THE CITY OF GOD: BOOK XVI
BOOK XVI.
ARGUMENT.
IN THE FORMER PART OF THIS BOOK, FROM THE FIRST TO THE TWELFTH CHAPTER, THE
PROGRESS OF THE TWO CITIES, THE EARTHLY AND THE HEAVENLY, FROM NOAH TO ABRAHAM,
IS EXHIBITED FROM HOLY SCRIPTURE: IN THE LATTER PART, THE PROGRESS OF THE
HEAVENLY ALONE, FROM ABRAHAM TO THE KINGS OF ISRAEL, IS THE SUBJECT.
CHAP. 1.--WHETHER, AFTER THE DELUGE, FROM NOAH TO ABRAHAM, ANY FAMILIES CAN BE
FOUND WHO LIVED ACCORDING TO GOD.
IT is difficult to discover from Scripture, whether, after the deluge,
traces of the holy city are continuous, or are so interrupted by intervening
seasons of godlessness, that not a single worshipper of the one true God was found
among men; because from Noah, who, with his wife, three sons, and as many
daughters-in-law, achieved deliverance in the ark from the destruction of the deluge,
down to Abraham, we do not find in the canonical books that the piety of any
one is celebrated by express divine testimony, unless it be in the case of Noah,
who commends with a prophetic benediction his two sons Shem and Japheth, while
he beheld and foresaw what was long afterwards to happen. It was also by this
prophetic spirit that, when his middle son--that is, the son who was younger
than the first and older than the last born--had sinned against him, he cursed
him not in his own person, but in his son's (his own grandson's), in the words,
"Cursed be the lad Canaan; a servant shall he be unto his brethren."(2) Now
Canaan was born of Ham, who, so far from covering his sleeping father's nakedness,
had divulged it. For the same reason also he subjoins the blessing on his two
other sons, the oldest and youngest, saying, "Blessed be the Lord God of Shem;
and Canaan shall be his servant. God shall gladden Japheth, and he shall dwell
in the houses of Shem."(2) And so, too, the planting of the vine by Noah, and
his intoxication by its fruit, and his nakedness while he slept, and the other
things done at that time, and recorded, are all of them pregnant with prophetic
meanings, and veiled in mysteries.(3)
CHAP. 2.--WHAT WAS PROPHETICALLY PREFIGURED IN THE SONS OF NOAH.
The things which then were hidden are now sufficiently revealed by the
actual events which have followed. For who can carefully and intelligently
consider these things without recognizing them accomplished in Christ? Shem, of whom
Christ was born in the flesh, means "named." And what is of greater name than
Christ, the fragrance of whose i name is now everywhere perceived, so that even
prophecy sings of it beforehand, comparing it in the Song of Songs,(4) to
ointment poured forth? Is it not also in the houses of Christ, that is, in the
churches, that the "enlargement" of the nations dwells? For Japheth means
"enlargement." And Ham (i.e., hot), who was the middle son of Noah, and, as it were,
separated himself from both, and remained between them, neither belonging to the
first-fruits of Israel nor to the fullness of the Gentiles, what does he signify
but the tribe of heretics, hot with the spirit, not of patience, but of
impatience, with which the breasts of heretics are wont to blaze, and with which they
disturb the peace of the saints? But even the heretics yield an advantage to
those that make proficiency, according to the apostle's saying, "There must also
be heresies, that they which are approved may be made manifest among you."(1)
Whence, too, it is elsewhere said, "The son that receives instruction will be
wise, and he uses the foolish as his servant."(2) For while the hot restlessness
of heretics stirs questions about many articles of the catholic faith, the
necessity of defending them forces us both to investigate them more accurately, to
understand them more clearly, and to proclaim them more earnestly; and the
question mooted by an adversary becomes the occasion of instruction. However, not
only those who are openly separated from the church, but also all who glory in
the Christian name, and at the same time lead abandoned lives, may without
absurdity seem to be figured by Noah's middle son: for the passion of Christ, which
was signified by that man's nakedness, is at once proclaimed by their
profession, and dishonored by their wicked conduct. Of such, therefore, it has been
said, "By their fruits ye shall know them."(3) And therefore was Ham cursed in his
son, he being, as it were, his fruit. So, too, this son of his, Canaan, is
fitly interpreted "their movement," which is nothing else than their work. But Shem
and Japheth, that is to say, the circumcision and uncircumcision, or, as the
apostle otherwise calls them, the Jews and Greeks, but called and justified,
having somehow discovered the nakedness of their father (which signifies the
Saviour's passion), took a garment and laid it upon their backs, and entered
backwards and covered their father's nakedness, without their seeing what their
reverence hid. For we both honor the passion of Christ as accomplished for us, and we
hate the crime of the Jews who crucified Him. The garment signifies the
sacrament, their backs the memory of things past: for the church celebrates the
passion of Christ as already accomplished, and no longer to be looked forward to,
now that Japheth already dwells in the habitations of Shem, and their wicked
brother between them.
But the wicked brother is, in the person of his son (i.e., his work), the
boy, or slave, of his good brothers, when good men make a skillful use of bad
men, either for the exercise of their patience or for their advancement in
wisdom. For the apostle testifies that there are some who preach Christ from no pure
motives; "but," says be, "whether in pretence or in truth, Christ is preached;
and I therein do rejoice, yea, and will rejoice."(4) For it is Christ Himself
who planted the vine of which the prophet says, "The vine of the Lord of hosts
is the house of Israel;"(5) and He drinks of its wine, whether we thus
understand that cup of which He says, "Can ye drink of the cup that I shall drink
of?"(6) and, "Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me,"(7) by which He
obviously means His passion. Or, as wine is the fruit of the vine, we may
prefer to understand that from this vine, that is to say, from the race of Israel,
He has assumed flesh and blood that He might suffer; "and he was drunken," that
is, He suffered; "and was naked," that is, His weakness appeared in His
suffering, as the apostle says, "though He was crucified through weakness."(8)
Wherefore the same apostle says, "The weakness of God is stronger than men; and the
foolishness of God is wiser than men."(9) And when to the expression "he was
naked" Scripture adds "in his house," it elegantly intimates that Jesus was to
suffer the cross and death at the hands of His own household, His own kith and kin,
the Jews. This passion of Christ is only externally and verbally professed by
the reprobate, for what they profess. they do not understand. But the elect
hold in the inner man this so great mystery, and honor inwardly in the heart this
weakness and foolishness of God. And of this there is a figure in Ham going out
to proclaim his father's nakedness; while Shem and Japheth, to cover or honor
it, went in, that is to say, did it inwardly.
These secrets of divine Scripture we investigate as well as we can. All
will not accept our interpretation with equal confidence, but all hold it certain
that these things were neither done nor recorded without some foreshadowing of
future events, and that they are to be referred only to Christ and His church,
which is the city of God, proclaimed from the very beginning of human history
by figures which we now see everywhere accomplished. From the blessing of the
two sons of Noah, and the cursing of the middle son, down to Abraham, or for
more than a thousand years, there is, as I have said, no mention of any righteous
persons who worshipped God. I do not therefore conclude that there were none;
but it had been tedious to mention every one, and would have displayed
historical accuracy rather than prophetic foresight. The object of the writer of these
sacred books, or rather of the Spirit of God in him, is not only to record the
past, but to depict the future, so far as it regards the city of God; for
whatever is said of those who are not its citizens, is given either for her
instruction, or as a foil to enhance her glory. Yet we are not to suppose that all that
is recorded has some signification; but those things which have no
signification of their own are interwoven for the sake of the things which are significant.
It is only the ploughshare that cleaves the soil; but to effect this, other
parts of the plough are requisite. It is only the strings in harps and other
musical instruments which produce melodious sounds; but that they may do so, there
are other parts of the instrument which are not indeed struck by those who
sing, but are connected with the strings which are struck, and produce musical
notes. So in this prophetic history some things are narrated which have no
significance, but are, as it were, the framework to which the significant things are
attached.
CHAP. 3.--OF THE GENERATIONS OF THE THREE SONS OF NOAH.
We must therefore introduce into this work an explanation of the
generations of the three sons of Noah, in so far as that may illustrate the progress in
time of the two cities. Scripture first mentions that of the youngest son, who
is called Japheth: he had eight sons,(1) and by two of these sons seven
grandchildren, three by one son, four by the other; in all, fifteen descendants. Ham,
Noah's middle son, had four sons, and by one of them five grandsons, and by one
of these two great-grandsons; in all, eleven. After enumerating these,
Scripture returns to the first of the sons, and says, "Cush begat Nimrod; he began to
be a giant on the earth. He was a giant hunter against the Lord God: wherefore
they say, As Nimrod the giant hunter against the Lord. And the beginning of his
kingdom was Babylon, Erech, Accad, and Calneh, in the land of Shinar. Out of
that land went forth Assur, and built Nineveh, and the city Rehoboth, and Calah,
and Resen between Nineveh and Calah: this was a great city." Now this Cush,
father of the giant Nimrod, is the first-named among the sons of Ham, to whom
five sons and two grandsons are ascribed. But he either begat this giant after his
grandsons were born, or, which is more credible, Scripture speaks of him
separately on account of his eminence; for mention is also made of his kingdom,
which began with that magnificent city Babylon, and the other places, whether
cities or districts, mentioned along with it. But what is recorded of the land of
Shinar which belonged to Nimrod's kingdom, to wit, that Assur went forth from it
and built Nineveh and the other cities mentioned with it, happened long after;
but he takes occasion to speak of it here on account of the grandeur of the
Assyrian kingdom, which was wonderfully extended by Ninus son of Belus, and
founder of the great city Nineveh, which was named after him, Nineveh, from Ninus.
But Assur, father of the Assyrian, was not one of the sons of Ham, Noah's son,
but is found among the sons of Shem, his eldest son. Whence it appears that among
Shem's offspring there arose men who afterwards took possession of that
giant's kingdom, and advancing from it, founded other cities, the first of which was
called Nineveh, from Ninus. From him Scripture returns to Ham's other son,
Mizraim; and his sons are enumerated, not as seven individuals, but as seven
nations. Arid from the sixth, as if from the sixth son, the race called the
Philistines are said to have sprung; so that there are in all eight. Then it returns
again to Canaan, in whose person Ham was cursed; and his eleven sons are named.
Then the territories they occupied, and some of the cities, are named. And thus,
if we count sons and grandsons, there are thirty-one of Ham's descendants
registered.
It remains to mention the sons of Shem, Noah's eldest son; for to him this
genealogical narrative gradually ascends from the youngest. But in the
commencement of the record of Shem's sons there is an obscurity which calls for
explanation, since it is closely connected with the object of our investigation. For
we read, "Unto Shem also, the father of all the children of Heber, the brother
of Japheth the elder, were children born."(2) This is the order of the words:
And to Shem was born Heber, even to himself, that is, to Shem himself was born
Heber, and Shem is the father of all his children. We are intended to understand
that Shem is the patriarch of all his posterity who were to be mentioned,
whether sons, grandsons, great-grand-sons, or descendants at any remove. For Shem
did not beget Heber, who was indeed in the fifth generation from him. For Shem
begat, among other sons, Arphaxad; Arphaxad begat Cainan, Cainan begat Salah,
Salah begat Heber. And it was with good reason that he was named first among
Shem's offspring, taking precedence even of his sons, though only a grandchild of
the fifth generation; for from him, as tradition says, the Hebrews derived their
name, though the other etymology which derives the name from Abraham (as if
Abrahews) may possibly be correct. But there can be little doubt that the former
is the right etymology, and that they were called after Heber, Heberews, and
then, dropping a letter, Hebrews; and so was their language called Hebrew, which
was spoken by none but the people of Israel among whom was the city of God,
mysteriously prefigured in all the people, and truly present in the saints. Six
of Shem's sons then are first named, then four grandsons born to one of these
sons; then it mentions another son of Shem, who begat a grandson; and his son,
again, or Shem's great-grandson, was Heber. And Heber begat two sons, and called
the one Peleg, which means "dividing;" and Scripture subjoins the reason of
this name, saying, "for in his days was the earth divided." What this means will
afterwards appear. Heber's other son begat twelve sons; consequently all Shem's
descendants are twenty-seven. The total number of the progeny of the three sons
of Noah is seventy-three, fifteen by Japheth, thirty-one by Ham, twenty-seven
by Shem. Then Scripture adds, "These are the sons of Shem, after their
families, after their tongues, in their lands, after their nations." And so of the
whole number "These are the families of the sons of Noah after their generations,
in their nations; and by these were the isles of the nations dispersed through
the earth after the flood." From which we gather that the seventy-three (or
rather, as I shall presently show, seventy-two) were not individuals, but nations.
For in a former passage, when the sons of Japheth were enumerated, it is said
in conclusion, "By these were the isles of the nations divided in their lauds,
every one after his language, in their tribes, and in their nations."
But nations are expressly mentioned among the sons of Ham, as I showed
above. "Mizraim begat those who are called Ludim;(15) and so also of the other
seven nations. And after 'enumerating all of them, it concludes, "These are the
sons of Ham, in their families, according to their languages, in their
territories, and in their nations." The reason, then, why the children of several of them
are not mentioned, is that they belonged by birth to other nations, and did
not themselves become nations. Why else is it, that though eight sons are
reckoned to Japheth, the sons of only two of these are mentioned; and though four are
reckoned to Ham, only three are spoken of as having sons; and though six are
reckoned to Shem, the descendants of only two of these are traced? Did the rest
remain childless? We cannot suppose so; but they did not produce nations so
great as to warrant their being mentioned, but were absorbed in the nations to
which they belonged by birth.
CHAP. 4.--OF THE DIVERSITY OF LANGUAGES, AND OF THE FOUNDING OF BABYLON.
But though these nations are said to have been dispersed according to
their languages, yet the narrator recurs to that time when all had but one
language, and explains how it came to pass that a diversity of languages was
introduced. "The whole earth," he says, "was of one lip, and all had one speech. And it
came to pass, as they journeyed from the east, that they found a plain in the
land of Shinar, and dwelt there. And they said one to another, Come, and let us
make bricks, and burn them thoroughly. And they had bricks for stone, and slime
for mortar. And they said, Come, and let us build for ourselves a city, and a
tower whose top shall reach the sky; and let us make us a name, before we be
scattered abroad on the face of all the earth. And the Lord came down to see the
city and the tower, which the children of men builded. And the Lord God said,
Behold, the people is one, and they have all one language; and this they begin to
do: and now nothing will be restrained from them, which they have imagined to
do. Come, and let us go down, and confound there their language, that they may
not understand one another's speech. And God scattered them thence on the face
of all the earth: and they left off to build the city and the tower. Therefore
the name of it is called Confusion; because the Lord did there confound the
language of all the earth: and the Lord God scattered them thence on the face of
all the earth."(1) This city, which was called Confusion, is the same as
Babylon, whose wonderful construction Gentile history also notices. For Babylon means
Confusion. Whence we conclude that the giant Nimrod was its founder, as had
been hinted a little before, where Scripture, in speaking of him, says that the
beginning of his kingdom was Babylon, that is, Babylon had a supremacy over the
other cities as the metropolis and royal residence; although it did not rise to
the grand dimensions designed by its proud and impious founder. The plan was to
make it so high that it should reach the sky, whether this was meant of one
tower which they intended to build higher than the others, or of all the towers,
which might be signified by the singular number, as we speak of "the soldier,"
meaning the army, and of the frog or the locust, when we refer to the whole
multitude of frogs and locusts in the plagues with which Moses smote the
Egyptians.1 But what did these vain and presumptuous men intend? How did they expect to
raise this lofty mass against God, when they had built it above all the
mountains and the clouds of the earth's atmosphere? What injury could any spiritual or
material elevation do to God? The safe and true way to heaven is made by
humility, which lifts up the heart to the Lord, not against Him; as this giant is
said to have been a" hunter against the Lord." This has been misunderstood by
some through the ambiguity of the Greek word, and they have translated it, not
"against the Lord," but "before the Lord;" for <greek>e?anti?on</greek> means both
"before" and "against." In the Psalm this word is rendered, " Let us weep
before the Lord our Maker."2 The same word occurs in the book of Job, where it is
written, "Thou hast broken into fury against the Lord."3 And so this giant is
to be recognized as a "hunter against the Lord." And what is meant by the term
"hunter" but deceiver, oppressor, and destroyer of the animals of the earth? He
and his people therefore, erected this tower against the Lord, and so gave
expression to their impious pride; and justly was their wicked intention punished
by God, even though it was unsuccessful. But what was the nature of the
punishment? As the tongue is the instrument of domination, in it pride was punished; so
that man, who would not understand God when He issued His commands, should be
misunderstood when he himself gave orders. Thus was that conspiracy disbanded,
for each man retired from those he could not understand, and associated with
those whose speech was intelligible; and the nations were divided according to
their languages, and scattered over the earth as seemed good to God, who
accomplished this in ways hidden from and incomprehensible to us.
CHAP. 5.--OF GOD'S COMING DOWN TO CONFOUND THE LANGUAGES OF THE BUILDERS OF
THE CITY.
We read, "The Lord came down to see the city and the tower which the sons
of men built:" it was not the sons of God, but that society which lived in a
merely human way, and which we call the earthly city. God, who is always wholly
everywhere, does not move locally; but He is said to descend when He does
anything in the earth out of the usual course, which, as it were, makes His presence
felt. And in the same way, He does not by "seeing" learn some new thing, for He
cannot ever be ignorant of anything; but He is said to see and recognize, in
time, that which He causes others to see and recognize. And therefore that city
was not previously being seen as God made it be seen when He showed how
offensive it was to Him. We might, indeed, interpret God's descending to the city of
the descent of His angels in whom He dwells; so that the following words, "And
the Lord God said, Behold, they are all one race and of one language," and also
what follows, "Come, and let us go down and confound their speech," are a
recapitulation, explaining how the previously intimated "descent of the Lord" was
accomplished. For if He had already gone down, why does He say, "Come, and let us
go down and confound?"--words which seem to be addressed to the angels, and to
intimate that He who was in the angels descended in their descent. And the
words most appropriately are, not, "Go ye down and confound," but, "Let us
confound their speech;" showing that He so works by His servants, that they are
themselves also fellow-laborers with God, as the apostle says, "For we are
fellow-laborers with God."4
CHAP. 6.--WHAT WE ARE TO UNDERSTAND BY GOD'S SPEAKING TO THE ANGELS.
We might have supposed that the words uttered at the creation of man, "Let
us," and not Let me, "make man," were addressed to the angels, had He not
added "in our image;" but as we cannot believe that man was made in the image of
angels, or that the image of God is the same as that of angels, it is proper to
refer this expression to the plurality of the Trinity. And yet this Trinity,
being one God, even after saying "Let us make," goes on to say, "And God made man
in His image,"5 and not "Gods made," or "in their image." And were there any
difficulty in applying to the angels the words, "Come, and let us go down and
confound their speech," we might refer the plural to the Trinity, as if the
Father were addressing the Son and the Holy Spirit; but it rather belongs to the
angels to approach God by holy movements, that is, by pious thoughts, and thereby
to avail themselves of the unchangeable truth which rules in the court of
heaven as their eternal law. For they are not themselves the truth; but partaking in
the creative truth, they are moved towards it as the fountain of life, that
what they have not in themselves they may obtain in it. And this movement of
theirs is steady, for they never go back from what they have reached. And to these
angels God does not speak, as we speak to one another, or to God, or to angels,
or as the angels speak to us, or as God speaks to us through them: He speaks
to them in an ineffable manner of His own, and that which He says is conveyed to
us in a manner suited to our capacity. For the speaking of God antecedent and
superior to all His works, is the immutable reason of His work: it has no noisy
and passing sound, but an energy eternally abiding and producing results in
time. Thus He speaks to the holy angels; but to us, who are far off, He speaks
otherwise. When, however, we hear with the inner ear some part of the speech of
God, we approximate to the angels. But in this work I need not labor to give an
account of the ways in which God speaks. For either the unchangeable Truth
speaks directly to the mind of the rational creature in some indescribable way, or
speaks through the changeable creature, either presenting spiritual images to
our spirit, or bodily voices to our bodily sense.
The words, "Nothing will be restrained from them which they have imagined
to do,"1 are assuredly not meant as an affirmation, but as an interrogation,
such as is used by persons threatening, as e.g., when Dido exclaims,
"They will not take arms and pursue?"2
We are to understand the words as if it had been said, Shall nothing be
restrained from them which they have imagined to do?3 From these three men,
therefore, the three sons of Noah we mean, 73, or rather, as the catalogue will show,
72 nations and as many languages were dispersed over the earth, and as they
increased filled even the islands. But the nations multiplied much more than the
languages. For even in Africa we know several barbarous nations which have but
one language; and who can doubt that, as the human race increased, men contrived
to pass to the islands in ships?
CHAP. 7.--WHETHER EVEN THE REMOTEST ISLANDS RECEIVED THEIR FAUNA FROM THE
ANIMALS WHICH WERE PRESERVED, THROUGH THE DELUGE, IN THE ARK.
There is a question raised about all those kinds of beasts which are not
domesticated, nor are produced like frogs from the earth, but are propagated by
male and female parents, such as wolves and animals of that kind; and it is
asked how they could be found in the islands after the deluge, in which all the
animals not in the ark perished, unless the breed was restored from those which
were preserved in pairs in the ark. It might, indeed, be said that they crossed
to the islands by swimming, but this could only be true of those very near the
mainland; whereas there are some so distant, that we fancy no animal could swim
to them. But if men caught them and took them across with themselves, and thus
propagated these breeds in their new abodes, this would not imply an
incredible fondness for the chase. At the same time, it cannot be denied that by the
intervention of angels they might be transferred by God's order or permission. If,
however, they were produced out of the earth as at their first creation, when
God said, "Let the earth bring forth the living creature,"4 this makes it more
evident that all kinds of animals were preserved in the ark, not so much for
the sake of renewing the stock, as of prefiguring the various nations which were
to be saved in the church; this, I say, is more evident, if the earth brought
forth many animals in islands to which they could not cross over.
CHAP. 8.--WHETHER CERTAIN MONSTROUS RACES OF MEN ARE DERIVED FROM THE STOCK OF
ADAM OR NOAH'S SONS.
It is also asked whether we are to believe that certain monstrous races of
men, spoken of in secular history,5 have sprung from Noah's sons, or rather, I
should say, from that one man from whom they themselves were descended. For it
is reported that some have one eye in the middle of the forehead; some, feet
turned backwards from the heel; some, a double sex, the right breast like a man,
the left like a woman, and that they alternately beget and bring forth: others
are said to have no mouth, and to breathe only through the nostrils; others
are but a cubit high, and are therefore called by the Greeks "Pigmies: "6 they
say that in some places the women conceive in their fifth year, and do not live
beyond their eighth. So, too, they tell of a race who have two feet but only one
leg, and are of marvellous swiftness, though they do not bend the knee: they
are called Skiopodes, because in the hot weather they lie down on their backs
and shade themselves with their feet. Others are said to have no head, and their
eyes in their shoulders; and other human or quasi-human races are depicted in
mosaic in the harbor esplanade of Carthage, on the faith of histories of
rarities. What shall I say of the Cynocephali, whose dog-like head and barking
proclaim them beasts rather than men? But we are not bound to believe all we hear of
these monstrosities. But whoever is anywhere born a man, that is, a rational,
mortal animal, no matter what unusual appearance he presents in color, movement,
sound, nor how peculiar he is in some power, part, or quality of his nature, no
Christian can doubt that he springs from that one protoplast. We can
distinguish the common human nature from that which is peculiar, and therefore wonderful.
The same account which is given of monstrous births in individual cases
can be given of monstrous races. For God, the Creator of all, knows where and
when each thing ought to be, or to have been created, because He sees the
similarities and diversities which can contribute to the beauty of the whole. But He
who cannot see the whole is offended by the deformity of the part, because he is
blind to that which balances it, and to which it belongs. We know that men are
born with more than four fingers on their bands or toes on their feet: this is
a smaller matter; but far from us be the folly of supposing that the Creator
mistook the number of a man's fingers, though we cannot account for the
difference. And so in cases where the divergence from the rule is greater. He whose
works no man justly finds fault with, knows what He has done. At Hippo-Diarrhytus
there is a man whose hands are crescent-shaped, and have only two fingers each,
and his feet similarly formed. If there were a race like him, it would be added
to the history of the curious and wonderful. Shall we therefore deny that
this man is descended from that one man who was first created? As for the
Androgyni, or Hermaphrodites, as they are called, though they are rare, yet from time
to time there appears persons of sex so doubtful, that it remains uncertain from
which sex they take their name; though it is customary to give them a
masculine name, as the more worthy. For no one ever called them Hermaphroditesses. Some
years ago, quite within my own memory, a man was born in the East, double in
his upper, but single in his lower half--having two heads, two chests, four
hands, but one body and two feet like an ordinary man; and he lived so long that
many had an opportunity of seeing him. But who could enumerate all the human
births that have differed widely from their ascertained parents? As, therefore, no
one will deny that these are all descended from that one man, so all the races
which are reported to have diverged in bodily appearance from the usual course
which nature generally or almost universally preserves, if they are embraced in
that definition of man as rational and mortal animals, unquestionably trace
their pedigree to that one first father of all. We are supposing these stories
about various races who differ from one another and from us to be true; but
possibly they are not: for if we were not aware that apes, and monkeys, and sphinxes
are not men, but beasts, those historians would possibly describe them as
races of men, and flaunt with impunity their false and vainglorious discoveries.
But supposing they are men of whom these marvels are recorded, what if God has
seen fit to create some races in this way, that we might not suppose that the
monstrous births which appear among ourselves are the failures of that wisdom
whereby He fashions the human nature, as we speak of the failure of a less perfect
workman? Accordingly, it ought not to seem absurd to us, that as in individual
races there are monstrous births, so in the whole race there are monstrous
races. Wherefore, to conclude this question cautiously and guardedly, either these
things which have been told of some races have no existence at all; or if they
do exist, they are not human races; or if they are human, they are descended
from Adam.
CHAP. 9.--WHETHER WE ARE TO BELIEVE IN THE ANTIPODES.
But as to the fable that there are Antipodes, that is to say, men on the
opposite side of the earth, where the sun rises when it sets to us, men who walk
with their feet opposite ours, that is on no ground credible. And, indeed, it
is not affirmed that this has been learned by historical knowledge, but by
scientific conjecture, on the ground that the earth is suspended within the
concavity of the sky, and that it has as much room on the one side of it as on the
other: hence they say that the part which is beneath must also be inhabited. But
they do not remark that, although it be supposed or scientifically demonstrated
that the world is of a round and spherical form, yet it does not follow that
the other side of the earth is bare of water; nor even, though it be bare, does
it immediately follow that it is peopled. For Scripture, which proves the truth
of its historical statements by the accomplishment of its prophecies, gives no
false information; and it is too absurd to say, that some men might have taken
ship and traversed the whole wide ocean, and crossed from this side of the
world to the other, and that thus even the inhabitants of that distant region are
descended from that one first man. Wherefore let us seek if we can find the
city of God that sojourns on earth among those human races who are catalogued as
having been divided into seventy-two nations and as many languages. For it
continued down to the deluge and the ark, and is proved to have existed still among
the sons of Noah by their blessings, and chiefly in the eldest son Shem; for
Japheth received this blessing, that he should dwell in the tents of Shem.
CHAP. 10.--OF THE GENEALOGY OF SHEM, IN WHOSE LINE THE CITY OF GOD IS
PRESERVED TILL THE TIME OF ABRAHAM.
It is necessary, therefore, to preserve the series of generations
descending from Shem, for the sake of exhibiting the city of God after the flood; as
before the flood it was exhibited in the series of generations descending from
Seth. And therefore does divine Scripture, after exhibiting the earthly city as
Babylon or "Confusion," revert to the patriarch Shem. and recapitulate the
generations from him to Abraham, specifying besides, the year in which each father
begat the son that belonged to this line, and how long he lived. And
unquestionably it is this which fulfills the promise I made, that it should appear why it
is said of the sons of Heber, "The name of the one was Peleg, for in his days
the earth was divided."1 For what can we understand by the division of the
earth, if not the diversity of languages? And, therefore, omitting the other sons of
Shem, who are not concerned in this matter, Scripture gives the genealogy of
those by whom the line runs on to Abraham, as before the flood those are given
who carried on the line to Noah from Seth. Accordingly this series of
generations begins thus: "These are the generations of Shem: Shem was an hundred years
old, and begat Arphaxad two years after the flood. And Shem lived after he begat
Arphaxad five hundred years, and begat sons and daughters." In like manner it
registers the rest, naming the year of his life in which each begat the son who
belonged to that line which extends to Abraham. It specifies, too, how many
years he lived thereafter, begetting sons and daughters, that we may not
childishly suppose that the men named were the only men, but may understand how the
population increased, and how regions and kingdoms so vast could be populated by
the descendants of Shem; especially the kingdom of Assyria, from which Ninus
subdued the surrounding nations, reigning with brilliant prosperity, and
bequeathing to his descendants a vast but thoroughly consolidated empire, which held
together for many centuries.
But to avoid needless prolixity, we shall mention not the number of years
each member of this series lived, but only the year of his life in which he
begat his heir, that we may thus reckon the number of years from the flood to
Abraham, and may at the same time leave room to touch briefly and cursorily upon
some other matters necessary to our argument. In the second year, then, after the
flood, Shem when he was a hundred years old begat Arphaxad; Arphaxad when he
was 135 years old begat Cainan; Cainan when he was 130 years begat Salah. Salah
himself, too, was the same age when he begat Eber. Eber lived 134 years, and
begat Peleg, in whose days the earth was divided. Peleg himself lived 130 years,
and begat Reu; and Reu lived 132 years, and begat Serug; Serug 130, and begat
Nahor; and Nahor 79, and begat Terah; and Terah 70, and begat Abram, whose name
God afterwards changed into Abraham. There are thus from the flood to Abraham
1072 years, according to the Vulgate or Septuagint versions. In the Hebrew
copies far fewer years are given; and for this either no reason or a not very
credible one is given.
When, therefore, we look for the city of God in these seventy-two nations,
we cannot affirm that while they had but one lip, that is, one language, the
human race had departed from the worship of the true God, and that genuine
godliness had survived only in those generations which descend from Shem through
Arphaxad and reach to Abraham; but from the time when they proudly built a tower
to heaven, a symbol of godless exaltation, the city or society of the wicked
becomes apparent. Whether it was only disguised before, or non-existent; whether
both cities remained after the flood,--the godly in the two sons of Noah who
were blessed, and in their posterity, and the ungodly in the cursed son and his
descendants, from whom sprang that mighty hunter against the Lord,--is not easily
determined. For possibly--and certainly this is more credible--there were
despisers of God among the descendants of the two sons, even before Babylon was
founded, and worshippers of God among the descendants of Ham. Certainly neither
race was ever obliterated from earth. For in both the Psalms in which it is said,
"They are all gone aside, they are altogether become filthy; there is none
that doeth good, no, not one," we read further, "Have all the workers of iniquity
no knowledge? who eat up my people as they eat bread, and call not upon the
Lord."1 There was then a people of God even at that time. And therefore the words,
"There is none that doeth good, no, not one," were said of the sons of men,
not of the sons of God. For it had been previously said, "God looked down from
heaven upon the sons of men, to see if any understood and sought after God;" and
then follow the words which demonstrate that all the sons of men, that is, all
who belong to the city which lives according to man, not according to God, are
reprobate.
CHAP. 11.--THAT THE ORIGINAL LANGUAGE IN USE AMONG MEN WAS THAT WHICH WAS
AFTERWARDS CALLED HEBREW, FROM HEBER, IN WHOSE FAMILY IT WAS PRESERVED WHEN THE
CONFUSION OF TONGUES OCCURRED.
Wherefore, as the fact of all using one language did not secure the
absence of sin-infected men from the race,--for even before the deluge there was one
language, and yet all but the single family of just Noah were found worthy of
destruction by the flood, --so when the nations, by a prouder godlessness,
earned the punishment of the dispersion and the confusion of tongues, and the city
of the godless was called Confusion or Babylon, there was still the house of
Heber in which the primitive language of the race survived. And therefore, as I
have already mentioned, when an enumeration is made of the sons of Shem, who each
founded a nation, Heber is first mentioned, although he was of the fifth
generation from Shem. And because, when the other races were divided by their own
peculiar languages, his family preserved that language which is not unreasonably
believed to have been the common language of the race, it was on this account
thenceforth named Hebrew. For it then became necessary to distinguish this
language from the rest by a proper name; though, while there was only one, it had no
other name than the language of man, or human speech, it alone being spoken by
the whole human race. Some one will say: If the earth was divided by languages
in the days of Peleg, Heber's son, that language, which was formerly common to
all, should rather have been called after Peleg. But we are to understand that
Heber himself gave to his son this name Peleg, which means Division; because
he was born when the earth was divided, that is, at the very time of the
division, and that this is the meaning of the words, "In his days the earth was
divided."2 For unless Heber had been still alive when the languages were multiplied,
the language which was preserved in his house would not have been called after
him. We are induced to believe that this was the primitive and common
language, because the multiplication and change of languages was introduced as a
punishment, and it is fit to ascribe to the people of God an immunity from this
punishment. Nor is it without significance that this is the language which Abraham
retained, and that he could not transmit it to all his descendants, but only to
those of Jacob's line, who distinctively and eminently constituted God's
people, and received His covenants, and were Christ's progenitors according to the
flesh. In the same way, Heber himself did not transmit that language to all his
posterity, but only to the line from which Abraham sprang. And thus, although it
is not expressly stated, that when the wicked were building Babylon there was
a godly seed remaining, this indistinctness is intended to stimulate research
rather than to elude it. For when we see that originally there was one common
language, and that Heber is mentioned before all Shem's sons, though he belonged
to the fifth generation from him, and that the language which the patriarchs
and prophets used, not only in their conversation, but in the authoritative
language of Scripture, is called Hebrew, when we are asked where that primitive and
common language was preserved after the confusion of tongues, certainly, as
there can be no doubt that those among whom it was preserved were exempt from the
punishment it embodied. what other suggestion can we make, than that it
survived in the family of him whose name it took, and that this is no small proof of
the righteousness of this family, that the punishment with which the other
families were visited did not fall upon it?
But yet another question is mooted: How did Heber and his son Peleg each
found a nation, if they had but one language? For no doubt the Hebrew nation
propagated from Heber through Abraham, and becoming through him a great people, is
one nation. How, then, are all the sons of the three branches of Noah's family
enumerated as founding a nation each, if Heber and Peleg did not so? It is
very probable that the giant Nimrod founded also his nation, and that Scripture
has named him separately on account of the extraordinary dimensions of his empire
and of his body, so that the number of seventy-two nations remains. But Peleg
was mentioned, not because he rounded a nation (for his race and language are
Hebrew), but on account of the critical time at which he was born, all the earth
being then divided. Nor ought we to be surprised that the giant Nimrod lived
to the time in which Babylon was rounded and the confusion of tongues occurred,
and the consequent division of the earth. For though Heber was in the sixth
generation from Noah, and Nimrod in the fourth, it does not follow that they could
not be alive at the same time. For when the generations are few, they live
longer and are born later; but when they are many, they live a shorter time, and
come into the world earlier. We are to understand that, when the earth was
divided, the descendants of Noah who are registered as founders of nations were not
only already born, but were of an age to have immense families, worthy to be
called tribes or nations. And therefore we must by no means suppose that they
were born in the order in which they were set down; otherwise, how could the
twelve sons of Joktan, another son of Heber's, and brother of Peleg, have already
founded nations, if Joktan was born, as he is registered, after his brother
Peleg, since the earth was divided at Peleg's birth? We are therefore to understand
that, though Peleg is named first, he was born long after Joktan, whose twelve
sons had already families so large as to admit of their being divided by
different languages. There is nothing extraordinary in the last born being first
named: of the sons of Noah, the descendants of Japheth are first named; then the
sons of Ham, who was the second son; and last the sons of Shem, who was the first
and oldest. Of these nations the names have partly survived, so that at this
day we can see from whom they have sprung, as the Assyrians from Assur, the
Hebrews from Heber, but partly have been altered in the lapse of time, so that the
most learned men, by profound research in ancient records, have scarcely been
able to discover the origin, I do not say of all, but of some of these nations.
There is, for example, nothing in the name Egyptians to show that they are
descended from Misraim, Ham's son, nor in the name Ethiopians to show a connection
with Gush, though such is said to be the origin of these nations. And if we
take a general survey of the names, we shall find that more have been changed than
have remained the same.
CHAP. 12.--OF THE ERA IN ABRAHAM'S LIFE FROM WHICH A NEW PERIOD IN THE HOLY
SUCCESSION BEGINS.
Let us now survey the progress of the city of God from the era of the
patriarch Abraham, from whose time it begins to be more conspicuous, and the divine
promises which are now fulfilled in Christ are more fully revealed. We learn,
then, from the intimations of holy Scripture, that Abraham was born in the
country of the Chaldeans, a land belonging to the Assyrian empire. Now, even at
that time impious superstitions were rife with the Chaldeans, as with other
nations. The family of Terah, to which Abraham belonged, was the only one in which
the worship of the true God survived, and the only one, we may suppose, in which
the Hebrew language was preserved; although Joshua the son of Nun tells us that
even this family served other gods in Mesopotamia.1 The other descendants of
Heber gradually became absorbed in other races and other languages. And thus, as
the single family of Noah was preserved through the deluge of water to renew
the human race, so, in the deluge of superstition that flooded the whole world,
there remained but the one family of Terah in which the seed of God's city was
preserved. And as, when Scripture has enumerated the generations prior to Noah,
with their ages, and explained the cause of the flood before God began to
speak to Noah about the building of the ark, it is said, "These are the generations
of Noah;" so also now, after enumerating the generations from Shem, Noah's
son, down to Abraham, it then signalizes an era by saying, "These are the
generations of Terah: Terah begat Abram, Nahor, and Haran; and Haran begat Lot. And
Haran died before his father Terah in the land of his nativity, in Ur of the
Chaldees. And Abram and Nahor took them wives: the name of Abram's wife was Sarai;
and the name of Nahor's wife Milcah, the daughter of Haran, the father of
Milcah, and the father of Iscah."2 This Iscah is supposed to be the same as Sarah,
Abraham's wife.
CHAP. 13.--WHY, IN THE ACCOUNT OF TERAH'S EMIGRATION, ON HIS FORSAKING THE
CHALDEANS AND PASSING OVER INTO MESOPOTAMIA, NO MENTION IS MADE OF HIS SON NAHOR.
Next it is related how Terah with his family left the region of the
Chaldeans and came into Mesopotamia, and dwelt in Haran. But nothing is said about
one of his sons called Nahor, as if he had not taken him along with him. For the
narrative runs thus: "And Terah took Abram his son, and Lot the son of Haran,
his son's son, and Sarah his daughter-in-law, his son Abram's wife, and led them
forth out of the region of the Chaldeans to go into the land of Canaan; and he
came into Haran, and dwelt there." (1) Nahor and Milcah his wife are nowhere
named here. But afterwards, when Abraham sent his servant to take a wife for his
son Isaac, we find it thus written: "And the servant took ten camels of the
camels of his lord, and of all the goods of his lord, with him; and arose, and
went into Mesopotamia, into the city of Nahor." (2) This and other testimonies of
this sacred history show that Nahor, Abraham's brother, had also left the
region of the Chaldeans, and fixed his abode in Mesopotamia, where Abraham dwelt
with his father. Why, then, did the Scripture not mention him, when Terah with
his family went forth out of the Chaldean nation and dwelt in Haran, since it
mentions that he took with him not only Abraham his son, but also Sarah his
daughter-in-law, and Lot his grandson? The only reason we can think of is, that
perhaps he had lapsed from the piety of his father and brother, and adhered to the
superstition of the Chaldeans, and had afterwards emigrated thence, either
through penitence, or because he was persecuted as a suspected person. For in the
book called Judith, when Holofernes, the enemy of the Israelites, inquired what
kind of nation that might be, and whether war should be made against them,
Achior, the leader of the Ammonites, answered him thus: "Let our lord now hear a
word from the mouth of thy servant, and I will declare unto thee the truth
concerning the people which dwelleth near thee in this hill country, and there shall
no lie come out of the mouth of thy servant. For this people is descended from
the Chaldeans, and they dwelt heretofore in Mesopotamia, because they would not
follow the gods of their fathers, which were glorious in the land of the
Chaldeans, but went out of the way of their ancestors, and adored the God of heaven,
whom they knew; and they cast them out from the face of their gods, and they
fled into Mesopotamia, and dwelt there many days. And their God said to them,
that they should depart from their habitation, and go into the land of Canaan; and
they dwelt,'' (3) etc., as Achior the Ammonite narrates. Whence it is manifest
that the house of Terah had suffered persecution from the Chaldeans for the
true piety with which they worshipped the one and true God.
CHAP. 14--OF THE YEARS OF TERAH, WHO COMPLETED HIS LIFETIME IN HARAN.
On Terah's death in Mesopotamia, where he is said to have lived 205 years,
the promises of God made to Abraham now begin to be pointed out; for thus it
is written: "And the days of Terah in Haran were two hundred and five years, and
he died in Haran.'' (4) This is not to be taken as if he had spent all his
days there, but that he there completed the days of his life, which were two
hundred and five years: otherwise it would not be known how many years Terah lived,
since it is not said in what year of his life he came into Haran; and it is
absurd to suppose that, in this series of generations, where it is carefully
recorded how many years each one lived, his age was the only one not put on record.
For although some whom the same Scripture mentions have not their age recorded,
they are not in this series, in which the reckoning of time is continuously
indicated by the death of the parents and the succession of the children. For
this series, which is given in order from Adam to Noah, and from him down to
Abraham, contains no one without the number of the years of his life.
CHAP. 15.--OF THE TIME OF THE MIGRATION OF ABRAHAM, WHEN, ACCORDING TO THE
COMMANDMENT OF GOD, HE WENT OUT FROM HARAN.
When, after the record of the death of Terah, the father of Abraham, we
next read, "And the Lord said to Abram, Get thee out of thy country, and from thy
kindred, and from thy father's house," (5) etc., it is not to be supposed,
because this follows in the order of the narrative, that it also followed in the
chronological order of events. For if it were so, there would be an insoluble
difficulty. For after these words of God which were spoken to Abraham, the
Scripture says: "And Abram departed, as the Lord had spoken unto him; and Lot went
with him. Now Abraham was seventy-five years old when he departed out of
Haran." (6) How can this be true if he departed from Haran after his father's death?
For when Terah was seventy years old, as is intimated above, he begat Abraham;
and if to this number we add the seventy-five years which Abraham reckoned when
he went out of Haran, we get 145 years. Therefore that was the number of the
years of Terah, when Abraham departed out of that city of Mesopotamia; for he
had reached the seventy-fifth year of his life, and thus his father, who begat
him in the seventieth year of his life, had reached, as was said, his 145th.
Therefore he did not depart thence after his father's death, that is, after the 205
years his father lived; but the year of his departure from that place, seeing
it was his seventy-fifth, is inferred beyond a doubt to have been the 145th of
his father, who begat him in his seventieth year. And thus it is to be
understood that the Scripture, according to its custom, has gone back to the time which
had already been passed by the narrative; just as above, when it had mentioned
the grandsons of Noah, it said that they were in their nations and tongues;
and yet afterwards, as if this also had followed in order of time, it says, "And
the whole earth was of one lip, and one speech for all." (1) How, then, could
they be said to be in their own nations and according to their own tongues, if
there was one for all; except because the narrative goes back to gather up what
it had passed over? Here, too, in the same way, after saying, "And the days of
Terah in Haran were 205 years, and Terah died in Haran," the Scripture, going
back to what had been passed over in order to complete what had been begun about
Terah, says, "And the Lord said to Abram, Get thee out of thy country," (2)
etc. After which words of God it is added, "And Abram departed, as the Lord spake
unto him; and Lot went with him. But Abram was seventy-five years old when he
departed out of Haran." Therefore it was done when his father was in the 145th
year of his age; for it was then the seventy-fifth of his own. But this
question is also solved in another way, that the seventy-five years of Abraham when he
departed out of Haran are reckoned from the year in which he was delivered
from the fire of the Chaldeans, not from that of his birth, as if he was rather to
be held as having been born then.
Now the blessed Stephen, in narrating these things in the Acts of the
Apostles, says: "The God of glory appeared unto our father Abraham, when he was in
Mesopotamia, before he dwelt in Charran, and said unto him, Get thee out of thy
country, and from thy kindred, and from thy father's house, and come into the
land which I will show thee." (3) According to these words of Stephen, God
spoke to Abraham, not after the death of his father, who certainly died in Haran,
where his son also dwelt with him, but before he dwelt in that city, although he
was already in Mesopotamia. Therefore he had already departed from the
Chaldeans. So that when Stephen adds, "Then Abraham went out of the land of the
Chaldeans, and dwelt in Charran," (4) this does not point out what took place after
God spoke to him (for it was not after these words of God that he went out of
the land of the Chaldeans, since he says that God spoke to him in Mesopotamia),
but the word "then" which he uses refers to that whole period from his going out
of the land of the Chaldeans and dwelling in Haran. Likewise in what follows,
"And thenceforth, when his father was dead, he settled him in this land,
wherein ye now dwell, and your fathers," he does not say, after his father was dead
he went out from Haran; but thenceforth he settled him here, after his father
was dead. It is to be understood, therefore, that God had spoken to Abraham when
he was in Mesopotamia, before he dwelt in Haran; but that he came to Haran with
his father, keeping in mind the precept of God, and that he went out thence in
his own seventy-fifth year, which was his father's 145th. But he says that his
settlement in the land of Canaan, not his going forth from Haran, took place
after his father's death; because his father was already dead when he purchased
the land, and personally entered on possession of it. But when, on his having
already settled in Mesopotamia, that is, already gone out of the land of the
Chaldeans, God says, "Get thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and from
thy father's house," (5) this means, not that he should cast out his body from
thence, for he had already done that, but that he should tear away his soul.
For he had not gone out from thence in mind, if he was held by the hope and
desire of returning, --a hope and desire which was to be cut off by God's command
and help, and by his own obedience. It would indeed be no incredible supposition
that afterwards, when Nahor followed his father, Abraham then fulfilled the
precept of the Lord, that he should depart out of Haran with Sarah his wife and
Lot his brother's son.
CHAP. 16.--OF THE ORDER AND NATURE OF THE PROMISES OF GOD WHICH WERE MADE TO
ABRAHAM,
God's promises made to Abraham are now to be considered; for in these the
oracles of ]our God, (6) that is, of the true God, began to appear more openly
concerning the godly people, whom prophetic authority foretold. The first of
these reads thus: "And the Lord said unto Abram, Get thee out of thy country, and
from thy kindred, and from thy father's house, and go into a land that I will
show thee: and I will make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee and
magnify thy name; and thou shall be blessed: and I will bless them that bless
thee, and curse them that curse thee: and in thee shall all tribes of the earth be
blessed." (1) Now it is to be observed that two things are promised to
Abraham, the one, that his seed should possess the land of Canaan, which is intimated
when it is said, "Go into a land that I will show thee, and I will make of thee
a great nation;" but the other far more excellent, not about the carnal but
the spiritual seed, through which he is the father, not of the one Israelite
nation, but of all nations who follow the footprints of his faith, which was first
promised in these words, "And in thee shall all tribes of the earth be
blessed." Eusebius thought this promise was made in Abraham's seventy-fifth year, as if
soon after it was made Abraham had departed out of Haran because the Scripture
cannot be contradicted in which we read, "Abram was seventy and five years old
when he departed out of Haran." But if this promise was made in that year,
then of course Abraham was staying in Haran with his father; for he could not
depart thence unless he had first dwelt there. Does this, then, contradict what
Stephen says, "The God of glory appeared to our father Abraham, when he was in
Mesopotamia, before he dwelt in Charran?" (2) But it is to be understood that the
whole took place in the same year,--both the promise of God before Abraham
dwelt in Haran, and his dwelling in Haran, and his departure thence, --not only
because Eusebius in the Chronicles reckons from the year of this promise, and
shows that after 430 years the exodus from Egypt took place, when the law was
given, but because the Apostle Paul also mentions it.
CHAP. 17.--OF THE THREE MOST FAMOUS KINGDOMS OF THE NATIONS, OF WHICH ONE,
THAT IS THE ASSYRIAN, WAS ALREADY VERY EMINENT WHEN ABRAHAM WAS BORN.
During the same period there were three famous kingdoms of the nations, in
which the city of the earth-born, that is, the society of men living according
to man under the domination of the fallen angels, chiefly flourished, namely,
the three kingdoms of Sicyon, Egypt, and Assyria. Of these, Assyria was much
the most powerful and sublime; for that king Ninus, son of Belus, had subdued the
people of all Asia except India. By Asia I now mean not that part which is one
province of this greater Asia, but what is called Universal Asia, which some
set down as the half, but most as the third part of the whole world,--the three
being Asia, Europe, and Africa, thereby making an unequal division. For the
part called Asia stretches from the south through the east even to the north;
Europe from the north even to the west; and Africa from the west even to the south.
Thus we see that two, Europe and Africa, contain one half of the world, and
Asia alone the other half. And these two parts are made by the circumstance, that
there enters tween them from the ocean all the Mediterranean water, which
makes this great sea of ours. So that, if you divide the world into two parts, the
east and the west, Asia will be in the one, and Europe and Africa in the other
So that of the three kingdoms then famous, one, namely Sicyon, was not under
the Assyrians, because it was in Europe; but as for Egypt, how could it fail to
be subject to the empire which ruled all Asia with the single exception of
India? In Assyria, therefore, the dominion of the impious city had the pre-eminence.
Its head was Babylon,-an earth-born city, most fitly named, for it means
confusion. There Ninus reigned after the death of his father Belus, who first had
reigned there sixty-five years. His son Ninus, who, on his father's death,
succeeded to the kingdom, reigned fifty-two years, and had been king forty-three
years when Abraham was born, which was about the 1200th year before Rome was
founded, as it were another Babylon in the west.
CHAP. 18.--OF THE REPEATED ADDRESS OF GOD TO ABRAHAM, IN WHICH HE PROMISED THE
LAND OF CANAAN TO HIM AND TO HIS SEED.
Abraham, then, having departed out of Haran in the seventy-fifth year of
his own age, and in the hundred and forty-fifth of his father's, went with Lot,
his brother's son, and Sarah his wife, into the land of Canaan, and came even
to Sichem, where again he received the divine oracle, of which it is thus
written: "And the Lord appeared unto Abram, and said unto him, Unto thy seed will I
give this land." (3) Nothing is promised here about that seed in which he is
made the father of all nations, but only about that by which he is the father of
the one Israelite nation; for by this seed that land was possessed.
CHAP. 19.--OF THE DIVINE PRESERVATION OF SARAH'S CHASTITY IN EGYPT, WHEN
ABRAHAM HAD CALLED HER NOT HIS WIFE BUT HIS SISTER.
Having built an altar there, and called upon God, Abraham proceeded thence
and dwelt in the desert, and was compelled by pressure of famine to go on into
Egypt. There he called his wife his sister, and told no lie. For she was this
also, because she was near of blood; just as Lot, on account of the same
nearness, being his brother's son, is called his brother. Now he did not deny that
she was his wife, but held his peace about it, committing to God the defence of
his wife's chastity, and providing as a man against human wiles; because if he
had not provided against the danger as much as he could, he would have been
tempting God rather than trusting in Him. We have said enough about this matter
against the calumnies of Faustus the Manichaean. At last what Abraham had expected
the Lord to do took place. For Pharaoh, king of Egypt, who had taken her to
him as his wife, restored her to her husband on being severely plagued. And far
be it from us to believe that she was defiled by lying with another; because it
is much more credible that, by these great afflictions, Pharaoh was not
permitted to do this.
CHAP. 20.--OF THE PARTING OF LOT AND ABRAHAM, WHICH THEY AGREED TO WITHOUT
BREACH OF CHARITY.
On Abraham's return out of Egypt to the place he had left, Lot, his
brother's son, departed from him into the land of Sodom, without breach of charity.
For they had grown rich, and began to have many herdmen of cattle, and when
these strove together, they avoided in this way the pugnacious discord of, their
families. Indeed, as human affairs go, this cause might even have given rise to
some strife between themselves. Consequently these are the words of Abraham to
Lot, when taking precaution against this evil, "Let there be no strife between
me and thee, and between my herdmen and thy herdmen; for we be brethren. Behold,
is not the whole · land before thee? Separate thyself from me: if thou wilt go
to the left hand, I will go to the right; or if thou wilt go to the right
hand, I will go to the left." (1) From this, perhaps, has arisen a pacific custom
among men, that when there is any partition of earthly things, the greater
should make the division, the less the choice.
CHAP. 21--OF THE THIRD PROMISE OF GOD, BY WHICH HE ASSURED THE LAND OF CANAAN
TO ABRAHAM AND HIS SEED IN PERPETUITY.
Now, when Abraham and Lot had separated, and dwelt apart, owing to the
necessity of supporting their families, and not to vile discord, and Abraham was
in the land of Canaan, but Lot in Sodom, the Lord said to Abraham in a third
oracle, "Lift up thine eyes, and look from the place where thou now art, to the
north, and to Africa, and to the east, and to the sea; for all the land which
thou seest, to thee will I give it, and to thy seed for ever. And I will make thy
seed as the dust of the earth: if any one can number the dust of the earth, thy
seed shall also be numbered. Arise, and walk through the land, in the length
of it, and in the breadth of it; for unto thee will I give it.'' (2) It does not
clearly appear whether in this promise that also is contained by which he is
made the father of all nations. For the clause, "And I will make thy seed as
the dust of the earth," may seem to refer to this, being spoken by that figure
the Greeks call hyperbole, which indeed is figurative, not literal. But no person
of understanding can doubt in what manner the Scripture uses this and other
figures. For that figure (that is, way of speaking) is used when what is said is
far larger than what is meant by it; for who does not see how incomparably
larger the number of the dust must be than that of all men can be from Adam himself
down to the end of the world? How much greater, then, must it be than the seed
of Abraham,--not only that pertaining to the nation of Israel, but also that
which is and shall be according to the imitation of faith in all nations of the
whole wide world ! For that seed is indeed very small in comparison with the
multitude of the wicked, although even those few of themselves make an
innumerable multitude, which by a hyperbole is compared to the dust of the earth. Truly
that multitude which was promised to Abraham is not innumerable to God, although
to man; but to God not even the dust of the earth is so. Further, the promise
here made may be understood not only of the nation of Israel, but of the whole
seed of Abraham, which may be fitly compared to the dust for multitude, because
regarding it also there is the promise (1) of many children, not according to
the flesh, but according to the spirit. But we have therefore said that this
does not clearly appear, because the multitude even of that one nation, which was
born according to the flesh of Abraham through his grandson Jacob, has
increased so much as to fill almost all parts of the world. Consequently, even it
might by hyperbole be compared to the dust for multitude, because even it alone is
innumerable by man. Certainly no one questions that only that land is meant
which is called Canaan. But that saying, "To thee will I give it, and to thy seed
for ever," may move some, if by "for ever" they understand "to eternity." But
if in this passage they take "for ever" thus, as we firmly hold it means that
the beginning of the world to come is to be ordered from the end of the present,
there is still no difficulty, because, although the Israelites are expelled
from Jerusalem, they still remain in other cities in the land of Canaan, and
shall remain even to the end; and when that whole land is inhabited by Christians,
they also are the very seed of Abraham.
CHAP. 22.--OF ABRAHAM'S OVERCOMING THE ENEMIES OF SODOM, WHEN HE DELIVERED LOT
FROM CAPTIVITY AND WAS BLESSED BY MELCHIZEDEK THE PRIEST.
Having received this oracle of promise, Abraham migrated, and remained in
another place of the same land, that is, beside the oak of Mature, which was
Hebron. Then on the invasion of Sodom, when five kings carried on war against
four, and Lot was taken captive with the conquered Sodomites, Abraham delivered
him from the enemy, leading with him to battle three hundred and eighteen of his
home-born servants, and won the victory for the kings of Sodom, but would take
nothing of the spoils when offered by the king for whom he had won them. He was
then openly blessed by Melchizedek, who was priest of God Most High, about
whom many and great things are written in the epistle which is inscribed to the
Hebrews, which most say is by the Apostle Paul, though some deny this. For then
first appeared the sacrifice which is now offered to God by Christians in the
whole wide world, and that is fulfilled which long after the event was said by
the prophet to Christ, who was yet to come in the fresh, "Thou art a priest for
ever after the order of Melchizedek," (2)--that is to say, not after the order
of Aaron, for that order was to be taken away when the things shone forth which
were intimated beforehand by these shadows.
CHAP. 23. --OF THE WORD OF THE LORD TO ABRAHAM, BY WHICH IT WAS PROMISED TO
HIM THAT HIS POSTERITY SHOULD BE MULTIPLIED ACCORDING TO THE MULTITUDE OF THE
STARS; ON BELIEVING WHICH HE WAS DECLARED JUSTIFIED WHILE YET IN UNCIRCUMCISION.
The word of the Lord came to Abraham in a vision also. For when God
promised him protection and exceeding great reward, he, being solicitous about
posterity, said that a certain Eliezer of Damascus, born in his house, would be his
heir. Immediately he was promised an heir, not that house-born servant, but one
who was to come forth of Abraham himself; and again a seed innumerable, not as
the dust of the earth, but as the stars of heaven,--which rather seems to me a
promise of a posterity exalted in celestial felicity. For, so far as multitude
is concerned, what are the stars of heaven to the dust of the earth, unless one
should say the comparison is like inasmuch as the stars also cannot be
numbered? For it is not to be believed that all of them can be seen. For the more
keenly one observes them, the more does he see. So that it is to be supposed some
remain concealed from the keenest observers, to say nothing of those stars which
are said to rise and set in another part of the world most remote from us.
Finally, the authority of this book condemns those like Aratus or Eudoxus, or any
others who boast that they have found out and written down the complete number
of the stars. Here, indeed, is set down that sentence which the apostle quotes
in order to commend the grace of God, "Abraham believed God, and it was counted
to him for righteousness;" (3) lest the circumcision should glory, and be
unwilling to receive the uncircumcised nations to the faith of Christ. For at the
time when he believed, and his faith was counted to him for righteousness,
Abraham had not yet been circumcised.
CHAP. 24.--OF THE MEANING OF THE SACRIFICE ABRAHAM WAS COMMANDED TO OFFER WHEN
HE SUPPLICATED TO BE TAUGHT ABOUT THOSE THINGS HE HAD BELIEVED.
In the same vision, God in speaking to him also says, "I am God that
brought thee out of the region of the Chaldees, to give thee this land to inherit
it." (1) And when Abram asked whereby he might know that he should inherit it,
God said to him, "Take me an heifer of three years old, and a she-goat of three
years old, and a ram of three years old, and a turtle-dove, and a pigeon. And he
took unto him all these, and divided them in the midst, and laid each piece
one against another; but the birds divided he not. And the fowls came down," as
it is written, "on the carcasses, and Abram sat down by them. But about the
going down of the sun, great fear fell upon Abram; and, lo, an horror of great
darkness fell upon him. And He said unto Abram, Know of a surety that thy seed
shall be a stranger in a land not theirs, and they shall reduce them to servitude
and shall afflict them four hundred years: but the nation whom they shall serve
will I judge; and afterward shall they come out hither with great substance.
And thou shalt go to thy fathers in peace; kept in a good old age. But in the
fourth generation they shall come hither again: for the iniquity of the Amorites
is not yet full. And when the sun was setting, there was a flame, and a smoking
furnace, and lamps of fire, that passed through between those pieces. In that
day the Lord made a covenant with Abram, saying, Unto thy seed will I give this
land, from the river of Egypt unto the great river Euphrates: the Kenites, and
the Kenizzites, and the Kadmonites, and the Hittites, and the Perizzites, and
the Rephaims, and the Amorites, and the Canaanites, and the Hivites, and the
Girgashites, and the Jebusites." (2)
All these things were said and done in a vision from God; but it would
take long, and would exceed the scope of this work, to treat of them exactly in
detail. It is enough that we should know that, after it was said Abram believed
in God, and it was counted to him for righteousness, he did not fail in faith in
saying, "Lord God, whereby shall I know that I shall inherit it?" (5) for the
inheritance of that land was promised to him. Now he does not say, How shall I
know, as if he did not yet believe; but he says, "Whereby shall I know,"
meaning that some sign might be given by which he might know the manner of those
things which he had believed, just as it is not for lack of faith the Virgin Mary
says, "How shall this be, seeing I know not a man ?" (3) for she inquired as to
the way in which that should take place which she was certain would come to
pass. And when she asked this, she was told, "The Holy Ghost shall come upon
thee, and the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee." (4) Here also, in fine,
a symbol was given, consisting of three animals, a heifer, a she-goat, and a
ram and two birds, a turtle-dove and pigeon, that he might know that the things
which he had not doubted should come to pass were to happen in accordance with
this symbol. Whether, therefore, the heifer was a sign that the people should be
put under the law, the she-goat that the same people was to become sinful, the
ram that they should reign (and these animals are said to be of three years
old for this reason, that there are three remarkable divisions of time, from Adam
to Noah, and from him to Abraham, and from him to David, who, on the rejection
of Saul, was first established by the will of the Lord in the kingdom of the
Israelite nation: in this third division, which extends from Abraham to David,
that people grew up as if passing through the third age of life), or whether
they had some other more suitable meaning, still I have no doubt whatever that
spiritual things were prefigured by them as well as by the turtle-dove and pigeon.
And it is said, "But the birds divided he not," because carnal men are divided
among themselves, but the spiritual not at all, whether they seclude
themselves from the busy conversation of men, like the turtle-dove, or dwell among them,
like the pigeon; for both birds are simple and harmless, signifying that even
in the Israelite people, to which that land was to be given, there would be
individuals who were children of the promise, and heirs of the kingdom that is (5)
to remain in eternal felicity. But the fowls coming down on the divided
carcasses represent nothing good, but the spirits of this air, seeking some food for
themselves in the division of carnal men. But that Abraham sat down with them,
signifies that even amid these divisions of the carnal, true believers shall
persevere to the end. And that about the going down of the sun great fear fell
upon Abraham and a horror of great darkness, signifies that about the end of this
world believers shall be in great perturbation and tribulation, of which the
Lord said in the gospel, "For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not
from the beginning." (6)
But what is said to Abraham, "Know of a surety that thy seed shall be a
stranger in a land not theirs, and they shall reduce them to servitude, and shall
afflict them 400 years," is most clearly a prophecy about the people of Israel
which was to be in servitude in Egypt. Not that this people was to be in that
servitude under the oppressive Egyptians for 400 years, but it is foretold that
this should take place in the course of those 400 years. For as it is written
of Terah the father of Abraham, "And the days of Terah in Haran were 205
years,"(1) not because they were all spent there, but because they were completed
there, so it is said here also, "And they shall reduce them to servitude, and
shall afflict them 400 years," for this reason, because that number was completed,
not because it was all spent in that affliction. The years are said to be 400
in round numbers, although they were a little more,--whether you reckon from
this time, when these things were promised to Abraham, or from the birth of Isaac,
as the seed of Abraham, of which these things are predicted. For, as we have
already said above, from the seventy-fifth year of Abraham, when the first
promise was made to him, down to the exodus of Israel from Egypt, there are reckoned
430 years, which the apostle thus mentions: "And this I say, that the covenant
confirmed by God, the law, which was made 430 years after, cannot disannul,
that it should make the promise of none effect."(2) So then these 430 years might
be called 400, because they are not much more, especially since part even of
that number had already gone by when these things were shown and said to Abraham
in vision, or when Isaac was born in his father's 100th year, twenty-five
years after the first promise, when of these 430 years there now remained 405,
which God was pleased to call 400. No one will doubt that the other things which
follow in the prophetic words of God pertain to the people of Israel.
When it is added, "And when the sun was now setting there was a flame, and
lo, a smoking furnace, and lamps of fire, which passed through between those
pieces," this signifies that at the end of the world the carnal shall be judged
by fire. For just as the affliction of the city of God, such as never was
before, which is expected to take place under Antichrist, was signified by Abraham's
horror of great darkness about the going down of the sun, that is, when the
end of the world draws nigh,--so at the going down of the sun, that is, at the
very end of the world, there is signified by that fire the day of judgment, which
separates the carnal who are to be saved by fire from those who are to be
condemned in the fire. And then the covenant made with Abraham particularly sets
forth the land of Canaan, and names eleven tribes in it from the river of Egypt
even to the great river Euphrates. It is not then from the great river of Egypt,
that is, the Nile, but from a small one which separates Egypt from Palestine,
where the city of Rhinocorura is.
CHAP. 25.--OF SARAH'S HANDMAID, HAGAR, WHOM SHE HERSELF WISHED TO BE ABRAHAM'S
CONCUBINE.
And here follow the times of Abraham's sons, the one by Hagar the bond
maid, the other by Sarah the free woman, about whom we have already spoken in the
previous book. As regards this transaction, Abraham is in no way to be branded
as guilty concerning this concubine, for he used her for the begetting of
progeny, not for the gratification of lust; and not to insult, but rather to obey
his wife, who supposed it would be solace of her barrenness if she could make use
of the fruitful womb of her handmaid to supply the defect of her own nature,
and by that law of which the apostle says, "Likewise also the husband hath not
power of his own body, but the wife,"(3) could, as a wife, make use of him for
childbearing by another, when she could not do so in her own person. Here there
is no wanton lust, no filthy lewdness. The handmaid is delivered to the husband
by the wife for the sake of progeny, and is received by the husband for the
sake of progeny, each seeking, not guilty excess, but natural fruit. And when the
pregnant bond woman despised her barren mistress, and Sarah, with womanly
jealousy, rather laid the blame of this on her husband, even then Abraham showed
that he was not a slavish lover, but a free begetter of children, and that in
using Hagar he had guarded the chastity of Sarah his wife, and had gratified her
will and not his own,--had received her without seeking, had gone in to her
without being attached, had impregnated without loving her,--for he says, "Behold
thy maid is in thy hands: do to her as it pleaseth thee;"(4) a man able to use
women as a man should,--his wife temperately, his handmaid compliantly, neither
intemperately!
CHAP. 26.--OF GOD'S ATTESTATION TO ABRAHAM, BY WHICH HE ASSURES HIM, WHEN NOW
OLD, OF A SON BY THE BARREN SARAH, AND APPOINTS HIM THE FATHER OF THE NATIONS,
AND SEALS HIS FAITH IN THE PROMISE BY THE SACRAMENT OF CIRCUMCISION.
After these things Ishmael was born of Hagar; and Abraham might think that
in him was fulfilled what God had promised him, saying, when he wished to
adopt his home-born servant, "This shall not be thine heir: but he that shall come
forth of thee, he shall be thine heir."(2) Therefore, lest he should think that
what was promised was fulfilled in the handmaid's son, "when Abram was ninety
years old and nine, God appeared to him, and said unto him, I am God; be
well-pleasing in my sight, and be without complaint, and I will make my covenant
between me and thee, and will fill thee exceedingly."(2)
Here there are more distinct promises about the calling of the nations in
Isaac, that is, in the son of the promise, by which grace is signified, and not
nature; for the son is promised from an old man and a barren old woman. For
although God effects even the natural course of procreation, yet where the agency
of God is manifest, through the decay or failure of nature, grace is more
plainly discerned. And because this was to be brought about, not by generation, but
by regeneration, circumcision was enjoined now, when a son was promised of
Sarah. And by ordering all, not only sons, but also home-born and purchased
servants to be circumcised, he testifies that this grace pertains to all. For what
else does circumcision signify than a nature renewed on the putting off of the
old? And what else does the eighth day mean than Christ, who rose again when the
week was completed, that is, after the Sabbath? The very names of the parents
are changed: all things proclaim newness, and the new covenant is shadowed forth
in the old. For what does the term old covenant imply but the concealing of
the new? And what does the term new covenant imply but the revealing of the old?
The laughter of Abraham is the exultation of one who rejoices, not the scornful
laughter of one who mistrusts. And those words of his in his heart, "Shall a
son be born to me that am an hundred years old? and shall Sarah, that is ninety
years old, bear?" are not the words of doubt, but of wonder. And when it is
said, "And I will give to thee, and to thy seed after thee, the land in which thou
art a stranger, all the land of Canaan, for an everlasting possession," if it
troubles any one whether this is to be held as fulfilled, or whether its
fulfilment may still be looked for, since no kind of earthly possession can be
everlasting for any nation whatever, let him know that the word translated
everlasting, by our writers is what the Greeks term <greek>ai?w?nion</greek>, which is
derived from <greek>ai?w?n</greek>, the Greek for soeculum, an age. But the
Latins have not ventured to translate this by secular, test they should change the
meaning into something widely different. For many things are called secular
which so happen in this world as to pass away even in a short time; but what is
termed <greek>ai?wnion</greek> either has no end, or lasts to the very end of this
world.
CHAP. 27.--OF THE MALE, WHO WAS TO LOSE HIS SOUL IF HE WAS NOT CIRCUMCISED ON
THE EIGHTH DAY, BECAUSE HE HAD BROKEN GOD'S COVENANT.
When it is said, "The male who is not circumcised in the flesh of his
foreskin, that soul shall be cut off from his people, because he hath broken my
covenant,"[3] some may be troubled how that ought to be understood, since it can
be no fault of the infant whose life it is said must perish; nor has the
covenant of God been broken by him, but by his parents, who have not taken care to
circumcise him. But even the infants, not personally in their own life, but
according to the common origin of the human race, have all broken God's covenant in
that one in whom all have sinned.[4] Now there are many things called God' s
covenants besides those two great ones, the old and the new, which any one who
pleases may read and know. For the first covenant, which was made with the first
man, is just this: "In the day ye eat thereof, ye shall surely die."[5] Whence
it is written in the book called Ecclesiasticus, "All flesh waxeth old as doth a
garment. For the covenant from the beginning is, Thou shall die the death."[6]
Now, as the law was more plainly given afterward, and the apostle says, "Where
no law is, there is no prevarication,"[7] on what supposition is what is said
in the psalm true,"[1] accounted all the sinners of the earth
prevaricators,"[8] except that all who are held liable for any sin are accused of dealing
deceitfully (prevaricating) with some law? If on this account, then, even the
infants are, according to the true belief, born in sin, not actual but original, so
that we confess they have need of grace for the remission of sins, certainly it
must be acknowledged that in the same sense in which they are sinners they are
also prevaricators of that law which was given in Paradise, according to the
truth of both scriptures, "I accounted all the sinners of the earth
prevaricators," and "Where no law is, there is no prevarication." And thus, because
circumcision was the sign of regeneration, and the infant, on account of the original
sin by which God's covenant was first broken, was not undeservedly to lose his
generation unless delivered by regeneration, these divine words are to be
understood as if it had been said, Whoever is not born again, that soul shall perish
from his people, because he hath broken my covenant, since he also has sinned
in Adam with all others. For had He said, Because he hath broken this my
covenant, He would have compelled us to understand by it only this of circumcision;
but since He has not expressly said what covenant the infant has broken, we are
free to understand Him as speaking of that covenant of which the breach can be
ascribed to an infant. Yet if any one contends that it is said of nothing else
than circumcision, that in it the infant has broken the covenant of God
because, he is not circumcised, he must seek some method of explanation by which it
may be understood without absurdity (such as this) that he has broken the
covenant, because it has been broken in him although not by him. Yet in this case also
it is to be observed that the soul of the infant, being guilty of no sin of
neglect against itself, would perish unjustly, unless original sin rendered it
obnoxious to punishment.
CHAP. 28.--OF THE CHANGE OF NAME IN ABRAHAM AND SARAH, WHO RECEIVED THE GIFT
OF FECUNDITY WHEN THEY WERE INCAPABLE OF REGENERATION OWING TO THE BARRENNESS OF
ONE, AND THE OLD AGE OF BOTH.
Now when a promise so great and clear was made to Abraham, in which it was
so plainly said to him, "I have made thee a father of many nations, and I will
increase thee exceedingly, and I will make nations of thee, and kings shall go
forth of thee. And I will give thee a son of Sarah; and I will bless him, and
he shall become nations, and kings of nations shall be of him,"(1) --a promise
which we now see fulfilled in Christ,--from that time forward this couple are
not called in Scripture, as formerly, Abram and Sarai, but Abraham and Sarah, as
we have called them from the first, for every one does so now. The reason why
the name of Abraham was changed is given: "For," He says, "I have made thee a
father of many nations." This, then, is to be understood to be the meaning of
Abraham; but Abram, as he was formerly called, means "exalted father." The reason
of the change of Sarah's name is not given; but as those say who have written
interpretations of the Hebrew names contained in these books, Sarah means "my
princess," and Sarai "strength." Whence it is written in the Epistle to the
Hebrews, "Through faith also Sarah herself received strength to conceive seed."[2]
For both were old, as the Scripture testifies; but she was also barren, and
had ceased to menstruate, so that she could no longer bear children even if she
had not been barren. Further, if a woman is advanced in years, yet still retains
the custom of women, she can bear children to a young man, but not to an old
man, although that same old man can beget, but only of a young woman; as after
Sarah's death Abraham could of Keturah, because he met with her in her lively
age. This, then, is what the apostle mentions as wonderful, saying, besides, that
Abraham's body was now dead;[3] because at that age he was no longer able to
beget children of any woman who retained now only a small part of her natural
vigor. Of course we must understand that his body was dead only to some purposes,
not to all; for if it was so to all, it would no longer be the aged body of a
living man, but the corpse of a dead one. Although that question, how Abraham
begot children of Keturah, is usually solved in this way, that the gift of
begetting which he received from the Lord, remained even after the death of his
wife, yet I think that solution of the question which I have followed is
preferable, because, although in our days an old man of a hundred years can beget
children of no woman, it was not so then, when men still lived so long that a hundred
years did not yet bring on them the decrepitude of old age.
CHAP. 29.--OF THE THREE MEN OR ANGELS, IN WHOM THE LORD IS RELATED TO HAVE
APPEARED TO ABRAHAM AT THE OAK OF MAMRE.
God appeared again to Abraham at the oak of Mature in three men, who it is
not to be doubted were angels, although some think that one of them was
Christ, and assert that He was visible before He put on flesh. Now it belongs to the
divine power, and invisible, incorporeal, and incommutable nature, without
changing itself at all, to appear even to mortal men, not by what it is, but by
what is subject to it. And what is not subject to it? Yet if they try to establish
that one of these three was Christ by the fact that, although he saw three, he
addressed the Lord in the singular, as it is written, "And, lo, three men
stood by him: and, when he saw them, he ran to meet them from the tent-door, and
worshipped toward the ground, and said, Lord, if I have found favor before
thee,"(1) etc.; why do they not advert to this also, that when two of them came to
destroy the Sodomites, while Abraham still spoke to one, calling him Lord, and
interceding that he would not destroy the righteous along with the wicked in
Sodom, Lot received these two in such a way that he too in his conversation with
them addressed the Lord in the singular? For after saying to them in the plural,
"Behold, my lords, turn aside into your servant's house,"(2) etc., yet it is
afterwards said, "And the angels laid hold upon his hand, and the hand of his
wife, and the hands of his two daughters, because the Lord was merciful unto him.
And it came to pass, .whenever they had led him forth abroad, that they said,
Save thy life; look not behind thee, neither stay thou in all this region: save
thyself in the mountain, lest thou be caught. And Lot said unto them, I pray
thee, Lord, since thy servant hath found grace in thy sight,"(3) etc. And then
after these words the Lord also answered him in the singular, although He was in
two angels, saying, "See, I have accepted thy face,"(4) etc. This makes it much
more credible that both Abraham in the three men and Lot in the two recognized
the Lord, addressing Him in the singular number, even when they were
addressing men; for they received them as they did for no other reason than that they
might minister human refection to them as men who needed it. Yet there was about
them something so excellent, that those who showed them hospitality as men
could not doubt that God was in them as He was wont to be in the prophets, and
therefore sometimes addressed them in the plural, and sometimes God in them in the
singular. But that they were angels the Scripture testifies, not only in this
book of Genesis, in which these transactions are related, but also in the
Epistle to the Hebrews, where in praising hospitality it is said, "For thereby some
have entertained angels unawares." 5 By these three men, then, when a son Isaac
was again promised to Abraham by Sarah, such a divine oracle was also given
that it was said, "Abraham shall become a great and numerous nation, and all the
nations of the earth shall be blessed in him."(6) And here these two things,
are promised with the utmost brevity and fullness,--the nation of Israel
according to the flesh, and all nations according to faith.
CHAP. 30.--OF LOT'S DELIVERANCE FROM SODOM, AND ITS CONSUMPTION BY FIRE FROM
HEAVEN; AND OF ABIMELECH, WHOSE LUST COULD NOT HARM SARAH'S CHASTITY.
After this promise Lot was delivered out of Sodom, and a fiery rain from
heaven turned into ashes that whole region of the impious city, where custom had
made sodomy as prevalent as laws have elsewhere made other kinds of
wickedness. But this punishment of theirs was a specimen of the divine judgment to come.
For what is meant by the angels for-bidding those who were delivered to look
back, but that we are not to look back in heart to the old life which, being
regenerated through grace, we have put off, if we think to escape the last
judgment? Lot's wife, indeed, when she looked back, remained, and, being turned into
salt, furnished to believing men a condiment by which to savor somewhat the
warning to be drawn from that example. Then Abraham did again at Gerar, with
Abimelech the king of that city, what he had done in Egypt about his wife, and
received her back untouched in the same way. On this occasion, when the king rebuked
Abraham for not saying she was his wife, and calling her his sister, he
explained what he had been afraid of, and added this further, "And yet indeed she is my
sister by the father's site, but not by the mother's;(7) for she was
Abraham's sister by his own father, and so near of kin. But her beauty was so great,
that even at that advanced age she could be fallen in love with.
CHAP. 31.--OF ISAAC, WHO WAS BORN ACCORDING TO THE PROMISE, WHOSE NAME WAS
GIVEN ON ACCOUNT OF THE LAUGHTER OF BOTH PARENTS.
After these things a son was born to Abraham, according to God's promise,
of Sarah, and was called Isaac:, which means laughter. For his father had
laughed when he was promised to him, in wondering delight, and his mother, when he
was again promised by those three men, had laughed, doubting for joy; yet she
was blamed by the angel because that laughter, although it was for joy, yet was
not full of faith. Afterwards she was confirmed in faith by the same angel. From
this, then, the boy got his name. For when Isaac was born and called by that
name, Sarah showed that her laughter was not that of scornful reproach, but that
of joyful praise; for she said, "God hath made me to laugh, so that every one
who hears will laugh with me."(1) Then in a little while the bond maid was cast
out of the house with her son; and, according to the apostle, these two women
signify the old and new covenants,---Sarah representing that of the Jerusalem
which is above, that is, the city of God.(2)
CHAP. 32.--OF ABRAHAM'S OBEDIENCE AND FAITH, WHICH WERE PROVED BY THE OFFERING
UP, OF HIS SON IN SACRIFICE, AND OF SARAH'S DEATH.
Among other things, of which it would take too long time to mention the
whole, Abraham was tempted about the offering up of his well-beloved son Isaac,
to prove his pious obedience, and so make it known to the world, not to God. Now
every temptation is not blame-worthy; it may even be praise-worthy, because it
furnishes probation. And, for the most part, the human mind cannot attain to
self-knowledge otherwise than by making trial of its powers through temptation,
by some kind of experimental and not merely verbal self-interrogation; when, if
it has acknowledged the gift of God, it is pious, and is consolidated by
steadfast grace and not puffed up by vain boasting. Of course Abraham could never
believe that God delighted in human sacrifices; yet when the divine commandment
thundered, it was to be obeyed, not disputed. Yet Abraham is worthy of praise,
because he all along believed that his son, on being offered up, would rise
again; for God had said to him, when he was unwilling to fulfill his wife's
pleasure by casting out the bond maid and her son, "In Isaac shall thy seed be
called." No doubt He then goes on to say, "And as for the son of this bond woman, I
will make him a great nation, because he is thy seed."[3] How then is it said "In
Isaac shall thy seed be called," when God calls Ishmael also his seed? The
apostle, in explaining this, says, "In Isaac shall thy seed be called, that is,
they which are the children of the flesh, these are not the children of God: but
the children of the promise are counted for the seed."[4] In order, then, that
the children of the promise may be the seed of Abraham, they are called in
Isaac, that is, are gathered together in Christ by the call of grace. Therefore the
father, holding fast from the first the promise which behoved to be fulfilled
through this son whom God had ordered him to slay, did not doubt that he whom
he once thought it hopeless he should ever receive would be restored to him when
he had offered him up. It is in this way the passage in the Epistle to the
Hebrews is also to be understood and explained. "By faith," he says, "Abraham
overcame, when tempted about Isaac: and he who had received the promise offered up
his only son, to whom it was said, In Isaac shall thy seed be called: thinking
that God was able to raise him up, even from the dead;" therefore he has added,
"from whence also he received him in a similitude."[5] In whose similitude but
His of whom the apostle says, "He that spared not His own Son, but delivered
Him up for us all?"(6) And on this account Isaac also himself carried to the
place of sacrifice the wood on which he was to be offered up, just as the Lord
Himself carried His own cross. Finally, since Isaac was not to be slain, after his
father was forbidden to smite him, who was that ram by the offering of which
that sacrifice was completed with typical blood? For when Abraham saw him, he
was caught by the horns in a thicket. What, then, did he represent but Jesus,
who, before He was offered up, was crowned with thorns by the Jews?
But let us rather hear the divine words spoken through the angel. For the
Scripture says, "And Abraham stretched forth his hand to take the knife, that
he might slay his son. And the Angel of the Lord called unto him from heaven,
and said, Abraham. And he said, Here am I. And he said, Lay not thine hand upon
the lad, neither do thou anything unto him: for now I know that thou fearest
God, and hast not spared thy beloved son for my sake."(7) It is said, "Now I
know," that is, Now I have made to be known; for God was not previously ignorant of
this. Then, having offered up that ram instead of Isaac his son, "Abraham," as
we read, "called the name of that place The Lord seeth: as they say this day,
In the mount the Lord hath appeared."(8) As it is said, "Now I know," for Now I
have made to be known, so here, "The Lord sees," for The Lord hath appeared,
that is, made Himself to be seen. "And the Angel of the Lord called unto Abraham
from heaven the second time, saying, By myself have I sworn, saith the Lord;
because thou hast done this thing, and hast not spared thy beloved son for my
sake; that in blessing I will bless thee, and in multiplying I will multiply thy
seed as the stars of heaven, and as the sand which is upon the seashore; and thy
seed shall possess by inheritance the cities of the adversaries: and in thy
seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed; because thou hast obeyed my
voice."(1) In this manner is that promise concerning the calling of the nations
in the seed of Abraham confirmed even by the oath of God, after that
burnt-offering which typified Christ. For He had often promised, but never sworn. And
what is the oath of God, the true and faithful, but a confirmation of the promise,
and a certain reproof to the unbelieving?
After these things Sarah died, in the 127th year of her life, and the
137th of her husband for he was ten years older than she, as he himself says, when
a son is promised to him by her: "Shall a son be born to me that am an hundred
years old? and shall Sarah, that is ninety years old, bear?"(2) Then Abraham
bought a field, in which he buried his wife. And then, according to Stephen's
account, he was settled in that land, entering then on actual possession of
it,--that is, after the death of his father, who is inferred to have died two years
before.
CHAP. 33.--OF REBECCA, THE GRAND-DAUGHTER OF NAHOR, WHOM ISAAC TOOK TO WIFE.
Isaac married Rebecca, the grand-daughter of Nahor, his father's brother,
when he was forty years old, that is, in the 140th year of his father's life,
three years after his mother's death. Now when a servant was sent to Mesopotamia
by his father to fetch her, and when Abraham said to that servant, "Put thy
hand under my thigh, and I will make thee swear by the Lord, the God of heaven,
and the Lord of the earth, that thou shalt not take a wife unto my son Isaac of
the daughters of the Canaanites,"(3) what else was pointed out by this, but
that the Lord, the God of heaven, and the Lord of the earth, was to come in the
flesh which was to be derived from that thigh? Are these small tokens of the
foretold truth which we see fulfilled in Christ?
CHAP. 34.--WHAT IS MEANT BY ABRAHAM'S MARRYING KETURAH AFTER SARAH'S DEATH.
What did Abraham mean by marrying Keturah after Sarah's death? Far be it
from us to suspect him of incontinence, especially when he had reached such an
age and such sanctity of faith. Or was he still seeking to beget children,
though he held fast, with most approved faith, the promise of God that his children
should be multiplied out of Isaac as the stars of heaven and the dust of the
earth? And yet, if Hagar and Ishmael, as the apostle teaches us, signified the
carnal people of the old covenant, why may not Keturah and her sons also signify
the carnal people who think they belong to the new covenant? For both are
called both the wives and the concubines of Abraham; but Sarah is never called a
concubine (but only a wife). For when Hagar is given to Abraham, it is written.
"And Sarai, Abram's wife, took Hagar the Egyptian, her handmaid, after Abraham
had dwelt ten years in the land of Canaan, and gave her to her husband Abram to
be his wife."(4) And of Keturah, whom he took after Sarah's departure, we read,
"Then again Abraham took a wife, whose name was Keturah."(5) Lo! both are
called wives, yet both are found to have been concubines; for the Scripture
afterward says, "And Abraham gave his whole estate unto Isaac his son. But unto the
sons of his concubines Abraham gave gifts, and sent them away from his son Isaac,
(while he yet lived,) eastward, unto the east country."(6) Therefore the sons
of the concubines, that is, the heretics and the carnal Jews, have some gifts,
but do not attain the promised kingdom; "For they which are the children of the
flesh, these are not the children of God: but the children of the promise are
counted for the seed, of whom it was said, In Isaac shall thy seed be
called."(7) For I do not see why Keturah, who was married after the wife's death, should
be called a concubine, except on account of this mystery. But if any one is
unwilling to put such meanings on these things, he need not calumniate Abraham.
For what if even this was provided against the heretics who were to be the
opponents of second marriages, so that it might be shown that it was no sin in the
case of the father of many nations himself, when, after his wife's death, he
married again? And Abraham died when he was 175 years old, so that he left his son
Isaac seventy-five years old, having begotten him when 100 years old.
CHAP. 35.--WHAT WAS INDICATED BY THE DIVINE ANSWER ABOUT THE TWINS STILL SHUT
UP IN THE WOMB OF REBECCA THEIR MOTHER.
Let us now see how the times of the city of God run on from this point
among Abraham's descendants. In the time from the first year of Isaac's life to
the seventieth, when his sons were born, the only memorable thing is, that when
he prayed God that his wife, who was barren, might bear, and the Lord granted
what he sought, and she conceived, the twins leapt while still enclosed in her
womb. And when she was troubled by this struggle, and inquired of the Lord, she
received this answer: "Two nations are in thy womb, and two manner of people
shall be separated from thy bowels; and the one people shall overcome the other
people, and the elder shall serve the younger." (1) The Apostle Paul would have
us understand this as a great instance of grace; (2) for the children being not
yet born, neither having done any good or evil, the younger is chosen without
any good desert and the elder is rejected, when beyond doubt, as regards
original sin, both were alike, and as regards actual sin, neither had any. But the
plan of the work on hand does not permit me to speak more fully of this matter
now, and I have said much about it in other works. Only that saying, "The elder
shall serve the younger," is understood by our writers, almost without exception,
to mean that the elder people, the Jews, shall serve the younger people, the
Christians. And truly, although this might seem to be fulfilled in the Idumean
nation, which was born of the elder (who had two names, being called both Esau
and Edom. whence the name Idumeans), because it was afterwards to be overcome by
the people which sprang from the younger, that is, by the Israelites, and was
to become subject to them; yet it is more suitable to believe that, when it was
said, "The one people shall overcome the other people, and the elder shall
serve the younger," that prophecy meant some greater thing; and what is that
except what is evidently fulfilled in the Jews and Christians?
CHAP. 36. -- OF THE ORACLE AND BLESSING WHICH ISAAC RECEIVED, JUST AS HIS
FATHER DID, BEING BELOVED FOR HIS SAKE.
Isaac also received such an oracle as his father had often received. Of
this oracle it is thus written: "And there was a famine aver the land, beside the
first famine that was in the days of Abraham. And Isaac went unto Abimelech
king of the Philistines unto Gerar, And the Lord appeared unto him, and said, Go
not down into Egypt; but dwell in the land which I shall tell thee of. And
abide in this land, and I will be with thee, and will bless thee: unto thee and
unto thy seed I will give all this land; and I will establish mine oath, which I
sware unto Abraham thy father: and I will multiply thy seed as the stars of
heaven, and will give unto thy seed all this land: and in thy seed shall all the
nations of the earth be blessed; because that Abraham thy father obeyed my voice,
and kept my precepts, my commandments, my righteousness, and my laws." (3)
This patriarch neither had another wife, nor any concubine, but was content with
the twin-children begotten by one act of generation. He also was afraid, when he
lived among strangers, of being brought into danger owing to the beauty of his
wife, and did like his father in calling her his sister, and not telling that
she was his wife; for she was his near blood-relation by the father's and
mother's side. She also remained untouched by the strangers, when it was known she
was his wife. Yet we ought not to prefer him to his father because he knew no
woman besides his one wife. For beyond doubt the merits of his father's faith and
obedience were greater, inasmuch as God says it is for his sake He does Isaac
good: "In thy seed," He says, "shall all the nations of the earth be blessed,
because that Abraham thy father obeyed my voice, and kept my precepts, my
commandments, my statutes, and my laws." And again in another oracle He says, "I am
the God of Abraham thy father: fear not, for I am with thee, and will bless
thee, and multiply thy seed for my servant Abraham's sake." (4) So that we must
understand how chastely Abraham acted, because imprudent men, who seek some
support for their own wickedness in the Holy Scriptures, think he acted through lust.
We may also learn this, not to compare men by single good things, but to
consider everything in each; for it may happen that one man has something in his
life and character in which he excels another, and it may be far more excellent
than that in which the other excels him. And thus, according to sound and true
judgment, while continence is preferable to marriage, yet a believing married man
is better than a continent unbeliever; for the unbeliever is not only less
praiseworthy, but is even highly detestable. We must conclude, then, that both are
good; yet so as to hold that the married man who is most faithful and most
obedient is certainly better than the continent man whose faith and obedience are
less. But if equal in other things, who would hesitate to. prefer the continent
man to the married?
CHAP. 37.--OF THE THINGS MYSTICALLY PREFIGURED IN ESAU AND JACOB.
Isaac's two sons, Esau and Jacob, grew up together. The primacy of the
elder was transferred to the younger by a bargain and agreement between them, when
the elder immoderately lusted after the lentiles the younger had prepared for
food, and for that price sold his birthright to him, confirming it with an
oath. We learn from this that a person is to be blamed, not for the kind of food he
eats, but for immoderate greed. Isaac grew old, and old age deprived him of
his eyesight. He wished to bless the elder son, and instead of the elder, who was
hairy, unwittingly blessed the younger, who put himself under his father's
hands, having covered himself with kid-skins, as if bearing the sins of others.
Lest we should think this guile of Jacob's was fraudulent guile, instead of
seeking in it the mystery of a great thing, the Scripture has predicted in the words
just before, "Esau was a cunning hunter, a man of the field; and Jacob was a
simple man, dwelling at home." (1) Some of our writers have interpreted this,
"without guile. But whether the Greek <greek>a?plastos</greek> means without
guile," or "simple," or rather "without reigning," in the receiving of that
blessing what is the guile of the man without guile? What is the guile of the simple,
what the fiction of the man who does not lie, but a profound mystery of the
truth? But what is the blessing itself ? "See," he says, "the smell of my son is
as the smell of a full field which the Lord hath blessed: therefore God give
thee of the dew of heaven, and of the fruitfulness of the earth, and plenty of
corn and wine: let nations serve thee, and princes adore thee: and be lord of thy
brethren, and let thy father's sons adore thee: cursed be he that curseth thee,
and blessed be he that blesseth thee." (2) The blessing of Jacob is therefore
a proclamation of Christ to all nations. It is this which has come to pass, and
is now being fulfilled. Isaac is the law and the prophecy: even by the mouth
of the Jews Christ is blessed by prophecy as by one who knows not, because it is
itself not understood. The world like a field is filled with the odor of
Christ's name: His is the blessing of the dew of heaven, that is, of the showers of
divine words; and of the fruitfulness of the earth, that is, of the gathering
together of the peoples: His is the plenty of corn and wine, that is, the
multitude that gathers bread and wine in the sacrament of His body and blood. Him the
nations serve, Him princes adore. He is the Lord of His brethren, because His
people rules over the Jews. Him His Father's sons adore, that is, the sons of
Abraham according to faith; for He Himself is the son of Abraham according to
the flesh. He is cursed that curseth Him, and he that blesseth Him is blessed.
Christ, I say, who is ours is blessed, that is, truly spoken of out of the mouths
of the Jews, when, although erring, they yet sing the law and the prophets,
and think they are blessing another for whom they erringly hope. So, when the
elder son claims the promised blessing, Isaac is greatly afraid, and wonders when
he knows that he has blessed one instead of the other, and demands who he is;
yet he does not complain that he has been deceived, yea, when the great mystery
is revealed to him, in his secret heart he at once eschews anger, and confirms
the blessing. "Who then," he says, "hath hunted me venison, and brought it me,
and I have eaten of all before thou camest, and have blessed him, and he shall
be blessed?" (3) Who would not rather have expected the curse of an angry man
here, if these things had been done in an earthly manner, and not by inspiration
from above? O things done, yet done prophetically; on the earth, yet
celestially; by men, yet divinely! If everything that is fertile of so great mysteries
should be examined carefully, many volumes would be filled; but the moderate
compass fixed for this work compels us to hasten to other things.
CHAP. 38.--OF JACOB'S MISSION TO MESOPOTAMIA TO GET A WIFE, AND OF THE VISION
WHICH HE SAW IN A DREAM BY THE WAY, AND OF HIS GETTING FOUR WOMEN WHEN HE
SOUGHT ONE WIFE.
Jacob was sent by his parents to Mesopotamia that he might take a wife
there. These were his father's words on sending him: "Thou shall not take a wife
of the daughters of the Canaanites. Arise, fly to Mesopotamia, to the house of
Bethuel, thy mother's father, and take thee a wife from thence of the daughters
of Laban thy mother's brother. And my God bless thee, and increase thee, and
multiply thee; and thou shall be an assembly of peoples; and give to thee the
blessing of Abraham thy father, and to thy seed after thee; that thou mayest
inherit the land wherein thou dwellest, which God gave unto Abraham." (4) Now we
understand here that the seed of Jacob is separated from Isaac's other seed which
came through Esau. For when it is said, "In Isaac shall thy seed be called,"
(5) by this seed is meant solely the city of God; so that from it is separated
Abraham's other seed, which was in the son of the bond woman, and which was to
be in the sons of Keturah. But until now it had been uncertain regarding Isaac's
twin-sons whether that blessing belonged to both or only to one of them; and
if to one, which of them it was. This is now declared when Jacob is
prophetically blessed by his father, and it is said to him, "And thou shalt be an assembly
of peoples, and God give to thee the blessing of Abraham thy father."
When Jacob was going to Mesopotamia, he received in a dream an oracle, of
which it is thus written: "And Jacob went out from the well of the oath, (1)
and went to Haran. And he came to a place, and slept there, for the sun was set;
and he took of the stones of the place, and put them at his head, and slept in
that place, and dreamed. And behold a ladder set up on the earth, and the top
of it reached to heaven; and the angels of God ascended and descended by it. And
the Lord stood above it, and said, I am the God of Abraham thy father, and the
God of Isaac fear not: the land whereon thou sleepest, to thee will I give it,
and to thy seed; and thy seed shall be as the dust of the earth; and it shall
be spread abroad to the sea, and to Africa, and to the north, and to the east:
and all the tribes of the earth shall be blessed in thee and in thy seed. And,
behold, I am with thee, to keep thee in all thy way wherever thou goest, and I
will bring thee back into this land; for I will not leave thee, until I have,
done all which I have spoken to thee of. And Jacob awoke out of his sleep, and
said, Surely the Lord is in this place, and I knew it not. And he was afraid,
and said, How dreadful is this place! this is none other but the house of God,
and this is the gate of heaven. And Jacob arose, and took the stone that he had
put under his head there, and set it up for a memorial, and poured oil upon the
top of it. And Jacob called the name of that place the house of God." (2) This
is prophetic. For Jacob did not pour oil on the stone in an idolatrous way, as
if making it a god; neither did he adore that stone, or sacrifice to it. But
since the name of Christ comes from the chrism or anointing, something pertaining
to the great mystery was certainly represented in this. And the Saviour
Himself is understood to bring this latter to remembrance in the gospel, when He says
of Nathanael, "Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile!" (3) because
Israel who saw this vision is no other than Jacob. And in the same place He
says, "Verily, verily, I say unto you, Ye shall see heaven open, and the angels of
God ascending and descending upon the Son of man."
Jacob went on to Mesopotamia to take a wife from thence. And the divine
Scripture points out how, without unlawfully desiring any of them, he came to
have four women, of whom he begat twelve sons and one daughter; for he had come to
take only one. But when one was falsely given him in place of the other, he
did not send her away after unwittingly using her in the night, lest he should
seem to have put her to shame; but as at that time, in order to multiply
posterity, no law forbade a plurality of wives, he took her also to whom alone he had
promised marriage. As she was barren, she gave her handmaid to her husband that
she might have children by her; and her elder sister did the same thing in
imitation of her, although she had borne, because she desired to multiply progeny.
We do not read that Jacob sought any but one, or that he used many, except for
the purpose of begetting offspring, saving conjugal rights; and he would not
have done this, had not his wives, who had legitimate power over their own
husband's body, urged him to do it. So he begat twelve sons and one daughter by four
women. Then he entered into Egypt by his son Joseph, who was sold by his
brethren for envy, and carried there, and who was there exalted.
CHAP. 39.--THE REASON WHY JACOB WAS ALSO CALLED ISRAEL.
As I said a little ago, Jacob was also called Israel, the name which was
most prevalent among the people descended from him. Now this name was given him
by the angel who wrestled with him on the way back from Mesopotamia, and who
was most evidently a type of Christ. For when Jacob overcame him, doubtless with
his own consent, that the mystery might be represented, it signified Christ's
passion, in which the Jews are seen overcoming Him. And yet he besought a
blessing from the very angel he had overcome; and so the imposition of this name was
the blessing. For Israel means seeing God, (4) which will at last be the reward
of alI the saints. The angel also touched him on the breadth of the thigh when
he was overcoming him, and in that way made him lame. So that Jacob was at one
and the same time blessed and lame: blessed in those among that people who
believed in Christ, and lame in the unbelieving. For the breadth of the thigh is
the multitude of the family. For there are many of that race of whom it was
prophetically said beforehand, "And they have halted in their paths." (5)
CHAP. 40.--HOW IT IS SAID THAT JACOB WENT INTO EGYPT WITH SEVENTY-FIVE SOULS,
WHEN MOST OF THOSE WHO ARE MENTIONED WERE BORN AT A LATER PERIOD.
Seventy-five men are reported to have entered Egypt along with Jacob,
counting him with his children. In this number only two women are mentioned, one a
daughter, the other a grand-daughter. But when the thing is carefully
considered, it does not appear that Jacob's offspring was so numerous on the day or year
when he entered Egypt. There are also included among them the
great-grandchildren of Joseph, who could not possibly be born already. For Jacob was then 130
years old, and his son Joseph thirty-nine and as it is plain that he took a wife
when he was thirty or more, how could he in nine years have
great-grandchildren by the children whom he had by that wife? Now since, Ephraim and Manasseh,
the sons of Joseph, could not even have children, for Jacob found them boys under
nine years old when he entered Egypt, in what way are not only their sons but
their grandsons reckoned among those seventy-five who then entered Egypt with
Jacob? For there is reckoned there Machir the son of Manasseh, grandson of
Joseph, and Machir's son, that is, Gilead grandson of Manasseh, great-grandson of
Joseph; there, too, is he whom Ephraim, Joseph's other son, begot, that is,
Shuthelah grandson of Joseph, and Shuthelah's son Ezer, grandson of Ephraim, and
great-grand-son of Joseph, who could not possibly be in existence when Jacob came
into Egypt, and there found his grandsons, the sons of Joseph, their
grandsires, still boys under nine years of age.' But doubtless, when the Scripture
mentions Jacob's entrance into Egypt with seventy-five souls, it does not mean one
day, or one year, but that whole time as long as Joseph lived, who was the cause
of his entrance. For the same Scripture speaks thus of Joseph: "And Joseph
dwelt in Egypt, he and his brethren, and all his father's house: and Joseph lived
110 years, and saw Ephraim's children of the third generation." (2) That is,
his great-grandson, the third from Ephraim; for the third generation means son,
grandson, great-grandson. Then it is added," The children also of Machir, the
son of Manasseh, were born upon Joseph's knees." (3) And this is that grandson of
Manasseh, and great-grandson of Joseph. But the plural number is employed
according to scriptural usage; for the one daughter of Jacob is spoken of as
daughters, just as in the usage of the Latin tongue liberi is used in the plural for
children even when there is only one. Now, when Joseph's own happiness is
proclaimed, because he could see his great-grandchildren, it is by no means to be
thought they already existed in the thirty-ninth year of their great-grand-sire
Joseph, when his father Jacob came to him in Egypt. But those who diligently
look into these things will the less easily be mistaken, because it is written,
"These are the names of the sons of Israel who entered into Egypt along with
Jacob their father." (4) For this means that the seventy-five are reckoned along
with him, not that they were all with him when he entered Egypt; for, as I have
said, the whole period during which Joseph, who occasioned his entrance, lived,
is held to be the time of that entrance.
CHAP. 41.--OF THE BLESSING WHICH JACOB PROMISED IN JUDAH HIS SON.
If, on account of the Christian people in whom the city of God sojourns in
the earth, we look for the flesh of Christ in the seed of Abraham, setting
aside the sons of the concubines, we have Isaac; if in the seed of Isaac, setting
aside Esau, who is also Edom, we have Jacob, who also is Israel; if in the seed
of Israel himself, setting aside the rest, we have Judah, because Christ
sprang of the tribe of Judah. Let us hear, then, how Israel, when dying in Egypt, in
blessing his sons, prophetically blessed Judah. He says: "Judah, thy brethren
shall praise thee: thy hands shall be on the back of thine enemies; thy
father's children shall adore thee. Judah is a lion's whelp: from the sprouting, my
son, thou art gone up: lying down, thou hast slept as a lion, and as a lion's
whelp; who shall awake him? A prince shall not be lacking out of Judah, and a
leader from his thighs, until the things come that are laid up for him; and He
shall be the expectation of the nations. Binding his foal unto the vine, and his
ass's foal to the choice vine; he shall wash his robe in wine, and his clothes in
the blood of the grape: his eyes are red with wine, and his teeth are whiter
than milk." (5) I have expounded these words in disputing against Faustus the
Manichaean; and I think it is enough to make the truth of this prophecy shine, to
remark that the death of Christ is predicted by the word about his lying down,
and not the necessity, but the voluntary character of His death, in the title
of lion. That power He Himself proclaims in the gospel, saying, "I have the
power of laying down my life, and I have the power of taking it again. No man
taketh it from me; but I lay it down of myself, and take it again." (1) So the lion
roared, so He fulfilled what He said. For to this power what is added about
the resurrection refers, "Who shall awake him?" This means that no man but
Himself has raised Him, who also said of His own body, "Destroy this temple, and in
three days I will raise it up." (2) And the very nature of His death, that is,
the height of the cross, is understood by the single words "Thou are gone up."
The evangelist explains what is added, "Lying down, thou hast slept," when he
says, "He bowed His head, and gave up the ghost." (3) Or at least His burial is
to be understood, in which He lay down sleeping, and whence no man raised Him,
as the prophets did some, and as He Himself did others; but He Himself rose up
as if from sleep. As for His robe which He washes in wine, that is, cleanses
from sin in His own blood, of which blood those who are baptized know the mystery,
so that he adds, "And his clothes in the blood of the grape," what is it but
the Church? "And his eyes are red with wine," [these are] His spiritual people
drunken with His cup, of which the psalm sings, "And thy cup that makes drunken,
how excellent it is!" "And his teeth are whiter than milk," (4)--that is, the
nutritive words which, according to the apostle, the babes drink, being as yet
unfit for solid food. (5) And it is He in whom the promises of Judah were laid
up, so that until they come, princes, that is, the kings of Israel, shall never
be lacking out of Judah. "And He is the expectation of the nations." This is
too plain to need exposition.
CHAP. 42.--OF THE SONS OF JOSEPH, WHOM JACOB BLESSED, PROPHETICALLY CHANGING
HIS HANDS.
Now, as Isaac's two sons, Esau and Jacob, furnished a type of the two
people, the Jews and the Christians (although as pertains to carnal descent it was
not the Jews but the Idumeans who came of the seed of Esau, nor the Christian
nations but rather the Jews who came of Jacob's; for the type holds only as
regards the saying, "The elder shall serve the younger" (6)), so the same thing
happened in Joseph's two sons; for the elder was a type of the Jews, and the
younger of the Christians. For when Jacob was blessing them, and laid his fight hand
on the younger, who was at his left, and his left hand on the elder, who was
at his right, this seemed wrong to their father, and he admonished his father by
trying to correct his mistake and show him which was the elder. But he would
not change his hands, but said, "I know, my son, I know. He also shall become a
people, and he also shall be exalted; but his younger brother shall be greater
than he, and his seed shall become a multitude of nations." (7) And these two
promises show the same thing. For that one is to become "a people;" this one "a
multitude of nations." And what can be more evident than that these two
promises comprehend the people of Israel, and the whole world of Abraham's seed, the
one according to the flesh, the other according to faith?
CHAP. 43.--OF THE TIMES OF MOSES AND JOSHUA THE SON OF NUN, OF THE JUDGES, AND
THEREAFTER OF THE KINGS, OF WHOM SAUL WAS THE FIRST, BUT DAVID IS TO BE
REGARDED AS THE CHIEF, BOTH BY THE OATH AND BY MERIT.
Jacob being dead, and Joseph also, during the remaining 144 years until
they went out of the land of Egypt, that nation increased to an incredible
degree, even although wasted by so great persecutions, that at one time the male
children were murdered at their birth, because the wondering Egyptians were
terrified at the too great increase of that people. Then Moses, being stealthily kept
from the murderers of the infants, was brought to the royal house, God
preparing to do great things by him, and was nursed and adopted by the daughter of
Pharaoh (that was the name of all the kings of Egypt), and became so great a man
that he--yea, rather God, who had promised this to Abraham, by him--drew that
nation, so wonderfully multiplied, out of the yoke of hardest and most grievous
servitude it had borne there. At first, indeed, he fled thence (we are told he
fled into the land of Midian), because, in defending an Israelite, he had slain
an Egyptian, and was afraid. Afterward, being divinely commissioned in the power
of the Spirit of God, he overcame the magi of Pharaoh who resisted him. Then,
when the Egyptians would not let God's people go, ten memorable plagues were
brought by Him upon them,--the water turned into blood, the frogs and lice, the
flies, the death of the cattle, the boils, the hail, the locusts. the darkness,
the death of the first-born. At last the Egyptians were destroyed in the Red
Sea while pursuing the Israelites, whom they had let go when at length they were
broken by so many great plagues. The divided sea made a way for the Israelites
who were departing, but, returning on itself, it overwhelmed their pursuers
with its waves. Then for forty years the people of God went through the desert,
under the leadership of Moses, when the tabernacle of testimony was dedicated,
in which God was worshipped by sacrifices prophetic of things to come, and that
was after the law had been very terribly given in the mount, for its divinity
was most plainly attested by wonderful signs and voices. This took place soon
after the exodus from Egypt, when the people had entered the desert, on the
fiftieth day after the passover was celebrated by the offering up of a lamb, which
is so completely a type of Christ, foretelling that through His sacrificial
passion He should go from this world to the Father (for pascha in, the Hebrew
tongue means transit), that when the new covenant was revealed, after Christ our
passover was offered up, the Holy Spirit came from heaven on the fiftieth day; and
He is called in the gospel the Finger of God, because He recalls to our
remembrance the things done before by way of types, and because the tables of that
law are said to have been written by the finger of God.
On the death of Moses, Joshua the son of Nun ruled the people, and led
them into the land of promise, and divided it among them. By these two wonderful
leaders wars were also carried on most prosperously and wonderfully, God calling
to witness that they had got these victories not so much on account of the
merit of the Hebrew people as on account of the sins of the nations they subdued.
After these leaders there were judges, when the people were settled in the land
of promise, so that, in the meantime, the first promise made to Abraham began
to be fulfilled about the one nation, that is, the Hebrew, and about the land
of Canaan; but not as yet the promise about all nations, and the whole wide
world, for that was to be fulfilled, not by the observances of the old law, but by
the advent of Christ in the flesh, and by the faith of the gospel. And it was
to prefigure this that it was not Moses, who received the law for the people on
Mount Sinai, that led the people into the land of promise, but Joshua, whose
name also was changed at God's command, so that he was called Jesus. But in the
times of the judges prosperity alternated with adversity in war, according as
the sins of the people and the mercy of God were displayed. We come next to
the times of the kings. The first who reigned was Saul; and when he was rejected
and laid low in battle, and his offspring rejected so that no kings should
arise out of it, David succeeded to the kingdom, whose son Christ is chiefly
called. He was made a kind of starting-point and beginning of the advanced youth of
God's people, who had passed a kind of age of puberty from Abraham to this
David. And it is not in vain that the evangelist Matthew records the generations in
such a way as to sum up this first period from Abraham to David in fourteen
generations. For from the age of puberty man begins to be capable of generation;
therefore he starts the list of generations from Abraham, who also was made the
father of many nations when he got his name changed. So that previously this
family of God's people was in its childhood, from Noah to Abraham; and for that
reason the first language was then learned, that is, the Hebrew. For man begins
to speak in childhood, the age succeeding infancy, which is so termed because
then he cannot speak. (1) And that first age is quite drowned in oblivion, just
as the first age of the human race was blotted out by the flood; for who is
there that can remember his infancy? Wherefore in this progress of the city of
God, as the previous book contained that first age, so this one ought to contain
the. second and third ages, in which third age, as was shown by the heifer of
three years old, the she-goat of three years old, and the ram of three years
old, the yoke of the law was imposed, and there appeared abundance of sins, and
the beginning of the earthly kingdom arose, in which there were not lacking
spiritual men, of whom the turtledove and pigeon represented the mystery.