REPLY TO FAUSTUS THE MANICHAEAN. [CONTRA FAUSTUM MANICHAEUM.] A.D. 400 (BOOK
XXII--PART 2)
51. Now, having defended the character of the patriarch, and refuted an
accusation arising from these detestable errors, let us avail ourselves of the
opportunity of searching out the symbolical meaning, and let us knock with the
reverence of faith, that the Lord may open to us the typical significance of the
four wives of Jacob, of whom two were free, and two slaves. We see that, in the
wife and bond-slaves of Abraham, the apostle understands the two
Testaments.(3) But there, one represents each; here, the application does not suit so well,
as there are two and two. There, also, the son of the bond-slave is
disinherited; lint here the sons of the slaves receive the land of promise along with the
sons of the free women: so that this type must have a different meaning.
52. Supposing that the two free wives point to the New Testament, by which
we are called to liberty, what is the meaning of there being two? Perhaps
because in Scripture, as the attentive reader will find, we are said to have two
lives in the body of Christ,--one temporal, in which we suffer pain, and one
eternal, in which we shall behold the blessedness of God. We see the one in the
Lord's passion, and the other in His resurrection. The names of the women point to
this meaning: It is said that Leah means Suffering, and Rachel the First
Principle made visible, or the Word which makes the First Principle visible. The
action, then, of our mortal human life, in which we live by faith, doing many
painful tasks without knowing what benefit may result from them to those in whom we
are interested, is Leah, Jacob's first wife. And thus she is said to have had
weak eyes. For the purposes of mortals are timid, and our plans uncertain.
Again, the hope of the eternal contemplation of God, accompanied with a sure and
delightful perception of truth, is Rachel. And on this account she is described
as fair and well-formed. This is the beloved of every pious student, and for
this he serves the grace of God, by which our sins, though like scarlet, are made
white as snow.(1) For Laban means making white; and we read that Jacob served
Laban for Rachel.(2) No man turns to serve righteousness, in subjection to the
grace of forgiveness, but that he may live in peace in the Word which makes
visible the First Principle, or God; that is, he serves for Rachel, not for Leah.
For what a man loves in the works of righteousness is not the toil of doing and
suffering. No one desires this life for its own sake; as Jacob desired not
Leah, who yet was brought to him, and became his wife, and the mother of children.
Though she could not be loved of herself, the Lord made her be borne with as a
step to Rachel; and then she came to be approved of on account of her children.
Thus every useful servant of God, brought into His grace by which his sins are
made white, has in his mind, and heart, and affection, when he thus turns to
God, nothing but the knowledge of wisdom. This we often expect to attain as a
reward for practising the seven precepts of the law which concern the love of our
neighbor, that we injure no one: namely, Honor thy father and mother; Thou
shall not commit adultery; Thou shall not kill; Thou shalt not steal; Thou shall
not bear false witness; Thou shalt not desire thy neighbor's wife; Thou shall
not covet thy neighbor's property. When a man has obeyed these to the best of his
ability, and, instead of the bright joys of truth which he desired and hoped
for, finds in the darkness of the manifold trials of this world that he is bound
to painful endurance, or has embraced Leah instead of Rachel, if there is
perseverance in his love, he bears with the one in order to attain the other; and
as if it were said to him, Serve seven Other years for Rachel, he hears seven
new commands,--to be poor in spirit, to be meek, to be a mourner, to hunger and
thirst after righteousness, to be merciful, pure, and a peacemaker.(3) A man
would desire, if it were possible, to obtain at once the joys of lovely and
perfect wisdom, without the endurance of toil in action and suffering; but this is
impossible in mortal life. This seems to be meant, when it is said to Jacob: "It
is not the custom in our country to marry the younger before the elder."(4) The
elder may very well mean the first in order of time. So, in the discipline of
man, the toil of doing the work of righteousness precedes the delight of
understanding the truth.
53. To this purpose it is written: "Thou hast desired wisdom; keep the
commandments, and the Lord shall give it thee."(5) The commandments are those
concerning righteousness, and the righteousness is that which is by faith,
surrounded with the uncertainty of temptations; so that understanding is the reward of
a pious belief of what is not yet understood. The meaning I have given to these
words, "Thou hast desired wisdom; keep the commandments, and the Lord shall
give it thee, "I find also in the passage, "Unless ye believe, ye shall not
understand;"(6) showing that as righteousness is by faith, understanding comes by
wisdom. Accordingly, in the case of those who eagerly demand evident truth, we
must not condemn the desire, but regulate it, so that beginning with faith it may
proceed to the desired end through good works. The life of virtue is one of
toil; the end desired is unclouded wisdom. Why should I believe, says one, what
is not clearly proved? Let me hear some word which will disclose the first
principle of all things. This is the one great craving of the rational soul in the
pursuit of truth. And the answer is, What you desire is excellent, and well
worthy of your love; but Leah is to be married first, and then Rachel. The proper
effect of your eagerness is to lead you to submit to the right method, instead
of rebelling against it; for without this method you cannot attain what you so
eagerly long for. And when it is attained, the possession of the lovely form of
knowledge will be in this world accompanied with the toils of righteousness.
For however clear and true our perception in this life may be of the unchangeable
good, the mortal body is still a weight on the mind and the earthly tabernacle
is a clog on the intellect in its manifold activity. The end then, is one, but
many things must be gone through for the sake of it.
54. Thus Jacob has two free wives; for both are daughters of the remission
of sins, or of whitening, that is, of Laban. One is loved, the other is borne.
But she that is borne is the most and the soonest fruitful, that she may be
loved, if not for herself, at least for her children. For the toil of the
righteous is specially fruitful in those whom they beget for the kingdom of God, by
preaching the gospel amid many trials and temptations; and they call those their
joy and crown for whom they are in labors more abundantly, in stripes above
measure, in deaths often,(2)--for whom they have fightings without and fears
within.(3) Such births result most easily and plentifully from the word of faith,
the preaching of Christ crucified, which speaks also of His human nature as far
as it can be easily understood, so as not to hurt the weak eyes of Leah. Rachel,
again, with clear eye, is beside herself to God,(4) and sees in the beginning
the Word of God with God, and wishes to bring forth, but cannot; for who shall
declare His generation? So the life devoted to contemplation, in order to see
with no feeble mental eye things invisible to flesh, but understood by the
things that are made, and to discern the ineffable manifestation of the eternal
power and divinity of God, seeks leisure from all occupation, and is therefore
barren. In this habit of retirement, where the fire of meditation burns bright,
there is a want of sympathy with human weakness, and with the need men have of our
help in their calamities. This life also burns with the desire for children
(for it wishes to teach what it knows, and not to go with the corruption of
envy(5)), and sees its sister-life fully occupied with work and with bringing forth;
and it grieves that men run after that virtue which cares for their wants l
and weaknesses, instead of that which has a divine imperishable lesson to impart.
This is what is meant when it is said, "Rachel envied her sister."(6)
Moreover, as the pure intellectual perception of that which is not matter, and so is
not the object of the bodliy sense, cannot be expressed in words which spring
from the flesh, the doctrine of wisdom prefers to get some lodging for divine
truth in the mind by whatever material figures and illustrations occur, rather than
to give up teaching these things; and thus Rachel preferred that her husband
should have children by her handmaid, rather than that she should be without any
children. Bilhah, the name of her handmaid, is said to mean old; and so, even
when we speak of the spiritual and unchangeable nature of God, ideas are
suggested relating to the old life of the bodily senses.
55. Leah, too, got children by her handmaid, from the desire of having a
numerous family. Zilpah, her handmaid, is, interpreted, an open mouth. So Leah's
handmaid represents those who are spoken of in Scripture as engaging in the
preaching of the gospel with open mouth, but not with open heart. Thus it is
written of some: "This people honor me with their lips, but their heart is far from
me."(7) To such the apostle says: "Thou that preachest that a man should not
steal, dost thou steal? Thou that sayest a man should not commit adultery, dost
thou commit adultery?"(8) But that even by this arrangement the free wife of
Jacob, the type of labor or endurance, might obtain children to be heirs of the
kingdom, the Lord says: "What they say, do; but do not after their works."(9)
And again, the apostolic life, when enduring imprisonment, says: "Whether Christ
is preached in pretence or in truth, I therein do rejoice, yea, and will
rejoice."(10) It is the joy of the mother over her numerous family, though born of
her handmaid.
56. In one instance Leah owed her becoming a mother to Rachel, who, in
return for some mandrakes, allowed her husband to give her night to her sister.
Some, I know, think that eating this fruit has the effect of making barren women
productive, and that Rachel, from her desire for children, was thus bent on
getting the fruit from her sister. But I should not agree to this, even had Rachel
conceived at the time. As Leah then conceived, and, besides, had two other
children before God opened Rachel's womb, there is no reason for supposing any
such quality in the mandrake, without any experience to prove it. I will give my
explanation; those better able than I may give a better. Though this fruit is
not often met with, I had once, to my great satisfaction, on account of its
connection with this passage of Scripture, an opportunity of seeing it. I examined
the fruit as carefully as I could, not with the help of any recondite knowledge
of the nature of roots or the virtues of plants, but only as to what I or any
one might learn from the sight, and smell, and taste. I thought it a
nice-looking fruit, and sweet-smelling, but insipid; and I confess it is hard to say why
Rachel desired it so much, unless it was for its rarity and its sweet smell. Why
the incident should be narrated in Scripture, in which the fancies of women
would not be mentioned as important unless it was intended that we should learn
some important lesson from them, the only thing I can think of is the very
simple idea that the fruit represents a good character; not the praise given a man
by a few just and wise people, but popular report, which bestows greatness and
renown on a man, and which is not desirable for its own sake, but is essential
to the success of good men in their endeavors to benefit their fellow-men. So
the apostle says, that it is proper to have a good report of those that are
without;(1) for though they are not infallible, the lustre of their praise and the
odor of their good opinion are a great help to the efforts of those who seek to
benefit them. And this popular renown is not obtained by those that are highest
in the Church, unless they expose themselves to the toils and hazards of an
active life. Thus the son of Leah found the mandrakes when he went out into the
field, that is, when walking honestly towards those that are without. The
pursuit of wisdom, on the other hand, retired from the busy crowd, and lost in calm
meditation, could never obtain a particle of this public approval, except
through those who take the management of public business, not for the sake of being
leaders, but in order to be useful. These men of action and business exert
themselves for the public benefit, and by a popular use of their influence gain the
approval of the people even for the quiet life of the student and inquirer
after truth; and thus through Leah the mandrakes come into the hands of Rachel.
Leah herself got them from her first-born son, that is, in honor of her fertility,
which represents all the useful result of a laborious life exposed to the com
mort vicissitudes; a life which many avoid on account of its troublesome
engagements, because, although they might be able to take the lead, they are bent on
study, and devote all their powers to the quiet pursuit of knowledge, in love
with the beauty of Rachel.
57. But as it is right that this studious life should gain public approval
by letting itself be known, while it cannot rightly gain this approval if it
keeps its follower in retirement, instead of using his powers for the management
of ecclesiastical affairs, and so prevents his being generally useful; to this
purpose Leah says to her sister, "Is it a small matter that thou hast taken my
husband? and wouldest thou take away my son's mandrakes also?"(2) The husband
represents all those who, though fit for active life, and able to govern the
Church, in administering to believers the mystery of the faith, from their love
of learning and of the pursuit of wisdom, desire to relinquish all troublesome
occupations, and to bury themselves in the classroom. Thus the words, "Is it a
small matter that thou hast taken my husband? and wouldest thou take away my
son's mandrakes also?" mean, "Is it a small matter that the life of study keeps in
retirement men required for the toils of public life? and does it ask for
popular renown as well?"
58. To get this renown justly, Rachel gives her husband to her sister for
the night; that is, those who, by a talent for business, are fitted for
government, must for the public benefit consent to bear the burden and suffer the
hardships of public life; lest the pursuit of wisdom, to which their leisure is
devoted, should be evil spoken of, and should not gain from the multitude the good
opinion, represented by the fruit, which is necessary for the encouragement of
their pupils. But the life of business must be forced upon them. This is
clearly shown by Leah's meeting Jacob when coming from the field, and laying hold of
him, saying, "Thou shalt come in to me; for I have hired thee with my son's
mandrakes."(3) As if she said, Dost thou wish the knowledge which thou lovest to
be well thought of? Do not shirk the toil of business. The same thing happens
constantly in the Church. What we read is explained by what we meet with in our
own experience. Do we not everywhere see men coming from secular employments,
to seek leisure for the study and contemplation of truth, their beloved Rachel,
and intercepted mid-way by ecclesiastical affairs, which require them to be set
to work, as if Leah said to them, You must come in to me? When such men
minister in sincerity the mystery of God, so as in the night of this world to beget
sons in the faith, popular approval is gained also for that life, in love for
which they were led to abandon worldly pursuits, and from the adoption of which
they were called away to undertake the benevolent task of government. In all
their labors they aim chiefly at this, that their chosen way of life may have
greater and wider renown, as having supplied the people with such leaders; as Jacob
consents to go with Leah, that Rachel may obtain the sweet-smelling and
good-looking fruit. Rachel, too, in course of time, by the mercy of God, brings forth
a child herself, but not till after some time; for it seldom happens that
there is a sound, though only partial, apprehension, without fleshly ideas, of such
sacred lessons of wisdom as this: "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word
was with God, and the Word was God."(1)
59. This must suffice as a reply to the false accusations brought by
Faustus against the three fathers, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, from whom the God whom
the Catholic Church worship was pleased to take His name. This is not the
place to discourse on the merits and piety of these three men, or on the dignity of
their prophetic character, which is beyond the comprehension of carnal minds.
It is enough in this treatise to defend them against the calumnious attacks of
malevolence and falsehood, in case those who read the Scriptures in a carping
and hostile spirit should fancy that they have proved anything against the
sacredness and the profitableness of these books, by their attempts to blacken the
character of men who are there mentioned so honorably.
60. It should be added that Lot, the brother, that is the blood relation,
of Abraham, is not to be ranked as equal to those of whom God says, "I am the
God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob;" nor does he belong to those testified
to in Scripture as having continued righteous to the end, although in Sodom he
lived a pious and virtuous life, and showed a praiseworthy hospitality, so that
he was rescued from the fire, and a land was given by God to his seed to dwell
in, for the sake of his uncle Abraham. On these accounts he is commended in
Scripture--not for intemperance or incest. But when we find bad and good actions
recorded of the same person, we must take warning from the one, and example from
the other. As, then, the sin of Lot, of whom we are told that he was righteous
previous to this sin, instead of bringing a stain on the character of God, or
the truth of Scripture, rather calls on us to approve and admire the record in
its resemblance to a faithful mirror, which reflects not only the beauties and
perfections, but also the faults and deformities, of those who approach it;
still more, in the case of Judah, who lay with his daughter-in-law, we may see how
groundless are the reproaches cast on the narrative. The sacred record has an
authority which raises it far above not merely the cavils of a handful of
Manichaeans, but the determined enmity of the whole Gentile world; for, in
confirmation of its claims, we see that already it has brought nearly all people from
their idolatrous superstitions to the worship of one God, according to the rule
of Christianity. It has conquered the world, not by violence and warfare, but by
the resistless force of truth. Where, then, is Judah praised in Scripture?
Where is anything good said of him, except that in the blessing pronounced by his
father he is distinguished above the rest, because of the prophecy that Christ
would come in the flesh from his tribe?(2)
61. Judah, as Faustus says, committed fornication; and besides that, we
can accuse him of selling his brother into Egypt. Is it any disparagement to
light, that in revealing all things it discloses what is unsightly? So neither is
the character of Scripture affected by the evil deeds of which we are informed
by the record itself. Undoubtedly, by the eternal law, which requires the
preservation of natural order, and forbids the transgression of it, conjugal
intercourse should take place only for the procreation of children, and after the
celebration of marriage, so as to maintain the bond of peace. Therefore, the
prostitution of women, merely for the gratification of sinful passion, is condemned by
the divine and eternal law. To purchase the degradation of another, disgraces
the purchaser; so that, though the sin would have been greater if Judah had
knowingly lain with his daughter-in-law (for if, as the Lord says, man and wife
are no more two, but one flesh,(3) a daughter-in-law is the same as a daughter);
still, it is plain that, as regards his own intention, he was disgraced by his
intercourse with an harlot. The woman, on the other hand, who deceived her
father-in-law, sinned not from wantonness, or because she loved the gains of
iniquity, but from her desire to have children of this particular family. So, being
disappointed in two of the brothers, and not obtaining the third, she succeeded
by craft in getting a child by their father; and the reward which she got was
kept, not as an ornament, but as a pledge. It would certainly have been better
to have remained childless than to become a mother without marriage. Still, her
desire to have her father-in-law as the father of her children was very
different from having a criminal affection for him. And when, by his order, she was
brought out to be killed, on her producing the staff and necklace and ring,
saying that the father of the child was the man who had given her those pledges,
Judah acknowledged them, and said, "She hath been more righteous than I"--not
praising her, but condemning himself. He blamed her desire to have children less
than his own unlawful passion, which had led him to one whom he thought to be an
harlot. In a similar sense, it is said of some that they justified Sodom;(1)
that is, their sin was so great, that Sodom seemed righteous in comparison. And
even allowing that this woman is not spoken of as comparatively less guilty, but
is actually praised by her father-in-law, while, on account of her not
observing the established rites of marriage, she is a criminal in the eye of the
eternal law of right, which forbids the transgression of natural order, both as
regards the body, and first and chiefly as regards the mind, what wonder though one
sinner should praise another?
62. The mistake of Faustus and of Manichaeism generally, is in supposing
that these objections prove anything against us, as if our reverence for
Scripture, and our profession of regard for its authority, bound us to approve of all
the evil actions mentioned in it; whereas the greater our homage for the
Scripture, the more decided must be our condemnation of what the truth of Scripture
itself teaches us to condemn. In Scripture, all fornication and adultery are
condemned by the divine law; accordingly, when actions of this kind are narrated,
without being expressly condemned, it is intended not that we should praise
them, but that we should pass judgment on them ourselves. Every one execrates the
cruelty of Herod in the Gospel, when, in his uneasiness on hearing of the birth
of Christ, he commanded the slaughter of so many infants.(2) But this is
merely narrated without being condemned. Or if Manichaean absurdity is bold enough
to deny the truth of this narrative, since they do not admit the birth of
Christ, which was what troubled Herod, let them read the account of the blind fury of
the Jews, which is related without any expression of reproach, although the
feeling of abhorrence is the same in all.
63. But, it is said, Judah, who lay with his daughter-in-law, is reckoned
as one of the twelve patriarchs. And was not Judas, who betrayed the Lord,
reckoned among the twelve apostles? And was not this one of them, who was a devil,
sent along with them to preach the gospel?(3) In reply to this, it will be said
that after his crime Judas hanged himself, and was removed from the number of
the apostles; while Judah, after his evil conduct, was not only blessed along
with his brethren, but got special honor and approval from his father, who is so
highly spoken of in Scripture. But the main lesson to be learned from this is,
that this prophecy refers not to Judah, but to Christ, who was foretold as to
come in the flesh from his tribe; and the very reason for the mention of this
crime of Judah is to be found in the desirableness of teaching us to look for
another meaning in the words of his father, which are seen not to be applicable
to him in his misconduct, from the praise which they express.
64. Doubtless, the intention of Faustus' calumnies is to damage this very
assertion, that Christ was born of the tribe of Judah. Especially, as in the
genealogy given by Matthew we find the name of Zara, whom this woman Tamar bore
to Judah. Had Faustus wished to reproach Jacob's family merely, and not Christ's
birth, he might have taken the case of Reuben the first-born, who committed
the unnatural crime of defiling his father's bed, of which fornication the
apostle says, that it was not so much as named among the Gentiles.(4) Jacob also
mentions this in his blessing, charging his son with the infamous deed. Faustus
might have brought up this, as Reuben seems to have been guilty of deliberate
incest, and there was no harlot's disguise in this case, were it not that Tamar's
conduct in desiring nothing but to have children is more odious to Faustus than
if she had acted from criminal passion, and did he not wish to discredit the
incarnation, by bringing reproach on Christ's progenitors. Faustus unhappily is
not aware that the most true and truthful Saviour is a teacher, not only in His
words, but also in His birth. In His fleshly origin there is this lesson for
those who should believe on Him from all nations, that the sins of their fathers
need be no hindrance to them. Besides, the Bridegroom, who was to call good and
bad to His marriage,(5) was pleased to assimilate Himself to His guests, in
being born of good and bad. He thus confirms as typical of Himself the symbol of
the Passover, in which it was commanded that the lamb to be eaten should be
taken from the sheep or from the goats--that is, from the righteous or the
wicked.(6) Preserving throughout the indication of divinity and humanity, as man He
consented to have both bad and good as His parents, while as God He chose the
miraculous birth from a virgin.
65. The impiety, therefore, of Faustus' attacks on Scripture can injure no
one but himself; for what he thus assails is now deservedly the object of
universal reverence. As has been said already, the sacred record, like a faithful
mirror, has no flattery in its portraits, and either itself passes sentence upon
human actions as worthy of approval or disapproval, or leaves the reader to do
so. And not only does it distinguish men as blameworthy or praiseworthy, but
it also takes notice of cases where the blameworthy deserve praise, and the
praiseworthy blame. Thus, although Saul was blameworthy, it was not the less
praiseworthy in him to examine so carefully who had eaten food during the curse, and
to pronounce the stern sentence in obedience to the commandment of God.(1) So,
too, he was right in banishing those that had familiar spirits and wizards out
of the land.(2) And although David was praiseworthy, we are not called on to
approve or imitate his sins, which God rebukes by the prophet. And so Pontius
Pilate was not wrong in pronouncing the Lord innocent, in spite of the accusations
of the Jews;(3) nor was it praiseworthy in Peter to deny the Lord thrice; nor,
again, was he praiseworthy on that occasion when Christ called him Satan
because, not understanding the things of God, he wished to withhold Christ from his
passion, that is, from our salvation. Here Peter, immediately after being
called blessed, is called Satan.(4) Which character most truly belonged to him, we
may see from his apostleship, and from his crown of martyrdom.
66. In the case of David also, we read of both good and bad actions. But
where David's strength lay, and what was the secret of his success, is
sufficiently plain, not to the blind malevolence with which Faustus assails holy
writings and holy men, but to pious discernment, which bows to the divine authority,
and at the same time judges correctly of human conduct. The Manichaeans will
find, if they read the Scriptures, that God rebukes David more than Faustus
does.(5) But they will read also of the sacrifice of his penitence, of his surpassing
gentleness to his merciless and bloodthirsty enemy, whom David, pious as he
was brave, dismissed unhurt when now and again he fell into his hands.(6) They
will read of his memorable humility under divine chastisement, when the kingly
neck was so bowed under the Master's yoke, that he bore with perfect patience
bitter taunts from his enemy, though he was armed, and had armed men with him. And
when his companion was enraged at such things being said to the king, and was
on the point of requiting the insult on the head of the scoffer, he mildly
restrained him, appealing to the fear of God in support of his own royal order, and
saying that this bad happened to him as a punishment from God, who had sent
the man to curse him.(7) They will read how, with the love of a shepherd for the
flock entrusted to him, he was willing to die for them, when, after he had
numbered the people, God saw good to punish his sinful pride by lessening the
number he boasted of. In this destruction, God, with whom there is no iniquity, in
His secret judgment, both took away the lives of those whom He knew to be
unworthy of life, and by this diminution cured the vainglory which had prided itself
on the number of the people. They will read of that scrupulous fear of God in
his regard for the emblem of Christ in the sacred anointing, which made David's
heart smite him with regret for having secretly cut off a small piece of Saul's
garment, that he might prove to him that he had no wish to kill him, when he
might have done it. They will read of his judicious behavior as regards his
children, and also of his tenderness toward them--how, when one was sick, he
entreated the Lord for him with many tears and with much self-abasement, but when he
died, an innocent child, he did not mourn for him; and again, how, when his
youthful son was carried away with unnatural hostility to an infamous violation of
his father's bed, and in a parricidal war, he wished him to live, and wept for
him when he was killed; for he thought of the eternal doom of a soul guilty of
such crimes, and desired that he should live to escape this doom by being
brought to submission and repentance. These, and many other praiseworthy and
exemplary things, may be seen in this holy man by a candid examination of the
Scripture narrative, especially if in humble piety and unfeigned faith we regard the
judgment of God, who knew the secrets of David's heart, and who, in His
infallible inspection, so approves of David as to commend him as a pattern to his sons.
67. It must have been on account of this inspection of the depths of
David's heart by the Spirit of God that, when on being reproved by the prophet, he
said, I have sinned, he was considered worthy to be told, immediately after this
brief confession, that he was pardoned--that is, that he was admitted to
eternal salvation. For he did not escape the correction of the fatherly rod, of
which God spoke in His threatening, that, while by his confession he obtained
eternal exemption, he might be tried by temporal chastisement. And it is a
remarkable evidence of the strength of David's faith, and of his meek and submissive
spirit, that, when he had been told by the prophet that God had forgiven him,
although the threatened consequences were still permitted to follow, he did not
accuse the prophet of having deluded him, or murmur against God as having mocked
him with a declaration of forgiveness. This deeply holy man, whose soul was
lifted up unto God, and not against God, knew that had not the Lord mercifully
accepted his confession and repentance, his sins would have deserved eternal
punishment. So when, instead of this, he was made to smart under temporal correction,
he saw that, while the pardon remained good, wholesome discipline was also
provided. Saul, too, when he was reproved by Samuel, said, I have sinned.(1) Why,
then, was he not considered fit to be told, as David was, that the Lord had
pardoned his sin? Is there acceptance of persons with God? Far from it. While to
the human ear the words were the same, the divine eye saw a difference in the
heart. The lesson for us to learn from these things is, that the kingdom of
heaven is within us,(2) and that we must worship God from our inmost feelings, that
out of the abundance of the heart the mouth may speak, instead of honoring Him
with our lips, like the people of old, while our hearts are far from Him. We
may learn also to judge of men, whose hearts we cannot see, only as God judges,
who sees what we cannot, and who cannot be biased or misled. Having, on the high
authority of sacred Scripture, the plainest announcement of God's opinion of
David, we may regard as absurd or deplorable the rashness of men who hold a
different opinion. The authority of Scripture, as regards the character of these
men of ancient times, is supported by the evidence from the prophecies which they
contain, and which are now receiving their fulfillment.
68. We see the same thing in the Gospel, where the devils confess that
Christ is the Son of God in the words used by Peter, but with a very different
heart. So, though the words were the same, Peter is praised for his faith, while
the impiety of the devils is checked. For Christ, not by human sense. but by
divine knowledge, could inspect and infallibly discriminate the sources from which
the words came. Besides, there are multitudes who confess that Christ is the
Son of the living God, without meriting the same approval as Peter--not only of
those who shall say in that day, "Lord, Lord," and shall receive the sentence,
"Depart from me," but also of those who shall be placed on the right hand. They
may probably never have denied Christ even once; they may never have opposed
His suffering for our salvation; they may never have forced the Gentiles to do
as the Jews;(3) and yet they shall not be honored equally with Peter, who,
though he did all these things, will sit on one of the twelve thrones, and judge not
only the twelve tribes, but the angels. So, again, many who have never desired
another man's wife, or procured the death of the husband, as David did, will
never reach the place which David nevertheless held in the divine favor. There
is a vast difference between what is in itself so undesirable that it must be
utterly rejected, and the rich and plenteous harvest which may afterwards appear.
For farmers are best pleased with the fields from which, after weeding them,
it may be, of great thistles, they receive an hundred-fold; not with fields
which have never had any thistles, and hardly bear thirty-fold.
69. So Moses, too, who was so faithful a servant of God in all his house;
the minister of the holy, just, and good law; of whose character the apostle
speaks in the words here quoted;(4) the minister also of the symbols which,
though not conferring salvation, promised the Saviour, as the Saviour Himself shows,
when He says, "If ye believed Moses, ye would also believe me, for he wrote of
me,"--from which passage we have already sufficiently answered the
presumptuous cavils of the Manichaeans;--this Moses, the servant of the living, the true,
the most high God, that made heaven and earth, not of a foreign substance, but
of nothing--not from the pressure of necessity, but from plenitude of
goodness--not by the suffering of His members, but by the power of His word;--this
Moses, who humbly put from him this high ministry, but obediently accepted it, and
faithfully kept it, and diligently fulfilled it; who ruled the people with
vigilance, reproved them with vehemence, loved them with fervor, and bore with them
in patience, standing for his subjects before God to receive His counsel, and
to appease His wrath;--this great and good man is not to be judged of from
Faustus' malicious representations, but from what is said by God, whose word is a
true expression of His true opinion of this man, whom He knew because He made
him. For the sins of men are also known to God, though He is not their author; but
He takes notice of them as a judge in those who refuse to own them, and
pardons them as a father in those who make confession. His servant Moses, as thus
described, we love and admire, and to the best of our power imitate, coming indeed
far short of his merits, though we have killed no Egyptian, nor plundered any
one, nor carried on any war; which actions of Moses were in one case prompted
by the zeal of the future champion of his people, and in the other cases
commanded by God.
70. It might be shown that, though Moses slew the Egyptian, without being
commanded by God, the action was divinely permitted, as, from the prophetic
character of Moses, it prefigured something in the future. Now however, I do not
use this argument, but view the action as having no symbolical meaning. In the
light, then, of the eternal law, it was wrong for one who had no legal authority
to kill the man, even though he was a bad character, besides being the
aggressor. But in minds where great virtue is to come, there is often an early crop of
vices, in which we may still discern a disposition for some particular virtue,
which will come when the mind is duly cultivated. For as farmers, when they
see land bringing forth huge crops, though of weeds, pronounce it good for corn;
or when they see wild creepers, which have to be rooted out, still consider the
land good for useful vines; and when they see a hill covered with wild olives,
conclude that with culture it will produce good fruit: so the disposition of
mind which led Moses to take the law into his own hands, to prevent the wrong
done to his brother, living among strangers, by a wicked citizen of the country
from being unrequited, was not unfit for the production of virtue, but from want
of culture gave signs of its productiveness in an unjustifiable manner. He who
afterwards, by His angel, called Moses on Mount Sinai, with the divine
commission to liberate the people of Israel from Egypt, and who trained him to
obedience by the miraculous appearance in the bush burning but not consumed, and by
instructing him in his ministry, was the same who, by the call addressed from
heaven to Saul when persecuting the Church, humbled him, raised him up, and
animated him; or in figurative words, by this stroke He cut off the branch, grafted
it, and made it fruitful. For the fierce energy of Paul, when in his zeal for
hereditary traditions he persecuted the Church, thinking that he was doing God
service, was like a crop of weeds showing great signs of productiveness. It was
the same in Peter, when he took his sword out of its sheath to defend the Lord,
and cut off the right ear of an assailant, when the Lord rebuked him with
something like a threat, saying, "Put up thy sword into its sheath; for he that
taketh the sword shall perish by the sword."(1) To take the sword is to use weapons
against a man's life, without the sanction of the con stituted authority. The
Lord, indeed, had told His disciples to carry a sword; but He did not tell them
to use it. But that after this sin Peter should become a pastor of the Church
was no more improper than that Moses, after smiting the Egyptian, should become
the leader of the congregation. In both cases the trespass originated not in
inveterate cruelty, but in a hasty zeal which admitted of correction. In both
cases there was resentment against injury, accompanied in one case by love for
a brother, and in the other by love, though still carnal, of the Lord. Here was
evil to be subdued or rooted out; but the heart with such capacities needed
only, like good soil, to be cultivated to make it fruitful in virtue.
71. Then, as for Faustus' objection to the spoiling of the Egyptians, he
knows not what he says. In this Moses not only did not sin, but it would have
been sin not to do it. It was by the command of God,(2) who, from His knowledge
both of the actions and of the hearts of men, can decide on what every one
should be made to suffer, and through whose agency. The people at that time were
still carnal, and engrossed with earthly affections; while the Egyptians were in
open rebellion against God, for they used the gold, God's creature, in the
service of idols, to the dishonor of the Creator, and they had grievously oppressed
strangers by making them work without pay. Thus the Egyptians deserved the
punishment, and the Israelites were suitably employed in inflicting it. Perhaps,
indeed, it was not so much a command as a permission to the Hebrews to act in the
matter according to their own inclinations; and God, in sending the message by
Moses, only wished that they should thus be informed of His permission. There
may also have been mysterious reasons for what God said to the people on this
matter. At any rate, God's commands are to be submissively received, not to be
argued against. The apostle says, "Who hath known the mind of the Lord? or who
hath been His counsellor?"(3) Whether, then, the reason was what I have said, or
whether in the secret appointment of God, there was some unknown reason for
His telling the people by Moses to borrow things from the Egyptians, and to take
them away with them, this remains certain, that this was said for some good
reason, and that Moses could not lawfully have done otherwise than God told him,
leaving to God the reason of the command, while the servant's duty is to obey.
72. But, says Faustus, it cannot be admitted that the true God, who is
also good, ever gave such a command. I answer, such a command can be rightly given
by no other than the true and good God, who alone knows the suitable command
in every case, and who alone is incapable of inflicting unmerited suffering on
any one. This ignorant and spurious goodness of the human heart may as well deny
what Christ says, and object to the wicked being made to suffer by the good
God, when He shall say to the angels, "Gather first the tares into bundles to
burn them." The servants, however, were stopped when they wished to do this
prematurely: "Lest by chance, when ye would gather the tares, ye root up the wheat
also with them."(1) Thus the true and good God alone knows when, to whom, and by
whom to order anything, or to permit anything. In the same way, this human
goodness, or folly rather, might object to the Lord's permitting the devils to
enter the swine, which they asked to be allowed to do with a mischievous intent?(2)
especially as the Manichaeans believe that not only pigs, but the vilest
insects, have human souls. But setting aside these absurd notions, this is
undeniable, that our Lord Jesus Christ, the only son of God, and therefore the true and
good God, permitted the destruction of swine belonging to strangers, implying
loss of life and of a great amount of property, at the request of devils. No one
can be so insane as to suppose that Christ could not have driven the devils
out of the men without gratifying their malice by the destruction of the swine.
If, then, the Creator and Governor of all natures, in His superintendence,
which, though mysterious, is ever just, indulged the violent and unjust inclination
of those lost spirits already doomed to eternal fire, why should not the
Egyptians, who were unrighteous oppressors, be spoiled by the Hebrews, a free people,
who would claim payment for their enforced and painful toil, especially as the
earthly possessions which they thus lost were used by the Egyptians in their
impious rites, to the dishonor of the Creator? Still, if Moses had originated
this order, or if the people had done it spontaneously, undoubtedly it would have
been sinful; and perhaps the people did sin, not in doing what God commanded
or permitted, but in some desire of their own for what they took. The permission
given to this action by divine authority was in accordance with the just and
good counsel of Him who uses punishments both to restrain the wicked and to
educate His own people; who knows also how to give more advanced precepts to those
able to bear them, while He begins on a lower scale in the treatment of the
feeble. As for Moses, he can be blamed neither for coveting the property, nor for
disputing, in any instance, the divine authority.
73. According to the eternal law, which requires the preservation of
natural order, and forbids the transgression of it, some actions have an indifferent
character, so that men are blamed for presumption if they do them without
being called upon, while they are deservedly praised for doing them when required.
The act, the agent, and the authority for the action are all of great
importance in the order of nature. For Abraham to sacrifice his son of his own accord is
shocking madness. His doing so at the command of God proves him faithful and
submissive. This is so loudly proclaimed by the very voice of truth, that
Faustus, eagerly rummaging for some fault, and reduced at last to slanderous charges,
has not the boldness to attack this action. It is scarcely possible that he
can have forgotten a deed so famous, that it recurs to the mind of itself without
any study or reflection, and is in fact repeated by so many tongues, and
portrayed in so many places, that no one can pretend to shut his eyes or his ears to
it. If, therefore, while Abraham's killing his son of his own accord would
have been unnatural, his doing it at the command of God shows not only guiltless
but praiseworthy compliance, why does Faustus blame Moses for spoiling the
Egyptians? Your feeling of disapproval for the mere human action should be
restrained by a regard for the divine sanction. Will you venture to blame God Himself
for desiring such actions? Then "Get thee behind me, Satan, for thou
understandest not the things which be of God, but those which be of men." Would that this
rebuke might accomplish in you what it did in Peter, and that you might
hereafter preach the truth concerning God, which you now, judging by feeble sense, find
fault with! as Peter became a zealous messenger to announce to the Gentiles
what he objected to at first, when the Lord spoke of it as His intention.
74. Now, if this explanation suffices to satisfy human obstinacy and
perverse misinterpretation of right actions of the vast difference between the
indulgence of passion and presumption on the part of men, and obedience to the
command of God, who knows what to permit or to order, and also the time and the
persons, and the due action or suffering in each case, the account of the wars of
Moses will not excite surprise or abhorrence, for in wars carried on by divine
command, he showed not ferocity but obedience; and God in giving the command,
acted not in cruelty, but in righteous retribution, giving to nil what they
deserved, and warning those who needed warning. What is the evil in war? Is it the
death of some who will soon die in any case, that others may live in peaceful
subjection? This is mere cowardly dislike, not any religious feeling. The real
evils in war are love of violence, revengeful cruelty, fierce and implacable
enmity, wild resistance, and the lust of power, and such like; and it is generally
to punish these things, when force is required to inflict the punishment, that,
in obedience to God or some lawful authority, good men undertake wars, when
they find themselves in such a position as regards the conduct of human affairs,
that right conduct requires them to act, or to make others act in this way.
Otherwise John, when the soldiers who came to be baptized asked, What shall we do?
would have replied, Throw away your arms; give up the service; never strike,
or wound, or disable any one. But knowing that such actions in battle were not
murderous but authorized by law, and that the soldiers did not thus avenge
themselves, but defend the public safety, he replied, "Do violence to no man, accuse
no man falsely, and be content with your wages."(1) But as the Manichaeans are
in the habit of speaking evil of John, let them hear the Lord Jesus Christ
Himself ordering this money to be given to Caesar, which John tells the soldiers
to be content with. "Give," He says, "to Caesar the things that are
Caesar's."(2) For tribute-money is given on purpose to pay the soldiers for war. Again, in
the case of the centurion who said, "I am a man under authority, and have
soldiers under me: and I say to one, Go, and he goeth; and to another, Come, and he
cometh; and to my servant, Do this, and he doeth it," Christ gave due praise to
his faith;(3) He did not tell him to leave the service. But there is no need
here to enter on the long discussion of just and unjust ways.
75. A great deal depends on the causes for which men undertake wars, and
on the authority they have for doing so; for the natural order which seeks the
peace of mankind, ordains that the monarch should have the power of undertaking
war if he thinks it advisable, and that the soldiers should perform their
military duties in behalf of the peace and safety of the community. When war is
undertaken in obedience to God, who would rebuke, or humble, or crush the pride of
man, it must be allowed to be a righteous war; for even the wars which arise
from human passion cannot harm the eternal well-being of God, nor even hurt His
saints; for in the trial of their patience, and the chastening of their spirit,
and in bearing fatherly correction, they are rather benefited than injured. No
one can have any power against them but what is given him from above. For there
is no power but of God,(4) who either orders or permits. Since, therefore, a
righteous man, serving it may be under an ungodly king, may do the duty
belonging to his position in the State in fighting by the order of his sovereign,--for
in some cases it is plainly the will of God that he should fight, and in
others, where this is not so plain, it may be an unrighteous command on the part of
the king, while the soldier is innocent, because his position makes obedience a
duty,--how much more must the man be blameless who carries on war on the
authority of God, of whom every one who serves Him knows that He can never require
what is wrong?
76. If it is supposed that God could not enjoin warfare, because in after
times it was said by the Lord Jesus Christ, "I say unto you, That ye resist not
evil: but if any one strike thee on the right cheek, turn to him the left
also,"(5) the answer is, that what is here required is not a bodily action, but an
inward disposition. The sacred seat of virtue is the heart, and such were the
hearts of our fathers, the righteous men of old. But order required such a
regulation of events, and such a distinction of times, as to show first of all that
even earthly blessings (for so temporal kingdoms and victory over enemies are
considered to be, and these are the things which the community of the ungodly
all over the world are continually begging from idols and devils) are entirely
under the control and at the disposal of the one true God. Thus, under the Old
Testament, the secret of the kingdom of heaven, which was to be disclosed in due
time, was veiled, and so far obscured, in the disguise of earthly promises. But
when the fullness of time came for the revelation of the New Testament, which
was hidden under the types of the Old, clear testimony was to be borne to the
truth, that there is another life for which this life ought to be disregarded,
and another kingdom for which the opposition of all earthly kingdoms should be
patiently borne. Thus the name martyrs, which means witnesses, was given to
those who, by the will of God, bore this testimony, by their confessions, their
sufferings, and their death. The number of such witnesses is so great, that if it
pleased Christ--who called Saul by a voice from heaven, and having changed him
from a wolf to a sheep, sent him into the midst of wolves--to unite them all in
one army, and to give them success in battle, as He gave to the Hebrews, what
nation could withstand them? what kingdom would remain unsubdued? But as the
doctrine of the New Testament is, that we must serve God not for temporal
happiness in this life, but for eternal felicity hereafter, this truth was most
strikingly confirmed by the patient endurance of what is commonly called adversity
for the sake of that felicity. So in fullness of time the Son of God, made of a
woman, made under the law, that He might redeem them that were under the law,
made of the seed of David according to the flesh sends His disciples as sheep
into the midst of wolves, and bids them not fear those that can kill the body, but
cannot kill the soul, and promises that even the body will be entirely
restored, so that not a hair shall be lost.(1) Peter's sword He orders back into its
sheath, restoring as it was before the ear of His enemy that had been cut off.
He says that He could obtain legions of angels to destroy His enemies, but that
He must drink the cup which His Father's will had given Him.(2) He sets the
example of drinking this cup, then hands it to His followers, manifesting thus,
both in word and deed, the grace of patience. Therefore God raised Him from the
dead, and has given Him a name which is above every name; that in the name of
Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven and of things in earth, and of
things under the earth; and that every tongue should confess that Jesus is Lord,
to the glory of God the Father.(3) The patriarchs and prophets, then, have a
kingdom in this world, to show that these kingdoms, too, are given and taken
away by God: the apostles and martyrs had no kingdom here, to show the superior
desirableness of the kingdom of heaven. The prophets, however, could even in
those times die for the truth, as the Lord Himself says, "From the blood of Abel to
the blood of Zacharia;(4) and in these days, since the commencement of the
fulfillment of what is prophesied in the psalm of Christ, under the figure of
Solomon, which means the peacemaker, as Christ is our peace,(5) "All kings of the
earth shall bow to Him, all nations shall serve Him,"(6) we have seen Christian
emperors, who have put all their confidence in Christ, gaining splendid
victories over ungodly enemies, whose hope was in the rites of idolatry and
devil-worship. There are public and undeniable proofs of the fact, that on one side the
prognostications of devils were found to be fallacious, and on the other, the
predictions of saints were a means of support; and we have now writings in which
those facts are recorded.
77. If our foolish opponents are surprised at the difference between the
precepts given by God to the ministers of the Old Testament, at a time when the
grace of the New was still undisclosed, and those given to the preachers of the
New Testament, now that the obscurity of the Old is removed, they will find
Christ Himself saying one thing at one time, and another at another. "When I sent
you," He says, "without scrip, or purse, or shoes, did ye lack anything? And
they said, Nothing. Then saith He to them, But now, he that hath a scrip, let
him take it, and also a purse; and he that hath not a sword, let him sell his
garment, and buy one." If the Manichaeans found passages in the Old and New
Testaments differing in this way, they would proclaim it as a proof that the
Testaments are opposed to each other. But here the difference is in the utterances of
one and the same person. At one time He says, "I sent you without scrip, or
purse, or shoes, and ye lacked nothing;" at another, "Now let him that hath a scrip
take it, and also a purse; and he that hath a tunic, let him sell it and buy a
sword." Does not this show how, without any inconsistency, precepts and
counsels and permissions may be changed, as different times require different
arrangements? If it is said that there was a symbolical meaning in the command to take
a scrip and purse, and to buy a sword, why may there not be a symbolical
meaning in the fact, that one and the same God commanded the prophets in old times
to make war, and forbade the apostles? And we find in the passage that we have
quoted from the Gospel, that the words spoken by the Lord were carried into
effect by His disciples. For, besides going at first without scrip or purse, and
yet lacking nothing, as from the Lord's question and their answer it is plain
they did, now that He speaks of buying a sword, they say, "Lo, here are two
swords;" and He replied, "It is enough." Hence we find Peter with a weapon when he
cut off the assailant's ear, on which occasion his spontaneous boldness was
checked, because, although he had been told to take a sword, he had not been told to
use it.(1) Doubtless, it was mysterious that the Lord should require them to
carry weapons, and forbid the use of them. But it was His part to give the
suitable precepts, and it was their part to obey without reserve.
78. It is therefore mere groundless calumny to charge Moses with making
war, for there would have been less harm in making war of his own accord, than in
not doing it when God commanded him. And to dare to find fault with God
Himself for giving such a command, or not to believe it possible that a just and good
God did so, shows, to say the least, an inability to consider that in the view
of divine providence, which pervades all things from the highest to the
lowest, time can neither add anything nor take away; but all things go, or come, or
remain according to the order of nature or desert in each separate case, while
in men a right will is in union with the divine law, and ungoverned passion is
restrained by the order of divine law; so that a good man wills only what is
commanded, and a bad man can do only what he is permitted, at the same time that
he is punished for what he wills to do unjustly. Thus, in all the things which
appear shocking and terrible to human feebleness, the real evil is the
injustice; the rest is only the result of natural properties or of moral demerit. This
injustice is seen in every case where a man loves for their own sake things
which are desirable only as means to an end, and seeks for the sake of something
else things which ought to be loved for themselves. For thus, as far as he can,
he disturbs in himself the natural order which the eternal law requires us to
observe. Again, a man is just when he seeks to use things only for the end for
which God appointed them, and to enjoy God as the end of all, while he enjoys
himself and his friend in God and for God. For to love in a friend the love of God
is to love the friend for God. Now both justice and injustice, to be acts at
all, must be voluntary; otherwise, there can be no just rewards or punishments;
which no man in his senses will assert. The ignorance and infirmity which
prevent a man from knowing his duty, or from doing all he wishes to do, belong to
God's secret penal arrangement, and to His unfathomable judgments, for with Him
there is no iniquity. Thus we are informed by the sure word of God of Adam's
sin; and Scripture truly declares that in him all die, and that by him sin entered
into the world, and death by sin.(2) And our experience gives abundant
evidence, that in punishment for this sin our body is corrupted, and weighs down the
soul, and the clay tabernacle clogs the mind in its manifold activity;(3) and we
know that we can be freed from this punishment only by gracious interposition.
So the apostle cries out in distress, "O wretched man that I am! who shall
deliver me from the body of this death? The grace of God through Jesus Christ our
Lord."(4) So much we know; but the reasons for the distribution of divine
judgment and mercy, why one is in this condition, and another in that, though just,
are unknown. Still, we are sure that all these things are due either to the
mercy or the judgment of God, while the measures and numbers and weights by which
the Creator of all natural productions arranges all things are concealed from
our view. For God is not the author, but He is the controller of sin; so that
sinful actions, which are sinful because they are against nature, are judged and
controlled, and assigned to their proper place and condition, in order that
they may not bring discord and disgrace on universal nature. This being the case,
and as the judgments of God and the movements of man's will contain the hidden
reason why the same prosperous circumstances which some make a right use of are
the ruin of others, and the same afflictions under which some give way are
profitable to others, and since the whole mortal life of man upon earth is a
trial,(5) who can tell whether it may be good or bad in any particular case--in time
of peace, to reign or to serve, or to be at ease or to die--or in time of war,
to command or to fight, or to conquer or to be killed? At the same time, it
remains true, that whatever is good is so by the divine blessing, and whatever is
bad is so by the divine judgment.
79. Let no one, then, be so daring as to make rash charges against men,
not to say against God. If the service of the ministers of the Old Testament, who
were also heralds of the New, consisted in putting sinners to death, and that
of the ministers of the New Testament, who are also interpreters of the Old, in
being put to death by sinners, the service in both cases is rendered to one
God, who, varying the lesson to suit the times, teaches both that temporal
blessings are to be sought from Him, and that they are to be forsaken for Him, and
that temporal distress is both sent by Him and should be endured for Him. There
was, therefore, no cruelty in the command, or in the action of Moses when, in
his holy jealousy for his people, whom he wished to be subject to the one true
God, on learning that they had fallen away to the worship of an idol made by
their own hands, he impressed their minds at the time with a wholesome fear, and
gave them a warning for the future, by using the sword in the punishment of a
few, whose just punishment God, against whom they had sinned, appointed in the
depth of His secret judgment to be immediately inflicted. That Moses acted as he
did, not in cruelty, but in great love, may be seen from the words in which he
prayed for the sins of the people: "If Thou wilt forgive their sin, forgive it;
and if not, blot me out of Thy book."(1) The pious inquirer who compares the
slaughter with the prayer will find in this the clearest evidence of the awful
nature of the injury done to the soul by prostitution to the images of devils,
since such love is roused to such anger. We see the same in the apostle, who, not
in cruelty, but in love, delivered a man up to Satan for the destruction of
the flesh, that the spirit might be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus.(2)
Others, too, he delivered up, that they might learn not to blaspheme.(3) In the
apocryphal books of the Manichaeans there is a collection of fables, published by
some unknown authors under the name of the apostles. The books would no doubt
have been sanctioned by the Church at the time of their publication, if holy and
learned men then in life, and competent to determine the matter, had thought the
contents to be true. One of the stories is, that the Apostle Thomas was once
at a marriage feast in a country where he was unknown, when one of the servants
struck him, and that he forthwith by his curse brought a terrible punishment on
this man. For when he went out to the fountain to provide water for the
guests, a lion fell on him and killed him, and the hand with which he had given a
slight blow to the apostle was torn off, in fulfillment of the imprecation, and
brought by a dog to the table at which the apostle was reclining. What could be
more cruel than this? And yet, if I mistake not, the story goes on to say, that
the apostle made up for the cruelty by obtaining for the man the blessing of
pardon in the next world; so that, while the people of this strange country
learned to fear the apostle as being so dear to God, the man's eternal welfare was
secured in exchange for the loss of this mortal life. It matters not whether the
story is true or false. At any rate, the Manichaeans, who regard as genuine
and authentic books which the canon of the Church rejects, must allow, as shown
in the story, that the virtue of patience, which the Lord enjoins when He says,
"If any one smite thee on the right cheek, turn to him thy left also," may be
in the inward disposition, though it is not exhibited in bodily action or in
words. For when the apostle was struck, instead of turning his other side to the
man, or telling him to repeat the blow, he prayed to God to pardon his assailant
in the next world, but not to leave the injury unpunished at the time.
Inwardly he preserved a kindly feeling, while outwardly he wished the man to be
punished as an example. As the Manichaeans believe this, rightly or wrongly, they may
also believe that such was the intention of Moses, the servant of God, when he
cut down with the sword the makers and worshippers of the idol; for his own
words show that he so entreated for pardon for their sin of idolatry as to ask to
be blotted out of God's book if his prayer was not heard. There is no
comparison between a stranger being struck with the hand, and the dishonor done to God
by forsaking Him for an idol, when He had brought the people out of the bondage
of Egypt, had led them through the sea, and had covered with the waters the
enemy pursuing them. Nor, as regards the punishment, is there any comparison
between being killed with the sword and being torn in pieces by wild beasts. For
judges in administering the law condemn to exposure to wild beasts worse
criminals than are condemned to be put to death by the sword.
80. Another of Faustus' malicious and impious charges which has to be
answered, is about the Lord's saying to the prophet Hosea, "Take unto thee a wife
of whoredoms and children of whoredoms."(4) As regards this passage, the impure
mind of our adversaries is so blinded that they do not understand the plain
words of the Lord in His gospel, when He says to the Jews, "The publicans and
harlots shall go into the kingdom of heaven before you."(5) There is nothing
contrary to the mercifulness of truth, or inconsistent with Christian faith, in a
harlot leaving fornication, and becoming a chaste wife. Indeed, nothing could be
more unbecoming in one professing to be a prophet than not to believe that all
the sins of the fallen woman were pardoned when she changed for the better. So
when the prophet took the harlot as his wife, it was both good for the woman to
have her life amended, and the action symbolized a truth of which we shall
speak presently. But it is plain what offends the Manichaeans in this case; for
their great anxiety is to prevent harlots from being with child. It would have
pleased them better that the woman should continue a prostitute, so as not to
bring their god into confinement, than that she should become the wife of one man,
and have children.
81. As regards Solomon, it need only be said that the condemnation of his
conduct in the faithful narrative of holy Scripture is much more serious than
the childish vehemence of Faustus' attacks. The Scripture tells us with faithful
accuracy both the good that Solomon had at first, and the evil actions by
which he lost the good he began with; while Faustus, in his attacks, like a man
closing his eyes, or with no eyes at all, seeks no guidance from the light, but is
prompted only by violent animosity. To pious and discerning readers of the
sacred Scriptures evidence of the chastity of the holy men who are said to have
had several wives is found in this, that Solomon, who by his polygamy gratified
his passions, instead of seeking for offspring, is expressly noted as chargeable
with being a lover of women. This, as we are informed by the truth which
accepts no man's person, led him down into the abyss of idolatry.
82. Having now gone over all the cases in which Faustus finds fault with
the Old Testament, and having attended to the merit of each, either defending
men of God against the calumnies of carnal heretics, or, where the men were at
fault, showing the excellence and the majesty of Scripture, let us again take the
cases in the order of Faustus' accusations, and see the meaning of the actions
recorded, what they typify, and what they foretell. This we have already done
in the case of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, of whom God said that He was their
God, as if the God of universal nature were the God of none besides them; not
honoring them with an unmeaning title, but because He, who could alone have a full
and perfect knowledge, knew the sincere and remarkable charity of these men;
and because these three patriarchs united formed a notable type of the future
people of God, in not only having free children by free women, as by Sarah, and
Rebecca, and Leah, and Rachel, but also bond children, as of this same Rebecca
was born Esau, to whom it was said, "Thou shalt serve thy brother;"(1) and in
having by bond women not only bond children, as by Hagar, but also free children,
as by Bilhah and Zilphah. Thus also in the people of God, those spiritually
free not only have children born into the enjoyment of liberty, like those to
whom it is said, "Be ye followers of me, as I also am of Christ"(2) but they have
also children born into guilty bondage, as Simon was born of Philip.(3) Again,
from carnal bondmen are born not only children of guilty bondage, who imitate
them, but also children of happy liberty, to whom it is said, "What they say,
do; but do not after their works."(4) Whoever rightly observes the fulfillment of
this type in the people of God, keeps the unity of the Spirit in the bond of
peace, by continuing to the end in union with some, and in patient endurance of
others. Of Lot, also, we have already spoken, and have shown what the Scripture
mentions as praiseworthy in him, and what as blameworthy and the meaning of
the whole narrative.
83. We have next to consider the prophetic significance of the action of
Judah in lying with his daughter-in-law. But, for the sake of those whose
understanding is feeble, we shall begin with observing, that in sacred Scripture evil
actions are sometimes prophetic not of evil, but of good. Divine providence
preserves throughout its essential goodness, so that, as in the example given
above, from adulterous intercourse a man-child is born, a good work of God from
the evil of man, by the power of nature, and not due to the misconduct of the
parents; so in the prophetic Scriptures, where both good and evil actions are
recorded, the narrative being itself prophetic, foretells something good even by
the record of what is evil, the credit being due not to the evil-doer, but to the
writer. Judah, when, to gratify his sinful passion, he went in to Tamar, had
no intention by his licentious conduct to typify anything connected with the
salvation of men, any more than Judas, who betrayed the Lord, intended to produce
any result connected with the salvation of men. So then if from the evil deed
of Judas the Lord brought the good work of our redemption by His own passion,
why should not His prophet, of whom He Himself says "He wrote of me," for the
sake of instructing us make the evil action of Judah significant of something
good? Under the guidance and inspiration of the Holy Spirit, the prophet has
compiled a narrative of actions so as to make a continuous prophecy of the things he
designed to foretell. In foretelling good, it is of no consequence whether the
typical actions are good or bad. If it is written in red ink that the
Ethiopians are black, or in Black ink that the Gauls are white, this circumstance does
not affect the information which the writing conveys. No doubt, if it was a
painting instead of a writing, the wrong color would be a fault; so when human
actions are represented for example or for warning much depends on whether they are
good or bad. But when actions are related or recorded as types, the merit or
demerit of the agents is a matter of no importance, as long as there is a true
typical relation between the action and the thing signified. So in the case of
Caiaphas in the Gospel as regards his iniquitous and mischievous intention, and
even as regards his words in the sense in which he used them, that a just man
should be put to death unjustly, assuredly they were bad; and yet there was a
good meaning in his words which he did not know of when he said, "It is expedient
that one man should die for the people and that the whole nation perish not."
So it is written of Him, "This he spake not of himself; but being the high
priest, he prophesied that Jesus should die for the people."(1) In the same way the
action of Judah was bad as regards his sinful passion, but it typified a great
good he knew nothing of. Of himself he did evil while it was not of himself
that he typified good. These introductory remarks apply not only to Judah, but
also to all the other cases where in the narrative of bad actions is contained a
prophecy of good.
84. In Tamar, then, the daughter-in-law of Judah, we see the people of the
kingdom of Judah, whose kings, answering to Tamar's husbands, were taken from
this tribe. Tamar means bitterness; and the meaning is suitable, for this
people gave the cup of gall to the Lord.(2) The two sons of Judah represent two
classes of kings who governed ill--those who did harm and those who did no good.
One of these sons was evil or cruel before the Lord; the other spilled the seed
on the ground that Tamar might not become a mother. There are only those two
kinds of useless people in the world--the injurious and those who will not give
the good they have but lose it or spill it on the ground. And as injury is worse
than not doing good, the evil-doer is called the eider and the other the
younger. Er, the name of the elder, means a preparer of skins, which were the coats
given to our first parents when they were punished with expulsion from
paradise.(3) Onan, the name of the younger, means, their grief; that is, the grief of
those to whom he does no good, wasting the good he has on the earth. The loss of
life implied in the name of the elder is a greater evil than the want of help
implied in the name of the younger. Both being killed by God typifies the
removal of the kingdom from men of this character. The meaning of the third son of
Judah not being joined to the woman, is that for a time the kings of Judah were
not of that tribe. So this third son did not become the husband of Tamar; as
Tamar represents the tribe of Judah, which continued to exist, although the people
received no king from it. Hence the name of this son, Selom, means, his
dismission. None of those types apply to the holy and righteous men who, like David,
though they lived in those times, belong properly to the New Testament, which
they served by their enlightened predictions. Again, in the time when Judah
ceased to have a king of its own tribe, the eider Herod does not count as one of
the kings typified by the husbands of Tamar; for he was a foreigner, and his
union with the people was never consecrated with the holy oil. His was the power of
a stranger, given him by the Romans and by Caesar. And it was the same with
his sons, the tetrarchs, one of whom, called Herod, like his father, agreed with
Pilate at the time of the Lord's passion.(4) So plainly were these foreigners
considered as distinct from the sacred monarchy of Judah, that the Jews
themselves, when raging against Christ, exclaimed openly, "We have no king but
Caesar."(5) Nor was Caesar properly their king, except in the sense that all the world
was subject to Rome. The Jews thus condemned themselves, only to express their
rejection of Christ, and to flatter Caesar.
85. The time when the kingdom was removed from the tribe of Judah was the
time appointed for the coming of Christ our Lord, the true Saviour, who should
come not for harm, but for great good. Thus was it prophesied, "A prince shall
not fail from Judah, nor a leader from his loins, till He come for whom it is
reserved: He is the desire of nations."(6) Not only the kingdom, but all
government, of the Jews had ceased, and also, as prophesied by Daniel, the sacred
anointing from which the name Christ or Anointed is derived. Then came He for whom
it was reserved, the desire of nations; and the holy of holies was anointed
with the oil of gladness above His fellows.(7) Christ was born in the time of the
eider Herod, and suffered in the time of Herod the tetrarch. He who thus came
to the lost sheep of the house of Israel was typified by Judah when he went to
shear his sheep in Thamna, which means, failing. For then the prince had failed
from Judah, with all the government and anointing of the Jews, that He might
come for whom it was reserved. Judah, we are told, came with his Adullamite
shepherd, whose name was Iras; and Adullamite means, a testimony in water. So it was
with this testimony that the Lord came, having indeed greater testimony than
that of John;(1) but for the sake of his feeble sheep he made use of the
testimony in water. The name Iras, too, means, vision of my brother. So John saw his
brother, a brother in the family of Abraham, and from the relationship of Mary
and Elisabeth; and the same person he recognised as his Lord and his God, for,
as he himself says, he received of His fullness.(2) On account of this vision,
among those born of woman, there has arisen no greater than he;(3) because, of
all who foretold Christ, he alone saw what many righteous men and prophets
desired to see and saw not. He saluted Christ from the womb;(4) he knew Him more
certainly from seeing the dove; and therefore, as the Adullamite, he gave
testimony by water. The Lord came to shear His sheep, in releasing them from painful
burdens, as it is said in praise of the Church in the Song of Songs, that her
teeth are like a flock of sheep after shearing.(5)
86. Next, we have Tamar changing her dress; for Tamar also means changing.
Still, the name of bitterness must be retained--not that bitterness in which
gall was given to the Lord, but that in which Peter wept bitterly.(6) For Judah
means confession; and bitterness is mingled with confession as a type of true
repentance. It is this repentance which gives fruitfulness to the Church
established among all nations. For "it behoved Christ to suffer, and to rise from the
dead, and that repentance and the remission of sins be preached among all
nations in His name, beginning at Jerusalem."(7) In the dress Tamar put on there is
a confession of sins; and Tamar sitting in this dress at the gate of AEnan or
AEnaim, which means fountain, is a type of the Church called from among the
nations. She ran as a hart to the springs of water, to meet with the seed of
Abraham; and there she is made fruitful by one who knows her not, as it is foretold,
"A people whom I have not known shall serve me."(8) Tamar received under her
disguise a ring, a bracelet, a staff; she is sealed in her calling, adorned in
her justification, raised in her glorification. For "whom He predestinated, them
He also called: and whom He called, them He also justified: and whom He
justified, them He also glorified."(9) This was while she was still disguised, as I
have said; and in the same state she conceives, and becomes fruitful in holiness.
Also the kid promised is sent to her as to a harlot. The kid represents rebuke
for sin, and it is sent by the Adullamite already mentioned, who, as it were,
uses the reproachful words, "O generation of vipers!"(10) But this rebuke for
sin does not reach her, for she has been changed by the bitterness of
confession. Afterwards, by exhibiting the pledges of the ring and bracelet and staff, she
prevails over the Jews, in their hasty judgment of her, who are now
represented by Judah himself; as at this day we hear the Jews saying that we are not the
people of Christ, and have not the seed of Abraham. But when we exhibit the
sure tokens of our calling and justification and glorification, they will
immediately be confounded, and will acknowledge that we are justified rather than they.
I should enter into this more particularly, taking, as it were, each limb and
joint separately, as the Lord might enable me, were it not that such minute
inquiry is prevented by the necessity of bringing this work to a close, for it is
already longer than is desirable.
87. As regards the prophetic significance of David's sin, a single word
must suffice. The names occurring in the narrative show what it typifies. David
means, strong of hand, or desirable; and what can be stronger than the Lion of
the tribe of Judah, who has conquered the world, or more desirable than He of
whom the prophet says, "The desire of all nations shall come?"(11) Bersabee
means, well of satisfaction, or seventh well: either of these interpretations will
suit our purpose. So, in the Song of Songs, the spouse, who is the Church, is
called a well of living water;(12) or again, the number seven represents the Holy
Spirit, as in the number of days in Pentecost, when the Holy Spirit came from
heaven. We learn also from the book of Tobit, that Pentecost was the feast of
seven weeks.(13) To forty-nine, which is seven times seven, one is added to
denote unity. To this effect is the saying of the apostle: "Bearing with one
another in love, endeavoring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of
peace."(14) The Church becomes a well of satisfaction by this gift of the Spirit, the
number seven denoting its spirituality; for it is in her a fountain of living
water springing up unto everlasting life, and he who has it shall never
thirst.(15) Uriah, Bersabee's husband, must, from the meaning of his name, be understood
as representing the devil. It is in union to the devil that all are bound whom
the grace of God sets free, that the Church without spot or wrinkle may be
married to her true Saviour. Uriah means, my light of God; and Hittite means, cut
off, referring either to his not abiding in the truth, when he was cut off on
account of his pride from the celestial light which he had of God, or to his
transforming himself into an angel of light, because after losing his real strength
by his fall, he still dares to say, My light is of God. The literal David,
then, was guilty of a heinous crime, which God by the prophet condemned in the
rebuke addressed to David, and which David atoned for by his repentance. On the
other hand, He who is the desire of all nations loved the Church when washing
herself on the roof, that is, when cleansing herself from the pollution of the
world, and in spiritual contemplation mounting above her house of clay, and
trampling upon it; and after commencing an acquaintance, He puts to death the devil,
whom He first entirely removes from her, and joins her to Himself in perpetual
union. While we hate the sin, we must not overlook the prophetical
significance; and while we love, as is His due, that David who in His mercy has freed us
from the devil, we may also love the David who by the humility of his repentance
healed the wound made by his transgression.
88. Little need be said of Solomon, who is spoken of in Holy Scripture in
terms of the strongest disapproval and condemnation, while nothing is said of
his repentance and restoration to the divine favor. Nor can I find in his
lamentable fall even a symbolical connection with anything good. Perhaps the strange
women he lusted after may be thought to represent the Churches chosen from
among the Gentiles. This idea might have been admissible, if the women had left
their gods for Solomon's sake to worship his God. But as he for their sakes
offended his God and worshipped their gods, it seems impossible to think of any good
meaning. Doubtless, something is typified, but it is something bad, as in the
case already explained of Lot's wife and daughters. We see in Solomon a notable
pre-eminence and a notable fall. Now, this good and evil which we see in him at
different periods, first good and then evil, are in our day found together in
the Church. What is good in Solomon represents, I think, the good members of
the Church; and what was bad in him represents the bad members. Both are in one
man, as the bad and the good are in the chaff and grain of one floor, or in the
tares and wheat of one field. A closer inquiry into what is said of Solomon in
Scripture might disclose, either to me or to others of greater learning and
greater worth, some more probable interpretation. But as we are now engaged on a
different subject, we must not allow this matter to break the connection of our
discourse.
89. As regards the prophet Hosea, it is unnecessary for me to explain the
meaning of the command, or of the prophet's conduct, when God said to him, "Go
and take unto thee a wife of whoredoms and produce children of whoredoms," for
the Scripture itself informs us of the origin and purpose of this direction. It
proceeds thus: "For the land hath committed great whoredom, departing from the
Lord. So he went and took Gomer the daughter of Diblaim; which conceived, and
bare him a son. And the Lord said unto him, Call his name Jezreel; for yet a
little while, and I will avenge the blood of Jezreel upon the house of Judah, and
will cause to cease the kingdom of the house of Israel. And it shall come to
pass at that day, that I will break the bow of Israel in the valley of Jezreel.
And she conceived again, and bare a daughter. And God said unto him, Call her
name No-mercy: for I will no more have mercy upon the house of Israel; but I
will utterly take them away. But I will have mercy upon the house of Judah, and
will save them by the Lord their God, and will not save them by bow, nor by
sword, nor by battle, by horses, nor by horsemen. Now when she had weaned No-mercy,
she conceived, and bare a son. Then said God, Call his name Not-my-people: for
ye are not my people, and I will not be your God. Yet the number of the
children of Israel shall be as the sand of the sea, which cannot be measured for
multitude; and it shall come to pass that in the place where it was said unto them,
Ye are not my people, there it shall be said unto them, Ye are the sons of the
living God. Then shall the children of Israel and the children of Judah be
gathered together, and appoint themselves one head, and they shall come up out of
the land: for great shall be the day of Jezreel. Say ye unto your brethren, My
people; and to your sister, She hath found mercy."(1) Since the typical meaning
of the command and of the prophet's conduct is thus explained in the same book
by the Lord Himself, and since the writings of the apostles declare the
fulfillment of this prophecy in the preaching of the New Testament, every one must
accept the explanation thus given of the command and of the action of the prophet
as the true explanation. Thus it is said by the Apostle Paul, "That He might
make known the riches of His glory on the vessels of mercy, which He had afore
prepared unto glory, even us, whom He hath called, not of the Jews only, but also
of the Gentiles. As He saith also in Hosea, I will call them my people, which
were not my people; and her beloved, which was not beloved. And it shall come
to pass, that in the place where it was said unto them, Ye are not my people,
there shall they be called the children of the living God."(1) Here Paul applies
the prophecy to the Gentiles. So also Peter, writing to the Gentiles, without
naming the prophet, borrows his expressions when he says, "But ye are a chosen
generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a peculiar people; that ye might
show forth the praises of Him who has called you out of darkness into His
marvellous light; which in time past were not a people, but are now the people of
God: which had not obtained mercy, but now have obtained mercy."(2) From this it
is plain that the words of the prophet, "And the number of the children of
Israel shall be as the sand of the sea, which cannot be measured for multitude,"
and the words immediately following, "And it shall be that in the place where it
was said unto them, Ye are not my people, there they shall be called the
children of the living God," do not apply to that Israel which is after the flesh,
but to that of which the apostle says to the Gentiles, "Ye therefore are the seed
of Abraham, and heirs according to the promise."(3) But, as many Jews who were
of the israel after the flesh have believed, and will yet believe; for of
these were the apostles, and all the thousands in Jerusalem of the company of the
apostles, as also the churches of which Paul speaks, when he says to the
Galatians, "I was unknown by face to the churches of Judaea which were in Christ;"(4)
and again, he explains the passage in the Psalms, where the Lord is called the
cornerstone,(5) as referring to His uniting in Himself the two walls of
circumcision and uncircumcision, "that He might make in Himself of twain one new man,
so making peace; and that He might reconcile both unto God in one body by the
cross, having slain the enmity thereby: and that He might come and preach peace
to them that are far off, and to them that are nigh," that is, to the Gentiles
and to the Jews; "for He is our peace, who hath made of both one;"(6) to the
same purpose we find the prophet speaking of the Jews as the children of Judah,
and of the Gentiles as children of Israel, where he says, "The children of Judah
and the children of Israel shall be gathered together, and shall make to
themselves one head, and shall go up from the land." Therefore, to speak against a
prophecy thus confirmed by actual events, is to speak against the writings of
the apostles as well as those of the prophets; and not only to speak against
writings, but to impugn in the most reckless manner the evidence clear as noonday
of established facts. In the case of the narrative of Judah, it is perhaps not
so easy to recognize, under the disguise of the woman called Tamar, the harlot
representing the Church gathered from among the corruption of Gentile
superstition; but here, where Scripture explains itself, and where the explanation is
confirmed by the writings of the apostles, instead of dwelling longer on this, we
may proceed at once to inquire into the meaning of the very things to which
Faustus objects in Moses the servant of God.
90. Moses killing the Egyptian in defending one of his brethren reminds us
naturally of the destruction of the devil, our assailant in this land of
strangers, by our defender the Lord Christ. And as Moses hid the dead body in the
sand, even so the devil, though slain, remains concealed in those who are not
firmly settled. The Lord, we know, builds the Church on a rock; and those who hear
His word and do it, He compares to a wise man who builds his house upon a
rock, and who does not yield or give way before temptation; and those who hear and
do not, He compares to a foolish man who builds on the sand, and when his house
is tried its ruin is great.(7)
91. Of the prophetic significance of the spoiling of the Egyptians, which
was done by Moses at the command of the Lord his God, who commands nothing but
what is most just, I remember to have set down what occurred to me at the time
in my book entitled On Christian Doctrine;(8) to the effect that the gold and
silver and garments of the Egyptians typified certain branches of learning which
may be profitably learned or taught among the Gentiles. This may be the true
explanation; or we may suppose that the vessels of gold and silver represent the
precious souls, and the garments the bodies, of those from among the Gentiles
who join themselves to the people of God, that along with them they may be
freed from the Egypt of this world. Whatever the true interpretation may be, the
pious student of the Scriptures will feel certain that in the command, in the
action, and in the narrative there is a purpose and a symbolic meaning.
92. It would take too long to go through all the wars of Moses. It is
enough to refer to what has already been said, as sufficient for the purpose in
this reply to Faustus of the prophetic and symbolic character of the war with
Amalek.(1) There is also the charge of cruelty made against Moses by the enemies of
Scriptures, or by those who have never read anything. Faustus does not make
any specific charge, but speaks of Moses as commanding and doing many cruel
things. But, knowing the things they are in the habit of bringing forward and of
misrepresenting, I have already taken a particular case and have defended it, so
that any Manichaeans who are willing to be corrected, and all other ignorant and
irreligious people, may see that there is no ground for their accusations. We
must now inquire into the prophetic significance of the command, that many of
those who, while Moses was absent, made an idol for themselves should be slain
without regard to relationship. It is easy to see that the slaughter of these
men represents the warfare against the evil principles which led the people into
the same idolatry. Against such evil we are commanded to wage war in the words
of the psalm, "Be ye angry and sin not.(2) And a similar command is given by
the apostle, when he says, "Mortify your members which are on earth fornication,
uncleanness, luxury, evil concupiscence, and covetousness, which is
idolatry."(3)
93. It requires closer examination to see the meaning of the first action
of Moses in burning the calf in fire, and grinding it to powder, and sprinkling
it in the water for the people to drink. The tables given to him, written with
the finger of God, that is, by the agency of the Holy Spirit, he may have
broken, because he judged the people unworthy of having them read to them; and he
may have burned the calf, and ground it, and scattered it so as to be carried
away by the water, in order to let nothing of it remain among the people. But why
should he have made them drink it? Every one must feel anxious to discover the
typical significance of this action. Pursuing the inquiry, we may find that in
the calf there was an embodiment of the devil, as there is in men of all
nations who have the devil as their head or leader in their impious rites. The calf
is gold, because there is a semblance of wisdom in the institution of
idolatrous worship. Of this the apostle says, "Knowing God, they glorified Him not as
God, nor were thankful; but they became vain in their imaginations, and their
foolish heart was darkened. Professing themselves to be wise they became foolish,
and changed the glory of the incorruptible God into the likeness of corruptible
man, and of birds, and of four-footed beasts, and of creeping things."(4) From
this so-called wisdom came the golden calf, which was one of the forms of
idolatry among the chief men and professed sages of Egypt. The calf, then,
represents every body or society of Gentile idolaters. This impious society the Lord
Christ burns with that fire of which He says in the Gospel, "I am come to send
fire on the earth;"(5) for, as there is nothing hid from His heat,(6) when the
Gentiles believe in Him they lose the form of the devil in the fire of divine
influence. Then all the body is ground, that is, after the dissolution of the
combination in the membership of iniquity comes humiliation under the word of
truth. Then the dust is sprinkled in the water, that the Israelites, that is, the
preachers of the gospel, may in baptism admit those formerly idolaters into their
own body, that is, the body of Christ. To Peter, who was one of those
Israelites, it was said of the Gentiles, "Kill, and eat."(7) To kill and eat is much
the same as to grind and drink. So this calf, by the fire of zeal, and the keen
penetration of the word, and the water of baptism, was swallowed up by the
people, instead of their being swallowed up by it.
94. Thus, when the very passages on which the heretics found their
objections to the Scriptures are studied and examined, the more obscure they are the
more wonderful are the secrets which we discover in reply to our questions; so
that the mouths of blasphemers are completely stopped, and the evidence of the
truth so stifles them that they cannot even utter a sound. The unhappy men who
will not receive into their hearts the sweetness of the truth must feel its
force as a gag in their mouths. All those passages speak of Christ. The head now
ascended into heaven along with the body still suffering on earth is the full
development of the whole purpose of the authors of Scripture, which is well called
Sacred Scripture. Every part of the narrative in the prophetical books should
be viewed as having a figurative meaning, except what serves merely as a
framework for the literal or figurative predictions of this king and of his people.
For as in harps and other musical instruments the musical sound does not come
from all parts of the instrument, but from the strings, and the rest is only for
fastening and stretching the strings so as to tune them, that when they are
struck by the musician they may give a pleasant sound; so in these prophetical
narratives the circumstances selected by the prophetic spirit either predict some
future event, or if they have no voice of their own, they serve to connect
together other significant utterances.
95. Should the heretics reject our exposition of those allegorical
narratives, or even insist on understanding them only in a literal sense, to dispute
about such a difference of understanding would be as useless as to dispute about
a difference of taste. Only, the fact that the divine precepts have either a
moral and religious character or a prophetic meaning must be believed, whether
intelligently or not. Moreover, the figurative interpretations must all be in
the interest of morality and religion. So, if the Manichaeans or any others
disagree with our interpretation, or differ from us in method or in any particular
opinion, suffice it that the character of the fathers whom God commends for
their conduct and obedience to His precepts is vindicated on a principle which all
but those inveterate in their hostility will acknowledge to be true; and that
the purity and dignity of the Scriptures are maintained in reference to those
passages which the enemies of the truth find fault with, where certain actions
are either praised or blamed, or merely narrated for us to form a judgment of
them.
96. In fact, nothing could have been devised more likely to instruct and
benefit the pious reader of sacred Scripture than that, besides describing
praiseworthy characters as examples, and blameworthy characters as warnings, it
should also narrate cases where good men have gone back and fallen into evil,
whether they are restored to the right path or continue irreclaimable; and also
where bad men have changed, and have attained to goodness, whether they persevere
in it or relapse into evil; in order that the righteous may be not lifted up in
the pride of security, nor the wicked hardened in despair of cure. And even
those passages in Scripture which contain no examples or warnings are either
required for connection, so as to pass on to essential matters, or, from their very
appearance of superfluity, indicate the presence of some secret symbolical
meaning. For in the books we speak of, so far from there being a want or a scarcity
of prophetical announcements, such announcements are numerous and distinct;
and now that the fulfillment has actually taken place, the testimony thus borne
to the divine authority of the books is irresistibly strong, so that it is mere
madness to suppose that there can be any useless or unmeaning passages in books
to which all classes of men and of minds do homage, and which themselves
predict what we see thus actually coming to pass.
97. If, then, any one reading of the action of David, of which he repented
when the Lord rebuked and threatened him, find in the narrative an
encouragement to sin, is Scripture to be blamed for this? Is not the man's own guilt in
proportion to the abuse which he makes for his own injury or destruction of what
was written for his recovery and release? David is set forth as a great example
of repentance, because men who fall into sin either proudly disregard the cure
of repentance, or lose themselves in despair of obtaining salvation or of
meriting pardon. The example is for the benefit of the sick, not for the injury of
those in health. If madmen destroy themselves, or if evil-doers destroy others,
with surgical instruments, it is not the fault of surgery.
98. Even supposing that our fathers the patriarchs and prophets, of whose
devout and religious habits so good a report is given in that Scripture which
every one who knows it, and has not lost entirely the use of his reason, must
admit to have been provided by God for the salvation of men, were as lustful and
cruel as the Manichaeans falsely and fanatically allege, they might still be
shown to be superior not only to those whom the Manichaeans call the Elect, but
also to their god himself. Is there in the licentious intercourse of man with
woman anything so bad as the self-abasement of unclouded light by mixture with
darkness? Here, is a man prompted by avarice and greed to pass off his wife as
his sister and sell her to her lover; but worse still and more shocking, that one
should disguise his own nature to gratify criminal passion, and submit
gratuitously to pollution and degradation. Why, even one who knowingly lies with his
own daughters is not equally criminal with one who lets his members share in the
defilement of all sensuality as gross as this, or grosser. And is not the
Manichaean god a partaker in the contamination of the most atrocious acts of
uncleanness? Again, if it were true, as Faustus says, that Jacob went from one to
another of his four wives, not desiring offspring, but resembling a he-goat in
licentiousness, he would still not be sunk so low as your god, who must not only
have shared in this degradation, from his being confined in the bodies of Jacob
and his wives so as to be mixed up with all their movements, but also, in union
with this very he-goat of Faustus' coarse comparison, must have endured all
the pains of animal appetite, incurring fresh defilement at every step, as
partaking in the passion of the male, the conception of the female, and the birth of
the kid. And, in the same way, supposing Judah to have been guilty not only of
fornication, but of incest, a share in the heats and impurities of this
incestuous passion would also belong to your god. David repented of his sin in loving
the wife of another, and in ordering the death of her husband; but when will
your god repent of giving up his members to the wanton passion of the male and
female chiefs of the race of darkness, and of putting to death not the husband of
his mistress, but his own children, whom he confines in the members of the
very demons who were his own lovers? Even if David had not repented, nor been thus
restored to righteousness, he would still have been better than your god.
David may have been defiled by this one act, or to the extent to which one man is
capable of such defilement; but your god suffers the pollution of his members in
all such actions by whomsoever committed. The prophet Hosea, too, is accused
by Faustus: and, supposing him to have taken the harlot to wife because he had a
criminal affection for her, if he is licentious and she a prostitute, their
souls, according to your own assertion, are parts and members of your god and of
his nature. In plain language, the harlot herself must be your god. You cannot
pretend that your god is not confined in the contaminated body, or that he is
only present, while preserving entire the purity of his own nature; and you
acknowledge that the members of your god are so defiled as to require a special
purification. This harlot, then, for whom you venture to find fault with the man
of God, even if she had not been changed for the better by becoming a chaste
wife, would still have been your god; at least you must admit her soul to have
been a part, however small, of your god. But one single harlot is not so bad as
your god, for he on account of his mixture with the race of darkness shares in
every act of prostitution; and wherever such impurities are perpetrated, he goes
through the corresponding experiences of abandonment, of release, and of
confinement, and this from generation to generation, till this most corrupt part
reaches its final state in the mass of darkness, like an irreclaimable harlot. Such
are the evils and such the shameful abominations which your god could not ward
off from his members, and to which he was brought irresistibly by his
merciless enemy; for only by the sacrifice of his own subjects, or rather his own
parts, could he effect the destruction of his formidable assailant. Surely, there
was nothing so bad as this in killing an Egyptian so as to preserve uninjured a
fellow-countryman. Yet Faustus finds fault with this most absurdly, while with
amazing infatuation he overlooks the case of his own god. Would it not have been
better for him to have carried off the gold and silver vessels of the
Egyptians, than to let his members be carried off by the race of darkness? And yet the
worshippers of this unfortunate god find fault with the servant of our God for
carrying on wars, in which he with his followers were always victorious, so
that, under the leadership of Moses, the children of Israel carried captive their
enemies, men and women, as your god would have done too, if he had been able.
You profess to accuse Moses of doing wrong, while in fact you envy his success.
There was no cruelty in punishing with the sword those who had sinned
grievously against God. Indeed, Moses entreated pardon for this sin, even offering to
bear himself in their stead the divine anger. But even had he been cruel instead
of compassionate, he would still have been better than your god. For if any of
his followers had been sent to break the force of the enemy and had been taken
captive, he would never, if victorious, have condemned him when he had done no
wrong, but acted in obedience to orders. And yet this is what your god is to do
with the part of himself which is to be fastened in the mass of darkness,
because it obeyed orders, and advanced at the risk of its own life in defence of
his kingdom against the body of the enemy. But, says the Manichaean, this part,
after mixture and combination with evil during the course of ages, has not been
obedient. But why? If the obedience was voluntary, the guilt is real, and the
punishment just. But from this it would follow that there is no nature opposed
to sin; otherwise it would not sin voluntarily; and so the whole system of
Manichaeism falls at once. If, again, this part suffers from the power of this enemy
against whom it was sent, and is subdued by a force it was unable to resist,
the punishment is unjust, and flagrantly cruel. The god who is defended on the
plea of necessity is a fit object of worship to those who refuse to worship the
one true God. Still, it must be allowed that, however debasing the worship of
this god may be, the worshippers are so far better than their deity, that they
have an existence, while he is nothing more than a fabulous invention. Proceed
we now to the rest of Faustus' vagaries.(1)