THE CITY OF GOD: BOOK XIX
BOOK XIX.
ARGUMENT.
IN THIS BOOK THE END OF THE TWO CITIES, THE EARTHLY AND THE HEAVENLY, IS
DISCUSSED. AUGUSTIN REVIEWS THE OPINIONS OF THE PHILOSOPHERS REGARDING THE SUPREME
GOOD, AND THEIR VAIN EFFORTS TO MAKE FOR THEMSELVES A HAPPINESS IN THIS LIFE;
AND, WHILE HE REFUTES THESE, HE TAKES OCCASION TO SHOW WHAT THE PEACE AND
HAPPINESS BELONGING TO THE HEAVENLY CITY, OR THE PEOPLE OF CHRIST, ARE BOTH NOW AND
HEREAFTER.
CHAP. 1.--THAT VARRO HAS MADE OUT THAT TWO HUNDRED AND EIGHTY-EIGHT DIFFERENT
SECTS OF PHILOSOPHY MIGHT BE FORMED BY THE VARIOUS OPINIONS REGARDING THE
SUPREME GOOD.
As I see that I have still to discuss the fit destinies of the two cities,
the earthly and the heavenly, I must first explain, so far as the limits of
this work allow me, the reasonings by which men have attempted to make for
themselves a happiness in this unhappy life, in order that it may be evident, not
only from divine authority, but also from such reasons as can be adduced to
unbelievers, how the empty dreams of the philosophers differ from the hope which God
gives to us, and from the substantial fulfillment of it which He will give us
as our blessedness. Philosophers have expressed a great variety of, diverse
opinions regarding the ends of goods and of evils, and this question they have
eagerly canvassed, that they might, if possible, discover what makes a man happy.
For the end of our good is that for the sake of which other things are to be
desired, while it is to be desired for its own sake; and the end of evil is that
on account of which other things are to be shunned, while it is avoided on its
own account. Thus, by the end of good, we at present mean, not that by which
good is destroyed, so that it no longer exists, but that by which it is finished,
so that it becomes complete; and by the end of evil we mean, not that which
abolishes it, but that which completes its development.
These two ends, therefore, are the supreme good and the supreme evil; and,
as I have said, those who have in this vain life professed the study of wisdom
have been at great pains to discover these ends, and to obtain the supreme
good and avoid the supreme evil in this life. And although they erred in a variety
of ways, yet natural insight has prevented them from wandering from the truth
so far that they have not placed the supreme good and evil, some in the soul,
some in the body, and some in both. From this tripartite distribution of the
sects of philosophy, Marcus Varro, in his book De Philosophia,(1) has drawn so
large a variety of opinions, that, by a subtle and minute analysis of
distinctions, he numbers without difficulty as many as 288 sects,--not that these have
actually existed, but sects which are possible.
To illustrate briefly what he means, I must begin with his own
introductory statement in the above-mentioned book, that there are four things which men
desire, as it were by nature without a master, without the help of any
instruction, without industry or the art of living which is called virtue, and which is
certainly learned:(2) either pleasure, which is an agreeable stirring of the
bodily sense; or repose, which excludes every bodily inconvenience; or both
these, which Epicurus calls by the one name, pleasure; or the primary objects of
nature,(1) which comprehend the things already named and other things, either
bodily, such as health, and safety, and integrity of the members, or spiritual,
such as the greater and less mental gifts that are found in men. Now these four
things--pleasure, repose, the two combined, and the primary objects of
nature--exist in us in such sort that we must either desire virtue on their account, or
them for the sake of virtue, or both for their own sake; and consequently there
arise from this distinction twelve sects, for each is by this consideration
tripled. I will illustrate this in one instance, and, having done so, it will not
be difficult to understand the others. According, then, as bodily pleasure is
subjected, preferred, or united to Virtue, there are three sects. It is
subjected to virtue when it is chosen as subservient to virtue. Thus it is a duty of
virtue to live for one's country, and for its sake to beget children, neither of
which can be done without bodily pleasure. For there is pleasure in eating and
drinking, pleasure also in sexual intercourse. But when it is preferred to
virtue, it is desired for its own sake, and virtue is chosen only for its sake, and
to effect nothing else than the attainment or preservation of bodily pleasure.
And this, indeed, is to make life hideous; for where virtue is the slave of
pleasure it no longer deserves the name of virtue. Yet even this disgraceful
distortion has found some philosophers to patronize and defend it. Then virtue is
united to pleasure when neither is desired for the other's sake, but both for
their own. And therefore, as pleasure, according as it is subjected, preferred,
or united to virtue, makes three sects, so also do repose, pleasure and repose
combined, and the prime natural blessings, make their three sects each. For as
men's opinions vary, and these four things are sometimes subjected, sometimes
preferred, and sometimes united to virtue, there are produced twelve sects. But
this number again is doubled by the addition of one difference, viz., the social
life; for whoever attaches himself to any of these sects does so either for
his own sake alone, or for the sake of a companion, for whom he ought to wish
what he desires for himself. And thus there will be twelve of those who think some
one of these opinions should be held for their own sakes, and other twelve who
decide that they ought to follow this or that philosophy not for their own
sakes only, but also for the sake of others whose good they desire as their own.
These twenty-four sects again are doubled, and become forty-eight by adding a
difference taken from the New Academy. For each of these four and twenty sects
can hold and defend their opinion as certain, as the Stoics defended the position
that the supreme good of man consisted solely in virtue; or they can be held
as probable, but not certain, as the New Academics did. There are, therefore,
twenty-four who hold their philosophy as certainly true, other twenty-four who
hold their opinions as probable, but not certain. Again, as each person who
attaches himself to any of these sects may adopt the mode of life either of the
Cynics or of the other philosophers, this distinction will double the number, and
so make ninety-six sects. Then, lastly, as each of these sects may be adhered to
either by men who love a life of ease, as those who have through choice or
necessity addicted themselves to study, or by men who love a busy life, as those
who, while philosophizing, have been much occupied with state affairs and public
business, or by men who choose a mixed life, in imitation of those who have
apportioned their time partly to erudite leisure, partly to necessary business:
by these differences the number of the sects is tripled, and becomes 288.
I have thus, as briefly and lucidly as I could, given in my own words the
opinions which Varro expresses in his book. But how he refutes all the rest of
these sects, and chooses one, the Old Academy, instituted by Plato, and
continuing to Polemo, the fourth teacher of that school of philosophy which held that
their system was certain; and how on this ground he distinguishes it from the
New Academy,(2) which began with Polemo's successor Arcesilaus, and held that
all things are uncertain; and how he seeks to establish that the Old Academy was
as free from error as from doubt,--all this, I say, were too long to enter upon
in detail, and yet I must not altogether pass it by in silence. Varro then
rejects, as a first step, all those differences which have multiplied the number
of sects; and the ground on which he does so is that they are not differences
about the supreme good. He maintains that in philosophy a sect is created only by
its having an opinion of its own different from other schools on the point of
the ends-in-chief. For man has no other reason for philosophizing than that he
may be happy; but that which makes him happy is itself the supreme good. In
other words, the supreme good is the reason of philosophizing; and therefore that
cannot be called a sect of philosophy which pursues no way of its own towards
the supreme good. Thus, when it is asked whether a wise man will adopt the
social life, and desire and be interested in the supreme good of his friend as in
his own, or will, on the contrary, do all that he does merely for his own sake,
there is no question here about the supreme good, but only about the propriety
of associating or not associating a friend in its participation: whether the
wise man will do this not for his own sake, but for the sake of his friend in
whose good he delights as in his own. So, too, when it is asked whether all things
about which philosophy is concerned are to be considered uncertain, as by the
New Academy, or certain, as the other philosophers maintain, the question here
is not what end should be pursued, but whether or not we are to believe in the
substantial existence of that end; or, to put it more plainly, whether he who
pursues the supreme good must maintain that it is a true good, or only that it
appears to him to be true, though possibly it may be delusive,--both pursuing one
and the same good. The distinction, too, which is founded on the dress and
manners of the Cynics, does not touch the question of the chief good, but only the
question whether he who pursues that good which seems to himself true should
live as do the Cynics. There were, in fact, men who, though they pursued
different things as the supreme good, some choosing pleasure, others virtue, yet
adopted that mode of life which gave the Cynics their name. Thus, whatever it is
which distinguishes the Cynics from other philosophers, this has no bearing on
the choice and pursuit of that good which constitutes happiness. For if it had
any such bearing, then the same habits of life would necessitate the pursuit of
the same chief good, and all-verse habits would necessitate the pursuit of
different ends.
CHAP. 2.--HOW VARRO, BY REMOVING ALL THE DIFFERENCES WHICH DO NOT FORM SECTS,
BUT ARE MERELY SECONDARY QUESTIONS, REACHES THREE DEFINITIONS OF THE CHIEF
GOOD, OF WHICH WE MUST CHOOSE ONE.
The same may be said of those three kinds of life, the life of studious
leisure and search after truth, the life of easy engagement in affairs, and the
life in which both these are mingled. When it is asked, which of these should be
adopted, this involves no controversy about the end of good, but inquires
which of these three puts a man in the best position for finding and retaining the
supreme good. For this good, as soon as a man finds it, makes him happy; but
lettered leisure, or public business, or the alternation of these, do not
necessarily constitute happiness. Many, in fact, find it possible do adopt one or
other of these modes of life, and yet to miss what makes a man happy. The question,
therefore, regarding the supreme good and the supreme evil, and which
distinguishes sects of philosophy, is one; and these questions concerning the social
life, the doubt of the Academy, the dress and food of the Cynics, the three modes
of life--the active, the contemplative, and the mixed--these are different
questions, into none of which the question of the chief good enters. And
therefore, as Marcus Varro multiplied the sects to the number of 288 (or whatever larger
number he chose) by introducing these four differences derived from the social
life, the New Academy, the Cynics, and the threefold form of life, so, by
removing these differences as having no bearing on the supreme good, and as
therefore not constituting what can properly be called sects, he returns to those
twelve schools which concern themselves with inquiring what that good is which
makes man happy, and he shows that one of these is true, the rest false. In other
words, he dismisses the distinction rounded on the threefold mode of life, and
so decreases the whole number by two-thirds, reducing the sects to ninety-six.
Then, putting aside the Cynic peculiarities, the number decreases by a half, to
forty-eight. Taking away next the distinction occasioned by the hesitancy of
the New Academy, the number is again halved, and reduced to twenty-four. Treating
in a similar way the diversity introduced by the consideration of the social
life, there are left but twelve, which this difference had doubled to
twenty-four. Regarding these twelve, no reason can be assigned why they should not be
called sects. For in them the sole inquiry is regarding the supreme good and the
ultimate evil,--that is to say, regarding the supreme good, for this being
found, the opposite evil is thereby found. Now, to make these twelve sects, he
multiplies by three these four things--pleasure, repose, pleasure and repose
combined, and the primary objects of nature which Varro calls primigenia. For as these
four things are sometimes subordinated to virtue, so that they seem to be
desired not for their own sake, but for virtue's sake; sometimes preferred to it,
so that virtue seems to be necessary not on its own account, but in order to
attain these things; sometimes joined with it, so that both they and virtue are
desired for their own sakes,--we must multiply the four by three, and thus we get
twelve sects. But from those four things Varro eliminates three--pleasure,
repose, pleasure and repose combined--not because he thinks these are not worthy
of the place assigned them, but because they are included in the primary objects
of nature. And what need is there, at any rate, to make a threefold division
out of these two ends, pleasure and repose, taking them first severally and then
conjunctly, since both they, and many other things besides, are comprehended
in the primary objects of nature? Which of the three remaining sects must be
chosen? This is the question that Varro dwells upon. For whether one of these
three or some other be chosen, reason forbids that more than one be true. This we
shall afterwards see; but meanwhile let us explain as briefly and distinctly as
we can how Varro makes his selection from these three, that is, from the sects
which severally hold that the primary objects of nature are to be desired for
virtue's sake, that virtue is to be desired for their sake, and that virtue and
these objects are to be desired each for their own sake.
CHAP. 3.--WHICH OF THE THREE LEADING OPINIONS REGARDING THE CHIEF GOOD SHOULD
BE PREFERRED, ACCORDING TO VARRO, WHO FOLLOWS ANTIOCHUS AND THE OLD ACADEMY.
Which of these three is true and to be adopted he attempts to show in the
following manner. As it is the supreme good, not of a tree, or of a beast, or
of a god, but of man that philosophy is in quest of, he thinks that, first of
all, we must define man. He is of opinion that there are two parts in human
nature, body and soul, and makes no doubt that of these two the soul is the better
and by far the more worthy part. But whether the soul alone is the man, so that
the body holds the same relation to it as a horse to the horseman, this he
thinks has to be ascertained. The horseman is not a horse and a man, but only a
man, yet he is called a horseman, because he is in some relation to the horse.
Again, is the body alone the man, having a relation to the soul such as the cup
has to the drink? For it is not the cup and the drink it contains which are
called the cup, but the cup alone; yet it is so called because it is made to hold
the drink. Or, lastly, is it neither the soul alone nor the body alone, but both
together, which are man, the body and the soul being each a part, but the whole
man being both together, as we call two horses yoked together a pair, of which
pair the near and the off horse is each a part, but we do not call either of
them, no matter how connected with the other, a pair, but only both together? Of
these three alternatives, then, Varro chooses the third, that man is neither
the body alone, nor the soul alone, but both together. And therefore the highest
good, in which lies the happiness of man, is composed of goods of both kinds,
both bodily and spiritual. And consequently he thinks that the primary objects
of nature are to be sought for their own sake, and that virtue, which is the
art of living, and can be communicated by instruction, is the most excellent of
spiritual goods. This virtue, then, or art of regulating life, when it has
received these primary objects of nature which existed independently of it, and
prior to any instruction, seeks them all, and itself also, for its own sake; and it
uses them, as it also uses itself, that from them all it may derive profit and
enjoyment, greater or less, according as they are themselves greater or less;
and while it takes pleasure in all of them, it despises the less that it may
obtain or retain the greater when occasion demands. Now, of all goods, spiritual
or bodily, there is none at all to compare with virtue. For virtue makes a good
use both of itself and of all other goods in which lies man's happiness; and
where it is absent, no matter how many good things a man has, they are not for
his good, and consequently should not be called good things while they belong to
one who makes them useless by using them badly. The life of man, then, is
called happy when it enjoys virtue and these other spiritual and bodily good things
without which virtue is impossible. It is called happier if it enjoys some or
many other good things which are not essential to virtue; and happiest of all,
if it lacks not one of the good things which pertain to the body and the soul.
For life is not the same thing as virtue, since not every life, but a wisely
regulated life, is virtue; and yet, while there can be life of some kind without
virtue, there cannot be virtue without life. This I might apply to memory and
reason, and such mental faculties; for these exist prior to instruction, and
without them there cannot be any instruction, and consequently no virtue, since
virtue is learned. But bodily advantages, such as swiftness of foot, beauty, or
strength, are not essential to virtue, neither is virtue essential to them, and
yet they are good things; and, according to our philosophers, even these
advantages are desired by virtue for its own sake, and are used and enjoyed by it in
a becoming manner.
They say that this happy life is also social, and loves the advantages of
its friends as its own, and for their sake wishes for them what it desires for
itself, whether these friends live in the same family, as a wife, children,
domestics; or in the locality where one's home is, as the citizens of the same
town; or in the world at large, as the nations bound in common human brotherhood;
or in the universe itself, comprehended in the heavens and the earth, as those
whom they call gods, and provide as friends for the wise man, and whom we more
familiarly call angels. Moreover, they say that, regarding the supreme good and
evil, there is no room for doubt, and that they therefore differ from the New
Academy in this respect, and they are not concerned whether a philosopher
pursues those ends which they think true in the Cynic dress and manner of life or in
some other. And, lastly, in regard to the three modes of life, the
contemplative, the active, and the composite, they declare in favor of the third. That
these were the opinions and doctrines of the Old Academy, Varro asserts on the
authority of Antiochus, Cicero's master and his own, though Cicero makes him out
to have been more frequently in accordance with the Stoics than with the Old
Academy. But of what importance is this to us, who ought to judge the matter on
its own merits, rather than to understand accurately what different men have
thought about it?
CHAP. 4.--WHAT THE CHRISTIANS BELIEVE REGARDING THE SUPREME GOOD AND EVIL, IN
OPPOSITION TO THE PHILOSOPHERS, WHO HAVE MAINTAINED THAT THE SUPREME GOOD IS IN
THEMSELVES.
If, then, we be asked what the city of God has to say upon these points,
and, in the first place, what its opinion regarding the supreme good and evil
is, it will reply that life eternal is the supreme good, death eternal the
supreme evil, and that to obtain the one and escape the other we must live rightly.
And thus it is written, "The just lives by faith,"(1) for we do not as yet see
our good, and must therefore live by faith; neither have we in ourselves power
to live rightly, but can do so only if He who has given us faith to believe in
His help do help us when we believe and pray. As for those who have supposed
that the sovereign good and evil are to be found in this life, and have placed it
either in the soul or the body, or in both, or, to speak more explicitly,
either in pleasure or in virtue, or in both; in repose or in virtue, or in both; in
pleasure and repose, or in virtue, or in all combined; in the primary objects
of nature, or in virtue, or in both,--all these have, with a marvelous
shallowness, sought to find their blessedness in this life and in themselves. Contempt
has been poured upon such ideas by the Truth, saying by the prophet, "The Lord
knoweth the thoughts of men" (or, as the Apostle Paul cites the passage, "The
Lord knoweth the thoughts of the wise") "that they are vain."(2)
For what flood of eloquence can suffice to detail the miseries of this
life? Cicero, in the Consolation on the death of his daughter, has spent all his
ability in lamentation; but how inadequate was even his ability here? For when,
where, how, in this life can these primary objects of nature be possessed so
that they may not be assailed by unforeseen accidents? Is the body of the wise
man exempt from any pain which may dispel pleasure, from any disquietude which
may banish repose? The amputation or decay of the members of the body puts an end
to its integrity, deformity blights its beauty, weakness its health, lassitude
its vigor, sleepiness or sluggishness its activity,--and which of these is it
that may not assail the flesh of the wise man? Comely and fitting attitudes and
movements of the body are numbered among the prime natural blessings; but what
if some sickness makes the members tremble? what if a man suffers from
curvature of the spine to such an extent that his hands reach the ground, and he goes
upon all-fours like a quadruped? Does not this destroy all beauty and grace in
the body, whether at rest or in motion? What shall I say of the fundamental
blessings of the soul, sense and intellect, of which the one is given for the
perception, and the other for the comprehension of truth? But what kind of sense is
it that remains when a man becomes deaf and blind? where are reason and
intellect when disease makes a man delirious? We can scarcely, or not at all, refrain
from tears, when we think of or see the actions and words of such frantic
persons, and consider how different from and even opposed to their own sober
judgment and ordinary conduct their present demeanor is. And what shall I say of
those who suffer from demoniacal possession? Where is their own intelligence hidden
and buried while the malignant spirit is using their body and soul according
to his own will? And who is quite sure that no such thing can happen to the wise
man in this life? Then, as to the perception of truth, what can we hope for
even in this way while in the body, as we read in the true book of Wisdom, "The
corruptible body weigheth down the soul, and the earthly tabernacle presseth
down the mind that museth upon many things?"(3) And eagerness, or desire of
action, if this is the right meaning to put upon the Greek <greek>ormh</greek>, is
also reckoned among the primary advantages of nature; and yet is it not this
which produces those pitiable movements of the insane, and those actions which we
shudder to see, when sense is deceived and reason deranged?
In fine, virtue itself, which is not among the primary objects of nature,
but succeeds to them as the result of learning, though it holds the highest
place among human good things, what is its occupation save to wage perpetual war
with vices,--not those that are outside of us, but within; not other men's, but
our own,--a war which is waged especially by that virtue which the Greeks call
<greek>swfrsnh</greek>, and we temperance,(1) and which bridles carnal lusts,
and prevents them from winning the consent of the spirit to wicked deeds? For we
must not fancy that there is no vice in us, when, as the apostle says, "The
flesh lusteth against the spirit;"(2) for to this vice there is a contrary
virtue, when, as the same writer says, "The spirit lusteth against the flesh." "For
these two," he says, "are contrary one to the other, so that you cannot do the
things which you would." But what is it we wish to do when we seek to attain the
supreme good, unless that the flesh should cease to lust against the spirit,
and that there be no vice in us against which the spirit may lust? And as we
cannot attain to this in the present life, however ardently we desire it, let us
by God's help accomplish at least this, to preserve the soul from succumbing and
yielding to the flesh that lusts against it, and to refuse our consent to the
perpetration of sin. Far be it from us, then, to fancy that while we are still
engaged in this intestine war, we have already found the happiness which we
seek to reach by victory. And who is there so wise that he has no conflict at all
to maintain against his vices?
What shall I say of that virtue which is called prudence? Is not all its
vigilance spent in the discernment of good from evil things, so that no mistake
may be admitted about what we should desire and what avoid? And thus it is
itself a proof that we are in the midst of evils, or that evils are in us; for it
teaches us that it is an evil to consent to sin, and a good to refuse this
consent. And yet this evil, to which prudence teaches and temperance enables us not
to consent, is removed from this life neither by prudence nor by temperance.
And justice, whose office it is to render to every man his due, whereby there is
in man himself a certain just order of nature, so that the soul is subjected to
God, and the flesh to the soul, and consequently both soul and flesh to
God,--does not this virtue demonstrate that it is as yet rather laboring towards its
end than resting in its finished work? For the soul is so much the less
subjected to God as it is less occupied with the thought of God; and the flesh is so
much the less subjected to the spirit as it lusts more vehemently against the
spirit. So long, therefore, as we are beset by this weakness, this plague, this
disease, how shall we dare to say that we are safe? and if not safe, then how
can we be already enjoying our final beatitude? Then that virtue which goes by
the name of fortitude is the plainest proof of the ills of life, for it is these
ills which it is compelled to bear patiently. And this holds good, no matter
though the ripest wisdom co-exists with it. And I am at a loss to understand how
the Stoic philosophers can presume to say that these are no ills, though at
the same time they allow the wise man to commit suicide and pass out of this life
if they become so grievous that he cannot or ought not to endure them. But
such is the stupid pride of these men who fancy that the supreme good can be found
in this life, and that they can become happy by their own resources, that
their wise man, or at least the man whom they fancifully depict as such, is always
happy, even though he become blind, deaf, dumb, mutilated, racked with pains,
or suffer any conceivable calamity such as may compel him to make away with
himself; and they are not ashamed to call the life that is beset with these evils
happy. 0 happy life, which seeks the aid of death to end it? If it is happy, let
the wise man remain in it; but if these ills drive him out of it, in what
sense is it happy? Or how can they say that these are not evils which conquer the
virtue of fortitude, and force it not only to yield, but so to rave that it in
one breath calls life happy and recommends it to be given up? For who is so
blind as not to see that if it were happy it would not be fled from? And if they
say we should flee from it on account of the infirmities that beset it, why then
do they not lower their pride and acknowledge that it is miserable? Was it, I
would ask, fortitude or weakness which prompted Cato to kill himself? for he
would not have done so had he not been too weak to endure Caesar's victory. Where,
then, is his fortitude? It has yielded, it has succumbed, it has been so
thoroughly overcome as to abandon, forsake, flee this happy life. Or was it no
longer happy? Then it was miserable. How, then, were these not evils which made life
miserable, and a thing to be escaped from?
And therefore those who admit that these are evils, as the Peripatetics
do, and the Old Academy, the sect which Varro advocates, express a more
intelligible doctrine; but theirs also is a surprising mistake, for they contend that
this is a happy life which is beset by these evils, even though they be so great
that he who endures them should commit suicide to escape them. "Pains and
anguish of body," says Varro, "are evils, and so much the worse in proportion to
their severity; and to escape them you must quit this life." What life, I pray?
This life, he says, which is oppressed by such evils. Then it is happy in the
midst of these very evils on account of which you say we must quit it? Or do you
call it happy because you are at liberty to escape these evils by death? What,
then, if by some secret judgment of God you were held fast and not permitted to
die, nor suffered to live without these evils? In that case, at least, you
would say that such a life was miserable. It is soon relinquished, no doubt but
this does not make it not miserable; for were it eternal, you yourself would
pronounce it miserable. Its brevity, therefore, does not clear it of misery;
neither ought it to be called happiness because it is a brief misery. Certainly there
is a mighty force in these evils which compel a man--according to them even a
wise man--to cease to be a man that he may escape them, though they say, and
say truly, that it is as it were the first and strongest demand of nature that a
man cherish himself, and naturally therefore avoid death, and should so stand
his own friend as to wish and vehemently aim at continuing to exist as a living
creature, and subsisting in this union of soul and body. There is a mighty
force in these evils to overcome this natural instinct by which death is by every
means and with all a man's efforts avoided, and to overcome it so completely
that what was avoided is desired, sought after, and if it cannot in any other way
be obtained, is inflicted by the man on himself. There is a mighty force in
these evils which make fortitude a homicide,--if, indeed, that is to be called
fortitude which is so thoroughly overcome by these evils, that it not only cannot
preserve by patience the man whom it undertook to govern and defend, but is
itself obliged to kill him. The wise man, I admit, ought to bear death with
patience, but when it is inflicted by another. If, then, as these men maintain, he is
obliged to inflict it on himself, certainly it must be owned that the ills
which compel him to this are not only evils, but intolerable evils. The life,
then, which is either subject to accidents, or environed with evils so considerable
and grievous, could never have been called happy, if the men who give it this
name had condescended to yield to the truth, and to be conquered by valid
arguments, when they inquired after the happy life, as they yield to unhappiness,
and are overcome by overwhelming evils, when they put themselves to death, and if
they had not fancied that the supreme good was to be found in this mortal
life; for the very virtues of this life, which are certainly its best and most
useful possessions, are all the more telling proofs of its miseries in proportion
as they are helpful against the violence of its dangers, toils, and woes. For if
these are true virtues,--and such cannot exist save in those who have true
piety,--they do not profess to be able to deliver the men who possess them from
all miseries; for true virtues tell no such lies, but they profess that by the
hope of the future world this life, which is miserably involved in the many and
great evils of this world, is happy as it is also safe. For if not yet safe, how
could it be happy? And therefore the Apostle Paul, speaking not of men without
prudence, temperance, fortitude, and justice, but of those whose lives were
regulated by true piety, and whose virtues were therefore true, says, "For we are
saved by hope: now hope which is seen is not hope; for what a man seeth, why
doth he yet hope for? But if we hope for that we see not, then do we with
patience wait for it."(1) As, therefore, we are saved, so we are made happy by hope.
And as we do not as yet possess a present, but look for a future salvation, so
is it with our happiness, and this "with patience;" for we are encompassed with
evils, which we ought patiently to endure, until we come to the ineffable
enjoyment of unmixed good; for there shall be no longer anything to endure.
Salvation, such as it shall be in the world to come, shall itself be our final
happiness. And this happiness these philosophers refuse to believe in, because they do
not see it, and attempt to fabricate for themselves a happiness in this life,
based upon a virtue which is as deceitful as it is proud.
CHAP. 5.--OF THE SOCIAL LIFE, WHICH, THOUGH MOST DESIRABLE, IS FREQUENTLY
DISTURBED BY MANY DISTRESSES.
We give a much more unlimited approval to their idea that the life of the
wise man must be social. For how could the city of God (concerning which we are
already writing no less than the nineteenth book of this work) either take a
beginning or be developed, or attain its proper destiny, if the life of the
saints were not a social life? But who can enumerate all the great grievances with
which human society abounds in the misery of this mortal state? Who can weigh
them? Hear how one of their comic writers makes one of his characters express
the common feelings of all men in this matter: "I am married; this is one misery.
Children are born to me; they are additional cares."(1) What shall I say of
the miseries of love which Terence also recounts--"slights, suspicions, quarrels,
war to-day, peace to-morrow?"(2) Is not human life full of such things? Do
they not often occur even in honorable friendships? On all hands we experience
these slights, suspicions, quarrels, war, all of which are undoubted evils; while,
on the other hand, peace is a doubtful good, because we do not know the heart
of our friend, and though we did know it to-day, we should be as ignorant of
what it might be to-morrow. Who ought to be, or who are more friendly than those
who live in the same family? And yet who can rely even upon this friendship,
seeing that secret treachery has often broken it up, and produced enmity as
bitter as the amity was sweet, or seemed sweet by the most perfect dissimulation? It
is on this account that the words of Cicero so move the heart of every one,
and provoke a sigh: "There are no snares more dangerous than those which lurk
under the guise of duty or the name of relationship. For the man who is your
declared foe you can easily baffle by precaution; but this hidden, intestine, and
domestic danger not merely exists, but overwhelms you before you can foresee and
examine it."(3) It is also to this that allusion is made by the divine saying,
"A man's foes are those of his own household,"(4)--words which one cannot hear
without pain; for though a man have sufficient fortitude to endure it with
equanimity, and sufficient sagacity to baffle the malice of a pretended friend, yet
if he himself is a good man, he cannot but be greatly pained at the discovery
of the perfidy of wicked men, whether they have always been wicked and merely
feigned goodness, or have fallen from a better to a malicious disposition. If,
then, home, the natural refuge from the ills of life, is itself not safe, what
shall we say of the city, which, as it is larger, is so much the more filled
with lawsuits civil and criminal, and is never free from the fear, if sometimes
from the actual outbreak, of disturbing and bloody insurrections and civil wars?
CHAP. 6.--OF THE ERROR OF HUMAN JUDGMENTS WHEN THE TRUTH IS HIDDEN.
What shall I say of these judgments which men pronounce on men, and which
are necessary in communities, whatever outward peace they enjoy? Melancholy and
lamentable judgments they are, since the judges are men who cannot discern the
consciences of those at their bar, and are therefore frequently compelled to
put innocent witnesses to the torture to ascertain the truth regarding the
crimes of other men. What shall I say of torture applied to the accused himself? He
is tortured to discover whether he is guilty, so that, though innocent, he
suffers most undoubted punishment for crime that is still doubtful, not because it
is proved that he committed it, but because it is not ascertained that he did
not commit it. Thus the ignorance of the judge frequently involves an innocent
person in suffering. And what is still more unendurable--a thing, indeed, to be
bewailed, and, if that were possible, watered with fountains of tears--is this,
that when the judge puts the accused to the question, that he may not
unwittingly put an innocent man to death, the result of this lamentable ignorance is
that this very person, whom he tortured that he might not condemn him if
innocent, is condemned to death both tortured and innocent. For if he has chosen, in
obedience to the philosophical instructions to the wise man, to quit this life
rather than endure any longer such tortures, he declares that he has committed
the crime which in fact he has not committed. And when he has been condemned and
put to death, the judge is still in ignorance whether he has put to death an
innocent or a guilty person, though he put the accused to the torture for the
very purpose of saving himself from condemning the innocent; and consequently he
has both tortured an innocent man to discover his innoence, and has put him to
death without discovering it. If such darkness shrouds social life, will a wise
judge take his seat on the bench or no? Beyond question he will. For human
society, which he thinks it a wickedness to abandon, constrains him and compels him
to this duty. And he thinks it no wickedness that innocent witnesses are
tortured regarding the crimes of which other men are accused; or that the accused
are put to the torture, so that they are often overcome with anguish, and, though
innocent, make false confessions regarding themselves, and are punished; or
that, though they be not condemned to die, they often die during, or in
consequence of, the torture; or that sometimes the accusers, who perhaps have been
prompted by a desire to benefit society by bringing criminals to justice, are
themselves condemned through the ignorance of the judge, because they are unable to
prove the truth of their accusations though they are true, and because the
witnesses lie, and the accused endures the torture without being moved to
confession. These numerous and important evils he does not consider sins; for the wise
judge does these things, not with any intention of doing harm, but because his
ignorance compels him, and because human society claims him as a judge. But
though we therefore acquit the judge of malice, we must none the less condemn human
life as miserable. And if he is compelled to torture and punish the innocent
because his office and his ignorance constrain him, is he a happy as well as a
guiltless man? Surely it were proof of more profound considerateness and finer
feeling were he to recognize the misery of these necessities, and shrink from his
own implication in that misery; and had he any piety about him, he would cry
to God "From my necessities deliver Thou me."(1)
CHAP. 7.--OF THE DIVERSITY OF LANGUAGES, BY WHICH THE INTERCOURSE OF MEN IS
PREVENTED; AND OF THE MISERY OF WARS, EVEN OF THOSE CALLED JUST.
After the state or city comes the world, the third circle of human
society,--the first being the house, and the second the city. And the world, as it is
larger, so it is fuller of dangers, as the greater sea is the more dangerous.
And here, in the first place, man is separated from man by the difference of
languages. For if two men, each ignorant of the other's language, meet, and are
not compelled to pass, but, on the contrary, to remain in company, dumb animals,
though of different species, would more easily hold intercourse than they,
human beings though they be. For their common nature is no help to friendliness
when they are prevented by diversity of language from conveying their sentiments
to one another; so that a man would more readily hold intercourse with his dog
than with a foreigner. But the imperial city has endeavored to impose on subject
nations not only her yoke, but her language, as a bond of peace, so that
interpreters, far from being scarce, are numberless. This is true; but how many
great wars, how much slaughter and bloodshed, have provided this unity! And though
these are past, the end of these miseries has not yet come. For though there
have never been wanting, nor are yet wanting, hostile nations beyond the empire,
against whom wars have been and are waged, yet, supposing there were no such
nations, the very extent of the empire itself has produced wars of a more
obnoxious description--social and civil wars--and with these the whore race has been
agitated, either by the actual conflict or the fear of a renewed outbreak. If I
attempted to give an adequate description of these manifold disasters, these
stern and lasting necessities, though I am quite unequal to the task, what limit
could I set? But, say they, the wise man will wage just wars. As if he would
not all the rather lament the necessity of just wars, if he remembers that he is
a man; for if they were not just he would not wage them, and would therefore
be delivered from all wars. For it is the wrongdoing of the opposing party which
compels the wise man to wage just wars; and this wrong-doing, even though it
gave rise to no war, would still be matter of grief to man because it is man's
wrong-doing. Let every one, then, who thinks with pain on all these great evils,
so horrible, so ruthless, acknowledge that this is misery. And if any one
either endures or thinks of them without mental pain, this is a more miserable
plight still, for he thinks himself happy because he has lost human feeling.
CHAP. 8.--THAT THE FRIENDSHIP OF GOOD MEN CANNOT BE SECURELY RESTED IN, SO
LONG AS THE DANGERS OF THIS LIFE FORCE US TO BE ANXIOUS.
In our present wretched condition we frequently mistake a friend for an
enemy, and an enemy for a friend. And if we escape this pitiable blindness, is
not the unfeigned confidence and mutual love of true and good friends our one
solace in human society, filled as it is with misunderstandings and calamities?
And yet the more friends we have, and the more widely they are scattered, the
more numerous are our fears that some portion of the vast masses of the disasters
of life may light upon them. For we are not only anxious lest they suffer from
famine, war, disease, captivity, or the inconceivable horrors of slavery, but
we are also affected with the much more painful dread that their friendship may
be changed into perfidy, malice, and injustice. And when these contingencies
actually occur,--as they do the more frequently the more friends we have, and the
more widely they are scattered,--and when they come to our knowledge, who but
the man who has experienced it can tell with what pangs the heart is torn? We
would, in fact, prefer to hear that they were dead, although we could not
without anguish hear of even this. For if their life has solaced us with the charms
of friendship, can it be that their death should affect us with no sadness? He
who will have none of this sadness must, if possible, have no friendly
intercourse. Let him interdict or extinguish friendly affection; let him burst with
ruthless insensibility the bonds of every human relationship; or let him contrive
so to use them that no sweetness shall distil into his spirit. But if this is
utterly impossible, how shall we contrive to feel no bitterness in the death of
those whose life has been sweet to us? Hence arises that grief which affects the
tender heart like a wound or a bruise, and which is healed by the application
of kindly consolation. For though the cure is affected all the more easily and
rapidly the better condition the soul is in, we must not on this account
suppose that there is nothing at all to heal. Although, then, our present life is
afflicted, sometimes in a milder, sometimes in a more painful degree, by the death
of those very dear to us, and especially of useful public men, yet we would
prefer to hear that such men were dead rather than to hear or perceive that they
had fallen from the faith, or from virtue,--in other words, that they were
spiritually dead. Of this vast material for misery the earth is full, and therefore
it is written, "Is not human life upon earth a trial?"(1) And with the same
reference the Lord says. "Woe to the world because of offenses!"(2) and again,
"Because iniquity abounded, the love of many shall wax cold."(3) And hence we
enjoy some gratification when our good friends die; for though their death leaves
us in sorrow, we have the consolatory assurance that they are beyond the ills
by which in this life even the best of men are broken down or corrupted, or are
in danger of both results.
CHAP. 9--OF THE FRIENDSHIP OF THE HOLY ANGELS, WHICH MEN CANNOT BE SURE OF IN
THIS LIFE, OWING TO THE DECEIT OF THE DEMONS WHO HOLD IN BONDAGE THE
WORSHIPPERS OF A PLURALITY OF GODS.
The philosophers who wished us to have the gods for our friends rank the
friendship of the holy angels in the fourth circle of society, advancing now
from the three circles of society on earth to the universe, and embracing heaven
itself. And in this friendship we have indeed no fear that the angels will
grieve us by their death or deterioration. But as we cannot mingle with them as
familiarly as with men (which itself is one of the grievances of this life), and as
Satan, as we read,(4) sometimes transforms himself into an angel of light, to
tempt those whom it is necessary to discipline, or just to deceive, there is
great need of God's mercy to preserve us from making friends of demons in
disguise, while we fancy we have good angels for our friends; for the astuteness and
deceitfulness of these wicked spirits is equalled by their hurtfulness. And is
this not a great misery of human life, that we are involved in such ignorance
as, but for God's mercy, makes us a prey to these demons? And it is very certain
that the philosophers of the godless city, who have main-rained that the gods
were their friends, had fallen a prey to the malignant demons who rule that
city, and whose eternal punishment is to be shared by it. For the nature of these
beings is sufficiently evinced by the sacred or rather sacrilegious observances
which form their worship, and by the filthy games in which their crimes are
celebrated, and which they themselves originated and exacted from their
worshippers as a fit propitiation.
CHAP. 10.--THE REWARD PREPARED FOR THE SAINTS AFTER THEY HAVE ENDURED THE
TRIAL OF THIS LIFE.
But not even the saints and faithful worshippers of the one true and most
high God are safe from the manifold temptations and deceits of the demons. For
in this abode of weakness, and in these wicked days, this state of anxiety has
also its use, stimulating us to seek with keener longing for that security
where peace is complete and unassailable. There we shall enjoy the gifts of
nature, that is to say, all that God the Creator of all natures has bestowed upon
ours,--gifts not only good, but eternal,--not only of the spirit, healed now by
wisdom, but also of the body renewed by the resurrection. There the virtues shall
no longer be struggling against any vice or evil, but shall enjoy the reward
of victory, the eternal peace which no adversary shall disturb. This is the
final blessedness, this the ultimate consummation, the unending end. Here, indeed,
we are said to be blessed when we have such peace as can be enjoyed in a good
life; but such blessedness. is mere misery compared to that final felicity. When
we mortals possess such peace as this mortal life can afford, virtue, if we
are living rightly, makes a right use of the advantages of this peaceful
condition; and when we have it not, virtue makes a good use even of the evils a man
suffers. But this is true virtue, when it refers all the advantages it makes a
good use of, and all that it does in making good use of good and evil things, and
itself also, to that end in which we shall enjoy the best and greatest peace
possible.
CHAP. 11.--OF THE HAPPINESS OF THE ETERNAL PEACE, WHICH CONSTITUTES THE END OR
TRUE PERFECTION OF THE SAINTS.
And thus we may say of peace, as we have said of eternal life, that it is
the end of our good; and the rather because the Psalmist says of the city of
God, the subject of this laborious work, "Praise the Lord, O Jerusalem; praise
thy God, O Zion: for He hath strengthened the bars of thy gates; He hath blessed
thy children within thee; who hath made thy borders peace."(1) For when the
bars of her gates shall be strengthened, none shall go in or come out from her;
consequently we ought to understand the peace of her borders as that final peace
we are wishing to declare. For even the mystical name of the city itself, that
is, Jerusalem, means, as I have already said, "Vision of Peace." But as the
word peace is employed in connection with things in this world in which certainly
life eternal has no place, we have preferred to call the end or supreme good of
this city life eternal rather than peace. Of this end the apostle says, "But
now, being freed from sin, and become servants to God, ye have your fruit unto
holiness, and the end life eternal."(2) But, on the other hand, as those who are
not familiar with Scripture may suppose that the life of the wicked is eternal
life, either because of the immortality of the soul, which some of the
philosophers even have recognized, or because of the endless punishment of the wicked,
which forms a part of our faith, and which seems impossible unless the wicked
live for ever, it may therefore be advisable, in order that every one may
readily understand what we mean, to say that the end or supreme good of this city is
either peace in eternal life, or eternal life in peace. For peace is a good so
great, that even in this earthly and mortal life there is no word we hear with
such pleasure, nothing we desire with such zest, or find to be more thoroughly
gratifying. So that if we dwell for a little longer on this subject, we shall
not, in my opinion, be wearisome to our readers, who will attend both for the
sake of understanding what is the end of this city of which we speak, and for
the sake of the sweetness of peace which is dear to all.
CHAP. 12.--THAT EVEN THE FIERCENESS OF WAR AND ALL THE DISQUIETUDE OF MEN MAKE
TOWARDS THIS ONE END OF PEACE, WHICH EVERY NATURE DESIRES.
Whoever gives even moderate attention to human affairs and to our common
nature, will recognize that if there is no man who does not wish to be joyful,
neither is there any one who does not wish to have peace. For even they who make
war desire nothing but victory,--desire, that is to say, to attain to peace
with glory. For what else is victory than the conquest of those who resist us?
and when this is done there is peace. It is therefore with the desire for peace
that wars are waged, even by those who take pleasure in exercising their warlike
nature in command and battle. And hence it is obvious that peace is the end
sought for by war. For every man seeks peace by waging war, but no man seeks war
by making peace. For even they who intentionally interrupt the peace in which
they are living have no hatred of peace, but only wish it changed into a peace
that suits them better. They do not, therefore, wish to have no peace, but only
one more to their mind. And in the case of sedition, when men have separated
themselves from the community, they yet do not effect what they wish, unless they
maintain some kind of peace with their fellow-conspirators. And therefore even
robbers take care to maintain peace with their comrades, that they may with
greater effect and greater safety invade the peace of other men. And if an
individual happen to be of such unrivalled strength, and to be so jealous of
partnership, that he trusts himself with no comrades, but makes his own plots, and
commits depredations and murders on his own account, yet he maintains some shadow
of peace with such persons as he is unable to kill, and from whom he wishes to
conceal his deeds. In his own home, too, he makes it his aim to be at peace with
his wife and children, and any other members of his household; for
unquestionably their prompt obedience to his every look is a source of pleasure to him.
And if this be not rendered, he is angry, he chides and punishes; and even by
this storm he secures the calm peace of his own home, as occasion demands. For he
sees that peace cannot be maintained unless all the members of the same
domestic circle be subject to one head, such as he himself is in his own house. And
therefore if a city or nation offered to submit itself to him, to serve him in
the same style as he had made his household serve him, he would no longer lurk in
a brigand's hiding-places, but lift his head in open day as a king, though the
same coveteousness and wickedness should remain in him. And thus all men
desire to have peace with their own circle whom they wish to govern as suits
themselves. For even those whom they make war against they wish to make their own, and
impose on them the laws of their own peace.
But let us suppose a man such as poetry and mythology speak of,--a man so
insociable and savage as to be called rather a semi-man than a man.(1)
Although, then, his kingdom was the solitude of a dreary cave, and he himself was so
singularly bad-hearted that he was named <greek>kakos</greek>, which is the Greek
word for bad; though he had no wife to soothe him with endearing talk, no
children to play with, no sons to do his bidding, no friend to enliven him with
intercourse, not even his father Vulcan (though in one respect he was happier than
his father, not having begotten a monster like himself); although he gave to
no man, but took as he wished whatever he could, from whomsoever he could, when
he could yet in that solitary den, the floor of which, as Virgil(2) says, was
always reeking with recent slaughter, there was nothing else than peace sought,
a peace in which no one should molest him, or disquiet him with any assault or
alarm. With his own body he desired to be at peace, and he was satisfied only
in proportion as he had this peace. For he ruled his members, and they obeyed
him; and for the sake of pacifying his mortal nature, which rebelled when it
needed anything, and of allaying the sedition of hunger which threatened to banish
the soul from the body, he made forays, slew, and devoured, but used the
ferocity and savageness he displayed in these actions only for the preservation of
his own life's peace. So that, had he been willing to make with other men the
same peace which he made with himself in his own cave, he would neither have been
called bad, nor a monster, nor a semi-man. Or if the appearance of his body and
his vomiting smoky fires frightened men from having any dealings with him,
perhaps his fierce ways arose not from a desire to do mischief, but from the
necessity of finding a living. But he may have had no existence, or, at least, he
was not such as the poets fancifully describe him, for they had to exalt
Hercules, and did so at the expense of Cacus. It is better, then, to believe that such
a man or semi-man never existed, and that this, in common with many other
fancies of the poets, is mere fiction. For the most savage animals (and he is said
to have been almost a wild beast) encompass their own species with a ring of
protecting peace. They cohabit, beget, produce, suckle, and bring up their young,
though very many of them are not gregarious, but solitary,--not like sheep,
deer, pigeons, starlings, bees, but such as lions, foxes, eagles, bats. For what
tigress does not gently purr over her cubs, and lay aside her ferocity to fondle
them? What kite, solitary as he is when circling over his prey, does not seek
a mate, build a nest, hatch the eggs, bring up the young birds, and maintain
with the mother of his family as peaceful a domestic alliance as he can? How much
more powerfully do the laws of man's nature move him to hold fellowship and
maintain peace with all men so far as in him lies, since even wicked men wage war
to maintain the peace of their own circle, and wish that, if possible, all men
belonged to them, that all men and things might serve but one head, and might,
either through love or fear, yield themselves to peace with him! It is thus
that pride in its perversity apes God. It abhors equality with other men under
Him; but, instead of His rule, it seeks to impose a rule of its own upon its
equals. It abhors, that is to say, the just peace of God, and loves its own unjust
peace; but it cannot help loving peace of one kind or other. For there is no
vice so clean contrary to nature that it obliterates even the faintest traces of
nature.
He, then, who prefers what is right to what is wrong, and what is
well-ordered to what is perverted, sees that the peace of unjust men is not worthy to
be called peace in comparison with the peace of the just. And yet even what is
perverted must of necessity be in harmony with, and in dependence on, and in
some part of the order of things, for otherwise it would have no existence at all.
Suppose a man hangs with his head downwards, this is certainly a perverted
attitude of body and arrangement of its members; for that which nature requires to
be above is beneath, and vice versa. This perversity disturbs the peace of the
body, and is therefore painful. Nevertheless the spirit is at peace with its
body, and labors for its preservation, and hence the suffering; but if it is
banished from the body by its pains, then, so long as the bodily framework holds
together, there is in the remains a kind of peace among the members, and hence
the body remains suspended. And inasmuch as the earthly body tends towards the
earth, and rests on the bond by which it is suspended, it tends thus to its
natural peace, and the voice of its own weight demands a place for it to rest; and
though now lifeless and without feeling, it does not fall from the peace that
is natural to its place in creation, whether it already has it, or is tending
towards it. For if you apply embalming preparations to prevent the bodily frame
from mouldering and dissolving, a kind of peace still unites part to part, and
keeps the whole body in a suitable place on the earth,--in other words, in a
place that is at peace with the body. If, on the other hand, the body receive no
such care, but be left to the natural course, it is disturbed by exhalations
that do not harmonize with one another, and that offend our senses; for it is this
which is perceived in putrefaction until it is assimilated to the elements of
the world, and particle by particle enters into peace with them. Yet throughout
this process the laws of the most high Creator and Governor are strictly
observed, for it is by Him the peace of the universe is administered. For although
minute animals are produced from the carcass of a larger animal, all these
little atoms, by the law of the same Creator, serve the animals they belong to in
peace. And although the flesh of dead animals be eaten by others, no matter where
it be carried, nor what it be brought into contact with, nor what it be
converted and changed into, it still is ruled by the same laws which pervade all
things for the conservation of every mortal race, and which bring things that fit
one another into harmony.
CHAP. 13.--OF THE UNIVERSAL PEACE WHICH THE LAW OF NATURE PRESERVES THROUGH
ALL DISTURBANCES, AND BY WHICH EVERY ONE REACHES HIS DESERT IN A WAY REGULATED BY
THE JUST JUDGE.
The peace of the body then consists in the duly proportioned arrangement
of its parts. The petite of the irrational soul is the harmonious repose of the
appetites, and that of the rational soul the harmony of knowledge and action.
The peace of body and soul is the well-ordered and harmonious life and health of
the living creature. Peace between man and God is the well-ordered obedience
of faith to eternal law. Peace between man and man is well-ordered concord.
Domestic peace is the well-ordered concord between those of the family who rule and
those who obey. Civil peace is a similar concord among the citizens. The peace
of the celestial city is the perfectly ordered and harmonious enjoyment of
God, and of one another in God. The peace of all things is the tranquillity of
order. Order is the distribution which allots things equal and unequal, each to
its own place. And hence, though the miserable, in so far as they are such, do
certainly not enjoy peace, but are severed from that tranquillity of order in
which there is no disturbance, nevertheless, inasmuch as they are deservedly and
justly, miserable, they are by their very misery connected with order. They are
not, indeed, conjoined with the blessed, but they are disjoined from them by
the law of order. And though they are disquieted, their circumstances are
notwithstanding adjusted to them, and consequently they have some tranquillity of
order, and therefore some peace. But they are wretched because, although not wholly
miserable, they are not in that place where any mixture of misery is
impossible. They would, however, be more wretched if they had not that peace which
arises from being in harmony with the natural order of things. When they suffer,
their peace is in so far disturbed; but their peace continues in so far as they do
not suffer, and in so far as their nature continues to exist. As, then, there
may be life without pain, while there cannot be pain without some kind of life,
so there may be peace without war, but there cannot be war without some kind
of peace, because war supposes the existence of some natures to wage it, and
these natures cannot exist without peace of one kind or other.
And therefore there is a nature in which evil does not or even cannot
exist; but there cannot be a nature in which there is no good. Hence not even the
nature of the devil himself is evil, in so far as it is nature, but it was made
evil by being perverted. Thus he did not abide in the truth,(1) but could not
escape the judgment of the Truth; he did not abide in the tranquillity of order,
but did not therefore escape the power of the Ordainer. The good imparted by
God to his nature did not screen him from the justice of God by which order was
preserved in his punishment; neither did God punish the good which He had
created, but the evil which the devil had committed. God did not take back all He
had imparted to his nature, but something He took and something He left, that
there might remain enough to be sensible of the loss of what was taken. And this
very sensibility to pain is evidence of the good which has been taken away and
the good which has been left. For, were nothing good left, there could be no
pain on account of the good which had been lost. For he who sins is still worse if
he rejoices in his loss of righteousness. But he who is in pain, if he derives
no benefit from it, mourns at least the loss of health. And as righteousness
and health are both good things, and as the loss of any good thing is matter of
grief, not of joy,--if, at least, there is no compensation, as spiritual
righteousness may compensate for the loss of bodily health,--certainly it is more
suitable for a wicked man to grieve in punishment than to rejoice in his fault.
As, then, the joy of a sinner who has abandoned what is good is evidence of a bad
will, so his grief for the good he has lost when he is punished is evidence of
a good nature. For he who laments the peace his nature has lost is stirred to
do so by some relics of peace which make his nature friendly to itself. And it
is very just that in the final punishment the wicked and godless should in
anguish bewail the loss of the natural advantages they enjoyed, and should perceive
that they were most justly taken from them by that God whose benign liberality
they had despised. God, then, the most wise Creator and most just Ordainer of
all natures, who placed the human race upon earth as its greatest ornament,
imparted to men some good things adapted to this life, to wit, temporal peace,
such as we can enjoy in this life from health and safety and human fellowship, and
all things needful for the preservation and recovery of this peace, such as
the objects which are accommodated to our outward senses, light, night, the air,
and waters suitable for us, and everything the body requires to sustain,
shelter, heal, or beautify it: and all under this most equitable condition. that
every man who made a good use of these advantages suited to the peace of this
mortal condition, should receive ampler and better blessings, namely, the peace of
immortality, accompanied by glory and honor in an endless life made fit for the
enjoyment of God and of one another in God; but that he who used the present
blessings badly should both lose them and should not receive the others.
CHAP. 14.--OF THE ORDER AND LAW WHICH OBTAIN IN HEAVEN AND EARTH, WHEREBY IT
COMES TO PASS THAT HUMANSOCIETY ISSERVED BY THOSE WHO RULE IT.
The whole use, then, of things temporal has a reference to this result of
earthly peace in the earthly community, while in the city of God it is
connected with eternal peace. And therefore, if we were irrational animals, we should
desire nothing beyond the proper arrangement of the parts of the body and the
satisfaction of the appetites,--nothing, therefore, but bodily comfort and
abundance of pleasures, that the peace of the body might contribute to the peace of
the soul. For if bodily peace be awanting, a bar is put to the peace even of the
irrational soul, since it cannot obtain the gratification of its appetites.
And these two together help out the mutual peace of soul and body, the peace of
harmonious life and health. For as animals, by shunning pain, show that they
love bodily peace, and, by pursuing pleasure to gratify their appetites, show that
they love peace of soul, so their shrinking from death is a sufficient
indication of their intense love of that peace which binds soul and body in close
alliance. But, as man has a rational soul, he subordinates all this which he has in
common with the beasts to the peace of his rational soul, that his intellect
may have free play and may regulate his actions, and that he may thus enjoy the
well-ordered harmony of knowledge and action which constitutes, as we have
said, the peace of the rational soul. And for this purpose he must desire to be
neither molested by pain, nor disturbed by desire, nor extinguished by death, that
he may arrive at some useful knowledge by which he may regulate his life and
manners. But, owing to the liability of the human mind to fall into mistakes,
this very pursuit of knowledge may be a snare to him unless he has a divine
Master, whom he may obey without misgiving, and who may at the same time give him
such help as to preserve his own freedom. And because, so long as he is in this
mortal body, he is a stranger to God, he walks by faith, not by sight; and he
therefore refers all peace, bodily or spiritual or both, to that peace which
mortal man has with the immortal God, so that he exhibits the well-ordered
obedience of faith to eternal law. But as this divine Master inculcates two
precepts,--the love of God and the love of our neighbor,--and as in these precepts a man
finds three things he has to love,--God, himself, and his neighbor,--and that he
who loves God loves himself thereby, it follows that he must endeavor to get
his neighbor to love God, since he is ordered to love his neighbor as himself.
He ought to make this endeavor in behalf of his wife, his children, his
household, all within his reach, even as he would wish his neighbor to do the same for
him if he needed it; and consequently he will be at peace, or in well-ordered
concord, with all men, as far as in him lies. And this is the order of this
concord, that a man, in the first place, injure no one, and, in the second, do good
to every one he can reach. Primarily, therefore, his own household are his
care, for the law of nature and of society gives him readier access to them and
greater opportunity of serving them. And hence the apostle says, "Now, if any
provide not for his own, and specially for those of his own house, he hath denied
the faith, and is worse than an infidel."(1) This is the origin of domestic
peace, or the well-ordered concord of those in the family who rule and those who
obey. For they who care for the rest rule,--the husband the wife, the parents
the children, the masters the servants; and they who are cared for obey,--the
women their husbands, the children their parents, the servants their masters. But
in the family of the just man who lives by faith and is as yet a pilgrim
journeying on to the celestial city, even those who rule serve those whom they seem
to command; for they rule not from a love of power, but from a sense of the duty
they owe to others--not because they are proud of authority, but because they
love mercy.
CHAP. 15.--OF THE LIBERTY PROPER TO MAN'S NATURE, AND THE SERVITUDE INTRODUCED
BY SIN,--A SERVITUDE IN WHICH THE MAN WHOSE WILL IS WICKED IS THE SLAVE OF HIS
OWN LUST, THOUGH HE IS FREE SO FAR AS REGARDS OTHER MEN.
This is prescribed by the order of nature: it is thus that God has created
man. For "let them," He says, "have dominion over the fish of the sea, and
over the fowl of the air, and over every creeping thing which creepeth on the
earth."(1) He did not intend that His rational creature, who was made in His image,
should have dominion over anything but the irrational creation,--not man over
man, but man over the beasts. And hence the righteous men in primitive times
were made shepherds of cattle rather than kings of men, God intending thus to
teach us what the relative position of the creatures is, and what the desert of
sin; for it is with justice, we believe, that the condition of slavery is the
result of sin. And this is why we do not find the word "slave" in any part of
Scripture until righteous Noah branded the sin of his son with this name. It is a
name, therefore, introduced by sin and not by nature. The origin of the Latin
word for slave is supposed to be found in the circumstance that those who by the
law of war were liable to be killed were sometimes preserved by their victors,
and were hence called servants.(2) And these circumstances could never have
arisen save through sin. For even when we wage a just war, our adversaries must be
sinning; and every victory, even though gained by wicked men, is a result of
the first judgment of God, who humbles the vanquished either for the sake of
removing or of punishing their sins. Witness that man of God, Daniel, who, when he
was in captivity, confessed to God his own sins and the sins of his people,
and declares with pious grief that these were the cause of the captivity.(3) The
prime cause, then, of slavery is sin, which brings man under the dominion of
his fellow,--that which does not happen save by the judgment of God, with whom is
no unrighteousness, and who knows how to award fit punishments to every
variety of offence. But our Master in heaven says, "Every one who doeth sin is the
servant of sin."(4) And thus there are many wicked masters who have religious men
as their slaves, and who are yet themselves in bondage; "for of whom a man is
overcome, of the same is he brought in bondage."(5) And beyond question it is a
happier thing to be the slave of a man than of a lust; for even this very lust
of ruling, to mention no others, lays waste men's hearts with the most
ruthless dominion. Moreover, when men are subjected to one another in a peaceful
order, the lowly position does as much good to the servant as the proud position
does harm to the master. But by nature, as God first created us, no one is the
slave either of man or of sin. This servitude is, however, penal, and is appointed
by that law which enjoins the preservation of the natural order and forbids
its disturbance; for if nothing had been done in violation of that law, there
would have been nothing to restrain by penal servitude. And therefore the apostle
admonishes slaves to be subject to their masters, and to serve them heartily
and with good-will, so that, if they cannot be freed by their masters, they may
themselves make their slavery in some sort free, by serving not in crafty fear,
but in faithful love, until all unrighteousness pass away, and all principality
and every human power be brought to nothing, and God be all in all.
CHAP. 16.--OF EQUITABLE RULE.
And therefore, although our righteous fathers(6) had slaves, and
administered their domestic affairs so as to distinguish between the condition of slaves
and the heirship of sons in regard to the blessings of this life, yet in
regard to the worship of God, in whom we hope for eternal blessings, they took an
equally loving oversight of all the members of their household. And this is so
much in accordance with the natural order, that the head of the household was
called paterfamilias; and this name has been so generally accepted, that even
those whose rule is unrighteous are glad to apply it to themselves. But those who
are true fathers of their households desire and endeavor that all the members of
their household, equally with their own children, should worship and win God,
and should come to that heavenly home in which the duty of ruling men is no
longer necessary, because the duty of caring for their everlasting happiness has
also ceased; but, until they reach that home, masters ought to feel their
position of authority a greater burden than servants their service. And if any member
of the family interrupts the domestic peace by disobedience, he is corrected
either by word or blow, or some kind of just and legitimate punishment, such as
society permits, that he may himself be the better for it, and be readjusted to
the family harmony from which he had dislocated himself. For as it is not
benevolent to give a man help at the expense of some greater benefit he might
receive, so it is not innocent to spare a man at the risk of his falling into graver
sin. To be innocent, we must not only do harm to no man, but also restrain him
from sin or punish his sin, so that either the man himself who is punished may
profit by his experience, or others be warned by his example. Since, then, the
house ought to be the beginning or element of the city, and every beginning
bears reference to some end of its own kind, and every element to the integrity
of the whole of which it is an element, it follows plainly enough that domestic
peace has a relation to civic peace,--in other words, that the well-ordered
concord of domestic obedience and domestic rule has a relation to the well-ordered
concord of civic obedience and civic rule. And therefore it follows, further,
that the father of the family ought to frame his domestic rule in accordance
with the law of the city, so that the household may be in harmony with the civic
order.
CHAP. 17.--WHAT PRODUCES PEACE, AND WHAT DISCORD, BETWEEN THE HEAVENLY AND
EARTHLY CITIES.
But the families which do not live by faith seek their peace in the
earthly advantages of this life; while the families which live by faith look for
those eternal blessings which are promised, and use as pilgrims such advantages of
time and of earth as do not fascinate and divert them from God, but rather aid
them to endure with greater ease, and to keep down the number of those burdens
of the corruptible body which weigh upon the soul. Thus the things necessary
for this mortal life are used by both kinds of men and families alike, but each
has its own peculiar and widely different aim in using them. The earthly city,
which does not live by faith, seeks an earthly peace, and the end it proposes,
in the well-ordered concord of civic obedience and rule, is the combination of
men's wills to attain the things which are helpful to this life. The heavenly
city, or rather the part of it which sojourns on earth and lives by faith, makes
use of this peace only because it must, until this mortal condition which
necessitates it shall pass away. Consequently, so long as it lives like a captive
and a stranger in the earthly city, though it has already received the promise of
redemption, and the gift of the Spirit as the earnest of it, it makes no
scruple to obey the laws of the earthly city, whereby the things necessary for the
maintenance of this mortal life are administered; and thus, as this life is
common to both cities, so there is a harmony between them in regard to what belongs
to it. But, as the earthly city has had some philosophers whose doctrine is
condemned by the divine teaching, and who, being deceived either by their own
conjectures or by demons, supposed that many gods must be invited to take an
interest in human affairs, and assigned to each a separate function and a separate
department,--to one the body, to another the soul; and in the body itself, to
one the head, to another the neck, and each of the other members to one of the
gods; and in like manner, in the soul, to one god the natural capacity was
assigned, to another education, to another anger, to another lust; and so the various
affairs of life were assigned,--cattle to one, corn to another, wine to
another, oil to another, the woods to another, money to another, navigation to
another, wars and victories to another, marriages to another, births and fecundity to
another, and other things to other gods: and as the celestial city, on the
other hand, knew that one God only was to be worshipped, and that to Him alone was
due that service which the Greeks call <greek>latreia</greek>, and which can
be given only to a god, it has come to pass that the two cities could not have
common laws of religion, and that the heavenly city has been compelled in this
matter to dissent, and to become obnoxious to those who think differently, and
to stand the brunt of their anger and hatred and persecutions, except in so far
as the minds of their enemies have been alarmed by the multitude of the
Christians and quelled by the manifest protection of God accorded to them. This
heavenly city, then, while it sojourns on earth, calls citizens out of all nations,
and gathers together a society of pilgrims of all languages, not scrupling about
diversities in the manners, laws, and institutions whereby earthly peace is
secured and maintained, but recognizing that, however various these are, they all
tend to one and the same end of earthly peace. It therefore is so far from
rescinding and abolishing these diversities, that it even preserves and adopts
them, so long only as no hindrance to the worship of the one supreme and true God
is thus introduced. Even the heavenly city, therefore, while in its state of
pilgrimage, avails itself of the peace of earth, and, so far as it can without
injuring faith and godliness, desires and maintains a common agreement among men
regarding the acquisition of the necessaries of life, and makes this earthly
peace bear upon the peace of heaven; for this alone can be truly called and
esteemed the peace of the reasonable creatures, consisting as it does in the
perfectly ordered and harmonious enjoyment of God and of one another in God. When we
shall have reached that peace, this mortal life shall give place to one that is
eternal, and our body shall be no more this animal body which by its corruption
weighs down the soul, but a spiritual body feeling no want, and in all its
members subjected to the will. In its pilgrim state the heavenly city possesses
this peace by faith; and by this faith it lives righteously when it refers to the
attainment of that peace every good action towards God and man; for the life
of the city is a social life.
CHAP. 18.--HOW DIFFERENT THE UNCERTAINTY OF THE NEW ACADEMY IS FROM THE
CERTAINTY OF THE CHRISTIAN FAITH.
As regards the uncertainty about everything which Varro alleges to be the
differentiating characteristic of the New Academy, the city of God thoroughly
detests such doubt as madness. Regarding matters which it apprehends by the mind
and reason it has most absolute certainty, although its knowledge is limited
because of the corruptible body pressing down the mind, for, as the apostle
says, "We know in part."(1) It believes also the evidence of the senses which the
mind uses by aid of the body; for [if one who trusts his senses is sometimes
deceived], he is more wretchedly deceived who fancies he should never trust them.
It believes also the Holy Scriptures, old and new, which we call canonical, and
which are the source of the faith by which the just lives(2) and by which we
walk without doubting whilst we are absent from the Lord.(3) So long as this
faith remains inviolate and firm, we may without blame entertain doubts regarding
some things which we have neither perceived by sense nor by reason, and which
have not been revealed to us by the canonical Scriptures, nor come to our
knowledge through witnesses whom it is absurd to disbelieve.
CHAP. 19.--OF THE DRESS AND HABITS OF THE CHRISTIAN PEOPLE.
It is a matter of no moment in the city of God whether he who adopts the
faith that brings men to God adopts it in one dress and manner of life or
another, so long only as he lives in conformity with the commandments of God. And
hence, when philosophers themselves become Christians, they are compelled, indeed,
to abandon their erroneous doctrines, but not their dress and mode of living,
which are no obstacle to religion. So that we make no account of that
distinction of sects which Varro adduced in connection with the Cynic school, provided
always nothing indecent or self-indulgent is retained. As to these three modes
of life, the contemplative, the active, and the composite, although, so long as
a man's faith is preserved, he may choose any of them without detriment to his
eternal interests, yet he must never overlook the claims of truth and duty. No
man has a right to lead such a life of contemplation as to forget in his own
ease the service due to his neighbor; nor has any man a right to be so immersed
in active life as to neglect the contemplation of God. The charm of leisure must
not be indolent vacancy of mind, but the investigation or discovery of truth,
that thus every man may make solid attainments without grudging that others do
the same. And, in active life, it is not the honors or power of this life we
should covet, since all things under the sun are vanity, but we should aim at
using our position and influence, if these have been honorably attained, for the
welfare of those who are under as, in the way we have already explained.(4) It
is to this the apostle refers when he says, "He that desireth the episcopate
desireth a good work."(5) He wished to show that the episcopate is the title of a
work, not of an honor. It is a Greek word, and signifies that he who governs
superintends or takes care of those whom be governs: for <greek>epi</greek> means
over, and <greek>skopein</greek>, to see; therefore <greek>episkopein</greek>
means "to oversee."(6) So that he who loves to govern rather than to do good is
no bishop. Accordingly no one is prohibited from the search after truth, for
in this leisure may most laudably be spent; but it is unseemly to covet the high
position requisite for governing the people, even though that position be held
and that government be administered in a seemly manner. And therefore holy
leisure is longed for by the love of truth; but it is the necessity of love to
undertake requisite business. If no one imposes this burden upon us, we are free
to sift and contemplate truth; but if it be laid upon us, we are necessitated
for love's sake to undertake it. And yet not even in this case are we obliged
wholly to relinquish the sweets of contemplation; for were these to be withdrawn,
the burden might prove more than we could bear.
CHAP. 20.--THAT THE SAINTS ARE IN THIS LIFE BLESSED IN HOPE.
Since, then, the supreme good of the city of God is perfect and eternal
peace, not such as mortals pass into and out of by birth and death, but the peace
of freedom from all evil, in which the immortals ever abide; who can deny that
that future life is most blessed, or that, in comparison with it, this life
which now we live is most wretched, be it filled with all blessings of body and
soul and external things? And yet, if any man uses this life with a reference to
that other which he ardently loves and confidently hopes for, he may well be
called even now blessed, though not in reality so much as in hope. But the
actual possession of the happiness of this life, without the hope of what is beyond,
is but a false happiness and profound misery. For the true blessings of the
soul are not now enjoyed; for that is no true wisdom which does not direct all
its prudent observations, manly actions, virtuous self-restraint, and just
arrangements, to that end in which God shall be all and all in a secure eternity and
perfect peace
CHAP. 21.--WHETHER THERE EVER WAS A ROMAN REPUBLIC ANSWERING TO THE
DEFINITIONS OF SCIPIO IN CICERO'S DIALOGUE.
This, then, is the place where I should fulfill the promise gave in the
second book of this work,(1) and explain, as briefly and clearly as possible,
that if we are to accept the definitions laid down by Scipio in Cicero's De
Republica, there never was a Roman republic; for he briefly defines a republic as the
weal of the people. And if this definition be true, there never was a Roman
republic, for the people's weal was never attained among the Romans. For the
people, according to his definition, is an assemblage associated by a common
acknowledgment of right and by a community of interests. And what he means by a
common acknowledgment of right he explains at large, showing that a republic cannot
be administered without justice. Where, therefore, there is no true justice
there can be no right. For that which is done by right is justly done, and what is
unjustly done cannot be done by right. For the unjust inventions of men are
neither to be considered nor spoken of as rights; for even they themselves say
that right is that which flows from the fountain of justice, and deny the
definition which is commonly given by those who misconceive the matter, that right is
that which is useful to the stronger party. Thus, where there is not true
justice there can be no assemblage of men associated by a common acknowledgment of
right, and therefore there can be no people, as defined by Scipio or Cicero; and
if no people, then no weal of the people, but only of some promiscuous
multitude unworthy of the name of people. Consequently, if the republic is the weal of
the people, and there is no people if it be not associated by a common
acknowledgment of right, and if there is no right where there is no justice, then most
certainly it follows that there is no republic where there is no justice.
Further, justice is that virtue which gives every one his due. Where, then, is the
justice of man, when he deserts the true God and yields himself to impure
demons? Is this to give every one his due? Or is he who keeps back a piece of ground
from the purchaser, and gives it to a man who has no right to it, unjust,
while he who keeps back himself from the God who made him, and serves wicked
spirits, is just?
This same book, De Republica, advocates the cause of justice against
injustice with great force and keenness. The pleading for injustice against justice
was first heard, and it was asserted that without injustice a republic could
neither increase nor even subsist, for it was laid down as an absolutely
unassailable position that it is unjust for some men to rule and some to serve; and yet
the imperial city to which the republic belongs cannot rule her provinces
without having recourse to this injustice. It was replied in behalf of justice,
that this ruling of the provinces is just, because servitude may be advantageous
to the provincials, and is so when rightly administered,--that is to say, when
lawless men are prevented from doing harm. And further, as they became worse and
worse so long as they were free, they will improve by subjection. To confirm
this reasoning, there is added an eminent example drawn from nature: for "why,"
it is asked, "does God rule man, the soul the body, the reason the passions and
other vicious parts of the soul?" This example leaves no doubt that, to some,
servitude is useful; and, indeed, to serve God is useful to all. And it is when
the soul serves God that it exercises a right control over the body; and in
the soul itself the reason must be subject to God if it is to govern as it ought
the passions and other vices. Hence, when a man does not serve God, what
justice can we ascribe to him, since in this case his soul cannot exercise a just
control over the body, nor his reason over his vices? And if there is no justice
in such an individual, certainly there can be none in a community composed of
such persons. Here, therefore, there is not that common acknowledgment of right
which makes an assemblage of men a people whose affairs we call a republic. And
why need I speak of the advantageousness, the common participation in which,
according to the definition, makes a people? For although, if you choose to
regard the matter attentively, you will see that there is nothing advantageous to
those who live godlessly, as every one lives who does not serve God but demons,
whose wickedness you may measure by their desire to receive the worship of men
though they are most impure spirits, yet what I have said of the common
acknowledgment of right is enough to demonstrate that, according to the above
definition, there can be no people, and therefore no republic, where there is no
justice. For if they assert that in their republic the Romans did not serve unclean
spirits, but good and holy gods, must we therefore again reply to this evasion,
though already we have said enough, and more than enough, to expose it? He must
be an uncommonly stupid, or a shamelessly contentious person, who has read
through the foregoing books to this point, and can yet question whether the Romans
served wicked and impure demons. But, not to speak of their character, it is
written in the law of the true God, "He that sacrificeth unto any god save unto
the Lord only, be shall be utterly destroyed."(1) He, therefore, who uttered so
menacing a commandment decreed that no worship should be given either to good
or bad gods.
CHAP. 22.--WHETHER THE GOD WHOM THE CHRISTIANS SERVE IS THE TRUE GOD TO WHOM
ALONE SACRIFICE OUGHT TO BE PAID.
But it may be replied, Who is this God, or what proof is there that He
alone is worthy to receive sacrifice from the Romans? One must be very blind to be
still asking who this God is. He is the God whose prophets predicted the
things we see accomplished. He is the God from whom Abraham received the assurance,
"In thy seed shall all nations be blessed."(2) That this was fulfilled in
Christ, who according to the flesh sprang from that seed, is recognized, whether
they will or no, even by those who have continued to be the enemies of this name.
He is the God whose divine Spirit spake by the men whose predictions I cited
in the preceding books, and which are fulfilled in the Church which has extended
over all the world. This is the God whom Varro, the most learned of the
Romans, supposed to be Jupiter, though he knows not what he says; yet I think it
right to note the circumstance that a man of such learning was unable to suppose
that this God had no existence or was contemptible, but believed Him to be the
same as the supreme God. In fine, He is the God whom Porphyry, the most learned
of the philosophers, though the bitterest enemy of the Christians, confesses to
be a great God, even according to the oracles of those whom he esteems gods.
CHAP. 23.--PORPHYRY'S ACCOUNT OF THE RESPONSES GIVEN BY THE ORACLES OF THE
GODS CONCERNING CHRIST.
For in his book called <greek>ek</greek> <greek>logiwn</greek>
<greek>filosofias</greek>, in which he collects and comments upon the responses which he
pretends were uttered by the gods concerning divine things, he says--I give his
own words as they have been translated from the Greek: "To one who inquired
what god he should propitiate in order to recall his wife from Christianity,
Apollo replied in the following verses." Then the following words are given as those
of Apollo: "You will probably find it easier to write lasting characters on
the water, or lightly fly like a bird through the air, than to restore right
feeling in your impious wife once she has polluted herself. Let her remain as she
pleases in her foolish deception, and sing false laments to her dead God, who
was condemned by right-minded judges, and perished ignominiously by a violent
death." Then after these verses of Apollo (which we have given in a Latin version
that does not preserve the metrical form), he goes on to say: "In these verses
Apollo exposed the incurable corruption of the Christians, saying that the
Jews, rather than the Christians, recognized God." See how he misrepresents Christ,
giving the Jews the preference to the Christians in the recognition of God.
This was his explanation of Apollo's verses, in which he says that Christ was put
to death by right-minded or just judges,--in other words, that He deserved to
die. I leave the responsibility of this oracle regarding Christ on the lying
interpreter of Apollo, or on this philosopher who believed it or possibly himself
invented it; as to its agreement with Porphyry's opinions or with other
oracles, we shall in a little have something to say. In this passage, however, he
says that the Jews, as the interpreters of God, judged justly in pronouncing
Christ to be worthy of the most shameful death. He should have listened, then, to
this God of the Jews to whom he bears this testimony, when that God says, "He
that sacrificeth to any other god save to the Lord alone shall be utterly
destroyed." But let us come to still plainer expressions, and hear how great a God
Porphyry thinks the God of the Jews is. Apollo, he says, when asked whether word,
i.e., reason, or law is the better thing, replied in the following verses. Then
he gives the verses of Apollo, from which I select the following as sufficient:
"God, the Generator, and the King prior to all things, before whom heaven and
earth, and the sea, and the hidden places of hell tremble, and the deities
themselves are afraid, for their law is the Father whom the holy Hebrews honor." In
this oracle of his god Apollo, Porphyry avowed that the God of the Hebrews is
so great that the deities themselves are afraid before Him. I am surprised,
therefore, that when God said, He that sacrificeth to other gods shall be utterly
destroyed, Porphyry himself was not afraid lest he should be destroyed for
sacrificing to other gods.
This philosopher, however, has also some good to say of Christ, oblivious,
as it were, of that contumely of his of which we have just been speaking; or
as if his gods spoke evil of Christ only while asleep, and recognized Him to be
good, and gave Him His deserved praise, when they awoke. For, as if he were
about to proclaim some marvellous thing passing belief, he says, "What we are
going to say will certainly take some by surprise. For the gods have declared that
Christ was very pious, and has become immortal, and that they cherish his
memory: that the Christians, however, are polluted, contaminated, and involved in
error. And many other such things," he says, "do the gods say against the
Christians." Then he gives specimens of the accusations made, as he says, by the gods
against them, and then goes on: "But to some who asked Hecate whether Christ
were a God, she replied, You know the condition of the disembodied immortal soul,
and that if it has been severed from wisdom it always errs. The soul you refer
to is that of a man foremost in piety: they worship it because they mistake
the truth." To this so-called oracular response he adds the following words of
his own: "Of this very pious man, then, Hecate said that the soul, like the souls
of other good men, was after death dowered with immortality, and that the
Christians through ignorance worship it. And to those who ask why he was condemned
to die, the oracle of the goddess replied, The body, indeed, is always exposed
to torments, but the souls of the pious abide in heaven. And the soul you
inquire about has been the fatal cause of error to other souls which were not fated
to receive the gifts of the gods, and to have the knowledge of immortal Jove.
Such souls are therefore hated by the gods; for they who were fated not to
receive the gifts of the gods, and not to know God, were fated to be involved in
error by means of him you speak of. He himself, however, was good, and heaven has
been opened to him as to other good men. You are not, then, to speak evil of
him, but to pity the folly of men: and through him men's danger is imminent."
Who is so foolish as not to see that these oracles were either composed by
a clever man with a strong animus against the Christians, or were uttered as
responses by impure demons with a similar design,--that is to say, in order that
their praise of Christ may win credence for their vituperation of Christians;
and that thus they may, if possible, close the way of eternal salvation, which
is identical with Christianity? For they believe that they are by no means
counterworking their own hurtful craft by promoting belief in Christ, so long as
their calumniation of Christians is also accepted; for they thus secure that even
the man who thinks well of Christ declines to become a Christian, and is
therefore not delivered from their own rule by the Christ he praises. Besides, their
praise of Christ is so contrived that whosoever believes in Him as thus
represented will not be a true Christian but a Photinian heretic, recognizing only
the humanity, and not also the divinity of Christ, and will thus be precluded
from salvation and from deliverance out of the meshes of these devilish lies. For
our part, we are no better pleased with Hecate's praises of Christ than with
Apollo's calumniation of Him. Apollo says that Christ was put to death by
right-minded judges, implying that He was unrighteous. Hecate says that He was a most
pious man, but no more. The intention of both is the same, to prevent men from
becoming Christians, because if this be secured, men shall never be rescued
from their power. But it is incumbent on our philosopher, or rather on those who
believe in these pretended oracles against the Christians, first of all, if they
can, to bring Apollo and Hecate to the same mind regarding Christ, so that
either both may condemn or both praise Him. And even if they succeeded in this, we
for our part would notwithstanding repudiate the testimony of demons, whether
favorable or adverse to Christ. But when our adversaries find a god and goddess
of their own at variance about Christ the one praising, the other vituperating
Him, they can certainly give no credence, if they have any judgment, to mere
men who blaspheme the Christians.
When Porphyry or Hecate praises Christ, and adds that He gave Himself to
the Christians as a fatal gift, that they might be involved in error, he
exposes, as he thinks, the causes of this error. But before I cite his words to that
purpose, I would ask, If Christ did thus give Himself to the Christians to
involve them in error, did He do so willingly, or against His will? If willingly,
how is He righteous? If against His will, how is He blessed? However, let us hear
the causes of this error. "There are," he says," in a certain place very small
earthly spirits, subject to the power of evil demons. The wise men of the
Hebrews, among whom was this Jesus, as you have heard from the oracles of Apollo
cited above, turned religious persons from these very wicked demons and minor
spirits, and taught them rather to worship the celestial gods, and especially to
adore God the Father. This," he said, "the gods enjoin; and we have already
shown how they admonish the soul to turn to God, and command it to worship Him. But
the ignorant and the ungodly, who are not destined to receive favors from the
gods, nor to know the immortal Jupiter, not listening to the gods and their
messages, have turned away from all gods, and have not only refused to hate, but
have venerated the prohibited demons. Professing to worship God, they refuse to
do those things by which alone God is worshipped. For God, indeed, being the
Father of all, is in need of nothing; but for us it is good to adore Him by means
of justice, chastity, and other virtues, and thus to make life itself a prayer
to Him, by inquiring into and imitating His nature. For inquiry," says he,
"purifies and imitation deifies us, by moving us nearer to Him." He is right in so
far as he proclaims God the Father, and the conduct by which we should worship
Him. Of such precepts the prophetic books of the Hebrews are full, when they
praise or blame the life of the saints. But in speaking of the Christians he is
in error, and caluminates them as much as is desired by the demons whom he
takes for gods, as if it were difficult for any man to recollect the disgraceful
and shameful actions which used to be done in the theatres and temples to please
the gods, and to compare with these things what is heard in our churches, and
what is offered to the true God, and from this comparison to conclude where
character is edified, and where it is ruined. But who but a diabolical spirit has
told or suggested to this man so manifest and vain a lie, as that the Christians
reverenced rather than hated the demons, whose worship the Hebrews prohibited?
But that God, whom the Hebrew sages worshipped, forbids sacrifice to be
offered even to the holy angels of heaven and divine powers, whom we, in this our
pilgrimage, venerate and love as our most blessed fellow-citizens. For in the law
which God gave to His Hebrew people He utters this menace, as in a voice of
thunder: "He that sacrificeth unto any god, save unto the Lord only, he shall be
utterly destroyed."(1) And that no one might suppose that this prohibition
extends only to the very wicked demons and earthly spirits, whom this philosopher
calls very small and inferior,--for even these are in the Scripture called gods,
not of the Hebrews, but of the nations, as the Septuagint translators have
shown in the psalm where it is said, "For all the gods of the nations are
demons,"(2)--that no one might suppose, I say, that sacrifice to these demons was
prohibited, but that sacrifice might be offered to all or some of the celestials, it
was immediately added, "save unto the Lord alone."(3) The God of the Hebrews,
then, to whom this renowned philosopher bears this signal testimony, gave to His
Hebrew people a law, composed in the Hebrew language, and not obscure and
unknown, but published now in every nation, and in this law it is written, "He that
sacrificeth unto any god, save unto the Lord alone, he shall be utterly
destroyed." What need is there to seek further proofs in the law or the prophets of
this same thing? Seek, we need not say, for the passages are neither few nor
difficult to find; but what need to collect and apply to my argument the proofs
which are thickly sown and obvious, and by which it appears clear as day that
sacrifice may be paid to none but the supreme and true God? Here is one brief but
decided, even menacing, and certainly true utterance of that God whom the
wisest of our adversaries so highly extol. Let this be listened to, feared,
fulfilled, that there may be no disobedient soul cut off. "He that sacrifices," He
says, not because He needs anything, but because it behoves us to be His
possession. Hence the Psalmist in the Hebrew Scriptures sings, "I have said to the Lord,
Thou art my God, for Thou needest not my good."(1) For we ourselves, who are
His own city, are His most noble and worthy sacrifice, and it is this mystery we
celebrate in our sacrifices, which are well known to the faithful, as we have
explained in the preceding books. For through the prophets the oracles of God
declared that the sacrifices which the Jews offered as a shadow of that which
was to be would cease, and that the nations, from the rising to the setting of
the sun, would offer one sacrifice. From these oracles, which we now see
accomplished, we have made such selections as seemed suitable to our purpose in this
work. And therefore, where there is not this righteousness whereby the one
supreme God rules the obedient city according to His grace, so that it sacrifices to
none but Him, and whereby, in all the citizens of this obedient city, the soul
consequently rules the body and reason the vices in the rightful order, so
that, as the individual just man, so also the community and people of the just,
live by faith, which works by love, that love whereby man loves God as He ought to
be loved, and his neighbor as himself,--there, I say, there is not an
assemblage associated by a common acknowledgment of right, and by a community of
interests. But if there is not this, there is not a people, if our definition be
true, and therefore there is no republic; for where there is no people there can be
no republic.
CHAP. 24.--THE DEFINITION WHICH MUST BE GIVEN OF A PEOPLE AND A REPUBLIC, IN
ORDER TO VINDICATE THE ASSUMPTION OF THESE TITLES BY THE ROMANS AND BY OTHER
KINGDOMS.
But if we discard this definition of a people, and, assuming another, say
that a people is an assemblage of reasonable beings bound together by a common
agreement as to the objects of their love, then, in order to discover the
character of any people, we have only to observe what they love. Yet whatever it
loves, if only it is an assemblage of reasonable beings and not of beasts, and is
bound together by an agreement as to the objects of love. it is reasonably
called a people; and it will be a superior people in proportion as it is bound
together by higher interests, inferior in proportion as it is bound together by
lower. According to this definition of ours, the Roman people is a people, and its
weal is without doubt a commonwealth or republic. But what its tastes were in
its early and subsequent days, and how it declined into sanguinary seditions
and then to social and civil wars, and so burst asunder or rotted off the bond of
concord in which the health of a people consists, history shows, and in the
preceding books I have related at large. And yet I would not on this account say
either that it was not a people, or that its administration was not a republic,
so long as there remains an assemblage of reasonable beings bound together by
a common agreement as to the objects of love. But what I say of this people and
of this republic I must be understood to think and say of the Athenians or any
Greek state, of the Egyptians, of the early Assyrian Babylon, and of every
other nation, great or small, which had a public government. For, in general, the
city of the ungodly, which did not obey the command of God that it should offer
no sacrifice save to Him alone, and which, therefore, could not give to the
soul its proper command over the body, nor to the reason its just authority over
the vices, is void of true justice.
CHAP. 25.--THAT WHERE THERE IS NO TRUE RELIGION THERE ARE NO TRUE VIRTUES.
For though the soul may seem to rule the body admirably, and the reason
the vices, if the soul and reason do not themselves obey God, as God has
commanded them to serve Him, they have no proper authority over the body and the vices.
For what kind of mistress of the body and the vices can that mind be which is
ignorant of the true God, and which, instead of being subject to His authority,
is prostituted to the corrupting influences of the most vicious demons? It is
for this reason that the virtues which it seems to itself to possess, and by
which it restrains the body and the vices that it may obtain and keep what it
desires, are rather vices than virtues so long as there is no reference to God in
the matter. For although some suppose that virtues which have a reference only
to themselves, and are desired only on their own account, are yet true and
genuine virtues, the fact is that even then they are inflated with pride, and are
therefore to be reckoned vices rather than virtues. For as that which gives life
to the flesh is not derived from flesh, but is above it, so that which gives
blessed life to man is not derived from man, but is something above him; and
what I say of man is true of every celestial power and virtue what, soever.
CHAP. 26.--OF THE PEACE WHICH IS ENJOYED BY THE PEOPLE THAT ARE ALIENATED FROM
GOD, AND THE USE MADE OF IT BY THE PEOPLE OF GOD IN THE TIME OF ITS PILGRIMAGE.
Wherefore, as the life of the flesh is the soul, so the blessed life of
man is God, of whom the sacred writings of the Hebrews say, "Blessed is the
people whose God is the Lord."(1) Miserable, therefore, is the people which is
alienated from God. Yet even this people has a peace of its own which is not to be
lightly esteemed, though, indeed, it shall not in the end enjoy it, because it
makes no good use of it before the end. But it is our interest that it enjoy
this peace meanwhile in this life; for as long as the two cities are commingled,
we also enjoy the peace of Babylon. For from Babylon the people of God is so
freed that it meanwhile sojourns in its company. And therefore the apostle also
admonished the Church to pray for kings and those in authority, assigning as the
reason, "that we may live a quiet and tranquil life in all godliness and
love."(2) And the prophet Jeremiah, when predicting the captivity that was to befall
the ancient people of God, and giving them the divine command to go obediently
to Babylonia, and thus serve their God, counselled them also to pray for
Babylonia, saying, "In the peace thereof shall ye have peace,"(3)--the temporal peace
which the good and the wicked together enjoy.
CHAP. 27.--THAT THE PEACE OF THOSE WHO SERVE GOD CANNOT IN THIS MORTAL LIFE BE
APPREHENDED IN ITS PERFECTION.
But the peace which is peculiar to ourselves we enjoy now with God by
faith, and shall hereafter enjoy eternally with Him by sight. But the peace which
we enjoy in this life, whether common to all or peculiar to ourselves, is rather
the solace of our misery than the positive enjoyment of felicity. Our very
righteousness, too, though true in so far as it has respect to the true good, is
yet in this life of such a kind that it consists rather in the remission of sins
than in the perfecting of virtues. Witness the prayer of the whole city of God
in its pilgrim state, for it cries to God by the mouth of all its members,
"Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors."(4) And this prayer is
efficacious not for those whose faith is "without works and dead,"(5) but for those
whose faith "worketh by love."(6) For as reason, though subjected to God, is yet
"pressed down by the corruptible body,"(7) so long as it is in this mortal
condition, it has not perfect authority over vice, and therefore this prayer is
needed by the righteous. For though it exercises authority, the vices do not submit
without a struggle. For however well one maintains the conflict, and however
thoroughly he has subdued these enemies, there steals in some evil thing, which,
if it do not find ready expression in act, slips out by the lips, or insinuates
itself into the thought; and therefore his peace is not full so long as he is
at war with his vices. For it is a doubtful conflict he wages with those that
resist, and his victory over those that are defeated is not secure, but full of
anxiety and effort. Amidst these temptations, therefore, of all which it has
been summarily said in the divine oracles, "Is not human life upon earth a
temptation?"(8) who but a proud man can presume that he so lives that he has no need
to say to God, "Forgive us our debts?" And such a man is not great, but swollen
and puffed up with vanity, and is justly resisted by Him who abundantly gives
grace to the humble. Whence it is said, "God resisteth the proud, but giveth
grace to the humble."(9) In this, then, consists the righteousness of a man,
that he submit himself to God, his body to his soul, and his vices, even when they
rebel, to his reason, which either defeats or at least resists them; and also
that he beg from God grace to do his duty,(10) and the pardon of his sins, and
that he render to God thanks for all the blessings he receives. But, in that
final peace to which all our righteousness has reference, and for the sake of
which it is maintained, as our nature shall enjoy a sound immortality and
incorruption, and shall have no more vices, and as we shall experience no resistance
either from ourselves or from others, it will not be necessary that reason should
rule vices which no longer exist, but God shall rule the man, and the soul
shall rule the body, with a sweetness and facility suitable to the felicity of a
life which is done with bondage. And this condition shall there be eternal, and
we shall be assured of its eternity; and thus the peace of this blessedness and
the blessedness of this peace shall be the supreme good.
CHAP. 28.--THE END OF THE WICKED.
But, on the other hand, they who do not belong to this city of God shall
inherit eternal misery, which is also called the second death, because the soul
shall then be separated from God its life, and therefore cannot be said to
live, and the body shall be subjected to eternal pains. And consequently this
second death shall be the more severe, because no death shall terminate it. But war
being contrary to peace, as misery to happiness, and life to death, it is not
without reason asked what kind of war can be found in the end of the wicked
answering to the peace which is declared to be the end of the righteous? The person
who puts this question has only to observe what it is in war that is hurtful
and destructive, and he shall see that it is nothing else than the mutual
opposition and conflict of things. And can he conceive a more grievous and bitter war
than that in which the will is so opposed to passion, and passion to the will,
that their hostility can never be terminated by the victory of either, and in
which the violence of Fain so conflicts with the nature of the body, that
neither yields to the other? For in this life, when this conflict has arisen, either
pain conquers and death expels the feeling of it, or nature conquers and
health expels the pain. But in the world to come the pain continues that it may
torment, and the nature endures that it may be sensible of it; and neither ceases
to exist, test punishment also should cease. Now, as it is through the last
judgment that men pass to these ends, the good to the supreme good, the evil to the
supreme evil, I will treat of this judgment in the following book.