ON CHRISTIAN DOCTRINE: BOOK II
BOOK II.
ARGUMENT.
HAVING COMPLETED HIS EXPOSITION OF THINGS, THE AUTHOR NOW PROCEEDS TO DISCUSS
THE SUBJECT OF SIGNS. HE FIRST DEFINES WHAT A SIGN IS, AND SHOWS THAT THERE ARE
TWO CLASSES OF SIGNS, THE NATURAL AND THE CONVENTIONAL. OF CONVENTIONAL SIGNS
(WHICH ARE THE ONLY CLASS HERE NOTICED), WORDS ARE THE MOST NUMEROUS AND
IMPORTANT, AND ARE THOSE WITH WHICH THE INTERPRETER OF SCRIPTURE IS CHIEFLY
CONCERNED. THE DIFFICULTIES AND OBSCURITIES OF SCRIPTURE SPRING CHIEFLY FROM TWO
SOURCES, UNKNOWN AND AMBIGUOUS SIGNS. THE PRESENT BOOK DEALS ONLY WITH UNKNOWN SIGNS,
THE AMBIGUITIES OF LANGUAGE BEING RESERVED FOR TREATMENT IN THENEXT BOOK. THE
DIFFICULTY ARISING FROM IGNORANCE OF SIGNS IS TO BE REMOVED BYLEARNING THE GREEK
AND HEBREW LANGUAGES, IN WHICH SCRIPTURE IS WRITTEN, BY COMPARING THE VARIOUS
TRANSLATIONS, AND BY ATTENDING TO THE CONTEXT. IN THE INTERPRETATION OF
FIGURATIVE EXPRESSIONS, KNOWLEDGE OF THINGS IS AS NECESSARY AS KNOWLEDGE OF WORDS; AND
THE VARIOUS SCIENCES AND ARTS OF THE HEATHEN, SO FAR AS THEY ARE TRUE AND
USEFUL, MAY BE TURNED TO ACCOUNT IN REMOVING OUR IGNORANCE OF SIGNS, WHETHER THESE
BE DIRECT OR FIGURATIVE. WHILST EXPOSING THE FOLLY AND FUTILITY OF MANY HEATHEN
SUPERSTITIONS AND PRACTICES, THE AUTHOR POINTS OUT HOW ALL THAT IS SOUND AND
USEFUL IN THEIR SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHY MAY BE TURNED TO A CHRISTIAN USE. AND IN
CONCLUSION, HE SHOWS THE SPIRIT IN WHICH IT BEHOVES US TO ADDRESS OURSELVES TO
THE STUDY AND INTERPRETATION OF THE SACRED BOOKS.
CHAP. 1.--SIGNS, THEIR NATURE AND VARIETY.
1. As when I was writing about things, I introduced the subject with a
warning against attending to anything but what they are in themselves,(1) even
though they are signs of something else, so now, when I come in its turn to
discuss the subject of signs, I lay down this direction, not to attend to what they
are in themselves, but to the fact that they are signs, that is, to what they
signify. For a sign is a thing which, over and above the impression it makes on
the senses, causes something else to come into the mind as a consequence of
itself: as when we see a footprint, we conclude that an animal whose footprint this
is has passed by; and when we see smoke, we know that there is fire beneath;
and when we hear the voice of a living man, we think of the feeling in his mind;
and when the trumpet sounds, soldiers know that they are to advance or
retreat, or do whatever else the state of the battle requires.
2. Now some signs are natural, others conventional. Natural signs are
those which, apart from any intention or desire of using them as signs, do yet lead
to the knowledge of something else, as, for example, smoke when it indicates
fire. For it is not from any intention of making it a sign that it is so, but
through attention to experience we come to know that fire is beneath, even when
nothing but smoke can be seen. And the footprint of an animal passing by belongs
to this class of signs. And the countenance of an angry or sorrowful man
indicates the feeling in his mind, independently of his will: and in the same way
every other emotion of the mind is betrayed by the tell-tale countenance, even
though we do nothing with the intention of making it known. This class of signs,
however, it is no part of my design to discuss at present. But as it comes
under this division of the subject, I could not altogether pass it over. It will be
enough to have noticed it thus far.
CHAP. 2.--OF THE KIND OF SIGNS WE ARE NOW CONCERNED WITH.
3. Conventional signs, on the other hand, are those which living beings
mutually exchange for the purpose of showing, as well as they can, the feelings
of their minds, or their perceptions, or their thoughts. Nor is there any reason
for giving a sign except the desire of drawing forth and conveying into
another's mind what the giver of the sign has in his own mind. We wish, then, to
consider and discuss this class of signs so far as men are concerned with it,
because even the signs which have been given us of God, and which are contained in
the Holy Scriptures, were made known to us through men--those, namely, who wrote
the Scriptures. The beasts, too, have certain signs among themselves by which
they make known the desires in their mind. For when the poultry-cock has
discovered food, he signals with his voice for the hen to run to him, and the dove by
cooing calls his mate, or is called by her in turn; and many signs of the same
kind are matters of common observation. Now whether these signs, like the
expression or the cry of a man in grief, follow the movement of the mind
instinctively and apart from any purpose, or whether they are really used with the
purpose of signification, is another question, and does not pertain to the matter in
hand. And this part of the subject I exclude from the scope of this work as not
necessary to my present object.
CHAP. 3.--AMONG SIGNS, WORDS HOLD THE CHIEF PLACE.
4. Of the signs, then, by which men communicate their thoughts to one
another, some relate to the sense of sight, some to that of hearing, a very few to
the other senses. For, when we nod, we give no sign except to the eyes of the
man to whom we wish by this sign to impart our desire. And some convey a great
deal by the motion of the hands: and actors by movements of all their limbs give
certain signs to the initiated, and, so to speak, address their conversation
to the eyes: and the military standards and flags convey through the eyes the
will of the commanders. And all these signs are as it were a kind of visible
words. The signs that address themselves to the ear are, as I have said, more
numerous, and for the most part consist of words. For though the bugle and the flute
and the lyre frequently give not only a sweet but a significant sound, yet all
these signs are very few in number compared with words. For among men words
have obtained far and away the chief place as a means of indicating the thoughts
of the mind. Our Lord, it is true, gave a sign through the odor of the ointment
which was poured out upon His feet;(1) and in the sacrament of His body and
blood He signified His will through the sense of taste; and when by touching the
hem of His garment the woman was made whole, the act was not wanting in
significance.(2) But the countless multitude of the signs through which men express
their thoughts consist of words. For I have been able to put into words all those
signs, the various classes of which I have briefly touched upon, but I could
by no effort express words in terms of those signs.
CHAP. 4.--ORIGIN OF WRITING.
5. But because words pass away as soon as they strike upon the air, and
last no longer than their sound, men have by means of letters formed signs of
words. Thus the sounds of the voice are made visible to the eye, not of course as
sounds, but by means of certain signs. It has been found impossible, however,
to make those signs common to all nations owing to the sin of discord among men,
which springs from every man trying to snatch the chief place for himself. And
that celebrated tower which was built to reach to heaven was an indication of
this arrogance of spirit; and the ungodly men concerned in it justly earned the
punishment of having not their minds only, but their tongues besides, thrown
into confusion and discordance.(3)
CHAP. 5.--SCRIPTURE TRANSLATED INTO VARIOUS LANGUAGES.
6. And hence it happened that even Holy Scripture, which brings a remedy
for the terrible diseases of the human will, being at first set forth in one
language, by means of which it could at the fit season be disseminated through the
whole world, was interpreted into various tongues, and spread far and wide,
and thus became known to the nations for their salvation. And in reading it, men
seek nothing more than to find out the thought and will of those by whom it was
written, and through these to find out the will of God, in accordance with
which they believe these men to have spoken.
CHAP. 6.--USE OF THE OBSCURITIES IN SCRIPTURE WHICH ARISE FROM ITS FIGURATIVE
LANGUAGE.
7. But hasty and careless readers are led astray by many and manifold
obscurities and ambiguities, substituting one meaning for another; and in some
places they cannot hit upon even a fair interpretation. Some of the expressions are
so obscure as to shroud the meaning in the thickest darkness. And I do not
doubt that all this was divinely arranged for the purpose of subduing pride by
toil, and of preventing a feeling of satiety in the intellect, which generally
holds in small esteem what is discovered without difficulty. For why is it, I ask,
that if any one says that there are holy and just men whose life and
conversation the Church of Christ uses as a means of redeeming those who come to it from
all kinds of superstitions, and making them through their imitation of good
men members of its own body; men who, as good and true servants of God, have come
to the baptismal font laying down the burdens of the world, and who rising
thence do, through the implanting of the Holy Spirit, yield the fruit of a
two-fold love, a love, that is, of God and their neighbor;--how is it, I say, that if
a man says this, he does not please his hearer so much as when he draws the
same meaning from that passage in Canticles, where it is said of the Church, when
it is being praised under the figure of a beautiful woman, "Thy teeth are like
a flock of sheep that are shorn which came up from the washing, whereof every
one bears twins, and none is barren among them?"(1) Does the hearer learn
anything more than when he listens to the same thought expressed in the plainest
language, without the help of this figure? And yet, I don't know why, I feel
greater pleasure in contemplating holy men, when I view them as the teeth of the
Church, tearing men away from their errors, and bringing them into the Church's
body, with all their harshness softened down, just as if they had been torn off
and masticated by the teeth. It is with the greatest pleasure, too, that I
recognize them under the figure of sheep that have been shorn, laying down the
burthens of the world like fleeces, and coming up from the washing, i.e., from
baptism, and all bearing twins, i.e., the twin commandments of love, and none among
them barren in that holy fruit.
8. But why I view them with greater delight under that aspect than if no
such figure were drawn from the sacred books, though the fact would remain the
same and the knowledge the same, is another question, and one very difficult to
answer. Nobody, however, has any doubt about the facts, both that it is
pleasanter in some cases to have knowledge communicated through figures, and that what
is attended with difficulty in the seeking gives greater pleasure in the
finding.-- For those who seek but do not find suffer from hunger. Those, again, who
do not seek at all because they have what they require just beside them often
grow languid from satiety. Now weakness from either of these causes is to be
avoided. Accordingly the Holy Spirit has, with admirable wisdom and care for our
welfare, so arranged the Holy Scriptures as by the plainer passages to satisfy
our hunger, and by the more obscure to stimulate our appetite. For almost
nothing is dug out of those obscure passages which may not be found set forth in the
plainest language elsewhere.
CHAP. 7.--STEPS TO WISDOM: FIRST, FEAR; SECOND, PIETY; THIRD, KNOWLEDGE;
FOURTH, RESOLUTION; FIFTH, COUNSEL; SIXTH, PURIFICATION OF HEART; SEVENTH, STOP OR
TERMINATION, WISDOM.
9. First of all, then, it is necessary that we should be led by the fear
of God to seek the knowledge of His will, what He commands us to desire and what
to avoid. Now this fear will of necessity excite in us the thought of our
mortality and of the death that is before us, and crucify all the motions of pride
as if our flesh were nailed to the tree. Next it is necessary to have our
hearts subdued by piety, and not to run in the face of Holy Scripture, whether when
understood it strikes at some of our sins, or, when not understood, we feel as
if we could be wiser and give better commands ourselves. We must rather think
and believe that whatever is there written, even though it be hidden, is better
and truer than anything we could devise by our own wisdom.
10. After these two steps of fear and piety, we come to the third step,
knowledge, of which I have now undertaken to treat. For in this every earnest
student of the Holy Scriptures exercises himself, to find nothing else in them but
that God is to be loved for His own sake, and our neighbor for God's sake; and
that God is to be loved with all the heart, and with all the soul, and with
all the mind, and one's neighbor as one's self--that is, in such a way that all
our love for our neighbor, like all our love for ourselves, should have
reference to God.(1) And on these two commandments I touched in the previous book when
I was treating about things.(2) It is necessary, then, that each man should
first of all find in the Scriptures that he, through being entangled in the love
of this world--i.e., of temporal things--has been drawn far away from such a
love for God and such a love for his neighbor as Scripture enjoins. Then that fear
which leads him to think of the judgment of God, and that piety which gives
him no option but to believe in and submit to the authority of Scripture, compel
him to bewail his condition. For the knowledge of a good hope makes a man not
boastful, but sorrowful. And in this frame of mind he implores with unremitting
prayers the comfort of the Divine help that he may not be overwhelmed in
despair, and so he gradually comes to the fourth step,--that is, strength and
resolution,(3)--in which he hungers and thirsts after righteousness. For in this frame
of mind he extricates himself from every form of fatal joy in transitory
things, and turning away from these, fixes his affection on things eternal, to wit,
the unchangeable Trinity in unity.
11. And when, to the extent of his power, he has gazed upon this object
shining from afar, and has felt that owing to the weakness of his sight he cannot
endure that matchless light, then in the fifth step--that is, in the counsel
of compassion(4)--he cleanses his soul, which is violently agitated, and
disturbs him with base desires, from the filth it has contracted. And at this stage he
exercises himself diligently in the love of his neighbor; and when he has
reached the point of loving his enemy, full of hopes and unbroken in strength, he
mounts to the sixth step, in which he purifies the eye itself which can see
God,(5) so far as God can be seen by those who as far as possible die to this
world. For men see Him just so far as they die to this world; and so far as they
live to it they see Him not. But yet, although that light may begin to appear
clearer, and not only more tolerable, but even more delightful, still it is only
through a glass darkly that we are said to see, because we walk by faith, not by
sight, while we continue to wander as strangers in this world, even though our
conversation be in heaven.(6) And at this stage, too, a man so purges the eye
of his affections as not to place his neighbor before, or even in comparison
with, the truth, and therefore not himself, because not him whom he loves as
himself. Accordingly, that holy man will be so single and so pure in heart, that he
will not step aside from the truth, either for the sake of pleasing men or with
a view to avoid any of the annoyances which beset this life. Such a son
ascends to wisdom, which is the seventh and last step, and which he enjoys in peace
and tranquillity. For the fear of God is the beginning of wisdom.(7) From that
beginning, then, till we reach wisdom itself, our way is by the steps now
described.
CHAP. 8.--THE CANONICAL BOOKS.
12. But let us now go back to consider the third step here mentioned, for
it is about it that I have set myself to speak and reason as the Lord shall
grant me wisdom. The most skillful interpreter of the sacred writings, then, will
be he who in the first place has read them all and retained them in his
knowledge, if not yet with full understanding, still with such knowledge as reading
gives,--those of them, at least, that arc called canonical. For he will read the
others with greater safety when built up in the belief of the truth, so that
they will not take first possession of a weak mind, nor, cheating it with
dangerous falsehoods and delusions, fill it with prejudices adverse to a sound
understanding. Now, in regard to the canonical Scriptures, he must follow the judgment
of the greater number of catholic churches; and among these, of course, a high
place must be given to such as have been thought worthy to be the seat of an
apostle and to receive epistles. Accordingly, among the canonical Scriptures he
will judge according to the following standard: to prefer those that are
received by all the catholic churches to those which some do not receive. Among
those, again, which are not received by all, he will prefer such as have the
sanction of the greater number and those of greater authority, to such as are held by
the smaller number and those of less authority. If, however, he shall find that
some books are held by the greater number of churches, and others by the
churches of greater authority (though this is not a very likely thing to happen), I
think that in such a case the authority on the two sides is to be looked upon
as equal.
13. Now the whole canon of Scripture on which we say this judgment is to
be exercised, is contained in the following books:--Five books of Moses, that
is, Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy; one book of Joshua the son
of Nun; one of Judges; one short book called Ruth, which seems rather to belong
to the beginning of Kings; next, four books of Kings, and two of Chronicles
--these last not following one another, but running parallel, so to speak, and
going over the same ground. The books now mentioned are history, which contains a
connected narrative of the times, and follows the order of the events. There
are other books which seem to follow no regular order, and are connected neither
with the order of the preceding books nor with one another, such as Job, and
Tobias, and Esther, and Judith, and the two books of Maccabees, and the two of
Ezra,(1) which last look more like a sequel to the continuous regular history
which terminates with the books of Kings and Chronicles. Next are the Prophets,
in which there is one book of the Psalms of David; and three books of Solomon,
viz., Proverbs, Song of Songs, and Ecclesiastes. For two books, one called
Wisdom and the other Ecclesiasticus, are ascribed to Solomon from a certain
resemblance of style, but the most likely opinion is that they were written by Jesus
the son of Sirach.(2) Still they are to be reckoned among the prophetical books,
since they have attained recognition as being authoritative. The remainder are
the books which are strictly called the Prophets: twelve separate books of the
prophets which are connected with one another, and having never been disjoined,
are reckoned as one book; the names of these prophets are as follows:--Hosea,
Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk Zephaniah, Haggai,
Zechariah, Malachi; then there are the four greater prophets, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Daniel,
Ezekiel. The authority of the Old Testament(3) is contained within the limits
of these forty-four books. That of the New Testament, again, is contained within
the following:--Four books of the Gospel, according to Matthew, according to
Mark, according to Luke, according to John; fourteen epistles of the Apostle
Paul--one to the Romans, two to the Corinthians, one to the Galatians, to the
Ephesians, to the Philippians, two to the Thessalonians, one to the Colossians, two
to Timothy, one to Titus, to Philemon, to the Hebrews: two of Peter; three of
John; one of Jude; and one of James; one book of the Acts of the Apostles; and
one of the Revelation of John.
CHAP. 9.--HOW WE SHOULD PROCEED IN STUDYING SCRIPTURE.
14. In all these books those who fear God and are of a meek and pious
disposition seek the will of God. And in pursuing this search the first rule to be
observed is, as I said, to know these books, if not yet with the understanding,
still to read them so as to commit them to memory, or at least so as not to
remain wholly ignorant of them. Next, those matters that are plainly laid down in
them, whether rules of life or rules of faith, are to be searched into more
carefully and more diligently; and the more of these a man discovers, the more
capacious does his understanding become. For among the things that are plainly
laid down in Scripture are to be found all matters that concern faith and the
manner of life,--to wit, hope and love, of which I have spoken in the previous
book. After this, when we have made ourselves to a certain extent familiar with
the language of Scripture, we may proceed to open up and investigate the obscure
passages, and in doing so draw examples from the plainer expressions to throw
light upon the more obscure, and use the evidence of passages about which there
is no doubt to remove all hesitation in regard to the doubtful passages. And in
this matter memory counts for a great deal; but if the memory be defective, no
rules can supply the want.
CHAP. 10.--UNKNOWN OR AMBIGUOUS SIGNS PREVENT SCRIPTURE fROM BEING UNDERSTOOD.
15. Now there are two causes which prevent what is written from being
understood: its being vailed either under unknown, or under ambiguous signs. Signs
are either proper or figurative. They are called proper when they are used to
point out the objects they were designed to point out, as we say bos when we
mean an ox, because all men who with us use the Latin tongue call it by this name.
Signs are figurative when the things themselves which we indicate by the
proper names are used to signify something else, as we say bos, and understand by
that syllable the ox, which is ordinarily called by that name; but then further
by that ox understand a preacher of the gospel, as Scripture signifies,
according to the apostle's explanation, when it says: "Thou shalt not muzzle the ox
that treadeth out the corn."(4)
CHAP. 11.--KNOWLEDGE OF LANGUAGES, ESPECIALLY OF GREEK AND HEBREW, NECESSARY
TO REMOVE IGNORANCE or SIGNS.
16. The great remedy for ignorance of proper signs is knowledge of
languages. And men who speak the Latin tongue, of whom are those I have undertaken to
instruct, need two other languages for the knowledge of Scripture, Hebrew and
Greek, that they may have recourse to the original texts if the endless
diversity of the Latin translators throw them into doubt. Although, indeed, we often
find Hebrew words untranslated in the books as for example, Amen, Halleluia,
Racha, Hosanna, and others of the same kind. Some of these, although they could
have been translated, have been preserved in their original form on account of the
more sacred authority that attaches to it, as for example, Amen and Halleluia.
Some of them, again, are said to be untranslatable into another tongue, of
which the other two I have mentioned are examples. For in some languages there are
words that cannot be translated into the idiom of another language. And this
happens chiefly in the case of interjections, which are words that express
rather an emotion of the mind than any part of a thought we have in our mind. And
the two given above are said to be of this kind, Racha expressing the cry of an
angry man, Hosanna that of a joyful man. But the knowledge of these languages is
necessary, not for the sake of a few words like these which it is very easy to
mark and to ask about, but, as has been said, on account of the diversities
among translators. For the translations of the Scriptures from Hebrew into Greek
can be counted, but the Latin translators are out of all number. For in the
early days of the faith every man who happened to get his hands upon a Greek
manuscript, and who thought he had any knowledge, were it ever so little, of the two
languages, ventured upon the work of translation.
CHAP. 12.--A DIVERSITY OF INTERPRETATIONS IS USEFUL. ERRORS ARISING FROM
AMBIGUOUS WORDS.
17. And this circumstance would assist rather than hinder the
understanding of Scripture, if only readers were not careless. For the examination of a
number of texts has often thrown light upon some of the more obscure passages; for
example, in that passage of the prophet Isaiah,(1) one translator reads: "And
do not despise the domestics of thy seed;"(2) another reads: "And do not
despise thine own flesh."(3) Each of these in turn confirms the other. For the one is
explained by the other; because "flesh" may be taken in its literal sense, so
that a man may understand that he is admonished not to despise his own body;
and "the domestics of thy seed" may be understood figuratively of Christians,
because they are spiritually born of the same seed as ourselves, namely, the Word.
When now the meaning of the two translators is compared, a more likely sense
of the words suggests itself, viz., that the command is not to despise our
kinsmen, because when one brings the expression "domestics of thy seed" into
relation with "flesh," kinsmen most naturally occur to one's mind. Whence, I think,
that expression of the apostle, when he says, "If by any means I may provoke to
emulation them which are my flesh, and might save some of them;"(4) that is,
that through emulation of those who had believed, some of them might believe too.
And he calls the Jews his "flesh," on account of the relationship of blood.
Again, that passage from the same prophet Isaiah:(5) "If ye will not believe, ye
shall not understand,"(6) another has translated: "If ye will not believe, ye
shall not abide."(7) Now which of these is the literal translation cannot be
ascertained without reference to the text in the original tongue. And yet to those
who read with knowledge, a great truth is to be found in each. For it is
difficult for interpreters to differ so widely as not to touch at some point.
Accordingly here, as understanding consists in sight, and is abiding, but faith feeds
us as babes, upon milk, in the cradles of temporal things (for now we walk by
faith, not by sight);(8) as, moreover, unless we walk by faith, we shall not
attain to sight, which does not pass away, but abides, our understanding being
purified by holding to the truth;--for these reasons one says," If ye will not
believe, ye shall not understand;" but the other, "If ye will not believe, ye
shall not abide."
18. And very often a translator, to whom the meaning is not well known, is
deceived by an ambiguity in the original language, and puts upon the passage a
construction that is wholly alien to the sense of the writer. As for example,
some texts read: "Their feet are sharp to shed blood;"(9) for the word
<greek>ozus</greek> among the Greeks means both sharp and swift. And so he saw the true
meaning who translated: "Their feet are swift to shed blood." The other,
taking the wrong sense of an ambiguous word, fell into error. Now translations such
as this are not obscure, but false; and there is a wide difference between the
two things. For we must learn not to interpret, but to correct texts of this
sort. For the same reason it is, that because the Greek word
<greek>hoskos</greek> means a calf, some have not understood that <greek>moskeumata</greek>(1) are
shoots of trees, and have translated the word "calves;" and this error has
crept into so many texts, that you can hardly find it written in any other way.
And yet the meaning is very clear; for it is made evident by the words that
follow. For "the plantings of an adulterer will not take deep root,"(2) is a more
suitable form of expression than the" calves;"(3) because these walk upon the
ground with their feet, and are not fixed in the earth by roots. In this passage,
indeed, the rest of the context also justifies this translation.
CHAP. 13.--HOW FAULTY INTERPRETATIONS CAN BE EMENDED.
19. But since we do not clearly see what the actual thought is which the
several translators endeavor to express, each according to his own ability and
judgment, unless we examine it in the language which they translate; and since
the translator, if he be not a very learned man, often departs from the meaning
of his author, we must either endeavor to get a knowledge of those languages
from which the Scriptures are translated into Latin, or we must get hold of the
translations of those who keep rather close to the letter of the original, not
because these are sufficient, but because we may use them to correct the freedom
or the error of others, who in their translations have chosen to follow the
sense quite as much as the words. For not only single words, but often whole
phrases are translated, which could not be translated at all into the Latin idiom
by any one who wished to hold by the usage of the ancients who spoke Latin. And
though these sometimes do not interfere with the understanding of the passage,
yet they are offensive to those who feel greater delight in things when even
the signs of those things are kept in their own purity. For what is called a
solecism is nothing else than the putting of words together according to a
different rule from that which those of our predecessors who spoke with any authority
followed. For whether we say inter homines (among men or inter hominibus, is of
no consequence to a man who only wishes to know the facts. And in the same way,
what is a barbarism but the pronouncing of a word in a different way from that
in which those who spoke Latin before us pronounced it? For whether the word
ignoscere (to pardon) should be pronounced with the third syllable long or
short, is not a matter of much concern to the man who is beseeching God, in any way
at all that he can get the words out, to pardon his sins. What then is purity
of speech, except the preserving of the custom of language established by the
authority of former speakers?
20. And men are easily offended in a matter of this kind, just in
proportion as they are weak; and they are weak just in proportion as they wish to seem
learned, not in the knowledge of things which tend to edification, but in that
of signs, by which it is hard not to be puffed up,(4) seeing that the knowledge
of things even would often set up our neck, if it were not held down by the
yoke of our Master. For how does it prevent our understanding it to have the
following passage thus expressed: "Qae est terra in qua isti insidunt super eam,
si bona est an nequam; el quae sunt civitates, in quibus ipsi inhabitant in
ipsis?"(5) And I am more disposed to think that this is simply the idiom of another
language than that any deeper meaning is intended. Again, that phrase, which
we cannot now take away from the lips of the people who sing it: "Super ipsum
autem floriet sanctificatio mea,"(6) surely takes away nothing from the meaning.
Yet a more learned man would prefer that this should be corrected, and that we
should say, not floriet, but florebit. Nor does anything stand in the way of
the correction being made, except the usage of the singers. Mistakes of this
kind, then, if a man do not choose to avoid them altogether, it is easy to treat
with indifference, as not interfering with a right understanding. But take, on
the other hand, the saying of the apostle: "Quod stultum est Dei, sapientius est
hominibus, et quod infirmum est Dei, fortius est hominibus."(7) If any one
should retain in this passage the Greek idiom, and say," Quod stultum est Dei,
sapientius est hominum et quod infirmum est Dei fortius est hominum,"(8) a quick
and careful reader would indeed by an effort attain to the true meaning, but
still a man of slower intelligence either would not understand it at all, or would
put an utterly false construction upon it. For not only is such a form of
speech faulty in the Latin tongue, but it is ambiguous too, as if the meaning might
be, that the folly of men or the weakness of men is wiser or stronger than that
of God. But indeed even the expression sapientius est hominibus (stronger than
men) is not free from ambiguity, even though it be free from solecism. For
whether hominibus is put as the plural of the dative or as the plural of the
ablative, does not appear, unless by reference to the meaning. It would be better
then to say, sapientius est guam homines, and fortius est quam homines.
CHAP. 14.--HOW THE MEANING OF UNKNOWN WORDS AND IDIOMS IS TO BE DISCOVERED.
21. About ambiguous signs, however, I shall speak afterwards. I am
treating at present of unknown signs, of which, as far as the words are concerned,
there are two kinds, For either a word or an idiom, of which the reader is
ignorant, brings him to a stop. Now if these belong to foreign tongues, we must either
make inquiry about them from men who speak those tongues, or if we have
leisure we must learn the tongues ourselves, or we must consult and compare several
translators. If, however, there are words or idioms in our own tongue that we
are unacquainted with, we gradually come to know them through being accustomed to
read or to hear them. There is nothing that it is better to commit to memory
than those kinds of words and phrases whose meaning we do not know, so that
where we happen to meet either with a more learned man of whom we can inquire, or
with a passage that shows, either by the preceding or succeeding context, or by
both, the force and significance of the phrase we are ignorant of, we can
easily by the help of our memory turn our attention to the matter and learn all
about it. So great, however, is the force of custom, even in regard to learning,
that those who have been in a sort of way nurtured and brought up on the study
of Holy Scripture, are surprised at other forms of speech, and think them less
pure Latin than those which they have learnt from Scripture, but which are not
to be found in Latin authors. In this matter, too, the great number of the
translators proves a very great assistance, if they are examined and discussed with
a careful comparison of their texts. Only all positive error must be removed.
For those who are anxious to know, the Scriptures ought in the first place to
use their skill in the correction of the texts, so that the uncorrected ones
should give way to the corrected, at least when they are copies of the same
translation.
CHAP. 15--AMONG VERSIONS A PREFERENCE IS GIVEN TO THE SEPTUAGINT AND THE ITALA.
22. Now among translations themselves the Italian (Itala)(1) is to be
preferred to the others, for it keeps closer to the words without prejudice to
clearness of expression. And to correct the Latin we must use the Greek versions,
among which the authority of the Septuagint is pre-eminent as far as the Old
Testament is concerned; for it is reported through all the more learned churches
that the seventy translators enjoyed so much of the presence and power of the
Holy Spirit in their work of translation, that among that number of men there
was but one voice. And if, as is reported, and as many not unworthy of confidence
assert,(2) they were separated during the work of translation, each man being
in a cell by himself, and yet nothing was found in the manuscript of any one of
them that was not found in the same words and in the same order of words in
all the rest, who dares put anything in comparison with an authority like this,
not to speak of preferring anything to it? And even if they conferred together
with the result that a unanimous agreement sprang out of the common labor and
judgment of them all; even so, it would not be right or becoming for any one man,
whatever his experience, to aspire to correct the unanimous opinion of many
venerable and learned men. Wherefore, even if anything is found in the original
Hebrew in a different form from that in which these men have expressed it, I
think we must give way to the dispensation of Providence which used these men to
bring it about, that books which the Jewish race were unwilling, either from
religious scruple or from jealousy, to make known to other nations, were, with the
assistance of the power of King Ptolemy, made known so long beforehand to the
nations which in the future were to believe in the Lord. And thus it is
possible that they translated in such a way as the Holy Spirit, who worked in them and
had given them all one voice, thought most suitable for the Gentiles. But
nevertheless, as I said above, a comparison of those translators also who have kept
most closely to the words, is often not without value as a help to the
clearing up of the meaning. The Latin texts, therefore, of the Old Testament are, as I
was about to say, to be corrected if necessary by the authority of the Greeks,
and especially by that of those who, though they were seventy in number, are
said to have translated as with one voice. As to the books of the New Testament,
again, if any perplexity arises from the diversities of the Latin texts, we
must of course yield to the Greek, especially those that are found in the
churches of greater learning and research.
CHAP. 16.--THE KNOWLEDGE BOTH OF LANGUAGE AND THINGS IS HELPFUL FOR THE
UNDERSTANDING OF FIGURATIVE EXPRESSIONS.
23. In the case of figurative signs, again, if ignorance of any of them
should chance to bring the reader to a stand-still, their meaning is to be traced
partly by the knowledge of languages, partly by the knowledge of things. The
pool of Siloam, for example, where the man whose eyes our Lord had anointed with
clay made out of spittle was commanded to wash, has a figurative significance,
and undoubtedly conveys a secret sense; but yet if the evangelist had not
interpreted that name,(1) a meaning so important would lie unnoticed. And we cannot
doubt that, in the same way, many Hebrew names which have not been interpreted
by the writers of those books, would, if any one could interpret them, be of
great value and service in solving the enigmas of Scripture. And a number of men
skilled in that language have conferred no small benefit on posterity by
explaining all these words without reference to their place in Scripture, and
telling us what Adam means, what Eve, what Abraham, what Moses, and also the names of
places, what Jerusalem signifies, or Sion, or Sinai, or Lebanon, or Jordan,
and whatever other names in that language we are not acquainted with. And when
these names have been investigated and explained, many figurative expressions in
Scripture become clear.
24. Ignorance of things, too, renders figurative expressions obscure, as
when we do not know the nature of the animals, or minerals, or plants, which are
frequently referred to in Scripture by way of comparison. The fact so well
known about the serpent, for example, that to protect its head it will present its
whole body to its assailants--how much light it throws upon the meaning of our
Lord's command, that we should be wise as serpents;(2) that is to say, that
for the sake of our head, which is Christ, we should willingly offer our body to
the persecutors, lest the Christian faith should, as it were, be destroyed in
us, if to save the body we deny our God! Or again, the statement that the
serpent gets rid of its old skin by squeezing itself through a narrow hole, and thus
acquires new strength--how appropriately it fits in with the direction to
imitate the wisdom of the serpent, and to put off the old man, as the apostle says,
that we may put on the new;(3) and to put it off, too, by coming through a
narrow place, according to the saying of our Lord, "Enter ye in at the strait
gate!"(4) As, then, knowledge of the nature of the serpent throws light upon many
metaphors which Scripture is accustomed to draw from that animal, so ignorance
of other animals, which are no less frequently mentioned by way of comparison,
is a very great drawback to the reader. And so in regard to minerals and plants:
knowledge of the carbuncle, for instance, which shines in the dark, throws
light upon many of the dark places in books too, where it is used metaphorically;
and ignorance of the beryl or the adamant often shuts the doors of knowledge.
And the only reason why we find it easy to understand that perpetual peace is
indicated by the olive branch which the dove brought with it when it returned to
the ark,(5) is that we know both that the smooth touch of olive oil is not
easily spoiled by a fluid of another kind, and that the tree itself is an
evergreen. Many, again, by reason of their ignorance of hyssop, not knowing the virtue
it has in cleansing the lungs, nor the power it is said to have of piercing
rocks with its roots, although it is a small and insignificant plant, cannot make
out why it is said, "Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean."(6)
25. Ignorance of numbers, too, prevents us from understanding things that
are set down in Scripture in a figurative and mystical way. A candid mind, if I
may so speak, cannot but be anxious, for example, to ascertain what is meant
by the fact that Moses and Elijah, and our Lord Himself, all fasted for forty
days.(7) And except by knowledge of and reflection upon the number, the
difficulty of explaining the figure involved in this action cannot be got over. For the
number contains ten four times, indicating the knowledge of all things, and
that knowledge interwoven with time. For both the diurnal and the annual
revolutions are accomplished in periods numbering four each; the diurnal in the hours of
the morning, the noontide, the evening, and the night; the annual in the
spring, summer, autumn, and winter months. Now while we live in time, we must
abstain and fast from all joy in time, for the sake of that eternity in which we
wish to live; although by the passage of time we are taught this very lesson of
despising time and seeking eternity. Further, the number ten signifies the
knowledge of the Creator and the creature, for there is a trinity in the Creator; and
the number seven indicates the creature, because of the life and the body. For
the life consists of three parts, whence also God is to be loved with the
whole heart, the whole soul, and the whole mind; and it is very clear that in the
body there are four elements of which it is made up. In this number ten,
therefore, when it is placed before us in connection with time, that is, when it is
taken four times we are admonished to live unstained by, and not partaking of,
any delight in time, that is, to fast for forty days. Of this we are admonished
by the law personified in Moses by prophecy personified in Elijah, and by our
Lord Himself, who, as if receiving the witness both of the law and the prophets,
appeared on the mount between the other two, while His three disciples looked
on in amazement. Next, we have to inquire in the same way, how out of the number
forty springs the number fifty, which in our religion has no ordinary
sacredness attached to it on account of the Pentecost, and how this number taken thrice
on account of the three divisions of time, before the law, under the law, and
under grace, or perhaps on account of the name of the Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit, and the Trinity itself being added over and above, has reference to the
mystery of the most Holy Church, and reaches to the number of the one hundred and
fifty-three fishes which were taken after the resurrection of our Lord, when
the nets were cast out on the right-hand side of the boat.(1) And in the same
way, many other numbers and combinations of numbers are used in the sacred
writings, to convey instruction under a figurative guise, and ignorance of numbers
often shuts out the reader from this instruction.
26. Not a few things, too, are closed against us and obscured by ignorance
of music. One man, for example, has not unskillfully explained some metaphors
from the difference between the psaltery and the harp.(2) And it is a question
which it is not out of place for learned men to discuss, whether there is any
musical law that compels the psaltery of ten chords to have just so many
strings; or whether, if there be no such law, the number itself is not on that very
account the more to be considered as of sacred significance, either with
reference to the ten commandments of the law (and if again any question is raised about
that number, we can only refer it to the Creator and the creature), or with
reference to the number ten itself as interpreted above. And the number of years
the temple was in building, which is mentioned in the gospel(3)--viz.,
forty-six--has a certain undefinable musical sound, and when referred to the structure
of our Lord's body, in relation to which the temple was mentioned, compels many
heretics to confess that our Lord put on, not a false, but a true and human
body. And in several places in the Holy Scriptures we find both numbers and music
mentioned with honor.
CHAP. 17.--ORIGIN OF THE LEGEND OF THE NINE MUSES.
27. For we must not listen to the falsities of heathen superstition, which
represent the nine Muses as daughters of Jupiter and Mercury. Varro refutes
these, and I doubt whether any one can be found among them more curious or more
learned in such matters. He says that a certain state (I don't recollect the
name) ordered from each of three artists a set of statues of the Muses, to be
placed as an offering in the temple of Apollo, intending that whichever of the
artists produced the most beautiful statues, they should select and purchase from
him. It so happened that these artists executed their works with equal beauty,
that all nine pleased the state, and that all were bought to be dedicated in the
temple of Apollo; and he says that afterwards Hesiod the poet gave names to
them all. It was not Jupiter, therefore, that begat the nine Muses, but three
artists created three each. And the state had originally given the order for
three, not because it had seen them in visions, nor because they had presented
themselves in that number to the eyes of any of the citizens, but because it was
obvious to remark that all sound, which is the material of song, is by nature of
three kinds. For it is either produced by the voice, as in the case of those who
sing with the mouth without an instrument; or by blowing, as in the case of
trumpets and flutes; or by striking, as in the case of harps and drums, and all
other instruments that give their sound when struck.
CHAP. 18.--NO HELP IS TO BE DESPISED, EVEN THOUGH IT COME FROM A PROFANE
SOURCE.
28. But whether the fact is as Varro has related, or is not so, still we
ought not to give up music because of the superstition of the heathen, if we can
derive anything from it that is of use for the understanding of Holy
Scripture; nor does it follow that we must busy ourselves with their theatrical trumpery
because we enter upon an investigation about harps and other instruments, that
may help us to lay hold upon spiritual things. For we ought not to refuse to
learn letters because they say that Mercury discovered them; nor because they
have dedicated temples to Justice and Virtue, and prefer to worship in the form
of stones things that ought to have their place in the heart, ought we on that
account to forsake justice and virtue. Nay, but let every good and true
Christian understand that wherever truth may be found, it belongs to his Master; and
while he recognizes and acknowledges the truth, even in their religious
literature, let him reject the figments of superstition, and let him grieve over and
avoid men who, "when they knew God, glorified him not as God, neither were
thankful; but became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart was darkened.
Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools, and changed the glory of
the uncorruptible God into an image made like to corruptible man, and to birds,
and four-footed beasts, and creeping things."(1)
CHAP. 19.--TWO KINDS OFHEATHEN KNOWLEDGE.
29. But to explain more fully this whole topic (for it is one that cannot
be omitted), there are two kinds of knowledge which are in vogue among the
heathen. One is the knowledge of things instituted by men, the other of things
which they have noted, either as transacted in the past or as instituted by God.
The former kind, that which deals with human institutions, is partly
superstitious, partly not.
CHAP. 20.--THE SUPERSTITIOUS NATURE OF HUMAN INSTITUTIONS.
30. All the arrangements made by men for the making and worshipping of
idols are superstitious, pertaining as they do either to the worship of what is
created or of some part of it as God, or to consultations and arrangements about
signs and leagues with devils, such, for example, as are employed in the
magical arts, and which the poets are accustomed not so much to teach as to
celebrate. And to this class belong, but with a bolder teach of deception, the books of
the haruspices and augurs. In this class we must place also all amulets and
cures which the medical art condemns, whether these consist in Incantations, or in
marks which they call characters, or in hanging or tying on or even dancing in
a fashion certain articles, not with reference to the condition of the body,
but to certain signs hidden or manifest; and these remedies they call by the
less offensive name of physica, so as to appear not to be engaged in superstitious
observances, but to be taking advantage of the forces of nature. Examples of
these are the earrings on the top of each ear, or the rings of ostrich bone on
the fingers, or telling you when you hiccup to hold your left thumb in your
right hand.
31. To these we may add thousands of the most frivolous practices, that
are to be observed if any part of the body should jump, or if, when friends are
walking arm-in-arm, a stone, or a dog, or a boy, should come between them. And
the kicking of a stone, as if it were a divider of friends, does less harm than
to cuff an innocent boy if he happens to run between men who are walking side
by side. But it is delightful that the boys are sometimes avenged by the dogs;
for frequently men are so superstitious as to venture upon striking a dog who
has run between them,--not with impunity however, for instead of a superstitious
remedy, the dog sometimes makes his assailant run in hot haste for a real
surgeon. To this class, too, belong the following rules: To tread upon the threshold
when you go out in front of the house; to go back to bed if any one should
sneeze when you are putting on your slippers; to return home if you stumble when
going to a place; when your clothes are eaten by mice, to be more frightened at
the prospect of coming misfortune than grieved by your present loss. Whence
that witty saying of Cato, who, when consulted by a man who told him that the mice
had eaten his boots, replied, "That is not strange, but it would have been
very strange indeed if the boots had eaten the mice."
CHAP. 21.--SUPERSTITION OF ASTROLOGERS.
32. Nor can we exclude from this kind of superstition those who were
called genethliaci, on account of their attention to birthdays, but are now commonly
called mathematici. For these, too, although they may seek with pains for the
true position of the stars at the time of our birth, and may sometimes even
find it out, yet in so far as they attempt thence to predict our actions, or the
consequences of our actions, grievously err, and sell inexperienced men into a
miserable bondage. For when any freeman goes to an astrologer of this kind, he
gives money that he may come away the slave either of Mars or of Venus, or
rather, perhaps, of all the stars to which those who first fell into this error, and
handed it on to posterity, have given the names either of beasts on account of
their likeness to beasts, or of men with a view to confer honor on those men.
And this is not to be wondered at, when we consider that even in times more
recent and nearer our own, the Romans made an attempt to dedicate the star which
we call Lucifer to the name and honor of Caesar. And this would, perhaps, have
been done, and the name handed down to distant ages, only that his ancestress
Venus had given her name to this star before him, and could not by any law
transfer to her heirs what she had never possessed, nor sought to possess, in life.
For where a place was vacant, or not held in honor of any of the dead of former
times, the usual proceeding in such cases was carried out. For example, we have
changed the names of the months Quintilis and Sextilis to July and August,
naming them in honor of the men Julius Caesar and Augustus Caesar; and from this
instance any one who cares can easily see that the stars spoken of above
formerly wandered in the heavens without the names they now bear. But as the men were
dead whose memory people were either compelled by royal power or impelled by
human folly to honor, they seemed to think that in putting their names upon the
stars they were raising the dead men themselves to heaven. But whatever they may
be called by men, still there are stars which God has made and set in order
after His own pleasure, and they have a fixed movement, by which the seasons are
distinguished and varied. And when any one is born, it is easy to observe the
point at which this movement has arrived, by use of the rules discovered and
laid down by those who are rebuked by Holy Writ in these terms: "For if they were
able to know so much that they could weigh the world, how did they not more
easily find out the Lord thereof?"(1)
CHAP. 22 .--THE FOLLY OF OBSERVING THE STARS IN ORDER TO PREDICT THE EVENTS OF
A LIFE.
33. But to desire to predict the characters, the acts, and the fate of
those who are born from such an observation, is a great delusion and great
madness. And among those at least who have any sort of acquaintance with matters of
this kind (which, indeed, are only fit to be unlearnt again), this superstition
is refuted beyond the reach of doubt. For the observation is of the position of
the stars, which they call constellations, at the time when the person was born
about whom these wretched men are consulted by their still more wretched
dupes. Now it may happen that, in the case of twins, one follows the other out of
the womb so closely that there is no interval of time between them that can be
apprehended and marked in the position of the constellations. Whence it
necessarily follows that twins are in many cases born under the same stars, while they
do not meet with equal fortune either in what they do or what they suffer, but
often meet with fates so different that one of them has a most fortunate life,
the other a most unfortunate. As, for example, we are told that Esau and Jacob
were born twins, and in such close succession, that Jacob, who was born last,
was found to have laid hold with his hand upon the heel of his brother, who
preceded him.(2) Now, assuredly, the day and hour of the birth of these two could
not be marked in any way that would not give both the same constellation. But
what a difference there was between the characters, the actions, the labors, and
the fortunes of these two, the Scriptures bear witness, which are now so widely
spread as to be in the mouth of all nations.
34. Nor is it to the point to say that the very smallest and briefest
moment of time that separates the birth of twins, produces great effects in nature,
and in the extremely rapid motion of the heavenly bodies. For, although I may
grant that it does produce the greatest effects, yet the astrologer cannot
discover this in the constellations, and it is by looking into these that he
professes to read the fates. If, then, he does not discover the difference when he
examines the constellations, which must, of course, be the same whether he is
consulted about Jacob or his brother, what does it profit him that there is a
difference in the heavens, which he rashly and carelessly brings into disrepute,
when there is no difference in his chart, which he looks into anxiously but in
vain? And so these notions also, which have their origin in certain signs of
things being arbitrarily fixed upon by the presumption of men, are to be referred
to the same class as if they were leagues and covenants with devils.
CHAP. 23.--WHY WE REPUDIATE ARTS OF DIVINATION.
35. For in this way it comes to pass that men who lust after evil things
are, by a secret judgment of God, delivered over to be mocked and deceived, as
the just reward of their evil desires. For they are deluded and imposed on by
the false angels, to whom the lowest part of the world has been put in subjection
by the law of God's providence, and in accordance with His most admirable
arrangement of things. And the result of these delusions and deceptions is, that
through these superstitious and baneful modes of divination many things in the
past and future are made known, and turn out just as they are foretold and in the
case of those who practise superstitious observances, many things turn out
agreeably to their observances, and ensnared by these successes, they become more
eagerly inquisitive, and involve themselves further and further in a labyrinth
of most pernicious error. And to our advantage, the Word of God is not silent
about this species of fornication of the soul; and it does not warn the soul
against following such practices on the ground that those who profess them speak
lies, but it says, "Even if what they tell you should come to pass, hearken not
unto them." I For though the ghost of the dead Samuel foretold the truth to
King Saul,(2) that does not make such sacrilegious observances as those by which
his ghost was brought up the less detestable; and though the ventriloquist
woman(3) in the Acts of the Apostles bore true testimony to the apostles of the
Lord, the Apostle Paul did not spare the evil spirit on that account, but rebuked
and cast it out, and so made the woman clean.(4)
36. All arts of this sort, therefore, are either nullities, or are part of
a guilty superstition, springing out of a baleful fellowship between men and
devils, and are to be utterly repudiated and avoided by the Christian as the
covenants of a false and treacherous friendship. "Not as if the idol were
anything," says the apostle; "but because the things which they sacrifice they
sacrifice to devils and not to God; and I would not that ye should have fellowship with
devils."(5) Now what the apostle has said about idols and the sacrifices
offered in their honor, that we ought to feel in regard to all fancied signs which
lead either to the worship of idols, or to worshipping creation or its parts
instead of God, or which are connected with attention to medicinal charms and
other observances for these are not appointed by God as the public means of
promoting love towards God and our neighbor, but they waste the hearts of wretched men
in private and selfish strivings after temporal things. Accordingly, in regard
to all these branches of knowledge, we must fear and shun the fellowship of
demons, who, with the Devil their prince, strive only to shut and bar the door
against our return. As, then, from the stars which God created and ordained, men
have drawn lying omens of their own fancy, so also from things that are born,
or in any other way come into exIstence under the government of God's
providence, if there chance only to be something unusual in the occurrence,--as when a
mule brings forth young, or an object is struck by lightning,--men have
frequently drawn omens by conjectures of their own, and have committed them to writing,
as if they had drawn them by rule.
CHAP. 24.--THE INTERCOURSE AND AGREEMENT WITH DEMONS WHICH SUPERSTITIOUS
OBSERVANCES MAINTAIN.
37. And all these omens are of force just so far as has been arranged with
the devils by that previous understanding in the mind which is, as it were,
the common language, but they are all full of hurtful curiosity, torturing
anxiety, and deadly slavery. For it was not because they had meaning that they were
attended to, but it was by attending to and marking them that they came to have
meaning. And so they are made different for different people, according to
their several notions and prejudices. For those spirits which are bent upon
deceiving, take care to provide for each person the same sort of omens as they see his
own conjectures and preconceptions have already entangled him in. For, to take
an illustration, the same figure of the letter X, which is made in the shape
of a cross, means one thing among the Greeks and another among the Latins, not
by nature, but by agreement and pre-arrangement as to its signification; and so,
any one who knows both languages uses this letter in a different sense when
writing to a Greek from that in which he uses it when writing to a Latin. And the
same sound, beta, which is the name of a letter among the Greeks, is the name
of a vegetable among the Latins; and when I say, lege, these two syllables mean
one thing to a Greek and another to a Latin. Now, just as all these signs
affect the mind according to the arrangements of the community in which each man
lives, and affect different men's minds differently, because these arrangements
are different; and as, further, men did not agree upon them as signs because
they were already significant, but on the contrary they are now significant
because men have agreed upon them; in the same way also, those signs by which the
ruinous intercourse with devils is maintained have meaning just in proportion to
each man's observations. And this appears quite plainly in the rites of the
augurs; for they, both before they observe the omens and after they have completed
their observations, take pains not to see the flight or hear the cries of
birds, because these omens are of no significance apart from the previous
arrangement in the mind of the observer.
CHAP. 25.--IN HUMAN INSTITUTIONS WHICH ARE NOT SUPERSTITIOUS, THERE ARE SOME
THINGS SUPERFLUOUS AND SOME CONVENIENT AND NECESSARY.
38. But when all these have been cut away and rooted out of the mind of
the Christian we must then look at human institutions which are not
superstitious, that is, such as are not set up in association with devils, but by men in
association with one another. For all arrangements that aye in force among men,
because they have agreed among themselves that they should be in force, are human
institutions; and of these, some are matters of superfluity and luxury, some
of convenience and necessity. For if those signs which the actors make in
dancing were of force by nature, and not by the arrangement and agreement of men, the
public crier would not in former times have announced to the people of
Carthage, while the pantomime was dancing, what it was he meant to express,--a thing
still remembered by many old men from whom we have frequently heard it.I And we
may well believe this, because even now, if any one who is unaccustomed to such
follies goes into the theatre, unless some one tells him what these movements
mean, he will give his whole attention to them in vain. Yet all men aim at a
certain degree of likeness in their choice of signs, that the signs may as far as
possible be like the things they signify. But because one thing may resemble
another in many ways, such signs are not always of the same significance among
men, except when they have mutually agreed upon them.
39. But in regard to pictures and statues, and other works of this kind,
which are intended as representations of things, nobody makes a mistake,
especially if they are executed by skilled artists, but every one, as soon as he sees
the likenesses, recognizes the things they are likenesses of. And this whole
class are to be reckoned among the superfluous devices of men, unless when it is
a matter of importance to inquire in regard to any of them, for what reason,
where, when, and by whose authority it was made. Finally, the thousands of fables
and fictions, in whose lies men take delight, are human devices, and nothing
is to be considered more peculiarly man's own and derived from himself than
anything that is false and lying. Among the convenient and necessary arrangements
of men with men are to be reckoned whatever differences they choose to make in
bodily dress and ornament for the purpose of distinguishing sex or rank; and the
countless varieties of signs without which human intercourse either could not
be carried on at all, or would be carried on at great inconvenience; and the
arrangements as to weights and measures, and the stamping and weighing of coins,
which are peculiar to each state and people, and other things of the same kind.
Now these, if they were not devices of men, would not be different in
different nations, and could not be changed among particular nations at the discretion
of their respective sovereigns.
40. This whole class of human arrangements, which are of convenience for
the necessary intercourse of life, the Christian is not by any means to neglect,
but on the contrary should pay a sufficient degree of attention to them, and
keep them in memory.
CHAP. 26.--WHAT HUMAN CONTRIVANCES WE ARE TO ADOPT, AND WHAT WE ARE TO AVOID.
For certain institutions of men are in a sort of way representations and
likenesses of natural objects. And of these, such as have relation to fellowship
with devils must, as has been said, be utterly rejected and held in
detestation; those, on the other hand, which relate to the mutual intercourse of men,
are, so far as they are not matters of luxury and superfluity, to be adopted,
especially the forms of the letters which are necessary for reading, and the
various languages as far as is required--a matter I have spoken of above.(2) To this
class also belong shorthand characters,(3) those who are acquainted with which
are called shorthand writers.(4) All these are useful, and there is nothing
unlawful in learning them, nor do they involve us in superstition, or enervate us
by luxury, if they only occupy our minds so far as not to stand in the way of
more important objects to which they ought to be subservient.
CHAP. 27.--SOME DEPARTMENTS OF KNOWLEDGE, NOT OF MERE HUMAN INVENTION, AID US
IN INTERPRETING SCRIPTURE.
41. But, coming to the next point, we are not to reckon among human
institutions those things which men nave handed down to us, not as arrangements of
their own, but as the result of investigation into the occurrences of the past,
and into the arrangements of God's providence. And of these, some pertain to the
bodily senses, some to the intellect. Those which are reached by the bodily
senses we either believe on testimony, or perceive when they are pointed out to
us, or infer from experience.
CHAP. 28.--TO WHAT EXTENT HISTORY IS AN AID.
42. Anything, then, that we learn from history about the chronology of
past times assists us very much in understanding the Scriptures, even if it be
learnt without the pale of the Church as a matter of childish instruction. For we
frequently seek information about a variety of matters by use of the
Olympiads, and the names of the consuls; and ignorance of the consulship in which our
Lord was born, and that in which He suffered, has led some into the error of
supposing that He was forty-six years of age when He suffered, that being the
number of years He was told by the Jews the temple (which He took as a symbol of His
body) was in building.(1) Now we know on the authority of the evangelist that
He was about thirty years of age when He was baptized;(2) But the number of
years He lived afterwards, although by putting His actions together we can make it
out, yet that no shadow of doubt might arise from another source, can be
ascertained more clearly and more certainly from a comparison of profane history
with the gospel. It will still be evident, however, that it was not without a
purpose it was said that the temple was forty and six years in building; so that,
as more secret formation of the body which, for our sakes, the only-begotten Son
of God, by whom all things were made, condescended to put on.(3)
43. As to the utility of history, moreover, passing over the Greeks, what
a great question our own Ambrose has set at rest! For, when the readers and
admirers of Plato dared calumniously to assert that our Lord Jesus Christ learnt
all those sayings of His, which they are compelled to admire and praise, from
the books of Plato--because (they urged) it cannot be denied that Plato lived
long before the coming of our Lord!--did not the illustrious bishop, when by his
investigations into profane history he had discovered that Plato made a journey
into Egypt at the time when Jeremiah the prophet was there,(4) show that it is
much more likely that Plato was through Jeremiah's means initiated into our
literature, so as to be able to teach and write those views of his which are so
justly praised? For not even Pythagoras himself, from whose successors these men
assert Plato learnt theology, lived at a date prior to the books of that
Hebrew race, among whom the worship of one God sprang up, and of whom as concerning
the flesh our Lord came. And thus, when we reflect upon the dates, it becomes
much more probable that those philosophers learnt Whatever they said that was
good and true from our literature, than that the Lord Jesus Christ learnt from
the writings of Plato,--a thing which it is the height of folly to believe.
44. And even when in the course of an historical narrative former
institutions of men are described, the history itself is not to be reckoned among human
institutions; because things that are past and gone and cannot be undone are
to be reckoned as belonging to the course of time, of which God is the author
and governor. For it is one thing to tell what has been done, another to show
what ought to be done. History narrates what has been done, faithfully and with
advantage; but the books of the haruspices, and all writings of the same kind,
aim at teaching what ought to be done or observed, using the boldness of an
adviser, not the fidelity of a narrator.
CHAP. 29.--TO WHAT EXTENT NATURAL SCIENCE IS AN EXEGETICAL AID.
45. There is also a species of narrative resembling description, in which
not a past but an existing state of things is made known to those who are
ignorant of it. To this species belongs all that has been written about the
situation of places, and the nature of animals, trees, herbs, stones, and other bodies.
And of this species I have treated above, and have shown that this kind of
knowledge is serviceable in solving the difficulties of Scripture, not that these
objects are to be used conformably to certain signs as nostrums or the
instruments of superstition; for that kind of knowledge I have already set aside as
distinct from the lawful and free kind now spoken of. For it is one thing to say:
If you bruise down this herb and drink it, it will remove the pain from your
stomach; and another to say: If you hang this herb round your neck, it will
remove the pain from your stomach. In the former case the wholesome mixture is
approved of, in the latter the superstitious charm is condemned; although indeed,
where incantations and invocations and marks are not used, it is frequently
doubtful whether the thing that is tied or fixed in any way to the body to cure it,
acts by a natural virtue, in which case it may be freely used; or acts by a
sort of charm, in which case it becomes the Christian to avoid it the more
carefully, the more efficacious it may seem to be. But when the reason why a thing is
of virtue does not appear, the intention with which it is used is of great
importance, at least in healing or in tempering bodies, whether in medicine or in
agriculture.
46. The knowledge of the stars, again, is not a matter of narration, but
of description. Very few of these, however, are mentioned in Scripture. And as
the course of the moon, which is regularly employed in reference to celebrating
the anniversary of our Lord's passion, is known to most people; so the rising
and setting and other movements of the rest of the heavenly bodies are
thoroughly known to very few. And this knowledge, although in itself it involves no
superstition, renders very little, indeed almost no assistance, in the
interpretation of Holy Scripture, and by engaging the attention unprofitably is a hindrance
rather; and as it is closely related to the very pernicious error of the
diviners of the fates, it is more convenient and becoming to neglect it. It
involves, moreover, in addition to a description of the present state of things,
something like a narrative of the past also; because one may go back from the present
position and motion of the stars, and trace by rule their past movements. It
involves also regular anticipations of the future, not in the way of forebodings
and omens, but by way of sure calculation; not with the design of drawing any
information from them as to our own acts and fates, in the absurd fashion of
the genethliaci, but only as to the motions of the heavenly bodies themselves.
For, as the man who computes the moon's age can tell, when he has found out her
age today, what her age was any number of years ago, or what will be her age any
number of years hence, in just the same way men who are skilled in such
computations are accustomed to answer like questions about every one of the heavenly
bodies. And I have stated what my views are about all this knowledge, so far as
regards its utility.
CHAP. 30.--WHAT THE MECHANICAL ARTS CONTRIBUTE TO EXEGETICS.
47. Further, as to the remaining arts, whether those by which something is
made which, when the effort of the workman is over, remains as a result of his
work, as, for example, a house, a bench, a dish, and other things of that
kind; or those which, so to speak, assist God in His operations, as medicine, and
agriculture, and navigation: or those whose sole result is an action, as
dancing, and racing, and wrestling;--in all these arts experience teaches us to infer
the future from the past. For no man who is skilled in any of these arts moves
his limbs in any operation without connecting the memory of the past with the
expectation of the future. Now of these arts a very superficial and cursory
knowledge is to be acquired, not with a view to practising them (unless some duty
compel us, a matter on which I do not touch at present), but with a view to
forming a judgment about them, that we may not be wholly ignorant of what Scripture
means to convey when it employs figures of speech derived from these arts.
CHAP. 31.--USE OF DIALECTICS. OF FALLACIES.
48. There remain those branches of knowledge which pertain not to the
bodily senses, but to the intellect, among which the science of reasoning and that
of number are the chief. The science of reasoning is of very great service in
searching into and unravelling all sorts of questions that come up in Scripture,
only in the use of it we must guard against the love of wrangling, and the
childish vanity of entrapping an adversary. For there are many of what are called
solphisms, inferences in reasoning that are false, and yet so close an
imitation of the true, as to deceive not only dull people, but clever men too, when
they are not on their guard. For example, one man lays before another with whom he
is talking, the proposition, "What I am, you are not." The other assents, for
the proposition is in part true, the one man being cunning and the other
simple. Then the first speaker adds: "I am a man;" and when the other has given his
assent to this also, the first draws his conclusion: "Then you are not a man. "'
Now of this sort of ensnaring arguments, Scripture, as I judge, expresses
detestation in that place where it is said, "There is one that showeth wisdom in
words, and is hated;"(1) although, indeed, a style of speech which is not
intended to entrap, but only aims at verbal ornamentation more than is consistent with
seriousness of purpose, is also called sophistical.
49. There are also valid processes of reasoning which lead to false
conclusions, by following out to its logical consequences the error of the man with
whom one is arguing; and these conclusions are sometimes drawn by a good and
learned man, with the object of making the person from whose error these
consequences result, feel ashamed of them and of thus leading him to give up his error
when he finds that if he wishes to retain his old opinion, he must of necessity
also hold other opinions which he condemns. For example, the apostle did not
draw true conclusions when he said, "Then is Christ not risen," and again, "Then
is our preaching vain, and your faith is also vain;"(1) and further on drew
other inferences which are all utterly false; for Christ has risen, the preaching
of those who declared this fact was not in vain, nor was their faith in vain
who had believed it. But all these false inferences followed legitimately from
the opinion of those who said that there is no resurrection of the dead. These
inferences, then, being repudiated as false, it follows that since they would be
true if the dead rise not, there will be a resurrection of the dead. As, then,
valid conclusions may be drawn not only from true but from false propositions,
the laws of valid reasoning may easily be learnt in the schools, outside the
pale of the Church. But the truth of propositions must be inquired into in the
sacred books of the Church.
CHAP. 32.--VALID LOGICAL SEQUENCE IS NOT DEVISED BUT ONLY OBSERVED BY MAN.
50. And yet the validity of logical sequences is not a thing devised by
men, but is observed and noted by them that they may be able to learn and teach
it; for it exists eternally in the reason of things, and has its origin with
God. For as the man who narrates the order of events does not himself create that
order; and as he who describes the situations of places, or the natures of
animals, or roots, or minerals, does not describe arrangements of man; and as he
who points out the stars and their movements does not point out anything that he
himself or any other man has ordained;--in the same way, he who says, "When the
consequent is false, the antecedent must also be false," says what is most
true; but he does not himself make it so, he only points out that it is so. And it
is upon this rule that the reasoning I have quoted from the Apostle Paul
proceeds. For the antecedent is, "There is no resurrection of the dead,"--the
position taken up by those whose error the apostle wished to overthrow. Next, from
this antecedent, the assertion, viz., that there is no resurrection of the dead,
the necessary consequence is, "Then Christ is not risen." But this consequence
is false, for Christ has risen; therefore the antecedent is also false. But the
antecedent is, that there is no resurrection of the dead. We conclude,
therefore, that there is a resurrection of the dead. Now all this is briefly expressed
thus: If there is no resurrection of the dead, then is Christ not risen; but
Christ is risen, therefore there is a resurrection of the dead. This rule, then,
that when the consequent is removed, the antecedent must also be removed, is
not made by man, but only pointed out by him. And this rule has reference to the
validity of the reasoning, not to the truth of the statements.
CHAP. 33.--FALSE INFERENCES MAY BE DRAWN FROM VALID REASONINGS, AND VICE VERSA.
51. In this passage, however, where the argument is about the
resurrection, both the law of the inference is valid, and the conclusion arrived at is
true. But in the case of false conclusions, too, there is a validity of inference
in some such way as the following. Let us suppose some man to have admitted: If
a snail is an animal, it has a voice. This being admitted, then, when it has
been proved that the snail has no voice, it follows (since when the consequent is
proved false, the antecedent is also false) that the snail is not an animal.
Now this conclusion is false, but it is a true and valid inference from the
false admission. Thus, the truth of a statement stands on its own merits; the
validity of an inference depends on the statement or the admission of the man with
whom one is arguing. And thus, as I said above, a false inference may be drawn
by a valid process of reasoning, in order that he whose error we wish to correct
may be sorry that he has admitted the antecedent, when he sees that its
logical consequences are utterly untenable. And hence it is easy to understand that
as the inferences may be valid where the opinions are false, so the inferences
may be unsound where the opinions are true. For example, suppose that a man
propounds the statement, "If this man is just, he is good," and we admit its truth.
Then he adds, "But he is not just;" and when we admit this too, he draws the
conclusion, "Therefore he is not good." Now although every one of these
statements may be true, still the principle of the inference is unsound. For it is not
true that, as when the consequent is proved false the antecedent is also false,
so when the antecedent is proved false the consequent is false. For the
statement is true, "If he is an orator, he is a man." But if we add, "He is not an
orator," the consequence does not follow, "He is not a man."
CHAP. 34.--IT IS ONE THING TO KNOW THE LAWS OF INFERENCE, ANOTHER TO KNOW THE
TRUTH OF OPINIONS.
52. Therefore it is one thing to know the laws of inference, and another
to know the truth of opinions. In the former case we learn what is consequent,
what is inconsequent, and what is incompatible. An example of a consequent is,
"If he is an orator, he is a man;" of an inconsequent, "If he is a man, he is
an orator;" of an incompatible, "If he is a man, he is a quadruped." In these
instances we judge of the connection. In regard to the truth of opinions,
however, we must consider propositions as they stand by themselves, and not in their
connection with one another; but when propositions that we are not sure about
are joined by a valid inference to propositions that are true and certain, they
themselves, too, necessarily become certain. Now some, when they have
ascertained the validity of the inference, plume themselves as if this involved also the
truth of the propositions. Many, again, who hold the true opinions have an
unfounded contempt for themselves, because they are ignorant of the laws of
inference; whereas the man who knows that there is a resurrection of the dead is
assuredly better than the man who only knows that it follows that if there is no
resurrection of the dead, then is Christ not risen.
CHAP. 35 .--THE SCIENCE OF DEFINITION IS NOT FALSE, THOUGH IT MAY BE APPLIED
TO FALSITIES.
53. Again, the science of definition, of division, and of partition,
although it is frequently applied to falsities, is not itself false, nor framed by
man's device, but is evolved from the reason of things. For although poets have
applied it to their fictions, and false philosophers, or even heretics--that
is, false Christians--to their erroneous doctrines, that is no reason why it
should be false, for example, that neither in definition, nor in division, nor in
partition, is anything to be included that does not pertain to the matter in
hand, nor anything to be omitted that does. This is true, even though the things
to be defined or divided are not true. For even falsehood itself is defined when
we say that falsehood is the declaration of a state of things which is not as
we declare it to be; and this definition is true, although falsehood itself
cannot be true. We can also divide it, saying that there are two kinds of
falsehood, one in regard to things that cannot be true at all, the other in regard to
things that are not, though it is possible they might be, true. For example, the
man who says that seven and three are eleven, says what cannot be true under
any circumstances; but he who says that it rained on the kalends of January,
although perhaps the fact is not so, says what posssibly might have been. The
definition and division, therefore, of what is false may be perfectly true,
although what is false cannot, of course, itself be true.
CHAP. 36.--THE RULES OF ELOQUENCE ARE TRUE, THOUGH SOMETIMES USED TO PERSUADE
MEN OF WHAT IS FALSE.
54. There are also certain rules for a more copious kind of argument,
which is called eloquence, and these rules are not the less true that they can be
used for persuading men of what is false; but as they can be used to enforce the
truth as well, it is not the faculty itself that is to be blamed, but the
perversity of those who put it to a bad use. Nor is it owing to an arrangement
among men that the expression of affection conciliates the hearer, or that a
narrative, when it is short and clear, is effective, and that variety arrests men's
attention without wearying them. And it is the same with other directions of the
same kind, which, whether the cause in which they are used be true or false,
are themselves true just in so far as they are effective in producing knowledge
or belief, or in moving men's minds to desire and aversion. And men rather
found out that these things are so, than arranged that they should be so.
CHAP. 37.--USE OF RHETORIC AND DIALECTIC.
55. This art, however, when it is learnt, is not to be used so much for
ascertaining the meaning as for setting forth the meaning when it is ascertained.
But the art previously spoken of, which deals with inferences, and
definitions, and divisions, is of the greatest assistance in the discovery of the meaning,
provided only that men do not fall into the error of supposing that when they
have learnt these things they have learnt the true secret of a happy life.
Still, it sometimes happens that men find less difficulty in attaining the object
for the sake of which these sciences are learnt, than in going through the very
intricate and thorny discipline of such rules. It is just as if a man wishing
to give rules for walking should warn you not to lift the hinder foot before you
set down the front one, and then should describe minutely the way you ought to
move the hinges of the joints and knees. For what he says is true, and one
cannot walk in any other way; but men find it easier to walk by executing these
movements than to attend to them while they are going through them, or to
understand when they are told about them. Those, on the other hand, who cannot walk,
care still less about such directions, as they cannot prove them by making trial
of them. And in the same way a clever man often sees that an inference is
unsound more quickly than he apprehends the rules for it. A dull man, on the other
hand, does not see the unsoundness, but much less does he grasp the rules. And
in regard to all these laws, we derive more pleasure from them as exhibitions
of truth, than assistance in arguing or forming opinions, except perhaps that
they put the intellect in better training. We must take care, however that they
do not at the same time make it more inclined to mischief or vanity,--that is
to say, that they do not give those who have learnt them an inclination to lead
people astray by plausible speech and catching questions, or make them think
that they have attained some great thing that gives them an advantage over the
good and innocent.
CHAP. 38.--THE SCIENCE OF NUMBERS NOT CREATED, BUT ONLY DISCOVERED, BY MAN.
56. Coming now to the science of number, it is clear to the dullest
apprehension that this was not created by man, but was discovered by investigation.
For, though Virgil could at his own pleasure make the first syllable of Italia
long, while the ancients pronounced it short, it is not in any man's power to
determine at his pleasure that three times three are not nine, or do not make a
square, or are not the triple of three, nor one and a half times the number six,
or that it is not true that they are not the double of any number because odd
numbers(1) have no half. Whether, then, numbers are considered in themselves,
or as applied to the laws of figures, or of sounds, or of other motions, they
have fixed laws which were not made by man, but which the acuteness of ingenious
men brought to light.
57. The man, however, who puts so high a value on these things as to be
inclined to boast himself one of the learned, and who does not rather inquire
after the source from which those things which he perceives to be true derive
their truth, and from which those others which he perceives to be unchangeable
also derive their truth and unchangeableness, and who, mounting up from bodily
appearances to the mind of man, and finding that it too is changeable (for it is
sometimes instructed, at other times uninstructed), although it holds a middle
place between the unchangeable truth above it and the changeable things beneath
it, does not strive to make all things redound to the praise and love of the
one God from whom he knows that all things have their being;-the man, I say, who
acts in this way may seem to be learned, but wise he cannot in any sense be
deemed.
CHAP. 39.--TO WHICH OF THE ABOVE-MENTIONED STUDIES ATTENTION SHOULD BE GIVEN,
AND IN WHAT SPIRIT.
58. Accordingly, I think that it is well to warn studious and able young
men, who fear God and are seeking for happiness of life, not to venture
heedlessly upon the pursuit of the branches of learning that are in vogue beyond the
pale of the Church of Christ, as if these could secure for them the happiness
they seek; but soberly and carefully to discriminate among them. And if they find
any of those which have been instituted by men varying by reason of the varying
pleasure of their founders, and unknown by reason of erroneous conjectures,
especially if they involve entering into fellowship with devils by means of
leagues and covenants about signs, let these be utterly rejected and held in
detestation. Let the young men also withdraw their attention from such institutions of
men as are unnecessary and luxurious. But for the sake of the necessities of
this life we must not neglect the arrangements of men that enable us to carry on
intercourse with those around us. I think, however, there is nothing useful in
the other branches of learning that are found among the heathen, except
information about objects, either past or present, that relate to the bodily senses,
in which are included also the experiments and conclusions of the useful
mechanical arts, except also the sciences of reasoning and of number. And in regard
to all these we must hold by the maxim, "Not too much of anything;" especially
in the case of those which, pertaining as they do to the senses, are subject to
the relations of space and time.(2)
59. What, then, some men have done in regard to all words and names found
in Scripture, in the Hebrew, and Syriac, and Egyptian, and other tongues,
taking up and interpreting separately such as were left in Scripture without
interpretation; and what Eusebius has done in regard to the history of the past with a
view to the questions arising in Scripture that require a knowledge of history
for their solution;--what, I say, these men have done in regard to matters of
this kind, making it unnecessary for the Christian to spend his strength on
many subjects for the sake of a few items of knowledge, the same, I think, might
be done in regard to other matters, if any competent man were willing in a
spirit of benevolence to undertake the labor for the advantage of his brethren. In
this way he might arrange in their several classes, and give an account of the
unknown places, and animals, and plants, and trees, and stones, and metals, and
other species of things that are mentioned in Scripture, taking up these only,
and committing his account to writing. This might also be done in relation to
numbers, so that the theory of those numbers, and those only, which are
mentioned in Holy Scripture, might be explained and written down. And it may happen
that some or all of these things have been done already (as I have found that many
things I had no notion of have been worked out and committed to writing by
good and learned Christians), but are either lost amid the crowds of the careless,
or are kept out of sight by the envious. And I am not sure whether the same
thing can be done in regard to the theory of reasoning; but it seems to me it
cannot, because this runs like a system of nerves through the whole structure of
Scripture, and on that account is of more service to the reader in disentangling
and explaining ambiguous passages, of which I shall speak hereafter, than in
ascertaining the meaning of unknown signs, the topic I am now discussing.
CHAP. 40.--WHATEVER HAS BEEN RIGHTLY SAID BY THE HEATHEN, WE MUST APPROPRIATE
TO OUR USES.
60. Moreover, if those who are called philosophers, and especially the
Platonists, have said aught that is true and in harmony with our faith, we are not
only not to shrink from it, but to claim it for our own use from those who
have unlawful possession of it. For, as the Egyptians had not only the idols and
heavy burdens which the people of Israel hated and fled from, but also vessels
and ornaments of gold and silver, and garments, which the same people when going
out of Egypt appropriated to themselves, designing them for a better use, not
doing this on their own authority, but by the command of God, the Egyptians
themselves, in their ignorance, providing them with things which they themselves
were not making a good use of;(1) in the same way all branches of heathen
learning have not only false and superstitious fancies and heavy burdens of
unnecessary toil, which every one of us, when going out under the leadership of Christ
from the fellowship of the heathen, ought to abhor and avoid; but they contain
also liberal instruction which is better adapted to the use of the truth, and
some most excellent precepts of morality; and some truths in regard even to the
worship of the One God are found among them. Now these are, so to speak, their
gold and silver, which they did not create themselves, but dug out of the mines
of God's providence which are everywhere scattered abroad, and are perversely
and unlawfully prostituting to the worship of devils. These, therefore, the
Christian, when he separates himself in spirit from the miserable fellowship of
these men, ought to take away from them, and to devote to their proper use in
preaching the gospel. Their garments, also,--that is, human institutions such as
are adapted to that intercourse with men which is indispensable in this life,--we
must take and turn to a Christian use.
61. And what else have many good and faithful men among our brethren done?
Do we not see with what a quantity of gold and silver and garments Cyprian,
that most per suasive teacher and most blessed martyr, was loaded when he came
out of Egypt? How much Lactantius brought with him? And Victorinus, and Optatus,
and Hilary, not to speak of living men! How much Greeks out of number have
borrowed! And prior to all these, that most faithful servant of God, Moses, had
done the same thing; for of him it is written that he was learned in all the
wisdom of the Egyptians.(2) And to none of all these would heathen superstition
(especially in those times when, kicking against the yoke of Christ, it was
persecuting the Christians) have ever furnished branches of knowledge it held useful,
if it had suspected they were about to turn them to the use of worshipping the
One God, and thereby overturning the vain worship of idols. But they gave their
gold and their silver and their garments to the people of God as they were
going out of Egypt, not knowing how the things they gave would be turned to the
service of Christ. For what was done at the time of the exodus was no doubt a
type prefiguring what happens now. And this I say without prejudice to any other
interpretation that may be as good, or better.
CHAP. 41.--WHAT KIND OF SPIRIT IS REQUIRED FOR THE STUDY OF HOLY SCRIPTURE.
62. But when the student of the Holy Scriptures, prepared in the way I
have indicated, shall enter upon his investigations, let him constantly meditate
upon that saying of the apostle's, "Knowledge puffeth up, but charity
edifieth."(1) For so he will feel that, whatever may be the riches he brings with him out
of Egypt, yet unless he has kept the passover, he cannot be safe. Now Christ
is our passover sacrificed for us,(2) and there is nothing the sacrifice of
Christ more clearly teaches us than the call which He himself addresses to those
whom He sees toiling in Egypt under Pharaoh: "Come unto me, all ye that labor and
are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of
me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls.
For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light."(3) To whom is it light but to the
meek and lowly in heart, whom knowledge doth not puff up, but charity
edifieth? Let them remember, then, that those who celebrated the passover at that time
in type and shadow, when they were ordered to mark their door-posts with the
blood of the lamb, used hyssop to mark them with.(4) Now this is a meek and lowly
herb, and yet nothing is stronger and more penetrating than its roots; that
being rooted and grounded in love, we may be able to comprehend with all saints
what is the breadth, and length, and depth, and height,(5)--that is, to
comprehend the cross of our Lord, the breadth of which is indicated by the transverse
wood on which the hands are stretched, its length by the part from the ground up
to the cross-bar on which the whole body from the head downwards is fixed, its
height by the part from the crossbar to the top on which the head lies, and
its depth by the part which is hidden, being fixed in the earth. And by this sign
of the cross all Christian action is symbolized, viz., to do good works in
Christ, to cling with constancy to Him, tó hope for heaven, and not to desecrate
the sacraments. And purified by this Christian action, we shall be able to know
even "the love of Christ which passeth knowledge," who is equal to the Father,
by whom all things, were made, "that we may be filled with all the fullness of
God."(6) There is besides in hyssop a purgative virtue, that the breast may not
be swollen with that knowledge which puffeth up, nor boast vainly of the
riches brought out from Egypt. "Purge me with hyssop," the psalmist says,(7) "and I
shall be clean; wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow. Make me to hear joy
and gladness." Then he immediately adds, to show that it is purifying from pride
that is indicated by hyssop, "that the bones which Thou hast broken(8) may
rejoice."
CHAP. 42.--SACRED SCRIPTURE COMPARED WITH PROFANE AUTHORS.
63. But just as poor as the store of gold and silver and garments which
the people of Israel brought with them out of Egypt was in comparison with the
riches which they afterwards attained at Jerusalem, and which reached their
height in the reign of King Solomon, so poor is all the useful knowledge which is
gathered from the books of the heathen when compared with the knowledge of Holy
Scripture, For whatever man may have learnt from other sources, if it is
hurtful, it is there condemned; if it is useful, it is therein contained. And while
every man may find there all that he has learnt of useful elsewhere, he will find
there in much greater abundance things that are to be found nowhere else, but
can be learnt only in the wonderful sublimity and wonderful simplicity of the
Scriptures.
When, then, the reader is possessed of the instruction here pointed out,
so that unknown signs have ceased to be a hindrance to him; when he is meek and
lowly of heart, subject to the easy yoke of Christ, and loaded with His light
burden, rooted and grounded and built up in faith, so that knowledge cannot puff
him up, let him then approach the consideration and discussion of ambiguous
signs in Scripture. And about these I shall now, in a third book, endeavor to say
what the Lord shall be pleased to vouchsafe.