REPLY TO FAUSTUS THE MANICHAEAN. [CONTRA FAUSTUM MANICHAEUM.] A.D. 400 (BOOKS
XXIII TO XXXI)
BOOK XXIII.
FAUSTUS RECURS TO THE GENEALOGICAL DIFFICULTY AND INSISTS THAT EVEN ACCORDING
TO MATTHEW JESUS WAS NOT SON OF GOD UNTIL HIS BAPTISM. AUGUSTIN SETS FORTH THE
CATHOLIC VIEW OF THE RELATION OF THE DIVINE AND THE HUMAN IN THE PERSON OF
CHRIST.
1. FAUSTUS said: On one occasion, when addressing a large audience, I was
asked by one of the crowd, Do you believe that Jesus was born of Mary? I
replied, Which Jesus do you mean? for in the Hebrew it is the name of several people.
One was the son of Nun, the follower of Moses;(1) another was the son of
Josedech the high priest;(2) again, another is spoken of as the son of David;(3) and
another is the Son of God.(4) Of which of these do you ask whether I believe
him to have been born of Mary? His answer was, The Son of God, of course. On
what evidence, said I, oral or written, am I to believe this? He replied, On the
authority of Matthew. What, said I, did Matthew write? He replied, "The book of
the generation of Jesus Christ, the son of David, the son of Abraham "(Matt. i.
1). Then said I, I was afraid you were going to say, The book of the
generation of Jesus Christ, the Son of God; and I was prepared to correct you. Now that
you have quoted the verse accurately, you must nevertheless be advised to pay
attention to the words. Matthew does not profess to give an account of the
generation of the Son of God, but of the son of David.
2. I will, for the present, suppose that this person was right in saying
that the son of David was born of Mary. It still remains true, that in this
whole passage of the generation no mention is made of the Son of God till we come
to the baptism; so that it is an injurious misrepresentation on your part to
speak of this writer as making the Son of God the inmate of a womb. The writer,
indeed, seems to cry out against such an idea, and in the very title of his book
to clear himself of such blasphemy, asserting that the person whose birth he
describes is the son of David, not the Son of God. And if you attend to the
writer's meaning and purpose, you will see that what he wishes us to believe of
Jesus the Son of God is not so much that He was born of Mary, as that He became the
Son of God by baptism at the river Jordan. He tells us that the person of whom
he spoke at the outset as the son of David was baptized by John, and became
the Son of God on this particular occasion, when about thirty years old,
according to Luke, when also the voice was heard saying to Him, "Thou art my Son; this
day have I begotten Thee."(5) It appears from this, that what was born, as is
supposed, of Mary thirty years before, was not the Son of God, but what was
afterwards made so by baptism at Jordan, that is, the new man, the same as in us
when we were converted from Gentile error, and believe in God. This doctrine may
or may not agree with what you call the Catholic faith; at all events, it is
what Matthew says, if Matthew is the real author. The words, Thou art my Son,
this day I have begotten Thee, or, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well
pleased, do not occur in connection with the story of Mary's motherhood, but with
the putting away of sin at Jordan. This is what is written; and if you believe
this doctrine, you must be called a Matthaean, for you will no longer be a
Catholic. The Catholic doctrine is well known; and it is as unlike Matthew's
representations as it is unlike the truth. In the words of your creed, you declare
that you believe in Jesus Christ, the Son of God, who was born of the Virgin Mary.
According to you, therefore, the Son of God comes from Mary; according to
Matthew, from the Jordan; while we believe Him to come from God. Thus the doctrine
of Matthew, if we are right in assigning the authorship to him, is as different
from yours as from ours; only we acknowledge that he is more cautious than you
in ascribing the being born of a woman to the son of David, and not to the Son
of God. As for you, your only alternative is to deny that those statements
were made, as they appear to be, by Matthew, or to allow that you have abandoned
the faith of the apostles.
3. For our part, while no one can alter our conviction that the Son of God
comes from God, we might indulge a credulous disposition, to the extent of
admitting the fiction, that Jesus became the Son of God at Jordan, but not that
the Son of God was born of a woman. Then, again, the son said to have been born
of Mary cannot properly be called the son of David, unless it is ascertained
that he was begotten by Joseph. You say he was not, and therefore you must allow
him not to have been the son of David, even though he were the son of Mary. The
genealogy proceeds in the line of Hebrew fathers from Abraham to David, and
from David to Joseph; and as we are told that Joseph was not the real father of
Jesus, Jesus cannot be said to be the son of David. To begin with calling Jesus
the son of David, and then to go on to tell of his being born of Mary before the
consummation of her marriage with Joseph, is pure madness. And if the son of
Mary cannot be called the son of David, on account of his not being the son of
Joseph, still less can the name be given to the Son of God.
4. Moreover, the Virgin herself appears to have belonged not to the tribe
of Judah, to which the Jewish kings belonged, and which all agree was David's
tribe, but to the priestly tribe of Levi. This appears from the fact that the
Virgin's father Joachim was a priest; and his name does not occur in the
genealogy. How, then, can Mary be brought within the pale of relationship to David,
when she has neither father nor husband belonging to it? Consequently, Mary's son
cannot possibly be the son of David, unless you can bring the mother into some
connection with Joseph, so as to be either his wife or his daughter.
5. AUGUSTIN replied: The Catholic, which is also the apostolic, doctrine,
is, that our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ is both the Son of God in His divine
nature, and the Son of David after the flesh. This we prove from the writings
of the evangelists and apostles, so that no one can reject our proofs without
also rejecting these writings. Faustus' plan is to represent some one as saying
a few words, without bringing forward any evidence in answer to Faustus'
fertile sophistry. But with all his ingenuity, the proofs I have to give will leave
Faustus no reply, but that these passages are spurious interpolations in the
sacred record,--a reply which serves as a means of escaping, or of trying to
escape, the force of the plainest statements in Holy Scripture. We have already in
this treatise sufficiently exposed the irrational absurdity, as well as the
daring profanity, of such criticism; and not to exceed all limits, we must avoid
repetition. It cannot be necessary that we should bring together all the passages
scattered throughout Scripture, which show, in answer to Faustus, that in the
books of the highest and most sacred authority He who is called the
only-begotten Son of God, even God with God, is also called the Son of David, on account
of His taking the form of a servant from the Virgin Mary, the wife of Joseph. To
instance only Matthew, since Faustus' argument refers to this Gospel, as the
whole book cannot be quoted here, let whoever choose read it, and see how
Matthew carries on to the passion and the resurrection the narrative of Him whom He
calls the Son of David in the introduction to the genealogy. Of this same Son of
David he speaks as being conceived and born of the Virgin Mary by the Holy
Ghost. He also applies to this the declaration of the prophet, "Behold, a virgin
shall conceive, and shall bear a son, and they shall call His name Emmanuel,
which is being interpreted, God with us."(1) Again, He who was called, even from
the Virgin's womb, God-with-us, is said to have heard, when He was baptized by
John, a voice from heaven, saying, "This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well
pleased."(2) Will Faustus say that to be called God is less than to be called the
Son of God? He seems to think so, for he tries to prove that because this
voice came from heaven at the time of the baptism, therefore, according to Matthew,
He must then have become the Son of God; whereas the same evangelist, in a
previous passage, quotes the sacred announcement made by the prophet, in which the
child horn of the Virgin is called God-with-us.
6. It is remarkable how, amid his wild irrelevancies, this wretched
trifler loses no available opportunity of darkening the declarations of Scripture by
the fabulous creations of his own fancy. Thus he says of Abraham, that when he
took his handmaid to wife he disbelieved God's promise that he should have a
child by Sarah; whereas, in fact, this promise had not at that time been given.
Then he accuses Abraham of falsehood in calling Sarah his sister, not having
read what may be learned on the authority of Scripture about the family of Sarah.
Abraham's son Isaac also he accuses of falsely calling his wife his sister,
though a distinct account is given of her family. Then he accuses Jacob of there
being a daily quarrel among his four wives, which should be the first to
appropriate him on his return from the field, while nothing of this is said in
Scripture. And this is the man who pretends to hate the writers of the sacred books
for their falsehood, and who has the effrontery so to misrepresent even the
gospel record, though its authority is admitted by all as possessing the most
abundant confirmation, as to try to make it appear, not indeed that Matthew
himself,--for in that case he would have been forced to yield to apostolic
authority,--but that some one under the name of Matthew, has written about Christ what he
refuses to believe, and attempts to refute with a contumelious ingenuity!
7. The voice from heaven at the Jordan should be compared with the voice
heard on the Mount.(1) In neither case do the words, "This is my beloved Son, in
whom I am well pleased," imply that He was not the Son of God before; for He
who from the Virgin's womb took the form of a servant "was in the form of God,
and thought it no robbery to be equal with God."(2) And the same Apostle Paul
himself says distinctly elsewhere," "But in the fullness of time, God sent His
Son, made of a woman, made under the law;"(3) that is, a woman in the Hebrew
sense, not a wife, but one of the female sex. The Son of God is both Lord of David
in His divine nature, and Son of David as being of the seed of David after the
flesh. And if it were not profitable for us to believe this, the same apostle
would not have made it so prominent as he does, when he says to Timothy,
"Remember that Christ Jesus, of the seed of David, rose from the dead, according to my
gospel."(4) And he carefully enjoins believers to regard as accursed whoever
preaches another gospel contrary to this.
8. This assailant of the holy Gospel need find no difficulty in the fact
that Christ is called the Son of David, though He was born of a virgin, and
though Joseph was not His real father; while the genealogy is brought down by the
evangelist Matthew, not to Mary, but to Joseph. First of all, the husband, as
the man, is the more honorable; and Joseph was Mary's husband, though she did not
live with him, for Matthew himself mentions that she was called Joseph's wife
by the angel; as it is also from Matthew that we learn that Mary conceived not
by Joseph, but by the Holy Spirit. But if this, instead of being a true
narrative written by Matthew the apostle, was a false narrative written by some one
else under his name, is it likely that he would have contradicted himself in such
an apparent manner, and in passages so immediately connected, as to speak of
the Son of David as born of Mary without conjugal intercourse, and then, in
giving His genealogy, to bring it down to the very man with whom the Virgin is
expressly said not to have had intercourse, unless he had some reason for doing so?
Even supposing there were two writers, one calling Christ the Son of David,
and giving an account of Christ's progenitors from David down to Joseph; while
the other does not call Christ the Son of David, and says that He was born of the
Virgin Mary without intercourse with any man; those statements are not
irreconcilable, so as to prove that one or both writers must be false. It will appear
on reflection that both accounts might be true; for Joseph might be called the
husband of Mary, though she was his wife only in affection, and in the
intercourse of the mind, which is more intimate than that of the body. In this way it
might be proper that the husband of the virgin-mother of Christ should have a
place in the list of Christ's ancestors. It might also be the case that some of
David's blood flowed in Mary herself, so that the flesh of Christ, although
produced from a virgin, still owed its origin to David's seed. But as, in fact,
both statements are made by one and the same writer, who informs us both that
Joseph was the husband of Mary and that the mother of Christ was a virgin, and that
Christ was of the seed of David, and that Joseph is in the list of Christ's
progenitors in the line of David, those who prefer the authority of the sacred
Gospel to that of heretical fiction must conclude that Mary was not unconnected
with the family of David, and that she was properly called the wife of Joseph,
because being a woman she was in spiritual alliance with him, though there was
no bodily connection. Joseph, too, it is plain, could not be omitted in the
genealogy; for, from the superiority of his sex, such an omission would be
equivalent to a denial of his relation to the woman with whom he was inwardly united;
and believers in Christ are taught not to think carnal connection the chief
thing in marriage, as if without this they could not be man and wife, but to
imitate in Christian wedlock as closely as possible the parents of Christ, that so
they may have the more intimate union with the members of Christ.
9. We believe that Mary, as well as Joseph, was of the family of David,
because we believe the Scriptures, which assert both that Christ was of the seed
of David after the flesh, and that His mother was the Virgin Mary, He having no
human father. Therefore, whoever denies the relationship of Mary to David,
evidently opposes the pre-eminent authority of these passages of Scripture; and to
maintain this opposition he must bring evidence in support of his statement
from writings acknowledged by the Church as canonical and catholic, not from any
writings he pleases. In the matters of which we are now treating, only the
canonical writings have any weight with us; for they only are received and
acknowledged by the Church spread over all the world, which is itself a fulfillment of
the prophecies regarding it contained in these writings. Accordingly, I am not
bound to admit the uncanonical account of Mary's birth which Faustus adopts,
that her father was a priest of the tribe of Levi, of the name of Joachim. But
even were I to admit this account, I should still contend that Joachim must have
in some way belonged to the family of David, and had somehow been adopted from
the tribe of Judah into that of Levi; or if not he, one of his ancestors; or,
at least, that while born in the tribe of Levi, he had still some relation to
the line of David; as Faustus himself acknowledges that Mary, though belonging to
the tribe of Levi, could be given to a husband of the tribe of Judah; and he
expressly says that if Mary were Joseph's daughter, the name Son of David would
be applicable to Christ. In this way, by the marriage of Joseph's daughter in
the tribe of Levi, her son, though born in the tribe of Levi, might not
improperly be called the Son of David. And so, if the mother of that Joachim, who in
the passage quoted by Faustus is called the father of Mary, married in the tribe
of Levi while she belonged to the tribe of Judah and to the family of David,
there would thus be a sufficient reason for speaking of Joachim and Mary and
Mary's son as belonging to the seed of David. If I felt obliged to pay any regard
to the apocryphal scripture in which Joachim is called the father of Mary, I
should adopt some such explanation as the above, rather than admit any falsehood
in the Gospel, where it is written both that Jesus Christ, the Son of God, and
our Saviour, was of the seed of David after the flesh, and that He was born of
the Virgin Mary. It is enough for us that the enemies of these Scriptures, which
record these truths and which we believe, cannot prove against them any charge
of falsehood.
10. Faustus cannot pretend then I am unable to prove that Mary was of the
family of David, as I have shown him unable to prove that she was not. I
produce the strongest evidence from Scriptures of established authority, which
declare that Christ was of the seed of David, and that He was born without a father
of the Virgin Mary. Faustus expresses what he considers a most becoming
indignation against impropriety when he says, It is an injurious misrepresentation of
the writer to make him speak of the Son of God as the inmate of a womb. Of
course, the Catholic doctrine which teaches that Christ the Son of God was born in
the flesh of a virgin, does not make the Son of God the inmate of her womb in
the sense of having no existence beyond it, as if He had abandoned the government
of heaven and earth, or as if He had left the presence of the Father. The
mistake is with the Manichaeans, whose understanding is so incapable of forming a
conception of anything except what is material, that they cannot comprehend how
the Word of God, who is the virtue and wisdom of God, while remaining in
Himself and with the Father, and while governing the universe, reaches from end to
end in strength, and sweetly orders all things.(1) In the faultless procedure of
this adorable providence, He appointed for Himself an earthly mother; and to
free His servants from the bondage of corruption He took in this mother the form
of a servant, that is, a mortal body; and this body which He took He showed
openly, and when it had been exposed, even to suffering and death, He raised it
again from the dead, and built again the temple which had been destroyed. You who
shrink from this doctrine as blasphemous, make the members of your god to be
confined not in a virgin's womb, but in the wombs of all female animals, from
elephants down to flies. Perhaps you think the less of the true Christ, because
the Word is said so to have become incarnate in the Virgin's womb as to provide
a temple for Himself in human nature, while His own nature continued unaltered
in its integrity; and, on the other hand, you think the more of your god,
because in the bonds and pollution of his confinement in flesh, in the part which is
to be made fast to the mass of darkness, he seeks for help to no purpose, or
is even rendered powerless to ask for help.
BOOK XXIV.
FAUSTUS EXPLAINS THE MANICHAEAN DENIAL THAT MAN WAS MADE BY GOD AS APPLYING TO
THE FLESHLY MAN NOT TO THE SPIRITUAL. AUGUSTIN ELUCIDATES THE APOSTLE PAUL'S
CONTRASTS BETWEEN FLESH AND SPIRIT SO AS TO EXCLUDE THE MANICHAEAN VIEW.
1. FAUSTUS said: We are asked the reason But we do not assert that man is
in no sense for our denial that man is made by God. made by God; we only ask in
what sense, and when, and how. For, according to the apostle, there are two
men, one of whom he calls sometimes the outer man, generally the earthy,
sometimes, too, the old man: the other he calls the inner or heavenly or new man.(1)
The question is, Which of these is made by God? For there are likewise two times
of our nativity; one when nature brought us forth into this light, binding us
in the bonds of flesh; and the other, when the truth regenerated us on our
conversion from error and our entrance into the faith. It is this second birth of
which Jesus speaks in the Gospel, when He says, "Except a man be born again, he
cannot see the kingdom of God."(2) Nicodemus, not knowing what Christ meant, was
at a loss, and inquired how this could be, for an old man could not enter into
his mother's womb and be born a second time. Jesus said in reply, "Except a
man be born of water and of the Holy Spirit, he cannot see the kingdom of God."
Then He adds, "That which is born of the flesh is flesh; and that which is born
of the Spirit is spirit." Hence, as the birth in which our bodies originate is
not the only birth, but there is another in which we are born again in spirit,
an important question arises from this distinction as to which of those births
it is in which God makes us. The manner of birth also is twofold. In the
humiliating process of ordinary generation, we spring from the heat of animal
passion; but when we are brought into the faith, we are formed under good instruction
in honor and purity in Jesus Christ, by the Holy Spirit. For this reason, in
all religion, and especially in the Christian religion, young children are
invited to membership. This is hinted at in the words of His apostle: "My little
children, of whom I travail in birth again until Christ be formed in you."(3) The
question, then, is not whether God makes man, but what man He makes, and when,
and how. For if it is when we are fashioned in the womb that God forms us after
His own image, which is the common belief of Gentiles and Jews, and which is
also your belief, then God makes the old man, and produces us by means of sensual
passion, which does not seem suitable to His divine nature. But if it is when
we are converted and brought to a better life that we are formed by God, which
is the general doctrine of Christ and His apostles, and which is also our
doctrine, in this case God makes us new men, and produces us in honor and purity,
which would agree perfectly with His sacred and adorable majesty. If you do not
reject Paul's authority, we will prove to you from him what man God makes, and
when, and how. He says to the Ephesians, "That ye put off according to your
former conversation the old man, which is corrupt through deceitful lusts; and be
renewed in the spirit of your mind; and put on the new man, which after God is
created in righteousness and holiness of truth."4 This shows that in the
creation of man after the image of God, it is another man that is spoken of, and
another birth, and another manner of birth. The putting off and putting on of which
he speaks, point to the time of the reception of the truth; and the assertion
that the new man is created by God implies that the old man is created neither
by God nor after God. And when he adds, that this new man is made in holiness
and righteousness and truth, he thus points to another manner of birth of which
this is the character, and which, as I have said, differs widely from the manner
in which bodily generation is effected. And as he declares that only the
former is of God, it follows that the latter is not. Again, writing to the
Colossians, he uses words to the same effect: "Put off the old man with his deeds, and
put on the new man, which is renewed in the knowledge of God according to the
image of Him who created Him in you. "Here he not only shows that iris the new
man that God makes, but he declares the time and manner of the formation, for the
words in the knowledge of God point to the time of believing. Then he adds,
according to the image of Him who created him, to make it clear that the old man
is not the image of God, nor formed by God. Moreover, the following words,
"Where there is neither male nor female, Jew nor Greek, Barbarian nor Scythian,''5
show more plainly still that the birth by which we are made male and female,
Greeks and Jews, Scythians and Barbarians, is not the birth in which God effects
the formation of man; but that the birth with which God has to do is that in
which we lose the difference of nation and sex and condition, and become one like
Him who is one, that is, Christ. So the same apostle says again, "As many as
have been baptized in Christ have put on Christ: there is neither Jew nor Greek,
there is neither male nor female, there is neither bond nor free; but all are
one in Christ."6 Man, then, is made by God, not when from one he is divided
into many, but when from many he becomes one. The division is in the first birth,
or that of the body; union comes by the second, which is immaterial and divine.
This affords sufficient ground for our opinion, that the birth of the body
should be ascribed to nature, and the second birth to the Supernal Majesty. So the
same apostle says again to the Corinthians, "I have begotten you in Christ
Jesus by the gospel;"(1) and, speaking of himself, to the Galatians, "When it
pleased Him, who separated me from my mother's womb, to reveal His Son in me, that
I might preach Him among the Gentiles, immediately I conferred not with flesh
and blood."(2) It is plain that everywhere he speaks of the second or spiritual
birth as that in which we are made by God, as distinct from the indecency of
the first birth, in which we are on a level with other animals as regards dignity
and purity, as we are conceived in the maternal womb, and are formed, and
brought forth. You may observe that in this matter the dispute between us is not so
much about a question of doctrine as of interpretation. For you think that it
is the old or outer or earthy man that is said to have been made by God; while
we apply this to the heavenly man, giving the superiority to the inner or new
man. And our opinion is not rash or groundless, for we have learned it from
Christ and His apostles, who are proved to have been the first in the world who
thus taught.
2. AUGUSTIN replied: The Apostle Paul certainly uses the expression the
inner man for the spirit of the mind, and the outer man for the body and for this
mortal life; but we nowhere find him making these two different men, but one,
which is all made by God, both the inner and the outer. However, it is made in
the image of God only as regards the inner, which, besides being immaterial, is
rational, and is not possessed by the lower animals. God, then, did not make
one man after His own image, and another man not after that image; but the one
man, which includes both the inner and the outer, He made after His own image,
not as regards the possession of a body and of mortal life, but as regards the
rational mind with the power of knowing God, and with the superiority as
compared with all irrational creatures which the possession of reason implies. Faustus
allows that the inner man is made by God, when, as he says, it is renewed in
the knowledge of God after the image of Him that created him. I readily admit
this on the apostle's authority. Why does not Faustus admit on the same authority
that "God has placed the members every one in the body, as it has pleased
Him"?(3) Here we learn from the same apostle that God is the framer of the outer
man too. Why does Faustus take only what he thinks to be in his own favor, while
he leaves out or rejects what upsets the follies of the Manichaeans? Moreover,
in treating of the earthy and the heavenly man, and making the distinction
between the mortal and the immortal, between that which we are in Adam and that
which we shall be in Christ, the apostle quotes the declaration of the law
regarding the earthy or natural body, referring to the very book and the very passage
where it is written that God made the earthy man too. Speaking of the manner in
which the dead shall rise again, and of the body with which they shall come,
after using the similitude of the seeds of corn, that they are sown bare grain,
and that God gives them a body as it pleases Him, and to every seed his own
body,--thus, by the way, overthrowing the error of the Manichaeans, who say that
grains and plants, and all roots and shoots, are created by the race of
darkness, and not by God, who, according to them, instead of exerting power in the
production of these objects, is Himself subject to confinement in them,--he goes
on, after this refutation of Manichaean impieties, to describe the different
kinds of flesh. "All flesh," he says, "is not the same flesh." Then he speaks of
celestial and terrestrial bodies, and then of the change of our body by which it
will become spiritual and heavenly. "It is sown," he says, "in dishonor, it
shall rise in glory; it is sown in weakness, it shall rise in power; it is sown a
natural body, it shall rise a spiritual body." Then, in order to show the
origin of the animal body, he says, "There is a natural body, and there is a
spiritual body; as it is written, The first man, Adam, was made a living soul."4 Now
this is written in Genesis,5 where it is related how God made man, and animated
the body which He had formed of the earth. By the old man the apostle simply
means the old life, which is a life in sin, and is after the manner of Adam, of
whom it is said, "By one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and
so death passed upon all men, in that all have sinned."6 Thus the whole of this
man, both the inner and the outer part, has become old because of sin, and
liable to the punishment of mortality. There is, however, a restoration of the
inner man, when it is renewed after the image of its Creator, in the putting off of
unrighteousness--that is, the old man, and putting on righteousness--that is,
the new man. But when that which is sown a natural body shall rise a spiritual
body, the outer man too shall attain the dignity of a celestial character; so
that all that has been created may be created anew, and all that has been made
be remade by the Creator and Maker Himself. This is briefly explained in the
words: "The body is dead because of sin; but the spirit is life because of
righteousness. But if the Spirit of Him who raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in
you, He that raised up Christ from the dead will also quicken your mortal bodies
by His Spirit dwelling in you."(1) No one instructed in the Catholic doctrine
but knows that it is in the body that some are male and some female, not in the
spirit of the mind, in which we are renewed after the image of God. But
elsewhere the apostle teaches that God is the Maker of both; for he says, "Neither is
the woman without the man, nor the man without the woman, in the Lord; for as
the woman is of the man, so is the man by the woman; but all things are of
God."(2) The only reply given to this, by the perverse stupidity of those who are
alienated from the life of God by the ignorance which is in them, on account of
the blindness of their heart, is, that whatever pleases them in the apostolic
writings is true, and whatever displeases them is false. This is the insanity of
the Manichaeans, who will be wise if they cease to be Manichaeans. As it is, if
they are asked whether it is He that remakes and renews the inner man (which
they acknowledge to be renewed after the image of God, and they themselves quote
the passage in support of this; and, according to Faustus, God makes man when
the inner man is renewed in the image of God), they will answer, yes. And if we
then go on to ask when God made what He now renews, they must devise some
subterfuge to prevent the exposure of their absurdities. For, according to them, the
inner man is not formed or created or originated by God, but is part of His
own substance sent against His enemies; and instead of becoming old by sin, it is
through necessity captured and damaged by the enemy. Not to repeat all the
nonsense they talk, the first man they speak of is not the man of the earth earthy
that the apostle speaks of,(3) but an invention proceeding from their own
magazine of untruths. Faustus, though he chooses man as a subject for discussion,
says not a word of this first man; for he is afraid that his opponents in the
discussion might come to know something about him.
BOOK XXV.
FAUSTUS SEEKS TO BRING INTO RIDICULE THE ORTHODOX CLAIM TO BELIEVE IN THE
INFINITY OF GOD BY CARICATURING THE ANTHROPOMORPHIC REPRESENTATIONS OF THE OLD
TESTAMENT. AUGUSTIN EXPRESSES HIS DESPAIR OF BEING ABLE TO INDUCE THE MANICHAEANS
TO ADOPT RIGHT VIEWS OF THE INFINITUDE OF GOD SO LONG AS THEY CONTINUE TO REGARD
THE SOUL AND GOD AS EXTENDED IN SPACE.
1. FAUSTUS said: Is God finite or infinite? He must be finite unless you
are mistaken in addressing Him as the God of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob;
unless, indeed, the being thus addressed is different from the God you call infinite.
In the case of the God of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob, the mark of
circumcision, which separated these men from fellowship with other people, marked also the
limit of God's power as extending only to them. And a being whose power is
finite cannot himself be infinite. Moreover, in this address, you do not mention
even the ancients before Abraham, such as Enoch, Noah, and Shem, and others like
them, whom you allow to have been righteous though in uncircumcision; but
because they lacked this distinguishing mark, you will not call God their God, but
only of Abraham and his seed. Now, if God is one and infinite, what need of
such careful particularity in addressing Him, as if it was not enough to name God,
without adding whose God He is--Abraham's, namely, and Isaac's and Jacob's; as
if Abraham were a landmark to steer by in your invocation, to escape shipwreck
among a shoal of deities? The Jews, who are circumcised, may very properly
address this deity, as having a reason for it, because they call God the God of
circumcision, in contrast to the gods of uncircumcision. But why you should do
the same, it is difficult to understand; for you do not pretend to have Abraham's
sign, though you invoke his God. If we understand the matter rightly, the Jews
and their God seem to have set marks upon one another for the purpose of
recognition, that they might not lose each ether. So God gave them the disgusting
mark of circumcision, that, in whatever land or among whatever people they might
be, they might by being circumcised be known to be His. They again marked God
by calling Him the God of their fathers, that, wherever He might be, though
among a crowd of gods, He might, on hearing the name God of Abraham, God of Isaac,
God of Jacob, know at once that He was addressed. So we often see, in a number
of people of the same name, that no one answers till called by his surname. In
the same way the shepherd or herdsman makes use of a brand to prevent his
property being taken by others. In thus marking God by calling Him the God of
Abraham and Isaac and Jacob, you show not only that He is finite, but also that you
have no connection with Him, because you have not the mark of circumcision by
which He recognizes His own. Therefore, if this is the God you worship, there can
be no doubt of His being finite. But if you say that God is infinite, you must
first of all give up this finite deity, and by altering your invocation, show
your penitence for your past errors. We have thus proved God to be finite,
taking you on your own ground. But to determine whether the supreme and true God is
infinite or not, we need only refer to the opposition between good and evil.
If evil does not exist, then certainly God is infinite; otherwise He must be
finite. Evil, however, undoubtedly exists; therefore God is not infinite. It is
where good stops that evil begins.
2. AUGUSTIN replied: No one that knows you would dream of asking you about
the infinitude of God, or of discussing the matter with you. For, before there
can be any degree of spirituality in any of your conceptions, you must first
have your minds cleared by simple faith, and by some elementary knowledge, from
the illusions of carnal and material ideas. This your our heresy prevents you
from doing, for it invariably represents the body and the soul and God as
extended in space, either finite or infinite, while the idea of space is applicable
only to the body. As long as this is the case, it will be better for you to
leave this matter alone; for you can teach no truth regarding it, any more than in
other matters; and in this you are unfit for learning, as you might do in other
things, if you were not proud and quarrelsome. For in such questions as how
God can be finite, when no space can contain Him; how He can be infinite, when
the Son knows Him perfectly; how He can be finite, and yet unbounded; how He can
be infinite, and yet perfect; how He can be finite, who is without measure; how
He can be infinite, who is the measure of all things--all carnal ideas go for
nothing; and if the carnality is to be removed, it must first become ashamed of
itself. Accordingly, your best way of ending the matter you have brought
forward of God as finite or infinite, is to say no more about it till you cease
going so far astray from Christ, who is the end of the law. Of the God of Abraham
and Isaac and Jacob we have already said enough to show why He who is the true
God of all creatures wished to be familiarly known by His people under this
name. On circumcision, too, we have already spoken in several places in answer to
ignorant reproaches. The Manichaeans would find nothing to ridicule in this sign
if they would view it as appointed by God, to be an appropriate symbol of the
putting off of the flesh. They ought thus to consider the rite with a Christian
instead of a heretical mind; as it is written, "To the pure all things are
pure." But, considering the truth of the following words, "To the unclean and
unbelieving nothing is pure, but even their mind and conscience are defiled,"(1) we
must remind our witty opponents, that if circumcision is indecent, as they say
it is, they should rather weep than laugh at it; for their god is exposed to
restraint and contamination in conjunction both with the skin which is cut and
with the blood which is shed.
BOOK XXVI.
FAUSTUS INSISTS THAT JESUS MIGHT HAVE DIED THOUGH NOT BORN, BY THE EXERCISE OF
DIVINE POWER, YET HE REJECTS BIRTH AND DEATH ALIKE. AUGUSTIN MAINTAINS THAT
THERE ARE SOME THINGS THAT EVEN GOD CANNOT DO, ONE OF WHICH IS TO DIE. HE REFUTES
THE DOCETISM OF THE MANICHAEANS.
1. FAUSTUS said: You ask, If Jesus was not born, how did He die? Well this
is a probability, such as one makes use of in want of proofs. We will,
however, answer the question by examples taken from what you generally believe. If
they are true, they will prove our case; if they are false, they will help you no
more than they will us. You say then, How could Jesus die, if He were not man?
In return, I ask you, How did Elias not die, though he was a man? Could a
mortal encroach upon the limits of immortality, and could not Christ add to His
immortality whatever experience of death was required? If Elias, contrary to
nature, lives for ever, why not allow that Jesus, with no greater contrariety to
nature, could remain in death for three days? Besides that, it is not only Elias,
but Moses and Enoch you believe to be immortal, and to have been taken up with
their bodies to heaven. Accordingly, if it is a good argument that Jesus was a
man because He died, it is an equally good argument that Elias was not a man
because he did not die. But as it is false that Elias was not a man,
notwithstanding his supposed immortality, so it is false that Jesus was a man, though He is
considered to have died. The truth is, if you will believe it, that the Hebrews
were in a mistake regarding both the death of Jesus and the immortality of
Elias. For it is equally untrue that Jesus died and that Elias did not die. But
you believe whatever you please; and for the rest, you appeal to nature. And,
allowing this appeal, nature is against both the death of the immortal and the
immortality of the mortal. And if we refer to the power of effecting their purpose
as possessed by God and by man, it seems more possible for Jesus to die than
for Elias not to die; for the power of Jesus is greater than that of Elias. But
if you exalt the weaker to heaven, though nature is against it, and, forgetting
his condition as a mortal, endow him with eternal felicity, why should I not
admit that Jesus could die if He pleased, even though I were to grant His death
to have been real, and not a mere semblance? For, as from the outset of His
taking the likeness of man He underwent in appearance all the experiences of
humanity, it was quite consistent that He should complete the system by appearing to
die.
2. Moreover, it is to be remembered that this reference to what nature
grants as possible, should be made in connection with all the history of Jesus,
and not only with His death. According to nature, it is impossible that a man
blind from his birth should see the light; and yet Jesus appears to have performed
a miracle of this kind, so that the Jews themselves exclaimed that from the
beginning of the world it was not seen that one opened the eyes of a man born
blind.(1) So also healing a withered hand, giving the power of utterance and
expression to those born dumb, restoring animation to the dead, with the recovery of
their bodily frame after dissolution had begun, produce a feeling of
amazement, and must seem utterly incredible in view of what is naturally possible and
impossible. And yet, as Christians, we believe all the things to have been done
by the same person; for we regard not the law of nature, but the powerful
operation of God. There is a story, too, of Jesus having been cast from the brow of a
hill, and having escaped unhurt. If, then, when thrown down from a height He
did not die, simply because He chose not to die, why should He not have had the
power to die when He pleased? We take this way of answering you because you
have a fancy for discussion, and affect to use logical weapons not properly
belonging to you. As regards our own belief, it is no more true that Jesus died than
that Elias is immortal.
3. AUGUSTIN replied: As to Enoch and Elias and Moses, our belief is
determined not by Faustus' suppositions, but by the declarations of Scripture,
resting as they do on foundations of the strongest and surest evidence. People in
error, as you are, are unfit to decide what is natural, and what contrary to
nature. We admit that what is contrary to the ordinary course of human experience is
commonly spoken of as contrary to nature. Thus the apostle uses the words, "If
thou art cut out of the wild olive, and engrafted contrary to nature in the
good olive."(2) Contrary to nature is here used in the sense of contrary to human
experience of the course of nature; as that a wild olive engrafted in a good
olive should bring forth the fatness of the olive instead of wild berries. But
God, the Author and Creator of all natures, does nothing contrary to nature; for
whatever is done by Him who appoints all natural order and measure and
proportion must be natural in every case. And man himself acts contrary to nature only
when he sins; and then by punishment he is brought back to nature again. The
natural order of justice requires either that sin should not be committed or
that it should not go unpunished. In either case, the natural order is preserved,
if not by the soul, at least by God. For sin pains the conscience, and brings
grief on the mind of the sinner, by the loss of the light of justice, even
should no physical sufferings follow, which are inflicted for correction, or are
reserved for the incorrigible. There is, however, no impropriety in saying that
God does a thing contrary to nature, when it is contrary to what we know of
nature. For we give the name nature to the usual common course of nature; and
whatever God does contrary to this, we call a prodigy, or a miracle. But against the
supreme law of nature, which is beyond the knowledge both of the ungodly and of
weak believers, God never acts, any more than He acts against Himself. As
regards spiritual and rational beings, to which class the human soul belongs, the
more they partake of this unchangeable law and light, the more clearly they see
what is possible, and what impossible; and again, the greater their distance
from it, the less their perception of the future, and the more frequent their
surprise at strange occurrences.
4. Thus of what happened to Elias we are ignorant; but still we believe
the truthful declarations of Scripture regarding him. Of one thing we are
certain, that what God willed happened, and that except by God s will nothing can
happen to any one. So, if I am told that it is possible that the flesh of a certain
man shall be changed into a celestial body, I allow the possibility, but I
cannot tell whether it will be done; and the reason of my ignorance is, that I am
not acquainted with the will of God in the matter. That it will be done if it
is God's will, is perfectly clear and indubitable. Again, if I am told that
something would happen if God did not prevent it from happening, I reply
confidently that what is to happen is the action of God, not the event which might
otherwise have happened. For God knows His own future action, and therefore He knows
also the effect of that action in preventing the happening of what would
otherwise have happened; and, beyond all question, what God knows is more certain
than what man thinks. Hence it is as impossible for what is future not to happen,
as for what is past not to have happened; for it can never be God's will that
anything should, in the same sense, be both true and false. Therefore all that
is properly future cannot but happen; what does not happen never was future;
even as all things which are properly in the past did indubitably take place.
5. Accordingly, to say, if God is almighty, let Him make what has been
done to be undone, is in fact to say, if God is almighty, let Him make a thing to
be in the same sense both true and false. God can put an end to the existence
of anything, when the thing to be put an end to has a present existence; as when
He puts an end by death to the existence of any one who has been brought into
existence in birth; for in this case there is an actual existence which may be
put a stop to. But when a thing does not exist, the existence cannot be put a
stop to. Now, what is past no longer exists and whatever has an existence which
can be put an end to cannot be past. What is truly past is no longer present;
and the truth of its past existence is in our judgment, not in the thing itself
which no longer exists. The proposition asserting anything to be past is true
when the thing no longer exists. God cannot make such a proposition false,
because He cannot contradict the truth. The truth in this case, or the true
judgment, is first of all in our own mind, when we know and give expression to it. But
should it disappear from our minds by our forgetting it, it would still remain
as truth. It will always be true that the past thing which is no longer present
had an existence; and the truth of its past existence after it has stopped is
the same as the truth of its future existence before it began to be. This truth
cannot be contradicted by God, in whom abides the supreme and unchangeable
truth, and whose illumination is the source of all the truth to be found in any
mind or understanding. Now God is not omnipotent in the sense of being able to
die; nor does this inability prevent His being omnipotent. True omnipotence
belongs to Him who truly exists, and who alone is the source of all existence, both
spiritual and corporeal. The Creator makes what use He pleases of all His
creatures; and His pleasure is in harmony with true and unchangeable justice, by
which, as by His own nature, He, Himself unchangeable, brings to pass the changes
of all changeable things according to the desert of their natures or of their
actions. No one, therefore, would be so foolish as to deny that Elias being a
creature of God could be changed either for the worse or for the better; or that
by the will of the omnipotent God he could be changed in a manner unusual among
men. So we can have no reason for doubting what on the high authority of
Scripture is related of him, unless we limit the power of God to things which we are
familiar with.
6. Faustus' argument is, If Elias who was a man could escape death, why
might not Christ have the power of dying, since He was more than man? This is the
same as to say, If human nature can be changed for the better, why should not
the divine nature be changed for the worse?--a weak argument, seeing that human
nature is changeable, while the divine nature is not. Such a method of
inference would lead to the glaring absurdity, that if God can bestow eternal glory on
man, He must also have the power of consigning Himself to eternal misery.
Faustus will reply that his argument refers only to three days of death for God, as
compared with eternal life for man. Well, if you understood the three days of
death in the sense of the death of the flesh which God took as a part of our
mortal nature, you would be quite correct; for the truth of the gospel makes
known that the death of Christ for three days was for the eternal life of men. But
in arguing that there is no impropriety in asserting a death of three days of
the divine nature itself, without any assumption of mortality, because human
nature can be endowed with immortality, you display the folly of one who knows
neither God nor the gifts of God. And indeed, since you make part of your god to
be fastened to the mass of darkness for ever, how can you escape the absurd
conclusion already mentioned, that God consigns Himself to eternal misery,? You
will then require to prove that part of light is light, while part of God is not
God. To give you in a word, without argument, the true reason of our faith, as
regards Elias having been caught up to heaven from the earth, though only a man,
and as regards Christ being truly born of a virgin, and truly dying on the
cross, our belief in both cases is grounded on the declaration of Holy
Scripture,(1) which it is piety to believe, and impiety to disbelieve. What is said of
Elias you pretend to deny, for you will pretend anything. Regarding Christ,
although even you do not go the length of saying that He could not die, though He
could be born, still you deny His birth from a virgin, and assert His death on the
cross to have been feigned, which is equivalent to denying it too, except as a
mockery for the delusion of men; and you allow so much merely to obtain
indulgence for your own falsehoods from the believers in these fictions.
7. The question which Faustus makes it appear that he is asked by a
Catholic, If Jesus was not born, how could He die? could be asked only by one who
overlooked the fact that Adam died, though he was not born. Who will venture to
say that the Son of God could not, if He had pleased, have made for Himself a
true human body in the same way as He did for Adam; for all things were made by
Him?(2) or who will deny that He who is the Almighty Son of the Almighty could,
if He had chosen, have taken a body from a heavenly substance, or from air or
vapor, and have so changed it into the precise character of a human body, as that
He might have lived as a man, and have died in it? Or, once more, if He had
chosen to take a body of none of the material substances which He had made, but
to create for Himself from nothing real flesh, as all things were created by Him
from nothing, none of us will oppose this by saying that He could not have
done it. The reason of our believing Him to have been born of the Virgin Mary, is
not that He could not otherwise have appeared among men in a true body, but
because it is so written in the Scripture, which we must believe in order to be
Christians, or to be saved. We believe, then, that Christ was born of the Virgin
Mary, because it is so written in the Gospel; we believe that He died on the
cross, because it is so written in the Gospel; we believe that both His birth and
death were real, because the Gospel is no fiction. Why He chose to suffer all
these things in a body taken from a woman is a matter known only to Himself.
Perhaps He took this way of giving importance and honor to both the sexes which
He had created, taking the form of a man, and being born of a woman; or there
may have been some other reason, we cannot tell. But this may be confidently
affirmed, that what took place was exactly as we are told in the Gospel narrative,
and that what the wisdom of God determined upon was exactly what ought to have
happened. We place the authority of the Gospel above all heretical discussions;
and we admire the counsel of divine wisdom more than any counsel of any
creature.
8. Faustus calls upon us to believe him, and says, The truth is, if you
will believe it, that the Hebrews were in a mistake regarding both the death of
Jesus and the immortality of Elias. And a little after he adds, As from the
outset of His taking the likeness of man He underwent in appearance all the
experiences of humanity, it was quite consistent that He should seal the dispensation
by appearing to die. How can this infamous liar, who declares that Christ
feigned death, expect to be believed? Did Christ utter falsehood when He said, "It
behoves the Son of man to be killed, and to rise the third day?"(3) And do you
tell us to believe what you say, as if you utter no falsehoods? In that case,
Peter was more truthful than Christ when he said to Him, "Be it far from Thee,
Lord; this shall not be unto Thee;" for which it was said to him, "Get thee
behind me, Satan."(4) This rebuke was not lost upon Peter, for, after his correction
and full preparation, he preached even to his own death the truth of the death
of Christ. But if Peter deserved to be called Satan for thinking that Christ
would not die, what should you be called, when you not only deny that Christ
died, but assert that He reigned death? You give, as a reason for Christ's
appearing to die, that He underwent in appearance all the experiences of humanity. But
that He reigned all the experiences of humanity is only your opinion in
opposition to the Gospel. In reality, when the evangelist says that Jesus slept,(1)
that He was hungry,(2) that He was thirsty,(3) that He was sorrowful,(4) or
glad, and so on,--these things are all true in the sense of not being feigned, but
actual experiences; only that they were undergone, not from a mere natural
necessity, but in the exercise of a controlling will, and of divine power. In the
case of a man, anger, sorrow, sleeping, being hungry and thirst, are often
involuntary; in Christ they were acts of His own will. So also men are born
without any act of their own will, and suffer against their will; while Christ was
born and suffered by His own will. Still, the things are true; and the accurate
narrative of them is intended to instruct whoever believes in Christ's gospel in
the truth, not to delude him with falsehoods.
BOOK XXVII.
FAUSTUS WARNS AGAINST PRESSING TOO FAR THE ARGUMENT, THAT IF JESUS WAS NOT
BORN HE CANNOT HAVE SUFFERED. AUGUSTIN ACCEPTS THE BIRTH AND DEATH ALIKE ON THE
TESTIMONY OF THE GOSPEL NARRATIVE, WHICH IS HIGHER AUTHORITY THAN THE FALSEHOOD
OF MANICHAEUS.
1. FAUSTUS said: If Jesus was not born, He cannot have suffered; but since
He did suffer, He must have been born. I advise you not to have recourse to
logical inference in these matters, or else your whole faith will be shaken. For,
even according to you, Jesus was born miraculously of a virgin; which the
argument from consequents to antecedents shows to be false. For your argument might
thus be turned against you: If Jesus was born of a woman, He must have been
begotten by a man; but He was not begotten by a man, therefore He was not born of
a woman. If, as you believe, He could be born without being begotten, why
could He not also suffer without being brought forth?
2. AGUSTIN replied: The argument which you here reply to is one which
could be used only by such ignorant people as you succeed in misleading, not by
those who know enough to refute you. Jesus could both be born without being
begotten and suffer without being brought forth. His being one and not the other was
the effect of His own will. He chose to be born without being begotten, and not
to suffer without being brought forth. And if you ask how I know that He was
brought forth, and that He suffered, I read this in the faithful Gospel
narrative. If I ask how you know what you state, you bring forward the authority of
Manichaeus, and charge the Gospel with falsehood. Even if Manichaeus did not set
forth falsehood as an excellence in Christ, I should not believe his statements.
His praise of falsehood comes from nothing that he found in Christ, but from
his own moral character.
BOOK XXVIII.
FAUSTUS RECURS TO THE GENEALOGY AND INSISTS UPON EXAMINING IT AS REGARDS ITS
CONSISTENCY WITH ITSELF. AUGUSTIN TAKES HIS STAND ON SCRIPTURE AUTHORITY AND
MAINTAINS THAT MATTHEW"S STATEMENTS AS TO THE BIRTH OF CHRIST MUST BE ACCEPTED AS
FINAL.
1. FAUSTUS said: Christ, you say, could not have died, had He not been
born. I reply, If He was born, He cannot have been God; or if He could both be God
and be born, why could He not both be born and die? Plainly, arguments and
necessary consequences are not applicable to those matters, where the question is
of the account to be given of Jesus. The answer must be obtained from His own
statements, or from the statements of His apostles regarding Him. The genealogy
must be examined as regards its consistency with itself, instead Of arguing
from the supposition of Christ's death to the fact of His birth; for He might have
suffered without having been born, or He might have been born, and yet never
have suffered; for you yourselves acknowledge that with God nothing is
impossible, which is inconsistent with the denial that Christ could have suffered
without having been born.
2. AUGUSTIN replied: You are always answering arguments which no one uses,
instead of our real arguments, which you cannot answer. No one says that
Christ could not die if He had not been born; for Adam died though he had not been
born. What we say is, Christ was born, because this is said not by this or that
heretic, but in the holy Gospel; and He died, for this too is written, not in
some heretical production, but in the holy Gospel. You set aside argument on the
question of the true account to be given of Jesus, and refer to what He says
of Himself, and what His apostles say of Him; and yet, when I begin to quote the
Gospel of His apostle Matthew, where we have the whole narrative of Christ's
birth, you forthwith deny that Matthew wrote the narrative, though this is
affirmed by the continuous testimony of the whole Church, from the days of apostolic
presidency to the bishops of our own time. What authority will you quote
against this? Perhaps some book of Manichaeus, where it is denied that Jesus was
born of a virgin. As, then, I believe your book to be the production of
Manichaeus, since it has been kept and handed down among the disciples of Manichaeus,
from the time when he lived to the present time, by a regular succession of your
presidents, so I ask you to believe the book which I quote to have been written
by Matthew, since it has been handed down from the days of Matthew in the
Church, without any break in the connection between that time and the present. The
question then is, whether we are to believe the statements of an apostle who was
in the company of Christ while He was on earth, or of a man away in Persia,
born long after Christ. But perhaps you will quote some other book bearing the
name of an apostle known to have been chosen by Christ; and you will find there
that Christ was not born of Mary. Since, then, one of the books must be false,
the question in this case is, whether we are to yield our belief to a book
acknowledged and approved as handed down from the beginning in the Church founded by
Christ Himself, and maintained through the apostles and their successors in an
unbroken connection all over the world to the present day; or to a book which
this Church condemns as unknown, and which, moreover, is brought forward by men
who prove their veracity by praising Christ for falsehood.
3. Here you will say, Examine the genealogy as given in the two Gospels,
and see if it is consistent with itself. The answer to this has been given
already.(1) Your difficulty is how Joseph could have two fathers. But even if you
could not have thought of the explanation, that one was his own father, and the
other adopted, you should not have been so ready to put yourself in opposition
to such high authority. Now that this explanation has been given you, I call
upon you to acknowledge the truth of the Gospel, and above all to cease your
mischievous and unreasonable attacks upon the truth.
4. Faustus most plausibly refers to what Jesus said of Himself. But how is
this to be known except from the narratives of His disciples? And if we do not
believe them when they tell us that Christ was born of a virgin, how shall we
believe what they record as said by Christ of Himself? For, as regards any
writing professing to come immediately from Christ Himself, if it were really His,
how is it not read and acknowledged and regarded as of supreme authority in the
Church, which, beginning with Christ Himself, and continued by His apostles,
who were succeeded by the bishops, has been maintained and extended to our own
day, and in which is found the fulfillment of many former predictions. while
those concerning the last days are sure to be accomplished in the future? In
regard to the appearance of such a writing, it would require to be considered from
what quarter it issued. Supposing it to have issued from Christ Himself, those
in immediate connection with Him might very well have received it, and have
transmitted it to others. In this case, the authority of the writing would be fully
established by the traditions of various communities, and of their presidents,
as I have already said. Who, then, is so infatuated as in our day to believe
that the Epistle of Christ issued by Manichaeus is genuine, or to disbelieve
Matthew's narrative of Christ's words and actions? Or, if the question is of
Matthew being the real author, who would not, in this also, believe what he finds
in the Church, which has a distinct history in unbroken connection from the days
of Matthew to the present time, rather than a Persian interloper, who comes
more than two hundred years after, and wishes us to believe his account of
Christ's words and actions rather than that of Matthew; whereas, even in the case of
the Apostle Paul, who was called from heaven after the Lord's ascension, the
Church would not have believed him, had there not been apostles in life with whom
he might communicate, and compare his gospel with theirs, so as to be
recognized as belonging to the same society? When it was ascertained that Paul preached
what the apostles preached, and that he lived in fellowship and harmony with
them, and when God's testimony was added by Paul's working miracles like those
done by the apostles, his authority became so great, that his words are now
received in the Church, as if, to use his own appropriate words, Christ were
speaking in him.(1) Manichaeus, on the other hand, thinks that the Church of Christ
should believe what he says in opposition to the Scriptures, which are supported
by such strong and continuous evidence, and in which the Church finds an
emphatic injunction, that whoever preaches to her differently from what she has
received must be anathema.(2)
5. Faustus tells us that he has good grounds for concluding that these
Scriptures are unworthy of credit. And yet he speaks of not using arguments. But
the argument too shall be refuted. The end of the whole argument is to bring the
soul to believe that the reason of its misery in this world is, that it is the
means of preventing God from being deprived of His kingdom, and that God's
substance and nature is so exposed to change, corruption, injury, and
contamination, that part of it is incurably defiled, and is consigned by Him self to
eternal punishment in the mass of darkness, though, when it was in harmless union
with Himself, and guilty of no crime, He knowingly sent it where it was to suffer
defilement. This is the end of all your arguments and fictions; and would that
there were an end of them as regards your heart and your lips, that you might
sometime desist from believing and uttering those execrable blasphemies! But,
says Faustus, I prove from the writings themselves that they cannot be in all
points trustworthy, for they contradict one another. Why not say, then, that they
are wholly untrustworthy, if their testimony is inconsistent and
self-contradictory? But, says Faustus, I say what I think to be in accordance with truth.
With what truth? The truth is only your own fiction, which begins with God's
battle, goes on to His contamination, and ends with His damnation. No one, says
Faustus, believes writings which contradict themselves. But if you think they do
this, it is because you do not understand them; for your ignorance has been
manifested in regard to the passages you have quoted in support of your opinion,
and the same will appear in regard to any quotations you may still make. So there
is no reason for our not believing these writings, supported as they are by
such weighty testimony; and this is itself the best reason for pronouncing
accursed those whose preaching differs from what is there written.
BOOK XXIX.
FAUSTUS SEEKS TO JUSTIFY THE DOCETISM OF THE MANICHAEANS. AUGUSTIN INSISTS
THAT THERE IS NOTHING DISGRACEFUL IN BEING BORN.
1. FAUSTUS said: If Christ was visible, and suffered without having been
born, this was sorcery. This argument of yours may be turned against you, by
replying that it was sorcery if He was conceived or brought forth without being
begotten. It is not in accordance with the law of nature that a virgin should
bring forth, and still less that she should still be a virgin after bringing
forth. Why, then, do you refuse to admit that Christ, in a preternatural manner,
suffered without submitting to the condition of birth? Believe me: in substance,
both our beliefs are contrary to nature; but our belief is decent, and yours is
not. We give an explanation of Christ's passion which is at least probable,
while the only explanation you give of His birth is false. In fine, we hold that
He suffered in appearance, and did not really die; you believe in an actual
birth, and conception in the womb. If it is not so, you have only to acknowledge
that the birth too was a delusion, and our whole dispute will be at an end. As to
what you frequently allege, that Christ could not have appeared or spoken to
men without having been born, it is absurd; for, as our teachers have shown,
angels have often appeared and spoken to men.
2. AUGUSTIN replied: We do not say that to die without having been born is
sorcery; for, as we have said already, this happened in the case of Adam. But,
though it had never happened, who will venture to say that Christ could not,
if He had so pleased, have come without taking His body from a virgin, and yet
appearing in a true booty to redeem us by a true death? However, it was better
that He should be, as He actually was, born of a virgin, and, by His
condescension, do honor to both sexes, for whose deliverance He was to die, by taking a
man's body born of a woman. In this He testifies emphatically against you, and
refutes your doctrine, which makes the sexes the work of the devil. What we call
sorcery in your doctrine is your making Christ's passion and death to have been
only in appearance, so that, by a spectral illusion, He seemed to die when He
did not. Hence you must also make His resurrection spectral and illusory and
false; for if there was no true death, there could not be a real resurrection.
Hence also the marks which He showed to His doubting disciples must have been
false; and Thomas was not assured by truth, but cheated by a lie, when he
exclaimed, "My Lord, and my God."(1) And yet you would have us believe that your tongue
utters truth, though Christ's whole body was a falsehood. Our argument against
you is, that the Christ you make is such that you cannot be His true disciples
unless you too practise deceit. The fact that Christ's body was the only one
born of a virgin does not prove that there was sorcery in His birth, any more
than there is sorcery in its being the only body to rise again on the third day,
never to die any more. Will you say that there was sorcery in all the Lord's
miracles because they were unusual? They really happened, and their appearance,
as seen by men, was true, and not an illusion; and when they are said to be
contrary to nature, it is not that they oppose nature, but that they transcend the
method of nature to which we are accustomed. May God keep the minds of His
people who are still babes in Christ from being influenced by Faustus, when he
recommends as a duty that we should acknowledge Christ's birth to have been
illusory and not real, that so we may end our dispute Nay, verily, rather let us
continue to contend for the truth against them, than agree with them in falsehood.
3. But if we are to end the controversy by saying this, why do not our
opponents themselves say it? While they assert the death of Christ to have been
not real but feigned, why do they make out that He had no birth at all, not even
of the same kind as His death? If they had so much regard for the authority of
the evangelist as to oblige them to admit that Christ suffered, at least in
appearance, it is the same authority which testifies to His birth. Two
evangelists, indeed, give the story of the birth;(2) but in all we read of Jesus having a
mother.(3) Perhaps Faustus was unwilling to make the birth an illusion, because
the difference of the genealogies given in Matthew and Luke causes an apparent
discrepancy. But, supposing a man ignorant, there are many things also
relating to the passion of Christ in which he will think the evangelists disagree;
suppose him instructed, he finds entire agreement. Can it be right to feign death,
and wrong to feign birth? And yet Faustus will have us acknowledge the birth
to be feigned, in order to put an end to the dispute. It will appear presently
in our reply to another objection what we think to be the reason why Faustus
will not admit of any birth, even a feigned one.
4. We deny that there is anything disgraceful in the bodies of saints.
Some members, indeed, are called uncomely, because they have not so pleasing an
appearance as those constantly in view.(4) But attend to what the apostle says,
when from the unity and harmony of the body he enjoins charity on the Church:
"Much more those members of the body, which seem to be feeble, are necessary: and
those members of the body, which we think to be less honorable, upon these we
bestow more abundant honor; and our uncomely parts have more abundant
comeliness. For our comely parts have no need: but God hath tempered the body together,
having given more abundant honor to that part which lacked: that there should
be no schism in the body."(5) The licentious and intemperate use of those
members is disgraceful, but not the members themselves; for they are preserved in
purity not only by the unmarried, but also by wedded fathers and mothers of holy
life, in whose case the natural appetite, as serving not lust, but an
intelligent purpose in the production of children, is in no way disgraceful. Still more,
in the holy Virgin Mary, who by faith conceived the body of Christ, there was
nothing disgraceful in the members which served not for a common natural
conception, but for a miraculous birth. In order that we might conceive Christ in
sincere hearts, and, as it were, produce Him in confession, it was meet that His
body should come from the substance of His mother without injury to her bodily
purity. We cannot suppose that the mother of Christ suffered loss by His birth,
or that the gift of productiveness displaced the grace of virginity. If these
occurrences, which were real and no illusion, are new and strange, and contrary
to the common course of nature, the reason is, that they are great, and amazing,
and divine; and all the more on this account are they true, and firm, and
sure. Angels, says Faustus, appeared and spoke without having been born. As if we
held that Christ could not have appeared or spoken without having been born of a
woman! He could, but He chose not; and what He chose was best. And that He
chose to do what He did is plain, because He acted, not like your god, from
necessity, but voluntarily. That He was born we know, because we put faith not in a
heretic, but in Christ's gospel.
BOOK XXX.
FAUSTUS REPELS THE INSINUATION THAT THE PROPHECY OF PAUL WITH REFERENCE TO
THOSE THAT SHOULD FORBID TO MARRY, ABSTAIN FROM MEATS, ETC., APPLIES TO THE
MANICHAEANS MORE THAN TO THE CATHOLIC ASCETICS, WHO ARE HELD IN THE HIGHEST ESTEEM IN
THE CHURCH. AUGUSTIN JUSTIFIES THIS APPLICATION OF THE PROPHECY, AND SHOWS THE
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MANICHAEAN AND CHRISTIAN ASCETICISM.
1. FAUSTUS said: You apply to us the words of Paul: "Some shall depart
from the faith, giving heed to lying spirits, and doctrines of devils; speaking
lies in hypocrisy; having their consciences seared as with a hot iron; forbidding
to marry, abstaining from meats, which God has created to be received with
thanksgiving by believers."(1) I refuse to admit that the apostle said this,
unless you first acknowledge that Moses and the prophets taught doctrines of devils,
and were the interpreters of a lying and malignant spirit; since they enjoin
with great emphasis abstinence from swine's flesh and other meats, which they
call unclean. This case must first be settled; and you must consider long and
carefully how their teaching is to be viewed: whether they said these things from
God, or from the devil. As regards these matters, either Moses and the prophets
must be condemned along with us; or we must be acquitted along with them. You
are unjust in condemning us, as you do now, as followers of the doctrine of
devils, because we require the priestly class to abstain from animal food; for we
limit the prohibition to the priesthood, while you hold that your prophets, and
Moses himself, who forbade all classes of men to eat the flesh of swine, and
hares, and conies, besides all varieties of cuttle-fish, and all fish wanting
scales, said this not in a lying spirit, nor in the doctrine of devils, but from
God, and in the Holy Spirit. Even supposing, then, that Paul said these words,
you can convince me only by condemning Moses and the prophets; and so, though
you will not do it for reason or truth, you will contradict Moses for the sake
of your belly.
2. Besides, you have in your Book of Daniel the account of the three
youths, which you will find it difficult to reconcile with the opinion that to
abstain from meats is the doctrine of devils. For we are told that they abstained
not only from what the law forbade, but even from what it allowed;(2) and you are
wont to praise them, and count them as martyrs; though they too followed the
doctrine of devils, if this is to be taken as the apostle's opinion. And Daniel
himself declares that he fasted for three weeks, not eating flesh or drinking
wine, while he prayed for his people.(3) How is it that he boasts of this
doctrine of devils, and glories in the falsehood of a lying spirit?
3. Again, what are we to think of you, or of the better class of
Christians among you, some of whom abstain from swine's flesh, some from the flesh of
quadrupeds, and some from all animal food, while-all the Church admires them for
it, and regards them with profound veneration, as only not gods? You
obstinately refuse to consider that if the words quoted from the apostle are true and
genuine, these people too are misled by doctrines of devils. And there is another
observance which no one will venture to explain away or to deny, for it is
known to all, and is practised yearly with particular attention in the congregation
of Catholics all over the world--I mean the fast of forty days, in the due
observance of which a man must abstain from all the things which, according to
this verse, were created by God that we might receive them, while at the same time
he calls this abstinence a doctrine of devils. So, my dear friends, shall we
say that you too, during this fast, while celebrating the mysteries of Christ's
passion, live after the manner of devils, and are deluded by a seducing spirit,
and speak lies in hypocrisy, and have your conscience seared with a hot iron?
If this does not apply to you, neither does it apply to us. What is to be
thought of this verse, or its author; or to whom does it apply, since it agrees
neither with the traditions of the Old Testament, nor with the institutions of the
New? As regards the New Testament, the proof is from your own practice; and
though the Old requires abstinence only from certain things, still it requires
abstinence. On the other hand, this opinion of yours makes all abstinence from
animal food a doctrine of devils. If this is your belief, once more I say it, you
must condemn Moses, and reject the prophets, and pass the same sentence on
yourselves; for, as they always abstained from certain kinds of food, so you
sometimes abstain from all food.
4. But if you think that in making a distinction in food, Moses and the
prophets established a divine ordinance, and not a doctrine of devils; if Daniel
in the Holy Spirit observed a fast of three weeks; if the youths Ananias,
Azarias, and Mishael, under divine guidance, chose to live on cabbage or pulse; if,
again, those among you who abstain, do it not at the instigation of devils; if
your abstinence from wine and flesh for forty days is not superstitious, but by
divine command,-consider, I beseech you, if it is not perfect madness to
suppose these words to be Paul's that abstinence from food and forbidding to marry
are doctrines of devils. Paul cannot have said that to dedicate virgins to
Christ is a doctrine of devils. But you read the words, and inconsiderately, as
usual, apply them to us, without seeing that this stamps your virgins too as led
away by the doctrine of devils, and that you are the functionaries of the devils
in your constant endeavors to induce virgins to make this profession, so that
in all your churches the virgins nearly outnumber the married women. Why do you
still adhere to such practises? Why do you ensnare wretched young women, if it
is the will of devils, and not of Christ, that they fulfill? But, first of all,
I wish to know if making virgins is, in all cases, the doctrine of devils, or
only the prohibition of marriage. If it is the prohibition, it does not apply
to us, for we too hold it equally foolish to prevent one who wishes, as it is
criminal and impious to force one who has some reluctance. But if you say that to
encourage the proposal, and not to resist such a desire, is all the doctrine
of devils, to say nothing of the consequence as regards you, the apostle himself
will be thus brought into danger, if he must be considered as having
introduced the doctrines of devils into Iconium, when Thecla, after having been
betrothed, was by his discourse inflamed with the desire of perpetual virginity.(1) And
what shall we say of Jesus, the Master Himself, and the source of all
sanctity, who is the unwedded spouse of the virgins who make this profession, and who,
when specifying in the Gospel three kinds of eunuchs, natural, artificial, and
voluntary, gives the palm to those who have "made themselves eunuchs for the
kingdom of heaven,"(2) meaning the youths of both sexes who have extirpated from
their hearts the desire of marriage, and who in the Church act as eunuchs of
the King's palace? Is this also the doctrine of devils? Are those words, too,
spoken in a seducing spirit? And if Paul and Christ are proved to be priests of
devils, is not their spirit the same that speaks in God? I do not mention the
other apostles of our Lord, Peter, Andrew, Thomas, and the example of celibacy,
the blessed John, who in various ways commended to young men and maidens the
excellence of this profession, leaving to us, and to you too, the form for making
virgins. I do not mention them, because you do not admit them into the canon,
and so you will not scruple impiously to impute to them doctrines of devils. But
will you say the same of Christ, or of the Apostle Paul, who, we know,
everywhere expressed the same preference for unmarried women to the married, and gave
an example of it in the case of the saintly Thecla? But if the doctrine preached
by Paul to Thecla, and which the other apostles also preached, was not the
doctrine of devils, how can we believe that Paul left on record his opinion, that
the very exhortation to sanctity is the injunction and the doctrine of devils?
To make virgins simply by exhortation, without forbidding to marry, is not
peculiar to you. That is our principle too; and he must be not only a fool, but a
madman, who thinks that a private law can forbid what the public law allows. As
regards marriage, therefore, we too encourage virgins to remain as they are
when they are willing to do so; we do not make them virgins against their will.
For we know the force of will and of natural appetite when opposed by public law;
much more when the law is only private, and every one is at liberty to disobey
it. If, then, it is no crime to make virgins in this manner, we are guiltless
as well as you. If it is wrong to make virgins in any way, you are guilty as
well as we. So that what you mean, or intend, by quoting this verse against us,
it is impossible to say.
5. AUGUSTIN replied: Listen, and you shall hear what we mean and intend by
quoting this verse against you, since you say that you do not know. It is not
that you abstain from animal food; for, as you observe, our ancient fathers
abstained from some kinds of food, not, however, as condemning them, but with a
typical meaning, which you do not understand, and of which I have said already in
this work all that appeared necessary. Besides, Christians, not heretics, but
Catholics, in order to subdue the body, that the soul may be more humbled in
prayer, abstain not only from animal food, but also from some vegetable
productions, without, however, believing them to be unclean. A few do this always; and
at certain seasons or days, as in Lent, almost all, more or less, according to
the choice or ability of individuals. You, on the other hand, deny that the
creature is good, and call it unclean, saying that animals are made by the devil of
the worst impurities in the substance of evil and so you reject them with
horror, as being the most cruel and loathsome places of confinement of your god.
You, as a concession, allow your followers, as distinct from the priests, to eat
animal food; as the apostle allows, in certain cases, not marriage in the
general sense, but the indulgence of passion m marriage.(1) It is only sin which is
thus made allowance for. This is the feeling you have toward all animal food;
you have learned it from your heresy, and you teach it to your followers. You
make allowance for your followers, because, as I said before, they supply you
with necessaries; but you grant them indulgence without saying that it is not
sinful. For yourselves, you shun contact with this evil and impurity; and hence our
reason for quoting this verse against you is found in the words of the apostle
which follow those with which you end the quotation. Perhaps it was for this
reason that you left out the words, and then say that you do not know what we
mean or intend by the quotation; for it suited you better to omit the account of
our intention than to express it. For, after speaking of abstaining from meats,
which God has created to be received with thanksgiving by believers, the
apostle goes on, "And by them who know the truth; for every creature of God is good,
and nothing to be refused, if it be received with thanksgiving: for it is
sanctified by the word of God and prayer."(2) This you deny; for your idea, and
motive, and belief in abstaining from such food is, that they are not typically,
but naturally, evil and impure. In this assuredly you blaspheme the Creator; and
in this is the doctrine of devils. You need not be surprised that, so long
before the event, this prediction regarding you was made by the Holy Spirit.
6. So, again, if your exhortations to virginity resembled the teaching of
the apostle, "He who giveth in marriage doeth well, and he who giveth not in
marriage doeth better;"(3) if you taught that marriage is good, and virginity
better, as the Church teaches which is truly Christ's Church, you would not have
been described in the Spirit's prediction as forbidding to marry. What a man
forbids he makes evil; but a good thing may be placed second to a better thing
without being forbidden. Moreover, the only honorable kind of marriage, or
marriage entered into for its proper and legitimate purpose, is precisely that you
hate most. So, though you may not forbid sexual intercourse, you forbid marriage;
for the peculiarity of marriage is, that it is not merely for the gratification
of passion, but, as is written in the contract, for the procreation of
children. And, though you allow many of your followers to retain their connection with
you in spite of their refusal, or their inability, to obey you, you cannot
deny that you make the prohibition. The prohibition is part of your false
doctrine, while the toleration is only for the interests of the society. And here we
see the reason, which I have delayed till now to mention, for your making not the
birth but only the death of Christ reigned and illusory. Death being the
separation of the soul, that is, of the nature of your god, from the body which
belongs to his enemies, for it is the work of the devil, you uphold and approve of
it; and thus, according to your creed, it was meet that Christ, though He did
not die, should commend death by appearing to die. In birth, again, you believe
your god to be bound instead of released; and so you will not allow that Christ
was born even in this illusory fashion. You would have thought better of Mary
had she ceased to be a virgin without being a mother, than as being a mother
without ceasing to be a virgin. You see, then, that there is a great difference
between exhorting to virginity as the better of two good things, and forbidding
to marry by denouncing the true purpose of marriage; between abstaining from
food as a symbolic observance, or for the mortification of the body, and
abstaining from food which God has created for the reason that God did not create it.
In one case, we have the doctrine of the prophets and apostles; in the other,
the doctrine of lying devils.
BOOK XXXI.
THE SCRIPTURE PASSAGE: "TO THE PURE ALL THINGS ARE PURE, BUT TO THE IMPURE AND
DEFILED IS NOTHING PURE; BUT EVEN THEIR MIND AND CONSCIENCE ARE DEFILED," IS
DISCUSSED FROM BOTH THE MANICHAEAN AND THE CATHOLIC POINTS OF VIEW, FAUSTUS
OBJECTING TO ITS APPLICATION TO HIS PARTY AND AUGUSTIN INSISTING ON ITS APPLICATION.
1. FAUSTUS said: "To the pure all things are pure. But to the impure and
defiled is nothing pure; but even their mind and conscience are defiled." As
regards this verse, too, it is very doubtful whether, for your own sake, you
should believe it to have been written by Paul. For it would follow that Moses and
the prophets were not only influenced by devils in making so much in their laws
of the distinctions in food, but also that they themselves were impure and
defiled in their mind and conscience, so that the following words also might
properly be applied to them: "They profess to know God, but in works deny Him."(1)
This is applicable to no one more than to Moses and the prophets, who are known
to have lived very differently from what was becoming in men knowing God. Up to
this time I have thought only of adulteries and frauds and murders as defiling
the conscience of Moses and the prophets; but now, from what this verse says,
it is plain that they were also defiled, because they looked upon something as
defiled. How, then, can you persist in thinking that the vision of the divine
majesty can have been bestowed on such men, when it is written that only the pure
in heart can see God? Even supposing that they had been pure from unlawful
crimes, this superstitious abstinence from certain kinds of food, if it defiles
the mind, is enough to debar them from the sight of deity. Gone for ever, too, is
the boast of Daniel, and of the three youths, who, till now that we are told
that nothing is unclean, have been regarded among the Jews as persons of great
purity and excellence of character, because, in observance of hereditary
customs, they carefully avoided defiling themselves with Gentile food, especially that
of sacrifices.(2) Now it appears that they were defiled in mind and conscience
most of all when they were closing their mouth against blood and idol-feasts.
2. But perhaps their ignorance may excuse them; for, as this Christian
doctrine of all things being pure to the pure had not then appeared, they may have
thought some things impure. But there can be no excuse for you in the face of
Paul's announcement, that there is nothing which is not pure, and that
abstinence from certain food is the doctrine of devils, and that those who think
anything defiled are polluted in their mind, if you not only abstain, as we have
said, but make a merit of it, and believe that you become more acceptable to Christ
in proportion as you are more abstemious, or, according to this new doctrine,
as your minds are defiled and your conscience polluted. It should also be
observed that, while there are three religions in the world which, though in a very
different manner, appoint chastity and abstinence as the means of purification
of the mind, the religions, namely, of the Jews, the Gentiles, and the
Christians, the opinion that everything is pure cannot have come from any one of the
three. It is certainly not from Judaism, nor from Paganism, which also makes a
distinction of food; the only difference being, that the Hebrew classification of
animals does not harmonize with the Pagan. Then as to the Christian faith, if
you think it peculiar to Christianity to consider nothing defiled, you must
first of all confess that there are no Christians among you. For things offered to
idols, and what dies of itself, to mention nothing else, are regarded by you
all as great defilement. If, again, this is a Christian practice, on your part,
the doctrine which is opposed to all abstinence from impurities cannot be
traced to Christianity either. How, then, could Paul have said what is not in
keeping with any religion? In fact, when the apostle from a Jew became a Christian,
it was a change of customs more than of religion. As for the writer of this
verse, there seems to be no religion which favors his opinion.
3. Be sure, then, whenever you discover anything else in Scripture to
assail our faith with, to see, in the first place, that it is not against you,
before you commence your attack on us. For instance, there is the passage you
continually quote about Peter, that he once saw a vessel let down from heaven in
which were all kinds of animals and serpents, and that, when he was surprised and
astonished, a voice was heard, saying to him, Peter, kill and eat whatsoever
thou seest in the vessel, and that he replied, Lord I will not touch what is
common or unclean. On this the voice spoke again, What I have cleansed, call not
unclean.(1) This, indeed, seems to have an allegorical meaning, and not to refer
to the absence of distinction in food. But as you choose to give it this
meaning, you are bound to feed upon all wild animals, and scorpions, and snakes, and
reptiles in general, in compliance with this vision of Peter's. In this way,
you will show that you are really obedient to the voice which Peter is said to
have heard. But you must never forget that you at the same time condemn Moses and
the prophets, who considered many things polluted which, according to this
utterance, God has sanctified.
4. AUGUSTIN replied: When the apostle says, "To the pure all things are
pure," he refers to the natures which God had created,--as it is written by Moses
in Genesis, "And God made all things; and behold they were very good,"(2)--not
to the typical meanings, according to which God, by the same Moses,
distinguished the clean from the unclean. Of this we have already spoken at length more
than once, and need not dwell on it here. It is clear that the apostle called
those impure who, after the revelation of the New Testament, still advocated the
observance of the shadows of things to come, as if without them the Gentiles
could not obtain the salvation which is in Christ, because in this they were
carnally minded; and he called them unbelieving, because they did not distinguish
between the time of the law and the time of grace. To them, he says, nothing is
pure, because they made an erroneous and sinful use both of what they received
and of what they rejected; which is true of all unbelievers, but especially of
you Manichaeans, for to you nothing whatever is pure. For, although you take
great care to keep the food which you use separate from the contamination of
flesh, still it is not pure to you, for the only creator of it you allow is the
devil. And you hold, that, by eating it, you release your god, who suffers
confinement and pollution in it. One would think you might consider yourselves pure,
since your stomach is the proper place for purifying your god. But even your own
bodies, in your opinion, are of the nature and handiwork of the race of
darkness; while your souls are still affected by the pollution of your bodies. What,
then, is pure to you? Not the things you eat; not the receptacle of your food;
not yourselves, by whom it is purified. Thus you see against whom the words of
the apostle are directed; he expresses himself so as to include all who are
impure and unbelieving, but first and chiefly to condemn you. To the pure,
therefore, all things are pure, in the nature in which they were created; but to the
ancient Jewish people all things were not pure in their typical significance;
and, as regards bodily health, or the customs of society, all things are not
suitable to us. But when things are in their proper places, and the order of nature
is preserved, to the pure all things are pure; but to the impure and
unbelieving, among whom you stand first, nothing is pure. You might make a wholesome
application to yourselves of the following words of the apostle, if you desired a
cure for your seared consciences. The words are: "Their very mind and
conscience are defiled."