,
"Warn them that are unruly, comfort the feeble-minded, sup port the weak, be
patient toward all men. See that none render evil for evil unto any man."(3) And in
another place, "If a man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual
restore such an one in the spirit of meekness; considering thyself, lest thou also
be tempted."(4) And elsewhere, "Let not the sun go down upon your wrath."(5) And
in the Gospel, "If thy brother shall trespass against thee, go and tell him
his fault between thee and him alone."(6) So too of sins which may create scandal
the apostle says, "Them that sin rebuke before all, that others also may
fear."(7) For this purpose, and that we may keep that peace without which no man can
see the Lord,(8) many precepts are given which carefully inculcate mutual
forgiveness; among which we may number that terrible word in which the servant is
ordered to pay his formerly remitted debt of ten thousand talents, because he
did not remit to his fellow-servant his debt of two hundred pence. To which
parable the Lord Jesus added the words, "So likewise shall my heavenly Father do
also unto you, if ye from your hearts forgive not every one his brother."(9) It
is thus the citizens of the city of God are healed while still they sojourn in
this earth and sigh for the peace of their heavenly country. The Holy Spirit,
too, works within, that the medicine externally applied may have some good
result. Otherwise, even though God Himself make use of the creatures that are
subject to Him, and in some human form address our human senses, whether we receive
those impressions in sleep or in some external appearance, still, if He does not
by His own inward grace sway and act upon the mind, no preaching of the truth
is of any avail. But this God does, distinguishing between the vessels of wrath
and the vessels of mercy, by His own very secret but very just providence.
When He Himself aids the soul in His own hidden and wonderful ways, and the sin
which dwells in our members, and is, as the apostle teaches, rather the
punishment of sin, does not reign in our mortal body to obey the lusts of it, and when
we no longer yield our members as instruments of unrighteousness,(10) then the
soul is converted from its own evil and selfish desires, and, God possessing
it, it possesses itself in peace even in this life, and afterwards, with
perfected health and endowed with immortality, will reign without sin in peace
everlasting.
CHAP. 7.--OF THE CAUSE OF CAIN'S CRIME HIS OBSTINACY, WHICH NOT EVEN THE WORD
OF GOD COULD SUBDUE.
But though God made use of this very mode of address which we have been
endeavoring to explain, and spoke to Cain in that form by which He was wont to
accommodate Himself to our first parents and converse with them as a companion,
what good influence had it on Cain? Did he not fulfill his wicked intention of
killing his brother even after he was warned by God's voice? For when God had
made a distinction between their sacrifices, neglecting Cain's, regarding Abel's,
which was doubtless intimated by some visible sign to that effect; and when
God had done so because the works of the one were evil but those of his brother
good, Cain was very wroth, and his countenance fell. For thus it is written:
"And the Lord said unto Cain, Why are thou wroth, and why is thy countenance
fallen? If thou offerest rightly, but dost not rightly distinguish, hast thou not
sinned? Fret not thyself, for unto thee shall be his turning, and thou shalt rule
over him." In this admonition administered by God to Cain, that clause indeed,
"If thou offerest rightly, but dost not rightly distinguish, hast thou not
sinned?" is obscure, inasmuch as it is not apparent for what reason or purpose it
was spoken, and many meanings have been put upon it, as each one who discusses
it attempts to interpret it according to the rule of faith. The truth is, that
a sacrifice is "rightly offered" when it is offered to the true God, to whom
alone we must sacrifice. And it is "not rightly distinguished" when we do not
rightly distinguish the places or seasons or materials of the offering, or the
person offering, or the person to whom it is presented, or those to whom it is
distributed for food after the oblation. Distinguishing(2) is here used for
discriminating,--whether when an offering is made in a place where it ought not or of
a material which ought to be offered not there but elsewhere; or when an
offering is made at a wrong time, or of a material suitable not then but at some
other time; or when that is offered which in no place nor any time ought to be
offered; or when a man keeps to himself choicer specimens of the same kind than he
offers to God; or when he or any other who may not lawfully partake profanely
eats of the oblation. In which of these particulars Cain displeased God, it is
difficult to determine. But the Apostle John, speaking of these brothers, says,
"Not as Cain, who was of that wicked one, and slew his brother. And wherefore
slew he him? Because his own works were evil, and his brother's righteous."(3)
He thus gives us to understand that God did not respect his offering because it
was not rightly "distinguished" in this, that he gave to God something of his
own but kept himself to himself. For this all do who follow not God's will but
their own, who live not with an upright but a crooked heart, and yet offer to
God such gifts as they suppose will procure from Him that He aid them not by
healing but by gratifying their evil passions. And this is the characteristic of
the earthly city, that it worships God or gods who may aid it in reigning
victoriously and peacefully on earth not through love of doing good, but through lust
of rule. The good use the world that they may enjoy God: the wicked, on the
contrary, that they may enjoy the world would fain use God,--those of them, at
least, who have attained to the belief that He is and takes an interest in human
affairs. For they who have not yet attained even to this belief are still at a
much lower level. Cain, then, when he saw that God had respect to his brother's
sacrifice, but not to his own, should have humbly chosen his good brother as
his example, and not proudly counted him his rival. But he was wroth, and his
countenance fell. This angry regret for another person's goodness, even his
brother's, was charged upon him by God as a great sin. And He accused him of it in
the interrogation, "Why are thou wroth, and why is thy countenance fallen?" For
God saw that he envied his brother, and of this He accused him. For to men,
from whom the heart of their fellow is hid, it might be doubtful and quite
uncertain whether that sadness bewailed his own wickedness by which, as he had
learned, he had displeased God, or his brother's goodness, which had pleased God, and
won His favorable regard to his sacrifice. But God, in giving the reason why He
refused to accept Cain's offering and why Cain should rather have been
displeased at himself than at his brother, shows him that though he was unjust in "not
rightly distinguishing," that is, not rightly living and being unworthy to
have his offering received, he was more unjust by far in hating his just brother
without a cause.
Yet He does not dismiss him without counsel, holy, just, and good. "Fret
not thyself," He says, "for unto thee shall be his turning, and thou shall rule
over him." Over his brother, does He mean? Most certainly not. Over what, then,
but sin? For He had said, "Thou hast sinned," and then He added, "Fret not
thyself, for to thee shall be its turning, and thou shall rule over it."(1) And
the "turning" of sin to the man can be understood of his conviction that the
guilt of sin can be laid at no other man's door but his own. For this is the
health-giving medicine of penitence, and the fit plea for pardon; so that, when it
is said, "To thee its turning," we must not supply "shall be," but we must read,
"To thee let its turning be," understanding it as a command, not as a
prediction. For then shall a man rule over his sin when he does not prefer it to
himself and defend it, but subjects it by repentance; otherwise he that becomes
protector of it shall surely become its prisoner. But if we understand this sin to
be that carnal concupiscence of which the apostle says, "The flesh lusteth
against the spirit,"(3) among the fruits of which lust he names envy, by which
assuredly Cain was stung and excited to destroy his brother, then we may properly
supply the words "shall be," and read, "To thee shall be its turning, and thou
shalt rule over it." For when the carnal part which the apostle calls sin, in
that place where he says, "It is not I who do it, but sin that dwelleth in me,"(3)
that part which the philosophers also call vicious, and which ought not to
lead the mind, but which the mind ought to rule and restrain by reason from
illicit motions,--when, then, this part has been moved to perpetrate any wickedness,
if it be curbed and if it obey the word of the apostle, "Yield not your members
instruments of unrighteousness unto sin,"(4) it is turned towards the mind and
subdued and conquered by it, so that reason rules over it as a subject. It was
this which God enjoined on him who was kindled with the fire of envy against
his brother, so that he sought to put out of the way him whom he should have set
as an example. "Fret not thyself," or compose thyself, He says: withhold thy
hand from crime; let not sin reign in your mortal body to fulfill it in the
lusts thereof, nor yield your members instruments of unrighteousness unto sin. "For
to thee shall be its turning," so long as you do not encourage it by giving it
the rein, but bridle it by quenching its fire. "And thou shall rule over it;"
for when it is not allowed any external actings, it yields itself to the rule
of the governing mind and righteous will, and ceases from even internal motions.
There is something similar said in the same divine book of the woman, when God
questioned and judged them after their sin, and pronounced sentence on them
all,--the devil in the form of the serpent, the woman and her husband in their
own persons. For when He had said to her, "I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and
thy conception; in sorrow shall thou bring forth children," then He added,
"and thy turning shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee."(5) What is
said to Cain about his sin, or about the vicious concupiscence of his flesh,
is here said of the woman who had sinned; and we are to understand that the
husband is to rule his wife as the soul rules the flesh. And therefore, says the
apostle, "He that loveth his wife, loveth himself; for no man ever yet hated his
own flesh."(6) This flesh, then, is to be healed, because it belongs to
ourselves: is not to be abandoned to destruction as if it were alien to our nature.
But Cain received that counsel of God in the spirit of one who did not wish to
amend. In fact, the vice of envy grew stronger in him; and, having entrapped his
brother, he slew him. Such was the founder of the earthly city. He was also a
figure of the Jews who slew Christ the Shepherd of the flock of men, prefigured
by Abel the shepherd of sheep: but as this is an allegorical and prophetical
matter, I forbear to explain it now; besides, I remember that I have made some
remarks upon it in writing against Faustus the Manichaean.(7)
CHAP. 8.--WHAT CAIN'S REASON WAS FOR BUILDING A CITY SO EARLY IN THE HlSTORY
OF THE HUMAN RACE.
At present it is the history which I aim at defending, that Scripture may
not be reckoned incredible when it relates that one man built a city at a time
in which there seem to have been but four men upon earth, or rather indeed but
three, after one brother slew the other,--to wit, the first man the father of
all, and Cain himself, and his son Enoch, by whose name the city was itself
called. But they who are moved by this consideration forget to take into account
that the writer of the sacred history does not necessarily mention all the men
who might be alive at that time, but those only whom the scope of his work
required him to name. The design of that writer (who in this matter was the
instrument of the Holy Ghost) was to descend to Abraham through the successions of
ascertained generations propagated from one man, and then to pass from Abraham's
seed to the people of God, in whom, separated as they were from other nations, was
prefigured and predicted all that relates to the city whose reign is eternal,
and to its king and founder Christ, which things were foreseen in the Spirit as
destined to come; yet neither is this object so effected as that nothing is
said of the other society of men which we call the earthly city, but mention is
made of it so far as seemed needful to enhance the glory of the heavenly city by
contrast to its opposite. Accordingly, when the divine Scripture, in
mentioning the number of years which those men lived, concludes its account of each man
of whom it speaks, with the words, "And he begat sons and daughters, and all
his days were so and so, and he died," are we to understand that, because it does
not name those sons and daughters, therefore, during that long term of years
over which one lifetime extended in those early days, there might not have been
born very many men, by whose united numbers not one but several cities might
have been built? But it suited the purpose of God, by whose inspiration these
histories were composed, to arrange and distinguish from the first these two
societies in their several generations,--that on the one side the generations of
men, that is to say, of those who live according to man, and on the other side the
generations of the sons of God, that is to say, of men living according to
God, might be traced down together and yet apart from one another as far as the
deluge, at which point their dissociation and association are exhibited: their
dissociation, inasmuch as the generations of both lines are recorded in separate
tables, the one line descending from the fratricide Cain, the other from Seth,
who had been born to Adam instead of him whom his brother slew; their
association, inasmuch as the good so deteriorated that the whole race became of such a
character that it was swept away by the deluge, with the exception of one just
man, whose name was Noah, and his wife and three sons and three
daughters-in-law, which eight persons were alone deemed worthy to escape from that desolating
visitation which destroyed all men.
Therefore, although it is written, "And Cain knew his wife, and she
conceived and bare Enoch, and he builded a city and called the name of the city after
the name of his son Enoch,"(1) it does not follow that we are to believe this
to have been his first-born; for we cannot suppose that this is proved by the
expression "he knew his wife," as if then for the first time he had had
intercourse with her. For in the case of Adam, the father of all, this expression is
used not only when Cain, who seems to have been his first-born, was conceived,
but also afterwards the same Scripture says, "Adam knew Eve his wife, and she
conceived, and bare a son, and called his name Seth."(2) Whence it is obvious that
Scripture employs this expression neither always when a birth is recorded nor
then only when the birth of a first-born is mentioned. Neither is it necessary
to suppose that Enoch was Cain's first-born because he named his city after
him, For it is quite possible that though he had other sons, yet tot some reason
the father loved him more than the rest. Judah was not the first-born, though he
gives his name to Judaea and the Jews. But even though Enoch was the
first-born of the city's founder, that is no reason for supposing that the father named
the city after him as soon as he was born; for at that time he, being but a
solitary man, could not have founded a civic community, which is nothing else than
a multitude of men bound together by some associating tie. But when his family
increased to such numbers that he had quite a population, then it became
possible to him both to build a city, and give it, when founded, the name of his
son. For so long was the life of those antediluvians, that he who lived the
shortest time of those whose years are mentioned in Scripture attained to the age of
753 years.(3) And though no one attained the age of a thousand years, several
exceeded the age of nine hundred. Who then can doubt that during the lifetime of
one man the human race might be so multiplied that there would be a population
to build and occupy not one but several cities? And this might very readily be
conjectured from the fact that from one man, Abraham, in not much more than
four hundred years, the numbers of the Hebrew race so increased, that in the
exodus of that people from Egypt there are recorded to have been six hundred
thousand men capable of bearing arms,(4) and this over and above the Idumaeans, who,
though not numbered with Israel's descendants, were yet sprung from his
brother, also a grandson of Abraham; and over and above the other nations which were
of the same stock of Abraham, though not through Sarah,--that is, his
descendants by Hagar and Keturah, the Ishmaelites, Midianites, etc.
CHAP. 9.--OF THE LONG LIFE AND GREATER STATURE OF THE ANTEDILUVIANS.
Wherefore no one who considerately weighs facts will doubt that Cain might
have built a city, and that a large one, when it is observed how prolonged
were the lives of men, unless perhaps some sceptic take exception to this very
length of years which our authors ascribe to the antediluvians and deny that this
is credible. And so, too, they do not believe that the size of men's bodies was
larger then than now, though the most esteemed of their own poets, Virgil,
asserts the same, when he speaks of that huge stone which had been fixed as a
landmark, and which a strong man of those ancient times snatched up as he fought,
and ran, and hurled, and cast it,--
"Scarce twelve strong men of later mould
That weight could on their necks uphold."(1)
thus declaring his opinion that the earth then produced mightier men. And if
in the more recent times, how much more in the ages before the world-renowned
deluge? But the large size of the primitive human body is often proved to the
incredulous by the exposure of sepulchres, either through the wear of time or the
violence of torrents or some accident, and in which bones of incredible size
have been found or have rolled out. I myself, along with some others, saw on the
shore at Utica a man's molar tooth of such a size, that if it were cut down
into teeth such as we have, a hundred, I fancy, could have been made out of it.
But that, I believe, belonged to some giant. For though the bodies of ordinary
men were then larger than ours, the giants surpassed all in stature. And neither
in our own age nor any other have there been altogether wanting instances of
gigantic stature, though they may be few. The younger Pliny, a most learned man,
maintains that the older the world becomes, the smaller will be the bodies of
men.(2) And he mentions that Homer in his poems often lamented the same decline;
and this he does not laugh at as a poetical figment, but in his character of a
recorder of natural wonders accepts it as historically true. But, as I said,
the bones which are from time to time discovered prove the size of the bodies of
the ancients,(3) and will do so to future ages, for they are slow to decay.
But the length of an antediluvian's life cannot now be proved by any such
monumental evidence. But we are not on this account to withhold our faith from the
sacred history, whose statements of past fact we are the more inexcusable in
discrediting, as we see the accuracy of its prediction of what was future. And even
that same Pliny(4) tells us that there is still a nation in which men live 200
years. If, then, in places unknown to us, men are believed to have a length of
days which is quite beyond our own experience, why should we not believe the
same of times distant from our own? Or are we to believe that in other places
there is what is not here, while we do not believe that in other times there has
been anything but what is now?
CHAP. 10.--OF THE DIFFERENT COMPUTATION OF THE AGES OF THE ANTEDILUVIANS,
GIVEN BY THE HEBREW MANUSCRIPTS AND BY OUR OWN.(5)
Wherefore, although there is a discrepancy for which I cannot account
between our manuscripts and the Hebrew, in the very number of years assigned to the
antediluvians, yet the discrepancy is not so great that they do not agree
about their longevity. For the very first man, Adam, before he begot his son Seth,
is in our manuscripts found to have lived 230 years, but in the Hebrew mss.
130. But after he begot Seth, our copies read that he lived 700 years, while the
Hebrew give 800. And thus, when the two periods are taken together, the sum
agrees. And so throughout the succeeding generations, the period before the father
begets a son is always made shorter by 100 years in the Hebrew, but the period
after his son is begotten is longer by 100 years in the Hebrew than in our
copies. And thus, taking the two periods together, the result is the same in both.
And in the sixth generation there is no discrepancy at all. In the seventh,
however, of which Enoch is the representative, who is recorded to have been
translated without death because he pleased God, there is the same discrepancy as in
the first five generations, 100 years more being ascribed to him by our mss.
before he begat a son. But still the result agrees; for according to both
documents he lived before he was translated 365 years. In the eighth generation the
discrepancy is less than in the others, and of a different kind. For Methuselah,
whom Enoch begat, lived, before he begat his successor, not 100 years less, but
100 years more, according to the Hebrew reading; and in our MSS. again these
years are added to the period after he begat his son; so that in this case also
the sum-total is the same. And it is only in the ninth generation, that is, in
the age of Lamech, Methuselah's son and Noah's father, that there is a
discrepancy in the sum total; and even in this case it is slight. For the Hebrew MSS.
represent him as living twenty-four years more than ours assign to him. For
before he begat his son, who was called Noah, six years fewer are given to him by
the Hebrew MSS. than by ours; but after he begat this son, they give him thirty
years more than ours; so that, deducting the former six, there remains, as we
said, a surplus of twenty-four.
CHAP. 11.--OF METHUSELAH'S AGE, WHICH SEEMS TO EXTEND FOURTEEN YEARS BEYOND
THE DELUGE.
From this discrepancy between the Hebrew books and our own arises the
well-known question as to the age of Methuselah;(1) for it is computed that he
lived for fourteen years after the deluge, though Scripture relates that of all who
were then upon the earth only the eight souls in the ark escaped destruction
by the flood, and of these Methuselah was not one. For, according to our books,
Methuselah, before he begat the son whom he called Lamech, lived 167 years;
then Lamech himself, before his son Noah was born, lived 188 years, which together
make 355 years. Add to these the age of Noah at the date of the deluge, 600
years, and this gives a total of 955 from the birth of Methuselah to the year of
the flood. Now all the years of the life of Methuselah are computed to be 969;
for when he had lived 167 years, and had begotten his son Lamech, he then lived
after this 802 years, which makes a total, as we said, of 969 years. From
this, if we deduct 955 years from the birth of Methuselah to the flood, there
remains fourteen years, which he is supposed to have lived after the flood. And
therefore some suppose that, though he was not on earth (in which it is agreed that
every living thing which could not naturally live in water perished), he was
for a time with his father, who had been translated, and that he lived there
till the flood had passed away. This hypothesis they adopt, that they may not cast
a slight on the trustworthiness of versions which the Church has received into
a position of high authority,(2) and because they believe that the Jewish MSS.
rather than our own are in error. For they do not admit that this is a mistake
of the translators, but maintain that there is a falsified statement in the
original, from which, through the Greek, the Scripture has been translated into
our own tongue. They say that it is not credible that the seventy translators,
who simultaneously and unanimously produced one rendering, could have erred, or,
in a case in which no interest of theirs was involved, could have falsified
their translation; but that the Jews, envying us our translation of their Law and
Prophets, have made alterations in their texts so as to undermine the
authority of ours. This opinion or suspicion let each man adopt according to his own
judgment. Certain it is that Methuselah did not survive the flood, but died in
the very year it occurred, if the numbers given in the Hebrew MSS. are true. My
own opinion regarding the seventy translators I will, with God's help, state
more carefully in its own place, when I have come down (following the order which
this work requires) to that period in which their translation was executed.(3)
For the present question, it is enough that, according to our versions, the men
of that age had lives so long as to make it quite possible that, during the
lifetime of the first-born of the two sole parents then on earth, the human race
multiplied sufficiently to form a community.
CHAP. 12.--OF THE OPINION OF THOSE WHO DO NOT BELIEVE THAT IN THESE PRIMITIVE,
TIMES MEN LIVED SO LONG AS IS STATED.
For they are by no means to be listened to who suppose that in those times
years were differently reckoned, and were so short that one of our years may
be supposed to be equal to ten of theirs. So that they say, when we read or hear
that some man lived 900 years, we should understand ninety, ten of those years
making but one of ours, and ten of ours equalling 100 of theirs. Consequently,
as they suppose, Adam was twenty-three years of age when he begat Seth, and
Seth himself was twenty years and six months old when his son Enos was born,
though the Scripture calls these months 205 years. For, on the hypothesis of those
whose opinion we are explaining, it was customary to divide one such year as we
have into ten parts, and to call each part a year. And each of these parts was
composed of six days squared; because God finished His works in six days, that
He might rest the seventh. Of this I disputed according to my ability in the
eleventh book.(4) Now six squared, or six times six, gives thirty-six days; and
this multiplied by ten amounts to 360 days, or twelve. lunar months. As for the
five remaining days which are needed to complete the solar year, and for the
fourth part of a day, which requires that into every fourth or leap-year a day
be added, the ancients added such days as the Romans used to call "intercalary,"
in order to complete the number of the years. So that Enos, Seth's son, was
nineteen years old when his son Cainan was born, though Scripture calls these
years 190. And so through all the generations in which the ages of the
antediluvians are given, we find in our versions that almost no one begat a son at the age
of 100 or under/or even at the age of 120 or thereabouts; but the youngest
fathers are recorded to have been 160 years old and upwards. And the reason of
this, they say, is that no one can beget children when he is ten years old, the
age spoken of by those men as 100, but that sixteen is the age of puberty, and
competent now to propagate offspring; and this is the age called by them 160. And
that it may not be thought incredible that in these days the year was
differently computed from our own, they adduce what is recorded by several writers of
history, that the Egyptians had a year of four months, the Acarnanians of six,
and the Lavinians of thirteen months.(1) The younger Pliny, after mentioning
that some writers reported that one man had lived 152 years, another ten more,
others 200, others 300, that some had even reached 500 and 600, and a few 800
years of age, gave it as his opinion that all this must be ascribed to mistaken
computation. For some, he says, make summer and winter each a year; others make
each season a year, like the Arcadians, whose years, he says, were of three
months. He added, too, that the Egyptians, of whose little years of four months we
have spoken already, sometimes terminated their year at the wane of each moon;
so that with them there are produced lifetimes of 1000 years.
By these plausible arguments certain persons, with no desire to weaken the
credit of this sacred history, but rather to facilitate belief in it by
removing the difficulty of such incredible longevity, have been themselves persuaded,
and think they act wisely in persuading others, that in these days the year
was so brief that ten of their years equal but one of ours, while ten of ours
equal 100 of theirs. But there is the plainest evidence to show that this is quite
false. Before producing this evidence, however, it seems right to mention a
conjecture which is yet more plausible. From the Hebrew manuscripts we could at
once refute this confident statement; for in them Adam is found to have lived
not 230 but 130 years before he begat his third son. If, then, this mean thirteen
years by our ordinary computation, then he must have begotten his first son
when he was only twelve or thereabouts. Who can at this age beget children
according to the ordinary and familiar course of nature? But not to mention him,
since it is possible he may have been able to beget his like as soon as he was
created,--for tt is not credible that he was created so little as our infants
are,--not to mention him, his son was not 205 years old when he begot Enos, as our
versions have it, but 105, and consequently, according to this idea, was not
eleven years old. But what shall I say of his son Cainan, who, though by our
version 170 years old, was by the Hebrew text seventy when he beget Mahalaleel? If
seventy years in those times meant only seven of our years, what man of seven
years old begets children?
CHAP. 13.--WHETHER, IN COMPUTING YEARS, WE OUGHT TO FOLLOW THE HEBREW OR THE
SEPTUAGINT.
But if I say this, I shall presently be answered, It is one of the Jews'
lies. This, however, we have disposed of above, showing that it cannot be that
men of so just a reputation as the seventy translators should have falsified
their version. However, if I ask them which of the two is more credible, that the
Jewish nation, scattered far and wide, could have unanimously conspired to
forge this lie, and so, through envying others the authority of their Scriptures,
have deprived themselves of their verity; or that seventy men, who were also
themselves Jews, shut up in one place (for Ptolemy king of Egypt had got them
together for this work), should have envied foreign nations that same truth, and by
common consent inserted these errors: who does not see which can be more
naturally and readily believed? But far be it from any prudent man to believe either
that the Jews, however malicious and wrong-headed, could have tampered with so
many and so widely-dispersed manuscripts; or that those renowned seventy
individuals had any common purpose to grudge the truth to the nations. One must
therefore more plausibly maintain, that when first their labors began to be
transcribed from the copy in Ptolemy's library, some such misstatement might find its
way into the first copy made, and from it might be disseminated far and wide;
and that this might arise from no fraud, but from a mere copyist's error. This
is a sufficiently plausible account of the difficulty regarding Methuselah's
life, and of that other case in which there is a difference in the total of
twenty-four years. But in those cases in which there is a methodical resemblance in
the falsification, so that uniformly the one version allots to the period before
a son and successor is born 100 years more than the other, and to the period
subsequent 100 years less, and vice versa, so that the totals may agree,--and
this holds true of the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, and seventh
generations,--in these cases error seems to have, if we may say so, a certain kind of
constancy, and savors not of accident, but of design.
Accordingly, that diversity of numbers which distinguishes the Hebrew from
the Greek and Latin copies of Scripture, and which consists of a uniform
addition and deduction of 100 years in each lifetime for several consecutive
generations, is to be attributed neither to the malice of the Jews nor to men so
diligent and prudent as the seventy translators, but to the error of the copyist who
was first allowed to transcribe the manuscript from the library of the
above-mentioned king. For even now, in cases where numbers contribute nothing to the
easier comprehension or more satisfactory knowledge of anything, they are both
carelessly transcribed, and still more carelessly emended. For who will trouble
himself to learn how many thousand men the several tribes of Israel contained?
He sees no resulting benefit of such knowledge. Or how many men are there who
are aware of the vast advantage that lies hid in this knowledge? But in this
case, in which during so many consecutive generations 100 years are added in one
manuscript where they are not reckoned in the other, and then, after the birth
of the son and successor, the years which were wanting are added, it is obvious
that the copyist who contrived this arrangement designed to insinuate that the
antediluvians lived an excessive number of years only because each year was
excessively brief, and that he tried to draw the attention to this fact by his
statement of their age of puberty at which they became able to beget children.
For, lest the incredulous might stumble at the difficulty of so long a lifetime,
he insinuated that Too of their years equalled but ten of ours; and this
insinuation he conveyed by adding 100 years whenever he found the age below 160 years
or thereabouts, deducting these years again from the period after the son's
birth, that tim total might harmonize. By this means he intended to ascribe the
generation of offspring to a fit age, without diminishing the total sum of years
ascribed to the lifetime of the individuals. And the very fact that in the
sixth generation he departed from this uniform practice, inclines us all the rather
to believe that when the circumstance we have referred to required his
alterations, he made them; seeing that when this circumstance did not exist, he made
no alteration. For in the same generation he found in the Hebrew MS., that Jared
lived before he begat Enoch 162 years, which, according to the short year
computation, is sixteen years and somewhat less than two months, an age capable of
procreation; and therefore it was not necessary to add 100 short years, and so
make the age twenty-six years of the usual length; and of course it was not
necessary to deduct, after the son's birth, years which he had not added before
it. And thus it comes to pass that in this instance there is no variation between
the two manuscripts.
This is corroborated still further by the fact that in the eighth
generation, while the Hebrew books assign 182(1) years to Methuselah before Lamech's
birth, ours assign to him twenty less, though usually 100 years are added to this
period; then, after Lamech's birth, the twenty years are restored, so as to
equalize the total in the two books. For if his design was that these 170 years
be understood as seventeen, so as to suit the age of puberty, as there was no
need for him adding anything, so there was none for his subtracting anything; for
in this case he found an age fit for the generation of children, for the sake.
of which he was in the habit of adding those 100 years m cases where he did
not find the age already sufficient. This difference of twenty years we might,
indeed, have supposed had happened accidentally, had he not taken care to restore
them afterwards as he had deducted them from the period before, so that there
might be no deficiency in the total. Or are we perhaps to suppose that there
was the still more astute design of concealing the deliberate and uniform
addition of 100 years to the first period and their deduction from the subsequent
period--did he design to conceal this by doing something similar, that is to say,
adding and deducting, not indeed a century, but some years, even in a case in
which there was no need for his doing so? But whatever may be thought of this,
whether it be believed that he did so or not, whether, in fine, it be so or not,
I would have no manner of doubt that when any diversity is found in the books,
since both cannot be true to fact, we do well to believe in preference that
language out of which the translation was made into another by translators. For
there are three Greek Mss., one Latin, and one Syriac, which agree with one
another, and in all of these Methuselah is said to have died six years before the
deluge.
CHAP. 14.--THAT THE YEARS IN THOSE ANCIENT TIMES WERE OF THE SAME LENGTH AS
OUR OWN.
Let us now see how it can be plainly made out that in the enormously
protracted lives of those men the years were not so short that ten of their years
were equal to only one of ours, but were of as great length as our own, which are
measured by the course of the sun. It is proved by this, that Scripture states
that the flood occurred in the six hundredth year of Noah's life. But why in
the same place is it also written, "The waters of the flood were upon the earth
in the six hundredth year of Noah's life, in the second month, the
twenty-seventh day of the month,"(1) if that very brief year (of which it took ten to make
one of ours) consisted of thirty-six days? For so scant a year, if the ancient
usage dignified it with the name of year, either has not months, or this month
must be three days, so that it may have twelve of them. How then was it here
said, "In the six hundredth year, the second month, the twenty-seventh day of the
month," unless the months then were of the same length as the months now? For
how else could it be said that the flood began on the twenty-seventh day of the
second month? Then afterwards, at the end of the flood, it is thus written:
"And the ark rested in the seventh month, on the twenty-seventh day of the month,
on the mountains of Ararat. And the waters decreased continually until the
eleventh month: on the first day of the month were the tops of the mountains
seen."(2) But if the months were such as we have, then so were the years. And
certainly months of three days each could not have a twenty-seventh day. Or if every
measure of time was diminished in proportion, and a thirtieth part of three
days was then called a day, then that great deluge, which is recorded to have
lasted forty clays and forty nights, was really over in less than four of our days.
Who can away with such foolishness and absurdity? Far be this error from
us,--an error which seeks to build up our fifth in the divine Scriptures on false
conjecture only to demolish our faith at another point. It is plain that the day
then was what it now is, a space of four-and-twenty hours, determined by the
lapse of day and night; the month then equal to the month now, which is defined
by the rise and completion of one moon; the year then equal to the year now,
which is completed by twelve lunar months, with the addition of five days and a
fourth to adjust it with the course of the sun. It was a year of this length
which was reckoned the six hundredth of Noah's life, and in the second month, the
twenty-seventh day of the month, the flood began,--a flood which, as is
recorded, was caused by heavy rains continuing for forty days, which days had not only
two hours and a little more, but four, and-twenty hours, completing a night and
a day. And consequently those antediluvians lived more than 900 years, which
were years as long as those which afterwards Abraham lived 175 of, and after him
his son Isaac 180, and his son Jacob nearly 150, and some time after, Moses
120, and men now seventy or eighty, or not much longer, of which years it is
said, "their strength is labor and sorrow."(3)
But that discrepancy of numbers which is found to exist between our own
and the Hebrew text does not touch the longevity of the ancients; and if there is
any diversity so great that both versions cannot be true, we must take our
ideas of the real facts from that text out of which our own version has been
translated. However, though any one who pleases has it in his power to correct this
version, yet it is not unimportant to observe that no one has presumed to emend
the Septuagint from the Hebrew text in the many places where they seem to
disagree. For this difference has not been reckoned a falsification; and for my own
part I am persuaded it ought not to be reckoned so. But where the difference
is not a mere copyist's error, and where the sense is agreeable to truth and
illustrative of truth, we must believe that the divine Spirit prompted them to
give a varying version, not in their function of translators, but in the liberty
of prophesying. And therefore we find that the apostles justly sanction the
Septuagint, by quoting it as well as the Hebrew when they adduce proofs from the
Scriptures. But as I have promised to treat this subject more carefully, if God
help me, in a more fitting place, I will now go on with the matter in hand. For
there can be no doubt that, the lives of men being so long, the first-born of
the first man could have built a city,--a city, however, which was earthly, and
not that which is called the city of God, to describe which we have taken in
hand this great work.
CHAP. 15.--WHETHER IT IS CREDIBLE THAT THE MEN OF THE PRIMITIVE AGE ABSTAINED
FROM SEXUAL INTERCOURSE UNTIL THAT DATE AT WHICH IT IS RECORDED THAT THEY BEGAT
CHILDREN.
Some one, then, will say, Is it to be believe that a man who intended to
beget children, and had no intention of continence, abstained from sexual
intercourse a hundred years and more, or even, according to the Hebrew version, only
a little less, say eighty, seventy, or sixty years; or, if he did not abstain,
was unable to beget offspring? This question admits of two solutions. For
either puberty was so much later as the whole life was longer, or, which seems to me
more likely, it is not the first-born sons that are here mentioned, but those
whose names were required to fill up the series until Noah was reached, from
whom again we see that the succession is continued to Abraham, and after him down
to that point of time until which it was needful to mark by pedigree the
course of the most glorious city, which sojourns as a stranger in this world, and
seeks the heavenly country. That which is undeniable is that Cain was the first
who was born of man and woman. For had he not been the first who was added by
birth to the two unborn persons, Adam could not have said what he is recorded to
have said, "I have gotten a man by the Lord."(1) He was followed by Abel, whom
the eider brother slew, and who was the first to show by a kind of
foreshadowing of the sojourning city of God, what iniquitous persecutions that city would
suffer at the hands of wicked and, as it were, earth-born men, who love their
earthly origin, and delight in the earthly happiness of the earthly city. But how
old Adam was when he begat these sons does not appear. After this the
generations diverge, the one branch deriving from Cain, the other from him whom Adam
begot in the room of Abel slain by his brother, and whom he called Seth, saying,
as it is written, "For God hath raised me up another seed for Abel whom Cain
slew."(2) These two series of generations accordingly, the one of Cain, the other
of Seth, represent the two cities in their distinctive ranks, the one the
heavenly city, which sojourns on earth, the other the earthly, which gapes after
earthly joys, and grovels in them as if they were the only joys. But though eight
generations, including Adam, are registered before the flood, no man of Cain's
line has his age recorded at which the son who succeeded him was begotten. For
the Spirit of God refused to mark the times before the flood in the
generations of the earthly city, but preferred to do so in the heavenly line, as if it
were more worthy of being remembered. Further, when Seth was born, the age of his
father is mentioned; but already he had begotten other sons, and who will
presume to say that Cain and Abel were the only ones previously begotten? For it
does not follow that they alone had been begotten of Adam, because they alone
were named in order to continue the series of generations which it was desirable
to mention. For though the names of all the rest are buried in silence, yet it
is said that Adam begot sons and daughters; and who that cares to be free from
the charge of temerity will dare to say how many his offspring numbered? It was
possible enough that Adam was divinely prompted to say, after Seth was born,
"For God hath raised up to me another seed for Abel," because that son was to be
capable of representing Abel's holiness, not because he was born first after
him in point of time. Then because it is written, "And Seth lived 205 years," or,
according to the Hebrew reading, "105 years, and begat Enos,"(3) who but a
rash man could affirm that this was his first-born? Will any man do so to excite
our wonder, and cause us to inquire how for so many years he remained free from
sexual intercourse, though without any purpose of continuing so, or how, if he
did not abstain, he yet had no children? Will any man do so when it is written
of him, "And he begat sons and daughters, and all the days of Seth were 912
years, and he died?"(4) And similarly regarding those whose years are afterwards
mentioned, it is not disguised that they begat sons and daughters.
Consequently it does not at all appear whether he who is named as the son
was himself the first begotten. Nay, since it is incredible that those fathers
were either so long in attaining puberty, or could not get wives, or could not
impregnate them, it is also incredible that those sons were their first-born.
But as the writer of the sacred history designed to descend by well-marked
intervals through a series of generations to the birth and life of Noah, in whose
time the flood occurred, he mentioned not those sons who were first begotten, but
those by whom the succession was handed down.
Let me make this clearer by here inserting an example, in regard to which
no one can have any doubt that what I am asserting is true. The evangelist
Matthew, where he designs to commit to our memories the generation of the Lord's
flesh by a series of parents, beginning from Abraham and intending to reach
David, says, "Abraham begat Isaac;"(1) why did he not say Ishmael, whom he first
begat? Then "Isaac begat Jacob;" why did he not say Esau, who was the first-born?
Simply because these sons would not have helped him to reach David. Then
follows, "And Jacob begat Judah and his brethren:" was Judah the first begotten?
"Judah," he says, "begat Pharez and Zara;" yet neither were these twins the
first-born of Judah, but before them he had begotten three other sons. And so in the
order of the generations he retained those by whom he might reach David, so as
to proceed onwards to the end he had in view. And from this we may understand
that the antediluvians who are mentioned were not the first-born, but those
through whom the order of the succeeding generations might be carried on to the
patriarch Noah. We need not, therefore, weary ourselves with discussing the
needless and obscure question as to their lateness of reaching puberty.
CHAP. 16.--OF MARRIAGE BETWEEN BLOOD-RELATIONS, IN REGARD TO WHICH THE PRESENT
LAW COULD NOT BIND THE MEN OF THE EARLIEST AGES.
As, therefore, the human race, subsequently to the first marriage of the
man who was made of dust, and his wife who was made out of his side, required
the union of males and females in order that it might multiply, and as there were
no human beings except those who had been born of these two, men took their
sisters for wives,--an act which was as certainly dictated by necessity in these
ancient days as afterwards it was condemned by the prohibitions of religion.
For it is very reasonable and just that men, among whom concord is honorable and
useful, should be bound together by various relationships; and one man should
not himself sustain many relationships, but that the various relationships
should be distributed among several, and should thus serve to bind together the
greatest number in the same social interests. "Father" and "father-in-law" are the
names of two relationships. When, therefore, a man has one person for his
father, another for his father-in-law, friendship extends itself to a larger number.
But Adam in his single person was obliged to hold both relations to his sons
and daughters, for brothers and sisters were united in marriage. So too Eve his
wife was both mother and mother-in-law to her children of both sexes; while,
had there been two women, one the mother, the other the mother-in-law, the family
affection would have had a wider field. Then the sister herself by becoming a
wife sustained in her single person two relationships, which, had they been
distributed among individuals, one being sister, and another being wife, the
family tie would have embraced a greater number of persons. But there was then no
material for effecting this, since there were no human beings but the brothers
and sisters born of those two first parents. Therefore, when an abundant
population made it possible, men ought to choose for wives women who were not already
their sisters; for not only would there then be no necessity for marrying
sisters, but, were it done; it would be most abominable. For if the grandchildren of
the first pair, being now able to choose their cousins for wives, married their
sisters, then it would no longer be only two but three relationships that were
held by one man, while each of these relationships ought to have been held by
a separate individual, so as to bind together by family affection a larger
number. For one man would in that case be both father, and father-in-law, and
uncle(2) to his own children (brother and sister now man and wife); and his wife
would be mother, aunt, and mother-in-law to them; and they themselves would be not
only brother and sister, and man and wife, but cousins also, being the
children of brother and sister. Now, all these relationships, which combined three men
into one, would have embraced nine persons had each relationship been held by
one individual, so that a man had one person for his sister, another his wife,
another his cousin, another his father, another his uncle, another his
father-in-law, another his mother, another his aunt, another his mother-in-law; and
thus the social bond would not have been tightened to bind a few, but loosened to
embrace a larger number of relations.
And we see that, since the human race has increased and multiplied, this
is so strictly observed even among the profane worshippers of many and false
gods, that though their laws perversely allow a brother to marry his sister,(3)
yet custom, with a finer morality, prefers to forego this license; and though it
was quite allowable in the earliest ages of the human race to marry one's
sister, it is now abhorred as a thing which no circumstances could justify. For
custom has very great power either to attract or to shock human feeling. And in
this matter, while it restrains concupiscence within due bounds, the man who
neglects and disobeys it is justly branded as abominable. For if it is iniquitous to
plough beyond our own boundaries through the greed of gain, is it not much
more iniquitous to transgress the recognized boundaries of morals through sexual
lust? And with regard to marriage in the next degree of consanguinity, marriage
between cousins, we have observed that in our own time the customary morality
has prevented this from being frequent, though the law allows it. It was not
prohibited by divine law, nor as yet had human law prohibited it; nevertheless,
though legitimate, people shrank from it, because it lay so close to what was
illegitimate, and in marrying a cousin seemed almost to marry a sister,--for
cousins are so closely related that they are called brothers and sisters,' and are
almost really so. But the ancient fathers, fearing that near relationship might
gradually in the course of generations diverge, and become distant
relationship, or cease to be relationship at all, religiously endeavored to limit it by the
bond of marriage before it became distant, and thus, as it were, to call it
back when it was escaping them. And on this account, even when the world was full
of people, though they did not choose wives from among their sisters or
half-sisters, yet they preferred them to be of the same stock as themselves. But who
doubts that the modern prohibition of the marriage even of cousins is the more
seemly regulation--not merely on account of the reason we have been urging, the
multiplying of relationships, so that one person might not absorb two, which
might be distributed to two persons, and so increase the number of people bound
together as a family, but also because there is in human nature I know not what
natural and praiseworthy shamefacedness which restrains us from desiring that
connection which, though for propagation, is yet lustful and which even
conjugal modesty blushes over, with any one to whom consanguinity bids us render
respect?
The sexual intercourse of man and woman, then, is in the case of mortals a
kind of seed-bed of the city; but while the earthly city needs for its
population only generation, the heavenly needs also regeneration to rid it of the
taint of generation. Whether before the deluge there was any bodily or visible sign
of regeneration, such as was afterwards enjoined upon Abraham when he was
circumcised, or what kind of sign it was, the sacred history does not inform us.
But it does inform us that even these earliest of mankind sacrificed to God, as
appeared also in the case of the two first brothers; Noah, too, is said to have
offered sacrifices to God when he had come forth from the ark after the deluge.
And concerning this subject we have already said in the foregoing books that
the devils arrogate to themselves divinity, and require sacrifice that they may
be esteemed gods, and delight in these honors on no other account than this,
because they know that true sacrifice is due to the true God.
CHAP. 17.--OF THE TWO FATHERS AND LEADERS WHO SPRANG FROM ONE PROGENITOR.
Since, then, Adam was the father of both lines,--the father, that is to
say, both of the line which belonged to the earthly, and of that which belonged
to the heavenly city,--when Abel was slain, and by his death exhibited a
marvellous mystery, there were henceforth two lines proceeding from two fathers, Cain
and Seth, and in those sons of theirs, whom it behoved to register, the tokens
of these two cities began to appear more distinctly. For Cain begat Enoch, in
whose name he built a city, an earthly one, which was not from home in this
world, but rested satisfied with its temporal peace and happiness. Cain, too, means
"possession;" wherefore at his birth either his father or mother said," I have
gotten a man through God." Then Enoch means "dedication;" for the earthly city
is dedicated in this world in which it is built, for in this world it finds
the end towards which it aims and aspires. Further, Seth signifies"
resurrection," and Enos his son signifies "man," not as Adam, which also signifies man, but
is used in Hebrew indifferently for man and woman, as it is written, "Male and
female created He them, and blessed them, and called their name Adam,"(2)
leaving no room to doubt that though the woman was distinctively called Eve, yet the
name Adam, meaning man, was common to both. But Enos means man in so
restricted a sense, that Hebrew linguists tell us it cannot be applied to woman: it is
the equivalent of the "child of the resurrection," when they, neither marry nor
are given in marriage.(3) For there shall be no generation in that place to
which regeneration shall have brought us. Wherefore I think it not immaterial to
observe that in those generations which are propagated from him who is called
Seth, although daughters as well as sons are said to have been begotten, no woman
is expressly registered by name; but in those which sprang from Cain at the
very termination to which the line runs, the last person named as begotten is a
woman. For we read, "Methusael begat Lamech. And Lamech took unto him two wives:
the name of the one was Adah, and the name of the other Zillah. And Adah bare
Jabal: he was the father of the shepherds that dwell in tents. And his
brother's name was Jubal: he was the father of all such as handle the harp and organ.
And Zillah, she also bare Tubal-cain, an instructor of every artificer in brass
and iron: and the sister of Tubal-cain was Naamah."(1) Here terminate all the
generations of Cain, being eight in number, including Adam,--to wit, seven from
Adam to Lamech, who married two wives, and whose children, among whom a woman
also is named, form the eighth generation. Whereby it is elegantly signified
that the earthly city shall to its termination have carnal generations proceeding
from the intercourse of males and females. And therefore tile wives themselves
of the man who is the last named father of Cain's line, are registered in their
own names,--a practice nowhere followed before the deluge save in Eve's case.
Now as Cain, signifying possession, the founder of the earthly city, and his
son Enoch, meaning dedication, in whose name it was founded, indicate that this
city is earthly both in its beginning and in its end,--a city in which nothing
more is hoped for than can be seen in this world,--so Seth, meaning
resurrection, and being the father of generations registered apart from the others, we must
consider what this sacred history says of his son.
CHAP. 18.--THE SIGNIFICANCE OF ABEL, SETH, AND ENOS TO CHRIST AND HIS BODY THE
CHURCH.
"And to Seth," it is said, "there was born a son, and he called his name
Enos: he hoped to call on the name of the Lord God."(2) Here we have a loud
testimony to the truth. Man, then, the son of the resurrection, lives in hope: he
lives in hope as long as the city of God, which is begotten by faith in the
resurrection, sojourns in this world. For in these two men, Abel, signifying
"grief," and his brother Seth, signifying "resurrection," the death of Christ and His
life from the dead are prefigured. And by faith in these is begotten in this
world the city of God, that is to say, the man who has hoped to call on the name
of the Lord. "For by hope," says the apostle, "we are saved: but hope that is
seen is not hope: for what a man seeth, why doth he yet hope for? But if we
hope for that we see not, then do we with patience wait for it."(3) Who can avoid
referring this to a profound mystery? For did not Abel hope to call upon the
name of the Lord God when his sacrifice is mentioned in Scripture as having been
accepted by God? Did not Seth himself hope to call on the name of the Lord God,
of whom it was said, "For God hath appointed me another seed instead of Abel?"
Why then is this which is found to be common to all the godly specially
attributed to Enos, unless because it was fit that in him, who is mentioned as the
first-born of the father of those generations which were separated to the better
part of the heavenly city, there should be a type of the man, or society of
men, who live not according to man in contentment with earthly felicity, but
according to God in hope of everlasting, felicity? And it, was not said, "He hoped
in the Lord God," nor He called on the name of the Lord God," but" He hoped to
call on the name of the Lord God." And what does this "hoped to call" mean,
unless it is a prophecy that a people should arise who, according to the election
of grace, would call on the name of the Lord God? It is this which has been said
by another prophet, and which the apostle interprets of the people who belong
to the grace of God: "And it shall be that whosoever shall call upon the name
of the Lord shall be saved."(4) For these two expressions, "And he called his
name Enos, which means man," and "He hoped to call on the name of the Lord God,"
are sufficient proof that man ought not to rest his hopes in himself; as it is
elsewhere written, "Cursed is the man that trusteth in man."(5) Consequently no
one ought to trust in himself that he shall become a citizen of that other
city which is not dedicated in the name of Cain's son in this present time, that
is to say, in the fleeting course of this mortal world, but in the immortality
of perpetual blessedness.
CHAP. 19.--THE SIGNIFICANCE OP ENOCH'S TRANSLATION.
For that line also of which Seth is the father has the name "Dedication"
in the seventh generation from Adam, counting Adam. For the seventh from him is
Enoch, that is, Dedication. But this is that man who was translated because he
pleased God, and who held in the order of the generations a remarkable place,
being the seventh from Adam, a number signalized by the consecration of the
Sabbath. But, counting from the diverging point of the two lines, or from Seth, he
was the sixth Now it was on the sixth day God made man, and consummated His
works. But the translation of Enoch prefigured our deferred dedication; for though
it is indeed already accomplished in Christ our Head, who so rose again that
He shall die no more, and who was Himself also translated, yet there remains
another dedication of the whole house, of which Christ Himself is the foundation,
and this dedication is deferred till the end, when all shall rise again to die
no more. And whether it is the house of God, or the temple of God, or the city
of God, that is said to be dedicated, it is all the same, and equally in
accordance With the usage of the Latin language. For Virgil himself calls the city of
widest empire "the house of Assaracus,"(1) meaning the Romans, who were
descended through the Trojans from Assaracus. He also calls them the house of AEneas,
because Rome was built by those Trojans who had come to Italy under AEneas.(2)
For that poet imitated the sacred writings, in which the Hebrew nation, though
so numerous, is called the house of Jacob.
CHAP. 20.--HOW IT IS THAT CAIN'S LINE TERMINATES IN THE EIGHTH GENERATION,
WHILE NOAH, THOUGH DESCENDED FROM THE SAME FATHER, ADAM, IS FOUND TO BE THE TENTH
FROM HIM.
Some one will say, If the writer of this history intended, in enumerating
the generations from Adam through his son Seth, to descend through them to
Noah, in whose time the deluge occurred, and from him again to trace the connected
generations down to Abraham, with whom Matthew begins the pedigree of Christ
the eternal King of the city of God, what did he intend by enumerating the
generations from Cain, and to what terminus did he mean to trace them? We reply, To
the deluge, by which the whole stock of the earthly city was destroyed, but
repaired by the sons of Noah. For the earthly city and community of men who live
after the flesh will never fail until the end of this world, of which our Lord
says, "The children of this world generate, and are generated."(3) But the city
of God, which sojourns in this world, is conducted by regeneration to the world
to come, of which the children neither generate nor are generated. In this
world generation is common to both cities; though even now the city of God has many
thousand citizens who abstain from the act of generation; yet the other city
also has some citizens who imitate these, though erroneously. For to that city
belong also those who have erred from the faith, and introduced divers heresies;
for they live according to man, not according to God. And the Indian
gymnosophists, who are said to philosophize in the solitudes of India in a state of
nudity, are its citizens; and they abstain from marriage. For continence is not a
good thing, except when it is practised in the faith of the highest good, that
is, God. Yet no one is found to have practised it before the deluge; for indeed
even Enoch himself, the seventh from Adam, who is said to have been translated
without dying, begat sons and daughters before he was translated, and among
these was Methuselah, by whom the succession of the recorded generations is
maintained.
Why, then, is so small a number of Cain's generations registered, if it
was proper to trace them to the deluge, and if there was no such delay of the
date of puberty as to preclude the hope of offspring for a hundred or more years?
For if the author of this book had not in view some one to whom he might
rigidly trace the series of generations, as he designed in those which sprang from
Seth's seed to descend to Noah, and thence to start again by a rigid order, what
need was there of omitting the first-born sons for the sake of descending to
Lamech, in whose sons that line terminates,--that is to say, in the eighth
generation from Adam, or the seventh from Cain,--as if from this point he had wished
to pass on to another series, by which he might reach either the Israelitish
people, among whom the earthly Jerusalem presented a prophetic figure of the
heavenly city, or to Jesus Christ, "according to the flesh, who is over all, God
blessed for ever,"(4) the Maker and Ruler of the heavenly city? What, I say, was
the need of this, seeing that the whole of Cain's posterity were destroyed in
the deluge? From this it is manifest that they are the first-born sons who are
registered in this genealogy. Why, then, are there so few of them? Their numbers
in the period before the deluge must have been greater, if the date of puberty
bore no proportion to their longevity, and they had children before they were
a hundred years old. For supposing they were on an average thirty years old
when they began to beget children, then, as there are eight generations, including
Adam and Lamech's children, 8 times 30 gives 240 years; did they then produce
no more children in all the rest of the time before the deluge? With what
intention, then, did he who wrote this record make no mention of subsequent
generations? For from Adam to the deluge there are reckoned, according to our copies of
Scripture, 2262 years,(5) and according to the Hebrew text, 1656 years.
Supposing, then, the smaller number to be the true one, and subtracting from 1656
years 240, is it credible that during the remaining 1400 and odd years until the
deluge the posterity of Cain begat no children?
But let any one who is moved by this call to mind that when I discussed
the question, how it is credible that those primitive men could abstain for so
many years from begetting children, two modes of solution were found,--either a
puberty late in proportion to their longevity, or that the sons registered in
the genealogies were not the first-born, but those through whom the author of the
book intended to reach the point aimed at, as he intended to reach Noah by the
generations of Seth. So that, if in the generations of Cain there occurs no
one whom the writer could make it his object to reach by omitting the first-born
and inserting those who would serve such a purpose, then we must have recourse
to the supposition of late puberty, and say that only at some age beyond a
hundred years they became capable of besetting children, so that the order of the
generations ran through the first-born, and filled up even the whole period
before the deluge, long though it was. It is, however, possible that, for some more
secret reason which escapes me, this city, which we say is earthly, is
exhibited in all its generations down to Lamech and his sons, and that then the writer
withholds from recording the rest which may have existed before the deluge.
And without supposing so late a puberty in these men, there might be another
reason for tracing the generations by sons who were not first-born, viz., that the
same city which Cain built, and named after his son Enoch, may have had a
widely extended dominion and many kings, not reigning simultaneously, but
successively, the reigning king besetting always his successor. Cain himself would be the
first of these kings; his son Enoch, in whose name the city in which he
reigned was built, would be the second; the third Irad, whom Enoch begat; the fourth
Mehujael, whom Irad begat; the fifth Methusael, whom Mehujael begat; the sixth
Lamech, whom Methusael begat, and who is the seventh from Adam through Cain.
But it was not necessary that the first-born should succeed their fathers in the
kingdom, but those would succeed who were recommended by the possession of some
virtue useful to the earthly city, or who were chosen by lot, or the son who
was best liked by his father would succeed by a kind of hereditary right to the
throne. And the deluge may have happened during the lifetime and reign of
Lamech, and may have destroyed him along with all other men, save those who were in
the ark. For we cannot be surprised that, during so long a period from Adam to
the deluge, and with the ages of individuals varying as they did, there should
not be an equal number of generations in both lines, but seven in Cain's, and
ten in Seth's; for as I have already said, Lamech is the seventh from Adam, Noah
the tenth; and in Lamech's case not one son only is registered, as in the
former instances, but more, because it was uncertain which of them would have
succeeded when he died, if there had intervened any time to reign between his death
and the deluge.
But in whatever manner the generations of Cain's line are traced
downwards, whether it be by first-born sons or by the heirs to the throne, it seems to
me that I must by no means omit to notice that, when Lamech had been set down as
the seventh from Adam, there were named, in addition, as many of his children
as made up this number to eleven, which is the number signifying sin; for three
sons and one daughter are added. The wives of Lamech have another
signification, different from that which I am now pressing. For at present I am speaking of
the children, and not of those by whom the children were begotten. Since,
then, the law is symbolized by the number ten,--whence that memorable
Decalogue,--there is no doubt that the number eleven, which goes beyond(1) ten, symbolizes
the transgression of the law, and consequently sin. For this reason, eleven
veils of goat's skin were ordered to be hung in the tabernacle of the testimony,
which served in the wanderings of God's people as an ambulatory temple. And in
that haircloth there was a reminder of sins, because the goats were to be set on
the left hand of the Judge; and therefore, when we confess our sins, we
prostrate ourselves in haircloth, as if we were saying what is written in the psalm,
"My sin is ever before me."(2) The progeny of Adam, then, by Cain the murderer,
is completed in the number eleven, which symbolizes sin; and this number itself
is made up by a woman, as it was by the same sex that beginning was made of
sin by which we all die. And it was committed that the pleasure of the flesh,
which resists the spirit, might follow; and so Naamah, the daughter of Lamech,
means "pleasure." But from Adam to Noah, in the line of Seth, there are ten
generations. And to Noah three sons are added, of whom, while one fell into sin, two
were blessed by their father; so that, if you deduct the reprobate and add the
gracious sons to the number, you get twelve,--a number signalized in the case
of the patriarchs and of the apostles, and made up of the parts of the number
seven multiplied into one another,--for three times four, or four times three,
give twelve. These things being so, I see that I must consider and mention how
these two lines, which by their separate genealogies depict the two cities one of
earth-born, the other of regenerated persons, became afterwards so mixed and
confused, that the whole human race, with the exception of eight persons,
deserved to perish in the deluge.
CHAP. 21.--WHY IT IS THAT, AS SOON AS CAIN'S SON ENOCH HAS BEEN NAMED, THE
GENEALOGY IS FORTHWITH CONTINUED AS FAR AS THE DELUGE, WHILE AFTER THE MENTION OF
ENOS, SETH'S SON, THE NARRATIVE RETURNS AGAIN TO THE CREATION OF MAN.
We must first see why, in the enumeration of Cain's posterity, after
Enoch, in whose name the city was built, has been first of all mentioned, the rest
are at once enumerated down to that terminus of which I have spoken, and at
which that race and the whole line was destroyed in the deluge; while, after Enos
the son of Seth, has been mentioned, the rest are not at once named down to the
deluge, but a clause is inserted to the following effect: "This is the book of
the generations of Adam. In the day that God created man, in the likeness of
God made He him; male and female created He them; and blessed them, and called
their name Adam, in the day when they were created."(1) This seems to me to be
inserted for this purpose, that here again the reckoning of the times may start
from Adam himself--a purpose which the writer had not in view in speaking of the
earthly city, as if God mentioned it, but did not take account of its
duration. But why does he return to this recapitulation after mentioning the son of
Seth, the man who hoped to call on the name of the Lord God, unless because it was
fit thus to present these two cities, the one beginning with a murderer and
ending in a murderer (for Lamech, too, acknowledges to his two wives that he had
committed murder), the other built up by him who hoped to call upon the name of
the Lord God? For the highest and complete terrestrial duty of the city of
God, which is a stranger in this world, is that which was exemplified in the
individual who was begotten by him who typified the resurrection of the murdered
Abel. That one man is the unity of the whole heavenly city, not yet indeed
complete, but to be completed, as this prophetic figure foreshows. The son of Cain,
therefore, that is, the son of possession (and of what but an earthly
possession?), may have a name in the earthly city which was built in his name. It is of
such the Psalmist says, "They call their lands after their own names."(2)
Wherefore they incur what is written in another psalm: "Thou, O Lord, in Thy city
wilt despise their image."(3) But as for the son of Seth, the son of the
resurrection, let him hope to call on the name of the Lord God. For he prefigures that
society of men which says, "But I am like a green olive-tree in the house of
God: I have trusted in the mercy of God."(4) But let him not seek the empty
honors of a famous name upon earth, for "Blessed is the man that maketh the name of
the Lord his trust, and respecteth not vanities nor lying follies."(5) After
having presented the two cities, the one founded in the material good of this
world, the other in hope in God, but both starting from a common gate opened in
Adam into this mortal state, and both running on and running out to their
proper and merited ends, Scripture begins to reckon the times, and in this reckoning
includes other generations, making a recapitulation from Adam, out of whose
condemned seed, as out of one mass handed over to merited damnation, God made
some vessels of wrath to dishonor and others vessels of mercy to honor; in
punishment rendering to the former what is due, in grace giving to the latter what is
not due: in order that by the very comparison of itself with the vessels of
wrath, the heavenly city, which sojourns on earth, may learn not to put confidence
in the liberty of its own will, but may hope to call on the name of the Lord
God. For will, being a nature which was made good by the good God, but mutable
by the immutable, because it was made out of nothing, can both decline from good
to do evil, which takes place when it freely chooses, and can also escape the
evil and do good, which takes place only by divine assistance.
CHAP. 22.--OF THE FALL OF THE SONS OF GOD WHO WERE CAPTIVATED BY THE DAUGHTERS
OF MEN, WHEREBY ALL, WITH THE EXCEPTION OF EIGHT PERSONS, DESERVEDLY PERISHED
IN THE DELUGE.
When the human race, in the exercise of this freedom of will, increased
and advanced, there arose a mixture and confusion of the two cities by their
participation in a common iniquity. And this calamity, as well as the first, was
occasioned by woman, though not in the same way; for these women were not
themselves betrayed, neither did they persuade the men to sin, but having belonged to
the earthly city and society of the earthly, they had been of corrupt manners
from the first, and were loved for their bodily beauty by the sons of God, or
the citizens of the other city which sojourns in this world. Beauty is indeed a
good gift of God; but that the good may not think it a great good, God dispenses
it even to the wicked. And thus, when the good that is great and proper to the
good was abandoned by the sons of God, they fell to a paltry good which is not
peculiar to the good, but common to the good and the evil; and when they were
captivated by the daughters of men, they adopted the manners of the earthly to
win them as their brides, and forsook the godly ways they had followed in their
own holy society. And thus beauty, which is indeed God's handiwork, but only a
temporal, carnal, and lower kind of good, is not filly loved in preference to
God, the eternal, spiritual, and unchangeable good. When the miser prefers his
gold to justice, it is through no fault of the gold, but of the man; and so
with every created thing. For though it be good, it may be loved with an evil as
well as with a good love: it is loved rightly when it is loved ordinately;
evilly, when inordinately, It is this which some one has briefly said in these
verses in praise of the Creator:(1) "These are Thine, they are good, because Thou
art good who didst create them. There is in them nothing of ours, unless the sin
we coimmit when we forget the order of things, and instead of Thee love that
which Thou hast made."
But if the Creator is truly loved, that is, if He Himself is loved and not
another thing in His stead, He cannot be evilly loved; for love itself is to
be ordinately loved, because we do well to love that which, when we love it,
makes us live well and virtuously. So that it seems to me that it is a brief but
true definition of virtue to say, it is the order of love; and on this account,
in the Canticles, the bride of Christ, the city of God, sings, "Order love
within me."(2) It was the order of this love, then, this charity or attachment,
which the sons of God disturbed when they forsook God, and were enamored of the
daughters of men.(3) And by these two names (sons of God and daughters of men)
the two cities are sufficiently distinguished. For though the former were by
nature children of men, they had come into possession of another name by grace.
For in the same Scripture in which the sons of God are said to have loved the
daughters of men, they are also called angels of God; whence many suppose that
they were not men but angels.
CHAP. 23.--WHETHER WE ARE TO BELIEVE THAT ANGELS, WHO ARE OF A SPIRITUAL
SUBSTANCE, FELL IN LOVE WITH THE BEAUTY OF WOMEN, AND SOUGHT THEM IN MARRIAGE, AND
THAT FROM THIS CONNECTION GIANTS WERE BORN.
In the third book of this work (c. 5) we made a passing reference to this
question, but did not decide whether angels, inasmuch as they are spirits,
could have bodily intercourse with women. For it is written, "Who maketh His angels
spirits,"(4) that is, He makes those who are by nature spirits His angels by
appointing them to the duty of bearing His messages. For the Greek word
<greek>aUUels</greek>, which in Latin appears as "angelus," means a messenger. But
whether the Psalmist speaks of their bodies when he adds, "and His ministers a
flaming fire," or means that God's ministers ought to blaze with love as with a
spiritual fire, is doubtful. However, the same trustworthy Scripture testifies
that angels have appeared to men in such bodies as could not only be seen, but
also touched. There is, too, a very general rumor, which many have verified by
their own experience, or which trustworthy persons who have heard the experience
of others corroborate, that sylvans and fauns, who are commonly called "incubi,"
had often made wicked assaults upon women, and satisfied their lust upon them;
and that certain devils, called Duses by the Gauls, are constantly attempting
and effecting this impurity is so generally affirmed, that it were impudent to
deny it.(5) From these assertions, indeed, I dare not determine whether there
be some spirits embodied in an aerial substance (for this element, even when
agitated by a fan, is sensibly felt by the body), and who are capable of lust and
of mingling sensibly with women; but certainly I could by no means believe that
God's holy angels could at that time have so fallen, nor can I think that it
is of them the Apostle Peter said, "For if God spared not the angels that
sinned, but cast them down to hell, and delivered them into chains of darkness, to be
reserved unto judgment."(1) I think he rather speaks of these who first
apostatized from God, along with their chief the devil, who enviously deceived the
first man under the form of a serpent But the same holy Scripture affords the
most ample testimony that even godly man have been called angels; for of John it
is written: "Behold, I send my messenger (angel) before Thy face, who shall
prepare Thy way."(2) And the prophet Malachi, by a peculiar grace specially
communicated to him, was called an angel.(3)
But some are moved by the fact that we have read that the fruit of the
connection between those who are called angels of God and the women they loved
were not men like our own breed, but giants; just as if there were not born even
in our own time (as I have mentioned above) men of much greater size than the
ordinary stature. Was there not at Rome a few years ago, when the destruction of
the city now accomplished by the Goths was drawing near, a woman, with her
father and mother, who by her gigantic size over-topped all others? Surprising
crowds from all quarters came to see her, and that which struck them most was the
circumstance that neither of her parents were quite up to the tallest ordinary
stature. Giants therefore might well be born, even before the sons of God, who
are also called angels of God, formed a connection with the daughters of men, or
of those living according to men, that is to say, before the sons of Seth
formed a connection with the daughters of Cain. For thus speaks even the canonical
Scripture itself in the book in which we read of this; its words are: "And it
came to pass, when men began to multiply on the face of the earth, and daughters
were born unto them, that the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they
were fair [good]; and they took them wives of all which they chose. And the Lord
God said, My Spirit shall not always strive with man, for that he also is
flesh: yet his days shall be an hundred and twenty years. There were giants in the
earth in those days; and also after that, when the sons of God came in unto the
daughters of men, and they bare children to them, the same became the giants,
men of renown."(4) These words of the divine book sufficiently indicate that
already there were giants in the earth in those days, in which the sons of God
took wives of the children of men, when they loved them because they were good,
that is, fair. For it is the custom of this Scripture to call those who are
beautiful in appearance "good." But after this connection had been formed, then too
were giants born. For the words are: "There were giants in the earth in those
days, and also after that, when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of
men." Therefore there were giants both before, "in those days," and "also after
that." And the words, "they bare children to them," show plainly enough that
before the sons of God fell in this fashion they begat children to God, not to
themselves,--that is to say, not moved by the lust of sexual intercourse, but
discharging the duty of propagation, intending to produce not a family to gratify
their own pride, but citizens to people the city of God; and to these they as
God's angels would bear the message, that they should place their hope in God,
like him who was born of Seth, the son of resurrection, and who hoped to call on
the name of the Lord God, in which hope they and their offspring would be
co-heirs of eternal blessings, and brethren in the family of which God is the
Father.
But that those angels were not angels in the sense of not being men, as
some suppose, Scripture itself decides, which unambiguously declares that they
were men. For when it had first been stated that "the angels of God saw the
daughters of men that they were fair, and they took them wives of all which they
chose," it was immediately added, "And the Lord God said, My Spirit shall not
always strive with these men, for that they also are flesh." For by the Spirit of
God they had been made angels of God, and sons of God; but declining towards
lower things, they are called men, a name of nature, not of grace; and they are
called flesh, as deserters of the Spirit, and by their desertion deserted [by
Him]. The Septuagint indeed calls them both angels of God and sons of God, though
all the copies do not show this, some having only the name" sons of God." And
Aquila, whom the Jews prefer to the other interpreters,(5) has translated
neither angels of God nor sons of God, but sons of gods. But both are correct. For
they were both sons of God, and thus brothers of their own fathers, who were
children of the same God; and they were sons of gods, because begotten by gods,
together with whom they themselves also were gods, according to that expression of
the psalm: "I have said, Ye are gods, and all of you are children of the Most
High."(1) For the Septuagint translators are justly believed to have received
the Spirit of prophecy; so that, if they made any alterations under His
authority, and did not adhere to a strict translation, we could not doubt that this
was divinely dictated. However, the Hebrew word may be said to be ambiguous, and
to be susceptible of either translation, "sons of God," or "sons of gods."
Let us omit, then, the fables of those scriptures which are called
apocryphal, because their obscure origin was unknown to the fathers from whom the
authority of the true Scriptures has been transmitted to us by a most certain and
well-ascertained succession. For though there is some truth in these apocryphal
writings, yet they contain so many false statements, that they have no canonical
authority. We cannot deny that Enoch, the seventh from Adam, left some divine
writings, for this is asserted by the Apostle Jude in his canonical epistle.
But it is not without reason that these writings have no place in that canon of
Scripture which was preserved in the temple of the Hebrew people by the
diligence of successive priests; for their antiquity brought them under suspicion, and
it was impossible to ascertain whether these were his genuine writings, and
they were not brought forward as genuine by the persons who were found to have
carefully preserved the canonical books by a successive transmission. So that the
writings which are produced under his name, and which contain these fables
about the giants, saying that their fathers were not men; are properly judged by
prudent men to be not genuine; just as many writings are produced by heretics
under the names both of other prophets, and more recently, under the names of the
apostles, all of which, after careful examination, have been set apart from
canonical authority under the title of Apocrypha. There is therefore no doubt
that, according to the Hebrew and Christian canonical Scriptures, there were many
giants before the deluge, and that these were citizens of the earthly society of
men, and that the sons of God, who were according to the flesh the sons of
Seth, sunk into this community when they forsook righteousness, Nor need we wonder
that giants should be born even from these. For all of their children were not
giants; but there were more then than in the remaining periods since the
deluge. And it pleased the Creator to produce them, that it might thus be
demonstrated that neither beauty, nor yet size and strength, are of much moment to the
wise man, whose blessedness lies in spiritual and immortal blessings, in far
better and more enduring gifts, in the good things that are the peculiar property
of the good, and are not shared by good and bad alike. It is this which another
prophet confirms when he says, "These were the giants, famous from the
beginning, that were of so great stature, and so expert in war. Those did not the Lord
choose, neither gave He the way of knowledge unto them; but they were destroyed
because they had no wisdom, and perished through their own foolishness."(2)
CHAP. 24.--HOW WE ARE TO UNDERSTAND THIS WHICH THE LORD SAID TO THOSE WHO WERE
TO PERISH IN THE FLOOD: "THEIR DAYS SHALL BE 120 YEARS."
But that which God said, "Their days shall be a hundred and twenty years,"
is not to be understood as a prediction that henceforth men should not live
longer than 120 years,--for even after the deluge we find that they lived more
than 500 years,--but we are to understand that God said this when Noah had nearly
completed his fifth century, that is, had lived 480 years, which Scripture, as
it frequently uses the name of the whole of the largest part, calls 500 years.
Now the deluge came in the 600th year of Noah's life, the second month; and
thus 120 years were predicted as being the remaining span of those who were
doomed, which years being spent, they should be destroyed by the deluge, And it is
not unreasonably believed that the deluge came as it did, because already there
were not found upon earth any who were not worthy of sharing a death so
manifestly judicial,--not that a good man, who must die some time, would be a jot the
worse of such a death after it was past. Nevertheless there died in the deluge
none of those mentioned in the sacred Scripture as descended from Seth. But
here is the divine account of the cause of the deluge: "The Lord God saw that the
wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the
thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. And it repented(3) the Lord that
He had made man on the earth, and it grieved Him at His heart. And the Lord
said, I will destroy man, whom I have created, from the face of the earth; both
man and beast, and the creeping thing, and the fowls of the air: for I am angry
that I have made them."(4)
CHAP. 25.--OF THE ANGER OF GOD, WHICH DOES NOT INFLAME HIS MIND, NOR DISTURB
HIS UNCHANGEABLE TRANQUILLITY.
The anger of God is not a disturbing emotion of His mind, but a judgment
by which punishment is inflicted upon sin. His thought and reconsideration also
are the unchangeable reason which changes things; for He does not, like man,
repent of anything He has done, because in all matters His decision is as
inflexible as His prescience is certain. But if Scripture were not to use such
expressions as the above, it would not familiarly insinuate itself into the minds of
all classes of men, whom it seeks access to for their good, that it may alarm
the proud, arouse the careless, exercise the inquisitive, and satisfy the
intelligent; and this it could not do, did it not first stoop, and in a manner
descend, to them where they lie. But its denouncing death on all the animals of earth
and air is a declaration of the vastness of the disaster that was approaching:
not that it threatens destruction to the irrational animals as if they too had
incurred it by sin.
CHAP. 26.--THAT THE ARK WHICH NOAH WAS ORDERED TO MAKE FIGURES IN EVERY
RESPECT CHRIST AND THE CHURCH.
Moreover, inasmuch as God commanded Noah, a just man, and, as the truthful
Scripture says, a man perfect in his generation,--not indeed with the
perfection of the citizens of the city of God in that immortal condition in which they
equal the angels, but in so far as they can be perfect in their sojourn in this
world,--inasmuch as God commanded him, I say, to make an ark, in which he
might be rescued from the destruction of the flood, along with his family, i.e.,
his wife, sons, and daughters-in-law, and along with the animals who, in
obedience to God's command, came to him into the ark: this is certainly a figure of the
city of God sojourning in this world; that is to say, of the church, which is
rescued by the wood on which hung the Mediator of God and men, the man Christ
Jesus.(1) For even its very dimensions, in length, breadth, and height,
represent the human body in which He came, as it had been foretold. For the length of
the human body, from the crown of the head to the sole of the foot, is six times
its breadth from side to side, and ten times its depth or thickness, measuring
from back to front: that is to say, if you measure a man as he lies on his
back or on his face, he is six times as long from head to foot as he is broad from
side to side, and ten tittles as long as he is high from the ground. And
therefore the ark was made 300 cubits in length, 50 in breadth, and 30 in height.
And its having a door made in the side of it certainly signified the wound which
was made when the side of the Crucified was pierced with the spear; for by this
those who come to Him enter; for thence flowed the sacraments by which those
who believe are initiated. And the fact that it was ordered to be made of
squared timbers, signifies the immoveable steadiness of the life of the saints; for
however you turn a cube, it still stands. And the other peculiarities of the
ark's construction are signs of features of the church.
But we have not now time to pursue this subject; and, indeed, we have
already dwelt upon it in the work we wrote against Faustus the Manichean, who
denies that there is anything prophesied of Christ in the Hebrew books. It may be
that one man's exposition excels another's, and that ours is not the best; but
all that is said must be referred to this city of God we speak of, which sojourns
in this wicked world as in a deluge, at least if the expositor would not
widely miss the meaning of the author. For example, the interpretation I have given
in the work against Faustus, of the words, "with lower, second, and third
stories shalt thou make it," is, that because the church is gathered out of all
nations, it is said to have two stories, to represent the two kinds of men,--the
circumcision, to wit, and the uncircumcision, or, as the apostle otherwise calls
them, Jews and Gentiles; and to have three stories, because all the nations
were replenished from the three sons of Noah. Now any one may object to this
interpretation, and may give another which harmonizes with the rule of faith. For as
the ark was to have rooms not only on the lower, but also on the upper
stories, which were called "third stories," that there might be a habitable space on
the third floor from the basement, some one may interpret these to mean the
three graces commended by the apostle.--faith, hope, and charity. Or even more
suitably they may be supposed to represent those three harvests in the gospel,
thirty-fold, sixty-fold, an hundred-fold,--chaste marriage dwelling in the ground
floor, chaste widowhood in the upper, and chaste virginity in the top story. Or
any better interpretation may be given, so long as the reference to this city
is maintained. And the same statement I would make of all the remaining
particulars in this passage which require exposition, viz., that although different
explanations are given, yet they must all agree with the one harmonious catholic
faith.
CHAP. 27.--OF THE ARK AND THE DELUGE, AND THAT WE CANNOT AGREE WITH THOSE WHO
RECEIVE THE BARE HISTORY, BUT REJECT THE ALLEGORICAL INTERPRETATION, NOR WITH
THOSE WHO MAINTAIN THE FIGURATIVE AND NOT THE HISTORICAL MEANING.
Yet no one ought to suppose either that these things were written for no
purpose, or that we should study only the historical truth, apart from any
allegorical meanings; or, on the contrary, that they are only allegories, and that
there were no such facts at all, or that, whether it be so or no, there is here
no prophecy of the church. For what right-minded man will contend that books
so religiously preserved during thousands of years, and transmitted by so
orderly a succession, were written without an object, or that only the bare
historical facts are to be considered when we read them? For, not to mention other
instances, if the number of the animals entailed the construction of an ark of great
size, where was the necessity of sending into it two unclean and seven clean
animals of each species, when both could have been preserved in equal numbers?
Or could not God, who ordered them to be preserved in order to replenish the
race, restore them in the same way He had created them?
But they who contend that these things never happened, but are only
figures setting forth other things, in the first place suppose that there could not
be a flood so great that the water should rise fifteen cubits above the highest
mountains, because it is said that clouds cannot rise above the top of Mount
Olympus, because it reaches the sky where there is none of that thicker
atmosphere in which winds, clouds, and rains have their origin. They do not reflect that
the densest element of all, earth, can exist there; or perhaps they deny that
the top of the mountain is earth. Why, then, do these measurers and weighers of
the elements contend that earth can be raised to those aerial altitudes, and
that water cannot, while they admit that water is lighter, and liker to ascend
than earth? What reason do they adduce why earth, the heavier and lower element,
has for so many ages scaled to the tranquil ether, while water, the lighter,
and more likely to ascend, is not suffered to do the same even for a brief space
of time?
They say, too, that the area of that ark could not contain so many kinds
of animals of both sexes, two of the unclean and seven of the clean. But they
seem to me to reckon only one area of 300 cubits long and 50 broad, and not to
remember that there was another similar in the story above, and yet another as
large in the story above that again; and that there was consequently an area of
900 cubits by 150. And if we accept what Origen(1) has with some appropriateness
suggested, that Moses the man of God, being, as it is written, "learned in all
the wisdom of the Egyptians,"(2) who delighted in geometry, may have meant
geometrical cubits, of which they say that one is equal to six of our cubits, then
who does not see what a capacity these dimensions give to the ark? For as to
their objection that an ark of such size could not be built, it is a very silly
calumny; for they are aware that huge cities have been built, and they should
remember that the ark was an hundred years in building. Or, perhaps, though
stone can adhere to stone when cemented with nothing but lime, so that a wall of
several miles may be constructed, yet plank cannot be riveted to plank by
mortices, bolts, nails, and pitch-glue, so as to construct an ark which was not made
with curved ribs but straight timbers, which was not to be launched by its
builders, but to be lifted by the natural pressure of the water when it reached it,
and which was to be preserved from shipwreck as it floated about rather by
divine oversight than by human skill.
As to another customary inquiry of the scrupulous about the very minute
creatures, not only such as mice and lizards, but also locusts, beetles, flies,
fleas, and so forth, whether there were not in the ark a larger number of them
than was determined by God in His command, those persons who are moved by this
difficulty are to be reminded that the words "every creeping thing of the earth"
only indicate that it was not needful to preserve in the ark the animals that
can live in the water, whether the fishes that live submerged in it, or the
sea-birds that swim on its surface. Then, when it is said "male and female," no
doubt reference is made to the repairing of the races, and consequently there was
no need for those creatures being in the ark which are born without the union
of the sexes from inanimate things, or from their corruption; or if they were
in the ark, they might be there as they commonly are in houses, not in any
determinate numbers; or if it was necessary that there should be a definite number
of all those animals that cannot naturally live in the water, that so the most
sacred mystery which was being enacted might be bodied forth and perfectly
figured in actual realities, still this was not the care of Noah or his sons, but of
God. For Noah did not catch the animals and put them into the ark, but gave
them entrance as they came seeking it. For this is the force of the words, "They
shall come unto thee,"(1)--not, that is to say, by man's effort, but by God's
will. But certainly we are not required to believe that those which have no sex
also came; for it is expressly and definitely said, "They shall be male and
female."' For there are some animals which are born out of corruption, but yet
afterwards they themselves copulate and produce offspring, as flies; but others,
which have no sex, like bees. Then, as to those animals which have sex, but
without ability to propagate their kind, like mules and shemules, it is probable
that they were not in the ark, but that it was counted sufficient to preserve
their parents, to wit, the horse and the ass; and this applies to all hybrids.
Yet, if it was necessary for the completeness of the mystery, they were there; for
even this species has "male and female."
Another question is commonly raised regarding the food of the carnivorous
animals,--whether, without transgressing the command which fixed the number to
be preserved, there were necessarily others included in the ark for their
sustenance; or, as is more probable, there might be some food which was not flesh,
and which yet suited all. For we know how many animals whose food is flesh eat
also vegetable products and fruits. especially figs and chestnuts. What wonder
is it, therefore, if that wise and just man was instructed by God what would
suit each, so that without flesh he prepared and stored provision fit for every
species? And what is there which hunger would not make animals eat? Or what could
not be made sweet and wholesome by God, who, with a divine facility, might
have enabled them to do without food at all, had it not been requisite to the
completeness of so great a mystery that they should be fed? But none but a
contentious man can suppose that there was no prefiguring of the church in so manifold
and circumstantial a detail. For the nations have already so filled the
church, and are comprehended in the framework of its unity, the clean and unclean
together, until the appointed end, that this one very manifest fulfillment leaves
no doubt how we should interpret even those others which are somewhat more
obscure, and which cannot so readily be discerned. And since this is so, if not
even the most audacious will presume to assert that these things were written
without a purpose, or that though the events really happened they mean nothing, or
that they did not really happen, but are only allegory, or that at all events
they are far from having any figurative reference to the church; if it has been
made out that, on the other hand, we must rather believe that there was a wise
purpose in their being committed to memory and to writing, and that they did
happen, and have a significance, and that this significance has a prophetic
reference to the church, then this book, having served this purpose, may now be
closed, that we may go on to trace in the history subsequent to the deluge the
courses of the two cities,--the earthly, that lives according to men, and the
heavenly, that lives according to God.