ON THE MORALS OF THE MANICHAEANS. [DE MORIBUS MANICHAEORUM.] A.D. 388
ON THE MORALS OF THE MANICHAEANS.
[DE MORIBUS MANICHAEORUM.] A. D. 388.
CONTAINING A PARTICULAR REFUTATION OF THE DOCTRINE OF THESE HERETICS REGARDING
THE ORIGIN AND NATURE OF EVIL; AN EXPOSURE OF THEIR PRETENDED SYMBOLICAL
CUSTOMS OF THE MOUTH, OF THE HANDS, AND OF THE BREAST; AND A CONDEMNATION OF THEIR
SUPERSTITIOUS ABSTINENCE AND UNHOLY MYSTERIES. LASTLY, SOME CRIMES BROUGHT TO
LIGHT AMONG THE MANICHAEANS ARE MENTIONED.
CHAP. 1.--THE SUPREME GOOD IS THAT WHICH IS POSSESSED OF SUPREME EXISTENCE.
1. EVERY one, I suppose, will allow that the question of things good and
evil belongs to moral science, in which such terms are in common use. It is
therefore to be wished that men would bring to these inquiries such a clear
intellectual perfection as might enable them to see the chief good, than which nothing
is better or higher, next in order to which comes a rational soul in a state
of purity and perfection.(1) If this were clearly understood, it would also
become evident that the chief good is that which is properly described as having
supreme and original existence. For that exists in the highest sense of the word
which continues always the same, which is throughout like itself, which cannot
in any part be corrupted or changed, which is not subject to time, which admits
of no variation in its present as compared with its former condition. This is
existence in its true sense. For in this signification of the word existence
there is implied a nature which is self-contained, and which continues immutably.
Such things can be said only of God, to whom there is nothing contrary in the
strict sense of the word. For the contrary of existence is non-existence. There
is therefore no nature contrary to God. But since the minds with which we
approach the study of these subjects have their vision damaged and dulled by silly
notions, and by perversity of will, let us try as we can to gain some little
knowledge of this great matter by degrees and with caution, making our inquiries
not like men able to see, but like men groping the dark.
CHAP. 2.--WHAT EVIL IS. THAT EVIL IS THAT WHICH IS AGAINST NATURE. IN ALLOWING
THIS, THE MANICHAEANS REFUTE THEMSELVES.
2. You Manichaeans often, if not in every case, ask those whom you try to
bring over to your heresy, Whence is evil? Suppose I had now met you for the
first time, I would ask you, if you please, to follow my example in putting aside
for a little the explanation you suppose yourselves to have got of these
subjects, and to commence this great inquiry with me as if for the first time. You
ask me, Whence is evil? I ask you in return, What is evil? Which is the more
reasonable question? Are those right who ask whence a thing is, when they do not
know what it is; or he who thinks it necessary to inquire first what it is, in
order to avoid the gross absurdity of searching for the origin of a thing
unknown? Your answer is quite correct, when you say that evil is that which is
contrary to nature; for no one is so mentally blind as not to see that, in every
kind, evil is that which is contrary to the nature of the kind. But the
establishment of this doctrine is the overthrow of your heresy. For evil is no nature, if
it is contrary to nature. Now, according to you, evil is a certain nature and
substance. Moreover, whatever is contrary to nature must oppose nature and seek
its destruction. For nature means nothing else than that which anything is
conceived of as being in its own kind. Hence is the new word which we now use
derived from the word for being,--essence namely, or, as we usually say,
substance,--while before these words were in use, the word nature was used instead. Here,
then, if you will consider the matter without stubbornness, we see that evil is
that which falls away from essence and tends to non-existence.
3. Accordingly, when the Catholic Church declares that God is the author
of all natures and substances, those who understand this understand at the same
time that God is not the author of evil. For how can He who is the cause of the
being of all things be at the same time the cause of their not being,--that
is, of their falling off from essence and tending to non-existence? For this is
what reason plainly declares to be the definition of evil. Now, how can that
race of evil of yours, which you make the supreme evil, be against nature, that
is, against substance, when it, according to you, is itself a nature and
substance? For if it acts against itself, it destroys its own existence; and when that
is completely done, it will come at last to be the supreme evil. But this
cannot be done, because you will have it not only to be, but to be everlasting. That
cannot then be the chief evil which is spoken of as a substance.(1)
4. But what am I to do? I know that many of you can understand nothing of
all this. I know, too, that there are some who have a good understanding and
can see these things, and yet are so stubborn in their choice of evil,--a choice
that will ruin their understanding as well,--that they try rather to find what
reply they can make in order to impose upon inactive and feeble minds, instead
of giving their assent to the truth. Still I shall not regret having written
either what one of you may come some day to consider impartially, and be led to
abandon your error, or what men of understanding and in allegiance to God, and
who are still untainted with your errors, may read and so be kept from being led
astray by your addresses.
CHAP. 3.--IF EVIL IS DEFINED AS THAT WHICH IS HURTFUL, THIS IMPLIES ANOTHER
REFUTATION OF THE MANICHAEANS.
5. Let us then inquire more carefully, and, if possible, more plainly. I
ask you again, What is evil? If you say it is that which is hurtful, here, too,
you will not answer amiss. But consider, I pray you; be on your guard, I beg of
you; be so good as to lay aside party spirit, and make the inquiry for the
sake of finding the truth, not of getting the better of it. Whatever is hurtful
takes away some good from that to which it is hurtful; for without the loss of
good there can be no hurt. What, I appeal to you, can be plainer than this? what
more intelligible? What else is required for complete demonstration to one of
average understanding, if he is not per verse? But, if this is granted, the
consequence seems plain. In that race which you take for the chief evil, nothing
can be liable to be hurt, since there is no good in it. But if, as you assert,
there are two natures,--the kingdom of light and the kingdom of darkness; since
you make the kingdom of light to be God, attributing to it an uncompounded
nature,(2) so that it has no part inferior to another, you must grant, however
decidedly in opposition to yourselves, you must grant, nevertheless, that this
nature, which you not only do not deny to be the chief good, but spend all your
strength in trying to show that it is so, is immutable, incorruptible,
impenetrable, inviolable, for otherwise it would not be the chief good; for the chief good
is that than which there is nothing better, and for such a nature to be hurt is
impossible. Again, if, as has been shown, to hurt is to deprive of good, there
can be no hurt to the kingdom of darkness, for there is no good in it. And as
the kingdom of light cannot be hurt, as it is inviolable, what can the evil you
speak of be hurtful to?
CHAP. 4.--THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN WHAT IS GOOD IN ITSELF AND WHAT IS GOOD BY
PARTICIPATION.
6. Now, compare with this perplexity, from which you cannot escape, the
consistency of the statements in the teaching of the Catholic Church, according
to which there is one good which is good supremely and in itself, and not by the
participation of any good, but by its own nature and essence; and another good
which is good by participation, and by having something bestowed. Thus it has
its being as good from the supreme good, which, however, is still
self-contained, and loses nothing. This second kind of good is called a creature, which is
liable to hurt through falling away. But of this failing away God is not the
author, for He is author of existence and of being. Here we see the proper use of
the word evil; for it is correctly applied not to essence, but to negation or
loss. We see, too, what nature it is which is liable to hurt. This nature is not
the chief evil, for when it is hurt it loses good; nor is it the chief good,
for its falling away from good is because it is good not intrinsically, but by
possessing the good. And a thing cannot be good by nature when it is spoken of
as being made, which shows that the goodness was bestowed. Thus, on the one
hand, God is the good, and all things which He has made are good, though not so
good as He who made them. For what madman would venture to require that the works
should equal the workman, the creatures the Creator? What more do you want?
Could you wish for anything plainer than this?
CHAP. 5.--IF EVIL IS DEFINED TO BE CORRUPTION, THIS COMPLETELY REFUTES THE
MANICHAEAN HERESY.
7. I ask a third time, What is evil? Perhaps you will reply, Corruption.
Undeniably this is a general definition of evil; for corruption implies
opposition to nature, and also hurt. But corruption exists not by itself, but in some
substance which it corrupts; for corruption itself is not a substance. So the
thing which it corrupts is not corruption, is not evil; for what is corrupted
suffers the loss of integrity and purity. So that which has no purity to lose
cannot be corrupted; and what has, is necessarily good by the participation of
purity. Again, what is corrupted is perverted; and what is perverted suffers the
loss of order, and order is good. To be corrupted, then, does not imply the
absence of good; for in corruption it can be deprived of good, which could not be if
there was the absence of good. Therefore that race of darkness, if it was
destitute of all good, as you say it was, could not be corrupted, for it had
nothing which corruption could take from it; and if corruption takes nothing away, it
does not corrupt. Say now, if you dare, that God and the kingdom of God can be
corrupted, when you cannot show how the kingdom of the devil, such as you make
it, can be corrupted.
CHAP. 6.--WHAT CORRUPTION AFFECTS AND WHAT IT IS.
8. What further does the Catholic light say? What do you suppose, but what
is the actual truth, that it is the created substance which can be corrupted,
for the uncreated, which is the chief good, is incorruptible; and corruption,
which is the chief evil, cannot be corrupted; besides, that it is not a
substance? But if you ask what corruption is, consider to what it seeks to bring the
things which it corrupts; for it affects those things according to its own
nature. Now all things by corruption fall away from what they were, and are brought
to non-continuance, to non-existence; for existence implies continuance. Thus
the supreme and chief existence is so called because it continues in itself, or
is self-contained. In the case of a thing changing for the better, the change is
not from continuance, but from perversion to the worse, that is, from falling
away from essence; the author of which falling away is not He who is the author
of the essence. So in some things there is change for the better, and so a
tendency towards existence. And this change is not called a perversion, but
reversion or conversion; for perversion is opposed to orderly arrangement. Now things
which tend towards existence tend towards order, and, attaining order they
attain existence, as far as that is possible to a creature. For order reduces to a
certain uniformity that which it arranges; and existence is nothing else than
being one. Thus, so far as anything acquires unity, so far it exists. For
uniformity and harmony are the effects of unity, and by these compound things exist
as far as they have existence. For simple things exist by themselves, for they
are one. But things not simple imitate unity by the agreement of their parts;
and so far as they attain this, so far they exist, This arrangement is the cause
of existence, disorder of non-existence; and perversion or corruption are the
other names for disorder. So whatever is corrupted tends to non-existence. You
may now be left to reflect upon the effect of corruption, that you may discover
what is the chief evil; for it is that which corruption aims at accomplishing.
CHAP. 7.--THE GOODNESS OF GOD PREVENTS CORRUPTION FROM BRINGING ANYTHING TO
NON-EXISTENCE. THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CREATING AND FORMING.
9. But the goodness of God does not permit the accomplishment of this end,
but so orders all things that fall away that they may exist where their
existence is most suitable, till in the order of their movements they return to that
from which they fell away. (1) Thus, when rational souls fall away from God,
although they possess the greatest amount of free-will, He ranks them in the
lower grades of creation. where their proper place is. So they suffer misery by the
divine judgment, while they are ranked suitably to their deserts. Hence we see
the excellence of that saying which you are always inveighing against so
strongly, "I make good things, and create evil things." (1) To create is to form and
arrange. So in some copies it is written, "I make good things and form evil
things." To make is used of things previously not in existence; but to form is to
arrange what had some kind of existence, so as to improve and enlarge it. Such
are the things which God arranges when He says, "I form evil things," meaning
things which are falling off, and so tending to non-existence,--not things
which have reached that to which they tend. For it has been said, Nothing is
allowed in the providence of God to go the length of non-existence.(2)
10. These things might be discussed more fully and at greater length, but
enough has been said for our purpose in dealing with you. We have only to show
you the gate which you despair of finding, and make the uninstructed despair of
it too. You can be made to enter only by good-will, on which the divine mercy
bestows peace, as the song in the Gospel says, "Glory to God in the highest,
and on earth peace to men of good-will." (3) It is enough, I say, to have shown
you that there is no way of solving the religious question of good and evil,
unless whatever is, as far as it is, is from God; while as far as it falls away
from being it is not of God, and yet is always ordered by Divine Providence in
agreement with the whole system. If you do not yet see this, I know nothing else
that I can do but to discuss the things already said with greater
particularity. For nothing save piety and purity can lead the mind to greater things.
CHAP. 8.--EVIL IS NOT A SUBSTANCE, BUT A DISAGREEMENT HOSTILE TO SUBSTANCE.
11. For what other answer will you give to the question, What is evil? but
either that it is against nature, or that it is hurtful, or that it is
corruption, or something similar? But I have shown that in these replies you make
shipwreck of your cause, unless, indeed, you will answer in the childish way in
which you generally speak to children, that evil is fire, poison, a wild beast,
and so on. For one of the leaders of this heresy, whose instructions we attended
with great familiarity land frequency, used to say with reference to a person
who held that evil was not a sub stance, "I should like to put a scorpion in
the man's hand, and see whether he would not withdraw his hand; and in so doing
he would get a proof, not in words but in the thing itself, that evil is a
substance, for he would not deny that the animal is a substance." He said this not
in the presence of the person, but to us, when we repeated to him the remark
which had troubled us, giving, as I said, a childish answer to children. For who
with the least tincture of learning or science does not see that these things
hurt by disagreement with the bodily temperament, while at other times they agree
with it, so as not only not to hurt, but to produce the best effects? For if
this poison were evil in itself, the scorpion itself would suffer first and
most. In fact, if the poison were quite taken from the animal, it would die. So
for its body it is evil to lose what it is evil for our body to receive; and it
is good for it to have what it is good for us to want. Is the same thing then
both good and evil? By no means; but evil is what is against nature, for this is
evil both to the animal and to us. This evil is the disagreement, which
certainly is not a substance, but hostile to substance. Whence then is it? See what it
leads to, and you will learn, if any inner light lives in you. It leads all
that it destroys to non-existence. Now God is the author of existence; and there
is no existence which, as far as it is existing, leads to non-existence: Thus
we learn whence disagreement is not; as to whence it is, nothing can be said.
12. We read in history of a female criminal in Athens, who succeeded in
drinking the quantity of poison allotted as a fatal draught for the condemned
with little or no injury to her health, by taking it at intervals. So being
condemned, she took the poison in the prescribed quantity like the rest, but rendered
it powerless by accustoming herself to it, and did not die like the rest. And
as this excited great wonder, she was banished. If poison is an evil, are we to
think that she made it to be no evil to her? What could be more absurd than
this? But because disagreement is an evil, what she did was to make the poisonous
matter agree with her own body by a process of habituation. For how could she
by any amount of cunning have brought it about that disagreement should not
hurt her? Why so? Because what is truly and properly an evil is hurtful both
always and to all. Oil is beneficial to our bodies, but very much the opposite to
many six-footed animals. And is not hellebore sometimes food, sometimes medicine,
and sometimes poison. Does not every one maintain that salt taken in excess is
poisonous? And yet the benefits to the body from salt are innumerable and most
important. Sea-water is injurious when drunk by land animals, but it is most
suitable and useful to many who bathe their bodies in it and to fish it is
useful and wholesome in both ways. Bread nourishes man, but kills hawks. And does
not mud itself, which is offensive and noxious when swallowed or smelt, serve as
cooling to the touch in hot weather, and as a cure for wounds from fire? What
can be nastier than dung, or more worthless than ashes? And yet they are of such
use to the fields, that the Romans thought divine honors due to the
discoverer, Stercutio, from whose name the word for dung [stercus] is derived.
13. But why enumerate details which are countless? We need not go farther
than the four elements themselves, which, as every one knows, are beneficial
when there is agreement, and bitterly opposed to nature when there is
disagreement in the objects acted upon. We who live in air die under earth or under water,
while innumerable animals creep alive in sand or loose earth, and fish die in
our air. Fire consumes our bodies, but, when suitably applied, it both restores
from cold, and expels diseases without number. The sun to which you bow the
knee, and than which, indeed, there is no fairer object among visible things,
strengthens the eyes of eagles, but hurts and dims our eyes when we gaze on it;
and yet we too can accustom ourselves to look upon it without injury. Will you,
then, allow the sun to be compared to the poison which the Athenian woman made
harmless by habituating herself to it? Reflect for once, and consider that if a
substance is an evil because it hurts some one, the light which you worship
cannot be acquitted of this charge. See the preferableness of making evil in
general to consist in this disagreement, from which the sun's ray produces dimness
in the eyes, though nothing is pleasanter to the eyes than light. (1)
CHAP. 9.--THE MANICHAEAN FICTIONS ABOUT THINGS GOOD AND EVIL ARE NOT
CONSISTENT WITH THEMSELVES.
14. I have said these things to make you cease, if that is possible,
giving the name of evil to a region boundless in depth and length; to a mind
wandering through the region; to the five caverns of the elements,--one full of
darkness, another of waters, another of winds, another of fire, another of smoke;
to the animals born in each of these elements,--serpents in the darkness,
swimming creatures in the waters, flying creatures in the winds, quadrupeds in the
fire, bipeds in the smoke. For these things, as you describe them, cannot be
called evil; for all such things, as far as they exist, must have their existence
from the most high God, for as far as they exist they are good. If pain and
weakness is an evil, the animals you speak of were of such physical strength that
their abortive offspring, after, as your sect believes, the world was formed of
them, fell from heaven to earth, according to you, and could not die. If
blindness is an evil, they could see; if deafness, they could hear. If to be nearly
or altogether dumb is an evil, their speech was so clear and intelligible, that,
as you assert, they decided to make war against God in compliance with an
address delivered in their assembly. If sterility is an evil, they were prolific in
children. If exile is an evil, they were in their own country, and occupied
their own territories. If servitude is an evil, some of them were rulers. If
death is an evil, they were alive, and the life was such that, by your statement,
even after God was victorious, it was impossible for the mind ever to die.
15. Can you tell me how it is that in the chief evil so many good things
are to be found, the opposites of the evils above mentioned? and if these are
not evils, can any substance be an evil, as far as it is a substance? If weakness
is not an evil, can a weak body be an evil? If blindness is not an evil, can
darkness be an evil? If deafness is not an evil, can a deaf man be an evil? If
dumbness is not an evil, can a fish be an evil? If sterility is not an evil,
how can we call a barren animal an evil? If exile is not an evil, how can we give
that name to an animal in exile, or to an animal sending some one into exile?
If servitude is not an evil, in what sense is a subject animal an evil, or one
enforcing subjection? If death is not an evil, in what sense is a mortal animal
an evil, or one causing death? Or if these are evils, must we not give the
name of good things to bodily strength, sight, hearing, persuasive speech,
fertility, native land, liberty, life, all which you hold to exist in that kingdom of
evil, and yet venture to call it the perfection of evil?
16. Once more, if, as has never been denied, unsuitableness is an evil,
what can be more suitable than those elements to their respective animals,--the
darkness to serpents, the waters to swimming creatures, the winds to flying
creatures, the fire to voracious animals, the smoke to soaring animals? Such is the
harmony which you describe as existing in the race of strife; such the order
in the seat of confusion. If what is hurtful is an evil, I do not repeat the
strong objection already stated, that no hurt can be suffered where no good
exists; but if that is not so clear, one thing at least is easily seen and understood
as following from the acknowledged truth, that what is hurtful is an evil. The
smoke in that region did not hurt bipeds: it produced them, and nourished and
sustained them without injury in their birth, their growth, and their rule. But
now, when the evil has some good mixed with it, the smoke has become more
hurtful, so that we, who certainly are bipeds, instead of being sustained by it,
are blinded, and suffocated, and killed by it. Could the mixture of good have
given such destructiveness to evil elements? Could there be such confusion in the
divine government?
17. In the other cases, at least, how is it that we find that congruity
which misled your author and induced him to fabricate falsehoods? Why does
darkness agree with serpents, and waters with swimming creatures, and winds with
flying creatures, though the fire burns up quadrupeds, and smoke chokes us? Then,
again, have not serpents very sharp sight, and do they not love the sunshine,
and abound most where the calmness of the air prevents the clouds from gathering
much or often? How very absurd that the natives and lovers of darkness should
live most comfortably and agreeably where the clearest light is enjoyed! Or if
you say that it is the heat rather than the light that they enjoy, it would be
more reasonable to assign to fire serpents, which are naturally of rapid motion,
than the slow-going asp. (1) Besides, all must admit that light is agreeable
to the eyes of the asp, for they are compared to an eagle's eyes. But enough of
the lower animals. Let us, I pray, attend to what is true of ourselves without
persisting in error, and so our minds shall be disentangled from silly and
mischievous falsehoods. For is it not intolerable perversity to say that in the
race of darkness, where there was no mixture of light, the biped animals had so
sound and strong, so incredible force of eyesight, that even in their darkness
they could see the perfectly pure light (as you represent it) of the kingdom of
God? for, according to you, even these beings could see this light, and could
gaze at it, and study it, and delight in it, and desire it; whereas our eyes,
after mixture with light, with the chief good, yea, with God, have become so
tender and weak, that we can neither see anything in the dark, nor bear to look at
the sun, but, after looking, lose sight of what we could see before.
18. The same remarks are applicable if we take corruption to be an evil,
which no one doubts. The smoke did not corrupt that race of animals, though it
corrupts animals now. Not to go over all the particulars, which would be
tedious, and is not necessary, the living creatures of your imaginary description were
so much less liable to corruption than animals are now, that their abortive
and premature offspring, cast headlong from heaven to earth, both lived and were
productive, and could band together again, having, forsooth, their original
vigor, because they were conceived before good was mixed with the evil; for, after
this mixture, the animals born are, according to you, those which we now see
to be very feeble and easily giving way to corruption. Can any one persist in
the belief of error like this, unless he fails to see these things, or is
affected by your habit and association in such an amazing way as to be proof against
all the force of reasoning?
CHAP. 10.--THREE MORAL SYMBOLS DEVISED BY THE MANICHAEANS FOR NO GOOD.
19. Now that I have shown, as I think, how much darkness and error is in
your opinions about good and evil things in general, let us examine now those
three symbols which you extol so highly, and boast of as excellent observances.
What then are those three symbols? That of the mouth, that of the hands, and
that of the breast. What does this mean? That man, we are told, should be pure and
innocent in mouth, in hands, and in breast. But what if he sins with eyes,
ears, or nose? What if he hurts some one with his heels, or perhaps kills him? How
can he be reckoned criminal when he has not sinned with mouth, hands, or
breast? But, it is replied, by the mouth we are to understand all the organs of
sense in the head; by the hands, all bodily actions; by the breast, all lustful
tendencies. To what, then, do you assign blasphemies ? To the mouth or to the
hand? For blasphemy is an action of the tongue. And if all actions are to be
classed under one head, why should you join together the actions of the hands and the
feet, and not those of the tongue. Do you wish to separate the action of the
tongue, as being for the purpose of expressing something, from actions which are
not for this purpose, so that the symbol of the hands should mean abstinence
from all evil actions which are not for the purpose of expressing something? But
then, what if some one sins by expressing something with his hands, as is done
in writing or in some significant gesture? This cannot be assigned to the
tongue and the mouth, for it is done by the hands. When you have three symbols of
the mouth, the hands, and the breast, it is quite inadmissible to charge against
the mouth sins found in the hands. And if you assign action in general to the
hands, there is no reason for including under this the action of the feet and
not that of the tongue. Do you see how the desire of novelty, with its attendant
error, lands you in great difficulties? For you find it impossible to include
purification of all sins in these three symbols, which you set forth as a kind
of new classification.
CHAP. 11.--THE VALUE OF THE SYMBOL OF THE MOUTH AMONG THE MANICHAEANS, WHO ARE
FOUND GUILTY OF BLASPHEMING GOD.
20. Classify as you please, omit what you please, we must discuss the
doctrines you insist upon most. You say that the symbol of the mouth implies
refraining from all blasphemy. But blasphemy is speaking evil of good things. So
usually the word blasphemy is applied only to speaking evil of God; for as regards
man there is uncertainty, but God is without controversy good. If, then, you
are proved guilty of saying worse things of God than any one else says, what
becomes of your famous symbol of the mouth? The evidence is not obscure, but clear
and obvious to every understanding, and irresistible, the more so that no one
can remain in ignorance of it, that God is incorruptible, immutable, liable to
no injury, to no want, to no weakness, to no misery. All this the common sense
of rational beings perceives, and even you assent when you hear it.
21. But when you begin to relate your fables, that God is corruptible, and
mutable, and subject to injury, and exposed to want and weakness, and not
secure from misery, this is what you are blind enough to teach, and what some are
blind enough to believe. And this is not all; for, according to you, God is not
only corruptible, but corrupted; not only changeable, but changed; not only
subject to injury, but injured; not only liable to want, but in want; not only
possibly, but actually weak; not only exposed to misery, but miserable. You say
that the soul is God, or a part of God. I do not see how it can be part of God
without being God. A part of gold is gold; of silver; of stone; and, to come to
greater things, part of earth is earth, part of water is water, and of air; and
if you take part from fire, you will not deny it to be fire; and part of light
can be nothing but light. Why then should part of God not be God? Has God a
jointed body, like man and the lower animals? For part of man is not man.
22. I will deal with each of these opinions separately. If you view God as
resembling light, you must admit that part of God is God. Hence, when you make
the soul part of God, though you allow it to be corrupted as being foolish,
and changed as having once been wise, and in want as needing health, and feeble
as needing medicine, and miserable as desiring happiness, all these things you
profanely attribute to God. Or if you deny these things of the mind, it follows
that the Spirit is not required to lead the soul into truth, since it is not in
folly; nor is the soul renewed by true religion, since it does not need
renewal; nor is it perfected by your symbols, since it is already perfect; nor does
God give it assistance, since it does not need it; nor is Christ its physician,
since it is in health; nor does it require the promise of happiness in another
life. Way then is Jesus called the deliverer, according to His own words in the
Gospel, "If the Son shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed?" (1) And the
Apostle Paul says, "Ye have been called to liberty." (2) The soul, then, which
has not attained this liberty is in bondage. Therefore, according to you, God,
since part of God is God, is both corrupted by folly, and is changed by
falling, and is injured by the loss of perfection, and is in need of help, and is
weakened by disease, and bowed down with misery, and subject to disgraceful
bondage.
23. Again, if part of God is not God, still He is not incorrupt when His
part is corrupted, nor unchanged when there is change in any part, nor uninjured
when He is not perfect in every part, nor free from want when He is busily
endeavoring to recover part of Himself, nor quite whole when He has a weak part,
nor perfectly happy when any part is suffering misery, nor entirely free when
any part is under bondage. These are conclusions to which you are driven, because
you say that the soul, which you see to be in such a calamitous condition, is
part of God. If you can succeed in making your sect abandon these and many
similar opinions, then you may speak of your mouth being free from blasphemies.
Better still, leave the sect; for if you cease to believe and to repeat what
Manichaeus has written, you will be no longer Manichaeans.
24. That God is the supreme good, and that than which nothing can be or
can be conceived better, we must either understand or believe, if we wish to keep
clear of blasphemy. There is a relation of numbers which cannot possibly be
impaired or altered, nor can any nature by any amount of violence prevent the
number which comes after one from being the double of one. This can in no way be
changed; and yet you represent God as changeable! This relation preserves its
integrity inviolable; and you will not allow God an equality even in this! Let
some race of darkness take in the abstract the number three, consisting of
indivisible units, and divide it into two equal parts, Your mind perceives that no
hostility could effect this. And can that which is unable to injure a numerical
relation injure God? If it could not, what possible necessity could there be for
a part of him to be mixed with evil, and driven into such miseries?
CHAP. 12.--MANICHAEAN SUBTERFUGE.
25. For this gives rise to the question, which used to throw us into great
perplexity even when we were your zealous disciples, nor could we find any
answer,--what the race of darkness would have done to God, supposing He had
refused to fight with it at the cost of such calamity to part of Himself. For if God
would not have suffered any loss by remaining quiet, we thought it hard that we
had been sent to endure so much. Again, if He would have suffered, His nature
cannot have been incorruptible, as it behoves the nature: of God to be.
Sometimes the answer was, that it was not for the sake of escaping evil or avoiding
injury, but that God in His natural goodness wished to bestow the blessing of
order on a disturbed and disordered nature. This is not what we find in the
Manichaean books: there it is constantly implied and constantly asserted that God
guarded against an invasion of His enemies. But supposing this answer, which was
given from want of a better, to represent the opinion of the Manichaeans, is
God, in their view, vindicated from the charge of cruelty or weakness? For this
goodness of His to the hostile race proved most pernicious to His own subjects.
Besides, if God's nature could not be corrupted nor changed, neither could any
destructive influence corrupt or change us; and the order to be bestowed on the
race of strangers might have been bestowed without robbing us of it.
26. Since those times, however, another answer has appeared which I heard
recently at Carthage. For one, whom I wish much to see brought out of this
error, when reduced to this same dilemma, ventured to say that the kingdom had its
own limits, which might be invaded by a hostile race, though God Himself could
not be injured. But this is a reply which your founder would never consent to
give; for he would be likely to see that such an opinion would lead to a still
speedier demolition of his heresy. And in fact any one of average intellect, who
hears that in this nature part is subject to injury and part not, will at once
perceive that this makes not two but three natures,--one violable, a second
inviolable, and a third violating.
CHAP. 13.--ACTIONS TO BE JUDGED OF FROM THEIR MOTIVE, NOT FROM EXTERNALS.
MANICHAEAN ABSTINENCE TO BE TRIED BY THIS PRINCIPLE.
27. Having every day in your mouth these blasphemies which come from your
heart, you ought not to continue holding up the symbol of the mouth as
something wonderful, to ensnare the ignorant. But perhaps you think the symbol of the
mouth excellent and admirable because you do not eat flesh or drink wine. But
what is your end in this? For according as the end we have in view in our
actions, on account of which we do whatever we do, is not only not culpable but also
praiseworthy, so only can our actions merit any praise. If the end we have
regard to in any performance is unlawful and blameworthy, the performance itself
will be unhesitatingly condemned as improper.
28. We are told of Catiline that he could bear cold, thirst, and hunger.
(1) This the vile miscreant had in common with our apostles. What then
distinguishes the parricide from our apostles but the precisely opposite end which he
followed? He bore these things in order to gratify his fierce and ungoverned
passions; they, on the other hand, in order to restrain these passions and subdue
them to reason. You often say, when you are told of the great number of Catholic
virgins, a she-mule is a virgin. This, indeed, is said in ignorance of the
Catholic system, and is not applicable. Still, what you mean is that this
continence is worthless unless it leads, on right principles, to an end of high
excellence. Catholic Christians might also compare your abstinence from wine and flesh
to that of cattle and many small birds, as likewise of countless sorts of
worms. But, not to be impertinent like you, I will not make this comparison
prematurely, but will first examine your end in what you do. For I suppose I may
safely take it as agreed on, that in such customs the end is the thing to look to.
Therefore, if your end is to be frugal and to restrain the appetite which finds
gratification in eating and drinking, I assent and approve. But this is not the
case.
29. Suppose, what is quite possible, that there is one so frugal and
sparing in his diet, that, instead of gratifying his appetite or his palate, he
refrains from eating twice in one day, and at supper takes a little cabbage
moistened and seasoned with lard, just enough to keep down hunger; and quenches his
thirst, from regard to his health, with two or three draughts of pure wine; and
this is his regular diet: whereas another of different habits never takes flesh
or wine, but makes an agreeable repast at two o'clock on rare and foreign
vegetables, varied with a number of courses, and well sprinkled with pepper, and
sups in the slime style towards night; and drinks honey-vinegar, mead,
raisin-wine, and the juices of various fruits, no bad imitation of wine, and even
surpassing it in sweetness; and drinks not for thirst but for pleasure; and makes this
provision for himself daily, and feasts in this sumptuous style, not because he
requires it, but only gratifying his taste;--which of these two do you regard
as living most abstemiously in food and drink? You cannot surely be so blind as
not to put the man of the little lard and wine above this glutton!
30. This is the true view; but your doctrine sounds very differently. For
one of your elect distinguished by the three symbols may live like the second
person in this description, and though he may be reproved by one or two of the
more sedate, he cannot be condemned as abusing the symbols. But should he sup
with the other person, and moisten his lips with a morsel of rancid bacon, or
refresh them with a drink of spoilt wine, he is pronounced a transgressor of the
symbol, and by the judgment of your founder is consigned to hell, while you,
though wondering, must assent. Will you not discard these errors? Will you not
listen to reason? Will you not offer some little resistance to the force of habit?
Is not such doctrine most unreasonable? Is it not insanity? Is it not the
greatest absurdity that one, who stuffs and loads his stomach every day to gratify
his appetite with mushrooms, rice, truffles, cake, mead, pepper, and
assafoetida, and who fares thus every day, cannot be convicted of transgressing the three
symbols, that is, the rule of sanctity; whereas another, who seasons his dish
of the commonest herbs with some smoky morsel of meat, and takes only so much
of this as is needed for the refreshment of his body, and drinks three cups of
wine for the sake of keeping in health, should, for exchanging the former diet
for this, be doomed to certain punishment?
CHAP. 14.--THREE GOOD REASONS FOR ABSTAINING FROM CERTAIN KINDS OF FOOD.
31. But, you reply, the apostle says, "It is good, brethren, neither to
eat flesh, nor to drink wine."(1) No one denies that this is good, provided that
it is for the end already mentioned, of which it is said," Make not provision
for the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof;" (2) or for the ends pointed out by
the apostle, namely, either to check the appetite, which is apt to go to a more
wild and uncontrollable excess in these things than in others, or lest a
brother should be offended, or lest the weak should hold fellowship with an idol.
For at the time when the apostle wrote, the flesh of sacrifices was often sold in
the market. And because wine, too, was used in libations to the gods of the
Gentiles, many weaker brethren, accustomed to purchase such things, preferred to
abstain entirely from flesh and wine rather than run the risk of having
fellowship, as they considered it, with idols, even ignorantly. And, for their sakes,
even those who were stronger, and had faith enough to see the insignificance of
these things, knowing that nothing is unclean except from an evil conscience,
and holding by the saying of the Lord, "Not that which entereth into your mouth
defileth you, but that which cometh out of it," (3) still, lest these weaker
brethren should stumble, were bound to abstain from these things. And this is
not a mere theory, but is clearly taught in the epistles of the apostle himself.
For you are in the habit of quoting only the words, "It is good, brethren,
neither to eat flesh, nor to drink wine," without adding what follows, "nor
anything whereby thy brother stumbleth, or is offended or is made weak." These words
show the intention of the apostle in giving the admonition.
32. This is evident from the preceding and succeeding context. The passage
is a long one to quote, but, for the sake of those who are indolent in reading
and searching the sacred Scriptures, we must give the whole of it. "Him that
is weak in the faith," says the apostle, "receive ye, but not to doubtful
disputations. For one believeth that he may eat all things: another, who is weak,
eateth herbs. Let not him that eateth despise him that eateth not; and let not him
that eateth not judge him that eateth, for God hath received him. Who art thou
that judgest another man's servant? to his own master he standeth or falleth;
yea, he shall be holden up: for God is able to make him stand. One man
esteemeth one day above another; another esteemeth every day alike. Let every man be
fully persuaded in his own mind. He that regardeth the day, regardeth it to the
Lord. He that eateth, eateth to the Lord, for he giveth God thanks; and he that
eateth not, to the Lord he eateth not, and giveth God thanks. For none of us
liveth to himself, and no man dieth to himself. For whether we live, we live unto
the Lord; and whether we die, we die unto the Lord: whether we live,
therefore, or die, we are the Lord's. For to this end Christ both lived, and died and
rose again, that He might be Lord both of the dead and living. But why dost thou
judge thy brother? or why dost thou set at nought thy brother? for we shall all
stand before the judgment-seat of God. For it is written, As I live, saith the
Lord, every knee shall bow to me, and every tongue shall confess to God.(1) So
then every one of us shall give account of himself to God. Let us not,
therefore, judge one another any more: but judge this rather, that no man put a
stumbling-block, or occasion to fall, in his brother's way. I know, and am persuaded
in the Lord Jesus, that there is nothing common of itself: but to him that
esteemeth anything to be common, to him it is common. But if thy brother be grieved
with thy meat, now walkest thou not charitably. Destroy not him with thy meat,
for whom Christ died. Let not then our good be evil spoken of. For the kingdom
of God is not meat and drink; but righteousness, and peace, and joy in the
Holy Ghost. For he who in this serveth Christ is acceptable to God, and approved
of men. Let us therefore follow after the things which make for peace, and
things whereby one may edify another. For meat destroys not the work of God. All
things indeed are pure; but it is evil for that man who eateth with offense. It is
good neither to eat flesh, nor to drink wine, nor anything whereby thy brother
stumbleth, or is offended, or is made weak. Hast thou faith? have it to
thyself before God. Happy is he who condemneth not himself in that thing which he
alloweth. And he that distinguishes is damned if he eats, because he eateth not of
faith: for whatsoever is not of faith is sin. We then that are strong ought to
bear the infirmities of the weak, and not to please ourselves. Let every one
of us please his neighbor for his good to edification. For even Christ pleased
not Himself." (2)
33. Is it not clear that what the apostle required was, that the stronger
should not eat flesh nor drink wine, because they gave offense to the weak by
not going along with them, and made them think that those who in faith judged
all things to be pure, did homage to idols in not abstaining from that kind of
food and drink? This is also set forth in the following passage of the Epistle to
the Corinthians: "As concerning, therefore, the eating of those things that
are offered in sacrifice unto idols, we know that an idol is nothing in the
world, and that there is none other God but one. For though there be that are called
gods, whether in heaven or in earth, but to us there is but one God, the
Father, of whom are all things, and we in Him; and one Lord Jesus Christ, by whom
are all things, and we by Him. Howbeit there is not in every man that knowledge:
for some, with conscience of the idol unto this hour, eat it as a thing offered
to an idol; and their conscience being weak is defiled. But meat commendeth us
not to God: for neither, if we eat, shall we abound; neither, if we eat not,
shall we suffer want. But take heed, lest by any means this liberty of yours
become a stumbling-block to them that are weak. For if any man see one who has
knowledge sit at meat in the idol's temple, shall not his conscience being weak be
emboldened to eat those things which are offered to idols; and through thy
knowledge shall the weak brother perish, for whom Christ died? But when ye sin so
against the brethren, and wound their weak conscience, ye sin against Christ.
Wherefore, if meat make my brother to offend, I will eat no flesh forever, lest
I make my brother to offend." (3)
34. Again, in another place: "What say I then ? that the idol is anything?
or that which is offered in sacrifice to idols is anything? But the things
which the Gentiles sacrifice they sacrifice to devils, and not to God: and I would
not that ye should have fellowship with devils. Ye cannot drink the cup of the
Lord, and the cup of devils: ye cannot be partakers of the Lord's table and of
the table of devils. Do we provoke the Lord to jealousy ? are we stronger than
He? All things are lawful for me, but all things are not expedient: all things
are lawful for me, but all things edify not. Let no man seek his own, but
every man what is another's. Whatsoever is sold in the shambles, that eat, asking
no question for conscience sake. But if any man say unto you, This is offered in
sacrifice unto idols, eat not for his sake that shows it, and for conscience
sake: conscience, I say, not thine own, but another's: for why is my liberty
judged of another man's conscience? For if I be a partaker with thanksgiving, why
am I evil spoken of for that for which I give thanks? Whether, therefore, ye
eat or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God. Give none offence,
neither to the Jews, nor to the Greeks, nor to the Church of God: even as I
please all men in all things not seeking mine own profit, but the profit of many
that they may be saved. Be ye followers of me, even as I also am of Christ." (1)
35. It is clear, then, I think, for what end we should abstain from flesh
and wine. The end is threefold: to check indulgence, which is mostly practised
in this sort of food, and in this kind of drink goes the length of
intoxication; to protect weakness, on account of the things which are sacrificed and
offered in libation; and, what is most praiseworthy of all, from love, not to offend
the weakness of those more feeble than ourselves, who abstain from these
things. You, again, consider a morsel of meat unclean; whereas the apostle says that
all things are clean, but that it is evil to him that eateth with offence. And
no doubt you are defiled by such food, simply because you think it unclean. For
the apostle says, "I know, and am persuaded by the Lord Jesus, that there is
nothing common of itself: but to him that esteemeth anything common, to him it
is common." And every one can see that by common he means unclean and defiled.
But it is folly to discuss passages of Scripture with you; for you both mislead
people by promising to prove your doctrines, and those books which possess
authority to demand our homage you affirm to be corrupted by spurious
interpolations. Prove then to me your doctrine that flesh defiles the eater, when it is
taken without offending any one, without any weak notions. and without any
excess.(2)
CHAP. 15.--WHY THE MANICHAEANS PROHIBIT THE USE OF FLESH.
36. It is worth while to take note of the whole reason for their
superstitious abstinence, which is given as follows:--Since, we are told, the member of
God has been mixed with the substance of evil, to repress it and to keep it
from excessive ferocity,--for that is what you say,--the world is made up of both
natures, of good and evil, mixed together. But this part of God is daily being
set free in all parts of the world, and restored to its own domain. But in its
passage upwards as vapor from earth to heaven, it enters plants, because their
roots are fixed in the earth, and so gives fertility and strength to all herbs
and shrubs. From these animals get their food, and, where there is sexual
intercourse, fetter in the flesh the member of God, and, turning it from its proper
course, they come in the way and entangle it in errors and troubles. So then,
if food consisting of vegetables and fruits comes to the saints, that is, to
the Manichaeans by means of their chastity, and prayers, and psalms, whatever in
it is excellent and divine is purified, and so is entirely perfected, in order
to restoration, free from all hindrance, to its own domain. Hence you forbid
people to give bread or vegetables, or even water, which would cost nobody
anything, to a beggar, if he is not a Manichaean, lest he should defile the member of
God by his sins, and obstruct its return.
37. Flesh, you say, is made up of pollution itself. For, according to you,
some portion of that divine part escapes in the eating of vegetables and
fruits: it escapes while they undergo the infliction of rubbing, grinding, or
cooking, as also of biting or chewing. It escapes, too, in all motions of animals, in
the carriage of burdens, in exercise, in toil, or in any sort of action. It
escapes, too, in our rest, when digestion is going on in the body by means of
internal heat. And as the divine nature escapes in all these ways, some very
unclean dregs remain, from which, in sexual intercourse, flesh is formed. These
dregs, however, fly off, in the motions above mentioned, along with what is good in
the soul; for though it is mostly, it is not entirely good. So, when the soul
has left the flesh, the dregs are utterly filthy, and the soul of those who eat
flesh is defiled.
CHAP. 16.--DISCLOSURE OF THE MONSTROUS TENETS OF THE MANICHAEANS.
38. O the obscurity of the nature of things How hard to expose falsehood!
Who that hears these things, if he is one who has not learned the causes of
things, and who, not yet illuminated by any ray of truth, is deceived by material
images, would not think them true, precisely because the things spoken of are
invisible, and are presented to the mind under the form of visible things, and
can be eloquently expressed? Men of this description exist in numbers and in
droves, who are kept from being led away into these errors more by a fear
grounded on religious feeling than by reason. I will therefore endeavor, as God may
please to enable me, so to refute these errors, as that their falsehood and
absurdity will be manifest not only in the judgment of the wise, who reject them on
hearing them, but also to the intelligence of the multitude.
39. Tell me then, first, where you get the doctrine that part of God, as
you call it, exists in corn, beans, cabbage, and flowers and fruits. From the
beauty of the color, say they, and the sweetness of the taste; this is evident;
and as these are not found in rotten substances, we learn that their good has
been taken from them. Are they not ashamed to attribute the finding of God to the
nose and the palate? But I pass from this. For I will speak, using words in
their proper sense; and, as the saying is, this is not so easy in speaking to
you. Let us see rather what sort of mind is required to understand this; how, if
the presence of good in bodies is shown by their color, the dung of animals, the
refuse of flesh itself, has all kinds of bright colors, sometimes white, often
golden; and so on, though these are what you take in fruits and flowers as
proofs of the presence and indwelling of God. Why is it that in a rose you hold
the red color to be an indication of an abundance of good, while the same color
in blood you condemn? Why do you regard with pleasure in a violet the same color
which you turn away from in cases of cholera, or of people with jaundice, or
in the excrement of infants? Why do you believe the light, shining appearance of
oil to be a sign of a plentiful admixture of good, which you readily set about
purifying by taking the oil into your throats and stomachs, while you are
afraid to touch your lips with a drop of fat, though it has the same shining
appearance as oil? Why do you look upon a yellow melon as part of the treasures of
God, and not rancid bacon fat or the yolk of an egg? Why do you think that
whiteness in a lettuce proclaims God, and not in milk? So much for colors, as regards
which (to mention nothing else) you cannot compare any flower-clad meadow with
the wings and feathers of a single peacock, though these are of flesh and of
fleshly origin.
40. Again, if this good is discovered also by smell, perfumes of excellent
smell are made from the flesh of some animals. And the smell of food, when
cooked along with flesh of delicate flavor, is better than if cooked without it.
Once more, if you think that the things that have a better smell than others are
therefore cleaner, there is a kind of mud which you ought to take to your
meals instead of water from the cistern; for dry earth moistened with rain has an
odor most agreeable to the sense, and this sort of mud has a better smell than
rain-water taken by itself. But if we must have the authority of taste to J
prove the presence in any object of part of God, he must dwell in dates and honey
more than in pork, but more in pork than in beans. I grant that He dwells more
in a fig than in a liver; but then you must allow that He is more in liver than
in beet. And, on this principle, must you not confess that some plants, which
none of you can doubt to be cleaner than flesh, receive God from this very
flesh, if we are to think of God as mixed with the flavor? For both cabbages taste
better when cooked along with flesh; and, while we cannot relish the plants on
which cattle feed, when these are turned into milk we think them improved in
color, and find them very agreeable to the taste.
41. Or must we think that good is to be found in greater quantity where
the three good qualities--a good color, and smell, and taste--are found together?
Then you must not admire and praise flowers so much, as yon cannot admit them
to be tried at the tribunal of the palate. At least you must not prefer
purslain to flesh, since flesh when cooked is superior in color, smell, and taste. A
young pig roasted (for your ideas on this subject force us to discuss good and
evil with you as if you were cooks and confectioners, instead of men of reading
or literary taste) is bright in color, and agreeable in smell, and pleasant in
taste. Here is a perfect evidence of the presence of the divine substance. You
are invited by this threefold testimony, and called on to purify this substance
by your sanctity. Make the attack. Why do you hold back? What objection have
you to make. In color alone the excrement of an infant surpasses lentils; in
smell alone a roast morsel surpasses a soft green fig; in taste alone a kid when
slaughtered surpasses the plant which it fed on when alive: and we have found a
kind of flesh in flavor of which all three give evidence. What more do you
require? What reply will you make? Why should eating meat make you unclean, if
using such monstrosities in discussion does not? And, above all, the rays of the
sun, which you surely think more of than all animal or vegetable food, have no
smell or taste, and are remarkable among other substances only by their eminently
bright color; which is a loud call to you, and an obligation, in spite of
yourselves, to place nothing higher than a bright color among the evidences of an
admixture of good.
42. Thus you are forced into this difficulty, that you must acknowledge
the part of God as dwelling more in blood, and in the filthy but bright-colored
animal refuse which is thrown out in the streets, than in the pale leaves of the
olive. If you reply, as you actually do, that olive leaves when burnt give out
a flame, which proves the presence of light, while flesh when burnt does not,
what will you say of oil, which lights nearly all the lamps in Italy? What of
cow dung (which surely is more unclean than the flesh), which peasants use when
dry as fuel, so that the fire is always at hand, and the liberation of the
smoke is always going on? And if brightness and lustre prove a greater presence of
the divine part, why do you yourselves not purify it, why not appropriate it,
why not liberate it? For it is found chiefly in flowers, not to speak of blood
and countless things almost the same as blood in flesh or coming from it, and
yet you cannot feed on flowers. And even if you were to eat flesh, you would
certainly not take with your gruel the scales of fish, or some worms and flies,
though these all shine with a light of their own in the dark.
43. What then remains, but that you should cease saying that you have in
your eyes, nose, and palate sufficient means of testing the presence of the
divine part in material objects? And, without these means, how can you tell not
only that there is a greater part of God in plants than in flesh, but that there
is any part in plants at all? Are you led to think this by their beauty--not the
beauty of agreeable color, but that of agreement of parts? An excellent
reason, in my opinion. For you will never be so bold as to compare twisted pieces of
wood with the bodies of animals, which are formed of members answering to one
another. But if you choose the testimony of the senses, as those must do who
cannot see with their mind the full force of existence, how do you prove that the
substance of good escapes from bodies in course of time, and by some kind of
attrition, but because God has gone out of it, according to your view, and has
left one place for another? The whole is absurd. But, as far as I can judge,
there are no marks or appearances to give rise to this opinion. For many things
plucked from trees, or pulled out of the ground, are the better of some interval
of time before we use them for food, as leeks and endive, lettuce, grapes,
apples, figs, and some pears; and there are many other things which get a better
color when they are not used immediately after being plucked, besides being more
wholesome for the body, and having a finer flavor to the palate. But these
things should not possess all these excellent and agreeable qualities, if, as you
say, they become more destitute of good the longer they are kept after separation
from their mother earth. Animal food itself is better and more fit for use the
day after the animal is killed; but this should not be, if, as you hold, it
possessed more good immediately after the slaughter than next day, when more of
the divine substance had escaped.
44. Who does not know that wine becomes purer and better by age? Nor is
it, as you think, more tempting to the destruction of the senses, but more useful
for invigorating the body,--only let there be moderation, which ought to
control everything. The senses are sooner destroyed by new wine. When the must has
been only a short time in the vat, and has begun to ferment, it makes those who
look down into it fall headlong, affecting their brain, so that without
assistance they would perish. And as regards health, every one knows that bodies are
swollen up and injuriously distended by new wine? Has it these bad properties
because there is more good in it? Are they not found in wine when old because a
good deal of the divine substance has gone? An absurd thing to say, especially
for you, who prove the divine presence by the pleasing effect produced on your
eyes, nose, and palate! And what a contradiction it is to make wine the poison
of the princes of darkness, and yet to eat grapes! Has it more of the poison
when in the cup than when in the cluster? Or if the evil remains unmixed after the
good is gone, and that by the process of time, how is it that the same grapes,
when hung up for awhile, become milder, sweeter, and more wholesome? or how
does the wine itself, as already mentioned, become purer and brighter when the
light has gone, and more wholesome by the loss of the beneficial substance?
45. What are we to say of wood and leaves, which in course of time become
dry, but cannot be the worse on that account in your estimation? For while they
lose that which produces smoke, they retain that from which a bright flame
arises; and, to judge by the clearness, which you think so much of, there is more
good in the dry than in the green. Hence you must either deny that there is
more of God in the pure light than in the smoky one, which will upset all your
evidences; or you must allow it to be possible that, when plants are plucked up,
or branches plucked off, and kept for a time, more of the nature of evil may
escape from them than of the nature of good. And, on the strength of this, we
shall hold that more evil may go off from plucked fruits; and so more good may
remain in animal food. So much on the subject of time.
46. As for motion, and tossing, and rubbing, if these give the divine
nature the opportunity of escaping from these substances, many things of the same
kind are against you, which are improved by motion. In some grains the juice
resembles wine, and is excellent when moved about. Indeed, as must not be
overlooked, this kind of drink produces intoxication rapidly; and yet you never called
the juice of grain the poison of the princes of darkness. There is a
preparation of water, thickened with a little meal, which is the better of being shaken,
and, strange to say, is lighter in color when the light is gone. The pastry
cook stirs honey for a long time to give it this light color, and to make its
sweetness milder and less unwholesome: you must explain how this can come from the
loss of good. Again, if you prefer to test the presence of God by the agreeable
effects on the hearing, and not sight, or smell, or taste, harps get their
strings and pipes their bones from animals; and these become musical by being
dried, and rubbed, and twisted. So the pleasures of music, which you hold to have
come from the divine kingdom, are obtained from the refuse of dead animals, and
that, too, when they are dried by time, and lessened by rubbing, and stretched
by twisting. Such rough treatment, according to you, drives the divine
substance from living objects; even cooking them, you say, does this. Why then are
boiled thistles not unwholesome? Is it because God, or part of God, leaves them
when they are cooked?
47. Why mention all the particulars, when it is difficult to enumerate
them? Nor is it necessary; for every one knows how many things are sweeter and
more wholesome when cooked. This ought not to be, if, as you suppose, things lose
the good by being thus moved about. I do not suppose that you will find any
proof from your bodily senses that flesh is unclean, and defiles the souls of
those who eat it, because fruits, when plucked and shaken about in various ways,
become flesh; especially as you hold that vinegar, in its age and fermentation,
is cleaner than wine, and the mead you drink is nothing else than cooked wine,
which ought to be more impure than wine, if material things lose the divine
members by being moved about and cooked. But if not, you have no reason to think
that fruits, when plucked, kept, handled, cooked, and digested, are forsaken by
the good, and therefore supply most unclean matter for the formation of bodies.
48. But if it is not from their color and appearance, and smell and taste,
that you think the good to be in these things, what else can you bring
forward? Do you prove it from the strength and vigor which those things seem to lose
when they are separated from the earth and put to use? If this is your reason
(though its erroneousness is seen at once, from the fact that the strength of
some things is increased after their separation from the earth, as in the case
already mentioned of wine, which becomes stronger from age),--if the strength,
then, is your reason, it would follow that the part of God is to be found in no
food more abundantly than in flesh. For athletes, who especially require vigor
and energy, are not in the habit of feeding on cabbage and fruit without animal
food.
49. Is your reason for thinking the bodies of trees better than our
bodies, that flesh is nourished by trees and not trees by flesh. You forget the
obvious fact that plants, when manured with dung, become richer and more fertile and
crops heavier, though you think it your gravest charge against flesh that it
is the abode of dung. This then gives nourishment to things you consider clean,
though it is, according to you, the most unclean part of what you consider
unclean. But if you dislike flesh because it springs from sexual intercourse, you
should be pleased with the flesh of worms, which are bred in such numbers, and
of such a size, in fruits, in wood, and in the earth itself, without any sexual
intercourse. But there is some insincerity in this. For if you were displeased
with flesh because it is formed from the cohabitation of father and mother, you
would not say that those princes of darkness were born from the fruits of
their own trees; for no doubt you think worse of these princes than of flesh, which
you refuse to eat.
50. Your idea that all the souls of animals come from the food of their
parents, from which confinement you pretend to liberate the divine substance
which is held bound in your viands, is quite inconsistent with your abstinence from
flesh, and makes it a pressing duty for you to eat animal food. For if sours
are bound in the body by those who eat animal food, why do you not secure their
liberation by being beforehand in eating the food? You reply, it is not from
the animal food that the good part comes which those people bring into bondage,
but from the vegetables which they take with their meat. What will you say then
of the souls of lions, who feed only on flesh? They drink, is the reply, and so
the soul is drawn in from the water and confined in flesh. But what of birds
without number? What of eagles, which eat only flesh, and need no drink? Here
you are at a loss, and can find no answer. For if the soul comes from food, and
there are animals which neither drink anything nor have any food but flesh, and
yet bring forth young, there must be some soul in flesh; and you are bound to
try your plan of purifying it by eating the flesh. Or will you say that a pig
has a soul of light, because it eats vegetables, and drinks water; and that the
eagle, because it eats only flesh, has a soul of darkness, though it is so fond
of the sun?(1)
51. What a confusion of ideas! What amazing fatuity! All this you would
have escaped, if you had rejected idle fictions, and had followed what truth
sanctions in abstinence from food, which would have taught you that sumptuous
eating is to be avoided, not to escape pollution, as there is nothing of the kind,
but to subdue the sensual appetite. For should any one, from inattention to the
nature of things, and the properties of the soul and body, allow that the soul
is polluted by animal food, you will admit that it is much much more defiled by
sensuality. Is it reasonable, then, or rather, is it not most unreasonable, to
expel from the number of the elect a man who, perhaps for his health's sake,
takes some animal food without sensual appetite; while, if a man eagerly devours
peppered truffles, you can only reprove him for excess, but cannot condemn him
as abusing your symbol? So one who has been induced, not by sensuality, but
for health, to eat part of a fowl, cannot remain among your elect; though one may
remain who has yielded voluntarily to an excessive appetite for comfits and
cakes without animal matter. You retain the man plunged in the defilements of
sensuality, and dismiss the man polluted, as you think, by the mere food; though
you allow that the defilement of sensuality is far greater than that of meat.
You keep hold of one who gloats with delight over highly-seasoned vegetables.
unable to keep possession of himself; while you shut out one who, to satisfy
hunger, takes whatever comes, if suitable for nourishment, ready either to use the
food, or to let it go. Admirable customs! Excellent morals! Notable temperance!
52. Again, the notion that it is unlawful for any one but the elect to
touch as food what is brought to your meals for what you call purification, leads
to shameful and sometimes to criminal practices. For sometimes so much is
brought that it cannot easily be eaten up by a few; and as it is considered
sacrilege to give what is left to others, or, at least, to throw it away, you are
obliged to eat to excess, from the desire to purify, as you call it, all that is
given. Then, when you are full almost to bursting, you cruelly use force in making
the boys of your sect eat the rest. So it was charged against some one at Rome
that he killed some poor children, by compelling them to eat for this
superstitious reason. This I should not believe, did I not know how sinful you consider
it to give this food to those who are not elect, or, at any rate, to throw it
away. So the only way is to eat it; and this leads every day to gluttony, and
may sometimes lead to murder.
53. For the same reason you forbid giving bread to beggars. By way of
showing compassion, or rather of avoiding reproach, you advise to give money. The
cruelty of this is equalled by its stupidity. For suppose a place where food
cannot be purchased: the beggar will die of starvation, while you, in your wisdom
and benevolence, have more mercy on a cucumber than on a human being This is
in truth (for how could it be better designated) pretended compassion, and real
cruelty. Then observe the stupidity. What if the beggar buys bread for himself
with the money you give him? Will the divine part, as you call it, not suffer
the same in him when he buys the food as it would have suffered if he had taken
it as a gift from you? So this sinful beggar plunges in corruption part of God
eager to escape, and is aided in this crime by your money! But you in your
great sagacity think it enough that you do not give to one about to commit murder a
man to kill, though you knowingly give him money to procure somebody to be
killed. Can any madness go beyond this? The result is, that either the man dies if
he cannot get food for his money, or the food itself dies if he gets it. The
one is true murder; the other what you call murder: though in both cases you
incur the guilt of real murder. Again, there is the greatest folly and absurdity
in allowing your followers to eat animal food, while you forbid them to kill
animals. If this food does not defile, take it yourselves. If it defiles, what can
be more unreasonable than to think it more sinful to separate the soul of a
pig from its body than to defile the soul of a man with the pig's flesh.
CHAP. 17.--DESCRIPTION OF THE SYMBOL OF THE HANDS AMONG THE MANICHAEANS.
54. We must now notice and discuss the symbol of the hands. And, in the
first place, your abstaining from the slaughter of animals and from injuring
plants is shown by Christ to be mere superstition; for, on the ground that there is
no community of rights between us and brutes and trees, He both sent-the
devils into an herd of swine,(1) and withered by His curse a tree in which He had
found no fruit(2) The swine assuredly had not sinned, nor had the tree. We are
not so insane as to think that a tree is fruitful or barren by its own choice.
Nor is it any reply to say that our Lord wished in these actions to teach some
other truths; for every one knows that. But assuredly the Son of God would not
commit murder to illustrate truth,if you call the destruction of a tree or of an
animal murder. The signs which Christ wrought in the case of men, with whom we
certainly have a community of rights, were in healing, not in killing them. And
it would have been the same in the case of beasts and trees, if we had that
community with them which you imagine.
55. I think it right to refer here to the authority of Scripture, because
we cannot here enter on a profound discussion about the soul of animals, or the
kind of life in trees. But as you preserve the right to call the Scriptures
corrupted, in case you should find them too strongly opposed to you,--although
you have never affirmed the passages about the tree and the herd of swine to be
spurious,--still, lest some day you should wish to say this of them too, when
you find how much they are against you, I will adhere to my plan, and will ask
you, who are so liberal in your promises of evidence and truth, to tell me first
what harm is done to a tree, I say not by plucking a leaf or an apple,--for
which, however, one of you would be condemned at once as having abused the symbol,
if he did it intentionally, and not accidentally,--but if you tear it up by
the root. For the soul in trees, which, according to you, is a rational soul, is,
in your theory, freed from bondage when the tree is cut down,--a bondage, too,
where it suffered great misery and got no profit. For it is well known that
you, in the words of your founder, threaten as a great, though not the greatest
punishment, the change from a man to a tree; and it is not probable that the
soul in a tree can grow in wisdom as it does in a man. There is the best reason
for not killing a man, in case you should kill one whose wisdom or virtue might
be of use to many, or one who might have attained to wisdom, whether by the
advice of another without himself, or by divine illumination in his own mind. And
the more wisdom the soul has when it leaves the body, the more profitable is its
departure, as we know both from well-grounded reasoning and from wide-spread
belief. Thus to cut down a tree is to set free the soul from a body in which it
makes no progress in wisdom. You--the holy men, I mean--ought to be mainly
occupied in cutting down trees, and in leading the souls thus emancipated to better
things by prayers and psalms. Or can this be done only with the souls which
you take into your belly, instead of aiding them by your understanding?
56. And you cannot escape the admission that the souls in trees make no
progress in wisdom while they are there, when you are asked why no apostle was
sent to teach trees as well as men, or why the apostle sent to men did not preach
the truth to trees also. Your reply must be, that the souls while in such
bodies cannot understand the divine precepts. But this reply lands you in great
difficulties; for you declare that these souls can hear your voices and understand
what you say, and see bodies and their motions, and even discern thoughts. If
this is true, why could they learn nothing from the apostle of light? Why could
they not learn even much better than we, since they can see into the mind?
Your master, who, as you say, has. difficulty in teaching you by speech, might
have taught these souls by thought; for they could see his ideas in his mind
before he expressed them. But if this is untrue, consider into what errors you have
fallen.
57. As for your not plucking fruits or pulling up vegetables yourselves,
while you get your followers to pluck and pull and bring them to you, that you
may confer benefits not only on those who bring the food but on the food which
is brought, what thoughtful person can bear to hear this? For, first, it matters
not whether you commit a crime yourself, or wish another to commit it for you.
You deny that you wish this! How then can relief be given to the divine part
contained in lettuce and leeks, unless some one pull them and bring them to the
saints to be purified. And again, if you were passing through a field where
the right of friendship permitted you to pluck anything you wished, what would
you do if you saw a crow on the point of eating a fig? Does not, according to
your ideas, the fig itself seem to address you and to beg of you piteously to
pluck it yourself and give it burial in a holy belly, where it may be purified and
restored, rather than that the crow should swallow it and make it part of his
cursed body, and then hand it over to bondage and torture in other forms? If
this is true, how cruel you are! If not, how silly! What can be more contrary to
your opinions than to break the symbol? What can be more unkind to the member of
God than to keep it?
58. This supposes the truth of your false and vain ideas. But you can be
shown guilty of plain and positive cruelty flowing from the same error. For were
any one lying on the road, his body wasted with disease, weary with
journeying, and half-dead from his sufferings, and able only to utter some broken words,
and if eating a pear would do him good as an astringent, and were he to beg you
to help him as you passed by, and were he to implore you to bring the fruit
from a neighboring tree, with no divine or human prohibition to prevent your
doing so, while the man is sure to die for the want of it, you, a Christian man and
a saint, will rather pass on and abandon a man thus suffering and entreating,
test the tree should lament the loss of its fruit, and you should be doomed to
the punishment threatened by Manichæus for breaking the symbol. Strange
customs, and strange harmlessness!
59. Now, as regards killing animals, and the reasons for your opinion,
much that has been said will apply also to this. For what harm will be done to the
soul of a wolf by killing the wolf, since the wolf, as long as it lives, will
be a wolf, and will not listen to any preacher, or give up, in the least,
shedding the blood of sheep; and, by killing it, the rational soul, as you think,
will be set free from its confinement in the body? But you make this slaughter
unlawful even for your followers; for you think it worse than that of trees. And
in this there is not much fault to be found with your senses,--that is, your
bodily senses. For we see and hear by their cries that animals die with pain,
although man disregards this in a beast, with which, as not having a rational
soul, we have no community of rights. But as to your senses in the observation of
trees, you must be entirely blind. For not to mention that l there are no
movements in the wood expressive of pain, what is clearer than that a tree is never
better than when it is green and flourishing, gay with flowers, and rich in
fruit? And this comes generally and chiefly from pruning. But if it felt the iron,
as you suppose, it ought to die of wounds so many, so severe, instead of
sprouting at the places, and reviving with such manifest delight.
60. But why do you think it a greater crime to destroy animals than
plants, although you hold that plants have a purer soul than animals? There is a
compensation, we are told, when part of what is taken from the fields is given to
the elect and the saints to be purified. This has already been refuted; and it
has, I think, been proved sufficiently that there is no reason for saying that
more of the good part is found in vegetables than in flesh. But should any one
support himself by selling butcher-meat, and spend the whole profit of his
business in purchasing food for Four elect, and bring larger supplies for those
saints than any peasant or farmer, will he not plead this compensation as a warrant
for his killing animals? But there is, we are told, some other mysterious
reason; for a cunning man can always find some resource in the secrets of nature
when addressing unlearned people. The story, then, is that the heavenly princes
who were taken from the race of darkness and bound, and have a place assigned
them in this region by the Creator of the world, have animals on the earth
specially belonging to them, each having those coming from his own stock and class;
and they hold the slaughterers of those animals guilty, and do not allow them to
leave the earth, but harass them as much as they can with pains and torments.
What simple man will not be frightened by this, and, seeing nothing in the
darkness shrouding these things, will not think that the fact is as described? But
I will hold to my purpose, with God's help, to rebut mysterious falsehood by
the plainest truth.
61. Tell me, then, it animals on land and in water come in regular
succession by ordinary generation from this race of princes, since the origin of
animal life is traced to the abortive births in that race;--tell me, I say, whether
bees and frogs, and many other creatures not sprung from sexual intercourse,(1)
may be killed with impunity. We are told they cannot. So it is not on account
of their relation to certain princes that you forbid your followers to kill
animals. Or if you make a general relationship to all bodies, the princes would be
equally concerned about trees, which you do not require your followers to
spare. You are brought back to the weak reply, that the injuries done in the case
of plants are atoned for by the fruits which your followers bring to your
church. For this implies that those who slaughter animals, and sell their flesh in
the market, if they are your followers, and if they bring to you vegetables
bought with their gains, may think nothing of the daily slaughter, and are cleared
of any sin that may be in it by your repasts.
62. But if you say that, in order to expiate the slaughter, the thing must
be given as food, as in the case of fruits and vegetables,--which cannot be
done, because the elect do not eat flesh, and so your followers must not
slaughter animals,--what reply will you give in the case of thorns and weeds, which
farmers destroy in clearing their fields, while they cannot bring any food to you
from them? How can there be pardon for such destruction, which gives no
nourishment to the saints? Perhaps you also put away any sin committed, for the
benefit of the fruits and vegetables, by eating some of these. What then if the
fields are plundered by locusts, mice, or rats, as we see often happen? Can your
rustic follower kill these with impunity, because he sins for the good of his
crops? Here you are at a loss; for you either allow your followers to kill animals,
which your founder prohibited, or you forbid them to be cultivators, which he
made lawful. Indeed, you sometimes go so far as to say that an usurer is more
harmless than a cultivator,--you feel so much more for melons than for men.
Rather than hurt the melons, you would have a man ruined as a debtor. Is this
desirable and praiseworthy justice, or not rather atrocious and damnable error? Is
this commendable compassion, or not rather detestable barbarity?
63. What, again, of your not abstaining yourselves from the slaughter of
lice, bugs, and fleas? You think it a sufficient excuse for this to say that
these are the dirt of our bodies. But this is clearly untrue of fleas and bugs;
for every one knows that these animals do not come from our bodies. Besides, if
you abhor sexual intercourse as much as you pretend to do, you should think
those animals all the cleaner which come from our bodies without any other
generation; for although they produce offspring of their own, they are not produced in
ordinary generation from us. Again, if we must consider as most filthy the
production of living bodies, still worse must be the production of dead bodies.
There must be less harm, therefore, in killing a rat, a snake, or a scorpion,
which you constantly say come from our dead bodies. But to pass over what is less
plain and certain, it is a common opinion regarding bees that they come from the
carcases of oxen; so there is no harm in killing them. Or if this too is
doubted, every one allows that beetles, at least, are bred in the ball of mud which
they make and bury.(1) You ought therefore to consider these animals, and
others that it would be tedious to specify, more unclean than your lice; and yet you
think it sinful to kill them, though it would be foolish not to kill the lice.
Perhaps you hold the lice cheap because they are small. But if an animal is to
be valued by its size, you must prefer a camel to a man.
64. Here we may use the gradation which often perplexed us when we were
your followers. For if a flea may be killed on account of its small size, so may
the fly which is bred in beans. And if this, so also may one of a little larger
size, for its size at birth is even less. Then again, a bee may be killed, for
its young is no larger than a fly. So on to the young of a locust, and to a
locust; and then to the young of a mouse, and to a mouse. And, to cut short, it
is clear we may come at last to an elephant; so that one who thinks it no sin to
kill a flea, because of its small size, must allow that it would be no sin in
him to kill this huge creature. But I think enough has been said of these
absurdities.
CHAP. 18.--OF THE SYMBOL OF THE BREAST, AND OF THE SHAMEFUL MYSTERIES OF THE
MANICHAEANS.
65. Lastly, there is the symbol of the breast, in which your very
questionable chastity consists. For though you do not forbid sexual intercourse, you,
as the apostle long ago said, forbid marriage in the proper sense, although this
is the only good excuse for such intercourse. No doubt you will exclaim
against this, and will make it a reproach against us that you highly esteem and
approve perfect chastity, but do not forbid marriage, because your followers--that
is, those in the second grade among you--are allowed to have wives. After you
have said this with great noise and heat, I will quietly ask, Is it not you who
hold that begetting children, by which souls are confined in flesh, is a greater
sin than cohabitation? Is it not you who used to counsel us to observe as much
as possible the time when a woman, after her purification, is most likely to
conceive, and to abstain from cohabitation at that time, lest the soul should be
entangled in flesh? This proves that you approve of having a wife, not for the
procreation of children, but for the gratification of passion. In marriage, as
the marriage law declares, the man and woman come together for the procreation
of children. Therefore whoever makes the procreation of children a greater sin
than copulation, forbids marriage, and makes the woman not a wife, but a
mistress, who for some gifts presented to her is joined to the man to gratify his
passion. Where there is a wife there must be marriage. But there is no marriage
where motherhood is not in view; therefore neither is there a wife. In this way
you forbid marriage. Nor can you defend yourselves successfully from this
charge, long ago brought against you prophetically by the Holy Spirit.
66. Moreover, when you are so eager in your desire to prevent the soul
from being confined in flesh by conjugal intercourse, and so eager in asserting
that the soul is set free from seed by the food of the saints, do you not
sanction, unhappy beings, the suspicion entertained about you? For why should it be
true regarding corn and beans and lentils and other seeds, that when you eat them
you wish to set free the soul, and not true of the seeds of animals? For what
you say of the flesh of a dead animal, that it is unclean because there is no
soul in it, cannot be said of the seed of the animal; for you hold that it keeps
confined the soul which will appear in the offspring, and you avow that the
soul of Manichæus himself is thus confined. And as your followers cannot bring
these seeds to you for purification, who will not suspect that you make this
purification secretly among yourselves, and hide it from your followers, in case
they should leave you? (1) If you do not these things, as it is to be hoped you
do not, still you see how open to suspicion your superstition is, and how
impossible it is to blame men for thinking what your own profession suggests, when
you maintain that you set free souls from bodies and from senses by eating and
drinking. I wish to say no more about this: you see yourselves what room there is
here for denunciation. But as the matter is one rather to repress than to
invite remark, and also as throughout my discourse my purpose appears of
exaggerating nothing, and of keeping to bare facts and arguments, we shall pass on to
other matters.
CHAP. 19.--CRIMES OF THE MANICHAEANS.
67. We see then, now, the nature of your three symbols. These are your
customs. This is the end of your notable precepts, in which there is nothing sure,
nothing steadfast, nothing consistent, nothing irreproachable, but all
doubtful, or rather undoubtedly and entirely false, all contradictory, abominable,
absurd. In a word, evil practices are detected in your customs so many and so
serious, that one wishing to denounce them all, if he were at all able to enlarge,
would require at least a separate treatise for each. Were you to observe these,
and to act up to your profession, no childishness, or folly, or absurdity
would go beyond yours; and when you praise and teach these things without doing
them, you display craft and deceit and malevolence equal to anything that can be
described or imagined.
68. During nine full years that I attended you with great earnestness and
assiduity, I could not hear of one of your elect who was not found
transgressing these precepts, or at least was not suspected of doing so. Many were caught
at wine and animal food, many at the baths; but this we only heard by report.
Some were proved to have seduced other men's wives, so that in this case I could
not doubt the truth of the charge. But suppose this, too, a report rather than
a fact. I myself saw, and not I only, but others who have either escaped from
that superstition, or will, I hope, yet escape,--we saw, I say, in a square in
Carthage, on a road much frequented, not one, but more than three of the elect
walking behind us, and accosting some women with such indecent sounds and
gestures as to outdo the boldness and insolence of all ordinary rascals. And it was
clear that this was quite habitual, and that they behaved in this way to one
another, for no one was deterred by the presence of a companion,showing that most
of them, if not all, were affected with this evil tendency. For they did not
all come from one house, but lived in quite different places, and quite
accidentally left together the place where they had met. It was a great shock to us, and
we lodged a complaint about it. But who thought of inflicting punishment,--I
say not by separation from the church, but even by severe rebuke in proportion
to the heinousness of the offence?
69. All the excuse given for the impunity of those men was that, at that
time, when their meetings were forbidden by law, it was feared that the persons
suffering punishment might retaliate by giving information. What then of their
assertion that they will always have persecution in this world, for which they
suppose that they will be thought the more of? for this is the application they
make of the words about the world hating them.(2) And they will have it that
truth must be sought for among them, because, in the promise of the Holy Spirit,
the Paraclete, it is said that the world cannot receive Him.(3) This is not
the place to discuss this question. But clearly, if you are always to be
persecuted, even to the end of the world, there will be no end to this laxity, and to
the unchecked spread of all this immorality, from your fear of giving offence to
men of this character.
70. This answer was also given to us, when we reported to the very highest
authorities that a woman had complained to us that in a meeting, where she was
along with other women, not doubting of the sanctity of these people, some of
the elect came in, and when one of them had put out the lamp, one, whom she
could not distinguish, tried to embrace her, and would have forced her into sin,
had she not escaped by crying out. How common must we conclude the practice to
have been which led to the misdeed on this occasion! And this was done on the
night when you keep the feast of vigils. Forsooth, besides the fear of
information being given, no one could bring the offender before the bishop, as. he had so
well guarded against being recognized. As if all who entered along with him
were not implicated in the crime; for in their indecent merriment they all wished
the lamp to be put out.
71. Then what wide doors were opened for suspicions, when we saw them full
of envy, full of covetousness, full of greed for costly foods, constantly at
strife, easily excited about trifles.! We concluded that they were not competent
to abstain from the things they professed to abstain from, if they found an
opportunity in secret or in the dark. There were two of sufficiently good
character, of active minds, and leaders in their debates, with whom we had a more
particular and intimate acquaintance than with the rest. One of them was much
associated with us, because he was also engaged in liberal studies; he is said to be
now an elder there. These two were very jealous of one another, and one
accused the other--not openly, but in conversation, as he had opportunity, and in
whispers--of having made a criminal assault on the wife of one of the followers.
He again, in clearing himself to us, brought the same charge against another of
the elect, who lived with this follower as his most trusted friend. He had,
going in suddenly, caught this man with the woman, and his enemy and rival had
advised the woman and her paramour to raise this false report about him, that he
might not be believed if he gave any information. We were much distressed, and
took it greatly to heart, that although there was a doubt about the assault on
the woman, the jealous feeling in those two men, than whom we found none better
in the place, showed itself so keenly, and inevitably raised a suspicion of
other things.(1)
72. Another thing was, that we very often saw in theatres men belonging to
the elect, men of years and, it was supposed, of character, along with a
hoary-headed elder We pass over the youths, whom we used to come upon quarrelling
about the people connected with the stage and the races; from which we may safely
conclude how they would be able to refrain in secret, when they could not
subdue the passion by which they were exposed in the eyes of their followers,
bringing on them disgrace and flight. In the case of the saint, whose discussions we
attended in the street of the fig-sellers, would his atrocious crime have been
discovered if he had been able to make the dedicated virgin his wife without
making her pregnant? The swelling womb betrayed the secret and unthought-of
iniquity. When her brother, a young man, heard of it from his mother, he felt
keenly the injury, but refrained, from regard to religion, from a public accusation.
He succeeded in getting the man expelled from that church, for such conduct
cannot always be tolerated; and that the crime might not be wholly unpunished, he
arranged with some of his friends to have the man well beaten and kicked. When
he was thus assailed, he cried out that they should spare him, from regard to
the authority of the opinion of Manichæeus, that Adam the first hero had
sinned, and was a greater saint after his sin.
73. This, in fact, is your notion about Adam and Eve.(2) It is a long
story; but I will touch only on what concerns the present matter. You say that Adam
was produced from his parents, the abortive princes of darkness; that he had
in his soul the most part of light, and very little of the opposite race. So
while he lived a holy life, on account of the prevalence of good, still the
opposite part in him was stirred up, so that he was led away into conjugal
intercourse. Thus he fell and sinned, but afterwards lived in greater holiness. Now, my
complaint is not so much about this wicked man, who, under the garb of an elect
and holy man, brought such shame and reproach on a family of strangers by his
shocking immorality. I do not charge you with this. Let it be attributed to the
abandoned character of the man, and not to your habits. I blame the man for the
atrocity, and not you. Still there is this in you all that cannot, as far as I
can see, be admitted or tolerated, that while you hold the soul to be part of
God, you still maintain that the mixture of a little evil prevailed over the
superior force and quantity of good. Who that believes this, when incited by
passion, will not find here an excuse, instead of checking and controlling his
passion?
CHAP. 20.--DISGRACEFUL CONDUCT DISCOVERED AT ROME.
74. What more shall I say of your customs? I have mentioned what I found
myself when I was in the city when the things were dome. To go through all that
happened at Rome in my absence would take a long time. I will, however, give a
short account of it; for the matter became so notorious, that even the absent
could not remain in ignorance of it. And when I was afterwards in Rome, I
ascertained the truth of all I had heard, although the story was told me by an
eye-witness whom I knew so well and esteemed so highly, that I could not feel any
doubt about it. One of your followers, then, quite equal to the elect in their
far-famed abstinence, for he was both liberally educated, and was in the habit of
defending your sect with great zeal, took it very ill that he had cast in his
teeth the vile conduct of the elect, who lived in all kinds of places, and went
hither and thither for lodging of the worst description. He therefore desired,
if possible, to assemble all who were willing to live according to the precepts
into his own house, and to maintain them at his own expense; for he was above
the average in carelessness as to spending money, besides being above the
average in the amount he had to spend. He complained that Iris efforts were hindered
by the remissness of the bishops, whose assistance he required for success. At
last one of your bishops was found,--a man, as I know, very rude and
unpolished, but somehow, from his very moroseness, the more inclined to strict
observance of morality. The follower eagerly lays hold of this man as the person he had
long wished for and found at last, and relates his whole plan. He approves and
assents, and agrees to be the first to take up his abode in the house. When
this was done, all the elect who could be at Rome were assembled there. The rule
of life in the epistle of Manichaeus was laid before them. Many thought it
intolerable, and left; not a few felt ashamed, and stayed. They began to live as
they had agreed, and as this high authority enjoined. The follower all the time
was zealously enforcing everything on everybody, though never, in any case, what
he did not undertake himself. Meanwhile quarrels constantly arose among the
elect. They charged one another with crimes, all which he lamented to hear, and
managed to make them unintentionally expose one another in their altercations.
The revelations were vile beyond description. Thus appeared the true character of
those who were unlike the rest in being willing to bend to the yoke of the
precepts. What then is to be suspected, or rather, concluded, of the others? To
come to a close, they gathered together on one occasion and complained that they
could not keep the regulations. Then came rebellion. The follower stated his
case most concisely, that either all must be kept, or the man who had given such
a sanction to such precepts, which no one could fulfill, must be thought a
great fool. But, as was inevitable, the wild clamor of the mob prevailed over the
opinion of one man. The bishop himself gave way at last, and took to flight with
great disgrace; and he was said to have got in provisions by stealth, contrary
to rule, which were often discovered. He had a supply of money from his
private purse, which he carefully kept concealed.
75. If you say these things are false, you contradict what is too clear
and public. But you may say so if you like. For, as the things are certain, and
easily known by those who wish to know them, those who deny that they are true
show what their habit of telling the truth is. But you have other replies with
which I do not find fault. For you either say that some do keep your precepts,
and that they should not be mixed up with the guilty in condemning the others;
or that the whole inquiry into the character of the members of your sect is
wrong, for the question is of the character of the profession. Should I grant both
of these (although you can neither point out those faithful observers of the
precepts, nor clear your heresy of all those frivolities and iniquities), still I
must insist on knowing why you heap reproaches on Christians of the Catholic
name on seeing the immoral life of some, while you either have the effrontery to
repel inquiry about your members, or the still greater effrontery not to repel
it, wishing it to be understood that in your scanty membership there are some
unknown individuals who keep the precepts they profess, but that among the
multitudes in the Catholic Church there are none.