THE CITY OF GOD: BOOK XXII
BOOK XXII.
ARGUMENT.
THIS BOOK TREATS OF THE END OF THE CITY OF GOD, THAT IS TO SAY, OF THE ETERNAL
HAPPINESS OF THE SAINTS; THE FAITH OF THE RESURRECTION OF THE BODY IS
ESTABLISHED AND EXPLAINED; AND THE WORK CONCLUDES BY SHOWING HOW THE SAINTS, CLOTHED IN
IMMORTAL AND SPIRITUAL BODIES, SHALL BE EMPLOYED.
CHAP. 1.--OF THE CREATION OF ANGELS AND MEN.
As we promised in the immediately preceeding book, this, the last of the
whole work, shall contain a discussion of the eternal blessedness of the city of
God. This blessedness is named eternal, not because it shall endure for many
ages, though at last it shall come to an end, but because, according to the
words of the gospel, "of His kingdom there shall be no end."(1) Neither shall it
enjoy the mere appearance of perpetuity which is maintained by the rise of fresh
generations to occupy the place of those that have died out, as in an evergreen
the same freshness seems to continue permanently, and the same appearance of
dense foliage is preserved by the growth of fresh leaves in the room of those
that have withered and fallen; but in that city all the citizens shall be
immortal, men now for the first time enjoying what the holy angels have never lost.
And this shall be accomplished by God, the most almighty Founder of the city. For
He has promised it, and cannot lie, and has already performed many of His
promises, and has done many unpromised kindnesses to those whom He now asks to
believe that He will do this also.
For it is He who in the beginning created the world full of all visible
and intelligible beings, among which He created nothing better than those spirits
whom He endowed with intelligence, and made capable of contemplating and
enjoying Him, and united in our society, which we call the holy and heavenly city,
and in which the material of their sustenance and blessedness is God Himself, as
it were their common food and nourishment. It is He who gave to this
intellectual nature free-will of such a kind, that if he wished to forsake God, i.e.,
his blessedness, misery should forthwith result. It is He who, when He foreknew
that certain angels would in their pride desire to suffice for their own
blessedness, and would forsake their great good, did not deprive them of this power,
deeming it to be more befitting His power and goodness to bring good out of evil
than to prevent the evil from coming into existence. And indeed evil had never
been, had not the mutable nature--mutable, though good, and created by the
most high God and immutable Good, who created all things good--brought evil upon
itself by sin. And this its sin is itself proof that its nature was originally
good. For had it not been very good, though not equal to its Creator, the
desertion of God as its light could not have been an evil to it. For as blindness is
a vice of the eye, and this very fact indicates that the eye was created to see
the light, and as, consequently, vice itself proves that the eye is more
excellent than the other members, because it is capable of light (for on no other
supposition would it be a vice of the eye to want light), so the nature which
once enjoyed God teaches, even by its very vice, that it was created the best of
all, since it is now miserable because it does not enjoy God. It is he who with
very just punishment doomed the angels who voluntarily fell to everlasting
misery, and rewarded those who continued in their attachment to the supreme good
with the assurance of endless stability as the meed of their fidelity. It is He
who made also man himself upright, with the same freedom of will,--an earthly
animal, indeed, but fit for heaven if he remained faithful to his Creator, but
destined to the misery appropriate to such a nature if he forsook Him. It is He
who when He foreknew that man would in his turn sin by abandoning God and
breaking His law, did not deprive him of the power of free-will, because He at the
same time foresaw what good He Himself would bring out of the evil, and how from
this mortal race, deservedly and justly condemned, He would by His grace
collect, as now He does, a people so numerous, that He thus fills up and repairs the
blank made by the fallen angels, and that thus that beloved and heavenly city
is not defrauded of the full number of its citizens, but perhaps may even
rejoice in a still more overflowing population.
CHAP. 2.--OF THE ETERNAL AND UNCHANGEABLE WILL OF GOD.
It is true that wicked men do many things contrary to God's will; but so
great is His wisdom and power, that all things which seem adverse to His purpose
do still tend towards those just and good ends and issues which He Himself has
foreknown. And consequently, when God is said to change His will, as when,
e.g., He becomes angry with those to whom He was gentle, it is rather they than He
who are changed, and they find Him changed in so far as their experience of
suffering at His hand is new, as the sun is changed to injured eyes, and becomes
as it were fierce from being mild, and hurtful from being delightful, though in
itself it remains the same as it was. That also is called the will of God
which He does in the hearts of those who obey His commandments; and of this the
apostle says, "For it is God that worketh in you both to will."(1) As God's
"righteousness" is used not only of the righteousness wherewith He Himself is
righteous, but also of that which He produces in the man whom He justifies, so also
that is called His law, which, though given by God, is rather the law of men. For
certainly they were men to whom Jesus said, "It is written in your law,"(2)
though in another place we read, "The law of Iris God is in his heart."(3)
According to this will which God works in men, He is said also to will what He
Himself does not will, but causes His people to will; as He is said to know what He
has caused those to know who were ignorant of it. For when the apostle says,
"But now, after that ye have known God, or rather are known of God,"(4) we cannot
suppose that God there for the first time knew those who were foreknown by Him
before the foundation of the world; but He is said to have known them then,
because then He caused them to know. But I remember that I discussed these modes
of expression in the preceding books. According to this will, then, by which we
say that God wills what He causes to be willed by others, from whom the future
is hidden, He wills many things which He does not perform.
Thus His saints, inspired by His holy will, desire many things which never
happen. They pray, e.g., for certain individuals--they pray in a pious and
holy manner--but what they request He does not perform, though He Himself by His
own Holy Spirit has wrought in them this will to pray. And consequently, when
the saints, in conformity with God's mind, will and pray that all men be saved,
we can use this mode of expression: God wills and does not perform,--meaning
that He who causes them to will these things Himself wills them. But if we speak
of that will of His which is eternal as His foreknowledge, certainly He has
already done all things in heaven and on earth that He has willed,--not only past
and present things, but even things still future. But before the arrival of that
time in which He has willed the occurrence of what He foreknew and arranged
before all time, we say, It will happen when God wills. But if we are ignorant
not only of the time in which it is to be, but even whether it shall be at all,
we say, It will happen if God wills,--not because God will then have a new will
which He had not before, but because that event, which from eternity has been
prepared in His unchangeable will, shall then come to pass.
CHAP. 3.--OF THE PROMISE OF ETERNAL BLESSEDNESS TO THE SAINTS, AND EVERLASTING
PUNISHMENT TO THE WICKED.
Wherefore, not to mention many other instances besides, as we now see in
Christ the fulfillment of that which God promised to Abraham when He said, "In
thy seed shall all nations be blessed,"(5) so this also shall be fulfilled which
He promised to the same race, when He said by the prophet, "They that are in
their sepulchres shall rise again,"(6) and also, "There shall be a new heaven
and a new earth: and the former shall not be mentioned, nor come into mind; but
they shall find joy and rejoicing in it: for I will make Jerusalem a rejoicing,
and my people a joy. And I will rejoice in Jerusalem, and joy in my people, and
the voice of weeping shall be no more heard in her."(1) And by another prophet
He uttered the same prediction: "At that time thy people shall be delivered,
every one that shall be found written in the book. And many of them that sleep
in the dust" (or, as some interpret it, "in the mound") "of the earth shall
awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt."(2)
And in another place by the same prophet: "The saints of the Most High shall take
the kingdom, and shall possess the kingdom for ever, even for ever and
ever."(3) And a little after he says, "His kingdom is an everlasting kingdom."(4)
Other prophecies referring to the same subject I have advanced in the twentieth
book, and others still which I have not advanced are found written in the same
Scriptures; and these predictions shall be fulfilled, as those also have been
which unbelieving men supposed would be frustrate. For it is the same God who
promised both, and predicted that both would come to pass,--the God whom the pagan
deities tremble before, as even Porphyry, the noblest of pagan philosophers,
testifies.
CHAP. 4.--AGAINST THE WISE MEN OF THE WORLD, WHO FANCY THAT THE EARTHLY BODIES
OF MEN CANNOT BE TRANSFERRED TO A HEAVENLY HABITATION.
But men who use their learning and intellectual ability to resist the
force of that great authority which, in fulfillment of what was so long before
predicted, has converted all races of men to faith and hope in its promises, seem
to themselves to argue acutely against the resurrection of the body while they
cite what Cicero mentions in the third book De Republica. For when he was
asserting the apotheosis of Hercules and Romulus, he says: "Whose bodies were not
taken up into heaven; for nature would not permit a body of earth to exist
anywhere except upon earth." This, forsooth, is the profound reasoning of the wise
men, whose thoughts God knows that they are vain. For if we were only souls, that
is, spirits without any body, and if we dwelt in heaven and had no knowledge of
earthly animals, and were told that we should be bound to earthly bodies by
some wonderful bond of union, and should animate them, should we not much more
vigorously refuse to believe this, and maintain that nature would not permit an
incorporeal substance to be held by a corporeal bond? And yet the earth is full
of living spirits, to which terrestrial bodies are bound, and with which they
are in a wonderful way implicated. If, then, the same God who has created such
beings wills this also, what is to binder the earthly body from being raised to
a heavenly body, since a spirit, which is more excellent than all bodies, and
consequently than even a heavenly body, has been tied to an earthly body? If so
small an earthly particle has been able to hold in union with itself something
better than a heavenly body, so as to receive sensation and life, will heaven
disdain to receive, or at least to retain, this sentient and living particle,
which derives its life and sensation from a substance more excellent than any
heavenly body? If this does not happen now, it is because the time is not yet
come which has been determined by Him who has already done a much more marvellous
thing than that which these men refuse to believe. For why do we not more
intensely wonder that incorporeal souls, which are of higher rank than heavenly
bodies, are bound to earthly bodies, rather than that bodies, although earthly, are
exalted to an abode which, though heavenly, is yet corporeal, except because
we have been accustomed to see this, and indeed are this, while we are not as
yet that other marvel, nor have as yet ever seen it? Certainly, if we consult
sober reason, the more wonderful of the two divine works is found to be to attach
somehow corporeal things to incorporeal, and not to connect earthly things with
heavenly, which, though diverse, are yet both of them corporeal.
CHAP. 5.--OF THE RESURRECTION OF THE FLESH, WHICH SOME REFUSE TO BELIEVE,
THOUGH THE WORLD AT LARGE BELIEVES IT.
But granting that this was once incredible, behold, now, the world has
come to the belief that the earthly body of Christ was received up into heaven.
Already both the learned and unlearned have believed in the resurrection of the
flesh and its ascension to the heavenly places, while only a very few either of
the educated or uneducated are still staggered by it. If this is a credible
thing which is believed, then let those who do not believe see how stolid they
are; and if it is incredible, then this also is an incredible thing, that what is
incredible should have received such credit. Here then we have two
incredibles,--to wit, the resurrection of our body to eternity, and that the world should
believe so incredible a thing; and both these incredibles the same God predicted
should come to pass before either had as yet occurred. We see that already one
of the two has come to pass, for the world has believed what was incredible;
why should we despair that the remaining one shall also come to pass, and that
this which the world believed, though it was incredible, shall itself occur? For
already that which was equally incredible has come to pass, in the world's
believing an incredible thing. Both were incredible: the one we see accomplished,
the other we believe shall be; for both were predicted in those same Scriptures
by means of which the world believed. And the very manner in which the world's
faith was won is found to be even more incredible if we consider it. Men
uninstructed in any branch of a liberal education, without any of the refinement of
heathen learning, unskilled in grammar, not armed with dialectic, not adorned
with rhetoric, but plain fishermen, and very few in number,--these were the men
whom Christ sent with the nets of faith to the sea of this world, and thus took
out of every race so many fishes, and even the philosophers themselves,
wonderful as they are rare. Let us add, if you please, or because you ought to be
pleased, this third incredible thing to the two former. And now we have three
incredibles, all of which have yet come to pass. It is incredible that Jesus Christ
should have risen in the flesh and ascended with flesh into heaven; it is
incredible that the world should have believed so incredible a thing; it is
incredible that a very few men, of mean birth and the lowest rank, and no education,
should have been able so effectually to persuade the world, and even its learned
men, of so incredible a thing. Of these three incredibles, the parties with
whom we are debating refuse to believe the first; they cannot refuse to see the
second, which they are unable to account for if they do not believe the third.
It is indubitable that the resurrection of Christ, and His ascension into heaven
with the flesh in which He rose, is already preached and believed in the whole
world. If it is not credible, how is it that it has already received credence
in the whole world? If a number of noble, exalted, and learned men had said
that they had witnessed it, and had been at pains to publish what they had
witnessed, it were not wonderful that the world should have believed it, but it were
very stubborn to refuse credence; but if, as is true, the world has believed a
few obscure, inconsiderable, uneducated persons, who state and write that they
witnessed it, is it not unreasonable that a handful of wrong-beaded men should
oppose themselves to the creed of the whole world, and refuse their belief? And
if the world has put faith in a small number of men, of mean birth and the
lowest rank, and no education, it is because the divinity of the thing itself
appeared all the more manifestly in such contemptible witnesses. The eloquence,
indeed, which lent persuasion to their message, consisted of wonderful works, not
words. For they who had not seen Christ risen in the flesh, nor ascending into
heaven with His risen body, believed those who related how they had seen these
things, and who testified not only with words but wonderful signs. For men whom
they knew to be acquainted with only one, or at most two languages, they
marvelled to hear speaking in the tongues of all nations. They saw a man, lame from
his mother's womb, after forty years stand up sound at their word in the name of
Christ; that handkerchiefs taken from their bodies had virtue to heal the
sick; that countless persons, sick of various diseases, were laid in a row in the
road where they were to pass, that their shadow might fall on them as they
walked, and that they forthwith received health; that many other stupendous miracles
were wrought by them in the name of Christ; and, finally, that they even
raised the dead. If it be admitted that these things occurred as they are related,
then we have a multitude of incredible things to add to those three incredibles.
That the one incredibility of the resurrection and ascension of Jesus Christ
may be believed, we accumulate the testimonies of countless incredible miracles,
but even so we do not bend the frightful obstinacy of these sceptics. But if
they do not believe that these miracles were wrought by Christ's apostles to
gain credence to their preaching of His resurrection and ascension, this one grand
miracle suffices for us, that the whole world has believed without any
miracles.
CHAP. 6.--THAT ROME MADE ITS FOUNDER ROMULUS A GOD BECAUSE IT LOVED HIM; BUT
THE CHURCH LOVED CHRIST BECAUSE IT BELIEVED HIM TO BE GOD.
Let us here recite the passage in which Tully expresses his astonishment
that the apotheosis of Romulus should have been credited. I shall insert his
words as they stand: "It is most worthy of remark in Romulus, that other men who
are said to have become gods lived in less educated ages, when there was a
greater propensity to the fabulous, and when the uninstructed were easily persuaded
to believe anything. But the age of Romulus was barely six hundred years ago,
and already literature and science bad dispelled the errors that attach to an
uncultured age." And a little after he says of the same Romulus words to this
effect:
"From this we may perceive that Homer had flourished long before Romulus,
and that there was now so much learning in individuals, and so generally
diffused an enlightenment, that scarcely any room was left for fable. For antiquity
admitted fables, and sometimes even very clumsy ones; but this age [of Romulus]
was sufficiently enlightened to reject whatever had not the air of truth." Thus
one of the most learned men, and certainly the most eloquent, M. Tullius
Cicero, says that it is surprising that the divinity of Romulus was believed in,
because the times were already so enlightened that they would not accept a
fabulous fiction. But who believed that Romulus was a god except Rome, which was
itself small and in its infancy? Then afterwards it was necessary that succeeding
generations should preserve the tradition of their ancestors; that, drinking in
this superstition with their mother's milk, the state might grow and come to
such power that it might dictate this belief, as from a point of vantage, to all
the nations over whom its sway extended. And these nations, though they might
not believe that Romulus was a god, at least said so, that they might not give
offence to their sovereign state by refusing to give its founder that title which
was given him by Rome, which had adopted this belief, not by a love of error,
but an error of love. But though Christ is the founder of the heavenly and
eternal city, yet it did not believe Him to be God because it was founded by Him,
but rather it is founded by Him, in virtue of its belief. Rome, after it had
been built and dedicated, worshipped its founder in a temple as a god; but this
Jerusalem laid Christ, its God, as its foundation, that the building and
dedication might proceed. The former city loved its founder, and therefore believed him
to be a god; the latter believed Christ to be God, and therefore loved Him.
There was an antecedent cause for the love of the former city, and for its
believing that even a false dignity attached to the object of its love; so there was
an antecedent cause for the belief of the latter, and for its loving the true
dignity which a proper faith, not a rash surmise, ascribed to its object. For,
not to mention the multitude of very striking miracles which proved that Christ
is God, there were also divine prophecies heralding Him, prophecies most worthy
of belief, which being already accomplished, we have not, like the fathers, to
wait for their verification. Of Romulus, on the other hand, and of his
building Rome and reigning in it, we read or hear the narrative of what did take
place, not prediction which beforehand said that such things should be. And so far
as his reception among the gods is concerned, history only records that this was
believed, and does not state it as a fact; for no miraculous signs testified
to the truth of this. For as to that wolf which is said to have nursed the
twin-brothers, and which is considered a great marvel, how does this prove him to
have been divine? For even supposing that this nurse was a real wolf and not a
mere courtezan, yet she nursed both brothers, and Remus is not reckoned a god.
Besides, what was there to hinder any one from asserting that Romulus or
Hercules, or any such man, was a god? Or who would rather choose to die than profess
belief in his divinity? And did a single nation worship Romulus among its gods,
unless it were forced through fear of the Roman name? But who can number the
multitudes who have chosen death in the most cruel shapes rather than deny the
divinity of Christ? And thus the dread of some slight indignation, which it was
supposed, perhaps groundlessly, might exist in the minds of the Romans,
constrained some states who were subject to Rome to worship Romulus as a god; whereas
the dread, not of a slight mental shock, but of severe and various punishments,
and of death itself, the most formidable of all, could not prevent an immense
multitude of martyrs throughout the world from not merely worshipping but also
confessing Christ as God. The city of Christ, which, although as yet a stranger
upon earth, had countless hosts of citizens, did not make war upon its godless
persecutors for the sake of temporal security, but preferred to win eternal
salvation by abstaining from war. They were bound, imprisoned, beaten, tortured,
burned, torn in pieces, massacred, and yet they multiplied. It was not given to
them to fight for their eternal salvation except by despising their temporal
salvation for their Saviour's sake.
I am aware that Cicero, in the third book of his De Republica, if I
mistake not, argues that a first-rate power will not engage in war except either for
honor or for safety. What he has to say about the question of safety, and what
he means by safety, he explains in another place, saying, "Private persons
frequently evade, by a speedy death, destitution, exile, bonds, the scourge, and
the other pains which even the most insensible feel. But to states, death, which
seems to emancipate individuals from all punishments, is itself a punishment;
for a state should be so constituted as to be eternal. And thus death is not
natural to a republic as to a man, to whom death is not only necessary, but often
even desirable. But when a state is destroyed, obliterated, annihilated, it is
as if (to compare great things with small) this whole world perished and
collapsed." Cicero said this because he, with the Platonists, believed that the world
would not perish. It is therefore agreed that, according to Cicero, a state
should engage in war for the safety which preserves the state permanently in
existence though its citizens change; as the foliage of an olive or laurel, or any
tree of this kind, is perennial, the old leaves being replaced by fresh ones.
For death, as he says, is no punishment to individuals, but rather delivers them
from all other punishments, but it is a punishment to the state. And therefore
it is reasonably asked whether the Saguntines did right when they chose that
their whole state should perish rather than that they should break faith with
the Roman republic; for this deed of theirs is applauded by the citizens of the
earthly republic. But I do not see how they could follow the advice of Cicero,
who tell us that no war is to be undertaken save for safety or for honor;
neither does he say which of these two is to be preferred, if a case should occur in
which the one could not be preserved without the loss of the other. For
manifestly, if the Saguntines chose safety, they must break faith; if they kept faith,
they must reject safety; as also it fell out. But the safety of the city of
God is such that it can be retained, or rather acquired, by faith and with faith;
but if faith be abandoned, no one can attain it. It is this thought of a most
steadfast and patient spirit that has made so many noble martyrs, while Romulus
has not had, and could not have, so much as one to die for his divinity.
CHAP. 7.--THAT THE WORLD'S BELIEF IN CHRIST IS THE RESULT OF DIVINE POWER, NOT
OF HUMAN PERSUASION.
But it is thoroughly ridiculous to make mention of the false divinity of
Romulus as any way comparable to that of Christ. Nevertheless, if Romulus lived
about six hundred years before Cicero, in an age which already was so
enlightened that it rejected all impossibilities, how much more, in an age which
certainly was more enlightened, being six hundred years later, the age of Cicero
himself, and of the emperors Augustus and Tiberius, would the human mind have
refused to listen to or believe in the resurrection of Christ's body and its
ascension into heaven, and have scouted it as an impossibility, had not the divinity of
the truth itself, or the truth of the divinity, and corroborating miraculous
signs, proved that it could happen and had happened? Through virtue of these
testimonies, and notwithstanding the opposition and terror of so many cruel
persecutions, the resurrection and immortality of the flesh, first in Christ, and
subsequently in all in the new world, was believed, was intrepidly proclaimed,
and was sown over the whole world, to be fertilized richly with the blood of the
martyrs. For the predictions of the prophets that had preceded the events were
read, they were corroborated by powerful signs, and the truth was seen to be
not contradictory to reason, but only different from customary ideas, so that at
length the world embraced the faith it had furiously persecuted.
CHAP. 8.--OF MIRACLES WHICH WERE WROUGHT THAT THE WORLD MIGHT BELIEVE IN
CHRIST, AND WHICH HAVE NOT CEASED SINCE THE WORLD BELIEVED.
Why, they say, are those miracles, which you affirm were wrought formerly,
wrought no longer? I might, indeed, reply that miracles were necessary before
the world believed, in order that it might believe. And whoever now-a-days
demands to see prodigies that he may believe, is himself a great prodigy, because
he does not believe, though the whole world does. But they make these objections
for the sole purpose of insinuating that even those former miracles were never
wrought. How, then, is it that everywhere Christ is celebrated with such firm
belief in His resurrection and ascension? How is it that in enlightened times,
in which every impossibility is rejected, the world has, without any miracles,
believed things marvellously incredible? Or will they say that these things
were credible, and therefore were credited? Why then do they themselves not
believe? Our argument, therefore, is a summary one--either incredible things which
were not witnessed have caused the world to believe other incredible things which
both occurred and were witnessed, or this matter was so credible that it
needed no miracles in proof of it, and therefore convicts these unbelievers of
unpardonable scepticism. This I might say for the sake of refuting these most
frivolous objectors. But we cannot deny that many miracles were wrought to confirm
that one grand and health-giving miracle of Christ's ascension to heaven with the
flesh in which He rose. For these most trustworthy books of ours contain in
one narrative both the miracles that were wrought and the creed which they were
wrought to confirm. The miracles were published that they might produce faith,
and the faith which they produced brought them into greater prominence. For they
are read in congregations that they may be believed, and yet they would not be
so read unless they were believed. For even now miracles are wrought in the
name of Christ, whether by His sacraments or by the prayers or relics of His
saints; but they are not so brilliant and conspicuous as to cause them to be
published with such glory as accompanied the former miracles. For the canon of the
sacred writings, which behoved to be closed,(1) causes those to be everywhere
recited, and to sink into the memory of all the congregations; but these modern
miracles are scarcely known even to the whole population in the midst of which
they are wrought, and at the best are confined to one spot. For frequently they
are known only to a very few persons, while all the rest are ignorant of them,
especially if the state is a large one; and when they are reported to other
persons in other localities, there is no sufficient authority to give them prompt
and unwavering credence, although they are reported to the faithful by the
faithful.
The miracle which was wrought at Milan when I was there, and by which a
blind man was restored to sight, could come to the knowledge of many; for not
only is the city a large one, but also the emperor was there at the time, and the
occurrence was witnessed by an immense concourse of people that had gathered to
the bodies of the martyrs Protasius and Gervasius, which had long lain
concealed and unknown, but were now made known to the bishop Ambrose in a dream, and
discovered by him. By virtue of these remains the darkness of that blind man was
scattered, and he saw the light of day.(2)
But who but a very small number are aware of the cure which was wrought
upon Innocentius, ex-advocate of the deputy prefecture, a cure wrought at
Carthage, in my presence, and under my own eyes? For when I and my brother Alypius,(3)
who were not yet clergymen,(4) though already servants of God, came from
abroad, this man received us, and made us live with him, for he and all his
household were devotedly pious. He was being treated by medical men for fistulae, of
which he had a large number intricately seated in the rectum. He had already
undergone an operation, and the surgeons were using every means at their command
for his relief. In that operation he had suffered long-continued and acute pain;
yet, among the many folds of the gut, one had escaped the operators so
entirely, that, though they ought, to have laid it open with the knife, they never
touched it. And thus, though all those that had been opened were cured, this one
remained as it was, and frustrated all their labor. The patient, having his
suspicions awakened by the delay thus occasioned, and fearing greatly a second
operation, which another medical man--one of his own domestics--had told him he must
undergo, though this man had not even been allowed to witness the first
operation, and had been banished from the house, and with difficulty allowed to come
back to his enraged master's presence,--the patient, I say, broke out to the
surgeons, saying, "Are you going to cut me again? Are you, after all, to fulfill
the prediction of that man whom you would not allow even to be present?" The
surgeons laughed at the unskillful doctor, and soothed their patient's fears with
fair words and promises. So several days passed, and yet nothing they tried
aid him good. Still they persisted in promising that they would cure that fistula
by drugs, without the knife. They called in also another old practitioner of
great repute in that department, Ammonius (for he was still alive at that time);
and he, after examining the part, promised the same result as themselves from
their care and skill. On this great authority, the patient became confident,
and, as if already well, vented his good spirits in facetious remarks at the
expense of his domestic physician, who had predicted a second operation. To make a
long story short, after a number of days had thus uselessly elapsed, the
surgeons, wearied and confused, had at last to confess that he could only be cured by
the knife. Agitated with excessive fear, he was terrified, and grew pale with
dread; and when he collected himself and was able to speak, he ordered them to
go away and never to return. Worn out with weeping, and driven by necessity, it
occurred to him to call in an Alexandrian, who was at that time esteemed a
wonderfully skillful operator, that he might perform the operation his rage would
not suffer them to do. But when he had come, and examined with a professional
eye the traces of their careful work, he acted the part of a good man, and
persuaded his patient to allow those same hands the satisfaction of finishing his
cure which had begun it with a skill that excited his admiration, adding that
there was no doubt his only hope of a cure was by an operation, but that it was
thoroughly inconsistent with his nature to win the credit of the cure by doing
the little that remained to be done, and rob of their reward men whose consummate
skill, care, and diligence he could not but admire when be saw the traces of
their work. They were therefore again received to favor; and it was agreed that,
in the presence of the Alexandrian, they should operate on the fistula, which,
by the consent of all, could now only be cured by the knife. The operation was
deferred till the following day. But when they had left, there arose in the
house such a wailing, in sympathy with the excessive despondency of the master,
that it seemed to us like the mourning at a funeral, and we could scarcely
repress it. Holy men were in the habit of visiting him daily; Saturninus of blessed
memory, at that time bishop of Uzali, and the presbyter Gelosus, and the
deacons of the church of Carthage; and among these was the bishop Aurelius, who alone
of them all survives,--a man to be named by us with due reverence,--and with
him I have often spoken of this affair, as we conversed together about the
wonderful works of God, and I have found that he distinctly remembers what I am now
relating. When these persons visited him that evening according to their
custom, he besought them, with pitiable tears, that they would do him the honor of
being present next day at what he judged his funeral rather than his suffering.
For such was the terror his former pains had produced, that he made no doubt he
would die in the hands of the surgeons. They comforted him, and exhorted him to
put his trust in God, and nerve his will like a man. Then we went to prayer;
but while we, in the usual way, were kneeling and bending to the ground, he cast
himself down, as if some one were hurling him violently to the earth, and
began to pray; but in what a manner, with what earnestness and emotion, with what a
flood of tears, with what groans and sobs, that shook his whole body, and
almost prevented him speaking, who can describe! Whether the others prayed, and had
not their attention wholly diverted by this conduct, I do not know. For
myself, I could not pray at all. This only I briefly said in my heart: "O Lord, what
prayers of Thy people dost Thou hear if Thou hearest not these?" For it seemed
to me that nothing could be added to this prayer, unless he expired in praying.
We rose from our knees, and, receiving the blessing of the bishop, departed,
the patient beseeching his visitors to be present next morning, they exhorting
him to keep up his heart. The dreaded day dawned. The servants of God were
present, as they had promised to be; the surgeons arrived; all that the
circumstances required was ready; the frightful instruments are produced; all look on in
wonder and suspense. While those who have most influence with the patient are
cheering his fainting spirit, his limbs are arranged on the couch so as to suit
the hand of the operator; the knots of the bandages are untied; the part is
bared; the surgeon examines it, and, with knife in hand, eagerly looks for the sinus
that is to be cut. He searches for it with his eyes; he feels for it with his
finger; he applies every kind of scrutiny: he finds a perfectly firm cicatrix!
No words of mine can describe the joy, and praise, and thanksgiving to the
merciful and almighty God which was poured from the lips of all, with tears of
gladness. Let the scene be imagined rather than described!
In the same city of Carthage lived Innocentia, a very devout woman of the
highest rank in the state. She had cancer in one of her breasts, a disease
which, as physicians say, is incurable. Ordinarily, therefore, they either
amputate, and so separate from the body the member on which the disease has seized, or,
that the patient's life may be prolonged a little, though death is inevitable
even if somewhat delayed, they abandon all remedies, following, as they say,
the advice of Hippocrates. This the lady we speak of had been advised to by a
skillful physician, who was intimate with her family; and she betook herself to
God alone by prayer. On the approach of Easter, she was instructed in a dream to
wait for the first woman that came out from the baptistery(1) after being
baptized, and to ask her to make the sign of Christ upon her sore. She did so, and
was immediately cured. The physician who had advised her to apply no remedy if
she wished to live a little longer, when he had examined her after this, and
found that she who, on his former examination, was afflicted with that disease was
now perfectly cured, eagerly asked her what remedy she had used, anxious, as
we may well believe, to discover the drug which should defeat the decision of
Hippocrates. But when she told him what had happened, he is said to have replied,
with religious politeness, though with a contemptuous tone, and an expression
which made her fear he would utter some blasphemy against Christ, "I thought
you would make some great discovery to me." She, shuddering at his indifference,
quickly replied, "What great thing was it for Christ to heal a cancer, who
raised one who had been four days dead?" When, therefore, I had heard this, I was
extremely indignant that so great a miracle wrought in that well-known city, and
on a person who was certainly not obscure, should not be divulged, and I
considered that she should be spoken to, if not reprimanded on this score. And when
she replied to me that she had not kept silence on the subject, I asked the
women with whom she was best acquainted whether they had ever heard of this
before. They told me they knew nothing of it. "See," I said, "what your not keeping
silence amounts to, since not even those who are so familiar with you know of
it." And as I had only briefly heard the story, I made her tell how the whole
thing happened, from beginning to end, while the other women listened in great
astonishment, and glorified God.
A gouty doctor of the same city, when he had given in his name for baptism,
and had been prohibited the day before his baptism from being baptized that
year, by black woolly-halted boys who appeared to him in his dreams, and whom he
understood to be devils, and when, though they trod on his feet, and inflicted
the acutest pain he had ever yet experienced, he refused to obey them, but
overcame them, and would not defer being washed in the layer of regeneration, was
relieved in the very act of baptism, not only of the extraordinary pain he was
tortured with, but also of the disease itself, so that, though he lived a long
time afterwards, he never suffered from gout; and yet who knows of this miracle?
We, however, do know it, and so, too, do the small number of brethren who were
in the neighborhood, and to whose ears it might come.
An old comedian of Curubis(1) was cured at baptism not only of paralysis,
but also of hernia, and, being delivered from both afflictions, came up out of
the font of regeneration as if he had had nothing wrong with his body. Who
outside of Curubis knows of this, or who but a very few who might hear it
elsewhere? But we, when we heard of it, made the man come to Carthage, by order of the
holy bishop Aurelius, although we had already ascertained the fact on the
information of persons whose word we could not doubt.
Hesperius, of a tribunitian family, and a neighbor of our own,(2) has a
farm called Zubedi in the Fussalian district;(3) and, finding that his family,
his cattle, and his servants were suffering from the malice of evil spirits, he
asked our presbyters, during my absence, that one of them would go with him and
banish the spirits by his prayers. One went, offered there the sacrifice of the
body of Christ, praying with all his might that that vexation might cease. It
did cease forthwith, through God's mercy. Now he had received from a friend of
his own some holy earth brought from Jerusalem, where Christ, having been
buried, rose again the third day. This earth he had hung up in his bedroom to
preserve himself from harm. But when his house was purged of that demoniacal
invasion, he began to consider what should be done with the earth; for his reverence
for it made him unwilling to have it any longer in his bedroom. It so happened
that I and Maximinus bishop of Synita, and then my colleague, were in the
neighborhood. Hesperius asked us to visit him, and we did so. When he had related all
the circumstances, he begged that the earth might be buried somewhere, and that
the spot should be made a place of prayer where Christians might assemble for
the worship of God. We made no objection: it was done as he desired. There was
in that neighborhood a young countryman who was paralytic, who, when he heard
of this, begged his parents to take him without delay to that holy place. When
he had been brought there, he prayed, and forthwith went away on his own feet
perfectly cured.
There is a country-seat called Victoriana, less than thirty miles from
Hippo-regius. At it there is a monument to the Milanese martyrs, Protasius and
Gervasius. Thither a young man was carried, who, when he was watering his horse
one summer day at noon in a pool of a river, had been taken possession of by a
devil. As he lay at the monument, near death, or even quite like a dead person,
the lady of the manor, with her maids and religious attendants, entered the
place for evening prayer and praise, as her custom was, and they began to sing
hymns. At this sound the young man, as if electrified, was thoroughly aroused, and
with frightful screaming seized the altar, and held it as if he did not dare or
were not able to let it go, and as if he were fixed or tied to it; and the
devil in him, with loud lamentation, besought that he might be spared, and
confessed where and when and how he took possession of the youth. At last, declaring
that he would go out of him, he named one by one the parts of his body which he
threatened to mutilate as he went out and with these words he departed from the
man. But his eye, falling out on his cheek, hung by a slender vein as by a
root, and the whole of the pupil which had been black became white. When this was
witnessed by those present (others too had now gathered to his cries, and had
all joined in prayer for him), although they were delighted that he had
recovered his sanity of mind, yet, on the other hand, they were grieved about his eye,
and said he should seek medical advice. But his sister's husband, who had
brought him there, said, "God, who has banished the devil, is able to restore his
eye at the prayers of His saints." Therewith he replaced the eye that was fallen
out and hanging, and bound it in its place with his handkerchief as well as he
could, and advised him not to loose the bandage for seven days. When he did so,
he found it quite healthy. Others also were cured there, but of them it were
tedious to speak.
I know that a young woman of Hippo was immediately dispossessed of a
devil, on anointing herself with oil, mixed with the tears of the prebsyter who had
been praying for her. I know also that a bishop once prayed for a demoniac
young man whom he never saw, and that he was cured on the spot.
There was a fellow-townsman of ours at Hippo, Florentius, an old man,
religious and poor, who supported himself as a tailor. Having lost his coat, and
not having means to buy another, he prayed to the Twenty Martyrs,(1) who have a
very celebrated memorial shrine in our town, begging in a distinct voice that he
might be clothed. Some scoffing young men, who happened to be present, heard
him, and followed him with their sarcasm as he went away, as if he had asked the
martyrs for fifty pence to buy a coat. But he, walking on in silence, saw on
the shore a great fish, gasping as if just cast up, and having secured it with
the good-natured assistance of the youths, he sold it for curing to a cook of
the name of Catosus, a good Christian man, telling him how he had come by it, and
receiving for it three hundred pence, which he laid out in wool, that his wife
might exercise her skill upon, and make into a coat for him. But, on cutting
up the fish, the cook found a gold ring in its belly; and forthwith, moved with
compassion, and influenced, too, by religious fear, gave it up to the man,
saying, "See how the Twenty Martyrs have clothed you."
When the bishop Projectus was bringing the relics of the most glorious
martyr Stephen to the waters of Tibilis, a great concourse of people came to meet
him at the shrine. There a blind woman entreated that she might be led to the
bishop who was carrying the relics. He gave her the flowers he was carrying. She
took them, applied them to her eyes, and forthwith saw. Those who were present
were astounded, while she, with every expression of joy, preceded them,
pursuing her way without further need of a guide.
Lucillus bishop of Sinita, in the neighborhood of the colonial town of
Hippo, was carrying in procession some relics of the same martyr, which had been
deposited in the castle of Sinita. A fistula under which he had long labored,
and which his private physician was watching an opportunity to cut, was suddenly
cured by the mere carrying of that sacred fardel,(2)--at least, afterwards
there was no trace of it in his body.
Eucharius, a Spanish priest, residing at Calama, was for a long time a
sufferer from stone. By the relics of the same martyr, which the bishop Possidius
brought him, he was cured. Afterwards the same priest, sinking under another
disease, was lying dead, and already they were binding his hands. By the succor
of the same martyr he was raised to life, the priest's cloak having been brought
from the oratory and laid upon the corpse.
There was there an old nobleman named Martial, who had a great aversion to
the Christian religion, but whose daughter was a Christian, while her husband
had been baptized that same year. When he was ill, they besought him with tears
and prayers to become a Christian, but he positively refused, and dismissed
them from his presence in a storm of indignation. It occurred to the son-in-law
to go to the oratory of St. Stephen, and there pray for him with all earnestness
that God might give him a right mind, so that he should not delay believing in
Christ. This he did with great groaning and tears, and the burning fervor of
sincere piety; then, as he left the place, he took some of the flowers that were
lying there, and, as it was already night, laid them by his father's head, who
so slept. And lo ! before dawn, he cries out for some one to run for the
bishop; but he happened at that time to be with me at Hippo. So when he had heard
that he was from home, he asked the presbyters to come. They came. To the joy and
amazement of all, he declared that he believed, and he was baptized. As long
as he remained in life, these words were ever on his lips: "Christ, receive my
spirit," though he was not aware that these were the last words of the most
blessed Stephen when he was stoned by the Jews. They were his last words also, for
not long after he himself also gave up the ghost.
There, too, by the same martyr, two men, one a citizen, the other a
stranger, were cured of gout; but while the citizen was absolutely cured, the
stranger was only informed what he should apply when the pain returned; and when he
followed this advice, the pain was at once relieved.
Audurus is the name of an estate, where there is a church that contains a
memorial shrine of the martyr Stephen. It happened that, as a little boy was
playing in the court, the oxen drawing a wagon went out of the track and crushed
him with the wheel, so that immediately he seemed at his last gasp. His mother
snatched him up, and laid him at the shrine, and not only did he revive, but
also appeared uninjured.
A religious female, who lived at Caspalium, a neighboring estate, when she
was so ill as to be despaired of, had her dress brought to this shrine, but
before it was brought back she was gone. However, her parents wrapped her corpse
in the dress, and, her breath returning, she became quite well.
At Hippo a Syrian called Bassus was praying at the relics of the same
martyr for his daughter, who was dangerously ill. He too had brought her dress with
him to the shrine. But as he prayed, behold, his servants ran from the house
to tell him she was dead. His friends, however, intercepted them, and forbade
them to tell him, lest he should bewail her in public. And when he had returned
to his house, which was already ringing with the lamentations of his family, and
had thrown on his daughter's body the dress he was carrying, she was restored
to life.
There, too, the son of a man, Irenaeus, one of our tax-gatherers, took ill
and died. And while his body was lying lifeless, and the last rites were being
prepared, amidst the weeping and mourning of all, one of the friends who were
consoling the father suggested that the body should be anointed with the oil of
the same martyr. It was done, and he revived.
Likewise Eleusinus, a man of tribunitian rank among us, laid his infant
son, who had died, on the shrine of the martyr, which is in the suburb where he
lived, and, after prayer, which he poured out there with many tears, he took up
his child alive.
What am I to do? I am so pressed by the promise of finishing this work,
that I cannot record all the miracles I know; and doubtless several of our
adherents, when they read what I have narrated, will regret that I have omitted so
many which they, as well as I, certainly know. Even now I beg these persons to
excuse me, and to consider how long it would take me to relate all those
miracles, which the necessity of finishing the work I have undertaken forces me to
omit. For were I to be silent of all others, and to record exclusively the miracles
of healing which were wrought in the district of Calama and of Hippo by means
of this martyr--I mean the most glorious Stephen--they would fill many volumes;
and yet all even of these could not be collected, but only those of which
narratives have been written for public recital. For when I saw, in our own times,
frequent signs of the presence of divine powers similar to those which had been
given of old, I desired that narratives might be written, judging that the
multitude should not remain ignorant of these things. It is not yet two years
since these relics were first brought to Hippo-regius, and though many of the
miracles which have been wrought by it have not, as I have the most certain means of
knowing, been recorded, those which have been published amount to almost
seventy at the hour at which I write. But at Calama, where these relics have been
for a longer time, and where more of the miracles were narrated for public
information, there are incomparably more.
At Uzali, too, a colony near Utica, many signal miracles were, to my
knowledge, wrought by the same martyr, whose relics had found a place there by
direction of the bishop Evodius, long before we had them at Hippo. But there the
custom of publishing narratives does not obtain, or, I should say, did not obtain,
for possibly it may now have been begun. For, when I was there recently, a
woman of rank, Petronia, had been miraculously cured of a serious illness of long
standing, in which all medical appliances had failed, and, with the consent of
the abovenamed bishop of the place, I exhorted her to publish an account of it
that might be read to the people. She most promptly obeyed, and inserted in her
narrative a circumstance which I cannot omit to mention, though I am compelled
to hasten on to the subjects which this work requires me to treat. She said
that she had been persuaded by a Jew to wear next her skin, under all her
clothes, a hair girdle, and on this girdle a ring, which, instead of a gem, had a
stone which had been found in the kidneys of an ox. Girt with this charm, she was
making her way to the threshold of the holy martyr. But, after leaving Carthage,
and when she had been lodging in her own demesne on the river Bagrada, and was
now rising to continue her journey, she saw her ring lying before her feet. In
great surprise she examined the hair girdle, and when she found it bound, as
it had been, quite firmly with knots, she conjectured that the ring had been
worn through and dropped off; but when she found that the ring was itself also
perfectly whole, she presumed that by this great miracle she had received somehow
a pledge of her cure, whereupon she untied the girdle, and cast it into the
river, and the ring along with it. This is not credited by those who do not
believe either that the Lord Jesus Christ came forth from His mother's womb without
destroying her virginity, and entered among His disciples when the doors were
shut; but let them make strict inquiry into this miracle, and if they find it
true, let them believe those others. The lady is of distinction, nobly born,
married to a nobleman. She resides at Carthage. The city is distinguished, the
person is distinguished, so that they who make inquiries cannot fail to find
satisfaction. Certainly the martyr himself, by whose prayers she was healed, believed
on the Son of her who remained a virgin; on Him who came in among the disciples
when the doors were shut; in fine,--and to this tends all that we have been
retailing,--on Him who ascended into heaven with the flesh in which He had risen;
and it is because he laid down his life for this faith that such miracles were
done by his means.
Even now, therefore, many miracles are wrought, the same God who wrought
those we read of still performing them, by whom He will and as He will; but they
are not as well known, nor are they beaten into the memory, like gravel, by
frequent reading, so that they cannot fall out of mind. For even where, as is now
done among ourselves, care is taken that the pamphlets of those who receive
benefit be read publicly, yet those who are present hear the narrative but once,
and many are absent; and so it comes to pass that even those who are present
forget in a few days what they heard, and scarcely one of them can be found who
will tell what he heard to one who he knows was not present.
One miracle was wrought among ourselves, which, though no greater than
those I have mentioned, was yet so signal and conspicuous, that I suppose there is
no inhabitant of Hippo who did not either see or hear of it, none who could
possibly forget it. There were seven brothers and three sisters of a noble family
of the Cappadocian Caesarea, who were cursed by their mother, a new-made
widow, on account of some wrong they had done her, and which she bitterly resented,
and who were visited with so severe a punishment from Heaven, that all of them
were seized with a hideous shaking in all their limbs. Unable, while presenting
this loathsome appearance, to endure the eyes of their fellow-citizens, they
wandered over almost the whole Roman world, each following his own direction.
Two of them came to Hippo, a brother and a sister, Paulus and Palladia, already
known in many other places by the fame of their wretched lot. Now it was about
fifteen days before Easter when they came, and they came daily to church, and
specially to the relics of the most glorious Stephen, praying that God might now
be appeased, and restore their former health. There, and wherever they went,
they attracted the attention of every one. Some who had seen them elsewhere, and
knew the cause of their trembling, told others as occasion offered. Easter
arrived, and on the Lord's day, in the morning, when there was now a large crowd
present, and the young man was holding the bars of the holy place where the
relics were, and praying, suddenly he fell down, and lay precisely as if asleep, but
not trembling as he was wont to do even in sleep. All present were astonished.
Some were alarmed, some were moved with pity; and while some were for lifting
him up, others prevented them, and said they should rather wait and see what
would result. And behold ! he rose up, and trembled no more, for he was healed,
and stood quite well, scanning those who were scanning him. Who then refrained
himself from praising God? The whole church was filled with the voices of those
who were shouting and congratulating him. Then they came running to me, where I
was sitting ready to come into the church. One after another they throng in,
the last comer telling me as news what the first had told me already; and while
I rejoiced and inwardly gave God thanks, the young man himself also enters,
with a number of others, falls at my knees, is raised up to receive my kiss. We go
in to the congregation: the church was full, and ringing with the shouts of
joy, "Thanks to God ! Praised be God !" every one joining and shouting on all
sides, "I have healed the people," and then with still louder voice shouting
again. Silence being at last obtained, the customary lessons of the divine
Scriptures were read. And when I came to my sermon, I made a few remarks suitable to the
occasion and the happy and joyful feeling, not desiring them to listen to me,
but rather to consider the eloquence of God in this divine work. The man dined
with us, and gave us a careful account of his own, his mother's, and his
family's calamity. Accordingly, on the following day, after delivering my sermon, I
promised that next day I would read his narrative to the people.(1) And when I
did so, the third day after Easter Sunday, I made the brother and sister both
stand on the steps of the raised place from which I used to speak; and while they
stood there their pamphlet was read.(2) The whole congregation, men and women
alike, saw the one standing without any unnatural movement, the other trembling
in all her limbs; so that those who had not before seen the man himself saw in
his sister what the divine compassion had removed from him. In him they saw
matter of congratulation, in her subject for prayer. Meanwhile, their pamphlet
being finished, I instructed them to withdraw from the gaze of the people; and I
had begun to discuss the whole matter somewhat more carefully, when lo ! as I
was proceeding, other voices are heard from the tomb of the martyr, shouting new
congratulations. My audience turned round, and began to run to the tomb. The
young woman, when she had come down from the steps where she had been standing,
went to pray at the holy relics, and no sooner had she touched the bars than
she, in the same way as her brother, collapsed, as if falling asleep, and rose up
cured. While, then, we were asking what had happened, and what occasioned this
noise of joy, they came into the basilica where we were, leading her from the
martyr's tomb in perfect health. Then, indeed, such a shout of wonder rose from
men and women together, that the exclamations and the tears seemed like never
to come to an end. She was led to the place where she had a little before stood
trembling. They now rejoiced that she was like her brother, as before they had
mourned that she remained unlike him; and as they had not yet uttered their
prayers in her behalf, they perceived that their intention of doing so had been
speedily heard. They shouted God's praises without words, but with such a noise
that our ears could scarcely bear it. What was there in the hearts of these
exultant people but the faith of Christ, for which Stephen had shed his blood?
CHAP. 9.--THAT ALL THE MIRACLES WHICH ARE DONE BY MEANS OF THE MARTYRS IN THE
NAME OF CHRIST TESTIFY TO THAT FAITH WHICH THE MARTYRS HAD IN CHRIST.
To what do these miracles witness, but to this faith which preaches Christ
risen in the flesh, and ascended with the same into heaven? For the martyrs
themselves were martyrs, that is to say, witnesses of this faith, drawing upon
themselves by their testimony the hatred of the world, and conquering the world
not by resisting it, but by dying. For this faith they died, and can now ask
these benefits from the Lord in whose name they were slain. For this faith their
marvellous constancy was exercised, so that in these miracles great power was
manifested as the result. For if the resurrection of the flesh to eternal life
had not taken place in Christ, and were not to be accomplished in His people, as
predicted by Christ, or by the prophets who foretold that Christ was to come,
why do the martyrs who were slain for this faith which proclaims the
resurrection possess such power? For whether God Himself wrought these miracles by that
wonderful manner of working by which, though Himself eternal, He produces effects
in time; or whether He wrought them by servants, and if so, whether He made
use of the spirits of martyrs as He uses men who are still in the body, or
effects all these marvels by means of angels, over whom He exerts an invisible,
immutable, incorporeal sway, so that what is said to be done by the martyrs is done
not by their operation, but only by their prayer and request; or whether,
finally, some things are done in one way, others in another, and so that man cannot
at all comprehend them,--nevertheless these miracles attest this faith which
preaches the resurrection of the flesh to eternal life.
CHAP. 10.--THAT THE MARTYRS WHO OBTAIN MANY MIRACLES IN ORDER THAT THE TRUE
GOD MAY BE WORSHIPPED, ARE WORTHY OF MUCH GREATER HONOR THAN THE DEMONS, WHO DO
SOME MARVELS THAT THEY THEMSELVES MAY BE SUPPOSED TO BE GOD.
Here perhaps our adversaries will say that their gods also have done some
wonderful things, if now they begin to compare their gods to our dead men. Or
will they also say that they have gods taken from among dead men, such as
Hercules, Romulus, and many others whom they fancy to have been received into the
number of the gods? But our martyrs are not our gods; for we know that the martyrs
and we have both but one God, and that the same. Nor yet are the miracles
which they maintain to have been done by means of their temples at all comparable
to those which are done by the tombs of our martyrs. If they seem similar, their
gods have been defeated by our martyrs as Pharaoh's magi were by Moses. In
reality, the demons wrought these marvels with the same impure pride with which
they aspired to be the gods of the nations; but the martyrs do these wonders, or
rather God does them while they pray and assist, in order that an impulse may
be given to the faith by which we believe that they are not our gods, but have,
together with ourselves, one God. In fine, they built temples to these gods of
theirs, and set up altars, and ordained priests, and appointed sacrifices; but
to our martyrs we build, not temples as if they were gods, but monuments as to
dead men whose spirits live with God. Neither do we erect altars at these
monuments that we may sacrifice to the martyrs, but to the one God of the martyrs
and of ourselves; and in this sacrifice they are named in their own place and
rank as men of God who conquered the world by confessing Him, but they are not
invoked by the sacrificing priest. For it is to God, not to them, he sacrifices,
though he sacrifices at their monument; for he is God's priest, not theirs. The
sacrifice itself, too, is the body of Christ, which is not offered to them,
because they themselves are this body. Which then can more readily be believed to
work miracles? They who wish themselves to be reckoned gods by those on whom
they work miracles, or those whose sole object in working any miracle is to
induce faith in God, and in Christ also as God? They who wished to turn even their
crimes into sacred rites, or those who are unwilling that even their own
praises be consecrated, and seek that everything for which they are justly praised be
ascribed to the glory of Him in whom they are praised? For in the Lord their
souls are praised. Let us therefore believe those who both speak the truth and
work wonders. For by speaking the truth they suffered, and so won the power of
working wonders. And the leading truth they professed is that Christ rose from
the dead, and first showed in His own flesh the immortality of the resurrection
which He promised should be ours, either in the beginning of the world to come,
or in the end of this world.
CHAP. 11.--AGAINST THE PLATONISTS, WHO ARGUE FROM THE PHYSICAL WEIGHT OF THE
ELEMENTS THAT AN EARTHLY BODY CANNOT INHABIT HEAVEN.
But against this great gift of God, these reasoners, "whose thoughts the
Lord knows that they are vain"(1) bring arguments from the weights of the
elements; for they have been taught by their master Plato that the two greatest
elements of the world, and the furthest removed from one another, are coupled and
united by the two intermediate, air and water. And consequently they say, since
the earth is the first of the elements, beginning from the base of the series,
the second the water above the earth, the third the air above the water, the
fourth the heaven above the air, it follows that a body of earth cannot live in
the heaven; for each element is poised by its own weight so as to preserve its
own place and rank. Behold with what arguments human infirmity, possessed with
vanity, contradicts the omnipotence of God! What, then, do so many earthly bodies
do in the air, since the air is the third element from the earth? Unless
perhaps He who has granted to the earthly bodies of birds that they be carried
through the air by the lightness of feathers and wings, has not been able to confer
upon the bodies of men made immortal the power to abide in the highest heaven.
The earthly animals, too, which cannot fly, among which are men, ought on these
terms to live under the earth, as fishes, which are the animals of the water,
live under the water. Why, then, can an animal of earth not live in the second
element, that is, in water, while it can in the third? Why, though it belongs
to the earth, is it forthwith suffocated if it is forced to live in the second
element next above earth, while it lives in the third, and cannot live out of
it? Is there a mistake here in the order of the elements, or is not the mistake
rather in their reasonings, and not in the nature of things? I will not repeat
what I said in the thirteenth book,(2) that many earthly bodies, though heavy
like lead, receive from the workman's hand a form which enables them to swim in
water; and yet it is denied that the omnipotent Worker can confer on the human
body a property which shall enable it to pass into heaven and dwell there.
But against what I have formerly said they can find nothing to say, even
though they introduce and make the most of this order of the elements in which
they confide. For if the order be that the earth is first, the water second, the
air third, the heaven fourth, then the soul is above all. For Aristotle said
that the soul was a fifth body, while Plato denied that it was a body at all. If
it were a fifth body, then certainly it would be above the rest; and if it is
not a body at all, so much the more does it rise above all. What, then, does it
do in an earthly body? What does this soul, which is finer than all else, do
in such a mass of matter as this? What does the lightest of substances do in
this ponderosity? this swiftest substance in such sluggishness? Will not the body
be raised to heaven by virtue of so excellent a nature as this? and if now
earthly bodies can retain the souls below, shall not the souls be one day able to
raise the earthly bodies above?
If we pass now to their miracles which they oppose to our martyrs as
wrought by their gods, shall not even these be found to make for us, and help out
our argument? For if any of the miracles of their gods are great, certainly that
is a great one which Varro mentions of a vestal virgin, who, when she was
endangered by a false accusation of unchastity, filled a sieve with water from the
Tiber, and carried it to her judges without any part of it leaking. Who kept the
weight of water in the sieve? Who prevented any drop from falling from it
through so many open holes? They will answer, Some god or some demon. If a god, is
he greater than the God who made the world? If a demon, is he mightier than an
angel who serves the God by whom the world was made? If, then, a lesser god,
angel, or demon could so sustain the weight of this liquid element that the water
might seem to have changed its nature, shall not Almighty God, who Himself
created all the elements, be able to eliminate from the earthly body its
heaviness, so that the quickened body shall dwell in whatever element the quickening
spirit pleases?
Then, again, since they give the air a middle place between the fire above
and the water beneath, how is it that we often find it between water and
water, and between the water and the earth? For what do they make of those watery
clouds, between which and the seas air is constantly found intervening? I should
like to know by what weight and order of the elements it comes to pass that
very violent and stormy torrents are suspended in the clouds above the earth
before they rush along upon the earth under the air. In fine, why is it that
throughout the whole globe the air is between the highest heaven and the earth, if its
place is between the sky and the water, as the place of the water is between
the sky and the earth?
Finally, if the order of the elements is so disposed that, as Plato
thinks, the two extremes, fire and earth, are united by the two means, air and water,
and that the fire occupies the highest part of the sky, and the earth the
lowest part, or as it were the foundation of the world, and that therefore earth
cannot be in the heavens, how is fire in the earth? For, according to this
reasoning, these two elements, earth and fire, ought to be so restricted to their own
places, the highest and the lowest, that neither the lowest can rise to rITe
place of the highest, nor the highest sink to that of the lowest. Thus, as they
think that no particle of earth is or shall ever be in the sky so we ought to
see no particle of fire on the earth. But the fact is that it exists to such an
extent, not only on but even under the earth, that the tops of mountains vomit
it forth; besides that we see it to exist on earth for human uses, and even to
be produced from the earth, since it is kindled from wood and stones, which are
without doubt earthly bodies. But that [upper] fire, they say, is tranquil,
pure, harmless, eternal; but this [earthly] fire is turbid, smoky, corruptible,
and corrupting. But it does not corrupt the mountains and caverns of the earth
in which it rages continually. But grant that the earthly fire is so unlike the
other as to suit its earthly position, why then do they object to our believing
that the nature of earthly bodies shall some day be made incorruptible and fit
for the sky, even as now fire is corruptible and suited to the earth? They
therefore adduce from their weights and order of the elements nothing from which
they can prove that it is impossible for Almighty God to make our bodies such
that they can dwell in the skies.
CHAP. 12.--AGAINST THE CALUMNIES WITH WHICH UNBELIEVERS THROW RIDICULE UPON
THE CHRISTIAN FAITH IN THE RESURRECTION OF THE FLESH.
But their way is to feign a scrupulous anxiety in investigating this
question, and to cast ridicule on our faith in the resurrection of the body, by
asking, Whether abortions shall rise? And as the Lord says, "Verily I say unto
you, not a hair of your head shall perish,"(1) shall all bodies have an equal
stature and strength, or shall there be differences in size? For if there is to be
equality, where shall those abortions, supposing that they rise again, get that
bulk which they had not here? Or if they shall not rise because they were not
born but cast out, they raise the same question about children who have died in
childhood, asking us whence they get the stature which we see they had not
here; for we will not say that those who have been not only born, but born again,
shall not rise again. Then, further, they ask of what size these equal bodies
shall be. For if all shall be as tall and large as were the tallest and largest
in this world, they ask us how it is that not only children but many full-grown
persons shall receive what they here did not possess, if each one is to
receive what he had here. And if the saying of the apostle, that we are all to come
to the "measure of the age of the fullness of Christ,"(1) or that other saying,
"Whom He predestinated to be conformed to the image of His Son,"(2) is to be
understood to mean that the stature and size of Christ's body shall be the
measure of the bodies of all those who shall be in His kingdom, then, say they, the
size and height of many must be diminished; and if so much of the bodily frame
itself be lost, what becomes of the saying, "Not a hair of your head shall
perish?" Besides, it might be asked regarding the hair itself, whether all that the
barber has cut off shall be restored? And if it is to be restored, who would
not shrink from such deformity? For as the same restoration will be made of what
has been pared off the nails, much will be replaced on the body which a regard
for its appearance had cut off. And where, then, will be its beauty, which
assuredly ought to be much greater in that immortal condition than it could be in
this corruptible state? On the other hand, if such things are not restored to
the body, they must perish; how, then, they say, shall not a hair of the head
perish? In like manner they reason about fatness and leanness; for if all are to
be equal, then certainly there shall not be some fat, others lean. Some,
therefore, shall gain, others lose something. Consequently there will not be a simple
restoration of what formerly existed, but, on the one hand, an addition of what
had no existence, and, on the other, a loss of what did before exist.
The difficulties, too, about the corruption and dissolution of dead
bodies,--that one is turned into dust, while another evaporates into the air; that
some are devoured by beasts, some by fire, while some perish by shipwreck or by
drowning in one shape or other, so that their bodies decay into liquid,these
difficulties give them immoderate alarm, and they believe that all those dissolved
elements cannot be gathered again and reconstructed into a body. They also
make eager use of all the deformities and blemishes which either accident or birth
has produced, and accordingly, with horror and derision, cite monstrous
births, and ask if every deformity will be preserved in the resurrection. For if we
say that no such thing shall be reproduced in the body of a man, they suppose
that they confute us by citing the marks of the wounds which we assert were found
in the risen body of the Lord Christ But of all these, the most difficult
question is, into whose body that flesh shall return which has been eaten and
assimilated by another man constrained by hunger to use it so; for it has been
converted into the flesh of the man who used it as his nutriment, and it filled up
those losses of flesh which famine had produced. For the sake, then, of
ridiculing the resurrection, they ask, Shall this return to the man whose flesh it
first was, or to him whose flesh it afterwards became? And thus, too, they seek to
give promise to the human soul of alternations of true misery and false
happiness, in accordance with Plato's theory; or, in accordance with Porphyry's, that,
after many transmigrations into different bodies, it ends its miseries. and
never more returns to them, not, however, by obtaining an immortal body, but by
escaping from every kind of body.
CHAP. 13.--WHETHER ABORTIONS, IF THEY ARE NUMBERED AMONG THE DEAD, SHALL NOT
ALSO HAVE A PART IN THE RESURRECTION.
To these objections, then, of our adversaries which I have thus detailed,
I will now reply, trusting that God will mercifully assist my endeavors. That
abortions, which, even supposing they were alive in the womb, did also die
there, shall rise again, I make bold neither to affirm nor to deny, although I fail
to see why, if they are not excluded from the number of the dead, they should
not attain to the resurrection of the dead. For either all the dead shall not
rise, and there will be to all eternity some souls without bodies though they
once had them,--only in their mother's womb, indeed; or, if all human souls shall
receive again the bodies which they had wherever they lived, and which they
left when they died, then I do not see how I can say that even those who died in
their mother's womb shall have no resurrection. But whichever of these opinions
any one may adopt concerning them, we must at least apply to them, if they rise
again, all that we have to say of infants who have been born.
CHAP. 14.--WHETHER INFANTS SHALL RISE IN THAT BODY WHICH THEY WOULD HAVE HAD
HAD THEY GROWN UP.
What, then, are we to say of infants, if not that they will not rise in
that diminutive body in which they died, but shall receive by the marvellous and
rapid operation of God that body which time by a slower process would have
given them? For in the Lord's words, where He says, "Not a hair of your head shall
perish,"(1) it is asserted that nothing which was possessed shall be wanting;
but it is not said that nothing which was not possessed shall be given. To the
dead infant there was wanting the perfect stature of its body; for even the
perfect infant lacks the perfection of bodily size, being capable of further
growth. This perfect stature is, in a sense, so possessed by all that they are
conceived and born with it,--that is, they have it potentially, though not yet in
actual bulk; just as all the members of the body are potentially in the seed,
though, even after the child is born, some of them, the teeth for examplé, may be
wanting. In this seminal principle of every substance, there seems to be, as it
were, the beginning of everything which does not yet exist, or rather does not
appear, but which in process of time will come into being, or rather into
sight. In this, therefore, the child who is to be tall or short is already tall or
short. And in the resurrection of the body, we need, for the same reason, fear
no bodily loss; for though all should be of equal size, and reach gigantic
proportions, lest the men who were largest here should lose anything of their bulk
and it should perish, in contradiction to the words of Christ, who said that
not a hair of their head should perish, yet why should there lack the means by
which that wonderful Worker should make such additions, seeing that He is the
Creator, who Himself created all things out of nothing?
CHAP. 15.--WHETHER THE BODIES OF ALL THE DEAD SHALL RISE THE SAME SIZE AS THE
LORD'S BODY.
It is certain that Christ rose in the same bodily stature in which He
died, and that it is wrong to say that, when the general resurrection shall have
arrived, His body shall, for the sake of equalling the tallest, assume
proportions which it had not when He appeared to the disciples in the figure with which
they Were familiar. But if we say that even the bodies of taller men are to be
reduced to the size of the Lord's body, there will be a great loss in many
bodies, though He promised that, not a hair of their head should perish. It remains,
therefore, that we conclude that every man shall receive his own size which he
haiti in youth, though he died an old man, or which he would have had,
supposing he died before his prime. As for what the apostle said of the measure of the
age of the fullness of Christ, we must either understand him to refer to
something else, viz., to the fact that the measure of Christ will be completed when
all the members among the Christian communities are added to the Head; or if we
are to refer it to the resurrection of the body, the meaning is that all shall
rise neither beyond nor under youth, but in that vigor and age to which we
know that Christ had arrived. For even the world's wisest men have fixed the bloom
of youth at about the age of thirty; and when this period has been passed, the
man begins to decline towards the defective and duller period of old age. And
therefore the apostle did not speak of the measure of the body, nor of the
measure of the stature, but of "the measure of the age of the fullness of Christ."
CHAP. 16.--WHAT IS MEANT BY THE CONFORMING OF THE SAINTS TO THE IMAGE OF TIlE
SON OF GOD.
Then, again, these words, "Predestinate to be conformed to the image of
the Son of God,"(2) may be understood of the inner man. So in another place He
says to us, "Be not conformed to this world, but be ye transformed in the
renewing of your mind."(3) In so far, then, as we are transformed so as not to be
conformed to the world, we are conformed to the Son of God. It may also be
understood thus, that as He was conformed to us by assuming mortality, we shall be
conformed to Him by immortality; and this indeed is connected with the resurrection
of the body. But if we are also taught in these words what form our bodies
shall rise in, as the measure we spoke of before, so also this conformity is to be
understood not of size, but of age.Accordingly all shall rise in the stature
they either had attained or would have attained had they lived to their prime,
although it will be no great disadvantage even if the form of the body he
infantine or aged, while no infirmity shall remain in the mind nor in the body
itself. So that even if any one contends that every person will rise again in the
same bodily form in which he died, we need not spend much labor in disputing with
him.
CHAP. 17.--WHETHER THE BODIES OF WOMEN SHALL RETAIN THEIR OWN SEX IN THE
RESURRECTION.
From the words, "Till we all come to a perfect man, to the measure of the
age of the fullness of Christ,"(4) and from the words, "Conformed to the image
of the Son of God,"(5) some conclude that women shall not rise women, but that
all shall be men, because God made man only of earth, and woman of the man.
For my part, they seem to be wiser who make no doubt that both sexes shall rise,
For there shall be no lust, which is now the cause of confusion. For before
they sinned, the man and the woman were naked, and were not ashamed. From those
bodies, then, vice shall be withdrawn, while nature shall be preserved. And the
sex of woman is not a vice, but nature. It shall then indeed be superior to
carnal intercourse and child-bearing; nevertheless the female members shall remain
adapted not to the old uses, but to a new beauty, which, so far from provoking
lust, now extinct, shall excite praise to the wisdom and clemency of God, who
both made what was not and delivered from corruption what He made. For at the
beginning of the human race the woman was made of a rib taken from the side of
the man while he slept; for it seemed fit that even then Christ and His Church
should be fore-shadowed in this event. For that sleep of the man was the death of
Christ, whose side, as He hung lifeless upon the cross, was pierced with a
spear, and there flowed from it blood and water, and these we know to be the
sacraments by which the Church is "built up." For Scripture used this very word, not
saying "He formed" or "framed," but "built her up into a woman;"(1) whence
also the apostle speaks of the edification of the body of Christ,(2) which is the
Church. The woman, therefore, is a creature of God even as the man; but by her
creation from man unity is commended; and the manner of her creation
prefigured, as has been said, Christ and the Church. He, then, who created both sexes
will restore both. Jesus Himself also, when asked by the Sadducees, who denied the
resurrection, which of the seven brothers should have to wife the woman whom
all in succession had taken to raise up seed to their brother, as the law
enjoined, says, "Ye do err, not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God."(3) And
though it was a fit opportunity for His saying, She about whom you make
inquiries shall herself be a man, and not a woman, He said nothing of the kind; but
"In the resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage, but are as the
angels of God in heaven."(4) They shall be equal to the angels in immortality
and happiness, not in flesh, nor in resurrection, which the angels did not
need, because they could not die. The Lord then denied that there would be in the
resurrection, not women, but marriages; and He uttered this denial in
circumstances in which the question mooted would have been more easily and speedily
solved by denying that the female sex would exist, if this had in truth been
foreknown by Him. But, indeed, He even affirmed that the sex should exist by saying,
"They shall not be given in marriage," which can only apply to females; "Neither
shall they marry," which applies to males. There shall therefore be those who
are in this world accustomed to marry and be given in marriage, only they shall
there make no such marriages.
CHAP. 18.--OF THE PERFECT MAN, THAT IS, CHRIST; AND OF HIS BODY, THAT IS, THE,
CHURCH, WHICH IS HIS FULLNESS.
To understand what the apostle means when he says that we shall all come
to a perfect man, we must consider the connection of the whole passage, which
runs thus: "He that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all
heavens, that He might fill all things. And He gave some, apostles; and some,
prophets; and some, evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers; for the perfecting
of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of
Christ: till we all come to the unity of the faith and knowledge of the Son of
God, to a perfect man, to the measure of the age of the fullness of Christ: that
we henceforth be no more children, tossed and carried about with every wind of
doctrine, by the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in
wait to deceive; but, speaking the truth in love, may grow up in Him in all
things, which is the Head, even Christ: from whom the whole body fitly joined
together and compacted by that which every joint supplieth, according to the
effectual working in the measure of every part, maketh increase of the body, unto the
edifying of itself in love."(5) Behold what the perfect man is--the head and
the body, which is made up of all the members, which in their own time shall be
perfected. But new additions are daily being made to this body while, the Church
is being built up, to which it is said, "Ye are the body of Christ and His
members;"(6) and again, "For His body's sake," he says, "which is the Church;"(7)
and again, "We being many are one head, one body."(8) It is of the edification
of this body that it is here, too, said, "For the perfecting of the saints,
for the work of the ministry, for the edification of the body of Christ;" and
then that passage of which we are now speaking is added, "Till we all come to the
unity of the faith and knowledge of the Son of God, to a perfect man, to the
measure of the age of the fullness of Christ," and so on. And he shows of what
body we are to understand this to be the measure, when he says, "That we may grow
up into Him in all things, which is the Head, even Christ: from whom the whole
body filly joined together and compacted by that which every joint supplieth,
according to the effectual working in the measure of every part." As,
therefore, there is a measure of every part, so there is a measure of the fullness of
the whole body which is made up of all its parts, and it is of this measure it is
said, "To the measure of the age of the fullness of Christ." This fullness he
spoke of also in the place where he says of Christ, "And gave Him to be the
Head over all things to the Church,(1) which is His body, the fullness of Him that
filleth all in all.'(2) But even if this should be referred to the form in
which each one shall rise, what should hinder us from applying to the woman what
is expressly said of the man, understanding both sexes to be included under the
general term "man?" For certainly in the saying, "Blessed is he who feareth the
Lord,"(3) women also who fear the Lord are included.
CHAP. 19.--THAT ALL BODILY BLEMISHES WHICH MAR HUMAN BEAUTY IN THIS LIFE SHALL
BE REMOVED IN THE RESURRECTION, THE NATURAL SUBSTANCE OF THE BODY REMAINING,
BUT THE QUALITY AND QUANTITY OF IT BEING ALTERED SO AS TO PRODUCE BEAUTY.
What am I to say now about the hair and nails? Once it is understood that
no part of the body shall so perish as to produce deformity in the body, it is
at the same time understood trial such things as would have produced a
deformity by their excessive proportions shall be added to the total bulk of the body,
not to parts in which the beauty of the proportion would thus be marred. Just
as if, after making a vessel of clay, one wished to make it over again of the
same clay, it would not be necessary that the same portion of the clay which had
formed the handle should again form the new handle, or that what had formed the
bottom should again do so, but only that the whole clay should go to make up
the whole new vessel, and that no part of it should be left unused. Wherefore,
if the hair that has been cropped and the nails that have been cut would cause a
deformity were they to be restored to their places, they shall not be
restored; and yet no one will lose these parts at the resurrection, for they shall be
changed into the same flesh, their substance being so altered as to preserve the
proportion of the various parts of the body. However, what our Lord said, "Not
a hair of your head shall perish," might more suitably be interpreted of the
number, and not of the length of the hairs, as He elsewhere says, "The hairs of
your head are all numbered."(4) Nor would I say this because I suppose that any
part naturally belonging to the body can perish, but that whatever deformity
was in it, and served to exhibit the penal condition in which we mortals are,
should be restored in such a way that, while the substance is entirely preserved,
the deformity shall perish. For if even a human workman, who has, for some
reason, made a deformed statue, can recast it and make it very beautiful, and this
without suffering any part of tile substance, but only the deformity to be
lost,--if he can, for example, remove some unbecoming or disproportionate part,
not by cutting off and separating this part from the whole, but by so breaking
down and mixing up the whole as to get rid of the blemish without diminishing the
quantity of his material,--shall we not think as highly of the almighty
Worker? Shall He not be able to remove and abolish all deformities of the human body,
whether common ones or rare and monstrous, which, though in keeping with this
miserable life, are yet not to be thought of in connection with that future
blessedness; and shall He not be able so to remove them that, while the natural
but unseemly blemishes are put an end to, the natural substance shall suffer no
diminution?
And consequently overgrown and emaciated persons need not fear that they
shall be in heaven of such a figure as they would not be even in this world if
they could help it. For all bodily beauty consists in the proportion of the
parts, together with a certain agreeableness of color. Where there is no
proportion, the eye is offended, either because there is something awanting, or too
small, or too large. And thus there shall be no deformity resulting from want of
proportion in that state in which all that is wrong is corrected, and all that is
defective supplied from resources the Creator wots of, and all that is
excessive removed without destroying the integrity of the substance. And as for the
pleasant color, how conspicuous shall it be where "the just shall shine forth as
the sun in the kingdom of their Father!"(5) This brightness we must rather
believe to have been concealed from the eyes of the disciples when Christ rose, than
to have been awanting. For weak human eyesight could not bear it, and it was
necessary that they should so look upon Him as to be able to recognize Him. For
this purpose also He allowed them to touch the marks of His wounds, and also
ate and drank,--not because He needed nourishment, but because He could take it
if He wished. Now, when an object, though present, is invisible to persons who
see other things which are present, as we say that that brightness was present
but invisible by those who saw other things, this is called in Greek
<greek>aorasia</greek>; and our Latin translators, for want of a better word, have
rendered this caecitas (blindness) in the book of Genesis. This blindness the men of
Sodom suffered when they sought the just Lot's gate and could not find it. But
if it had been blindness, that is to say, if they could see nothing, then they
would not have asked for the gate by which they might enter the house, but for
guides who might lead them away.
But the love we bear to the blessed martyrs causes us, I know not how, to
desire to see in the heavenly kingdom the marks of the wounds which they
received for the name of Christ, and possibly we shall see them. For this will not be
a deformity, but a mark of honor, and will add lustre to their appearance, and
a spiritual, if not a bodily beauty. And yet we need not believe that they to
whom it has been said, "Not a hair of your head shall perish," shall, in the
resurrection, want such of their members as they have been deprived of in their
martyrdom. But if it will be seemly in that new kingdom to have some marks of
these wounds still visible in that immortal flesh, the places where they have
been wounded or mutilated shall retain the scars without any of the members being
lost. While, therefore, it is quite true that no blemishes which the body has
sustained shall appear in the resurrection, yet we are not to reckon or name
these marks of virtue blemishes.
CHAP. 20.--THAT, IN THE RESURRECTION, THE SUBSTANCE OF OUR BODIES, HOWEVER
DISINTEGRATED, SHALL BE ENTIRELY REUNITED.
Far be it from us to fear that the omnipotence of the Creator cannot, for
the resuscitation and reanimation of our bodies, recall all the portions which
have been consumed by beasts or fire, or have been dissolved into dust or
ashes, or have decomposed into water, or evaporated into the air. Far from us be the
thought, that anything which escapes our observation in any most hidden recess
of nature either evades the knowledge or transcends the power of the Creator
of all things. Cicero, the great authority of our adversaries, wishing to define
God as accurately as possible, says, "God is a mind free and independent,
without materiality, perceiving and moving all things, and itself endowed with
eternal movement."(1) This he found in the systems of the greatest philosophers.
Let me ask, then, in their own language, how anything can either lie hid from Him
who perceives all things, or irrevocably escape Him who moves all things?
This leads me to reply to that question which seems the most difficult of
all,--To whom, in the resurrection, will belong the flesh of a dead man which
has become the flesh of a living man? For if some one, famishing for want and
pressed with hunger, use human flesh as food,--an extremity not unknown, as both
ancient history and the unhappy experience of our own days have taught us,--can
it be contended, with any show of reason, that all the flesh eaten has been
evacuated, and that none of it has been assimilated to the substance of the eater
though the very emaciation which existed before, and has now disappeared,
sufficiently indicates what large deficiencies have been filled up with this food?
But I have already made some remarks which will suffice for the solution of
this difficulty also. For all the flesh which hunger has consumed finds its way
into the air by evaporation, whence, as we have said, God Almighty can recall it.
That flesh, therefore, shall be restored to the man in whom it first became
human flesh. For it must be looked upon as borrowed by the other person, and,
like a pecuniary loan, must be returned to the lender. His own flesh, however,
which he lost by famine, shall be restored to him by Him who can recover even what
has evaporated. And though it had been absolutely annihilated, so that no part
of its substance remained in any secret spot of nature, the Almighty could
restore it by such means as He saw fit. For this sentence, uttered by the Truth,
"Not a hair of your head shall perish," forbids us to suppose that, though no
hair of a man's head can perish, yet the large portions of his flesh eaten and
consumed by the famishing can perish.
From all that we have thus considered, and discussed with such poor
ability as we can command, we gather this conclusion, that in the resurrection of the
flesh the body shall be of that size which it either had attained or should
have attained in the flower of its youth, and shall enjoy the beauty that arises
from preserving symmetry and proportion in all its members. And it is
reasonable to suppose that, for the preservation of this beauty, any part of the body's
substance, which, if placed in one spot, would produce a deformity, shall be
distributed through the whole of it, so that neither any part, nor the symmetry
of the whole, may be lost, but only the general stature of the body somewhat
increased by the distribution in all the parts of that which, in one place, would
have been unsightly. Or if it is contended that each will rise with the same
stature as that of the body he died in, we shall not obstinately dispute this,
provided only there be no deformity, no infirmity, no languor, no
corruption,--nothing of any kind which would ill become that kingdom in which the children of
the resurrection and of the promise shall be equal to the angels of God, if not
in body and age, at least in happiness.
CHAP. 21.--OF THE NEW SPIRITUAL BODY INTO WHICH THE FLESH OF THE SAINTS SHALL
BE TRANSFORMED.
Whatever, therefore, has been taken from the body, either during life or
after death shall be restored to it, and, in conjunction with what has remained
in the grave, shall rise again, transformed from the oldness of the animal body
into the newness of the spiritual body, and clothed in incorruption and
immortality. But even though the body has been all quite ground to powder by some
severe accident, or by the ruthlessness of enemies, and though it has been so
diligently scattered to the winds, or into the water, that there is no trace of it
left, yet it shall not be beyond the omnipotence of the Creator,--no, not a
hair of its head shall perish. The flesh shall then be spiritual, and subject to
the spirit, but still flesh, not spirit, as the spirit itself, when subject to
the flesh, was fleshly, but still spirit and not flesh. And of this we have
experimental proof in the deformity of our penal condition. For those persons were
carnal, not in a fleshly, but in a spiritual way, to whom the apostle said, "I
could not speak to you as unto spiritual, but as unto carnal."(1) And a man is
in this life spiritual in such a way, that he is yet carnal with respect to his
body, and sees another law in his members warring against the law of his mind;
but even in his body he will be spiritual when the same flesh shall have had
that resurrection of which these words speak, "It is sown an animal body, it
shall rise a spiritual body."(2) But what this spiritual body shall be and how
great its grace, I fear it were but rash to pronounce, seeing that we have as yet
no experience of it. Nevertheless, since it is fit that the joyfulness of our
hope should utter itself, and so show forth God's praise, and since it was from
the profoundest sentiment of ardent and holy love that the Psalmist cried, "O
Lord, I have loved the beauty of Thy house,"(3) we may, with God's help, speak
of the gifts He lavishes on men, good and bad alike, in this most wretched
life, and may do our best to conjecture the great glory of that state which we
cannot worthily speak of, because we have not yet experienced it, For I say nothing
of the time when God made man upright; I say nothing of the happy life of "the
man and his wife" in the fruitful garden, since it was so short that none of
their children experienced it: I speak only of this life which we know, and in
which we now are, from the temptations of which we cannot escape so long as we
are in it, no matter what progress we make, for it is all temptation, and I ask,
Who can describe the tokens of God's goodness that are extended to the human
race even in this life?
CHAP. 22.--OF THE MISERIES AND ILLS TO WHICH THE HUMAN RACE IS JUSTLY EXPOSED
THROUGH THE FIRST SIN, AND FROM WHICH NONE CAN BE DELIVERED SAVE BY CHRIST'S
GRACE.
That the whole human race has been condemned in its first origin, this
life itself, if life it is to be called, bears witness by the host of cruel ills
with which it is filled. Is not this proved by the profound and dreadful
ignorance which produces all the errors that enfold the children of Adam, and from
which no man can be delivered without toil, pain, and fear? Is it not proved by
his love of so many vain and hurtful things, which produces gnawing cares,
disquiet, griefs, fears, wild joys, quarrels, lawsuits, wars, treasons, angers,
hatreds, deceit, flattery, fraud, theft, robbery, perfidy, pride, ambition, envy,
murders, parricides, cruelty, ferocity, wickedness, luxury, insolence, impudence,
shamelessness, fornications, adulteries, incests, and the numberless
uncleannesses and unnatural acts of both sexes, which it is shameful so much as to
mention; sacrileges, heresies, blasphemies, perjuries, oppression of the innocent,
calumnies, plots, falsehoods, false witnessings, unrighteous judgments, violent
deeds, plunderings, and whatever similar wickedness has found its way into the
lives of men, though it cannot find its way into the conception of pure minds?
These are indeed the crimes of wicked men, yet they spring from that root of
error and misplaced love which is born with every son of Adam. For who is there
that has not observed with what profound ignorance, manifesting itself even in
infancy, and with what superfluity of foolish desires, beginning to appear in
boyhood, man comes into this life, so that, were he left to live as he pleased,
and to do whatever he pleased, he would plunge into all, or certainly into many
of those crimes and iniquities which I mentioned, and could not mention?
But because God does not wholly desert those whom He condemns, nor shuts
up in His anger His tender mercies, the human race is restrained by law and
instruction, which keep guard against the ignorance that besets us, and oppose the
assaults of vice, but are themselves full of labor and sorrow. For what mean
those multifarious threats which are used to restrain the folly of children? What
mean pedagogues, masters, the birch, the strap, the cane, the schooling which
Scripture says must be given a child, "beating him on the sides lest he wax
stubborn,"(1) and it be hardly possible or not possible at all to subdue him? Why
all these punishments, save to overcome ignorance and bridle evil
desires--these evils with which we come into the world? For why is it that we remember with
difficulty, and without difficulty forget? learn with difficulty, and without
difficulty remain ignorant? are diligent with difficulty, and without difficulty
are indolent? Does not this show what vitiated nature inclines and tends to by
its own weight, and what succor it needs if it is to be delivered? Inactivity,
sloth, laziness, negligence, are vices which shun labor, since labor, though
useful, is itself a punishment.
But, besides the punishments of childhood, without which there would be no
learning of what the parents wish,--and the parents rarely wish anything
useful to be taught,--who can describe, who can conceive the number and severity of
the punishments which afflict the human race,--pains which are not only the
accompaniment of the wickedness of godless men, but are a part of the human
condition and the common misery,--what fear and what grief are caused by bereavement
and mourning, by losses and condemnations, by fraud and falsehood, by false
suspicions, and all the crimes and wicked deeds of other men? For at their hands
we suffer robbery, captivity, chains, imprisonment, exile, torture, mutilation,
loss of sight, the violation of chastity to satisfy the lust of the oppressor,
and many other dreadful evils. What numberless casualties threaten our bodies
from without,--extremes of heat and cold, storms, floods, inundations,
lightning, thunder, hail, earthquakes, houses falling; or from the stumbling, or
shying, or vice of horses; from countless poisons. in fruits, water, air, animals;
from the painful or even deadly bites of wild animals; from the madness which a
mad dog communicates, so that even the animal which of all others is most gentle
and friendly to its own master, becomes an object of intenser fear than a lion
or dragon, and the man whom it has by chance infected with this pestilential
contagion becomes so rabid, that his parents, wife, children, dread him more
than any wild beast! What disasters are suffered by those who travel by land or
sea! What man can go out of his own house without being exposed on all hands to
unforeseen accidents? Returning home sound in limb, he slips on his own
doorstep, breaks his leg, and never recovers. What can seem safer than a man sitting in
his chair? Eli the priest fell from his, and broke his neck. How many
accidents do farmers, or rather all men, fear that the crops may suffer from the
weather, or the soil, or the ravages of destructive animals? Commonly they feel safe
when the crops are gathered and housed. Yet, to my certain knowledge, sudden
floods have driven the laborers away, and swept the barns clean of the finest
harvest. Is innocence a sufficient protection against the various assaults of
demons? That no man might think so, even baptized infants, who are certainly
unsurpassed in innocence, are sometimes so tormented, that God, who permits it,
teaches us hereby to bewail the calamities of this life, and to desire the felicity
of the life to come. As to bodily diseases, they are so numerous that they
cannot all be contained even in medical books. And in very many, or almost all of
them, the cures and remedies are themselves tortures, so that men are delivered
from a pain that destroys by a cure that pains. Has not the madness of thirst
driven men to drink human urine, and even their own? Has not hunger driven men
to eat human flesh, and that the flesh not of bodies found dead, but of bodies
slain for the purpose? Have not the fierce pangs of famine driven mothers to eat
their own children, incredibly savage as it seems? In fine, sleep itself,
which is justly called repose, how little of repose there sometimes is in it when
disturbed with dreams and visions; and with what terror is the wretched mind
overwhelmed by the appearances of things which are so presented, and which, as it
were so stand out before the senses, that we can not distinguish them from
realities! How wretchedly do false appearances distract men in certain diseases!
With what astonishing variety of appearances are even healthy men sometimes
deceived by evil spirits, who produce these delusions for the sake of perplexing the
senses of their victims, if they cannot succeed in seducing them to their side!
From this hell upon earth there is no escape, save through the grace of
the Saviour Christ, our God and Lord. The very name Jesus shows this, for it
means Saviour; and He saves us especially from passing out of this life into a more
wretched and eternal state, which is rather a death than a life. For in this
life, though holy men and holy pursuits afford us great consolations, yet the
blessings which men crave are not invariably bestowed upon them, lest religion
should be cultivated for the sake of these temporal advantages, while it ought
rather to be cultivated for the sake of that other life from which all evil is
excluded. Therefore, also, does grace aid good men in the midst of present
calamities, so that they are enabled to endure them with a constancy proportioned to
their faith. The world's sages affirm that philosophy contributes something to
this,--that philosophy which, according to Cicero, the gods have bestowed in
its purity only on a few men. They have never given, he says, nor can ever give,
a greater gift to men. So that even those against whom we are disputing have
been compelled to acknowledge, in some fashion, that the grace of God is
necessary for the acquisition, not, indeed, of any philosophy, but of the true
philosophy. And if the true philosophy--this sole support against the miseries of this
life--has been given by Heaven only to a few, it sufficiently appears from this
that the human race has been condemned to pay this penalty of wretchedness.
And as, according to their acknowledgment, no greater gift has been bestowed by
God, so it must be believed that it could be given only by that God whom they
themselves recognize as greater than all the gods they worship.
CHAP. 23.--OF THE MISERIES OF THIS LIFE WHICH ATTACH PECULIARLY TO THE TOIL OF
GOOD MEN. IRRESPECTIVE OF THOSE WHICH ARE COMMON TO THE GOOD AND BAD.
But, irrespective of the miseries which in this life are common to the
good and bad, the righteous undergo labors peculiar to themselves, in so far as
they make war upon their vices, and are involved in the temptations and perils of
such a contest. For though sometimes more violent and at other times slacker,
yet without intermission does the flesh lust against the spirit and the spirit
against the flesh, so that we cannot do the things we would,(1) and extirpate
all lust, but can only refuse consent to it, as God gives us ability, and so
keep it under, vigilantly keeping watch lest a semblance of truth deceive us, lest
a subtle discourse blind us, test error involve us in darkness, test we should
take good for evil or evil for good, lest fear should hinder us from doing
what we ought, or desire precipitate us into doing what we ought not, lest the sun
go down upon our wrath, lest hatred provoke us to render evil for evil, lest
unseemly or immoderate grief consume us, test an ungrateful disposition make us
slow to recognize benefits received, lest calumnies fret our conscience, lest
rash suspicion on our part deceive us regarding a friend, or false suspicion of
us on the part of others give us too much uneasiness, lest sin reign in our
mortal body to obey its desires, lest our members be used as the instruments of
unrighteousness, lest the eye follow lust, test thirst for revenge carry us away,
lest sight or thought dwell too long on some evil thing which gives us
pleasure, lest wicked or indecent language be willingly listened to, lest we do what
is pleasant but unlawful, and lest in this warfare, filled so abundantly with
toil and peril, we either hope to secure victory by our own strength, or
attribute it when secured to our own strength, and not to His grace of whom the apostle
says, "Thanks be unto God, who giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus
Christ;"(2) and in another place he says, "In all these things we are more than
conquerors through Him that loved us."(3) But yet we are to know this, that
however valorously we resist our vices, and however successful we are in overcoming
them, yet as long as we are in this body we have always reason to say to God,
Forgive us our debts."(4) But in that kingdom where we shall dwell for ever,
clothed in immortal bodies, we shall no longer have either conflicts or
debts,--as indeed we should not have had at any time or in any condition, had our nature
continued upright as it was created. Consequently even this our conflict, in
which we are exposed to peril, and from which we hope to be delivered by a final
victory, belongs to the ills of this life, which is proved by the witness of
so many grave evils to be a life under condemnation.
CHAP. 24.--OF THE BLESSINGS WITH WHICH THE CREATOR HAS FILLED THIS LIFE,
OBNOXIOUS THOUGH IT BE TO THE CURSE.
But we must now contemplate the rich and countless blessings with which
the goodness of God, who cares for all He has created, has filled this very
misery of the human race, which reflects His retributive justice. That first
blessing which He pronounced before the fall, when He said, "Increase, and multiply,
and replenish the earth,"(1) He did not inhibit after man had sinned, but the
fecundity originally bestowed remained in the condemned stock; and the vice of
sin, which has involved us in the necessity of dying, has yet not deprived us of
that wonderful power of seed, or rather of that still more marvellous power by
which seed is produced, and which seems to be as it were inwrought and inwoven
in the human body. But in this river, as I may call it, or torrent of the human
race, both elements are carried along together,--both the evil which is
derived from him who begets, and the good which is bestowed by Him who creates us. In
the original evil there are two things, sin and punishment; in the original
good, there are two other things, propagation and conformation. But of the evils,
of which the one, sin, arose from our audacity, and the other, punishment,
from God's judgment, we have already said as much as suits our present purpose. I
mean now to speak of the blessings which God has conferred or still confers
upon our nature, vitiated and condemned as it is. For in condemning it He did not
withdraw all that He had given it, else it had been annihilated; neither did
He, in penally subjecting it to the devil, remove it beyond His own power; for
not even the devil himself is outside of God's government, since the devil's
nature subsists only by the supreme Creator who gives being to all that in any form
exists.
Of these two blessings, then, which we have said flow from God's goodness,
as from a fountain, towards our nature, vitiated by sin and condemned to
punishment, the one, propagation, was conferred by God's benediction when He made
those first works, from which He rested on the seventh day. But the other,
conformation, is conferred in that work of His wherein "He worketh hitherto."(2) For
were He to withdraw His efficacious power from things, they should neither be
able to go on and complete the periods assigned to their measured movements, nor
should they even continue in possession of that nature they were created in.
God, then, so created man that He gave him what we may call fertility, whereby
he might propagate other men, giving them a congenital capacity to propagate
their kind, but not imposing on them any necessity to do so. This capacity God
withdraws at pleasure from individuals, making them barren; but from the whole
race He has not withdrawn the blessing of propagation once conferred. But though
not withdrawn on account of sin, this power of propagation is not what it would
have been had there been no sin. For since "man placed in honor fell, he has
become like the beasts,"(3) and generates as they do, though the little spark of
reason, which was the image of God in him, has not been quite quenched. But if
conformation were not added to propagation, there would be no reproduction of
one's kind. For even though there were no such thing as copulation, and God
wished to fill the earth with human inhabitants, He might create all these as He
created one without the help of human generation. And, indeed, even as it is,
those who copulate can generate nothing save by the creative energy of God. As,
therefore, in respect of that spiritual growth whereby a man is formed to piety
and righteousness, the apostle says, "Neither is he that planteth anything,
neither he that watereth, but God that giveth the increase,"(4) so also it must be
said that it is not he that generates that is anything, but God that giveth the
essential form; that it is not the mother who carries and nurses the fruit of
her womb that is anything, but God that giveth the increase. For He alone, by
that energy wherewith "He worketh hitherto," causes the seed to develop, and to
evolve from certain secret and invisible folds into the visible forms of beauty
which we see. He alone, coupling and connecting in some wonderful fashion the
spiritual and corporeal natures, the one to command, the other to obey, makes a
living being. And this work of His is so great and wonderful, that not only
man, who is a rational animal, and consequently more excellent than all other
animals of the earth, but even the most diminutive insect, cannot be considered
attentively without astonishment and without praising the Creator.
It is He, then, who has given to the human soul a mind, in which reason
and understanding lie as it were asleep during infancy, and as if they were not,
destined, however, to be awakened and exercised as years increase, so as to
become capable of knowledge and of receiving instruction, fit to understand what
is true and to love what is good. It is by this capacity the soul drinks in
wisdom, and becomes endowed with those virtues by which, in prudence, fortitude,
temperance, and righteousness, it makes war upon error and the other inborn
vices, and conquers them by fixing its desires upon no other object than the supreme
and unchangeable Good. And even though this be not uniformly the result, yet
who can competently utter or even conceive the grandeur of this work of the
Almighty, and the unspeakable boon He has conferred upon our rational nature, by
giving us even the capacity of such attainment? For over and above those arts
which are called virtues, and which teach us how we may spend our life well, and
attain to endless happiness,--arts which are given to the children of the
promise and the kingdom by the sole grace of God which is in Christ,--has not the
genius of man invented and applied countless astonishing arts, partly the result
of necessity, partly the result of exuberant invention, so that this vigor of
mind, which is so active in the discovery not merely of superfluous but even of
dangerous and destructive things, betokens an inexhaustible wealth in the nature
which can invent, learn, or employ such arts? What wonderful--one might say
stupefying--advances has human industry made in the arts of weaving and building,
of agriculture and navigation! With what endless variety are designs in
pottery, painting, and sculpture produced, and with what skill executed! What
wonderful spectacles are exhibited in the theatres, which those who have not seen them
cannot credit! How skillful the contrivances for catching, killing, or taming
wild beasts! And for the injury of men, also, how many kinds of poisons,
weapons, engines of destruction, have been invented, while for the preservation or
restoration of health the appliances and remedies are infinite! To provoke
appetite and please the palate, what a variety of seasonings have been concocted! To
express and gain entrance for thoughts, what a multitude and variety of signs
there are, among which speaking and writing hold the first place! what ornaments
has eloquence at command to delight the mind! what wealth of song is there to
captivate the ear! how many musical instruments and strains of harmony have
been devised! What skill has been attained in measures and numbers! with what
sagacity have the movements and connections of the stars been discovered! Who could
tell the thought that has been spent upon nature, even though, despairing of
recounting it in detail, he endeavored only to give a general view of it? In
fine, even the defence of errors and misapprehensions, which has illustrated the
genius of heretics and philosophers, cannot be sufficiently declared. For at
present it is the nature of the human mind which adorns this mortal life which we
are extolling, and not the faith and the way of truth which lead to
immortality. And since this great nature has certainly been created by the true and
supreme God, who administers all things He has made with absolute power and justice,
it could never have fallen into these miseries, nor have gone out of them to
miseries eternal, --saving only those who are redeemed,--had not an exceeding
great sin been found in the first man from whom the rest have sprung.
Moreover, even in the body, though it dies like that of the beasts, and is
in many ways weaker than theirs, what goodness of God, what providence of the
great Creator, is apparent! The organs of sense and the rest of the members,
are not they so placed, the appearance, and form, and stature of the body as a
whole, is it not so fashioned, as to indicate that it was made for the service of
a reasonable soul? Man has not been created stooping towards the earth, like
the irrational animals; but his bodily form, erect and looking heavenwards,
admonishes him to mind the things that are above. Then the marvellous nimbleness
which has been given to the tongue and the hands, fitting them to speak, and
write, and execute so many duties, and practise so many arts, does it not prove the
excellence of the soul for which such an assistant was provided? And even
apart from its adaptation to the work required of it, there is such a symmetry in
its various parts, and so beautiful a proportion maintained, that one is at a
loss to decide whether, in creating the body, greater regard was paid to utility
or to beauty. Assuredly no part of the body has been created for the sake of
utility which does not also contribute something to its beauty. And this would
be all the more apparent, if we knew more precisely how all its parts are
connected and adapted to one another, and were not limited in our observations to
what appears on the surface; for as to what is covered up and hidden from our
view, the intricate web of veins and nerves, the vital parts of all that lies under
the skin, no one can discover it. For although, with a cruel zeal for science,
some medical men, who are called anatomists, have dissected the bodies of the
dead, and sometimes even of sick persons who died under their knives, and have
inhumanly pried into the secrets of the human body to learn the nature of the
disease and its exact seat, and how it might be cured, yet those relations of
which I speak, and which form the concord,(1) or, as the Greeks call it,
"harmony," of the whole body outside and in, as of some instrument, no one has been
able to discover, because no one has been audacious enough to seek for them. But
if these could be known, then even the inward parts, which seem to have no
beauty, would so delight us with their exquisite fitness, as to afford a profounder
satisfaction to the mind--and the eyes are but its ministers--than the obvious
beauty which gratifies the eye. There are some things, too, which have such a
place in the body, that they obviously serve no useful purpose, but are solely
for beauty, as e.g. the teats on a man's breast, or the beard on his face; for
that this is for ornament, and not for protection, is proved by the bare faces
of women, who ought rather, as the weaker sex, to enjoy such a defence. If,
therefore, of all those members which are exposed to our view, there is certainly
not one in which beauty is sacrificed to utility, while there are some which
serve no purpose but only beauty, I think it can readily be concluded that in the
creation of the human body comeliness was more regarded than necessity. In
truth, necessity is a transitory thing; and the time is coming when we shall enjoy
one another's beauty without any lust,--a condition which will specially
redound to the praise of the Creator, who, as it is said in the psalm, has "put on
praise and comeliness,"(1)
How can I tell of the rest of creation, with all its beauty and utility,
which the divine goodness has given to man to please his eye and serve his
purposes, condemned though he is, and hurled into these labors and miseries? Shall I
speak of the manifold and various loveliness of sky, and earth, and sea; of
the plentiful supply and wonderful qualities of the light; of sun, moon, and
stars; of the shade of trees; of the colors and perfume of flowers; of the
multitude of birds, all differing in plumage and in song; of the variety of animals, of
which the smallest in size are often the most wonderful,--the works of ants
and bees astonishing us more than the huge bodies of whales? Shall I speak of the
sea, which itself is so grand a spectacle, when it arrays itself as it were in
vestures of various colors, now running through every shade of green, and
again becoming purple or blue? Is it not delightful to look at it in storm, and
experience the soothing complacency which it inspires, by suggesting that we
ourselves are not tossed and shipwrecked?(2) What shall I say of the numberless
kinds of food to alleviate hunger, and the variety of seasonings to stimulate
appetite which are scattered everywhere by nature, and for which we are not indebted
to the art of cookery? How many natural appliances are there for preserving
and restoring health! How grateful is the alternation of day and night! how
pleasant the breezes that cool the air! how abundant the supply of clothing
furnished us by trees and animals! Who can enumerate all the blessings we enjoy? If I
were to attempt to detail and unfold only these few which I have indicated in
the mass, such an enumeration would fill a volume. And all these are but the
solace of the wretched and condemned, not the rewards of the blessed. What then
shall these rewards be, if such be the blessings of a condemned state? What will
He give to those whom He has predestined to life, who has given such things even
to those whom He has predestined to death? What blessings will He in the
blessed life shower upon those for whom, even in this state of misery, He has been
willing that His only-begotten Son should endure such sufferings even to death?
Thus the apostle reasons concerning those who are predestined to that kingdom:
"He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He
not with Him also give us all things?"(3) When this promise is fulfilled, what
shall we be? What blessings shall we receive in that kingdom, since already we
have received as the pledge of them Christ's dying? In what condition shall the
spirit of man be, when it has no longer any vice at all; when it neither
yields to any, nor is in bondage to any, nor has to make war against any, but is
perfected, and enjoys undisturbed peace with itself? Shall it not then know all
things with certainty, and without any labor or error, when unhindered and
joyfully it drinks the wisdom of God at the fountain-head? What shall the body be,
when it is in every respect subject to the spirit, from which it shall draw a
life so sufficient, as to stand in need of no other nutriment? For it shall no
longer be animal, but spiritual, having indeed the substance of flesh, but without
any fleshly corruption.
CHAP. 25.--OF THE OBSTINACY OF THOSE INDIVIDUALS WHO IMPUGN THE RESURRECTION
OF THE BODY, THOUGH, AS WAS PREDICTED, THE WHOLE WORLD BELIEVES IT.
The foremost of the philosophers agree with us about the spiritual
felicity enjoyed by the blessed in the life to come; it is only the resurrection of
the flesh they call in question, and with all their might deny. But the mass of
men, learned and unlearned, the world's wise men and its fools, have believed,
and have left in meagre isolation the unbelievers, and have turned to Christ,
who in His own resurrection demonstrated the reality of that which seems to our
adversaries absurd. For the world has believed this which God predicted, as it
was also predicted that the world would believe,--a prediction not due to the
sorceries of Peter,(1) since it was uttered so long before. He who has predicted
these things, as I have already said, and am not ashamed to repeat, is the God
before whom all other divinities tremble, as Porphyry himself owns, and seeks
to prove, by testimonies from the oracles of these gods, and goes so far as to
call Him God the Father and King. Far be it from us to interpret these
predictions as they do who have not believed, along with the whole world, in that which
it was predicted the world would believe in. For why should we not rather
understand them as the world does, whose belief was predicted, and leave that
handful of unbelievers to their idle talk and obstinate and solitary infidelity? For
if they maintain that they interpret them differently only to avoid charging
Scripture with folly, and so doing an injury to that God to whom they bear so
notable a testimony, is it not a much greater injury they do Him when they say
that His predictions must be understood otherwise than the world believed them,
though He Himself praised, promised, accomplished this belief on the world's
part? And why cannot He cause the body to rise again, and live for ever? or is it
not to be believed that He will do this, because it is an undesirable thing, and
unworthy of God? Of His omnipotence, which effects so many great miracles, we
have already said enough. If they wish to know what the Almighty cannot do, I
shall tell them He cannot lie. Let us therefore believe what He can do, by
refusing to believe what He cannot do. Refusing to believe that He can lie, let them
believe that He will do what He has promised to do; and let them believe it as
the world has believed it, whose faith He predicted, whose faith He praised,
whose faith He promised, whose faith He now points to. But how do they prove
that the resurrection is an undesirable thing? There shall then be no corruption,
which is the only evil thing about the booty. I have already said enough about
the order of the elements, and the other fanciful objections men raise; and in
the thirteenth book I have, in my own judgment, sufficiently illustrated the
facility of movement which the incorruptible body shall enjoy, judging from the
ease and vigor we experience even now, when the body is in good health. Those
who have either not read the former books, or wish to refresh their memory, may
read them for themselves.
CHAP. 26.--THAT THE OPINION OF PORPHYRY, THAT THE SOUL, IN ORDER TO BE
BLESSED, MUST BE SEPARATED FROM EVERY KIND OF BODY, IS DEMOLISHED BY PLATO, WHO SAYS
THAT THE SUPREME GOD PROMISED THE GODS THAT THEY SHOULD NEVER BE OUSTED FROM
THEIR BODIES.
But, say they, Porphyry tells us that the soul, in order to be blessed,
must escape connection with every kind of body. It does not avail, therefore, to
say that the future body shall be incorruptible, if the soul cannot be blessed
till delivered from every kind of body. But in the book above mentioned I have
already sufficiently discussed this. This one thing only will I repeat,--let
Plato, their master, correct his writings, and say that their gods, in order to
be blessed, must quit their bodies, or, in other words, die; for he said that
they were shut up in celestial bodies, and that, nevertheless, the God who made
them promised them immortality,--that is to say, an eternal tenure of these same
bodies, such as was not provided for them naturally, but only by the further
intervention of His will, that thus they might be assured of felicity. In this
he obviously overturns their assertion that the resurrection of the body cannot
be believed because it is impossible; for, according to him, when the uncreated
God promised immortality to the created gods, He expressly said that He would
do what was impossible. For Plato tells us that He said, "As ye have had a
beginning, so you cannot be immortal and incorruptible; yet ye shall not decay, nor
shall any fate destroy you or prove stronger than my will, which more
effectually binds you to immortality than the bond of your nature keeps you from it."
If they who hear these words have, we do not say understanding, but ears, they
cannot doubt that Plato believed that God promised to the gods He had made that
He would effect an impossibility. For He who says, "Ye cannot be immortal, but
by my will ye shall be immortal," what else does He say than this, "I shall
make you what ye cannot be?" The body, therefore, shall be raised incorruptible,
immortal, spiritual, by Him who, according to Plato, has promised to do that
which is impossible. Why then do they still exclaim that this which God has
promised, which the world has believed on God's promise as was predicted, is an
impossibility? For what we say is, that the God who, even according to Plato, does
impossible things, will do this. It is not, then, necessary to the blessedness
of the soul that it be detached from a body of any kind whatever, but that it
receive an incorruptible body. And in what incorruptible body will they more
suitably rejoice than in that in which they groaned when it was corruptible? For
thus they shall not feel that dire craving which Virgil, in imitation of Plato,
has ascribed to them when he says that they wish to return again to their
bodies.(1) They shall not, I say, feel this desire to return to their bodies, since
they shall have those bodies to which a return was desired, and shall, indeed,
be in such thorough possession of them, that they shall never lose them even for
the briefest moment, nor ever lay them down in death.
CHAP. 27.--OF THE APPARENTLY CONFLICTING OPINIONS OF PLATO AND PORPHYRY, WHICH
WOULD HAVE CONDUCTED THEM BOTH TO THE TRUTH IF THEY COULD HAVE YIELDED TO ONE
ANOTHER.
Statements were made by Plato and Porphyry singly, which if they could
have Seen their way to hold in common, they might possibly have became Christians.
Plato said that souls could not exist eternally without bodies; for it was on
this account, he said, that the souls even of wise men must some time or other
return to their bodies. Porphyry, again, said that the purified soul, when it
has returned to the Father, shall never return to the ills of this world.
Consequently, if Plato had communicated to Porphyry that which he saw to be true,
that souls, though perfectly purified, and belonging to the wise and righteous,
must return to human bodies; and if Porphyry, again, had imparted to Plato the
truth which he saw, that holy soul, shall never return to the miseries of a
corruptible body, so that they should not have each held only his own opinion, but
should both have hold both truths, I think they would have seen that it follows
that the souls return to their bodies, and also that these bodies shall be such
as to afford them a blessed and immortal life. For, according to Plato, even
holy souls shall return to the body; according to Porphyry, holy souls shall not
return to the ills of this world. Let Porphyry then say with Plato, they shall
return to the body; let Plato say with Porphyry, they shall not return to
their old misery: and they will agree that they return to bodies in which they
shall suffer no more. And this is nothing else than what God has promised,--that He
will give eternal felicity to souls joined to their own bodies. For this, I
presume, both of them would readily concede, that if the souls of the saints are
to be reunited to bodies, it shall be to their own bodies, in Which they have
endured the miseries of this life, and in which, to escape these miseries, they
served God with piety and fidelity.
CHAP. 28.--WHAT PLATO OR LABEO, OR EVEN VARRO, MIGHT HAVE CONTRIBUTED TO THE
TRUE FAITH OF THE RESURRECTION, IF THEY HAD ADOPTED ONE ANOTHER'S OPINIONS INTO
ONE SCHEME.
Some Christians, who have a liking for Plato on account of his magnificent
style and the truths which he now and then uttered, say that he even held an
opinion similar to our own regarding the resurrection of the dead. Cicero,
however, alluding to this in his Republic, asserts that Plato meant it rather as a
playful fancy than as a reality; for he introduces a man(2) who had come to life
again, and gave a narrative of his experience in corroboration of the
doctrines of Plato. Labeo, too, says that two men died on one day, and met at a
cross-road, and that, being afterwards ordered to return to their bodies, they agreed
to be friends for life, and were so till they died again. But the
resurrection which these writers instance resembles that of those persons whom we have
ourselves known to rise again, and who came back indeed to this life, but not so
as never to die again. Marcus Varro, however, in his work On the Origin of the
Roman People, records something more remarkable; I think his own words should be
given. "Certain astrologers," he says, "have written that men are destined to
a new birth, which the Greeks call palingenesy. This will take place after four
hundred and forty years have elapsed; and then the same soul and the same
body, which were formerly united in the person, shall again be reunited." This
Varro, indeed, or those nameless astrologers,--for he does not give us the names of
the men whose statement he cites,--have affirmed what is indeed not altogether
true; for once the souls have returned to the bodies they wore, they shall
never afterwards leave them. Yet what they say upsets and demolishes much of that
idle talk of our adversaries about the impossibility of the resurrection. For
those who have been or are of this opinion, have not thought it possible that
bodies which have dissolved into air, or dust, or ashes, or water, or into the
bodies of the beasts or even of the men that fed on them, should be restored
again to that which they formerly were. And therefore, if Plato and Porphyry, or
rather, if their disciples now living, agree with us that holy souls shall return
to the body, as Plato says, and that, nevertheless, they shall not return to
misery, as Porphyry maintains, --if they accept the consequence of these two
propositions which is taught by the Christian faith, that they shall receive
bodies in which they may live eternally without suffering any misery,--let them also
adopt from Varro the opinion that they shall return to the same bodies as they
were formerly in, and thus the whole question of the eternal resurrection of
the body shall be resolved out of their own mouths.
CHAP. 29.--OF THE BEATIFIC VISION.
And now let us consider, with such ability as God may vouchsafe, how the
saints shall be employed when they are clothed in immortal and spiritual bodies,
and when the flesh shall live no longer in a fleshly but a spiritual fashion.
And indeed, to tell the truth, I am at a loss to understand the nature of that
employment, or, shall I rather say, repose and ease, for it has never come
within the range of my bodily senses. And if I should speak of my mind or
understanding, what is our understanding in comparison of its excellence? For then shall
be that "peace of God which," as the apostle says, "passeth all
understanding,"(1)--that is to say, all human, and perhaps all angelic understanding, but
certainly not the divine. That it passeth ours there is no doubt; but if it
passeth that of the angels,--and he who says ""all understanding" seems to make no
exception in their favor,then we must understand him to mean thai neither we nor
the angels can understand, as God understands, the peace which God Himself
enjoys. Doubtless this passeth all understanding but His own. But as we shall one
day be made to participate, according to our slender capacity, in His peace,
both in ourselves, and with our neighbor, and with God our chief good, in this
respect the angels understand the peace of God in their own measure, and men too,
though now far behind them, whatever spiritual advance they have made. For we
must remember how great a man he was who said, "We know in part, and we prophesy
in part, until that which is perfect is come;"(2) and "Now we see through a
glass, darkly; but then face to face."(3) Such also is now the vision of the holy
angels, who are also called our angels, because we, being rescued out of the
power of darkness, and receiving the earnest of the Spirit, are translated into
the kingdom of Christ, and already begin to belong to those angels with whom we
shall enjoy that holy and most delightful city of God of which we have now
written so much. Thus, then, the angels of God are our angels, as Christ is God's
and also ours. They are God's, because they have not abandoned Him; they are
ours, because we are their fellow-citizens. The Lord Jesus also said, "See that
ye despise not one of these little ones: for I say unto you, That in heaven
their angels do always see the face of my Father which is in heaven."(4) As, then,
they see, so shall we also see; but not yet do we thus see. Wherefore the
apostle uses the words cited a little ago, "Now we see through a glass, darkly; but
then face to face." This vision is reserved as the reward of our faith; and of
it the Apostle John also says, "When He shall appear, we shall be like Him, for
we shall see Him as He is."(5) "By "the face" of God we are to understand His
manifestation, and not a part of the body similar to that which in our bodies
we call by that name.
And so, when I am asked how the saints shall be employed in that spiritual
body, I do not say what I see, but I say what I believe, according to that
which I read in the psalm, "I believed, therefore have I spoken."(6) I say, then,
they shall in the body see God; but whether they shall see Him by means of the
body, as now we see the sun, moon, stars, sea, earth, and all that is in it,
that is a difficult question. For it is hard to say that the saints shall then
have such bodies that they shall not be able to shut and open their eyes as they
please; while it is harder still to say that every one who shuts his eyes shall
lose the vision of God. For if the prophet Elisha, though at a distance, saw
his servant Gehazi, who thought that his wickedness would escape his master's
observation and accepted gifts from Naaman the Syrian, whom the prophet had
cleansed from his foul leprosy, how much more shall the saints in the spiritual body
see all things, not only though their eyes be shut, but though they themselves
be at a great distance? For then shall be "that which is perfect," of which
the apostle says," We know in part, and we prophesy in part; but when that which
is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done away." Then, that
he may illustrate as well as possible, by a simile, how superior the future
life is to the life now lived, not only by ordinary men, but even by the foremost
of the saints, he says, "When I was a child, I understood as a child, I spake
as a child, I thought as a child; but when I became a man, I put away childish
things. Now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in
part; but then shall I know even as also I am known."(1) If, then, even in
this life, in which the prophetic power of remarkable men is no more worthy to be
compared to the vision of the future life than childhood is to manhood,
Elisha, though distant from his servant, saw him accepting gifts, shall we say that
when that which is perfect is come, and the corruptible body no longer oppresses
the soul, but is incorruptible and offers no impediment to it, the saints
shall need bodily eyes to see, though Elisha had no need of them to see his
servant? For, following the Septuagint version, these are the prophet's words: "Did
not my heart go with thee, when the man came out of his chariot to meet thee, and
thou tookedst his gifts?"(2) Or, as the presbyter Jerome rendered it from the
Hebrew, "Was not my heart present when the man turned from his chariot to meet
thee?" The prophet said that he saw this with his heart, miraculously aided by
God, as no one can doubt. But how much more abundantly shall the saints enjoy
this gift when God shall be all in all? Nevertheless the bodily eyes also shall
have their office and their place, and shall be used by the spirit through the
spiritual body. For the prophet did not forego the use of his eyes for seeing
what was before them, though he did not need them to see his absent servant, and
though he could have seen these present objects in spirit, and with his eyes
shut, as he saw things far distant in a place where he himself was not. Far be
it, then, from us to say that in the life to come the saints shall not see God
when their eyes are shut, since they shall always see Him with the spirit.
But the question arises, whether, when their eyes are open, they shall see
Him with the bodily eye? If the eyes of the spiritual body have no more power
than the eyes which we now possess, manifestly God cannot be seen with them.
They must be of a very different power if they can look upon that incorporeal
nature which is not contained in any place, but is all in every place. For though
we say that God is in heaven and on earth, as He, Himself says by the prophet,
"I fill heaven and earth,"(3) we do not mean that there is one part of God in
heaven and another part on earth; but He is all in heaven and all on earth, not
at alternate intervals of time, but both at once, as no bodily nature can be.
The eye, then, shall have a vastly superior power,--the power not of keen sight,
such as is ascribed to serpents or eagles, for however keenly these animals
see, they can discern nothing but bodily substances,--but the power of seeing
things incorporeal. Possibly it was this great power of vision which was
temporarily communicated to the eyes of the holy Job while yet in this mortal body, when
he says to God, "I have heard of Thee by the hearing of the ear; but now mine
eye seeth Thee: wherefore I abhor myself, and melt away, and count myself dust
and ashes;"(4) although there is no reason why we should not understand this of
the eve of the heart, of which the apostle says, "Having the eyes of your
heart illuminated."(5) But that God shall be seen with these eyes no Christian
doubts who believingly accepts what our God and Master says, "Blessed are the pure
in heart: for they shall see God."(6) But whether in the future life God shall
also be seen with the bodily eye, this is now our question. The expression of
Scripture, "And all flesh shall see the salvation of God,"(7) may without
difficulty be understood as if it were said, "And every man shall see the Christ of
God." And He certainly was seen in the body, and shall be seen in the body when
He judges quick and dead. And that Christ is the salvation of God, many other
passages of Scripture witness, but especially the words of the venerable Simeon,
who, when he had received into his hands the infant Christ, said, "Now lettest
Thou Thy servant depart in peace, according to Thy word: for mine eyes have
seen Thy salvation."(8) As for the words of the above-mentioned Job, as they are
found in the Hebrew manuscripts, "And in my flesh I shall see God,"(9) no doubt
they were a prophecy of the resurrection of the flesh; yet he does not say "by
the flesh." And indeed, if he had said this, it would still be possible that
Christ was meant by "God;" for Christ shall be seen by the flesh in the flesh.
But even understanding it of God, it is only equivalent to saying, I shall be in
tile flesh when I see God. Then the apostle's expression, "face to face,(10)
does not oblige us to believe that we shall see God by the bodily face in which
are the eyes of the body, for we shall see Him without intermission in spirit.
And if the apostle had not referred to the face of the inner man, he would not
have said, "But we, with unveiled face beholding as in a glass the glory of the
Lord, are transformed into the same image, from glory to glory, as by the
spirit of the Lord."(1) In the same sense we understand what the Psalmist sings,
"Draw near unto Him, and be enlightened; and your faces shall not be ashamed."(2)
For it is by faith we draw near to God, and faith is an act of the spirit, not
of the body. But as we do not know what degree of perfection the spiritual
body shall attain,--for here we speak of a matter of which we have no experience,
and upon which the authority of Scripture does not definitely pronounce,--it is
necessary that the words of the Book of Wisdom be illustrated in us: "The
thoughts of mortal men are timid, and our fore-castings uncertain."(3)
For if that reasoning of the philosophers, by which they attempt to make
out that intelligible or mental objects are so seen by the mind, and sensible or
bodily objects so seen by the body, that the former cannot be discerned by the
mind through the body, nor the latter by the mind itself without the body,--if
this reasoning were trustworthy, then it would certainly follow that God could
not be seen by the eye even of a spiritual body. But this reasoning is
exploded both by true reason and by prophetic authority. For who is so little
acquainted with the truth as to say that God has no cognisance of sensible objects? Has
He therefore a body, the eyes of which give Him this knowledge? Moreover, what
we have just been relating of the prophet Elisha, does this not sufficiently
show that bodily things can be discerned by the spirit without the help of the
body? For when that servant received the gifts, certainly this was a bodily or
material transaction, yet the prophet saw it not by the body, but by the spirit.
As, therefore, it is agreed that bodies are seen by the spirit, what if the
power of the spiritual body shall be so great that spirit also is seen by the
body? For God is a spirit. Besides, each man recognizes his own life--that life by
which he now lives in the body, and which vivifies these earthly members and
causes them to grow--by an interior sense, and not by his bodily eye; but the
life of other men, though it is invisible, he sees with the bodily eye. For how
do we distinguish between living and dead bodies, except by seeing at once both
the body and the life which we cannot see save by the eye? But a life without a
body we cannot see thus. Wherefore it may very well be, and it is thoroughly
credible, that we shall in the future world see the material forms of the new
heavens and the new earth in such a way that we shall most distinctly recognize
God everywhere present and governing all things, material as well as spiritual,
and shall see Him, not as now we understand the invisible things of God, by the
things which are made,(4) and see Him darkly, as in a mirror, and in part, and
rather by faith than by bodily vision of material appearances, but by means of
the bodies we shall wear and which we shall see wherever we turn our eyes. As
we do not believe, but see that the living men around us who are exercising
vital functions are alive, though we cannot see their life without their bodies,
but see it most distinctly by means of their bodies, so, wherever we shall look
with those spiritual eyes of our future bodies, we shall then, too, by means of
bodily substances behold God, though a spirit, ruling all things. Either,
therefore, the eyes shall possess some quality similar to that of the mind, by
which they may be able to discern spiritual things, and among these God,--a
supposition for which it is difficult or even impossible to find any support in
Scripture,--or, which is more easy to comprehend, God will be so known by us, and
shall be so much before us, that we shall see Him by the spirit in ourselves, in
one another, in Himself, in the new heavens and the new earth, in every created
thing which shall then exist; and also by the body we shall see Him in every
body which the keen vision of the eye of the spiritual body shall reach. Our
thoughts also shall be visible to all, for then shall be fulfilled the words of the
apostle, "Judge nothing before the time, until the Lord come, who both will
bring to light the hidden things of darkness, and will make manifest the thoughts
of the heart, and then shall every one have praise of God."(5)
CHAP. 30.--OF THE ETERNAL FELICITY OF THE CITY OF GOD, AND OF THE PERPETUAL
SABBATH.
How great shall be that felicity, which shall be tainted with no evil,
which shall lack no good, and which shall afford leisure for the praises of God,
who shall be all in all! For I know not what other employment there can be where
no lassitude shall slacken activity, nor any want stimulate to labor. I am
admonished also by the sacred song, in which I read or hear the words, "Blessed
are they that dwell in Thy house, O Lord; they will be still praising Thee."(6)
All the members and organs of the incorruptible body, which now we see to be
suited to various necessary uses, shall contribute to the praises of God; for in
that life necessity shall have no place, but full, certain, secure, everlasting
felicity. For all those parts(1) of the bodily harmony, which are distributed
through the whole body, within and without, and of which I have just been saying
that they at present elude our observation, shall then be discerned; and,
along with the other great and marvellous discoveries which shall then kindle
rational minds in praise of the great Artificer, there shall be the enjoyment of a
beauty which appeals to, the reason. What power of movement such bodies shall
possess, I have not the audacity rashly to define, as I have not the ability to
conceive. Nevertheless I will say that in any case, both in motion and at rest,
they shall be, as in their appearance, seemly; for into that state nothing
which is unseemly shall be admitted. One thing is certain, the body shall
forthwith be wherever the spirit wills, and the spirit shall will nothing which is
unbecoming either to the spirit or to the body. True honor shall be there, for it
shall be denied to none who is worthy, nor yielded to i any unworthy; neither
shall any unworthy person so much as sue for it, for none but the worthy shall be
there. True peace shall be there, where no one shall suffer opposition either
from himself or any other. God Himself, who is the Author of virtue, shall
there be its reward; for, as there is nothing greater or better, He has promised
Himself. What else was meant by His word through the prophet, "I will be your
God, and ye shall be my people,"(2) than, I shall be their satisfaction, I shall
be all that men honorably desire,--life, and health, and nourishment, and
plenty, and glory, and honor, and peace, and all good things? This, too, is the right
interpretation of the saying of the apostle, "That God may be all in all."(3)
He shall be the end of our desires who shall be seen without end, loved without
cloy, praised without weariness. This outgoing of affection, this employment,
shall certainly be, like eternal life itself, common to all.
But who can conceive, not to say describe, what degrees of honor and glory
shall be awarded to the various degrees of merit? Yet it cannot be doubted
that there shall be degrees. And in that blessed city there shall be this great
blessing, that no inferior shall envy any superior, as now the archangels are not
envied by the angels, because no one will wish to be what he has not received,
though bound in strictest concord with him who has received; as in the body
the finger does not seek to be the eye, though both members are harmoniously
included in the complete structure of the body. And thus, along with his gift,
greater or less, each shall receive this further gift of contentment to desire no
more than he has.
Neither are we to suppose that because sin shall have no power to delight
them, free will must be withdrawn. It will, on the contrary, be all the more
truly free, because set free from delight in sinning to take unfailing delight in
not sinning. For the first freedom of will which man received when he was
created upright consisted in an ability not to sin, but also in an ability to sin;
whereas this last freedom of will shall be superior, inasmuch. as it shall not
be able to sin. This, indeed, shall not be a natural ability, but the gift of
God. For it is one thing to be God, another thing to be a partaker of God. God
by nature cannot sin, but the partaker of God receives this inability from God.
And in this divine gift there was to be observed this gradation, that man
should first receive a free will by which he was able not to sin, and at last a free
will by which he was not able to sin,--the former being adapted to the
acquiring of merit, the latter to the enjoying of the reward.(4) But the nature thus
constituted, having sinned when it had the ability to do so, it is by a more
abundant grace that it is delivered so as to reach that freedom in which it cannot
sin. For as the first immortality which Adam lost by sinning consisted in his
being able not to die, while the last shall consist in his not being able to
die; so the first free will consisted in his being able not to sin, the last in
his not being able to sin. And thus piety and justice shall be as indefeasible
as happiness. For certainly by sinning we lost both piety and happiness; but
when we lost happiness, we did not lose the love of it. Are we to say that God
Himself is not free because He cannot sin? In that city, then, there shall be free
will, one in all the citizens, and indivisible in each, delivered from all
ill, filled with all good, enjoying indefeasibly the delights of eternal joys,
oblivious of sins, oblivious of sufferings, and yet not so oblivious of its
deliverance as to be ungrateful to its Deliverer.
The soul, then, shall have an intellectual remembrance of its past ills;
but, so far as regards sensible experience, they shall be quite forgotten. For a
skillful physician knows, indeed, professionally almost all diseases; but
experimentally he is ignorant of a great number which he himself has never suffered
from. As, therefore, there are two ways of knowing evil things,--one by mental
insight, the other by sensible experience, for it is one thing to understand
all vices by the wisdom of a cultivated mind, another to understand them by the
foolishness of an abandoned life,--so also there are two ways of forgetting
evils. For a well-instructed and learned man forgets them one way, and he who has
experimentally suffered from them forgets them another,--the former by
neglecting what he has learned, the latter by escaping what he has suffered. And in
this latter way the saints shall forget their past ills, for they shall have so
thoroughly escaped them all, that they shall be quite blotted out of their
experience. But their intellectual knowledge, which shall be great, shall keep them
acquainted not only with their own past woes, but with the eternal sufferings of
the lost. For if they were not to know that they had been miserable, how could
they, as the Psalmist says, for ever sing the mercies of God? Certainly that
city shall have no greater joy than the celebration of the grace of Christ, who
redeemed us by His blood. There shall be accomplished the words of the psalm,
"Be still, and know that I am God."(1) There shall be the great Sabbath which
has no evening, which God celebrated among His first works, as it is written,
"And God rested on the seventh day from all His works which He had made. And God
blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it; because that in it He had rested
from all His work which God began to make."(2) For we shall ourselves be the
seventh day, when we shall be filled and replenished with God's blessing and
sanctification. There shall we be still, and know that He is God; that He is that
which we ourselves aspired to be when we fell away from Him, and listened to the
voice of the seducer, "Ye shall be as gods,"(3) and so abandoned God, who would
have made us as gods, not by deserting Him, but by participating in Him. For
without Him what have we accomplished, save to perish in His anger? But when we
are restored by Him, and perfected with greater grace, we shall have eternal
leisure to see that He is God, for we shall be full of Him when He shall be all in
all. For even our good works, when they are understood to be rather His than
ours, are imputed to us that we may enjoy this Sabbath rest. For if we attribute
them to ourselves, they shall be servile; for it is said of the Sabbath, "Ye
shall do no servile work in it."(4) Wherefore also it is said by Ezekiel the
prophet, "And I gave them my Sabbaths to be a sign between me and them, that they
might know that I am the Lord who sanctify them."(5) This knowledge shall be
perfected when we shall be perfectly at rest, and shall perfectly know that He is
God.
This Sabbath shall appear still more clearly if we count the ages as days,
in accordance with the periods of time defined in Scripture, for that period
will be found to be the seventh. The first age, as the first day, extends from
Adam to the deluge; the second from the deluge to Abraham, equalling the first,
not in length of time, but in the number of generations, there being ten in
each. From Abraham to the advent of Christ there are, as the evangelist Matthew
calculates, three periods, in each of which are fourteen generations,--one period
from Abraham to David, a second from David to the captivity, a third from the
captivity to the birth of Christ in the flesh. There are thus five ages in all.
The sixth is now passing, and cannot be measured by any number of generations,
as it has been said, "It is not for you to know the times, which the Father
hath put in His own power."(6) After this period God shall rest as on the seventh
day, when He shall give us (who shall be the seventh day) rest in Himself.(7)
But there is not now space to treat of these ages; suffice it to say that the
seventh shall be our Sabbath, which shall be brought to a close, not by an
evening, but by the Lord's day, as an eighth and eternal day, consecrated by the
resurrection of Christ, and prefiguring the eternal repose not only of the spirit,
but also of the body. There we shall rest and see, see and love, love and
praise. This is what shall be in the end without end. For what other end do we
propose to ourselves than to attain to the kingdom of which there is no end?
I think I have now, by God's help, discharged my obligation in writing
this large work. Let those who think I have said too little, or those who think I
have said too much, forgive me; and let those who think I have said just enough
join me in giving thanks to God. Amen.