REPLY TO FAUSTUS THE MANICHAEAN. [CONTRA FAUSTUM MANICHAEUM.] A.D. 400 (BOOKS
XVI TO XVIII)
BOOK XVI.
FAUSTUS WILLING TO BELIEVE NOT ONLY THAT THE JEWISH BUT THAT ALL GENTILE
PROPHETS WROTE OF CHRIST, IF IT SHOULD BE PROVED; BUT HE WOULD NONE THE LESS INSIST
UPON REJECTING THEIR SUPERSTITIONS. AUGUSTIN MAINTAINS THAT ALL MOSES WROTE IS
OF CHRIST, AND THAT HIS WRITINGS MUST BE-EITHER ACCEPTED OR REJECTED AS A WHOLE.
1. FAUSTUS said: You ask why we do not believe Moses, when Christ says,
"Moses wrote of me; and if ye believed Moses, ye would also believe me." I should
be glad if not only Moses, but all prophets, Jew and Gentile, had written of
Christ. It would be no hindrance, but a help to our faith, if we could cull
testimonies from all hands agreeing in favor of our God. You could extract the
prophecies of Christ out of the superstition which we should hate as much as ever.
I am quite willing to believe that Moses, though so much the opposite of
Christ, may seem to have written of Him. No one but would gladly find a flower in
every thorn, and food in every plant, and honey in every insect, although we would
not feed on insects or on grass, nor wear thorns as a crown. No one but would
wish pearls to be found in every deep, and gems in every land, and fruit on
every tree. We may eat fish from the sea without drinking the water. We may take
the useful, and reject what is hurtful. And why may we not take the prophecies
of Christ from a religion the rites of which we condemn as useless? This need
not make us liable to be led into the bondage of the errors; for we do not hate
the unclean spirits less because they confessed plainly and openly that Jesus
was the Son of God. If any similar testimony is found in Moses, I will accept it.
But I will not on this account be brought into subjection to his law, which to
my mind is pure Paganism. There is no reason whatever for thinking that I can
have any objections to receiving prophecies of Christ from every spirit.
2. Since you have proved that Christ declared that Moses wrote of him, I
should be very grateful if you would show me what he has written. I have
searched the Scriptures, as we are told to do, and have found no prophecies of Christ,
either because there are none, or because I could not understand them. The
only escape from this perplexity was in one or other of two conclusions. Either
this verse must be spurious, or Jesus a liar. As it is not consistent with piety
to suppose God a liar, I preferred to attribute falsehood to the writers,
rather than to the Author, of truth. Moreover, He Himself tells that those who came
before him were thieves and robbers, which applies first of all to Moses. And
when, on the occasion of His speaking of His own majesty, and calling Himself
the light of the world, the Jews angrily rejoined, "Thou bearest witness of
thyself, thy witness is not true," I do not find that He appealed to the prophecies
of Moses, as might have been expected. Instead of this, as having no connection
with the Jews, and receiving no testimony from their fathers, He replied: "It
is written in your law, that the testimony of two men is true. I am one who
bear witness of myself, and the Father who sent me beareth witness of me." (1) He
referred to the voice from heaven which all had heard: "This is my beloved Son,
believe Him." I think it likely that if Christ had said that Moses wrote of
Him, the ingenious hostility of the Jews would have led them at once to ask what
He supposed Moses to have written. The silence of the Jews is a proof that
Jesus never made such a statement.
3. My chief reason, however, for suspecting the genuineness of this verse
is what I said before, that in all my search of the writings of Moses I have
found no prophecy of Christ. But now that I have found in you a reader of
superior intelligence, I hope to learn something; and I promise to be grateful if no
feeling of ill-will prevents you from giving me the benefit of your higher
attainments, as your lofty style of reproof entitles me to expect from you, I ask
for instruction in whatever the writings of Moses contain about our God and Lord
which has escaped me in reading. I beseech you not to use the ignorant argument
that Christ affirms Moses to have written of Him. For suppose you had not to
deal with me, as in my case there is an obligation to believe Him whom I profess
to follow, but with a Jew or a Gentile, in reply to the statement that Moses
wrote of Christ, they will ask for proofs. What shall we say to them? We cannot
quote Christ's authority, for they do not believe in Him. We must point out
what Moses wrote.
4. What, then, shall we point to? Shall it be that passage which you often
quote where the God of Moses says to him: "I will raise up unto them from
among their brethren a prophet like unto thee?" (2) But the Jew can see that this
does not refer to Christ, and there is every reason against our thinking that it
does. Christ was not a prophet, nor was He like Moses: for Moses was a man,
and Christ was God; Moses was a sinner, and Christ sinless; Moses was born by
ordinary generation, and Christ of a virgin according to you, or, as I hold, not
born at all: Moses, for offending his God, was put to death on the mountain;
and Christ suffered voluntarily, and the Father was well pleased in Him. If we
were to assert that Christ was a prophet like Moses, the Jew would either deride
us as ignorant or pronounce us untruthful.
5. Or shall we take another favorite passage of yours:" They shall see
their life hanging, and shall not believe their life?" (3) You insert the words
"on a tree," which are not in the original. Nothing can be easier than to show
that this has no reference to Christ. Moses is uttering dire threatenings in case
the people should depart from his law, and says among other things that they
would be taken captive by their enemies, and would be expecting death day and
night, having no confidence in the life allowed them by their conquerors, so that
their life would hang in uncertainty from fear of impending danger. This
passage will not do, we must try others. I cannot admit that the words, "Cursed is
every one that hangeth on a tree," refer to Christ, or when it is said that the
prince or prophet must be killed who should try to turn away the people from
their God, or should break any of the commandments. (1) That Christ did this I am
obliged to grant. But if you assert that these things were written of Christ,
it may be asked in reply, What spirit dictated these prophecies in which Moses
curses Christ and orders him to be killed? If he had the Spirit of God, these
things are not written of Christ; if they are written of Christ, he had not the
Spirit of God. The Spirit of God would not curse Christ, or order Him to be
killed. To vindicate Moses, you must confess that these passages too have no
reference to Christ. So, if you have no others to show, there are none. If there are
none, Christ could not have said that there were; and if Christ did not say
so, that verse is spurious.
6. The next verse too is suspicious, "If ye believed Moses, ye would also
believe me;" for the religion of Moses is so entirely different from that of
Christ, that if the Jews believed one, they could not believe the other. Moses
strictly forbids any work to be done on Sabbath, and gives as a reason for this
prohibition that God made the world and all that is therein in six days, and
rested on the seventh day, which is Sabbath; and therefore blessed or sanctified
it as His haven of repose after toil, and commanded that breaking the Sabbath
should be punished with death. The Jews, in obedience to Moses, insisted strongly
on this, and so would not even listen to Christ when He told them that God
always works, and that no day is appointed for the intermission of His pure and
unwearied energy, and that accordingly He Himself had to work incessantly even on
Sabbath. "My Father," he says, "worketh always, and I too must work.'' (2)
Again, Moses places circumcision among the rites pleasing to God, and commands
every male to be circumcised in the foreskin of his flesh, and declares that this
is a necessary sign of the covenant which God made with Abraham, and that every
male not circumcised would be cut off from his tribe, and from his part in the
inheritance promised to Abraham and to his seed. (3) In this observance, too,
the Jews were very zealous, and consequently could not believe in Christ, who
made light of these things, and declared that a man when circumcised became
twofold a child of hell. (4) Again, Moses is very particular about the distinction
in animal foods, and discourses like an epicure on the merits of fish, and
birds, and quadrupeds, and orders some to be eaten as clean, and others which are
unclean not to be touched. Among the unclean he reckons the swine and the hare,
and fish without scales, and quadrupeds that neither divide the hoof nor chew
the cud. In this also the Jews carefully obeyed Moses, and so could not believe
in Christ, who taught that alI food is alike, and though he allowed no animal
food to his own disciples, gave full liberty to the laity to eat whatever they
pleased, and taught that men are polluted not by what goes into the mouth, but
by the evil things which come out of it. In these and many other things the
doctrine of Jesus, as everybody knows, contradicts that of Moses.
7. Not to enumerate all the points of difference, it is enough to mention
this one fact, that most Christian sects, and, as is well known, the Catholics,
pay no regard to what is prescribed in the writings of Moses. If this does not
originate in some error, but in the doctrine correctly transmitted from Christ
and His disciples, you surely must acknowledge that the teaching of Jesus is
opposed to that of Moses, and that the Jews did not believe in Christ on account
of their attachment to Moses. How can it be otherwise than false that Jesus
said to the Jews, "If ye believed Moses, ye would believe me also," when it is
perfectly clear that their belief in Moses prevented them from believing in
Jesus, which they might have done if they had left off believing in Moses? Again I
ask you to show me anything that Moses wrote of Christ.
8. Elsewhere FAUSTUS says: When you find no passage to point to, you use
this weak and inappropriate argument, that a Christian is bound to believe
Christ when he says that Moses wrote of Him, and that whoever does not believe this
is not a Christian. It would be far better to confess at once that you cannot
find any passage. This argument might be used with me, because my reverence for
Christ compels me to believe what He says. Still it may be a question whether
this is Christ's own declaration, requiring absolute belief, or only the
writer's, to be carefully examined. And disbelief in falsehood is no offence to
Christ, but to impostors. But of whatever use this argument may be with Christians,
it is wholly inapplicable in the case of the Jew or Gentile, with whom we are
supposed to be discussing. And even with Christians the argument is
objectionable. When the Apostle Thomas was in doubt, Christ did not spurn him from Him.
Instead of saying, "Believe, if thou art a disciple; whoever does not believe is
not a disciple," Christ sought to heal the wounds of his mind by showing him the
marks of the wounds in His own body. Does it become you then to tell me that I
am not a Christian because I am in doubt, not about Christ, but about the
genuineness of a remark attributed to Christ? But, you say, He calls those
especially blessed, who have not seen, and yet have believed. If you think that this
refers to believing without the use of judgment and reason, you are welcome to
this blind blessedness.I shall be content with rational blessedness.
9. AUGUSTIN replied: Your idea of taking any prophecies of Christ to be
found in Moses, as a fish out of the sea, while you throw away the water from
which the fish is taken, is a clever one. But since all that Moses wrote is of
Christ, or relates to Christ, either as predicting Him by words and actions, or as
illustrating His grace and glory, you, with your faith in the untrue and
untruthful Christ from the writings of Manichæus, and your unbelief in Moses, will
not even eat the fish. Moreover, though you are sincere in your hostility to
Moses, you are hypocritical in your praise of fish. For how can yon say that there
is no harm in eating a fish taken out of the sea, when your doctrine is that
such food is so hurtful, that you would rather starve than make use of it? If
all flesh is unclean, as you say it is, and if the wretched life of ),our god is
confined in all water or plants, from which it is liberated by your using them
for food, according to your own vile superstition, you must throw away the fish
you have praised, and drink the water and eat the thistles you speak of as
useless. As for your comparison of the servant of God to devils, as if his
prophecies of Christ resembled their confession, the servant does not refuse to bear
the reproach of his master. If the Master of the house was called Beelzebub, how
much more they of His household! (1) You have learned this reproach from
Christ's enemies; and you are worse than they were. They did not believe that Jesus
was Christ, and therefore thought Him an impostor. But the only doctrine you
believe in is that which lares to make Christ a liar.
10. What reason have you for saying that the law of Moses is pure
Paganism? Is it because it speaks of a temple, and an altar of sacrifices, and priests?
But all these names are found also in the New Testament. Destroy," Christ
says, "this temple, and in three days I will raise it up;"' and again, "When
thou offerest thy gift at the altar;" (3) and again, "Go, show thyself to the
priest, and offer for thyself a sacrifice as Moses commanded, for a testimony unto
them." (4) What these things prefigured the Lord Himself partly tells us, when
He calls His own body the temple; and we learn also from the apostle, who says,
"The temple of God is holy, which temple ye are;" (5) and again, "I beseech
you therefore by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living
sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God ;" 6 and in similar passages. As the same
apostle says, in words which cannot be too often quoted, these things were our
examples, for they were not the work of devils, but of the one true God who made
heaven and earth, and who, though not needing such things, yet, suiting His
requirements to the time, made ancient observances significant of future realities.
Since you pretend to abhor Paganism, though it is only that you may lead astray
by your deception unlearned Christians or those not established in the faith,
show us any authority in Christian books for your worship and service of the sun
and moon. Your heresy is liker Paganism than the law of Moses is. For you do
not worship Christ, but only something that you call Christ, a fiction of your
own fancy; and the gods you serve are either the bodies visible in the heavens,
or hosts of your own contrivance. If you do not build shrines for these
worthless idols, the creatures of the imagination, yon make your hearts their temple.
11. You ask me to show what Moses wrote of Christ. Many passages have
already been pointed out. But who could point out all? Besides, when any quotation
is made, you are ready perversely to try to give the words another meaning; or
if the evidence is too strong to be resisted, you will say that you take the
passage as a sweet fish out of the salt water, and that you will not therefore
consent to drink all the brine of the books of Moses. It will be enough, then, to
take those passages in the Hebrew law which Faustus has chosen for criticism,
and to show that, when rightly understood, they apply to Christ. For if the
things which our adversary ridicules and condemns are made to prove that he
himself is condemned by Christian truth, it will be evident that either the mere
quotation or the careful examination of the other passages will be enough to show
their agreement with Christian faith. Well, then, O thou full of all subtilty,
when the Lord in the Gospel says, "If ye believed Moses, ye would believe me
also, for he wrote of me," (1) there is no occasion for the great perplexity you
pretend to be in, or for the alternative of either pronouncing this verse
spurious or calling Jesus a liar. The verse is as genuine as its words are true. I
preferred, says Faustus, to attribute falsehood to the writers, rather than to
the Author of truth. What sort of faith can you have in Christ as the author of
truth, when your doctrine is that His flesh and His; death, His wounds and their
marks, were reigned? And where is your authority for saying that Christ is the
author of truth, if you dare to attribute falsehood to those who wrote of Him,
whose testimony has come down to us with the confirmation of those immediately
succeeding them? You have not seen Christ, nor has He conversed with you as
with the apostles, nor called you from heaven as He did Saul. What knowledge or
belief can we have of Christ, but on the authority of Scripture? Or if there is
falsehood in the Gospel which has been widely published among all nations, and
has been held in such high sacredness in all churches since the name of Christ
was first preached, where shall we find a trustworthy record of Christ? If the
Gospel is called in question in spite of the general consent regarding it,
there can be no writing which a man may not call spurious if he does not wish to
believe it.
12. You go on to quote Christ's words, that all who came before Him were
thieves and robbers. How do you know that these were Christ's words, but from
the Gospel? You profess faith in these words, as if you had heard them from the
mouth of the Lord Himself. But if any one declares the verse to be spurious,
and denies that Christ said this, you will have, in reply, to exert yourself in
vindication of the authority of the Gospel. Unhappy being! what you refuse to
believe is written in the same place as that which you quote as spoken by the
Lord Himself. We believe both, for we believe the sacred narrative in which both
are contained. We believe both that Moses wrote of Christ, and that all that
came before Christ were thieves and robbers. By their coming He means their not
being sent. Those who were sent, as Moses and the holy prophets, came not
before Him, but with Him. They did not proudly wish to precede Him, but were the
humble bearers of the message which He tittered by them. According to the meaning
which you give to the Lord's words, it is plain that with you there can be no
prophets. And so you have made a Christ for yourselves who should prophesy a
Christ to come. If you have any prophets of your own, they will have, of course,
no authority, as not being recognized by any others; but if there are any that
you dare to quote as prophesying that Christ would come in an unreal body, and
would suffer an unreal death, and would show to His doubting disciples unreal
marks of wounds, not to speak of the abominable nature of such prophecies, and of
the evident untruthfulness of those who commend falsehood in Christ, by your
own interpretation those prophets must have been thieves and robbers, for they
could not have spoken of Christ as coming in any manner unless they had come
before Him. If by those who came before Christ we understand those who would not
come with Him, --that is, with the Word of God,--but without being sent by God
brought their own falsehoods to men, you yourselves, although you are born in
this world after the death and the resurrection of Christ, are thieves and
robbers. For, without waiting for His illumination that you might preach His truth,
you have come before Him to preach up your own deceits.
13. In the passage where we read of the Jews saying to Christ, Thou
bearest witness of thyself, thy witness is not true, you do not see that Christ
replies by saying that Moses wrote of Him, simply because you have not got the eye
of piety to see with. The answer of Christ is this: "It is written in your law,
that the testimony of two men is true; I am one who bear witness of myself, and
the Father that sent me heareth witness of me." (2) What does this mean, if
rightly understood, but that this number of witnesses required by the law was
fixed upon and consecrated in the spirit of prophecy, that even thus might be
prefigured the future revelation of the Father and Son, whose spirit is the Holy
Spirit of the inseparable Trinity? So it is written: " In the mouth of two or
three witnesses shall every word be established." (3) As a matter of fact, one
witness generally speaks the truth, while a number tell lies. And the world, in
its conversion to Christianity, believed one apostle preaching the gospel rather
than the mistaken multitude who persecuted him. There was a special reason for
requiring this number of witnesses, and in His answer the Lord implied that
Moses prophesied of Him. Do you carp at His saying your law instead of the law of
God? But, as every one knows, this is the common expression in Scripture. Your
law means the law given to you. So the apostle speaks of his gospel, while at
the same time he declares that he received it not from man,but by the
revelation of Jesus Christ. You might as well say that Christ denies God to be His
Father, when He uses the words your Father instead of our Father. Again, you should
refuse to believe the voice which you allude to as having come from heaven This
is my beloved Son, believe Him, because you did not hear it. But if you
believe this because you find it in the sacred Scriptures, you will also find there
what you deny, that Moses wrote of Christ, besides many other things that you do
not acknowledge as true. Do you not see that your own mischievous argument may
be used to prove that this voice never came from heaven? To your own
destruction, and to the detriment of the welfare of mankind, you try to weaken the
authority of the gospel, by arguing that it cannot be true that Christ said that
Moses wrote of Him; because if He had said this, the ingenious hostility of the
Jews would have led them at once to ask what He supposed Moses to have written of
Him. In the same way, it might be impiously argued that if that voice had
really come from heaven, all the Jews who heard it would have believed. Why are you
so unreasonable as not to consider that, as it was possible for the Jews to
remain hardened in unbelief after hearing the voice from heaven, so it was
possible for them, when Christ said that Moses wrote of Him, to refrain from asking
what Moses wrote, because in their ingenious hostility they were afraid of being
proved to be in the wrong?
14. Besides that this argument is an impious assault on the gospel,
Faustus himself is aware of its feebleness, and therefore insists more on what he
calls his chief difficulty,--that in all his search of the writings of Moses he
has found no prophecies of Christ. The obvious reply is, that he does not
understand. And if any one asks why he does not understand, the answer is that he
reads with a hostile, unbelieving mind; he does not search in order to know, but
thinks he knows when he is ignorant. This vainglorious presumption either blinds
the eye of his understanding so as to prevent his seeing anything, or distorts
his vision, so that his remarks of approval or disapproval are misdirected. I
ask, he says, for instruction in whatever the writings of Moses contain about
our God and Lord, which has escaped me in reading. I reply at once that it has
all escaped him, for all is written of Christ. As we cannot go through the whole,
I will, with the help of God, comply with your request, to the extent I have
already promised, by showing that the passages which you specially criticise
refer to Christ. You tell me not to use the ignorant argument that Christ affirms
Moses to have written of Him. But if I use this argument, it is not because I
am ignorant, but because I am a believer. I acknowledge that this argument will
not convince a Gentile or a Jew. But, in spite of all your evasions, you are
obliged to confess that it tells against you, who boast of possessing a kind of
Christianity. You say, Suppose you had not to deal with me, as in my case there
is an obligation to believe Him whom I profess to follow, but with a Jew or a
Gentile. This is as much as to say that you, at any rate, with whom I have at
present to do, are satisfied that Moses wrote of Christ; for you are not bold
enough to discard altogether the well-grounded authority of the Gospel where
Christ's own declaration is recorded. Even when you attack this authority
indirectly, you feel that you are attacking your own position. You are aware that if you
refuse to believe the Gospel, which is so generally known and received, you
must fail utterly in the attempt to substitute for it any trustworthy record of
the sayings and doings of Christ. You are afraid that the loss of the Christian
name might lead to the exposure of your absurdities to universal scorn and
condemnation. Accordingly you try to recover yourself, by saying that your
profession of Christianity obliges you to believe these words of the Gospel. So you, at
any rate, which is all that we need care for just now, are caught and slain in
this death blow to your errors. You are forced to confess that Moses wrote of
Christ, because the Gospel, which your profession obliges you to believe, states
that Christ said so. As regards a discussion with a Jew or a Gentile, I have
already shown as well as I could how I think it should be conducted.
15. I still hold that there is a reference to Christ in the passage which
you select for refutation, where God says to Moses, "I will raise up unto them
from among their brethren a prophet like unto thee.'' (1) The string of showy
antitheses with which you try to ornament your dull discourse does not at all
affect my belief of this truth. You attempt to prove, by a comparison of Christ
and Moses, that they are unlike, and that therefore the words. "I will raise up
a prophet like unto thee," cannot be understood of Christ. You specify a number
of particulars in which you find a diversity: that the one is man, and the
other God; that one is a sinner, the other sinless; that one is born of ordinary
generation, the other, as we hold, of a virgin, and, as you hold, not even of a
virgin; the one incurs God's anger, and is put to death on a mountain, the
other suffers voluntarily, law ing throughout the approval of His Father. But
surely things may be said to be like, although they are not like in every respect.
Besides the resemblance between things of the same nature, as between two men,
or between parents and children, or between men in general, or any species of
animals, or in trees, between one olive and another, or one laurel and another,
there is often a resemblance in things of a different nature, as between a wild
and a tame olive, or between wheat and barley. These things are to some extent
allied. But there is the greatest possible distance between the Son of God, by
whom all things were made, and a beast or a stone. And yet in the Gospel we
read, "Behold the Lamb of God,'' (1) and in the apostle, "That rock was Christ."
(2) This could not be said except on the supposition of some resemblance. What
wonder, then, if Christ condescended to become like Moses, when He was made like
the lamb which God by Moses commanded His people to eat as a type of Christ,
enjoining that its blood should be used as a means of protection, and that it
should be called the Passover, which every one must admit to be fulfilled in
Christ? The Scripture, I acknowledge, shows points of difference; and the Scripture
also, as I call on you to acknowledge, shows points of resemblance. There are
points of both kinds, and one can be proved as well as the other. Christ is
unlike man, for He is God; and it is written of Him that He is "over all, God
blessed for ever." (3) Christ is also like man, for He is man; and it is likewise
written of Him, that He is the "Mediator between God and man, the man Christ
Jesus.'' (4) Christ is unlike a sinner, for He is ever holy; and He is like a
sinner, for "God sent His Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, that by sin He might
condemn sin in the flesh." (5) Christ is unlike a man born in ordinary
generation, for He was born of a virgin; and yet He is like, for He too was born of a
woman, to whom it was said, "That holy thing which shall be born of thee shall
be called the Son of God.'' (6) Christ is unlike a man, who dies on account of
his own sin, for He died without sin, and of His own free-will; and again, He
is like, for He too died a real death of the body.
16. You ought not to say, in disparagement of Moses, that he was a sinner,
and that he was put to death on a mountain because his God was angry with him.
For Moses could glory in the Lord as his Saviour, who is also the Saviour of
him who says, "Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am
chief." (7) Moses, indeed, is accused by the voice of God, because his faith
showed signs of weakness when he was commanded to draw water out of the rock. (8)
In this he may have sinned as Peter did, when from the weakness of his faith he
became afraid in the: midst of the waves. (9) But we cannot think from this,
that he who, as the Gospel tells us, was counted worthy to be present with the
Lord along with holy Elias on the mount of transfiguration, was separated from
the eternal fellowship of the saints. The sacred history shows in what favor he
was with God even after his sin. But since you may ask why God speaks of this
sin as deserving the punishment of death, and as I have promised to point out
prophecies of Christ in those passages which you select for criticism, I will try,
with the Lord's help, to show that what you object to in the death of Moses
is, when rightly understood, prophetical of Christ.
17. We often find in the symbolical passages of Scripture, that the same
person appears in different characters on different occasions. So, on this
occasion, Moses represents and prefigures the Jewish people as placed under the law.
As, then, Moses, when he struck the rock with his rod, doubted the power of
God, so the people who were under the law given by Moses, when they nailed Christ
to the cross, did not believe Him to be the power of God. And as water flowed
from the smitten rock for those that were athirst, so life comes to believers
from the stroke of the Lord's passion. The testimony of the apostle is clear and
decisive on this point, when he says, "This rock was Christ." (10) In the
command of God, that the death of the flesh of Moses should take place on the
mountain, we see the divine appointment that the carnal doubt of the divinity of
Christ should die on Christ's exaltation. As the rock is Christ, so is the
mountain. The rock is the fortitude of His humiliation; the mountain the height of His
exaltation. For as the apostle says, "This rock was Christ," so Christ Himself
says, "A city set upon an hill cannot be hid," (11) showing that He is the
hill, and believers the city built upon the glory of His name. The carnal mind
lives when, like the smitten rock, the humiliation of Christ on the cross is
despised. For Christ crucified is to the Jews a stumbling-block, and to the Greeks
foolishness. And the carnal mind dies when, like the mountain-top, Christ is
seen in His exaltation. "For to them that are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ
is the power of God, and the wisdom of God.'' (1) Moses therefore ascended the
mount, that in the death of the flesh he might be received by the living
spirit. If Faustus had ascended, he would not have uttered carnal objections from a
dead mind. It was the carnal mind that made Peter dread the smiting of the
rock, when, on the occasion of the Lord's foretelling His passion, he said, "Be it
far from Thee, Lord; spare Thyself." And this sin too was severely rebuked,
when the Lord replied, "Get thee behind me, Satan; thou art an offense unto me:
for thou savorest not the things which be of God, but those which be of men." (2)
And where did this carnal distrust die but in the glorification of Christ, as
on a mountain height? If it was alive when Peter timidly denied Christ, it was
dead when he fearlessly preached Him. It was alive in Saul, when, in his
aversion to the offense of the cross, he made havoc of the Christian faith, and where
but on this mountain had it died, when Paul was able to say, "I live no
longer, but Christ liveth in me?"3
18. What other reason has your heretical folly to give for thinking that
there is no prophecy of Christ in the words, "I will raise lip unto them a
Prophet from among their brethren, like unto thee?" Your showing Christ to be unlike
Moses is no reason; for we can show that in other respects He is like. How can
you object to Christ's being called a prophet, since He condescended to be a
man, and actually foretold many future events? What is a prophet, but one who
predicts events beyond human foresight? So Christ says of Himself: "A prophet is
not without honor, save in his own country." (4) But, turning from you, since
you have already acknowledged that your profession of Christianity obliges you
to believe the Gospel, I address myself to the Jew, who enjoys the poor
privilege of liberty from the yoke of Christ, and who therefore thinks it allowable to
say: Your Christ spoke falsely; Moses wrote nothing of him.
19. Let the Jews say what prophet is meant in this promise of God to
Moses: "I will raise up unto them a Prophet from among their brethren, like unto
thee." Many prophets appeared after Moses; but one in particular is here pointed
out. The Jews will perhaps naturally think of the successor of Moses, who led
into the promised land the people that Moses had brought out of Egypt. Having
this successor of Moses in his mind, he may perhaps laugh at me for asking to what
prophet the words of the promise refer, since it is recorded who followed
Moses in ruling and leading the people. When he has laughed at my ignorance, as
Faustus supposes him to do, I will still continue my inquiries, and will desire my
laughing opponent to give me a serious answer to the question why Moses
changed the name of this successor, who was preferred to himself as the leader of the
people into the promised land, to show that the law given by Moses not to
save, but to convince the sinner, cannot lead us into heaven, but only the grace
and truth which are by Jesus Christ. This successor was called Osea, and Moses
gave him the name of Jesus. Why . then did he give him this name when he sent him
from the valley of Pharan into the land into which he was to lead the people?
(5) The true Jesus says, "If I go and prepare a place for you, I will come
again, and receive you unto myself.'' (6) I will ask the Jew if the prophet does
not show the prophetical meaning of these things when he says, "God shall come
from Africa, and the Holy One from Pharan." Does this not mean that the holy God
would come with the name of him who came from Africa by Pharan, that is, with
the name of Jesus? Then, again, it is the Word of God Himself who speaks when
He promises to provide this successor to Moses, speaking of him as an
angel,--a name commonly given in Scripture to those carrying any message. The words
are: "Behold I send my angel before thy face, to preserve thee in the way, and to
bring thee into the land which I have sworn to give thee. Take heed unto him,
and obey, and beware of unbelief in him; for he will not take anything from thee
wrongfully, for my name is in him." (7) Consider these words. Let the Jew, not
to speak of the Manichaean, say what other angel he can find in Scripture to
whom these words apply, but this leader who was to bring the people into the
land of promise. Then let him inquire who it was that succeeded Moses, and brought
in the people. He will find that it was Jesus, and that this was not his name
at first, but after his name was changed. It follows that He who said, "My name
is in him," is the true Jesus, the leader who brings His people into the
inheritance of eternal life, according to the New Testament, of which the Old was a
figure. No event or action could have a more distinctly prophetical character
than this, where the very name is a prediction.
20. It follows that this Jew, if he wishes to be a Jew inwardly, in the
spirit, and not in the letter, if he wishes to be thought a true Israelite, in
whom is no guile, will recognize in this dead Jesus, who led the people into the
land of mortality, a figure of the true living Jesus, whom he may follow into
the land of life. In this way, he will no longer in a hostile spirit resist so
plain a prophecy, but, influenced by the allusion to the Jesus of the Old
Testament, he will be prepared to listen meekly to Him whose name he bore, and who
leads to the true land of promise; for He says, "Blessed are the meek, for they
shall inherit the land."(1) The Gentile also, if his heart is not too stony, if
he is one of those stones from which God raises up children unto Abraham, must
allow it to be wonderful that in the ancient books of the people of whom Jesus
was born, so plain a prophecy, including His very name, is found recorded; and
must remark at the same time, that it is not any many of the name of Jesus who
is prophesied, of, but a divine person, because God said that His name was in
that man who was appointed to rule the people, and to lead them into the
kingdom, and who by a change of name was called Jesus. In His being sent with this
new name, He brings a great and divine message, and is therefore called an Angel,
which, as every tyro in Greek knows, means messenger. No Gentile, therefore,
it he were not perverse and obstinate, would despise these books merely because
be is not subject to the law of the Hebrews, to whom the books belong; but
would think highly of the books, no matter whose they were, on finding in them
prophecies of such ancient date, and of what he sees now taking place. Instead of
despising Christ Jesus because He is foretold in the Hebrew Scriptures, he
would conclude that one thought worth), of being the subject of prophetic
description, whoever the writers might be, for so many ages before His coming into the
world,--sometimes in plain announcements, sometimes in figure by symbolic
actions and utterances,--must claim to be regarded with profound admiration and
reverence, and to be followed with implicit reliance. Thus the facts of Christian
history would prove the truth of the prophecy, and the prophecy would prove the
claims of Christ. Call this fancy, if it is not actually the case that men all
over the world have been led, and are now led, to believe in Christ by reading
these books.
21. In view of the multitudes from all nations who have become zealous
believers in these books, it is laughably absurd to tell us that it is impossible
to persuade a Gentile to learn the Christian faith from Jewish books. Indeed,
it is a great confirmation of our faith that such important testimony is borne
by enemies. The believing Gentiles cannot suppose these testimonies to Christ
to be recent forgeries; for they find them in books held sacred for so many ages
by those who crucified Christ, and stilI regarded with the highest veneration
by those who every day blaspheme Christ. If the prophecies of Christ were the
production of the preachers of Christ. we might suspect their genuineness. But
now the preacher expounds the text of the blasphemer. In this way the Most High
God order the blindness of the ungodly for the profit of the saint, in His
righteous government bringing good out of evil, that those who by their own choice
live wickedly may be, in His just judgment, made the instruments of His will.
So, lest those that were to preach Christ to the world should be thought to have
forged the prophecies which speak of Christ as to be born, to work miracles,
to suffer unjustly, to die, to rise again, to ascend to heaven, to publish the
gospel of eternal life among all nations, the unbelief of the Jews has been made
of signal benefit to us; so that those who do not receive in their heart for
their own good these truths, carry, in their hands for our benefit the writings
in which these truths are contained. And the unbelief of the Jews increases
rather than lessens the authority of the books, for this blindness is itself,
foretold. They testify to the truth by their not understanding it. By not
understanding the books which predict that they would not understand, they prove these
books to be true.
22. In the passage, "Thou shalt see thy life hanging, and shalt not
believe thy life,"(2) Faustus is deceived by the ambiguity of the words. The words
may be differently interpreted; but that they cannot be understood of Christ is
not said by Faustus, nor can be said by anyone who does not deny that Christ is
life, or that He was seen by the Jews hang-lug on the cross, or that they did
not believe Him. Since Christ Himself says, "I am the life,"(3) and since there
is no doubt that He was seen hanging by the unbelieving Jews, I see no reason
for doubting that this was written of Christ; for, as Christ says, Moses wrote
of Him. Since we have already refuted Faustus' arguments by which he tries to
show that the words, "I will raise up from among their brethren a prophet like
unto thee," do not apply to Christ, because Christ is not like Moses, we need not
insist on this other prophecy. Since, in the one case, his argument is that
Christ is unlike Moses, so here he ought to argue that Christ is not the life, or
that He was not seen hanging by the unbelieving Jews. But as he has not said
this, and as no one will now venture to say so, there should be no difficulty in
accepting this too as a prophecy of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, uttered
by His servant. These words, says Faustus, occur in a chapter of curses. But
why should it be the less a prophecy because it occurs in the midst of
prophecies? Or why should it not be a prophecy of Christ, although the context does not
seem to refer to Christ? Indeed, among all the curses which the jews brought on
themselves by their sinful pride, nothing could be worse than this, that they
should see their Life--that is, the Son of God --hanging, and should not
believe their Life. For the curses of prophecy are not hostile imprecations, but
announcements of coming judgment. Hostile imprecations are forbidden, for it is
said, "Bless, and curse not."(1) But prophetic announcements are often found in
the writings of the saints, as when the Apostle Paul says: "Alexander the
coppersmith has done me much evil; the Lord shall reward him according to his
works."(2) So it might be thought that the apostle was prompted by angry feeling to
utter this imprecation: "I would that they were even made eunuchs that trouble
you."(3) But if we remember who the writer is, we may see in this ambiguous
expression an ingenious style of benediction. For there are eunuchs which have made
themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven's sake.(4) If Faustus had a pious
appetite for Christian food, he would have found a similar ambiguity in the
words of Moses. By the Jews the declaration, "Thou shalt see thy life hanging, and
shalt not believe thy life," may have been understood to mean that they would
see their life to be in danger from the threats and plots of their enemies, and
would not expect to live. But the child of the Gospel, who has heard Christ
say, "He wrote of me." distinguishes in the ambiguity of the prophecy between what
is thrown to swine and what is addressed to man. To his mind the thought
immediately suggests itself of Christ hanging as the life of man, and of the Jews
not believing in Him for this very reason, that they saw Him hanging. As to the
objection that these words, "Thou shalt see thy life hanging, and shalt not
believe thy life," are the only words referring to Christ in a passage containing
maledictions not applicable to Christ, some might grant that this is true. For
this prophecy might very well occur among the curses pronounced by the prophet
upon the ungodly people, for these curses are of different kinds. But I, and
those who with me. consider more closely the saying of the Lord in His Gospel,
which is not, He wrote also of me, as admitting that Moses wrote other things not
referring to Christ, but, "He wrote of me," as teaching that in searching the
Scriptures we should view them as intended solely to illustrate the grace of
Christ, see a reference to Christ in the rest of the passage also. But it would
take too much time to explain this here.
23. So far from these words of Faustus' quotation being proved not to
refer to Christ by their occurring among the other curses, these curses cannot be
rightly understood except as prophecies of the glory of Christ, in which lies
the happiness of man. And what is true of these curses is still more true of this
quotation. If it could be said of Moses that his words have a different
meaning from what was in his mind, I would rather suppose him to have prophesied
without knowing it, than allow that the words, "Thou shalt see thy life hanging,
and shalt not believe thy life," are not applicable to Christ. So the words of
Caiaphas had a different meaning from what he intended, when, in his hostility to
Christ, he said that it was expedient that one man should die for the people,
and that the whole nation should not perish, where the Evangelist added that
he said this not of himself, but, since he was high priest, he prophesied.(5)
But Moses was not Caiaphas; and therefore when Moses said 16 the Hebrew people,
"Thou shalt see thy life hanging, and shalt not believe thy life," he not only
spoke of Christ, as he certainly did, even though he spoke without knowing the
meaning of what he said, lint he knew that he spoke of Christ. For he was a most
faithful steward of the prophetic mystery, that is, of the priestly unction
which gives the knowledge of the name of Christ; and in this mystery even
Caiaphas, wicked as he was, was able to prophesy without knowing it. The prophetic
unction enabled him to prophesy, though his wicked life prevented him from knowing
it. Who then can say that there are no prophecies of Christ in Moses, with
whom began that unction to which we owe the knowledge of Christ's name, and by
which even Caiaphas, the persecutor of Christ, prophesied of Christ without
knowing it?
24. We have already said as much as appeared desirable of the curse
pronounced on every one that hangs on a tree. Enough has been said to show that the
command to kill any prophet or prince who tried to turn away the children of
Israel from their God, or to break any commandment, is not directed against
Christ. The more we consider the words and actions of our Lord Jesus Christ, the more
clearly will this appear; for Christ never tried to turn away any of the
Israelites from their God. The God whom Moses taught the people to love and serve,
is the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob, whom the Lord Jesus Christ speaks
of by this name, using the name in refutation of the Sadducees, who denied the
resurrection of the dead. He says, "Of the resurrection of the dead, have ye
not read what God said from the bush to Moses, I am the God of Abraham, the God
of Isaac, and the God of Jacob? God is not the God of the dead, but of the
living; for all live unto Him."(1) In the same words with which Christ answered the
Sadducees we may answer the Manichaeans, for they too deny the resurrection,
though in a different way. Again, when Christ said, in praise of the centurion's
faith, "Verily I say unto you, I have not found so great faith, no, not in
Israel," He added, "And I say unto you, that many shall come from the east and
from the west, and shall sit down with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, in the
kingdom of heaven; but the children of the kingdom shall go into outer darkness."(2)
If, then, as Faustus must admit, the God of whom Moses spoke was the God of
Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, of whom Christ also spoke, as these passages
prove, it follows that Christ did not try to turn away the people from their God. On
the contrary, He warned them that they would go into outer darkness, because
He saw that they were turned away from their God, in whose kingdom He says the
Gentiles called from the whole world will sit down with Abraham, and Isaac, and
Jacob; implying that they would believe in the God of Abraham, and of Isaac,
and of Jacob. So the apostle also says: "The Scripture, foreseeing that God would
justify the Gentiles by faith, preached the gospel beforehand to Abraham,
saying, In thy seed shall all nations be blessed."(3) It is implied that those who
are blessed in the seed of Abraham shall imitate the faith of Abraham. Christ,
then, did not try to turn away the Israelites from their God, but rather
charged them with being turned away. The idea that Christ broke one of the
commandments given by Moses is not a new one, for the Jews thought so; but it is a
mistake, for the Jews were in the wrong. Let Faustus mention the commandment which he
supposes the Lord to have broken, and we will point out his mistake, as we
have done already, when it was required. Meanwhile it is enough to say, that if
the Lord had broken any commandment, He could not have found fault with the Jews
for doing so. For when the Jews blamed His disciples for eating with unwashen
hands, in which they transgressed not a commandment of God, but the traditions
of the elders, Christ said, "Why do ye also transgress the commandment of God,
that ye may observe your traditions?" He then quotes a commandment of God, which
we know to have been given by Moses. "For God said," He adds, "Honor thy
father and mother, and he that curseth father or mother shall die the death. But ye
say, Whoever shall say to his father or mother, It is a gift, by whatsoever
thou mightest be profited by me, is not obliged to honor his father. So ye make
the word of God of none effect by your traditions."(4) From this several things
maybe learned: that Christ did not turn away the Jews from their God; that He
not only did not Himself break God's commandments, but found fault with those who
did so; and that it was God Himself who gave these commandments by Moses.
25. In fulfillment of our promise that we would prove the reference to
Christ in those passages selected by Faustus from the writings of Moses for
adverse criticism, since we cannot here point out the reference to Christ which we
believe to exist in all the writings of Moses, it becomes our duty to show that
this commandment of Moses, that every prophet or prince should be killed who
tried to turn away the people from their God, or to break any commandment, refers
to the preservation of the faith which is taught in the Church of Christ. Moses
no doubt knew in the spirit of prophecy, and from what he himself heard from
God. that many heretics, would arise to teach errors of all kinds against the
doctrine of Christ, and to preach another Christ than the true Christ. For the
true Christ is He that was foretold in the prophecies uttered by Moses himself,
and by the other holy men of that nation. Moses accordingly commanded that
whoever tried to teach another Christ should be put to death. In obedience to this
command, the voice of the Catholic Church, as with the spiritual two-edged sword
of both Testaments, puts to death all who try to turn us away from our God, or
to break any of the commandments. And chief among these is Manichaeus himself;
for the truth of the law and the prophets convinces him of error as trying to
turn us away from our God, the God of Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, whom
Christ acknowledges, and as trying to break the commandments of the law, which, even
when they are only figurative, we regard as prophetic of Christ.
26. Faustus uses an argument which is either very deceitful or very
stupid. And as Faustus is not stupid, it is probable that he used the argument
intentionally, with the design of misleading the careless reader. He says: If these
things are not written of Christ, and if you cannot show any others, it follows
that there are none at all. The proposition is true; but it remains to be
proved, both that these things are not written of Christ, and that no other can be
shown. Faustus has not proved this; for we have shown both how these things are
to be understood of Christ, and that there are many other things which have no
meaning but as applied to Christ. So it does not follow, as Faustus says, that
nothing was written by Moses of Christ. Let us repeat Faustus' argument: If
these things are not written of Christ, and if you cannot show any others, it
follows that there are none at all. Perfectly so. But as both these things and
many others have been shown to be written of Christ, or with reference to Christ,
the true conclusion is that Faustus' argument is worthless. In the passages
quoted by Faustus, he has tried, though without success, to show that they were
not written of Christ. But in order to draw the conclusion that there are none
at all, he should first have proved that no others can be shown. Instead of
this, he takes for granted that the readers of his book will be blind, or the
hearers deaf, so that the omission will be overlooked, and runs on thus: If there
are none, Christ could not have asserted that there were any. And if Christ did
not make this assertion, it follows that this verse is spurious. Here is a man
who thinks so much of what he says himself, that he does not consider the
possibility of another person saying the opposite. Where is your wit? Is this all
you could say for a bad cause? But if the badness of the cause made you utter
folly, the bad cause was your own choice. To prove your antecedent false, we have
only to show some other things written of Christ. If there are some, it will
not be true that there are none. And if there are some, Christ may have asserted
that there were. And if Christ may have asserted this, t follows that this
verse of the Gospel is not spurious. Coming back, then, to Faustus' proposition, If
you cannot show any other, it follows that there are none at all, it requires
to be proved that we cannot show any other. We need only refer to what we
showed before, as sufficient to prove the truth of the text in the Gospel, in which
Christ says, "If ye believed Moses, ye would also believe me; for he wrote of
me." And even though from dullness of mind we could find nothing written of
Christ by Moses, still, so strong is the evidence in support of the authority of
the Gospel, that it would be incumbent on us to believe that not only some
things, but everything written by Moses, refers to Christ; for He says not, He wrote
also of me, but, He wrote of me. The truth then is this, that even though
there were doubts, which God forbid, of the genuineness of this verse, the doubt
would be removed by the number of testimonies to Christ which we find in Moses;
while, on the other hand, even if we could find none, we should still be bound
to believe that these are to be found, because no doubts can be admitted
regarding any verse in the Gospel.
27. As to your argument that the doctrine of Moses was unlike that of
Christ, and that therefore it was improbable that if they believed Moses, they
would believe Christ too; and that it would rather follow that their belief in one
would imply of necessity opposition to the other,--you could not have said this
if you had turned your mind's eye for a moment to see men all the world over,
when they are not blinded by a contentious spirit, learned and unlearned, Greek
and barbarian, wise and unwise, to whom the apostle called himself a
debtor,(1) believing in both Christ and Moses. If it was improbable that the Jews would
believe both Christ and Moses, it is still more improbable that all the world
would do so. But as we see all nations believing both, and in a common and
well-grounded faith holding the agreement of the prophecy of the one with the gospel
of the other, it was no impossible thing to which this one nation was called,
when Christ said to them, "If ye believed Moses, ye would also believe me."
Rather we should be amazed at the guilty obstinacy of the Jews, who refused to do
what we see the whole world has done.
28. Regarding the Sabbath and circumcision, and the distinction in foods,
in which you say the teaching of Moses differs from what Christians are taught
by Christ, we have already shown that, as the apostle says, "all those things
were our examples."(2) The difference is not in the doctrine, but in the time.
There was a time when it was proper that these things should be figuratively
predicted; and there is now a different time when it is proper that they should be
openly declared and fully accomplished. It is not surprising that the Jews,
who understood the Sabbath in a carnal sense, should oppose Christ, who began to
open up its spiritual meaning. Reply, if you can, to the apostle, who declares
that the rest of the Sabbath was a shadow of something future.(1) If the Jews
opposed Christ because they did not understand what the true Sabbath is, there
is no reason why you should oppose Him, or refuse to learn what true innocence
is. For on that occasion when Jesus appears especially to set aside the Sabbath,
when His disciples were hungry, and pulled the ears of corn through which they
were passing, and ate them, Jesus, in replying to the Jews, declared His
disciples to be innocent. "If you knew," He said "what this meaneth, I will have
mercy, and not sacrifice, you would not have condemned the innocent."(2) They
should rather have pitied the wants of the disciples, for hunger forced them to do
what they did. But pulling ears of corn, which is innocence in the teaching of
Christ, is murder in the teaching of Manichaeus. Or was it an act of charity in
the apostles to pull the ears of corn, that they might in eating set free the
members of God, as in your foolish notions? Then it must be cruelty in you not
to do the same. Faustus' reason for setting aside the Sabbath is because he
knows that God's power is exercised without cessation, and without weariness. It
is for those to say this, who believe that all times are the production of an
eternal act of God's will. But you will find it difficult to reconcile this with
your doctrine, that the rebellion of the race of darkness broke your god's
rest, which was also disturbed by a sudden attack of the enemy; or perhaps God
never had rest, as he foresaw this from eternity, and could not feel at ease in the
prospect of so dire a conflict, with such loss and disaster to his members.
29. Unless Christ had considered this Sabbath-which in your want of
knowledge and of piety you laugh at--one of the prophecies written of Himself, He
would not have borne such a testimony to it as He did. For when, as you say in
praise of Christ, He suffered voluntarily, and so could choose His own time for
suffering and for resurrection, He brought it about that His body rested from all
its works on Sabbath in the tomb, and that His resurrection on the third day.
which we call the Lord's day, the day after the Sabbath, and therefore the
eighth, proved the circumcision of the eighth day to be also prophetical of Him.
For what does circumcision mean, but the eradication of the mortality which comes
from our carnal generation? So the apostle says: "Putting off from Himself His
flesh, He made a show of principalities and powers, triumphing over them in
Himself."(3) The flesh here said to be put off is that mortality of flesh on
account of which the body is properly called flesh. The flesh is the mortality, for
in the immortality of the resurrection there will be no flesh; as it is
written, "Flesh and blood shall not inherit the kingdom of God." You are accustomed
to argue from these words against our faith in the doctrine of the resurrection
of the body, which has already taken place in the Lord Himself. You keep out of
view the following words, in which the apostle explains his meaning. To show
what he here means by flesh, he adds, "Neither shall corruption inherit
incorruption." For this body, which from its mortality is properly called flesh, is
changed in the resurrection, so as to be no longer corruptible arid mortal. This
is the apostle's statement, and not a supposition of ours, as his next words
prove. "Lo" he says, "I show you a mystery: we shall all use again, but we shall
not all be changed. In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump;
for the last trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall rise incorruptible, and we
shall be changed. For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this
mortal must put on immortality."(4) To put on immortality, the body puts off
mortality. This is the mystery of circumcision, which by the law took place on the
eighth day; and on the eighth day, the Lord's day, the day after the Sabbath, was
fulfilled in its true meaning by the Lord. Hence it is said, "Putting off His
flesh, He made a show of principalities and powers." For by means of this
mortality the hostile powers of hell ruled over us. Christ is said to have made a
show or example of these, because in Himself, our Head, He gave an example which
will be fully realized in the liberation of His whole body, the Church, from
the power of the devil at the last resurrection. This is our faith. And according
to the prophetic declaration quoted by Paul, "The just shall live by faith."
This is our justification.(5) Even Pagans believe that Christ died. But only
Christians believe that Christ rose again. "If thou confess with thy mouth," says
the apostle, "that Jesus is the Lord, and believest in thy heart that God
raised Him from the dead, thou shalt be saved."(1) Again, because we are justified
by faith in Christ's resurrection, the apostle says, "He died for our offenses,
and rose again for our justification."(2) And because this resurrection by
faith in which we are justified was prefigured by the circumcision of the eighth
day, the apostle says of Abraham, with whom the observance began, "He received
the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of faith."(3) Circumcision,
then, is one of the prophecies of Christ, written by Moses, of whom Christ
said, "He wrote of me." In the words of the Lord, "Woe unto you, scribes and
Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye compass sea and land to make one proselyte; and when
he is made, ye make him twofold more the child of hell than yourselves,"(4) it
is not the circumcision of the proselyte which is meant, but his imitation of
the conduct of the scribes and Pharisees, which the Lord forbids His disciples to
imitate, when He says: "The scribes and Pharisees sit on Moses' seat: what
they say unto you, do; but do not after their works; for they say, and do not."(5)
These words of the Lord teach us both the honor due to the teaching of Moses,
in whose seat even bad men were obliged to teach good things, and the reason of
the proselyte becoming a child of hell, which was not that he heard from the
Pharisees the words of the law, but that he copied their example. Such a
circumcised proselyte might have been addressed in the words of Paul: "Circumcision
verily profiteth, if thou keep the law."(6) His imitation of the Pharisees in not
keeping the law made him a child of hell. And he was twofold more than they,
probably because of his neglecting to fulfill what he voluntarily undertook,
when, not being born a Jew, he chose to become a Jew.
30. Your scoff is very inappropriate, when you say that Moses discusses
like a glutton what should be eaten, and commands some things to be freely used
as clean, and other things as unclean to be not even touched. A glutton makes no
distinction, except in choosing the sweetest food. Perhaps you wish to commend
to the admiration of the uninitiated the innocence of your abstemious habits,
by appearing not to know, or to have forgotten, that swine's flesh tastes
better than mutton. But as this too was written by Moses of Christ in figurative
prophecy, in which the flesh of animals signifies those who are to be united to
the body of Christ, which is the Church, or who are to be cast out, you are
typified by the unclean animals; for your disagreement with the Catholic faith
shows that you do not ruminate on the word of wisdom, and that you do not divide
the hoof, in the sense of making a correct distinction between the Old Testament
and the New. But you show still more audacity in adopting the erroneous
opinions of your Adimantus.
31. You follow Adimantus in saying that Christ made no distinction in
food, except in entirely prohibiting the use of animal food to His disciples, while
He allowed the laity to eat anything that is eatable; and declared that they
were not polluted by what enters into the mouth, but that the unseemly things
which come out of the mouth are the things which defile a man. These words of
yours are unseemly indeed, for they express notorious falsehood. If Christ taught
that the evil things which come out of the mouth are the only things that
defile a man, why should they not be the only things to defile His disciples, so as
to make it unnecessary that any food should be forbidden or unclean? Is it only
the laity that are not polluted by what goes into the mouth, but by what comes
out of it? In that case, they are better protected from impurity than the
saints, who are polluted both by what goes in and by what comes out. But as Christ,
comparing Himself with John, who came neither eating nor drinking, says that
He came eating and drinking, I should like to know what He ate and drank. When
exposing the perversity which found fault with both, He says: "John came neither
eating nor drinking; and ye say, He hath a devil. The Son of man cometh eating
and drinking; and ye say, Behold a glutton and a wine-bibber, a friend of
publicans and sinners."(7) We know what John ate and drank. For it is not said that
he drank nothing, but that he drank no wine or strong drink; so he must have
drunk water. He did not live without food, but his food was locusts and wild
honey.(8) When Christ says that John did not eat or drink, He means that he did
not use the food which the Jews used. And because the Lord used this food, He is
spoken of, in contrast with John, as eating and drinking. Will it be said that
it was bread and vegetables which the Lord ate, and which John did not eat? It
would be strange if one was said not to eat, because he used locusts and
honey, while the other is said to eat simply because he used bread and vegetables.
But whatever may be thought of the eating, certainly no one could be called a
wine-bibber unless he used wine. Why then do you call wine unclean? It is not in
order to subdue the body by abstinence that you prohibit these things, but
because they are unclean, for you say that they are the poisonous filth of the race
of darkness; whereas the apostle says, "To the pure all things are pure."(1)
Christ, according to this doctrine, taught that all food was alike, but forbade
His disciples to use what the Manichaeans call unclean. Where do you find this
prohibition? You are not afraid to deceive men by falsehood; but in God's
righteous providence, you are so blinded that you provide us with the means of
refuting you. For I cannot resist quoting for examination the whole of that passage
of the Gospel which Faustus uses against Moses; that we may see from it the
falsehood of what was said first by Adimantus, and here by Faustus, that the Lord
Jesus forbade the use of animal food to His disciples, and allowed it to the
laity. After Christ's reply to the accusation that His disciples ate with
unwashen hands, we read in the Gospel as follows: "And He called the multitude, and
said unto them, Hear and understand. Not that which goeth into the mouth defileth
a man: but that which cometh out of the mouth, this defileth a man. Then came
His disciples, and said unto Him, Knowest Thou that the Pharisees were offended
after they heard this saying?" Here, when addressed by His disciples, He ought
certainly, according to the Manichaeans, to have given them special
instructions to abstain from animal food, and to show that His words, "Not that which
goeth into the mouth defileth a man, but that which goeth out of the mouth,"
applied to the multitude only. Let us hear, then, what, according to the evangelist,
the Lord replied, not to the multitude, but to His disciples: "But He answered
and said, Every plant which my heavenly Father hath not planted shall be
rooted up. Let them alone: they be blind leaders of the blind. And if the blind lead
the blind, both shall fall into the ditch." The reason of this was, that in
their desire to observe their own traditions, they did not understand the
commandments of God. As yet the disciples had not asked the Master how they were to
understand what He had said to the multitude. But now they do so; for the
evangelist adds: Then answered Peter and said unto Him, Declare unto us this parable."
This shows that Peter thought that when the Lord said, "Not that which goeth
into the mouth defileth a man, but that which goeth out of the mouth," He did
not speak plainly and literally, but, as usual, wished to convey some instruction
under the guise of a parable. When His disciples, then, put this question in
private, does He tell them, as the Manichaeans say, that all animal food is
unclean, and that they must never touch it? Instead of this, He rebukes them for
not understanding His plain language, and for thinking it a parable when it was
not. We read: "And Jesus said, Are ye also yet without understanding? Do not ye
yet understand, that whatsoever entereth in at the mouth goeth into the belly,
and is cast out into the drought? But those things which proceed out of the
mouth come forth from the heart, and they defile the man. For out of the heart
proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness,
blasphemies. These are the things which defile a man: but to eat with unwashen
hands defileth not a man."(2)
32. Here we have a complete exposure of the falsehood of the Manichaeans:
for it is plain that the Lord did not in this matter teach one thing to the
multitude, and another in private to His disciples. Here is abundant evidence that
the error and deceit are in the Manichaeans, and not in Moses, nor in Christ,
nor in the doctrine taught figuratively in one Testament and plainly in the
other,--prophesied in one, and fulfilled in the other. How can the Manichaeans say
that the Catholics regard none of the things that Moses wrote, when in fact
they observe them all, not now in the figures, but in what the figures were
intended to foretell? No one would say that one who reads the Scripture subsequently
to its being written does not observe it because he does not form the letters
which he reads. The letters are the figures of the sounds which he utters; and
though he does not form the letters, he cannot read without examining them. The
reason why the Jews did not believe in Christ, was because they did not
observe even the plain literal precepts of Moses. So Christ says to them: "Ye pay
tithe of mint and cummin, and omit the weightier matters of the law, mercy and
judgment. Ye strain out a gnat and swallow a camel. These ought ye to have done,
and not to leave the other undone."(3) So also He told them that by their
traditions they made of none effect the commandment of God to give honor to parents.
On account of this pride and perversity in neglecting what they understood,
they were justly blinded, so that they could not understand the other things.
33. You see, my argument is not that if you are a Christian you must
believe Christ when He says that Moses wrote of Him, and that if you do not believe
this you are no Christian. The account you give of yourself in asking to be
dealt with as a Jew or a Gentile is your own affair. My endeavor is to leave no
avenue of error open to you. I have shut you out, too, from that precipice to
which you rush as a last resort, when you say that these are spurious passages in
the Gospel; so that, freed from the pernicious influence of this opinion, you
may be reduced to the necessity of believing in Christ. You say you wish to be
taught like the Christian Thomas, whom Christ did not spurn from Him because he
doubted of Him, but, in order to heal the wounds of his mind, showed him the
marks of the wounds in His own body. These are your own words. It is well that
you desire to be taught as Thomas was. I feared yon would make out this passage
too to be spurious. Believe, then, the marks of Christ's wounds. For if the
marks were real, the wounds must have been real. And the wounds could not have been
real, unless His body had been capable of real wounds; which upsets at once
the whole error of the Manichaeans. If you say that the marks were unreal which
Christ showed to His doubting disciple, it follows that He must be a deceitful
teacher, and that you wish to be deceived in being taught by Him. But as no one
wishes to be deceived, while many wish to deceive, it is probable that you
would rather imitate the teaching which you ascribe to Christ than the learning you
ascribe to Thomas. If, then, you believe that Christ deceived a doubting
inquirer by false marks of wounds, you must yourself be regarded, not as a safe
teacher, but as a dangerous impostor. On the other hand, if Thomas touched the real
marks of Christ's wounds, you must confess that Christ had a real body. So, if
you believe as Thomas did, you are no more a Manichaean. If you do not believe
even with Thomas, you must be left to your infidelity.
BOOK XVII.
FAUSTUS REJECTS CHRIST'S DECLARATION THAT HE CAME NOT TO DESTROY THE LAW AND
THE PROPHETS BUT TO FULFILL THEM, ON THE GROUND THAT IT IS FOUND ONLY IN
MATTHEW, WHO WAS NOT PRESENT WHEN THE WORDS PURPORT TO HAVE BEEN SPOKEN. AUGUSTIN
REBUKES THE FOLLY OF REFUSING TO BELIEVE MATTHEW AND YET BELIEVING MANICHAEUS, AND
SHOWS WHAT THE PASSAGE OF SCRIPTURE REALLY MEANS.
1. FAUSTUS said: You ask why we do not receive the law and the prophets,
when Christ said that he came not to destroy them, but to fulfill them. Where do
we learn that Jesus said this? From Matthew, who declares that he said it on
the mount. In whose presence was it said? In the presence of Peter, Andrew,
James, and John--only these four; for the rest, including Matthew himself, were not
yet chosen. Is it not the case that one of these four--John, namely--wrote a
Gospel? It is. Does he mention this saying of Jesus? No. How, then, does it
happen that what is not recorded by John, who was on the mount, is recorded by
Matthew, who became a follower of Christ long after He came down from the mount? In
the first place, then, we must doubt whether Jesus ever said these words,
since the proper witness is silent on the matter, and we have only the authority of
a less trustworthy witness. But, besides this, we shall find that it is not
Matthew that has imposed upon us, but some one else under his name, as is evident
from the indirect style of the narrative. Thus we read: "As Jesus passed by,
He saw a man, named Matthew, sitting at the receipt of custom, and called him;
and he immediately rose up, and followed Him."(1) No one writing of himself
would say, He saw a man, and called him; and he followed Him; but, He saw me, and
called me, and I followed Him. Evidently this was written not by Matthew
himself, but by some one else under his name. Since, then, the passage already quoted
would not be true even if it had been written by Matthew, since he was not
present when Jesus spoke on the mount; much more is its falsehood evident from the
fact that the writer was not Matthew himself, but some one borrowing the names
both of Jesus and of Matthew.
2. The passage itself, in which Christ tells the Jews not to think that He
came to destroy the law, is rather designed to show that He did destroy it.
For, had He not done something of the kind, the Jews would not have suspected
Him. His words are: "Think not that I am come to destroy the law." Suppose the
Jews had replied, What actions of thine might lead us to suspect this? Is it
because thou exposest circumcision, breakest the Sabbath, discardest sacrifices,
makest no distinction in foods? this would be the natural answer to the words,
Think not. The Jews had the best possible reason for thinking that Jesus destroyed
the law. If this was not to destroy the law, what is? But, indeed, the law and
the prophets consider themselves already so faultlessly perfect, that they
have no desire to be fulfilled. Their author and father condemns adding to them as
much as taking away anything from them; as we read in Deuteronomy: "These
precepts which I deliver unto thee this day, O Israel, thou shalt observe to do;
thou shalt not turn aside from them to the right hand or to the left; thou shalt
not add thereto nor diminish from it, that thy God may bless thee."(1) Whether,
therefore, Jesus turned aside to the right by adding to the law and the
prophets in order to fulfill them, or to the left in taking away from them to destroy
them, either way he offended the author of the law. So this verse must either
have some other meaning, or be spurious.
3. AUGUSTIN replied: What amazing folly, to disbelieve what Matthew
records of Christ, while you believe Manichaeus! If Matthew is not to be believed
because he was not present when Christ said, "I came not to destroy the law and
the prophets, but to fulfill," was Manichaeus present, was he even born, when
Christ appeared among men? According, then, to your rule, you should not believe
anything that Manichaeus says of Christ. On the other hand, we refuse to believe
what Manichaeus says of Christ; not because he was not present as a witness of
Christ's words and actions, but because he contradicts Christ's disciples, and
the Gospel which rests on their authority. The apostle, speaking in in he Holy
Spirit, tells us that such teachers would arise. With reference to such, he
says to believers: "If any man preaches to you another gospel than that ye have
received, let him be accursed."(2) If no one can say what is true of Christ
unless he has himself seen and heard Him, no one now can be trusted. But if
believers can now say what is true of Christ because the truth has been handed down in
word or writing by those who saw and heard, why might not Matthew have heard
the truth from his fellow-disciple John, if John was present and he himself was
not, as from the writings of John both we who are born so long after and those
who shall be born after us can learn the truth about Christ? In this way, the
Gospels of Luke and Mark, who were companions of the disciples, as well as the
Gospel of Matthew, have the same authority as that of John. Besides, the Lord
Himself might have told Matthew what those called before him had already been
witnesses of. Your idea is, that John should have recorded this saying of the
Lord, as he was present on the occasion. As if it might not happen that, since it
was impossible to write all that be heard from the Lord, he set himself to write
some, omitting this among others. Does he not say at the close of his Gospel:
"And there are also many other things which Jesus did, the which, if they
should be written every one, I suppose that even the world itself could not contain
the books that should be written"?(3) This proves that he omitted many things
intentionally, But if you choose John as an authority regarding the law and the
prophets, I ask you only to believe his testimony to them. It is John who
writes that Isaiah saw the glory of Christ.(4) It is in his Gospel we find the text
l already treated of: "If ye believed Moses, ye would also believe me; for he
wrote of me."(5) Your evasions are met on every side. You ought to say plainly
that you do not believe the gospel of Christ. For to believe what you please,
and not to believe what you please, is to believe yourselves, and not the gospel.
4. Faustus thinks himself wonderfully clever in proving that Matthew was
not the writer of this Gospel, because, when speaking of his own election, he
says not, He saw me, and said to me, Follow me; but, He saw him, and said to him,
Follow me. This must have been said either in ignorance or from a design to
mislead. Faustus can hardly be so ignorant as not to have read or heard that
narrators, when speaking of themselves, often use a construction as if speaking of
another. It is more probable that Faustus wished to bewilder those more
ignorant than himself, in the hope of getting hold on not a few unacquainted with
these things. It is needless to resort to other writings to quote examples of this
construction from profane authors for the information of our friends, and for
the refutation of Faustus. We find examples in passages quoted above from Moses
by Faustus himself, without any denial, or rather with the assertion, that they
were written by Moses, only not written of Christ. When Moses, then, writes of
himself, does he say, I said this, or I did that, and not rather, Moses said,
and Moses did? Or does he say, The Lord called me, The Lord said to me, and not
rather, The Lord called Moses, The Lord said to Moses, and so on? So Matthew,
too, speaks of himself in the third person. And John does the same; for towards
the end of his book he says: "Peter, turning, saw the disciple whom Jesus
loved, who also lay on His breast at supper, and who said to the Lord, Who is it
that shall betray Thee?" Does he say, Peter, turning, saw me? Or will you argue
from this that John did not write this Gospel? But he adds a little after: "This
is the disciple that testifies of Jesus, and has written these things; and we
know that his testimony is true."(1) Does he say, I am the disciple who testify
of Jesus, and who have written these things, and we know that my testimony is
true? Evidently this style is common in writers of narratives. There are
innumerable instances in which the Lord Himself uses it. "When the Son of man," He
says, "cometh, shall He find faith on the earth?"(2) Not, When I come, shall I
find? Again, "The Son of man came eating and drinking;"(3) not, I came. Again,
"The hour shall come, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son
of God, and they that hear shall live;"(4) not, My voice. And so in many other
places. This may suffice to satisfy inquirers and to refute scoffers.
5. Every one can see the weakness of the argument that Christ could not
have said, "Think not that I am come to destroy the law and the prophets: I came
not to destroy, but to fulfill," unless He had done something to create a
suspicion of this kind. Of course, we grant that the unenlightened Jews may have
looked upon Christ as the destroyer of the law and the prophets; but their very
suspicion makes it certain that the true and truthful One, in saying that He came
not to destroy the law and the prophets, referred to no other law than that of
the Jews. This is proved by the words that follow: "Verily, verily, I say unto
you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass
from the law till all be fulfilled. Whosoever therefore shall break one of the
least of these commandments, and shall teach men so, shall be called the least
in the kingdom of heaven. But whosoever shall do and teach them, shall be called
great in the kingdom of heaven." This applied to the Pharisees, who taught the
law in word, while they broke it in deed. Christ says of the Pharisees in
another place, "What they say, that do; but do not after their works: for they say,
and do not."(5) So here also He adds, "For I say unto you, Except your
righteousness exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, ye shall not
enter into the kingdom of heaven;"(6) that is, Unless ye shall both do and teach
what they teach without doing, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven.
This law, therefore, which the Pharisees taught without keeping it, Christ says He
came not to destroy, but to fulfill; for this was the law connected with the
seat of Moses in which the Pharisees sat, who because they said without doing,
are to be heard, but not to be imitated.
6. Faustus does not understand, or pretends not to understand, what it is
to fulfill the law. He supposes the expression to mean the addition of words to
the law, regarding which it is written that nothing is to be added to or taken
away from the Scriptures of God. From this Faustus argues that there can be no
fulfillment of what is spoken of as so perfect that nothing can be added to it
or taken from it. Faustus requires to be told that the law is fulfilled by
living as it enjoins. "Love is the fulfilling of the law,"(7) as the apostle says.
The Lord has vouch-safed both to manifest and to impart this love, by sending
the Holy Spirit to His believing people. So it is said by the same apostle:
"The love of God is shed abroad in our heart by the Holy Ghost, which is given
unto us."(8) And the Lord Himself says: "By this shall all men know that ye are my
disciples, if ye have love one to another."(9) The law, then, is fulfilled
both by the observance of its precepts and by the accomplishment of its
prophecies. For "the law was given by Moses, but grace and truth came by Jesus
Christ."(10) The law itself, by being fulfilled, becomes grace and truth. Grace is the
fulfillment of love, and truth is the accomplishment of the prophecies. And as
both grace and truth are by Christ, it follows that He came not to destroy the
law, but to fulfill it; not by supplying any defects in the law, but by obedience
to what is written in the law. Christ's own words declare this. For He does
not say, One jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law till its
defects are supplied, but "till all be fulfilled."
BOOK XVIII.
THE RELATION OF CHRIST TO PROPHECY, CONTINUED.
1. FAUSTUS said: "I came not to destroy the law, but to fulfill it." If
these are Christ's words, unless they have some other meaning, they are as much
against you as against me. Your Christianity as well as mine is based on the
belief that Christ came to destroy the law and the prophets. Your actions prove
this, even though in words you deny it. It is on this ground that you disregard
the precepts of the law and the prophets. It is on this ground that we both
acknowledge Jesus as the founder of the New Testament, in which is implied the
acknowledgment that the Old Testament is destroyed. How, then, can we believe that
Christ said these words without first confessing that hitherto we have been
wholly in error, and without showing our repentance by entering on a course of
obedience to the law and the prophets, and of careful observance of their
requirements, whatever they may be? This done, we may honestly believe that Jesus said
that he came not to destroy the law, but to fulfill it. As it is, you accuse me
of not believing what you do not believe yourself, and what therefore is false.
2. But grant that we have been in the wrong hitherto. What is to be done
now? Shall we come under the law, since Christ has not destroyed, but fulfilled
it? Shall we by circumcision add shame to shame, and believe that God is
pleased with such sacraments? Shall we observe the rest of the Sabbath, and bind
ourselves in the fetters of Saturn? Shall we glut the demon of the Jews, for he is
not God, with the slaughter of bulls, rams, and goats, not to say of men; and
adopt, only with greater cruelty, in obedience to the law and the prophets, the
practices on account of which we abandoned idolatry? Shall we, in fine, call
the flesh of some animals clean, and that Of others unclean, among which,
according to the law and the prophets, swine's flesh has a particular defilement? Of
course you will allow that as Christians we must not do any of these things, for
you remember that Christ says that a man when circumcised becomes twofold a
child of hell.(1) It is plain also that Christ neither observed the Sabbath
himself, nor commanded it to be observed. And regarding foods, he says expressly
that man is not defiled by anything that goes into his mouth, but rather by the
things which come out of it.(2) Regarding sacrifices, too, he often says that God
desires mercy, and not sacrifice.(3) What becomes, then, of the statement that
he came not to destroy the law, but to fulfill it? If Christ said this, he
must have meant something else, or, what is not to be thought of, he told a lie,
or he never said it. No Christian will allow that Jesus spoke falsely; therefore
he must either not have said this, or said it with another meaning.
3. For my part, as a Manichaean, this verse has little difficulty for me,
for at the outset I am taught to believe that many things which pass in
Scripture under the name of the Saviour are spurious, and that they must therefore be
tested to find whether they are true, and sound, and genuine; for the enemy who
comes by night has corrupted almost every passage by sowing tares among the
wheat. So I am not alarmed by these words, notwithstanding the sacred name
affixed to them; for I still claim the liberty to examine whether this comes from the
hand of the good sower, who sows in the day-time, or of the evil one, who sows
in the night. But what escape from this difficulty can there be for you, who
receive everything without examination, condemning the use of reason, which is
the prerogative of human nature, and thinking it impiety to distinguish between
truth and falsehood, and as much afraid of separating between what is good and
what is not as children are of ghosts? For suppose a Jew or any one acquainted
with these words should ask you why you do not keep the precepts of the law and
the prophets, since Christ says that he came not to destroy but to fulfill
them: you will be obliged either to join in the superstitious follies of the Jews,
or to declare this verse false, or to deny that you are a follower of Christ.
4. AUGUSTIN replied: Since you continue repeating what has been so often
exposed and refuted, we must be content to repeat the refutation. The things in
the law and the prophets which Christians do not observe, are only the types of
what they do observe. These types were figures of things to come, and are
necessarily removed when the things themselves are fully revealed by Christ, that
in this very removal the law and the prophets may be fulfilled. So it is written
in the prophets that God would give a new covenant, "not as I gave to their
fathers."(1) Such was the hardness of heart of the people under the Old
Testament, that many precepts were given to them, not so much because they were good, as
because they suited the people. Still, in all these things the future was
foretold and prefigured, although the people did not understand the meaning of
their own observances. After the manifest appearance of the things thus signified,
we are not required to observe the types; but we read them to see their
meaning. So, again, it is foretold in the prophets, "I will take away their stony
heart, and will give them a heart of flesh,"(2)--that is, a sensible heart, instead
of an insensible one. To this the apostle alludes in the words: "Not in tables
of stone, but in the fleshy tables of the heart."(3) The fleshy tables of the
heart are the same as the heart of flesh. Since, then, the removal of these
observances is foretold, the law and the prophets could not have been fulfilled
but by this removal. Now, however, the prediction is accomplished, and the
fulfillment of the law and the prophets is found in what at first sight seems the
very opposite.
5. We are not afraid to meet your scoff at the Sabbath, when you call it
the fetters of Saturn. It is a silly and unmeaning expression, which occurred to
you only because you are in the habit of worshipping the sun on what you call
Sunday. What you call Sunday we call the Lord's day, and on it we do not
worship the sun, but the Lord's resurrection. And in the same way, the fathers
observed the rest of the Sabbath, not because they worshipped Saturn, but because it
was incumbent at that time, for it was a shadow of things to come, as the
apostle testifies.(4) The Gentiles, of whom the apostle says that they "worshipped
and served the creature rather than the Creator,"(5) gave the names of their
gods to the days of the week. And so far you do the same, except that you worship
only the two brightest luminaries, and not the rest of the stars, as the
Gentiles did. Besides, the Gentiles gave the names of their gods to the months. In
honor of Romulus, whom they believed to be the son of Mars, they dedicated the
first month to Mars, and called it March. The next month, April, is named not
from any god, but from the word for opening, because the buds generally open in
this month. The third month is called May, in honor of Maia the mother of
Mercury. The fourth is called June, from Juno. The rest to December used to be named
according to their number The fifth and sixth, however, got the names of July
and August from men to whom divine honors were decreed; while the others, from
September to December, continued to be named from their number. January, again,
is named from Janus, and February from the rites of the Luperci called Februae.
Must we say that you worship the god Mars in the month of March? But that is
the month in which you hold the feast you call Bema with great pomp. But if you
think it allowable to observe the month of March without thinking of Mars, why
do you try to bring in the name of Saturn in connection with the rest of the
seventh day enjoined in Scripture, merely because the Gentiles call the day
Saturday? The Scripture name for the day is Sabbath, which means rest. Your scoff is
as unreasonable as it is profane.
6. As regards animal sacrifices, every Christian knows that they were
enjoined as suitable to a perverse people, and not because God had any pleasure in
them. Still, even in these sacrifices there were types of what we enjoy; for we
cannot obtain purification or the propitiation of God without blood. The
fulfillment of these types is in Christ, by whose blood we are purified and
redeemed. In these figures of the divine oracles, the bull represents Christ, because
with the horns of His cross He scatters the wicked; the lamb, from His matchless
innocence; the goat, from His being made in the likeness of sinful flesh, that
by sin He might condemn sin.(6) Whatever kind of sacrifice you choose to
specify, I will show you a prophecy of Christ in it. Thus we have shown regarding
circumcision, and the Sabbath, and the distinction of food, and the sacrifice of
animals, that all these things were our examples, and our prophecies, which
Christ came not to destroy, but to fulfill, by fulfilling what was thus foretold.
Your opponent is the apostle, whose opinion I give in his own words: "All these
things were our examples."(7)
7. If you have learned from Manichaeus the willful impiety of admitting
only those parts of the Gospel which do not contradict your errors, while you
reject the rest, we have learned from the apostle the pious caution of looking on
every one as accursed that preaches to us another gospel than that which we
have received. Hence Catholic Christians look upon you as among the tares; for, in
the Lord's exposition of the meaning of the tares, they are not falsehood
mixed with truth in the Scriptures, but children of the wicked one--that is, people
who imitate the deceitfulness of the devil. It is not true that Catholic
Christians believe everything; for they do not believe Manichaeus or any of the
heretics. Nor do they condemn the use of human reason; but what you call reasoning
they prove to be fallacious. Nor do they think it profane to distinguish truth
from falsehood; for they distinguish between the truth of the Catholic faith
and the falsehood of your doctrines. Nor do they fear to separate good from evil;
but they contend that evil, instead of being natural, is unnatural. They know
nothing of your race of darkness, which, you say, is produced from a principle
of its own, and fights against the kingdom of God, and of which your god seems
really to be more frightened than children are of ghosts; for, according to
you, he covered himself with a veil, that he might not see his own members taken
and plundered by the assault of the enemy. To conclude, Catholic Christians are
in no difficulty regarding the words of Christ, though in one sense they may be
said not to observe the law and the prophets; for by the grace of Christ they
keep the law by their love to God and man; and on these two commandments hang
all the law and the prophets.(1) Besides, they see in Christ and the Church the
fulfillment of all the prophecies of the Old Testament, whether in the form of
actions, or of symbolic rites, or of figurative language. So we neither join in
superstitious follies, nor declare this verse false; nor deny that we are
followers of Christ; for on those principles which I have set forth to the best of
my power, the law and the prophets which Christ came not to destroy, but to
fulfill, are no other than those recognized by the Church.