ON CHRISTIAN DOCTRINE: BOOK IV
BOOK IV.
ARGUMENT.
PASSING TO THE SECOND PART OF HIS WORK, THAT WHICH TREATS OF EXPRESSION, THE
AUTHOR PREMISES THAT IT IS NO PART OF HIS INTENTION TO WRITE A TREATISE ON THE
LAWS OF RHETORIC. THESE CAN BE LEARNED ELSEWHERE, AND OUGHT NOT TO BE NEGLECTED,
BEING INDEED SPECIALLY NECESSARY FOR THE CHRISTIAN TEACHER, WHOM IT BEHOVES TO
EXCEL IN ELOQUENCE AND POWER OF SPEECH. AFTER DETAILING WITH MUCH CARE AND
MINUTENESS THE VARIOUS QUALITIES OF AN ORATOR, HE RECOMMENDS THE AUTHORS OF THE
HOLY SCRIPTURES AS THE BEST MODELS OF ELOQUENCE, FAR EXCELLING ALL OTHERS IN THE
COMBINATION OF ELOQUENCE WITH WISDOM. HE POINTS OUT THAT PERSPICUITY IS THE
MOST ESSENTIAL QUALITY OF STYLE, AND OUGHT TO BE CULTIVATED WITH ESPECIAL CARE BY
THE TEACHER, AS IT IS THE MAIN REQUISITE FOR INSTRUCTION, ALTHOUGH OTHER
QUALITIES ARE REQUIRED FOR DELIGHTING AND PERSUADING THE HEARER. ALL THESE GIFTS ARE
TO BE SOUGHT IN EARNEST PRAYER FROM GOD, THOUGH WE ARE NOT TO FORGET TO BE
ZEALOUS AND DILIGENT IN STUDY. HE SHOWS THAT THERE ARE THREE SPECIES OF STYLE, THE
SUBDUED, THE ELEGANT, AND THE MAJESTIC; THE FIRST SERVING FOR INSTRUCTION, THE
SECOND FOR PRAISE, AND THE THIRD FOR EXHORTATION: AND OF EACH OF THESE HE GIVES
EXAMPLES, SELECTED BOTH FROM SCRIPTURE AND FROM EARLY TEACHERS OF THE CHURCH,
CYPRIAN AND AMBROSE. HE SHOWS THAT THESE VARIOUS STYLES MAY BE MINGLED, AND
WHEN AND FOR WHAT PURPOSES THEY ARE MINGLED; AND THAT THEY ALL HAVE THE SAME END
IN VIEW, TO BRING HOME THE TRUTH TO THE HEARER, SO THAT HE MAY UNDERSTAND IT,
HEAR IT WITH GLADNESS, AND PRACTISE IT IN HIS LIFE. FINALLY, HE EXHORTS THE
CHRISTIAN TEACHER HIMSELF, POINTING OUT THE DIGNITY AND RESPONSIBILITY OF THE OFFICE
HE HOLD TO LEAD A LIFE IN HARMONY WITH HIS OWN TEACHING, AND TO SHOW A GOOD
EXAMPLE TO ALL.
CHAP. 1.--THIS WORK NOT INTENDED AS A TREATISE ON RHETORIC.
1. THIS work of mine, which is entitled On Christian Doctrine, was at the
commencement divided into two parts. For, after a preface, in which I answered
by anticipation those who were likely to take exception to the work, I said,
"There are two things on which all interpretation of Scripture depends: the mode
of ascertaining the proper meaning, and the known, the meaning."(1) As, then, I
have already said a great deal about the mode of ascertaining the meaning, and
have given three books to this one part of the subject, I shall only say a few
things about the mode of making known the meaning, in order if four books.
2. In the first place, then, I wish by this preamble to put a stop to the
expectations of readers who may think that I am about to lay down rules of
rhetoric such as I have learnt and taught too, in the secular schools, and to warn
them that they need not look for any such from me. Not that I think such rules
of no use, but that whatever use they have is to be learnt elsewhere; and if
any good man should happen to have leisure for learning them, he is not to ask me
to teach them either in this work or any other.
CHAP. 2.--IT IS LAWFUL FOR A CHRISTIAN TEACHER TO USE THE ART OF RHETORIC.
3. Now, the art of rhetoric being available for the enforcing either of
truth or falsehood, who will dare to say that truth in the person of its
defenders is to take its stand unarmed against falsehood? For example, that those who
are trying to persuade men of what is false are to know how to introduce their
subject, so as to put the hearer into a friendly, or attentive, or teachable
frame of mind, while the defenders of the truth shall be ignorant of that art?
That the former are to tell their falsehoods briefly, clearly, and plausibly,
while the latter shall tell the truth m such a way that it is tedious to listen to,
hard to understand, and, in fine, not easy to believe it? That the former are
to oppose the to melt, to enliven, and to rouse them, while the latter shall in
defence of the truth be sluggish, and frigid, and somnolent? Who is such a
fool as to think this wisdom? Since, then, the faculty of eloquence is available
for both sides, and is of very great service in the enforcing either of wrong
or right, why do not good men study to engage it on the side of truth, when bad
men use it to obtain the triumph of wicked and worthless causes, and to further
injustice and error?
CHAP. 3.--THE PROPER AGE AND THE PROPER MEANS FOR ACQUIRING RHETORICAL SKILL.
4. But the theories and rules on this subject (to which, when you add a
tongue thoroughly skilled by exercise and habit in the use of many words and many
ornaments of speech, you have what is called eloquence or oratory) may be
learnt apart from these writings of mine, if a suitable space of time be set aside
for the purpose at a fit and proper age. But only by those who can learn them
any one who cannot learn this art quickly can never thoroughly learn it at
all.(1) Whether this be true or not, why need we inquire? For even if this art can
occasionally be in the end mastered by men of slower intellect, I do not think
it of so much importance as to wish men who have arrived at mature age to spend
time in learning it. It is enough that boys should give attention to it; and
even of these, not all who are to be fitted for usefulness in the Church, but
only those who are not yet engaged in any occupation of more urgent necessity, or
which ought evidently to take precedence of it. For men of quick intellect and
glowing temperament find it easier to become eloquent by reading and listening
to eloquent speakers than by following rules for eloquence. And even outside
the canon, which to our great advantage is fixed in a place of secure authority,
there is no want of ecclesiastical writings, in reading which a man of ability
will acquire a tinge of the eloquence with which they are written, even though
he does not aim at this, but is solely intent on the matters treated of;
especially, of course, if in addition he practise himself in writing, or dictating,
and at last also in speaking, the opinions he has formed on grounds of piety
them, and who speak with fluency and elegance, cannot always think of them when
they are speaking so as to speak in accordance with them, unless they are
discussing the rules themselves. Indeed, I think there are scarcely any who can do
both things--that is, speak well, and; in order to do this, think of the rules of
speaking while they are speaking. For we must be careful that what we have got
to say does not escape us whilst we are thinking about saying it according to
the rules of art. Nevertheless, in the speeches of eloquent men, we find rules
of eloquence carried out which the speakers did not think of as aids to
eloquence at the time when they were speaking, whether they had ever learnt them, or
whether they had never even met with them. For it is because they are eloquent
that they exemplify these rules; it is not that they use them in order to be
eloquent.
5. And, therefore, as infants cannot learn to speak except by learning
words and phrases from those who do speak, why should not men become eloquent
without being taught any art of speech, simply by reading and learning the speeches
of eloquent men, and by imitating them as far as they can? And what do we find
from the examples themselves to be the case in this respect? We know numbers
who, without acquaintance with rhetorical rules, are more eloquent than many who
have learnt these; but we know no one who is eloquent without having read and
listened to the speeches and debates of eloquent men. For even the art of
grammar, which teaches correctness of speech, need not be learnt by boys, if they
have the advantage of growing up and living among men who speak correctly. For
without knowing the names of any of the faults, they will, from being accustomed
to correct speech, lay hold upon whatever is faulty in the speech of any one
they listen to, and avoid it; just as city-bred men, even when illiterate, seize
upon the faults of rustics.
CHAP. 4.--THEDUTY OF THE CHRISTIAN TEACHER.
6. It is the duty, then, of the interpreter and teacher of Holy Scripture
the defender of the true faith and the opponent of error, both to teach what is
right and to refute what is wrong, and in the performance of this task to
conciliate the hostile, to rouse the careless, and to tell the ignorant both what
is occurring at present and what is probable in the future. But once that his
hearers are friendly, attentive, and ready to learn, whether he has found them
so, or has himself made them so the remaining objects are to be carried out in
whatever way the case requires. If the hearers need teaching, the matter treated
of must be made fully known by means of narrative. On the other hand, to clear
up points that are doubtful requires reasoning and the exhibition of proof. If,
however, the hearers require to be roused rather than instructed, in order
that they may be diligent to do what they already know, and to bring their
feelings into harmony with the truths they admit, greater vigor of speech is needed.
Here entreaties and reproaches, exhortations and upbraidings, and all the other
means of rousing the emotions, are necessary.
7. And all the methods I have mentioned are constantly used by nearly
every one in cases where speech is the agency employed.
CHAP. 5.--WISDOM OF MORE IMPORTANCE THAN ELOQUENCE TO THE CHRISTIAN TEACHER.
But as some men employ these coarsely, inelegantly, and frigidly, while
others use them with acuteness, elegance, and spirit, the work that I am speaking
of ought to be undertaken by one who can argue and speak with wisdom, if not
with eloquence, and with profit to his hearers, even though he profit them less
than he would if he could speak with eloquence too. But we must beware of the
man who abounds in eloquent nonsense, and so much the more if the hearer is
pleased with what is not worth listening to, and thinks that because the speaker is
eloquent what he says must be true. And this opinion is held even by those who
think that the art of rhetoric should be taught; for they confess that "though
wisdom without eloquence is of little service to states, yet eloquence without
wisdom is frequently a positive injury, and is of service never."(1) If, then,
the men who teach the principles of eloquence have been forced by truth to
confess this in the very books which treat of eloquence, though they were ignorant
of the true, that is, the heavenly wisdom which comes down from the Father of
Lights, how much more ought we to feel it who are the sons and the ministers of
this higher wisdom ! Now a man speaks with more or less wisdom just as he has
made more or less progress in the knowledge of Scripture; I do not mean by
reading them much and committing them to memory, but by understanding them aright
and carefully searching into their meaning. For there are who read and yet
neglect them; they read to remember the words, but are careless about knowing the
meaning. It is plain we must set far above these the men who are not so retentive
of the words, but see with the eyes of the heart into the heart of Scripture.
Better than either of these, however, is the man who, when he wishes, can
repeat the words, and at the same time correctly apprehends their meaning.
8. Now it is especially necessary for the man who is bound to speak
wisely, even though he cannot speak eloquently, to retain in memory the words of
Scripture. For the more he discerns the poverty of his own speech, the more he
ought to draw on the riches of Scripture, so that what he says in his own words he
may prove by the words of Scripture; and he himself, though small and weak in
his own words, may gain strength and power from the confirming testimony of
great men. For his proof gives pleasure when he cannot please by his mode of
speech. But if a man desire to speak not only with wisdom, but with eloquence also
(and assuredly he will prove of greater service if he can do both), I would
rather send him to read, and listen to, and exercise himself in imitating, eloquent
men, than advise him to spend time with the teachers of rhetoric; especially if
the men he reads and listens to are justly praised as having spoken, or as
being accustomed to speak, not only with eloquence, but with wisdom also. For
eloquent speakers are heard with pleasure; wise speakers with profit. And,
therefore, Scripture does not say that the multitude of the eloquent, but "the
multitude of the wise is the welfare of the world."(1) And as we must often swallow
wholesome bitters, so we must always avoid unwholesome sweets. But what is better
than wholesome sweetness or sweet wholesomeness? For the sweeter we try to make
such things, the easier it is to make their wholesomeness serviceable. And so
there are writers of the Church who have expounded the Holy Scriptures, not
only with wisdom, but with eloquence as well; and there is not more time for the
reading of these than is sufficient for those who are studious and at leisure to
exhaust them.
CHAP. 6.--THE SACRED WRITERS UNITE ELOQUENCE WITH WISDOM.
9. Here, perhaps, some one inquires whether the authors whose
divinely-inspired writings constitute the canon, which carries with it a most wholesome
authority, are to be considered wise only, or eloquent as well. A question which
to me, and to those who think with me, is very easily settled. For where I
understand these writers, it seems to me not only that nothing can be wiser, but
also that nothing can be more eloquent. And I venture to affirm that all who truly
understand what these writers say, perceive at the same time that it could not
have been properly said in any other way. For as there is a kind of eloquence
that is more becoming in youth, and a kind that is more becoming in old age,
and nothing can be called eloquence if it be not suitable to the person of the
speaker, so there is a kind of eloquence that is becoming in men who justly claim
the highest authority, and who are evidently inspired of God. With this
eloquence they spoke; no other would have been suitable for them; and this itself
would be unsuitable in any other, for it is in keeping with their character, while
it mounts as far above that of others (not from empty inflation, but from
solid merit) as it seems to fall below them. Where, however, I do not understand
these writers, though their eloquence is then less apparent, I have no doubt but
that it is of the same kind as that I do understand. The very obscurity, too,
of these divine and wholesome words was a necessary element in eloquence of a
kind that was designed to profit our understandings, not only by the discovery of
truth, but also by the exercise of their powers.
10. I could, however, if I had time, show those men who cry up their own
form of language as superior to that of our authors (not because of its majesty,
but because of its inflation), that all those powers and beauties of eloquence
which they make their boast, are to be found in the sacred writings which God
in His goodness has provided to mould our characters, and to guide us from this
world of wickedness to the blessed world above. But it is not the qualities
which these writers have in common with the heathen orators and poets that give
me such unspeakable delight in their eloquence; I am more struck with admiration
at the way in which, by an eloquence peculiarly their own, they so use this
eloquence of ours that it is not conspicuous either by its presence or its
absence: for it did not become them either to condemn it or to make an ostentatious
display of it; and if they had shunned it, they would have done the former; if
they had made it prominent. they might have appeared to be doing the latter. And
in those passages where the learned do note its presence, the matters spoken
of are such, that the words in which they are put seem not so much to be sought
out by the speaker as spontaneously to suggest themselves; as if wisdom were
walking out of its house,--that is, the breast of the wise man, and eloquence,
like an inseparable attendant, followed it without being called for. (2)
CHAP. 7.--EXAMPLES OF TRUE ELOQUENCE DRAWN FROM THE EPISTLES OF PAUL AND THE
PROPHECIES OF AMOS.
11. For who would not see what the apostle meant to say, and how wisely he
has said it, in the following passage: "We glory in tribulations also: knowing
that tribulation worketh patience; and patience, experience; and experience,
hope: and hope maketh not ashamed; because the love of God is shed abroad in our
hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us"?(3) Now were any man
unlearnedly learned (if I may use the expression) to contend that the apostle had here
followed the rules of rhetoric, would not every Christian, learned or
unlearned, laugh at him? And yet here we find the figure which is called in Greek
<greek>klimaz</greek> (climax,) and by some in Latin gradatio, for they do not care
to call it scala (a ladder), when the words and ideas have a connection of
dependency the one upon the other, as we see here that patience arises out of
tribulation, experience out of patience, and hope out of experience. Another
ornament, too, is found here; for after certain statements finished in a single tone of
voice, which we call clauses and sections (membra et caesa), but the Greeks
<greek>kpla</greek> and <greek>kommata</greek>,(1) there follows a rounded
sentence (ambitus sive circuitus) which the Greeks call <greek>periodos</greek>,(2)
the clauses of which are suspended on the voice of the speaker till the whole is
completed by the last clause For of the statements which precede the period
this is the first clause, "knowing that tribulation worketh patience;" the
second, "and patience, experience;" the third, "and experience, hope." Then the
period which is subjoined is completed in three clauses, of which the first is, "and
hope maketh not ashamed;" the second, "because the love of God is shed abroad
in our hearts;" the third, "by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us." But
these and other matters of the same kind are taught in the art of elocution. As
then I do not affirm that the apostle was guided by the rules of eloquence, so I
do not deny that his wisdom naturally produced, and was accompanied by,
eloquence.
12. In the Second Epistle to the Corinthians, again, he refutes certain
false apostles who had gone out from the Jews, and had been trying to injure his
character; and being compelled to speak of himself, though he ascribes this as
folly to himself, how wisely and how eloquently he speaks! But wisdom is his
guide, eloquence his attendant; he follows the first, the second follows him, and
yet he does not spurn it when it comes after him. "I say again," he says, "Let
no man think me a fool: if otherwise, yet as a fool receive me, that I may
boast myself a little. That which I speak, I speak it not after the Lord, but as
it were foolishly, in this confidence of boasting. Seeing that many glory after
the flesh, I will glory also. For ye suffer fools gladly, seeing ye yourselves
are wise. For ye suffer, if a man bring you into bondage, if a man devour you,
if a man take of you, if a man exalt himself, if a man smite you on the face. I
speak as concerning reproach, as though we had been weak. Howbeit,
whereinsoever any is bold (I speak foolishly), I am bold also. Are they Hebrews? so am I.
Are they Israelites? so am I. Are they the seed of Abraham? so am I. Are they
ministers of Christ? (I speak as a fool), I am more: in labors more abundant, in
stripes above measure, in prisons more frequent, in deaths off. Of the Jews
five times received I forty stripes save one, thrice was I beaten with rods, once
was I stoned, thrice I suffered shipwreck, a night and a day I have been in
the deep; in journeyings often, in perils of waters, in perils of robbers, in
perils by mine own countrymen, in perils by the heathen, in perils in the city, in
perils in the wilderness, in perils in the sea, in perils among false
brethren; in weariness and painfulness, in watchings often, in hunger and thirst, in
fastings often, in cold and nakedness. Besides those things which are without,
that which cometh upon me daily, the care of all the churches. Who is weak, and I
am not weak? who is offended, and I burn not? If I must needs glory, I will
glory of the things which concern my infirmities."(3) The thoughtful and
attentive perceive how much wisdom there is in these words. And even a man sound asleep
must notice what a stream of eloquence flows through them.
13. Further stilI, the educated man observes that those sections which the
Greeks call <greek>kommata</greek>, and the clauses and periods of which I
spoke a short time ago, being intermingled in the most beautiful variety, make up
the whole form and features (so to speak) of that diction by which even the
unlearned are delighted and affected. For, from the place where I commenced to
quote, the passage consists of periods: the first the smallest possible,
consisting of two members; for a period cannot have less than two members, though it may
have more: "I say again, let no man think me a fool." The next has three
members: "if otherwise, yet as a fool receive me, that I may boast myself a little."
The third has four members: "That which I speak, I speak it not after the
Lord, but as it were foolishly, in this confidence of boasting." The fourth has
two: "Seeing that many glory after the flesh, I will glory also." And the fifth
has two: "For ye suffer fools gladly, seeing ye yourselves are wise." The sixth
again has two members: "for ye suffer, if a man bring you into bondage." Then
follow three sections (caesa): "if a man devour you, if a man take of you, if a
man exalt himself." Next three clauses (membra): if "a man smite you on the
face. I speak as concerning reproach, as though we had been weak." Then is
subjoined a period of three members: "Howbeit, whereinsoever any is bold (I speak
foolishly), I am bold also." After this, certain separate sections being put in the
interrogatory form, separate sections are also given as answers, three to
three: "Are they Hebrews? so am I. Are they Israelites? so am I. Are they the seed
of Abraham? so am I." But a fourth section being put likewise in the
interrogatory form, the answer is given not in another section (caesum) but in a clause
(membrum):(1) "Are they the ministers of Christ? (I speak as a fool.) I am
more." Then the next four sections are given continuously, the interrogatory form
being most elegantly suppressed: "in labors more abundant, in stripes above
measure, in prisons more frequent, in deaths oft." Next is interposed a short
period; for, by a suspension of the voice, "of the Jews five times" is to be marked
off as constituting one member, to which is joined the second, "received I forty
stripes save one." Then he returns to sections, and three are set down:
"Thrice was I beaten with rods, once was I stoned, thrice I suffered shipwreck." Next
comes a clause: "a night and a day I have been in the deep." Next fourteen
sections burst forth with a vehemence which is most appropriate: "In journeyings
often, in perils of waters, in perils of robbers, in perils by mine own
countrymen, in perils by the heathen, in perils in the city, in perils in the
wilderness, in perils in the sea, in perils among false brethren, in weariness and
painfulness, in watchings often, in hunger and thirst, in fastings often, in cold
and nakedness." After this comes in a period of three members: "Besides those
things which are without, that which cometh upon me daily, the care of all the
churches." And to this he adds two clauses in a tone of inquiry: "Who is weak, and
I am not weak? who is offended, and I burn not?" In fine, this whole passage,
as if panting for breath, winds up with a period of two members: "If I must
needs glory, I will glory of the things which concern mine infirmities." And I
cannot sufficiently express how beautiful and delightful it is when after this
outburst he rests himself, and gives the hearer rest, by interposing a slight
narrative. For he goes on to say: "The God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,
which is blessed for evermore, knoweth that I lie not." And then he tells, very
briefly the danger he had been in, and the way he escaped it.
14. It would be tedious to pursue the matter further, or to point out the
same facts in regard to other passages of Holy Scripture. Suppose i had taken
the further trouble, at least in regard to the passages I have quoted from the
apostle's writings, to point out figures of speech which are taught in the art
of rhetoric? Is it not more likely that serious men would think I had gone too
far, than that any of the studious would think I had done enough? All these
things when taught by masters are reckoned of great value; great prices are paid
for them, and the vendors puff them magniloquently. And I fear lest I too should
smack of that puffery while thus descanting on matters of this kind. It was
necessary, however, to reply to the ill-taught men who think our authors
contemptible; not because they do not possess, but because they do not display, the
eloquence which these men value so highly.
15. But perhaps some one is thinking that I have selected the Apostle Paul
because he is our great orator. For when he says, "Though I be rude in speech,
yet not in knowledge, (2) he seems to speak as if granting so much to his
detractors, not as confessing that he recognized its truth. If he had said, "I am
indeed rude in speech, but not in knowledge," we could not in any way have put
another meaning upon it. He did not hesitate plainly to assert his knowledge,
because without it he could not have been the teacher of the Gentiles. And
certainly if we bring forward anything of his as a model of eloquence, we take it
from those epistles which even his very detractors, who thought his bodily
presence weak and his speech contemptible, confessed to be weighty and powerful.(3)
I see, then, that I must say something about the eloquence of the prophets
also, where many things are concealed under a metaphorical style, which the
more completely they seem buried under figures of speech, give the greater
pleasure when brought to light. In this place, however, it is my duty to select a
passage of such a kind that I shall not be compelled to explain the matter, but
only to commend the style. And I shall do so, quoting principally from the book
of that prophet who says that he was a shepherd or herdsman, and was called by
God from that occupation, and sent to prophesy to the people of God. (4) I shall
not, however, follow the Septuagint translators, who, being themselves under
the guidance of the Holy Spirit in their translation, seem to have altered some
passages with the view of directing the reader's attention more particularly to
the investigation of the spiritual sense; (and hence some passages are more
obscure, because more figurative, in their translation;) but I shall follow the
translation made from the Hebrew into Latin by the presbyter Jerome, a man
thoroughly acquainted with both tongues.
16. When, then, this rustic, or quondam rustic prophet, was denouncing the
godless, the proud, the luxurious, and therefore the most neglectful of
brotherly love, he called aloud, saying: "Woe to you who are at ease in Zion, and
trust in the mountain of Samaria, who are heads and chiefs of the people, entering
with pomp into the house of Israel! Pass ye unto Calneh, and see; and from
thence go ye to Hamath the great; then go down to Gath of the Philistines, and to
all the best kingdoms of these: is their border greater than your border? Ye
that are set apart for the day of evil, and that come near to the seat of
oppression; that lie upon beds of ivory, and stretch yourselves upon couches that eat
the lamb of the flock, and the calves out of the midst of the herd; that chant
to the sound of the viol. They thought that they had instruments of music like
David; drinking wine in bowls, and anointing themselves with the costliest
ointment: and they were not grieved for the affliction of Joseph."(1) Suppose those
men who, assuming to be themselves learned and eloquent, despise our prophets
as untaught and unskillful of speech, had been obliged to deliver a message
like this, and to men such as these, would they have chosen to express themselves
in any respect differently--those of them, at least, who would have shrunk
from raving like madmen?
17. For what is there that sober ears could wish changed in this speech?
In the first place, the invective itself; with what vehemence it throws itself
upon the drowsy senses to startle them into wakefulness: "Woe to you who are at
ease in Zion, and trust in the mountains of Samaria, who are heads and chiefs
of the people, entering with pomp into the house of Israel!" Next, that he may
use the favors of God, who has bestowed upon them ample territory, to show their
ingratitude in trusting to the mountain of Samaria, where idols were
worshipped: "Pass ye unto Calneh," he says, "and see; and from thence go ye to Hamath
the great; then go down to Gath of the Philistines, and to all the best kingdoms
of these: is their border greater than your border?" At the same time also that
these things are spoken of, the style is adorned with names of places as with
lamps, such as "Zion," "Samaria," "Calneh," "Hamath the great," and "Gath of
the Philistines." Then the words joined to these places are most appropriately
varied: "ye are at ease," "ye trust," "pass on," "go," "descend."
18. And then the future captivity under an oppressive king is announced as
approaching, when it is added: "Ye that are set apart for the day of evil, and
come near to the seat of oppression." Then are subjoined the evils of luxury:
"ye that lie upon beds of ivory, and stretch yourselves upon couches; that eat
the lamb from the flock, and the calves out of the midst of the herd." These
six clauses form three periods of two members each. For he does not say: Ye who
are set apart for the day of evil, who come near to the seat of oppression, who
sleep upon beds of ivory, who stretch yourselves upon couches, who eat the lamb
from the flock, and calves out of the herd." If he had so expressed it, this
would have had its beauty: six separate clauses running on, the same pronoun
being repeated each time, and each clause finished by a single effort of the
speaker's voice. But it is more beautiful as it is, the clauses being joined in
pairs under the same pronoun, and forming three sentences, one referring to the
prophecy of the captivity: "Ye that are set apart for the day of evil, and come
near the seat of oppression;" the second to lasciviousness: "ye that lie upon
beds of ivory, and stretch yourselves upon couches;" the third to gluttony: "who
eat the lamb from the flock, and the calves out of the midst of the herd." So
that it is at the discretion of the speaker whether he finish each clause
separately and make six altogether, or whether he suspend his voice at the first, the
third, and the fifth, and by joining the second to the first, the fourth to the
third, and the sixth to the fifth, make three most elegant periods of two
members each: one describing the imminent catastrophe; another, the lascivious
couch; and the third, the luxurious table.
19. Next he reproaches them with their luxury in seeking pleasure for the
sense of hearing. And here, when he had said, "Ye who chant to the sound of
the viol," seeing that wise men may practise music wisely, he, with wonderful
skill of speech, checks the flow of his invective, and not now speaking to, but
of, these men, and to show us that we must distinguish the music of the wise
from the music of the voluptuary, he does not say, "Ye who chant to the sound of
the viol, and think that ye have instruments of music like David;" but he first
addresses to themselves what it is right the voluptuaries should hear, "Ye who
chant to the sound of the viol;" and then, turning to others, he intimates
that these men have not even skill in their art: "they thought that they had
instruments of music like David; drinking wine in bowls, and anointing themselves
with the costliest ointment." These three clauses are best pronounced when the
voice is suspended on the first two members of the period, and comes to a pause
on the third.
20. But now as to the sentence which follows all these: "and they were not
grieved for the affliction of Joseph." Whether this be pronounced continuously
as one clause, or whether with more elegance we hold the words, "and they were
not grieved," suspended on the voice, and then add, "for the affliction of
Joseph," so as to make a period of two members; in any case, it is a touch of
marvelous beauty not to say," and they were not grieved for the affliction of their
brother;" but to put Joseph for brother, so as to indicate brothers in general
by the proper name of him who stands out illustrious from among his brethren,
both in regard to the injuries he suffered and the good return he made. And,
indeed, I do not know whether this figure of speech, by which Joseph is put for
brothers in general, is one of those laid down in that art which I learnt and
used to teach. But how beautiful it is, and how it comes home to the intelligent
reader, it is useless to tell any one who does not himself feel it.
21. And a number of other points bearing on the laws of eloquence could be
found in this passage which I have chosen as an example. But an intelligent
reader will not be so much instructed by carefully analysing it as kindled by
reciting it with spirit. Nor was it composed by man's art and care, but it flowed
forth in wisdom and eloquence from the Divine mind; wisdom not aiming at
eloquence, yet eloquence not shrinking from wisdom. For if, as certain very eloquent
and acute men have perceived and said, the rules which are laid down in the art
of oratory could not have been observed, and noted, and reduced to system, if
they had not first had their birth in the genius of orators, is it wonderful
that they should be found in the messengers of Him who is the author of all
genius? Therefore let us acknowledge that the canonical writers are not only wise
but eloquent also, with an eloquence suited to a character and position like
theirs.
CHAP. 8.--THE OBSCURITY OF THE SACRED WRITERS, THOUGH COMPATIBLE WITH
ELOQUENCE, NOT TO BE IMITATED BY CHRISTIAN TEACHERS.
22. But although I take some examples of eloquence from those writings of
theirs which there is no difficulty in understanding, we are not by any means
to suppose that it is our duty to imitate them in those passages where, with a
view to exercise and train the minds of their readers, and to break in upon the
satiety and stimulate the zeal of those who are willing to learn, and with a
view also to throw a veil over the minds of the godless either that they may be
converted to piety or shut out from a knowledge of the mysteries, from one or
other of these reasons they have expressed themselves with a useful and wholesome
obscurity. They have indeed expressed themselves in such a way that those who
in after ages understood and explained them aright have in the Church of God
obtained an esteem, not indeed equal to that with which they are themselves
regarded, but coming next to it. The expositors of these writers, then, ought not to
express themselves in the same way, as if putting forward their expositions as
of the same authority; but they ought in all their deliverances to make it
their first and chief aim to be understood, using as far as possible such
clearness of speech that either he will be very dull who does not understand them, or
that if what they say should not be very easily or quickly understood, the
reason will lie not in their manner of expression, but in the difficulty and
subtilty of the matter they are trying to explain.
CHAP. 9.--HOW, AND WITH WHOM, DIFFICULT PASSAGES ARE TO BE DISCUSSED.
23. For there are some passages which are not understood in their proper
force, or are understood with great difficulty, at whatever length, however
clearly, or with whatever eloquence the speaker may expound them; and these should
never be brought before the people at all, or only on rare occasions when there
is some urgent reason. In books, however, which are written in such a style
that, if understood, they, so to speak, draw their own readers, and if not
understood, give no trouble to those who do not care to read them and in private
conversations, we must not shrink from the duty of bringing the truth which we
ourselves have reached within the comprehension of others, however difficult it may
be to understand it, and whatever labor in the way of argument it may cost us.
Only two conditions are to be insisted upon, that our hearer or companion
should have an earnest desire to learn the truth, and should have capacity of mind
to receive it in whatever form it may be communicated, the teacher not being so
anxious about the eloquence as about the clearness of his teaching.
CHAP. 10.--THE NECESSITY FOR PERSPICUITY OF STYLE.
24. Now a strong desire for clearness sometimes leads to neglect of the
more polished
forms of speech, and indifference about what sounds well, compared with what
dearly expresses and conveys the meaning intended. Whence a certain author, when
dealing with speech of this kind, says that there is in it "a kind of careful
negligence."(1) Yet while taking away ornament, it does not bring in vulgarity
of speech; though good teachers have, or ought to have, so great an anxiety
about teaching that they will employ a word which cannot be made pure Latin
without becoming obscure or ambiguous, but which when used according to the vulgar
idiom is neither ambiguous nor obscure) not in the way the learned, but rather in
the way the unlearned employ it. For if our translators did not shrink from
saying, "Non congregabo conventicula eorum de sanguinibus,"(2) because they felt
that it was important for the sense to put a word here in the plural which in
Latin is only used in the singular; why should a teacher of godliness who is
addressing an unlearned audience shrink from using assure instead of os, if he
fear that the latter might be taken not as the singular of ossa, but as the
singular of ora, seeing that African ears have no quick perception of the shortness
or length of vowels? And what advantage is there in purity of speech which does
not lead to understanding in the hearer, seeing that there is no use at all in
speaking, if they do not understand us for whose sake we speak? He, therefore,
who teaches will avoid all words that do not teach; and if instead of them he
can find words which are at once pure and intelligible, he will take these by
preference; if, however, he cannot, either because there are no such words, or
because they do not at the time occur to him, he will use words that are not
quite pure, if only the substance of his thought be conveyed and apprehended in
its integrity.
25. And this must be insisted on as necessary to our being understood, not
only in conversations, whether with one person or with several, but much more
in the case of a speech delivered in public: for in conversation any one has
the power of asking a question; but when all are silent that one may be heard,
and all faces are turned attentively upon him, it is neither customary nor
decorous for a person to ask a question about what he does not understand; and on
this account the speaker ought to be especially careful to give assistance to
those who cannot ask it. Now a crowd anxious for instruction generally shows by its
movements if it understands what is said; and until some indication of this
sort be given, the subject discussed ought to be turned over and over, and put in
every shape and form and variety of expression, a thing which cannot be done
by men who are repeating words prepared beforehand and committed to memory. As
soon, however, as the speaker has ascertained that what he says is understood,
he ought either to bring his address to a close, or pass on to another point.
For if a man gives pleasure when he throws light upon points on which people wish
for instruction, he becomes wearisome when he dwells at length upon things
that are already well known, especially when men's expectation was fixed on having
the difficulties of the passage removed. For even things that are very well
known are told for the sake of the pleasure they give, if the attention be
directed not to the things themselves, but to the way in which they are told. Nay,
even when the style itself is already well known, if it be pleasing to the
hearers, it is almost a matter of indifference whether he who speaks be a speaker or
a reader. For things that are gracefully written are often not only read with
delight by those who are making their first acquaintance with them, but re-read
with delight by those who have already made acquaintance with them, and have
not yet forgotten them; nay, both these classes will derive pleasure even from
hearing another man repeat them. And if a man has forgotten anything, when he is
reminded of it he is taught. But I am not now treating of the mode of giving
pleasure. I am speaking of the mode in which men who desire to learn ought to be
taught. And the best mode is that which secures that he who hears shall hear
the truth, and that what he hears he shall understand. And when this Joint has
been reached, no further labor need be spent on the truth itself, as if it
required further explanation; but perhaps some trouble may be taken to enforce it so
as to bring it home to the heart. If it appear right to do this, it ought to be
done so moderately as not to toad to weariness and impatience.
CHAP. 11--THE CHRISTIAN TEACHER MUST SPEAK CLEARLY, BUT NOT INELEGANTLY.
26. For teaching, of course, true eloquence consists, not in making people
like what they disliked, nor in making them do what they shrank from, but in
making clear what was obscure; yet if this be done without grace of style, the
benefit does not extend beyond the few eager students who are anxious to know
whatever is to be learnt, however rude and unpolished the form in which it is
put; and who, when they have succeeded in their object, find the plain truth
pleasant food enough. And it is one of the distinctive features of good intellects
not to love words, but the truth in words. For of what service is a golden key,
if it cannot open what we want it to open? Or what objection is there to a
wooden one if it can, seeing that to open what is shut is all we want? But as there
is a certain analogy between learning and eating, the very food without which
it is impossible to live must be flavored to meet the tastes of the majority.
CHAP. 12.--THE AIM OF THE ORATOR, ACCORDING TO CICERO, IS TO TEACH, TO
DELIGHT, AND TO MOVE. OF THESE, TEACHING IS THE MOST ESSENTIAL.
27. Accordingly a great orator has truly said that "an eloquent man must
speak so as to teach, to delight, and to persuade." Then he adds: "To teach is a
necessity, to delight is a beauty, to persuade is a triumph."(2) Now of these
three, the one first mentioned, the teaching, which is a matter of necessity,
depends on what we say; the other two on the way we say it. He, then, who speaks
with the purpose of teaching should not suppose that he has said what he has
to say as long as he is not understood; for although what he has said be
intelligible to himself it is not said at all to the man who does not understand it.
If, however, he is understood, he has said his say, whatever may have been his
manner of saying it. But if he wishes to delight or persuade his hearer as well,
he will not accomplish that end by putting his thought in any shape no matter
what, but for that purpose the style of speaking is a matter of importance. And
as the hearer must be pleased in order to secure his attention, so he must be
persuaded in order to move him to action. And as he is pleased if you speak
with sweetness and elegance, so he is persuaded if he be drawn by your promises,
and awed by your threats; if he reject what you condemn, and embrace what you
commend; if he grieve when you heap up objects for grief, and rejoice when you
point out an object for joy; if he pity those whom you present to him as objects
of pity, and shrink from those whom you set before him as men to be feared and
shunned. I need not go over all the other things that can be done by powerful
eloquence to move the minds of the hearers, not telling them what they ought to
do, but urging them to do what they already know ought to be done.
28. If, however, they do not yet know this, they must of course be
instructed before they can be moved. And perhaps the mere knowledge of their duty will
have such an effect that there will be no need to move them with greater
strength of eloquence. Yet when this is needful, it ought to be done. And it is
needful when people, knowing what they ought to do, do it not. Therefore, to teach
is a necessity. For what men know, it is in their own hands either to do or not
to I do. But who would say that it is their duty to do what they do not know?
On the same principle, to persuade is not a necessity: for it is not always
called for; as, for example, when the hearer yields his assent to one who simply
teaches or gives pleasure. For this reason also to persuade is a triumph,
because it is possible that a man may be taught and delighted, and yet not give his
consent. And what will be the use of gaining the first two ends if we fail in
the third? Neither is it a necessity to give pleasure; for when, in the course of
an address, the truth is clearly pointed out (and this is the true function of
teaching), it is not the fact, nor is it the intention, that the style of
speech should make the truth pleasing, or that the style should of itself give
pleasure; but the truth itself, when exhibited in its naked simplicity, gives
pleasure, because it is the truth. And hence even falsities are frequently a source
of pleasure when they are brought to light and exposed. It is not, of course,
their falsity that gives pleasure; but as it is true that they are false, the
speech which shows this to be true gives pleasure.
CHAP. 13.--THE HEARER MUST BE MOVED AS WELL AS INSTRUCTED.
29. But for the sake of those who are so fastidious that they do not care
for truth unless it is put in the form of a pleasing discourse, no small place
has been assigned in eloquence to the art of pleasing. And yet even this is not
enough for those stubborn-minded men who both understand and are pleased with
the teacher's discourse, without deriving any profit from it. For what does it
profit a man that he both confesses the truth and praises the eloquence, if he
does not yield his consent, when it is only for the sake of securing his
consent that the speaker in urging the truth gives careful attention to what he says?
If the truths taught are such that to believe or to know them is enough, to
give one's assent implies nothing more than to confess that they are true. When,
however, the truth taught is one that must be carried into practice, and that
is taught for the very purpose of being practised, it is useless to be persuaded
of the truth of what is said, it is useless to be pleased with the manner in
which it is said, if it be not so learnt as to be practised. The eloquent
divine, then, when he is urging a practical truth, must not only teach so as to give
instruction, and please so as to keep up the attention, but he must also sway
the mind so as to subdue the will. For if a man be not moved by the force of
truth, though it is demonstrated to his own confession, and clothed in beauty of
style, nothing remains but to subdue him by the power of eloquence.
CHAP. 14.--BEAUTY OF DICTION TO BE IN KEEPING WITH THE MATTER.
30. And so much labor has been spent by men on the beauty of expression
here spoken of, that not only is it not our duty to do, but it is our duty to
shun and abhor, many and heinous deeds of wickedness and baseness which wicked and
base men have with great eloquence recommended, not with a view to gaining
assent, but merely for the sake of being read with pleasure. But may God avert
from His Church what the prophet Jeremiah says of the synagogue of the Jews: "A
wonderful and horrible thing is committed in the land: the prophets prophesy
falsely, and the priests applaud them with their hands;(1) and my people love to
have it so: and what will ye do in the end thereof?"(2) O eloquence, which is the
more terrible from its purity, and the more crushing from its solidity!
Assuredly it is "a hammer that breaketh the rock in pieces." For to this God Himself
has by the same prophet compared His own word spoken through His holy
prophets.(3) God forbid, then, God forbid that with us the priest should applaud the
false prophet, and that God's people should love to have and so. God forbid, I
say, that with us there should be such terrible madness! For what shall we do in
the end thereof? And assuredly it is preferable, even though what is said should
be less intelligible, less pleasing, and less persuasive, that truth be
spoken, and that what is just, not what is iniquitous, be listened to with pleasure.
But this, of course, cannot be, unless what is true and just be expressed with
elegance.
31. In a serious assembly, moreover, such as is spoken of when it is said,
"I will praise Thee among much people,"(4) no pleasure is derived from that
species of eloquence which indeed says nothing that is false, but which buries
small and unimportant truths under a frothy mass of ornamental words, such as
would not be graceful or dignified even if used to adorn great and fundamental
truths. And something of this sort occurs in a letter of the blessed Cyprian,
which, I think, came there by accident, or else was inserted designedly with this
view, that posterity might see how the wholesome discipline of Christian
teaching had cured him of that redundancy of language, and confined him to a more
dignified and modest form of eloquence, such as we find in his subsequent letters,
a style which is admired without effort, is sought after with eagerness, but is
not attained without great difficulty. He says, then, in one place," Let us
seek this abode: the neighboring solitudes afford a retreat where, whilst the
spreading shoots of the vine trees, pendulous and intertwined, creep amongst the
supporting reeds, the leafy covering has made a portico of vine."(5) There is
wonderful fluency and exuberance of language here; but it is too florid to be
pleasing to serious minds. But people who are fond of this style are apt to think
that men who do not use it, but employ a more chastened style, do so because
they cannot attain the former, not because their judgment teaches them to avoid
it. Wherefore this holy man shows both that he can speak in that style, for he
has done so once, and that he does not choose, for he never uses it again.
CHAP. 15.--THE CHRISTIAN TEACHER SHOULD PRAY BEFORE PREACHING.
32. And so our Christian orator, while he says what is just, and holy, and
good (and he ought never to say anything else), does all he can to be heard
with intelligence, with pleasure, and with obedience; and he need and so far as
he succeeds, he will succeed more by piety in prayer than by gifts of oratory;
and so he ought to pray for himself, and for those he is about to address,
before he attempts to speak. And when the hour is come that he must speak, he
ought, before he opens his mouth, to lift up his thirsty soul to God, to drink in
what he is about to pour forth, and to be himself filled with what he is about to
distribute. For, as in regard to every matter of faith and love there are many
things that may be said, and many ways of saying them, who knows what it is
expedient at a given moment for us to say, or to be heard saying, except God who
knows the hearts of all? And who can make us say what we ought, and in the way
we ought, except Him in whose hand both we and our speeches are? Accordingly,
he who is anxious both to know and to teach should learn all that is to be
taught, and acquire such a faculty of speech as is suitable for a divine. But when
the hour for speech arrives, let him reflect upon that saying of our Lord's as
better suited to the wants of a pious mind "Take no thought how or what ye shall
speak; for it shall be given you in that same hour what ye shall speak. For it
is not ye that speak, but the Spirit of your Father which speaketh in you."(1)
The Holy Spirit, then, speaks thus in those who for Christ's sake are
delivered to the persecutors; why not also in those who deliver Christ's message to
those who are wilting to learn?
CHAP. 16.--HUMAN DIRECTIONS NOT TO BE DESPISED, THOUGH GOD MAKES THE TRUE
TEACHER.
33. Now if any one says that we need not direct men how or what they
should teach, since the Holy Spirit makes them teachers, he may as well say that we
need not pray, since our Lord says, "Your Father knoweth what things ye have
need of before ye ask Him;"(2) or that the Apostle Paul should not have given
directions to Timothy and Titus as to how or what they should teach others. And
these three apostolic epistles ought to be constantly before the eyes of every
one who has obtained the position of a teacher in the Church. In the First
Epistle to Timothy do we not read: "These things command and teach?"(3) What these
things are, has been told previously. Do we not read there: "Rebuke not an elder,
but entreat him as a father?"(4) Is it not said in the Second Epistle: "Hold
fast the form of sound words, which thou hast heard of me?"(5) And is he not be
ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth?"(6) And in the same place: "Preach
the word; be instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort, with
all long-suffering and doctrine."(7) And so in the Epistle to Titus, does he not
say that a bishop ought to "hold fast the faithful word as he hath been
taught, that he may be able by sound doctrine both to exhort and to convince the
gainsayers?"(8) There, too, he says: "But speak thou the things which become sound
doctrine: that the aged men be sober," and so on.(9) And there, too: "These
things speak, and exhort, and rebuke with all authority. Let no man despise thee.
Put them in mind to be subject to principalities and powers"(10) and so on.
What then are we to think? Does the apostle in any way contradict himself, when,
though he says that men are made teachers by the operation of the Holy Spirit,
he yet himself gives them directions how and what they should teach? Or are we
to understand, that though the duty of men to teach even the teachers does not
cease when the Holy Spirit is given, yet that neither is he who planteth
anything, nor he who watereth, but God who giveth the increase?(11) Wherefore though
holy men be our helpers, or even holy angels assist us, no one learns aright
the things that pertain to life with God, until God makes him ready to learn from
Himself, that God who is thus addressed in the psalm: "Teach me to do Thy
will; for Thou art my God."(12) And so the same apostle says to Timothy himself,
speaking, of course, as teacher to disciple: "But continue thou in the things
which thou hast learned, and hast been assured of, knowing of whom thou hast
learned them."(13) For as the medicines which men apply to the bodies of their
fellow-men are of no avail except God gives them virtue (who can heal without their
aid, though they cannot without His), and yet they are applied; and if it be
done from a sense of duty, it is esteemed a work of mercy or benevolence; so the
aids of teaching, applied through the instrumentality of man, are of advantage
to the soul only when God works to make them of advantage, who could give the
gospel to man even without the help or agency of men.
CHAP. 17.--THREEFOLD DIVISION OF THE VARIOUS STYLES OF SPEECH.
34. He then who, in speaking, aims at enforcing what is good, should not
despise any of those three objects, either to teach, or to give pleasure, or to
move, and should pray and strive, as we have said above, to be heard with
intelligence, with pleasure, and with ready compliance· And when he does this with
elegance and propriety, he may justly be called eloquent, even though he do not
carry with him the assent of his hearer. For it is these three ends, viz.,
teaching, giving pleasure, and moving, that the great master of Roman eloquence
himself seems to have intended that the following three directions should
subserve: "He, then, shall be eloquent, who can say little things in a subdued style,
moderate things in a temperate style, and great things in a majestic style:"(1)
as if he had taken in also the three ends mentioned above, and had embraced the
whole in one sentence thus: "He, then, shall be eloquent, who can say little
things in a subdued style, in order to give instruction, moderate things in a
temperate style, in order to give pleasure, and great things in a majestic style,
in order to sway the mind."
CHAP. 18.--THE CHRISTIAN ORATOR IS CONSTANTLY DEALING WITH GREAT MATTERS.
35. Now the author I have quoted could have exemplified these three
directions, as laid down by himself, in regard to legal questions: he could not,
however, have done so in regard to ecclesiastical questions,--the only ones that an
address such as I wish to give shape to is concerned with. For of legal
questions those are called small which have reference to pecuniary transactions;
those great where a matter relating to man's life or liberty comes up. Cases,
again, which have to do with neither of these, and where the intention is not to get
the hearer to do, or to pronounce judgment upon anything, but only to give him
pleasure, occupy as it were a middle place between the former two, and are on
that account called middling, or moderate. For moderate things get their name
from modus (a measure); and it is an abuse, not a proper use of the word
moderate, to put it for little. In questions like ours, however, where all things, and
especially those addressed to the people from the place of authority, ought to
have reference to men's salvation, and that not their temporal but their
eternal salvation, and where also the thing to be guarded against is eternal ruin,
everything that we say is important; so much so, that even what the preacher
says about pecuniary matters, whether it have reference to loss or gain, whether
the amount be great or small, should not seem unimportant. For justice is never
unimportant, and justice ought assuredly to be observed, even in small affairs
of money, as our Lord says: "He that is faithful in that which is least, is
faithful also in much."(2) That which is least, then, is very little; but to be
faithful in that which is least is great. For as the nature of the circle, viz.,
that all lines drawn from the centre to the circumference are equal, is the
same in a great disk that it is in the smallest coin; so the greatness of justice
is in no degree lessened, though the matters to which justice is applied be
small.
36. And when the apostle spoke about trials in regard to secular affairs
(and what were these but matters of money?), he says: "Dare any of you, having a
matter against another, go to law before the unjust, and not before the
saints? Do ye not know that the saints shall judge the world? and if the world shall
be judged by you, are ye unworthy to judge the smallest matters? Know ye not
that we shall judge angels? how much more things that pertain to this life? If,
then, ye have judgments of things pertaining to this life, set them to judge
who are least esteemed in the Church. I speak to your shame. Is it so, that there
is not a wise man among you? no, not one that shall be able to judge between
his brethren? But brother goeth to law with brother, and that before the
unbelievers. Now therefore there is utterly a fault among you, because ye go to law
one with another: why do ye not rather take wrong? why do ye not rather suffer
yourselves to be defrauded? Nay, ye do wrong, and defraud, and that your
brethren. Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God?"(3)
Why is it that the apostle is so indignant, and that he thus accuses, and
upbraids, and chides, and threatens? Why is it that the changes in his tone, so
frequent and so abrupt, testify to the depth of his emotion? Why is it, in fine, that
he speaks in a tone so exalted about matters so very trifling? Did secular
matters deserve so much at his hands? God forbid. No; but all this is done for
the sake of justice, charity, and piety, which in the judgment of every sober
mind are great, even when applied to matters the very least.
37. Of course, if we were giving men advice as to how they ought to
conduct secular cases, either for themselves or for their connections, before the
church courts, we would tightly advise them to conduct them quietly as matters of
little moment. But we are treating of the manner of speech of the man who is to
be a teacher of the truths which deliver us from eternal misery and bring us
to eternal happiness; and wherever these truths are spoken of, whether in public
or private, whether to one or many, whether to friends or enemies, whether in
a continuous discourse or in conversation, whether in tracts, or in books, or
in letters long or short, they are of great importance. Unless indeed we are
prepared to say that, because a cup of cold water is a very trifling and common
thing, the saying of our Lord that he who gives a cup of cold water to one of His
disciples shall in no wise lose his reward,(1) is very trivial and
unimportant. Or that when a preacher takes this saying as his text, he should think his
subject very unimportant, and therefore speak without either eloquence or power,
but in a subdued and humble style. Is it not the case that when we happen to
speak on this subject to the people, and the presence of God is with us, so that
what we say is not altogether unworthy of the subject, a tongue of fire springs
up out of that cold water which inflames even the cold hearts of men with a
zeal for doing works of mercy in hope of an eternal reward?
CHAP. 19.--THE CHRISTIAN TEACHER MUST USE DIFFERENT STYLES ON DIFFERENT
OCCASIONS.
38. And yet, while our teacher ought to speak of great matters, he ought
not always to be speaking of them in a majestic tone, but in a subdued tone when
he is teaching, temperately when he is giving praise or blame. When, however,
something is to be done, and we are speaking to those who ought, but are not
willing, to do it, then great matters must be spoken of with power, and in a
manner calculated to sway the mind. And sometimes the same important matter is
treated in all these ways at different times, quietly when it is being taught,
temperately when its importance is being urged, and powerfully when we are forcing
a mind that is averse to the truth to turn and embrace it. For is there
anything greater than God Himself? Is nothing, then, to be learnt about Him? Or ought
he who is teaching the Trinity in unity to speak of it otherwise than in the
method of calm discussion, so that in regard to a subject which it is not easy to
comprehend, we may understand as much as it is given us to understand? Are we
in this case to seek out ornaments instead of proofs? Or is the hearer to be
moved to do something instead of being instructed so that he may learn something?
But when we come to praise God, either in Himself, or in His works, what a
field for beauty and splendor of language opens up before man, who can task his
powers to the utmost in praising Him whom no one can adequately praise, though
there is no one who does not praise Him in some measure ! But if He be not
worshipped, or if idols, whether they be demons or any created being whatever, be
worshipped with Him or in preference to Him, then we ought to speak out with power
and impressiveness, show how great a wickedness this is, and urge men to flee
from it.
CHAP. 20.--EXAMPLES OF THE VARIOUS STYLES DRAWN FROM SCRIPTURE.
39. But now to come to something more definite. We have an example of the
calm, subdued style in the Apostle Paul, where he says: "Tell me, ye that
desire to be under the law, do ye not hear the law? For it is written, that Abraham
had two sons; the one by a bond maid, the other by a free woman. But he who was
of the bond woman was born after the flesh; but he of the free woman was by
promise. Which things are an allegory: for these are the two covenants; the one
from the Mount Sinai, which gendereth to bondage, which is Hagar. For this Hagar
is Mount Sinai in Arabia, and answereth to Jerusalem which now is, and is in
bondage with her children. But Jerusalem which is above is free, which is the
mother of us all;"(2) and so on. And in the same way where he reasons thus:
"Brethren, I speak after the manner of men: Though it be but a man's covenant, yet
if it be confirmed, no man disannulleth, or addeth thereto. Now to Abraham and
his seed were the promises made. He saith not, And to seeds, as of many; but as
of one, And to thy seed, which is Christ. And this I say, that the covenant,
that was confirmed before of God in Christ, the law, which was four hundred and
thirty years after, cannot disannul, that it should make the promise of none
effect. For if the inheritance be of the law, it is no more of promise: but God
gave it to Abraham by promise."(3) And because it might possibly occur to the
hearer to ask, If there is no inheritance by the law, why then was the law given?
he himself anticipates this objection and asks, "Wherefore then serveth the
law?" And the answer is given: "It was added because of transgressions, till the
seed should come to whom the promise was made; and it was ordained by angels in
the hand of a mediator. Now a mediator is not a mediator of one; but God is
one." And here an objection occurs which he himself has stated: "Is the law then
against the promises of God?" He answers: "God forbid." And he also states the
reason in these words: "For if there had been a law given which could have given
life, verily righteousness should have been by the law. But the Scripture hath
concluded all under sin, that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be
given to them that believe."(1) It is part, then, of the duty of the teacher not
only to interpret what is obscure, and to unravel the difficulties of
questions, but also, while doing this, to meet other questions which may chance to
suggest themselves, lest these should cast doubt or discredit on what we say. If,
however, the solution of these questions suggest itself as soon as the questions
themselves arise, it is useless to disturb what we cannot remove. And besides,
when out of one question other questions arise, and out of these again still
others; if these be all discussed and solved, the reasoning is extended to such
a length, that unless the memory be exceedingly powerful and active the
reasoner finds it impossible to return to the original question from which he set out.
It is, however, exceedingly desirable that whatever occurs to the mind as an
objection that might be urged should be stated and refuted, lest it turn up at a
time when no one will be present to answer it, or lest, if it should occur to
a man who is present but says nothing about it, it might never be thoroughly
removed.
40. In the following words of the apostle we have the temperate style:
"Rebuke not an elder, but entreat him as a father; and the younger men as
brethren; the elder women as mothers, the younger as sisters."(2) And also in these: "I
beseech you, therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye
pre-service."(3) And almost the whole of this hortatory passage is in the temperate style of
eloquence; and those parts of it are the most beautiful in which, as if
paying what was due, things that belong to each other are gracefully brought
together. For example: " Having then gifts, differing according to the grace that is
given to us, whether prophecy, let us prophesy according to the proportion of
faith; or ministry, let us wait on our ministering; or he that teacheth, on
teaching; or he that exhorteth, on exhortation: he that ruleth, with diligence; he
that showeth mercy, with cheerfulness. Let love be without dissimulation. Abhor
that, which is evil, cleave to that which is good. Be kindly affectioned one to
another with brotherly love; in honor preferring one another; not slothful in
business; fervent in spirit; serving the Lord; rejoicing in hope; patient in
tribulation; continuing instant in prayer; distributing to the necessity of
saints; given to hospitality. Bless them which persecute you: bless, and curse not.
Rejoice with them that do rejoice, and weep with them that weep. Be of the same
mind one toward another."(4) And how gracefully all this is brought to a close
in a period of two members: "Mind not high things, but condescend to men of
low estate !" And a little afterwards: "Render therefore to all their dues:
tribute to whom tribute is due; custom to whom custom; fear to whom fear; honor to
whom honor."(5) And these also, though expressed in single clauses, are
terminated by a period of two members: "Owe no man anything, but to love one another."
And a little farther on: "The night is far spent, the day is at hand: let us
therefore cast off the works of darkness, and let us put on the armor of light.
Let us walk honestly, as in the day; not in rioting and drunkenness, not in
chambering and wantonness, not in strife and envying: but put ye on the Lord Jesus
Christ, and make not provision for the flesh, to fulfill the lusts thereof."(6)
Now if the passage were translated thus, "et carnis providentiam ne in
cancupiscentiis feceritis,"(7) the ear would no doubt be gratified with a more
harmonious ending; but our translator, with more strictness, preferred to retain even
the order of the words. And how this sounds in the Greek language, in which the
apostle spoke, those who are better skilled in that tongue may determine. My
opinion, however, is, that what has been translated to us in the same order of
words does not run very harmoniously even in the original tongue.
41. And, indeed, I must confess that our authors are very defective in
that grace of speech which consists in harmonious endings. Whether this be the
fault of the translators, or whether, as I am more inclined to believe, the
authors designedly avoided such ornament, I dare not affirm; for I confess I do not
know. This I know, however, that if any one who is skilled in this species of
harmony would take the closing sentences of these writers and arrange them
according to the law of harmony (which he could very easily will learn that these
divinely-inspired men are not defective in any of those points which he has been
taught in the schools of the grammarians and rhetoricians to consider of
importance; and he will find in them many kinds of speech of great beauty,--beautiful
even in our language, but especially beautiful in the original,--none of which
can be found in those writings of which they boast so much. But care must be
taken that, while adding harmony, we take away none of the weight from these
divine and authoritative utterances. Now our prophets were so far from being
deficient in the musical training from which this harmony we speak of is most fully
learnt, that Jerome, a very learned man, describes even the metres employed by
some of them,(1) in the Hebrew language at least; though, in order to give an
accurate rendering of the words, he has not preserved these in his translation I,
however (to speak of my own feeling, which is better known to me than it is to
others, and than that of others is to me), while I do not in my own speech,
however modestly I think it done, neglect these harmonious endings, am just as
well pleased to find them in the sacred authors very rarely.
42. The majestic style of speech differs from the temperate style just
spoken of, chiefly in that it is not so much decked out with verbal ornaments as
exalted into vehemence by mental emotion. It uses, indeed, nearly all the
ornaments that the other does; but if they do not happen to be at hand, it does not
seek for them. For it is borne on by its own vehemence; and the force of the
thought, not the desire for ornament, makes it seize upon any beauty of expression
that comes in its way. It is enough for its object that warmth of feeling
should suggest the fitting words; they need not be selected by careful elaboration
of speech. If a brave man be armed with weapons adorned with gold and jewels,
heat of battle, not because they are costly, but because they are arms; and yet
the same man does great execution, even when anger furnishes him with a weapon
that he digs out of the ground.(2) The apostle in the following with patience
all the evils of this life. It is "Behold," he says, "now is the accepted time;
behold, now is the day of salvation. Giving no offence in anything, that the
ministry not blamed: but in all things approving ourselves as the ministers of
God, in much patience, in afflictions, in necessities, in distresses, in
strifes, in imprisonments, in tumults, in labors, in watchings, in fastings; by
pureness, by knowledge, by long-suffering, of God, by the armor of righteousness on
the right hand and on the left, by honor and dishonor, by evil report and good
report: as deceivers, and yet true; as unknown, and yet well known; as dying,
and, behold, we live; as chastened, and not killed; as sorrowful, yet alway
rejoicing; as poor, yet making many rich; as having nothing, and yet possessing all
things."(3) See him still burning: "O ye Corinthians, our mouth is opened unto
you, our heart is enlarged," and so on; it would be tedious to go through it
all.
43. And in the same way, writing to the Romans, he urges that the
persecutions of treats this subject with both power and beauty: "We know," he says,
"that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the
called according to His purpose. For whom He did foreknow, He also did
predestinate to be conformed to the image of His Son, that He might be the first-born
among many brethren. Moreover, whom He did predestinate, them He also called;
and whom He called, them He also justified; and whom He justified, them He also
glorified. What shall we then say to these things ? If God be for us, who can
be against us? He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all,
how shall He not with Him also freely give us all things ? Who shall lay
anything to the charge of God's elect ? It is God that justifieth; who is he that
condemneth ? It is Christ that died, yea, rather, that is risen again, who is even
at the right hand of God, who also maketh intercession for us. Who shall
separate us from the love of Christ ? shall tribulation, or distress, or
persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword ? (As it is written, For Thy sake
we are killed all the day long; we are accounted as sheep for the slaughter.)
Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerors, through Him that loved
us. For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor
principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth,
nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God,
which is in Christ Jesus our Lord."(1)
44. Again, in writing to the Galatians, although the whole epistle is
written in the subdued style, except at the end, where it rises into a temperate
eloquence, yet he interposes one passage of so much feeling that, notwithstanding
the absence of any ornaments such as appear in the passages just quoted, it
cannot be called anything but powerful: "Ye observe days, and months, and times,
and years. I am afraid of you, lest I have bestowed upon you labor in vain.
Brethren, I beseech you, be as I am; for I am as ye are: ye have not injured me at
all. Ye know how, through infirmity of the flesh, I preached the gospel unto
you at the first. And my temptation which was in my flesh ye despised not, nor
rejected; but received me as an angel of God, even as Christ Jesus. Where is
then the blessedness ye spake of ? for I bear you record, that, if it had been
possible, ye would have plucked out your own eyes, and have given them to me. Am I
therefore become your enemy, because I tell you the truth ? They zealously
affect you, but pot well; yea, they would exclude you, that ye might affect them.
But it is good to be zealously affected always in a good thing, and not only
when I am present with you. My little children, of whom I travail in birth again
until Christ be formed in you, I desire to be present with you now, and to
change my voice; for I stand in doubt of you."(2) Is there anything here of
contrasted words arranged antithetically, or of words rising gradually to a climax, or
of sonorous clauses, and sections, and periods ? Yet, notwithstanding, there
is a glow of strong emotion that makes us feel the fervor of eloquence.
CHAP. 21.--EXAMPLES OF THE VARIOUS STYLES, DRAWN FROM THE TEACHERS OF THE
CHURCH, ESPECIALLY AMBROSE AND CYPRIAN.
45. But these writings of the apostles, though dear, are yet profound, and
are so written that one who is not content with a superficial acquaintance,
but desires to know them thoroughly, must not only read and hear them, but must
have an expositor. Let us, then, study these various modes of speech as they are
exemplified in the writings of men who, by reading the Scriptures, have
attained to the knowledge of divine and saving truth, and have ministered it to the
Church. Cyprian of blessed memory writes in the subdued style in his treatise on
the sacrament of the cup. In this book he resolves the question, whether the
cup of the Lord ought to contain water only, or water mingled with wine. But we
must quote a passage by way of illustration. After the customary introduction,
he proceeds to the discussion of the point in question. "Observe" he says,
"that we are instructed, in presenting the cup, to maintain the custom handed down
to us from the Lord, and to do nothing that our Lord has not first done for us:
so that the cup which is offered m remembrance of Him should be mixed with
wine. For, as Christ says, 'I am the true vine,'(3) it follows that the blood of
Christ is wine, not water; and the cup cannot appear to contain His blood by
which we are redeemed and quickened, if the wine be absent; for by the wine is the
blood of Christ typified, that blood which is foreshadowed and proclaimed in
all the types and declarations of Scripture. For we find that in the book of
Genesis this very circumstance in regard to the sacrament is foreshadowed, and our
Lord's sufferings typically set forth, in the case of Noah, when he drank
wine, and was drunken, and was uncovered within his tent, and his nakedness was
exposed by his second son, and was carefully hidden by his elder and his younger
sons.(4) It is not necessary to mention the other circumstances in detail, as it
is only necessary to observe this point, that Noah, foreshadowing the future
reality, drank, not water, but wine, and thus showed forth our Lord's passion.
In the same way we see the sacrament of the Lord's supper prefigured in the case
of Melchizedek the priest, according to the testimony of the Holy Scriptures,
where it says: ' And Melchizedek king of Salem brought forth bread and wine:
and he was the priest of the most high God. And he blessed Abraham.'(5) Now, that
Melchizedek was a type of Christ, the Holy Spirit declares in the Psalms,
where the Father addressing the Son says, 'Thou art a priest for ever after the
order of Melchizedek.'(6)"(7) In this passage, and in all of the letter that
follows, the subdued style is maintained, as the reader may easily satisfy himself.
46. St. Ambrose also, though dealing with a question of very great
importance, the equality of the Holy Spirit with the Father and the Son, employs the
subdued style, because the object he has in view demands, not beauty of diction,
nor the swaying of the mind by the stir of emotion, but facts and proofs.
Accordingly, in the introduction to his work, we find the following passage among
others: "When Gideon was startled by the message he had heard from God, that,
though thousands of the people failed, yet through one man God would driver His
people from their enemies, he brought forth a kid of the goats, and by direction
of the angel laid it with unleavened cakes upon a rock, and poured the broth
over it; and as soon as the angel of God touched it with the end of the staff
that was in his hand, there rose up fire out of the rock and consumed the
offering.I Now this sign seems to indicate that the rock was a type of the body of
Christ, for it is written, 'They: drank of that spiritual rock that followed them,
and that rock was Christ;'(2) this, of course, referring not to Christ's
divine nature but to His flesh, whose ever-flowing fountain of blood has ever
satisfied the hearts of His thirsting people. And so it was at that time declared in
a mystery that the Lord Jesus, when crucified, should abolish in His flesh the
sins of the whole world, and not their guilty acts merely, but the evil lusts
of their hearts. For the kid's flesh refers to the guilt of the outward act, the
broth to the allurement of lust within, as it is written, 'And the mixed
multitude that was among them fell a lusting; the angel, then, stretched out his
staff and with the Spirit of God, should burn up all the sins of the human race.
Whence also the lord says 'I am coe to send fire on the earth."(4) And in the
same style he pursues the subject, devoting himself chiefly to proving and
enforcing his point.(5)
47. An example of the temperate style is the celebrated encomium on
virginity from Cyprian: "Now our discourse addresses itself to the (virgins, who, as
they are the objects of higher honor, are also the objects of greater care.
These are the flowers on the tree of the Church, the glory and ornament of
spiritual grace, the joy of honor and praise, a work unbroken and unblemished, the
image of God answering to the holiness of the Lord, the brighter portion of the
flock of Christ. The glorious fruitfulness of their mother the Church rejoices in
them, and in them flourishes more abundantly; and in proportion as bright
virginity adds to her numbers, in the same proportion does the mother's joy
increase. And at another place in the end of the epistle 'As we have borne,' he says,
' the image of the earthly, we shall also bear the image of the heavenly.'(7)
Virginity bears this image, integrity bears it, holiness and truth bear it; they
bear it who are mindful of the chastening of the Lord, who observe justice and
piety, who are strong in faith, humble in fear, steadfast in the endurance of
suffering, meek in the endurance of injury, ready to pity, of one mind and of
one heart in brotherly peace. and every one of these things ought ye, holy
virgins, to observe, to cherish, and fulfill, who having hearts at leisure for God
and for Christ, and having chosen the greater and better part, lead and point
the way to the Lord, to whom you have pledged are younger, wait upon the eiders,
and encourage your equals; stir up one another by mutual exhortations; provoke
one another to glory by emulous examples of virtue; endure bravely, advance in
spirituality, finish your course with joy; only be mindful of us when your
virginity shall begin to reap its reward of honor."(8)
48. Ambrose also uses the temperate and ornamented style when he is
holding up before virgins who have made their profession a model for their imitation,
and says: "She was a virgin not in body only, but also in mind; not mingling
the purity of her affection with any dross of hypocrisy; serious in speech;
uncertain riches, but in the prayer of the poor; diligent in labor; reverent in
word; accustomed to look to God, not man, as the guide of her conscience; injuring
no one, wishing well to all; dutiful to her elders, not envious of her equals;
avoiding boastfulness, following reason, loving virtue. When did she wound her
parents even by a look ? When did she quarrel with her neighbors ? When did
she spurn the humble, laugh at the weak, or shun the indigent ? She is accustomed
to visit only those haunts of men that pity would not blush for, nor modesty
pass by. There is nothing haughty in her eyes, nothing bold in her words,
nothing wanton in her gestures: her bearing is not voluptuous, nor her gait mo free,
nor her voice petulant; so that her outward appearance is an image of her mind,
and a picture of purity. For a good house ought to be known for Such at the
very threshold, and show at the very entrance that there is no dark recess
within, as the light of a lamp set inside sheds its radiance on the outside. Why need
I detail her sparingness in food, her superabundance in duty,--the one falling
beneath the demands of nature, the other rising above its powers? The latter
has no intervals of intermission, the former doubles the days by fasting; and
when the desire for refreshment does arise, it is satisfied with food such as
will support life, but not minister to appetite." I Now I have died these latter
passages as examples of the temperate style, because their purpose is not to
induce those who have not yet devoted themselves to take the vows of virginity,
but to show of what character those who have taken vows ought to be. To prevail
on any one to take a step of such a nature and of so great importance, requires
that the mind should be excited and set on fire by the majestic style. Cyprian
the martyr, however, did not write about the duty of taking up the profession
of virginity, but about the dress and deportment of virgins. Yet that great
bishop urges them to their duty even in these respects by the power of a majestic
eloquence.
49. But I shah select examples of the majestic style from their treatment
of a subject which both of them have touched. Both have denounced the women who
color, or rather discolor, their faces with paint. And the first, in dealing
with this topic, says: "Suppose a painter should depict in colors that arrival
nature's the features and form and complexion of some man, and that, when the
portrait had been finished with consummate art, another painter should put his
hand over it, as if to improve by his superior skill the painting already
completed; surely the first artist would feel deeply insulted, and his indignation
would be justly roused. Dost thou, then, think that thou wilt carry off with
impunity so audacious an act of wickedness, such an insult to God the great
artificer? For, granting that thou art not immodest in thy behavior towards men, and
that thou art not polluted in mind by these meretricious deceits, yet, in
corrupting and violating what is God's, thou provest thyself worse than an adulteress.
The fact that thou considerest thyself adorned and beautified by such arts is
an impeachment of God's handiwork, and a violation of truth. Listen to the
warning leavened. For even Christ our passover is sacrificed for us: therefore let
us keep the feast, not with old leaven, neither with the leaven of malice and
wickedness; but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth.'2 Now can
sincerity and truth continue to exist when what is sincere is polluted, and what is
true is changed by meretricious coloring and the deceptions of quackery into a
lie? Thy Lord says, ' Thou canst not make one hair white or black;'(3) and
dost thou wish to have greater power so as to bring to nought the words of thy
Lord? With rash and sacrilegious hand thou wouldst fain change the color of thy
hair: I would that, with a prophetic look to the future, thou shouldst dye it the
color of flame."(4) It would be too long to quote all that follows.
50. Ambrose again, inveighing against such practices, says: "Hence arise
these incentives to vice, that women, in their fear that they may not prove
attractive to men, paint their faces with carefully-chosen colors, and then from
stains on their features go on to stains on their chastity. What folly it is to
change the features of nature into those of painting, and from fear of incurring
their husband's disapproval, to proclaim openly that they have incurred their
own ! For the woman who desires to alter her natural appearance pronounces
condemnation on herself; and her eager endeavors to please another prove that she
has first been displeasing to herself. And what testimony to thine ugliness can
we find, O woman, that is more unquestionable than thine own, when thou art
afraid to show thyself ? If thou art comely why dost thou hide thy comeliness? If
thou art plain, why dost thou lyingly pretend to be beautiful, when thou canst
not enjoy the pleasure of the lie either in thine own consciousness or in that
of another? For he loves another woman, thou desirest to please another man;
and thou art angry if he love another, though he is taught adultery in thee.
Thou art the evil promptress of thine own injury. For even the woman who has been
the victim of a pander shrinks from acting the pander's part, and though she be
vile, it is herself she sins against and not another. The crime of adultery is
almost more tolerable than thine; for adultery tampers with modesty, but thou
with nature."(5) It is sufficiently clear, I think, that this eloquence calls
passionately upon women to avoid tampering with their appearance by deceitful
arts, and to cultivate modesty and fear. Accordingly, we notice that the style is
neither subdued nor temperate, but majestic throughout Now in these two
authors whom I have selected as specimens of the rest, and in other ecclesiastical
writers who both speak the truth and speak it well,--speak it, that is,
judiciously, pointedly, and with beauty and power of expression,--many examples may be
found of the three styles of speech, scattered through their various writings
and discourses; and the diligent student may by assiduous reading, intermingled
with practice on his own part, become thoroughly imbued with them all.
CHAP. 22.--THE NECESSITY OF VARIETY IN STYLE.
51. But we are not to suppose that it is against rule to mingle these
various styles: taste. For when we keep monotonously to one style, we fail to
retain the hearer's attention; but when we pass from one style to another, the
discourse goes off more gracefully, even though it extend to greater length. Each
separate style, again, has varieties of its own which prevent the hearer's
attention from cooling or becoming languid. We can bear the subdued style, however,
longer without variety than the majestic style. For the mental emotion which it
is necessary to stir up in order to carry the hearer's feelings with us, when
once it has been sufficiently excited, the higher the pitch to which it is
raised, can be maintained the shorter time. And therefore we must be on our guard,
lest, in striving to carry to a higher point the emotion we have excited, we
rather lose what we have already gained. But after the interposition of matter
that we have to treat in a quieter style, we can return with good effect to that
which must be treated forcibly, thus making the tide of eloquence to ebb and
flow like the sea. It follows from this, that the majestic style, if it is to be
long continued, ought not to be unvaried, but should alternate at intervals with
the other styles; the speech or writing as a whole, however, being referred to
that style which is the prevailing one.
CHAP. 23.--HOW THE VARIOUS STYLES SHOULD BE MINGLED.
52. Now it is a matter of importance to determine what style should be
alternated with what other, and the places where it is necessary that any
particular style should be used. In the majestic style, for instance, it is always, or
almost always, desirable that the introduction should be temperate. And the
speaker has it in his discretion to use the subdued style even where the majestic
would be allowable, in order that the majestic when it is used may be the more
majestic by comparison, and may as it were shine out with greater brilliance
from the dark background. Again, whatever may be the style of the speech or
writing, when knotty questions turn up for solution, accuracy of distinction is
required, and this naturally demands the subdued style. And accordingly this style
must be used in alternation with the other two styles whenever questions of
that sort turn up; just as we must use the temperate style, no matter what may be
the general tone of the discourse, whenever praise or blame is to be given
without any ulterior reference to the condemnation or acquittal of any one, or to
obtaining the concurrence of any one in a course of action. In the majestic
style, then, and in the quiet likewise, both the other two styles occasionally
find place. The temperate style, on the other hand, not indeed always, but
occasionally, needs the quiet style; for example, when, as I have said, a knotty
question comes up to be settled, or when some points that are susceptible of
ornament are left unadorned and expressed in the quiet style, in order to give greater
effect to certain exuberances (as they may be called) of ornament. But the
temperate style never needs the aid of the majestic; for its object is to gratify,
never to excite, the mind.
CHAP. 24.--THE EFFECTS PRODUCED BY THE MAJESTIC STYLE.
53. If frequent and vehement applause follows a speaker, we are not to
suppose on that account that he is speaking in the majestic style; for this effect
is often produced both by the accurate distinctions of the quiet style, and by
the beauties of the temperate. The majestic style, on the other hand,
frequently silences the audience by its impressiveness, but calls forth their tears.
For example, when at Caesarea in Mauritania I was dissuading the people from that
civil, or worse than civil, war which they called Caterva (for it was not
fellow-citizens merely, but neighbors, brothers, fathers and sons even, who,
divided into two factions and armed with stones, fought annually at a certain season
of the year for several days continuously, every one killing whomsoever he
could), I strove with all the vehemence of speech that I could command to root out
and drive from their hearts and lives an evil so cruel and inveterate; it was
not, however, when I heard their applause, but when I saw their tears, that I
thought I had produced an effect. For the applause showed that they were
instructed and delighted, but the tears that they were subdued. And when I saw their
tears I was confident even before the event proved it, that this horrible and
barbarous custom (which had been handed down to them from their fathers and their
ancestors of generations long gone by and which like an enemy was besieging
their hearts, or rather had complete possession of them) was overthrown; and
immediately that my sermon was finished I called upon them with heart and voice to
give praise and thanks to God. And, lo, with the blessing of Christ, it is now
eight years or more since anything of the sort was attempted there. In many
other cases besides I have observed that men show the effect made on them by the
powerful eloquence of a wise man, not by clamorous applause so much as by
groans, sometimes even by tears, finely by change of life.
54. The quiet style, too, has made a change in many; but it was to teach
them what they were ignorant of, or to persuade them of what they thought
incredible, not to make them do what they knew they ought to do but were unwilling to
do. To break down hardness of this sort, speech needs to be vehement. Praise
and censure, too, when they are eloquently expressed, even in the temperate
style, produce such an effect on some, that they are not only pleased with the
eloquence of the encomiums and censures, but are led to live so as themselves to
deserve praise, and to avoid living so as to incur blame. But no one would say
that all who are thus delighted change their habits in consequence, whereas all
who are moved by the majestic style act accordingly, and all who are taught by
the quiet style know or believe a truth which they were previously ignorant of.
CHAP. 25.--HOW THE TEMPERATE STYLE IS TO BE USED.
55. From all this we may conclude, that the end arrived at by the two
styles last mentioned is the one which it is most essential for those who aspire to
speak with wisdom and eloquence to secure. On the other hand, what the
temperate style properly aims at, viz., to please by beauty of expression, is not in
itself an adequate end; but when what we have to say is good and useful, and
when the hearers are both acquainted with it and favorably disposed towards it, so
that it is not necessary either to instruct or persuade them, beauty of style
may have its influence in securing their prompter compliance, or in making them
adhere to it more tenaciously. For as the function of all eloquence, whichever
of these three forms it may assume, is to speak persuasively, and its object
is to persuade, an eloquent man will speak persuasively, whatever style he may
adopt; but unless he succeeds in persuading, his eloquence has not secured its
object. Now in the subdued style, he persuades his hearers that what he says is
true; in the majestic style, he persuades them to do what they are aware they
ought to do, but do not; in the temperate style, he persuades them that his
speech is elegant and ornate. But what use is there in attaining such an object as
this last ? They may desire it who are vain of their eloquence and make a boast
of panegyrics, and such-like performances, where the object is not to instruct
the hearer, or to persuade him to any course of action, but merely to give him
pleasure. We, however, ought to make that end subordinate to another, viz.,
the effecting by this style of eloquence what we aim at effecting when we use the
majestic style. For we may by the use of this style persuade men to cultivate
good habits and give up evil ones, if a good course; we may induce them to
pursue a good course, we may induce them to pursue it more zealously, and to
persevere in it with , constancy. Accordingly, even in the temperate style we must
use beauty of expression not for ostentation, but for wise ends; not contenting
ourselves merely with pleasing the hearer, but rather seeking to aid him in
the pursuit of the good end which we hold out before him.
CHAP. 26.--IN EVERY STYLE THE ORATOR SHOULD AIM AT PERSPICUITY, BEAUTY, AND
PERSUASIVENESS.
55. Now in regard to the three conditions I laid down a little while
ago(1) as necessary to be fulfilled by any one who wishes to speak with wisdom and
eloquence, viz. perspicuity, beauty of style, and persuasive power, we are not
to understand that these three qualities attach themselves respectively to the
three several styles of speech, one to each, so that perspicuity is a merit
peculiar to the subdued style, beauty to the temperate and persuasive power to the
majestic. On the contrary, all speech, whatever its style, ought constantly to
aim at, and as far as possible to display, all these three merits. For we do
not like even to, not with intelligence merely, but with pleasure as well.
Again, why do we enforce what we teach by divine testimony, except that we wish to
carry the hearer with us, that , to compel his assent by calling in the
assistance of Him of whom it is said, "Thy testimonies are very sure"?(1) And when any
one narrates a story, even in the subdued style, what does he wish but to be
believed? But who will listen to him if he do not arrest attention by some beauty
of style? And if he be not intelligible, is it not plain that he can neither
give pleasure nor enforce conviction? The subdued style, again, in its own naked
simplicity, when it unravels questions of very great difficulty, and throws an
unexpected light upon them; when it worms out and brings to light some very
acute observations from a quarter whence nothing was expected; when it seizes
upon and exposes the falsity of an opposing opinion, which seemed at its first
statement to be unassailable; especially when all this is accompanied by a
natural, unsought grace of expression, and by a rhythm and balance of style which is
not ostentatiously obtruded, but seems rather to be called forth by the nature
of the subject: this style, so used, frequently calls forth applause so great
that one can hardly believe it to be the subdued style. For the fact that it
comes forth without either ornament or defence, and offers battle in its own naked
simplicity, does not hinder it from crushing its adversary by weight of nerve
and muscle, and overwhelming and destroying the falsehood that opposes it by
the mere strength of its own fight arm. How explain the frequent and vehement
applause that waits upon men who speak thus, except by the pleasure that truth so
irresistibly established, and so victoriously defended, naturally affords?
Wherefore the Christian teacher and speaker ought, when he uses the subdued style,
to endeavor not only to be dear and intelligible, but to give pleasure and to
bring home conviction to the hearer.
57. Eloquence of the temperate style, also, must, in the case of the
Christian orator, be neither altogether without ornament, nor unsuitably adorned,
nor is it to make the giving of pleasure its sole aim, which is all it professes
to accomplish in the hands of others; but in its encomiums and censures it
should aim at inducing the hearer to strive after or avoid or renounce what it
condemns. On the other hand, without perspicuity this style cannot give pleasure.
And so the three qualities, perspicuity, beauty, and persuasiveness. are to be
sought in this style also; beauty, of course, being its primary object.
58. Again, when it becomes necessary to stir and sway the hearers mind by
the maestic style (and this is always necessary when he admits that what you
say is both true and agreeable, and yet is unwilling to act accordingly), you
must, of course, speak in the majestic style. but who can be moved if he does not
understand what is said? and who will stay to listen if he receives no
pleasure? Wherefore, in this style, too, when an obdurate heart is to be persuaded to
obedience, you must speak so as to be both intelligible and pleasing, if you
would be heard with a submissive mind.
CHAP. 27.--THE MAN WHOSE LIFE IS IN HARMONY WITH HIS TEACHING WILL TEACH WITH
GREATER EFFECT.
59. But whatever may be the majesty of the style, the life of the speaker
will count for more in securing the hearer's compliance. The man who speaks
wisely and eloquently, but lives wickedly, may, it is true, instruct many who are
anxious to learn; though, as it is written, he "is unprofitable to himself."(2)
Wherefore, also, the apostle says: "Whether in pretence or in truth Christ is
preached."(3) Now Christ is the truth; yet we see that the truth can be
preached, though not in truth,--that is, what is right and true in itself may be
preached by a man of perverse and deceitful mind. And thus it is that Jesus Christ
is preached by those that seek their own, and not the things that are Jesus
Christ's. But since true believers obey the voice, not of any man, but of the Lord
Himself, who says, "All therefore whatsoever they bid you observe, that observe
and do: but do not ye after their works; for they say and do not;"(4)
therefore it is that men who themselves lead unprofitable lives are heard with profit
by others. For though they seek their own objects, they do not dare to teach
their own doctrines, sitting as they do in the high places of ecclesiastical
authority, which is established on sound doctrine. Wherefore our Lord Himself,
before saying what I have just quoted about men of this stamp, made this
observation: "The scribes and the Pharisees sit in Moses' seat."(5) The seat they
occupied, then, which was not theirs but Moses', compelled them to say what was good,
though they did what was evil. And so they followed their own course in their
lives, but were prevented by the seat they occupied, which belonged to another,
from preaching their own doctrines.
60. Now these men do good to many by preaching what they themselves do not
perform; but they would do good to very many more if they lived as they
preach. For there are numbers who seek an excuse for their own evil lives in
comparing the teaching with the conduct of their instructors, and who say m their
hearts, or even go a little further, and say with their lips: Why do you not do
yourself what you bid me do? And thus they cease to listen with submission to a man
who does not listen to himself, and in despising the preacher they learn to
despise the word that is preached. Wherefore the apostle, writing to Timothy,
after telling him, "Let no man despise thy youth," adds immediately the course by
which he would avoid contempt: "but be thou an example of the believers, in
word, in conversation, in charity, in spirit, in faith, in purity."(1)
CHAP. 28.--TRUTH IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN EXPRESSION.WHAT IS MEANT BY
STRIFEABOUT WORDS.
61. Such a teacher as is here described may, to secure compliance, speak
not only quietly and temperately, but even vehemently, without any breach of
modesty, because his life protects him against contempt. For while he pursues an
upright life, he takes care to maintain a good reputation as well, providing
things honest in the sight of God and men,(2) fearing God, and caring for men. In
his very speech even he prefers to please by matter rather than by words;
thinks that a thing is well said in proportion as it is true in fact, and that a
teacher should govern his words, not let the words govern him. This is what the
apostle says: "Not with wisdom of words, lest the cross of Christ should be made
of none effect."(3) To the same effect also is what he says to Timothy:
"Charging them before the Lord that they strive not about words to no profit, but to
the subverting of the hearers."(4) Now this does not mean that, when adversaries
oppose the truth, we are to say nothing in defence of the truth. For where,
then, would be what he says when he is describing the sort of man a bishop ought
to be: "that he may be able by sound doctrine both to exhort and convince the
gainsayers?"(5) To strive about words is not to be careful about the way to
overcome error by truth, but to be anxious that your mode of expression should be
preferred to that of another. The man who does not strive about words, whether
he speak quietly, temperately or vehemently, uses words with no other purpose
than to make the truth plain, pleasing, and effective; for not even love itself,
which is the end of the commandment and the fulfilling of the law,(6) can be
rightly exercised unless the objects of love are true and not false. For as a man
with a comely body but an ill-conditioned mind is a more painful object than
if his body too were deformed, so men who teach lies are the more pitiable if
they happen to be eloquent in speech. To speak eloquently, then, and wisely as
well, is just to express truths which it is expedient to teach in fit and proper
words,--words which in the subdued style are adequate, in the temperate,
elegant, and in the majestic, forcible. But the man who cannot speak both eloquently
and wisely should speak wisely without eloquence, rather than eloquently
without wisdom.
CHAP. 29.--IT IS PERMISSIBLE FOR A PREACHER TO DELIVER TO THE PEOPLE WHAT HAS
BEEN WRITTEN BY A MORE ELOQUENT MAN THAN HIMSELF.
If, however, he cannot do even this, let his life be such as shall not
only secure a reward for himself, but afford an example to others; and let his
manner of living be an eloquent sermon in itself.
62. There are, indeed, some men who have a good delivery, but cannot
compose anything to deliver. Now, if such men take what has been written with wisdom
and eloquence by others, and commit it to memory, and deliver it to the
people, they cannot be blamed, supposing them to do it without deception For in this
way many become preachers of the truth (which is certainly desirable), and yet
not many teachers; for all deliver the discourse which one real teacher has
composed, and there are no divisions among them. Nor are such men to be alarmed by
the words of Jeremiah the prophet, through whom God denounces those who steal
His words every one from his neighbor.(7) For those who steal take what does
not belong to them, but the word of God belongs to all who obey it; and it is the
man who speaks well, but lives badly, who really takes the words that belong
to another, For the good things he says seem to be the result of his own
thought, and yet they have nothing in common with his manner of life. And so God has
said that they steal His words who would appear good by speaking God's words,
but are in fact bad, as they follow their own ways. And if you look closely into
the matter, it is not really themselves who say the good things they say. For
how can they say in words what they deny in deeds? It is not for nothing that
the apostle says of such men: "They profess that they know God, but in works they
deny Him."(1) In one sense, then, they do say the things, and in another sense
they do not say them; for both these statements must be true, both being made
by Him who is the Truth. Speaking of such men, in one place He says,
"Whatsoever they bid you observe, that observe and do; but do not ye after their
works;"--that is to say, what ye hear from. their lips, that do; what ye see in their
lives, that do ye not;--"for they say and do not."(2) And so, though they do
not, yet they say. but in another place, upbraiding such men, He says, "O
generation of vipers, how can ye, being evil, speak good things?"(3) And from this it
would appear that even what they say, when they say what is good, it is not
themselves who say, for in wil;l and in deed they deny what they say. Hence it
happens that a wicked man who is eloquent may compose a discourse in which the
truth is set forth to be delivered by a good man who is not eloquent; and when this
takes place, the former draws from himself what does not belong to him, and
the latter receives from another what really belongs to himself. But when true
believers render this service to true believers, both parties speak what is their
own, for God is theirs, to whom belongs all that they say; and even those who
could not compose what they say make it their own by composing their lives in
harmony with it.
CHAP. 30.--THE PREACHER SHOULD COMMENCE HIS DISCOURSE WITH PRAYER TO GOD.
63. But whether a man is going to address the people or to dictate what
others will deliver or read to the people, he ought to pray God to put into his
mouth a suitable discourse. For if Queen Esther prayed, when she was about to
speak to the king touching the temporal welfare of her race, that God would put
fit words into her mouth,(4) how much more ought he to pray for the same
blessing who labors in word and doctrine for the eternal welfare of men? Those, again,
who are to deliver what others compose for them ought, before they receive
their discourse, to pray for those who are preparing it; and when they have
received it, they ought to pray both that they themselves may deliver it well, and
that those to whom they address it may give ear; and when the discourse has a
happy issue, they ought to render thanks to Him from whom they know such blessings
come, so that all the praise may be His "in whose hand are both we and our
words."(5)
CHAP. 31.--APOLOGY FOR THE LENGTH OF THE WORK.
64. This book has extended to a greater length than I expected or desired.
But the reader or hearer who finds pleasure in it will pot think it long. He
who thinks it long, but is anxious to know its contents, may read it in parts.
He who does not care to be acquainted with it need not complain of its length.
I, however, give thanks to God that with what lithe ability I possess I have in
these four books striven to depict, not the sort of man I am myself (for my
defects are very many), but the sort of man he ought to be who desires to labor in
sound, that is, in Christian doctrine, not for his own instruction only, but
for that of others also.