PHILOSOPHICAL WORKS: THE TREATISE "ON THE MAKING OF MAN"
III. PHILOSOPHICAL WORKS
NOTE ON THE TREATISE "ON THE MAKING OF MAN."
THIS work was intended to supplement and complete the Hexaemeron of S.
Basil, and presupposes an acquaintance with that treatise. The narrative of the
creation of the world is not discussed in detail: it is referred to, but chiefly
in order to insist on the idea that the world was prepared to be the sphere of
man's sovereignty. On the other hand, Gregory shows that man was made "with
circumspection," fitted by nature for rule over the other creatures, made in the
likeness of God in respect of various moral attributes, and in the possession of
reason, while differing from the Divine nature in that the human mind receives
its information by means of the senses and is dependent on them for its
perception of external things. The body is fitted to be the instrument of the mind,
adapted to the use of a reasonable being: and it is by the possession of the
"rational soul," as well as of the "natural" or "vegetative" and the "sensible"
soul, that man differs from the lower animals. At the same time, his mind waves
by means of the senses: it is incomprehensible in its nature (resembling in this
the Divine nature of which it is the image), and its relation to the body is
discussed at some length (chs. 12--15). The connection between mind and body is
ineffable: it is not to be accounted for by supposing that the mind resides in
any particular part of the body: the mind acts upon and is acted upon by the
whole body, depending on the corporeal and material nature for one element of
perception, so that perception requires both body and mind. But it is to the
rational element that the name of "soul" properly belongs: the nutritive and
sensible faculties only borrow the name from that which is higher than themselves. Man
was first made "in the image of God:" and this conception excludes the idea of
distinction of sex. In the first creation of man all humanity is included,
according to the Divine foreknowledge: "our whole nature extending from the first
to the last" is "one image of Him Who is." But for the Fall, the increase of
the human race would have taken place as the increase of the angelic race takes
place, in some way unknown to us. The declension of man from his first estate
made succession by generation necessary: and it was because this declension and
its consequences were present to the Divine mind that God "created them male and
female." In this respect, and in respect of the need of nourishment by food,
man is not "in the image of God," but shows his kindred with the lower creation.
But these necessities are not permanent: they will end with the restoration of
man to his former excellence (chs. 16--18). Here Gregory is led to speak (chs.
19--20) of the food of man in Paradise, and of the "tree of the knowledge of
good and evil." And thus, having made mention of the Fall of man, he goes on to
speak of his Restoration. This, in his view, follows from the finite nature of
evil: it is deferred until the sum of humanity is complete. As to the mode in
which the present state of things will end, we know nothing: but that it will
end is inferred from the non-eternity of matter (chs. 21--24). The doctrine of
the Resurrection is supported by our knowledge of the accuracy with which other
events have been predicted in Scripture, by the experience given to us of like
events in particular cases, in those whom our Lord raised to life, and
especially in His own resurrection. The argument that such a restoration is impossible
is met by an appeal to the unlimited character of the Divine power, and by
inferences from parallels observed in nature (chs. 25--27). Gregory then proceeds to
deal with the question of the pre-existence of the soul, rejecting that
opinion, and maintaining that the body and the soul come into existence together,
potentially, in the Divine will, actually at the moment when each individual man
comes into being by generation (chs. 28--29). In the course of his argument on
this last point, he turns aside to discuss at some length, in the last chapter,
the structure of the human body: but he returns once more, in conclusion, to
his main position, that man "is generated as a living and animated being," and
that the power of the soul is gradually manifested in, and by means of, the
material substratum of the body; so that man is brought to perfection by the aid of
the lower attributes of the soul. But the true perfection of the soul is not in
these, which will ultimately be "put away," but in the higher attributes which
constitute for man "the image of God."
ON THE MAKING OF MAN
Gregory, Bishop of Nyssa, to his brother Peter, THE SERVANT OF GOD.
If we had to honour with rewards of money those who excel in virtue, the
whole world of money, as Solomon says(1), would seem but small to be made equal
to your virtue in the balance. Since, however, the debt of gratitude due to
your Reverence is greater than can be valued in money, and the holy Eastertide
demands the accustomed gift of love, we offer to your greatness of mind, O man of
God, a gift too small indeed to be worthy of presentation to you, yet not
falling short of the extent of our power. The gift is a discourse, like a mean
garment, woven not without toil from our poor wit, and the subject of the discourse,
while it will perhaps be generally thought audacious, yet seemed not
unfitting. For he alone has worthily considered the creation of God who truly was
created after God, and whose soul was fashioned in the image of Him Who created
him,--Basil, our common father and teacher,--who by his own speculation made the
sublime ordering of the universe generally intelligible, making the world as
established by God in the true Wisdom known to those who by means of his
understanding are led to such contemplation: but we, who fall short even of worthily
admiring him, yet intend to add to the great writer's speculations that which is
lacking in them, not so as to interpolate his work by insertion(2) (for it is not
to be thought of that that lofty mouth should suffer the insult of being given
as authority for our discourses), but so that the glory of the teacher may not
seem to be failing among his disciples.
For if, the consideration of man being lacking in his Hexaemeron, none of
those who had been his disciples contributed any earnest effort to supply the
defect, the scoffer would perhaps have had a handle against his great fame, on
the ground that he had not cared to produce in his hearers any habit of
intelligence. But now that we venture according to our powers upon the exposition of
what was lacking, if anything should be found in our work such as to be not
unworthy of his teaching, it will surely be referred to our teacher: while if our
discourse does not reach the height of his sublime speculation, he will be free
from this charge and escape the blame of seeming not to wish that his disciples
should have any skill at all, though we perhaps may he answerable to our
censurers as being unable to contain in the littleness of our hear the wisdom of our
instructor.
The scope of our proposed enquiry is not small: it is second to none of
the wonders of the world,--perhaps even greater than any of those known to us,
because no other existing thing, save the human creation, has been made like to
God: thus we shall readily find that allowance will be made for what we say by
kindly readers, even if our discourse is far behind the merits of the subject.
For it is our business, I suppose, to leave nothing unexamined of all that
concerns man,--of what we believe to have taken place previously, of what we now
see, and of the results which are expected afterwards to appear (for surely our
effort would be convicted of failing of its promise, if, when man is proposed for
contemplation, any of the questions which bear upon the subject were to be
omitted); and, moreover, we must fit together, according to the explanation of
Scripture and to that derived from reasoning, those statements concerning him
which seem, by a kind of necessary sequence, to be opposed, so that our whole
subject may be consistent in train of thought and in order, as the Statements that
seem to be contrary are brought (if the Divine power so discovers a hope for
what is beyond hope, and a way for what is inextricable) to one and the same end:
and for clearness' sake I think it well to set forth to you the discourse by
chapters, that you may be able briefly to know the force of the several arguments
of the whole work.
1. Wherein is a partial inquiry into the nature of the world, and a more
minute exposition of the things which preceded the genesis of man.
2. Why man appeared last, after the creation.
3. That the nature of man is more precious than all the visible creation.
4. That the construction of man throughout signifies his ruling power.
5. That man is a likeness of the Divine sovereignty.
6. An examination of the kindred of mind to nature: wherein by way of
digression is refuted the doctrine of the Anomoeans.
7. Why man is destitute of natural weapons and covering.
8. Why man's form is upright, and that hands were given him because of
reason; wherein also is a speculation on the difference of souls.
9. That the form of man was framed to serve as an instrument for the use
of reason.
10. That the mind works by means of the senses.
11. That the nature of mind is invisible.
12. An examination of the question where the ruling principle is to be
considered to reside; wherein also is a discussion of tears and laughter, and a
physiological speculation as to the interrelation of matter, nature, and mind.
13. A rationale of sleep, of yawning, and of dreams.
14. That the mind is not in a part of the body; wherein also is a
distinction of the movements of the body and of the soul.
15. That the soul proper, in fact and name, is the rational soul, while
the others are called so equivocally: wherein also is this statement, that the
power of the mind extends throughout the whole body in fitting contact with every
part.
16. A contemplation of the Divine utterance which said,--"Let us make man
after our image and likeness;" wherein is examined what is the definition of
the image, and how the passible and mortal is like to the Blessed and Impassible,
and how in the image there are male and female, seeing these are not in the
Prototype.
17. What we must answer to those who raise the question--"If procreation
is after sin, how would souls have come into being if the first of mankind had
remained sinless?"
18. That our irrational passions have their rise from kindred with
irrational nature.
19. To those who say that the enjoyment of the good things we look for
will again consist in meat and drink, because it is written that by these means
man at first lived in Paradise.
20. What was the life in Paradise, and what was the forbidden tree.
21. That the resurrection is looked for as a consequence, not so much from
the declaration of Scripture as from the very necessity of things.
22. To those who say, "If the resurrection is a thing excellent and good,
how is it that it has not happened already, but is hoped for in some periods of
time?"
23. That he who confesses the beginning of the world's existence must
necessarily agree also as to its end.
24. An argument against those who say that matter is co-eternal with God.
25. How one even of those who are without may be brought to believe the
Scripture when teaching of the resurrection.
26. That the resurrection is not beyond probability.
27. That it is possible, when the human body is dissolved into the
elements of the universe, that each should have his own body restored from the common
source.
28. To those who say that souls existed before bodies, or that bodies were
formed before souls: wherein there is also a refutation of the fables
concerning transmigrations of souls.
29. An establishment of the doctrine that the cause of existence of soul
and body is one and the same.
30. A brief consideration of the construction of our bodies from a medical
point of view.
I. Wherein is a partial inquiry into the nature of the world, and a more
minute exposition of the things which preceded the genesis of man(3).
1. "This is the book of the generation of heaven and earth(4)," saith the
Scripture, when all that is seen was finished, and each of the things that are
betook itself to its own separate place, when the body of heaven compassed all
things round, and those bodies which are heavy and of downward tendency, the
earth and the water, holding each other in, took the middle place of the
universe; while, as a sort of bond and stability for the things that were made, the
Divine power and skill was implanted in the growth of things, guiding all things
with the reins of a double operation (for it was by rest and motion that it
devised the genesis of the things that were not, and the continuance of the things
that are), driving around, about the heavy and changeless element contributed
by the creation that does not move, as about some fixed path, the exceedingly
rapid motion of the sphere, like a wheel, and preserving the indissolubility of
both by their mutual action, as the circling substance by its rapid motion
compresses the compact body of the earth round about, while that which is firm and
unyielding, by reason of its unchanging fixedness, continually augments the
whirling motion of those things which revolve round it, and intensity s is produced
in equal measure in each of the natures which thus differ in their operation,
in the stationary nature, I mean, and in the mobile revolution; for neither is
the earth shifted from its own base, nor does the heaven ever relax in its
vehemence, or slacken its motion.
2. These, moreover, were first framed before other things, according to
the Divine wisdom, to be as it were a beginning of the whole machine, the great
Moses indicating, I suppose, where he says that the heaven and the earth were
made by God "in the beginning(6)" that all things that are seen in the creation
are the offspring of rest and motion, brought into being by the Divine will. Now
the heaven and the earth being diametrically opposed to each other in their
operations, the creation which lies between the opposites, and has in part a
share in what is adjacent to it, itself acts as a mean between the extremes, so
that there is manifestly a mutual contact of the opposites through the mean; for
air in a manner imitates the perpetual motion and subtlety of the fiery
substance, both in the lightness of its nature, and in its suitableness for motion; yet
it is not such as to be alienated from the solid substance, for it is no more
in a state of continual flux and dispersion than in a permanent state of
immobility, but becomes, in its affinity to each, a kind of borderland of the
opposition between operations, at once uniting in itself and dividing things which are
naturally distinct.
3. In the same way, liquid substance also is attached by double qualities
to each of the opposites; for in so far as it is heavy and of downward tendency
it is closely akin to the earthy; but in so far as it partakes of a certain
fluid and mobile energy it is not altogether alien from the nature which is in
motion; and by means of this also there is effected a kind of mixture and
concurrence of the opposites, weight being transferred to motion, and motion finding
no hindrance in weight, so that things most extremely opposite in nature combine
with one another, and are mutually joined by those which act as means between
them.
4. But to speak strictly, one should rather say that the very nature of
the contraries themselves is not entirely without mixture of properties, each
with the other, so that, as I think, all that we see in the world mutually agree,
and the creation, though discovered in properties of contrary natures, is yet
at union with itself. For as motion is not conceived merely as local shifting,
but is also contemplated in change and alteration, and on the other hand the
immovable nature does not admit motion by way of alteration, the wisdom of God has
transposed these properties, and wrought unchangeableness in that which is
ever moving, and change in that which is immovable; doing this, it may be, by a
providential dispensation, so that that property of nature which constitutes its
immutability and immobility might not, when viewed in any created object, cause
the creature to be accounted as God; for that which may happen to move or
change would cease to admit of the conception of Godhead. Hence the earth is stable
without being immutable, while the heaven, on the contrary, as it has no
mutability, so has not stability either, that the Divine power, by interweaving
change in the stable nature and motion with that which is not subject to change,
might, by the interchange of attributes, at once join them both closely to each
other, and make them alien from the conception of Deity; for as has been said,
neither of these (neither that which is unstable, nor that which is mutable) can
be considered to belong to the more Divine nature.
5. Now all things were already arrived at their own end: "the heaven and
the earth(7)," as Moses says, "were finished," and all things that lie between
them, and the particular things were adorned with their appropriate beauty; the
heaven with the rays of the stars, the sea and air with the living creatures
that swim and fly, and the earth with all varieties of plants and animals, to all
which, empowered by the Divine will, it gave birth together; the earth was
full, too, of her produce, bringing forth fruits at the same time with flowers;
the meadows were full of all that grows therein, and all the mountain ridges, and
summits, and every hillside, and slope, and hollow, were crowned with young
grass, and with the varied produce of the trees, just risen from the ground, yet
shot up at once into their perfect beauty; and all the beasts that had come
into life at God's command were rejoicing, we may suppose, and skipping about,
running to and for in the thickets in herds according to their kind, while every
sheltered and shady spot was ringing with the chants of the songbirds. And at
sea, we may suppose, the sight to be seen was of the like kind, as it had just
settled to quiet and calm in the gathering together of its depths, where havens
and harbours spontaneously hollowed out on the coasts made the sea reconciled
with the land; and the gentle motion of the waves vied in beauty with the
meadows, rippling delicately with light and harmless breezes that skimmed the surface;
and all the wealth of creation by land and sea was ready, and none was there
to share it.
II. Why man appeared last, after the creation
1. For not as yet had that great and precious thing, man, come into the
world of being; it was not to be looked for that the ruler should appear before
the subjects of his rule; but when his dominion was prepared, the next step was
that the king should be manifested. When, then the Maker of all had prepared
beforehand, as it were, a royal lodging for the future king (and this was the
land, and islands, and sea, and the heaven arching like a roof over them), and
when all kinds of wealth had been stored in this palace (and by wealth I mean the
whole creation, all that is in plants and trees, and all that has sense, and
breath, and life; and--if we are to account materials also as wealth--all that
for their beauty are reckoned precious in the eyes of men, as gold and silver,
and the substances of your jewels which men delight in--having concealed, I say,
abundance of all these also in the bosom of the earth as in a royal
treasure-house), he thus manifests man in the world, to be the beholder of some of the
wonders therein, and the lord of others; that by his enjoyment he might have
knowledge of the Giver, and by the beauty and majesty of the things he saw might
trace out that power of the Maker which is beyond speech and language.
2. For this reason man was brought into the world last after the creation,
not being rejected to the last as worthless, but as one whom it behoved to be
king over his subjects at his very birth. And as a good host does not bring his
guest to his house before the preparation of his feast, but, when he has made
all due preparation, and decked with their proper adornments his house, his
couches, his table, brings his guest home when things suitable for his
refreshment are in readiness, rain the same manner the rich and munificent Entertainer
of our nature, when He had decked the habitation with beauties of every kind,
and prepared this great and varied banquet, then introduced man, assigning to
him as his task not the acquiring of what was not there, but the enjoyment of
the things which were there; and for this reason He gives him as foundations the
instincts of a twofold organization, blending the Divine with the earthy, that
by means of both he may be naturally and properly disposed to each enjoyment,
enjoying God by means of his more divine nature, and the good things of earth by
the sense that is akin to them.
III. That the nature of man is more precious than all the visible creation(9).
1. But it is right that we should not leave this point without
consideration, that while the world, great as it is, and its parts, are laid as an
elemental foundation for the formation of the universe, the creation is, so to say,
made offhand by the Divine power, existing at once on His command, while counsel
precedes the making of man; and that which is to be is fore-shown by the Maker
in verbal description, and of what kind it is fitting that it should be, and
to what archetype it is fitting that it should bear a likeness, and for what it
shall be made, and what its operation shall be when it is made, and of what it
shall be the ruler, wall these things the saying examines beforehand, so that
he has a rank assigned him before his genesis, and possesses rule over the
things that are before his coming into being; for it says, "God said, Let us make
man in our image, after our likeness, and let them have dominion over the fish of
the sea, and the beasts of the earth, and the fowls of the heaven, and the
cattle, and all the earth(1)"
2. O marvellous! a sun is made, and no counsel precedes; a heaven
likewise; and to these no single thing in creation is equal. So great a wonder is
formed by a word alone, and the saying indicates neither when, nor how, nor any such
detail. So too in all particular cases, the aether, the stars, the
intermediate air, the sea, the earth, the animals, the plants,--all are brought into being
with a word, while only to the making of man does the Maker of all draw near
with circumspection, so as to prepare beforehand for him material for his
formation, and to liken his form to an archetypal beauty, and, setting before him a
mark for which he is to come into being, to make for him a nature appropriate
and allied to the operations, and suitable for the object in hand.
IV. That the construction of man throughout signifies his ruling power(2).
1. For as in our own life artificers fashion a tool in the way suitable to
its use, so the best Artificer made our nature as it were a formation fit for
the exercise of royalty, preparing it at once by superior advantages of soul,
and by the very form of the body, to be such as to be adapted for royalty: for
the soul immediately shows its royal and exalted character, far removed as it is
from the lowliness of private station, in that it owns no lord, and is
self-governed, swayed autocratically by its own will; for to whom else does this
belong than to a king? And further, besides these facts, the fact that it is the
image of that Nature which rules over all means nothing else than this, that our
nature was created to be royal from the first. For as, in men's ordinary use,
those who make images(3) of princes both mould the figure of their form, and
represent along with this the royal rank by the vesture of purple, and even the
likeness is commonly spoken of as "a king," so the human nature also, as it was
made to rule the rest, was, by its likeness to the King of all, made as it were a
living image, partaking with the archetype both in rank and in name, not
vested in purple, nor giving indication of its rank by sceptre and diadem (for the
archetype itself is not arrayed with these), but instead of the purple robe,
clothed in virtue, which is in truth the most royal of all raiment, and in place
of the sceptre, leaning on the bliss of immortality, and instead of the royal
diadem, decked with the crown of righteousness; so that it is shown to be
perfectly like to the beauty of its archetype in all that belongs to the dignity of
royalty.
V. That man is a likeness of the Divine sovereignty(4).
1. It is true, indeed, that the Divine beauty is not adorned with any
shape or endowment of form, by any beauty of colour, but is contemplated as
excellence in unspeakable bliss. As then painters transfer human forms to their
pictures by the means of certain colours, laying on their copy the proper and
corresponding tints, so that the beauty of the original may be accurately transferred
to the likeness, so I would have you understand that our Maker also, painting
the portrait to resemble His own beauty, by the addition of virtues, as it were
with colours, shows in us His own sovereignty: and manifold and varied are the
tints, so to say, by which His true form is portrayed: not red, or white(5), or
the blending of these, whatever it may be called, nor a touch of black that
paints the eyebrow and the eye, and shades, by some combination, the depressions
in the figure, and all such arts which the hands of painters contrive, but
instead of these, purity, freedom from passion, blessedness, alienation from all
evil, and all those attributes of the like kind which help to form in men the
likeness of God: with such hues as these did the Maker of His own image mark our
nature.
2. And if you were to examine the other points also by which the Divine
beauty is expressed, you will find that to them too the likeness in the image
which we present is perfectly preserved. The Godhead is mind and word: for "in the
beginning was the Word(6)" and the followers of Paul "have the mind of Christ"
which "speaks" in them(7): humanity too is not far removed from these: you see
in yourself word and understanding, an imitation of the very Mind and Word.
Again, God is love, and the fount of love: for this the great John declares, that
"love is of God," and "God is love(8)" : the Fashioner of our nature has made
this to be our feature too: for "hereby," He says, "shall all men know that ye
are my disciples, if ye love one another(9)" :--thus, if this be absent, the
whole stamp of the likeness is transformed. The Deity beholds and hears all
things, and searches all things out: you too have the power of apprehension of
things by means of sight and hearing, and the understanding that inquires into
things and searches them out.
VI. An examination of the kindred of mind to nature: wherein, by way of
digression, is refuted the doctrine of the Anomoeans(1).
1. And let no one suppose me to say that the Deity is in touch with
existing things in a manner resembling human operation, by means of different
faculties. For it is impossible to conceive in the simplicity of the Godhead the
varied and diverse nature of the apprehensive operation: not even in our own case
are the faculties which apprehend things numerous, although we are in touch with
those things which affect our life in many ways by means of our senses; for
there is one faculty, the implanted mind itself, which passes through each of the
organs of sense and grasps the things beyond: this it is that, by means of the
eyes, beholds what is seen; this it is that, by means of hearing, understands
what is said; that is content with what is to our taste, and turns from what is
unpleasant; that uses the hand for whatever it wills, taking hold or rejecting
by its means, using the help of the organ for this purpose precisely as it
thinks expedient.
2. If in men, then, even though the organs formed by nature for purposes
of perception may be different, that which operates and moves by means of all,
and uses each appropriately for the object before it, is one and the same, not
changing its nature by the differences of operations, how could any one suspect
multiplicity of essence in God on the ground of His varied powers? for "He that
made the eye," as the prophet says, and "that planted the ear(2)," stamped on
human nature these operations to be as it were significant characters, with
reference to their models in Himself: for He says, "Let us make man in our
image(3).
3. But what, I would ask, becomes of the heresy of the Anomoeans? what
will they say to this utterance? how will they defend the vanity of their dogma in
view of the words cited? Will they say that it is possible that one image
should be made like to different forms? if the Son is in nature unlike the Father,
how comes it that the likeness He forms of the different natures is one? for He
Who said, "Let us make after our image," and by the plural signification
revealed the Holy Trinity, would not, if the archetypes were unlike one another,
have mentioned the image in the singular: for it would be impossible that there
should be one likeness displayed of things which do not agree with one another:
if the natures were different he would assuredly have begun their images also
differently, making the appropriate image for each: but since the image is one,
while the archetype is not one, who is so far beyond the range of understanding
as not to know that the things which are like the same thing, surely resemble
one another? Therefore He says (the word, it may be, cutting short this
wickedness at the very formation of human life), "Let us make man in our image, after
our likeness."
VII. Why man is destitute of natural weapons and covering(4).
1. But what means the uprightness of his figure? and why is it that those
powers which aid life do not naturally belong to his body? but man is brought
into life bare of natural covering, an unarmed and poor being, destitute of all
things useful, worthy, according to appearances, of pity rather than of
admiration, not armed with prominent horns or sharp claws, nor with hoofs nor with
teeth, nor possessing by nature any deadly venom in a sting,--things such as most
animals have in their own power for defence against those who do them harm: his
body is not protected with a covering of hair: and yet possibly it was to be
expected that he who was promoted to rule over the rest of the creatures should
be defended by nature with arms of his own so that he might not need assistance
from others for his own security. Now, however, the lion, the boar, the tiger,
the leopard, and all the like have natural power sufficient for their safety:
and the bull has his horn, the hare his speed, the deer his leap and the
certainty of his sight, and another beast has bulk, others a proboscis, the birds
have their wings, and the bee her sting, and generally in all there is some
protective power implanted by nature: but man alone of all is slower than the beasts
that are swift of foot, smaller than those that are of great bulk, more
defenceless than those that are protected by natural arms; and how, one will say, has
such a being obtained the sovereignty over all things?
2. Well, I think it would not be at all hard to show that what seems to be
a deficiency of our nature is a means for our obtaining dominion over the
subject creatures. For if man had had such power as to be able to outrun the horse
in swiftness, and to have a foot that, from its solidity, could not be worn
out, but was strengthened by hoofs or claws of some kind, and to carry upon him
horns and stings and claws, he would be, to begin with, a wild-looking and
formidable creature, if such things grew with his body: and moreover he would have
neglected his rule over the other creatures if he had no need of the co-operation
of his subjects; whereas now, the needful services of our life are divided
among the individual animals that are under our sway, for this reason--to make our
dominion over them necessary.
3. It was the slowness and difficult motion of our body that brought the
horse to supply our need, and tamed him: it was the nakedness of our body that
made necessary our management of sheep, which supplies the deficiency of our
nature by its yearly produce of wool: it was the fact that we import from others
the supplies for our living which subjected beasts of burden to such service:
furthermore, 'it was the fact that we cannot eat grass like cattle which brought
the ox to render service to our life, who makes our living easy for us by his
own labour; and because we needed teeth and biting power to subdue some of the
other animals by grip of teeth, the dog gave, together with his swiftness, his
own jaw to supply our need, becoming like a live sword for man; and there has
been discovered by men iron, stronger and more penetrating than prominent horns
or sharp claws, not, as those things do with the beasts, always growing
naturally with us, but entering into alliance with us for the time, and for the rest
abiding by itself: and to compensate for the crocodile's scaly hide, one may make
that very hide serve as armour, by putting it on his skin upon occasion: or,
failing that, art fashions iron for this purpose too, which, when it has served
him for a time for war, leaves the man-at-arms once more free from the burden
in time of peace: and the wing of the birds, too, ministers to our life, so that
by aid of contrivance we are not left behind even by the speed of wings: for
some of them become tame and are of service to those who catch birds, and by
their means others are by contrivance subdued to serve our needs:. moreover art
contrives to make our arrows feathered, and by means of the bow gives us for our
needs the speed of wings: while the fact that our feet are easily hurt and worn
in travelling makes necessary the aid which is given by the subject animals:
for hence it comes that we fit shoes to our feet.
VIII. Why man's form is upright; and that hands were given him because of
reason; wherein also is a speculation on the difference of souls.
1. But man's form is upright, and extends aloft towards heaven, and looks
upwards: and these are marks of sovereignty which show his royal dignity. For
the fact that man alone among existing things is such as this, while all others
bow their bodies downwards, clearly points to the difference of dignity
between those which stoop beneath his sway and that power which rises above them: for
all the rest have the foremost limbs of their bodies in the form of feet,
because that which stoops needs something to support it: but in the formation of
man these limbs were made hands, for the upright body found one base, supporting
its position securely on two feet, sufficient for its needs.
2. Especially do these ministering hands adapt themselves to the
requirements of the reason: indeed if one were to say that the ministration of hands is
a special property of the rational nature, he would not be entirely wrong; and
that not only because his thought turns to the common and obvious fact that we
signify our reasoning by means of the natural employment of our hands in
written characters. It is true that this fact, that we speak by writing, and, in a
certain way, converse by the aid of our hands, preserving sounds by the forms of
the alphabet, is not unconnected with the endowment of reason; but I am
referring to something else when I say that the hands co-operate with the bidding of
reason.
3. Let us, however, before discussing this point, consider the matter we
passed over (for the subject of the order of created things almost escaped our
notice), why the growth of things that spring from the earth takes precedence,
and the irrational animals come next, and then, after the making of these, comes
man: for it may be that we learn from these facts not only the obvious
thought, that grass appeared to the Creator useful for the sake of the animals, while
the animals were made because of man, and that for this reason, before the
animals there was made their food, and before man that which was to minister to
human life.
4. But it seems to me that by these facts Moses reveals a hidden doctrine,
and secretly delivers that wisdom concerning the soul, of which the learning
that is without had indeed some imagination, but no clear comprehension. His
discourse then hereby teaches us that the power of life and soul may be considered
in three divisions. For one is only a power of growth and nutrition supplying
what is suitable for the support of the bodies that are nourished, which is
called the vegetative(6) soul, and is to be seen in plants; for we may perceive in
growing plants a certain vital power destitute of sense; and there is another
form of life besides this, which, while it includes the form above mentioned,
is also possessed in addition of the power of management according to sense; and
this is to be found in the nature of the irrational animals: for they are not
only the subjects of nourishment and growth, but also have the activity of
sense and perception. But perfect bodily life is seen in the rational (I mean the
human) nature, which both is nourished and endowed with sense, and also partakes
of reason and is ordered by mind.
5. We might make a division of our subject in some such way as this. Of
things existing, part are intellectual, part corporeal. Let us leave alone for
the present the division of the intellectual according to its properties, for our
argument is not concerned with these. Of the corporeal, part is entirely
devoid of life, and part shares in vital energy. Of a living body, again, part has
sense conjoined with life, and part is without sense: lastly, that which has
sense is again divided into rational and irrational. For this reason the lawgiver
says that after inanimate matter (as a sort of foundation for the form of
animate things), this vegetative life was made, and had earlier(7) existence in the
growth of plants: then he proceeds to introduce the genesis of those creatures
which are regulated by sense: and since, following the same order, of those
things which have obtained life in the flesh, those which have sense can exist by
themselves even apart from the intellectual nature, while the rational
principle could not be embodied save as blended with the sensitive,--for this reason
man was made last after the animals, as nature advanced in an orderly course to
perfection. For this rational animal, man, is blended of every form of soul; he
is nourished by the vegetative kind of soul, and to the faculty of growth was
added that of sense, which stands midway, if we regard its peculiar nature,
between the intellectual and the more material essence being as much coarser than
the one as it is more refined than the other: then takes place a certain
alliance and commixture of the intellectual essence with the subtle and enlightened
element of the sensitive nature: so that man consists of these three: as we are
taught the like thing by the apostle in what he says to the Ephesians(8),
praying for them that the complete grace of their "body and soul and spirit" may be
preserved at the coming of the Lord; using, the word "body" for the nutritive
part, and denoting the sensitive by the word "soul," and the intellectual by
"spirit." Likewise too the Lord instructs the scribe in the Gospel that he should
set before every commandment that love to God which is exercised with all the
heart and soul and mind(9): for here also it seems to me that the phrase
indicates the same difference, naming the more corporeal existence "heart," the
intermediate "soul," and the higher nature, the intellectual and mental faculty,
"mind."
6. Hence also the apostle recognizes three divisions of dispositions,
calling one "carnal," which is busied with the belly and the pleasures connected
with it, another "natural(1)," which holds a middle position with regard to
virtue and vice, rising above the one, but without pure participation in the other;
and another "spiritual," which perceives the perfection of godly life:
wherefore he says to the Corinthians, reproaching their indulgence in pleasure and
passion, "Ye are carnal(2)," and incapable of receiving the more perfect doctrine;
while elsewhere, making a comparison of the middle kind with the perfect, he
says, "but the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit: for they are
foolishness unto him: but he that is spiritual judgeth all things, yet he
himself is judged of no man(3)." As, then, the natural man is higher than the carnal,
by the same measure also the spiritual man rises above the natural.
7. If, therefore, Scripture tells us that man was made last, after every
animate thing, the lawgiver is doing nothing else than declaring to us the
doctrine of the soul, considering that what is perfect comes last, according to a
certain necessary sequence in the order of things: for in the rational are
included the others also, while in the sensitive there also surely exists the
vegetative form, and that again is conceived only in connection with what is material:
thus we i may suppose that nature makes an ascent as it were by steps--I mean
the various properties of life--from the lower to the perfect form.
8 4. Now since man is a rational animal, the instrument of his body must
be made suitable for the use of reason(5); as you may see musicians producing
their music according to the form of their instruments, and not piping with harps
nor harping upon flutes, so it must needs be that the organization of these
instruments of ours should be adapted for reason, that when struck by the vocal
organs it might be able to sound properly for the use of words. For this reason
the hands were attached to the body; for though we can count up very many uses
in daily life for which these skilfully contrived and helpful instruments, our
hands, that easily follow every art and every operation, alike in war and
peace(6), are serviceable, yet nature added them to our body pre-eminently for the
sake of reason. For if man were destitute of hands, the various parts of his
face would certainly have been arranged like those of the quadrupeds, to suit the
purpose of his feeding: so that its form would have been lengthened out and
pointed towards the nostrils, and his lips would have projected from his mouth,
lumpy, and stiff, and thick, fitted for taking up the grass, and his tongue would
either have lain between his teeth, of a kind to match his lips, fleshy, and
hard, and rough, assisting his teeth to deal with what came under his grinder,
or it would have been moist and hanging out at the side like that of dogs and
other carnivorous beasts, projecting through the gaps in his jagged row of teeth.
If, then, our body had no hands, how could articulate sound have been
implanted in it, seeing that the form of the parts of the mouth would not have had the
configuration proper for the use of speech, so that man must of necessity have
either bleated, or "baaed," or barked, or neighed, or bellowed like oxen or
asses, or uttered some bestial sound? but now, as the hand is made part of the
body, the mouth is at leisure for the service of the reason. Thus the hands are
shown to be the property of the rational nature, the Creator having thus devised
by their means a special advantage for reason.
IX. That the form of man was framed to serve as an instrument for the use of
reason(7).
1. Now since our Maker has bestowed upon our formation a certain Godlike
grace, by implanting in His image the likeness of His own excellences, for this
reason He gave, of His bounty, His other good gifts to human nature; but mind
and reason we cannot strictly say that He gave, but that He imparted them,
adding to the image the proper adornment of His own nature. Now since the mind is a
thing intelligible and incorporeal, its grace would have been incommunicable
and isolated, if its motion were not manifested by some contrivance. For this
cause there was still need of this instrumental organization, that it might, like
a plectrum, touch the vocal organs and indicate by the quality of the notes
struck, the motion within.
2. And as some skilled musician, who may have been deprived by some
affection of his own voice, and yet wish to make his skill known, might make melody
with voices of others, and publish his art by the aid of flutes or of the lyre,
so also the human mind being a discoverer of all sorts of conceptions, seeing
that it is unable, by the mere soul, to reveal to those who hear by bodily
senses the motions of its understanding, touches, like some skilful composer, these
animated instruments, and makes known its hidden thoughts by means of the sound
produced upon them.
3. Now the music of the human instrument is a-sort of compound of flute
and lyre, sounding together in combination as in a concerted piece of music. For
the breath, as it is forced up from the air-receiving vessels through the
windpipe, when the speaker's impulse to utterance attunes the harmony to sound, and
as it strikes against the internal protuberances which divide this flute-like
passage in a circular arrangement, imitates in a way the sound uttered through
a flute, being driven round and round by the membranous projections. But the
palate receives the sound from below in its own concavity, and dividing the sound
by the two passages that extend to the nostrils, and by the cartilages about
the perforated bone, as it were by some scaly protuberance, makes its resonance
louder; while the cheek, the tongue, the mechanism of the pharynx by which the
chin is relaxed when drawn in, and tightened when extended to a point--all
these in many different ways answer to the motion of the plectrum upon the strings,
varying very quickly, as occasion requires, the arrangement of the tones; and
the opening and closing of the lips has the same effect as players produce when
they check the breath of the flute with their fingers according to the measure
of the tune.
X. That the mind works by means of the senses.
1. As the mind then produces the music of reason by means of our
instrumental construction, we are born rational, while, as I think, we should not have
had the gift of reason if we had had to employ our lips to supply the need of
the body--the heavy and toilsome part of the task of providing food. As things
are, however, our hands appropriate this ministration to themselves, and leave
the mouth available for the service of reason.
2(8). The operation of the instrument(9), however, is twofold; one for the
production of sound, the other for the reception of concepts from without; and
the one faculty does not blend with the other, but abides in the operation for
which it was appointed by nature, not interfering with its neighbour either by
the sense of hearing undertaking to speak, or by the speech undertaking to
hear; for the latter is always uttering something, while the ear, as Solomon
somewhere says, is not filled with continual hearing(1).
3. That point as to our internal faculties which seems to me to be even in
a special degree matter for wonder, is this :--what is the extent of that
inner receptacle into which flows everything that is poured in by our hearing? who
are the recorders of the sayings that are brought in by it? what sort of
storehouses are there for the concepts that are being put in by our hearing? and how
is it, that when many of them, of varied kinds, are pressing one upon another,
there arises no confusion and error in the relative position of the things that
are laid up there? And one may have the like feeling of wonder also with
regard to the operation of sight; for by it also in like manner the mind apprehends
those things which are external to the body, and draws to itself the images of
phenomena, marking in itself the impressions of the things which are seen.
4. And just as if there were some extensive city receiving all comers by
different entrances, all will not congregate at any particular place, but some
will go to the market, some to the houses, others to the churches, or the
streets, or lanes, or the theatres, each according to his own inclination,--some such
city of our mind I seem to discern established in us, which the different
entrances through the senses keep filling, while the mind, distinguishing and
examining each of the things that enters, ranks them in their proper departments of
knowledge.
5. And as, to follow the illustration of the city, it may often be that
those who are of the same family and kindred do not enter by the same gate,
coming in by different entrances, as it may happen, but are none the less, when they
come within the circuit of the wall, brought together again, being on close
terms with each other (and one may find the contrary happen; for those who are
strangers and mutually unknown often take one entrance to the city, yet their
community of entrance does not bind them together; for even when they are within
they can be separated to join their own kindred); something of the same kind I
seem to discern in the spacious territory of our mind; for often the knowledge
which we gather from the different organs of sense is one, as the same object
is divided into several parts in relation to the senses; and again, on the
contrary, we may learn from some one sense many and varied things which have no
affinity one with another.
6. For instance--for it is better to make our argument clear by
illustration--let us suppose that we are making some inquiry into the property of
tastes--what is sweet to the sense, and what is to be avoided by tasters. We find,
then, by experience, both the bitterness of gall and the pleasant character of the
quality of honey; but when these facts are known, the knowledge is one which
is given to us (the same thing being introduced to our understanding in several
ways) by taste, smell, hearing, and often by touch and sight. For when one
sees honey, and hears its name, and receives it by taste, and recognizes its odour
by smell, and tests it by touch, he recognizes the same thing by means of each
of his senses.
7. On the other hand we get varied and multiform information by some one
sense, for as hearing receives all sorts of sounds, and our visual perception
exercises its operation by beholding things of different kinds--for it lights
alike on black and white, and all things that are distinguished by contrariety of
colour,--so with taste, with smell, with perception by touch; each implants in
us by means of its own perceptive power the knowledge of things of every kind.
XI. That the nature of mind is invisible(2)
1. What then is, in its own nature, this mind that distributes itself into
faculties of sensation, and duly receives, by means of each, the knowledge of
things? That it is something else besides the senses, I suppose no reasonable
man doubts; for if it were identical with sense, it would reduce the proper
character of the operations carried on by sense to one, on the the ground that it
is itself simple, and that in what is simple no diversity is to be found. Now
however, as all agree that touch is one thing and smell another, and as the rest
of the senses are in like manner so situated with regard to each other as to
exclude intercommunion or mixture, we must surely suppose, since the mind is duly
present in each case, that it is something else besides the sensitive nature,
so that no variation may attach to a thing intelligible.
2. "Who hath known the mind of the Lord(3)?" the apostle asks; and I ask
further, who has understood his own mind? Let those tell us who consider the
nature of God to be within their comprehension, whether they understand
themselves--if they know the nature of their own mind. "It is manifold and much
compounded." How then can that which is intelligible be composite? or what is the mode
of mixture of things that differ in kind? Or, "It is simple, and incomposite."
How then is it dispersed into the manifold divisions of the senses? how is there
diversity in unity? how is unity maintained in diversity?
3. But I find the solution of these difficulties by recourse to the very
utterance of God; for He says, "Let us make man in our image, after our
likeness(4)." The image is properly an image so long as it fails in none of those
attributes which we perceive in the archetype; but where it falls from its
resemblance to the prototype it ceases in that respect to be an image; therefore, since
one of the attributes we contemplate in the Divine nature is
incomprehensibility of essence, it is clearly necessary that in this point the image should be
able to show its imitation of the archetype.
4. For if, while the archetype transcends comprehension, the nature of the
image were comprehended, the contrary character of the attributes we behold in
them would prove the defect of the image; but since the nature of our mind,
which is the likeness of the Creator evades our knowledge, it has an accurate
resemblance to the superior nature, figuring by its own unknowableness the
incomprehensible Nature.
XII. An examination of the question where the ruling principle is to be
considered to reside; wherein also is a discussion of tears and laughter, and a
physiological speculation as to the interrelation of matter, nature, and minds.
1. Let there be an end, then, of all the vain and conjectural discussion
of those who confine the intelligible energy to certain bodily organs; of whom
some lay it down that the ruling principle is in the heart, while others say
that the mind resides in the brain, strengthening such opinions by some plausible
superficialities. For he who ascribes the principal authority to the heart
makes its local position evidence of his argument (because it seems that it
somehow occupies the middle position in the body(6)), on the ground that the motion
of the will is easily distributed from the centre to the whole body, and so
proceeds to operation; and he makes the troublesome and passionate disposition of
man a testimony for his argument, because such affections seem to move this part
sympathetically. Those, on the other hand, who consecrate the brain to
reasoning, say that the head has been built by nature as a kind of citadel of the
whole body, and that in it the mind dwells like a king, with a bodyguard of senses
surrounding it like messengers and shield-bearers. And these find a sign of
their opinion in the fact that the reasoning of those who have suffered some
injury to the membrane of the brain is abnormally distorted, and that those whose
heads are heavy with intoxication ignore what is seemly.
2. Each of those who uphold these views puts forward some reasons of a
more physical character on behalf of his opinion concerning the ruling principle.
One declares that the motion which proceeds from the understanding is in some
way akin to the nature of fire, because fire and the understanding are alike in
perpetual motion; and since heat is allowed to have its source in the region of
the heart, he says on this ground that the motion of mind is compounded with
the mobility of heat, and asserts that the heart, in which heat is enclosed, is
the receptacle of the intelligent nature. The other declares that the cerebral
membrane (for so they call the tissue that surrounds the brain) is as it were a
foundation or root of all the senses, and hereby makes good his own argument,
on the ground that the intellectual energy cannot have its seat save in that
part where the ear, connected with it, comes into concussion with the sounds that
fall upon it, and the sight (which naturally belongs to the hollow of the
place where the eyes are situated) makes its internal representation by means of
the images that fall upon the pupils, while the qualities of scents are discerned
in it by being drawn in through the nose, and the sense of taste is tried by
the test of the cerebral membrane, which sends down from itself, by the
veterbrae of the neck, sensitive nerve-processes to the isthmoidal passage, and unites
them with the muscles there.
3. I admit it to be true that the intellectual part of the soul is often
disturbed by prevalence of passions; and that the reason is blunted by some
bodily accident so as to hinder its natural operation; and that the heart is a sort
of source of the fiery element in the body, and is moved in correspondence
with the impulses of passion; and moreover, in addition to this, I do not reject
(as I hear very much the same account from those who spend their time on
anatomical researches) the statement that the cerebral membrane (according to the
theory of those who take such a physiological view), enfolding in itself the brain,
and steeped in the vapours that issue from it, forms a foundation for the
senses; yet I do not hold this for a proof that the incorporeal nature is bounded
by any limits of place.
4. Certainly we are aware that mental aberrations do not arise from
heaviness of head alone, but skilled physicians declare that our intellect is also
weakened by the membranes that underlie the sides being affected by disease, when
they call the disease frenzy, since the name given to those membranes is
<greek>frenes</greek>. And the sensation resulting from sorrow is mistakenly
supposed to arise at the heart; for while it is not the heart, but the entrance of the
belly that is pained, people ignorantly refer the affection to the heart.
Those, however, who have carefully studied the affections in question give some
such account as follows:--by a compression and closing of the pores, which
naturally takes place over the whole body in a condition of grief, everything that
meets a hindrance in its passage is driven to the cavities in the interior of the
body, and hence also (as the respiratory organs too are pressed by what
surrounds them), the drawing of breath often becomes more violent under the influence
of nature endeavouring to widen what has been contracted, so as to open out
the compressed passages; and such breathing we consider a symptom of grief and
call it a groan or a shriek. That, moreover, which appears to oppress the region
of the heart is a painful affection, not of the heart, but of the entrance of
the stomach, and occurs from the same cause (I mean, that of the compression of
the pores), as the vessel that contains the bile, contracting, pours that
bitter and pungent juice upon the entrance of the stomach; and a proof of this is
that the complexion of those in grief becomes sallow and jaundiced, as the bile
pours its own juice into the veins by reason of excessive pressure.
5. Furthermore, the opposite affection, that, I mean, of mirth and
laughter, contributes to establish the argument; for the pores of the body, in the
case of those who are dissolved in mirth by hearing something pleasant, are also
somehow dissolved and relaxed. Just as in the former case the slight and
insensible exhalations of the pores are checked by grief, and, as they compress the
internal arrangement of the higher viscera, drive up towards the head and the
cerebral membrane the humid vapour which, being retained in excess by the cavities
of the brain, is driven out by the pores at its base(7), while the closing of
the eyelids expels the moisture in the form of drops (and the drop is called a
tear), so I would have you think that when the pores, as a result of the
contrary condition, are unusually widened, some air is drawn in through them into the
interior, and thence again expelled by nature through the passage of the
mouth, while all the viscera (and especially, as they say, the liver) join in
expelling this air by a certain agitation and throbbing motion; whence it comes that
nature, contriving to give facility for the exit of the air, widens the passage
of the mouth, extending the cheeks on either side round about the breath; and
the result is called laughter.
6. We must not, then, on this account ascribe the ruling principle any
more to the liver than we must think, because of the heated state of the blood
about the heart in wrathful dispositions, that the seat of the mind is in the
heart; but we must refer these matters to the character of our bodily
organization, and consider that the mind is equally in contact with each of the parts
according to a kind of combination which is indescribable.
7. Even if any should allege to us on this point the Scripture which
claims the ruling principle for the heart, we shall not receive the statement
without examination; for he who makes mention of the heart speaks also of the reins,
when he says, "God trieth the hearts and reins"(8); so that they must either
confine the intellectual principle to the two combined or to neither.
8. And although I am aware that the intellectual energies are blunted, or
even made altogether ineffective in a certain condition of the body, I do not
hold this a sufficient evidence for limiting the faculty of the mind by any
particular place, so that it should be forced out of its proper amount of free
space by any inflammations that may arise in the neighbouring parts of the body(9)
(for such an opinion is a corporeal one, that when the receptacle is already
occupied by something placed in it, nothing else can find place there); for the
intelligible nature neither dwells in the empty spaces of bodies, nor is
extruded by encroachments of the flesh; but since the whole body is made like some
musical instrument, just as it often happens in the case of those who know how to
play, but are unable, because the unfitness of the instrument does not admit of
their art, to show their skill (for that which is destroyed by time, or broken
by a fall, or rendered useless by rust or decay, is mute and inefficient, even
if it be breathed upon by one who may be an excellent artist in
flute-playing); so too the mind, passing over the whole instrument, and touching each of the
parts in a mode corresponding to its intellectual activities, according to its
nature, produces its proper effect on those parts which are in a natural
condition, but remains inoperative and ineffective upon those which are unable to
admit the movement of its art; for the mind is somehow naturally adapted to be in
close relation with that which is in a natural condition, but to be alien from
that which is removed from nature.
9.(1) And here, I think there is a view of the matter more close to
nature, by which we may learn something of the more refined doctrines. For since the
most beautiful and supreme good of all is the Divinity Itself, to which incline
all things that have a tendency towards what is beautiful and good(2), we
therefore say that the mind, as being in the image of the most beautiful, itself
also remains in beauty and goodness so long as it partakes as far as is possible
in its likeness to the archetype; but if it were at all to depart from this it
is deprived of that beauty in which it was. And as we said that the mind was
adorned(3) by the likeness of the archetypal beauty, being formed as though it
were a mirror to receive the figure of that which it expresses, we consider that
the nature which is governed by it is attached to the mind in the same
relation, and that it too is adorned by the beauty that the mind gives, being, so to
say, a mirror of the mirror; and that by it is swayed and sustained the material
element of that existence in which the nature is contemplated.
10. Thus so long as one keeps in touch with the other, the communication
of the true beauty extends proportionally through the whole series, beautifying
by the superior nature that which comes next to it; but when there is any
interruption of this beneficent connection, or when, on the contrary, the superior
comes to follow the inferior, then is displayed the misshapen character of
matter, when it is isolated from nature (for in itself matter is a thing without
form or structure), and by its shapelessness is also destroyed that beauty of
nature with which(4) it is adorned through the mind; and so the transmission of the
ugliness of matter reaches through the nature to the mind itself, so that the
image of God is no longer seen in the figure expressed by that which was
moulded according to it; for the mind, setting the idea of good like a mirror behind
the back, turns off the incident rays of the effulgence of the good, and it
receives into itself the impress of the shapelessness of matter.
11. And in this way is brought about the genesis of evil, arising through
the withdrawal of that which is beautiful and good. Now all is beautiful and
good that is closely related to the First Good; but that which departs from its
relation and likeness to this is certainly devoid of beauty and goodness. If,
then, according to the statement we have been considering, that which is truly
good is one, and the mind itself also has its power of being beautiful and good,
in so far as it is in the image of the good and beautiful, and the nature,
which is sustained by the mind, has the like power, in so far as it is an image of
the image, it is hereby shown that our material part holds together, and is
upheld when it is controlled by nature; and on the other hand is dissolved and
disorganized when it is separated from that which upholds and sustains it, and is
dissevered from its conjunction with beauty and goodness.
12. Now such a condition as this does not arise except when there takes
place an overturning of nature to the opposite state, in which the desire has no
inclination for beauty and goodness, but for that which is in need of the
adorning element; for it must needs be that that which is made like to matter,
destitute as matter is of form of its own, should be assimilated to it in respect of
the absence alike of form and of beauty.
13. We have, however, discussed these points m passing, as following on
our argument, since they were introduced by our speculation on the point before
us; for the subject of enquiry was, whether the intellectual faculty has its
seat in any of the parts of us, or extends equally over them all; for as for those
who shut up the mind locally in parts of the body, and who advance for the
establishment of this opinion of theirs the fact that the reason has not free
course in the case of those whose cerebral membranes are in an unnatural condition,
our argument showed that in respect of every part of the compound nature of
man, whereby every man has some natural operation, the power of the soul remains
equally ineffective if the part does not continue in its natural condition. And
thus there came into our argument, following out this line of thought, the
view we have just stated, by which we learn that in the compound nature of man the
mind is governed by God, and that by it is governed our material life,
provided the latter remains in its natural state, but if it is perverted from nature
it is alienated also from that operation which is carried on by the mind.
14. Let us return however once more to the point from which we
started--that in those who are not perverted from their natural condition by some
affection, the mind exercises its own power, and is established firmly in those who are
in sound health, but on the contrary is powerless in those who do not admit
its operation; for we may confirm our opinion on these matters by yet other
arguments: and if it is not tedious for those to hear who are already wearied with
our discourse, we shall discuss these matters also, so far as we are able, in a
few words.
XIII. A Rationale of sleep, of yawning, and of dreams(5).
1. This life of our bodies, material and subject to flux, always advancing
by way of motion, finds the power of its being in this, that it never rests
from its motion: and as some river, flowing on by its own impulse, keeps the
channel in which it runs well filled, yet is not seen in the same water always at
the same place, but part of it glides away while part comes flowing on, so, too,
the material element of our life here suffers change in the continuity of its
succession of opposites by way of motion and flux, so that it never can desist
from change, but in its inability to rest keeps up unceasingly its motion
alternating by like ways(6): and if it should ever cease moving it will assuredly
have cessation also of its being.
2. For instance, emptying succeeds fulness, and on the other hand after
emptiness comes in turn a process of filling: sleep relaxes the strain of waking,
and, again, awakening braces up what had become slack: and neither of these
abides continually, but both give way, each at the other's coming; nature thus by
their interchange so renewing herself as, while partaking of each in turn, to
pass from the one to the other without break. For that the living creature
should always be exerting itself in its operations produces a certain rupture and
severance of the overstrained part; and continual quiescence of the body brings
about a certain dissolution and laxity in its frame: but to be in touch with
each of these at the proper times in a moderate degree is a staying-power of
nature, which, by continual transference to the opposed states, gives herself in
each of them rest from the other. Thus she finds the body on the strain through
wakefulness, and devises relaxation for the strain by means of sleep, giving the
perceptive faculties rest for the time from their operations, loosing them
like horses from the chariots after the race.
3. Further, rest at proper times is necessary for the framework of the
body, that the nutriment may be diffused over the whole body through the passages
which it contains, without any strain to hinder its progress. For just as
certain misty vapours are drawn up from the recesses of the earth when it is soaked
with rain, whenever the sun heats it with rays of any considerable warmth, so a
similar result happens in the earth that is in us, when the nutriment within
is heated up by natural warmth; and the vapours, being naturally of upward
tendency and airy nature, and aspiring to that which is above them, come to be in
the region of the head like smoke penetrating the joints of a wall: then they are
dispersed thence by exhalation to the passages of the organs of sense, and by
them the senses are of course rendered inactive, giving way to the transit of
these vapours. For the eyes are pressed upon by the eyelids when some leaden
instrument(7), as it were (I mean such a weight as that I have spoken of), lets
down the eyelid upon the eyes; and the hearing, being dulled by these same
vapours, as though a door were placed upon the acoustic organs, rests from its
natural operation: and such a condition is sleep, when the sense is at rest in the
body, and altogether ceases from the operation of its natural motion, so that the
digestive processes of nutriment may have free course for transmission by the
vapours through each of the passages.
4. And for this reason, if the apparatus of the organs of sense should be
closed and sleep hindered by some occupation, the nervous system, becoming
filled with the vapours, is naturally and spontaneously extended so that the part
which has had its density increased by the vapours is rarefied by the process of
extension, just as those do who squeeze the water out of clothes by vehement
wringing: and, seeing that the parts about the pharynx are somewhat circular,
and nervous tissue abounds there, whenever there is need for the expulsion from
that part of the density of the vapours-- since it is impossible that the part
which is circular in shape should be separated directly, but only by being
distended in the outline of its circumference--for this reason, by checking the
breath m a yawn the chin is moved downwards so as to leave a hollow to the uvula,
and all the interior parts being arranged in the figure of a circle, that smoky
denseness which had been detained in the neighbouring parts is emitted
together with the exit of the breath. And often the like may happen even after sleep
when any portion of those vapours remains in the region spoken of undigested and
unexhaled.
5. Hence the mind of man clearly proves its claim s to connection with his
nature, itself also co-operating and moving with the nature in its sound and
waking state, but remaining unmoved when it is abandoned to sleep, unless any
one supposes that the imagery of dreams is a motion of the mind exercised in
sleep. We for our part say that it is only the conscious and sound action of the
intellect which we ought to refer to mind; and as to the fantastic nonsense which
occurs to us in sleep, we suppose that some appearances of the operations of
the mind are accidentally moulded in the less rational part of the soul; for the
soul, being by sleep dissociated from the senses, is also of necessity outside
the range of the operations of the mind; for it is through the senses that the
union of mind with man takes place; therefore when the senses are at rest, the
intellect also must needs be inactive; and an evidence of this is the fact
that the dreamer often seems to be in absurd and impossible situations, which
would not happen if the soul were then guided by reason and intellect.
6. It seems to me, however, that when the soul is at rest so far as
concerns its more excellent faculties (so far, I mean, as concerns the operations of
mind and sense), the nutritive part of it alone is operative during sleep, and
that some shadows and echoes of those things which happen in our waking
moments--of the operations both of sense and of intellect--which are impressed upon it
by that part of the soul which is capable of memory, that these, I say, are
pictured as chance will have it, some echo of memory still lingering in this
division of the soul.
7. With these, then, the man is beguiled, not led to acquaintance with the
things that present themselves by any train of thought, but wandering among
confused and inconsequent delusions. But just as in his bodily operations, while
each of the parts individually acts in some way according to the power which
naturally resides in it, there arises also in the limb that is at rest a state
sympathetic with that which is in motion, similarly in the case of the soul, even
if one part is at rest and another in motion, the whole is affected in
sympathy with the part; for it is not possible that the natural unity should be in any
way severed, though one of the faculties included in it is in turn supreme in
virtue of its active operation. But as, when men are awake and busy, the mind
is supreme, and sense ministers to it, yet the faculty which regulates the body
is not dissociated from them (for the mind furnishes the food for its wants,
the sense receives what is furnished, and the nutritive faculty of the body
appropriates to itself that which is given to it), so in sleep the supremacy of
these faculties is in some way reversed in us, and while the less rational becomes
supreme, the operation of the other ceases indeed, yet is not absolutely
extinguished; but while the nutritive faculty is then busied with digestion during
sleep, and keeps all our nature occupied with itself, the faculty of sense is
neither entirely severed from it (for that cannot be separated which has once been
naturally joined), nor yet can its activity revive, as it is hindered by the
inaction during sleep of the organs of sense; and by the same reasoning (the
mind also being united to the sensitive part of the soul) it would follow that we
should say that the mind moves with the latter when it is in motion, and rests
with it when it is quiescent.
8. As naturally happens with fire when it is heaped over with chaff, and
no breath fans the flame it neither consumes what lies beside it, nor is
entirely quenched, but instead of flame it rises to the air through the chaff in the
form of smoke; yet if it should obtain any breath of air, it turns the smoke to
flame--in the same way the mind when hidden by the inaction of the senses in
sleep is neither able to shine out through them, nor yet is quite extinguished,
but has, so to say, a smouldering activity, operating to a certain extent, but
unable to operate farther.
9. Again, as a musician, when he touches with the plectrum the slackened
strings of a lyre, brings out no orderly melody (for that which is not stretched
will not sound), but his hand frequently moves skilfully, bringing the
plectrum to the position of the notes so far as place is concerned, yet there is no
sound, except that he produces by the vibration of the strings a sort of
uncertain and indistinct hum; so in sleep the mechanism of the senses being relaxed,
the artist is either quite inactive, if the instrument is completely relaxed by
satiety or heaviness; or will act slackly and faintly, if the instrument of the
senses does not fully admit of the exercise of its art.
10. For this cause memory is confused, and foreknowledge, though rendered
doubtful(9) by uncertain veils, is imaged in shadows of our waking pursuits,
and often indicates to us something of what is going to happen: for by its
subtlety of nature the mind has some advantage, in ability to behold things, over
mere corporeal grossness; yet it cannot make its meaning clear by direct methods,
so that the information of the matter in hand should be plain and evident, but
its declaration of the future is ambiguous and doubtful,--what those who
interpret such things call an "enigma."
11. So the butler presses the cluster for Pharaoh's cup: so the baker
seemed to carry his baskets; each supposing himself in sleep to be engaged in those
services with which he was busied when awake: for the images of their
customary occupations imprinted on the prescient element of their soul, gave them for a
time the power of foretelling, by this sort of prophecy on the part of the
mind, what should come to pass.
12. But if Daniel and Joseph and others like them were instructed by
Divine power, without any confusion of perception, in the knowledge of things to
come, this is nothing to the present statement; for no one would ascribe this to
the power of dreams, since he will be constrained as a consequence to suppose
that those Divine appearances also which took place in wakefulness were not a
miraculous vision but a result of nature brought about spontaneously. As then,
while all men are guided by their own minds, there are some few who are deemed
worthy of evident Divine communication; so, while the imagination of sleep
naturally occurs in a like and equivalent manner for all, some, not all, share by
means of their dreams in some more Divine manifestation: but to all the rest even
if a foreknowledge of anything does occur as a result of dreams, it occurs in
the way we have spoken of.
13. And again, if the Egyptian and the Assyrian king were guided by God to
the knowledge of the future, the dispensation wrought by their means is a
different thing: for it was necessary that the hidden wisdom of the holy men(1)
should be made known, that each of them might not pass his life without profit to
the state. For how could Daniel have been known for what he was, if the
soothsayers and magicians had not been unequal to the task of discovering the dream?
And how could Egypt have been preserved while Joseph was shut up in prison, if
his interpretation of the dream had not brought him to notice? Thus we must
reckon these cases as exceptional, and not class them with common dreams.
14. But this ordinary seeing of dreams is common to all men, and arises in
our fancies in different modes and forms: for either there remain, as we have
said, in the reminiscent part of the soul, the echoes of daily occupations; or,
as often happens, the constitution of dreams is framed with regard to such and
such a condition of the body: for thus the thirsty man seems to be among
springs, the man who is in need of food to be at a feast, and the young man in the
heat of youthful vigour is beset by fancies corresponding to his passion.
15. I also knew another cause of the fancies of sleep, when attending one
of my relations attacked by frenzy; who being annoyed by food being given him
in too great quantity for his strength, kept crying out and finding fault with
those who were about him for filling intestines with dung and putting them upon
him: and when his body was rapidly tending to perspire he blamed those who were
with him for having water ready to wet him with as he lay: and he did not
cease calling out till the result showed the meaning of these complaints: for all
at once a copious sweat broke out over his body, and a relaxation of the bowels
explained the weight in the intestines. The same condition then which, while
his sober judgment was dulled by disease, his nature underwent, being
sympathetically affected by the condition of the body--not being without perception of
what was amiss, but being unable clearly to express its pain, by reason of the
distraction resulting from the disease--this, probably, if the intelligent
principle of the soul were lulled to rest, not from infirmity but by natural sleep,
might appear as a dream to one similarly situated, the breaking out of
perspiration being expressed by water, and the pain occasioned by the food, by the weight
of intestines.
16. This view also is taken by those skilled in medicine, that according
to the differences of complaints the visions of dreams appear differently to the
patients: that the visions of those of weak stomach are of one kind, those of
persons suffering from injury to the cerebral membrane of another, those of
persons in fevers of yet another; that those of patients suffering from bilious
and from phlegmatic affections are diverse, and those again of plethoric
patients, and of patients in wasting disease, are different; whence we may see that the
nutritive and vegetative faculty of the soul has in it by commixture some seed
of the intelligent element, which is in some sense brought into likeness to
the particular state of the body, being adapted in its fancies according to the
complaint which has seized upon it.
17. Moreover, most men's dreams are conformed to the state of their
character: the brave man's fancies are of one kind, the coward's of another; the
wanton man's dreams of one kind, the continent man's of another; the liberal man
and the avaricious man are subject to different fancies; while these fancies are
nowhere framed by the intellect, but by the less rational disposition of the
soul, which forms even in dreams the semblances of those things to which each is
accustomed by the practice of his waking hours.
XIV. That the mind is not in a part of the body; wherein also is a distinction
of the movements of the body and of the soul(2).
1. But we have wandered far from our subject, for the purpose of our
argument was to show that the mind is not restricted to any part of the body, but is
equally in touch with the whole, producing its motion according to the nature
of the part which is under its influence. There are cases, however, in which
the mind even follows the bodily impulses, and becomes, as it were, their
servant; for often the bodily nature takes the lead by introducing either the sense of
that which gives pain or the desire for that which gives pleasure, so that it
may be said to furnish the first beginnings, by producing in us the desire for
food, or, generally, the impulse towards some pleasant thing; while the mind,
receiving such an impulse, furnishes the body by its own intelligence with the
proper means towards the desired object. Such a condition, indeed, does not
occur in all, save in those of a somewhat slavish disposition, who bring the reason
into bondage to the impulses of their nature and pay servile homage to the
pleasures of sense by allowing them the alliance of their mind; but in the case of
more perfect men this does not happen; for the mind takes the lead, and
chooses the expedient course by reason and not by passion, while their nature follows
in the tracks of its leader.
2. But since our argument discovered in our vital faculty three different
varieties--one which receives nourishment without perception, another which at
once receives nourishment and is capable of perception, but is without the
reasoning activity, and a third rational, perfect, and co-extensive with the whole
faculty--so that among these varieties the advantage belongs to the
intellectual,--let no one suppose on this account that in the compound nature of man there
are three souls welded together, contemplated each in its own limits, so that
one should think man's nature to be a sort of conglomeration of several souls.
The true and perfect soul is naturally one, the intellectual and immaterial,
which mingles with our material nature by the agency of the senses; but all that
is of material nature, being subject to mutation and alteration, will, if it
should partake of the animating power, move by way of growth: if, on the
contrary, it should fall away from the vital energy, it will reduce its motion to
destruction.
3. Thus, neither is there perception without material substance, nor does
the act of perception take place without the intellectual faculty.
XV. That the soul proper, in fact and name, is the rational soul, while the
others are called so equivocally; wherein also is this statement, that the power
of the mind extends throughout the whole body in fitting contact with every
part 3.
1. Now, if some things in creation possess the nutritive faculty, and
others again are regulated by the perceptive faculty, while the former have no
share of perception nor the latter of the intellectual nature, and if for this
reason any one is inclined to the opinion of a plurality of souls, such a man will
be positing a variety of souls in a way not in accordance with their
distinguishing definition. For everything which we conceive among existing things, if it
be perfectly that which it is, is also properly called by the name it bears:
but of that which is not every respect what it is called, the appellation also is
vain. For instance:--if one were to show us true bread, we say that he
properly applies the name to the subject: but if one were to show us instead that
which had been made of stone to resemble the natural bread, which had the same
shape, and equal size, and similarity of colour, so as in most points to be the
same with its prototype, but which yet lacks the power of being food, on this
account we say that the stone receives the name of "bread," not properly, but by a
misnomer, and all things which fall under the same description, which are not
absolutely what they are called, have their name from a misuse of terms.
2. Thus, as the soul finds its perfection in that which is intellectual
and rational, everything that is not so may indeed share the name of "soul," but
is not really soul, but a certain vital energy associated with the appellation
of "soul(4)." And for this reason also He Who gave laws on every matter, gave
the animal nature likewise, as not far removed from this vegetative life(5), for
the use of man, to be for those who partake of it instead of herbs:--for He
says, "Ye shall eat all kinds of flesh even as the green herb(6);" for the
perceptive energy seems to have but a slight advantage over that which is nourished
and grows without it. Let this teach carnal men not to bind their intellect
closely to the phenomena of sense, but rather to busy themselves with their
spiritual advantages, as the true soul is found in these, while sense has equal power
also among the brute creation.
3. The course of our argument, however, has diverged to another point: for
the subject of our speculation was not the fact that the energy of mind is of
more dignity among the attributes we conceive in man than the material element
of his being, but the fact that the mind is not confined to any one part of us,
but is equally in all and through all, neither surrounding anything without,
nor being enclosed within anything: for these phrases are properly applied to
casks or other bodies that are placed one inside the other; but the union of the
mental with the bodily presents a connection unspeakable and
inconceivable,--not being within it (for the incorporeal is not enclosed in a body), nor yet
surrounding it without (for that which is incorporeal does not include(7)
anything), but the mind approaching our nature in some inexplicable and incomprehensible
way, and coming into contact with it, is to be regarded as both in it and
around it, neither implanted in it nor enfolded with it, but in a way which we
cannot speak or think, except so far as this, that while the nature prospers
according to its own order, the mind is also operative; but if any misfortune befalls
the former, the movement of the intellect halts correspondingly.
XVI. A contemplation of the Divine utterance which said--"Let us make man
after our image and likeness"; wherein is examined what is the definition of the
image, and how the passible and mortal is like to the Blessed and Impassible, and
how in the image there are male and female, seeing these are not in the
Prototype(8).
1. Let us now resume our consideration of the Divine word, "Let us make
man in our image, after our likeness(9)." How mean and how unworthy of the
majesty of man are the fancies of some heathen writers, who magnify humanity, as they
supposed, by their comparison of it to this world! for they say that man is a
little world, composed of the same elements with the universe. Those who bestow
on human nature such praise as this by a high-sounding name, forget that they
are dignifying man with the attributes of the gnat and the mouse: for they too
are composed of these four elements,--because assuredly about the animated
nature of every existing thing we behold a part, greater or less, of those elements
without which it is not natural that any sensitive being should exist. What
great thing is there, then, in man's being accounted a representation and
likeness of the world,--of the heaven that passes away, of the earth that changes, of
all things that they contain, which pass away with the departure of that which
compasses them round?
2. In what then does the greatness of man consist, according to the
doctrine of the Church? Not in his likeness to the created world, but in his being in
the image of the nature of the Creator.
3. What therefore, you will perhaps say, is the definition of the image?
How is the incorporeal likened to body? how is the temporal like the eternal?
that which is mutable by change like to the immutable? that which is subject to
passion and corruption to the impassible and incorruptible? that which
constantly dwells with evil, and grows up with it, to that which is absolutely free from
evil? there is a great difference between that which is conceived in the
archetype, and a thing which has been made in its image: for the image is properly
so called if it keeps its resemblance to the prototype; but if the imitation be
perverted from its subject, the thing is something else, and no longer an image
of the subject.
4. How then is man, this mortal, passible, shortlived being, the image of
that nature which is immortal, pure, and everlasting? The true answer to this
question, indeed, perhaps only the very Truth knows: but this is what we,
tracing out the truth so far as we are capable by conjectures and inferences,
apprehend concerning the matter. Neither does the word of God lie when it says that
man was made in the image of God, nor is the pitiable suffering of man's nature
like to the blessedness of the impassible Life: for if any one were to compare
our nature with God, one of two things must needs be allowed in order that the
definition of the likeness may be apprehended in both cases in the same
terms,--either that the Deity is passible, or that humanity is impassible: but if
neither the Deity is passible nor our nature free from passion, what other account
remains whereby we may say that the word of God speaks truly, which says that
man was made in the image of God?
5. We must, then, take up once more the Holy Scripture itself, if we may
perhaps find some guidance in the question by means of what is written. After
saying, "Let us make man in our image," and for what purposes it was said "Let us
make him," it adds this saying:--"and God created man; in the image of God
created He him; male and female created He them(1)." We have already said in what
precedes, that this saying was uttered for the destruction of heretical
impiety, in order that being instructed that the Only-begotten God made man in the
image of God, we should in no wise distinguish the Godhead of the Father and the
Son, since Holy Scripture gives to each equally the name of God,--to Him Who
made man, and to Him in Whose image he was made.
6. However, let us pass by our argument upon this point: let us turn our
inquiry to the question before us,--how it is that while the Deity is in bliss,
and humanity is in misery, the latter is yet in Scripture called "like" the
former?
7. We must, then, examine the words carefully: for we find, if we do so,
that that which was made "in the image" is one thing, and that which is now
manifested in wretchedness is another. "God created man," it says; "in the image of
God created He him(3)." There is an end of the creation of that which was made
"in the image": then it makes a resumption of the account of creation, and
says, "male and female created He them." I presume that every one knows that this
is a departure from the Prototype: for "in Christ Jesus," as the apostle says,
"there is neither male nor female(2)." Yet the phrase declares that man is thus
divided.
8. Thus the creation of our nature is in a sense twofold: one made like to
God, one divided according to this distinction: for something like this the
passage darkly conveys by its arrangement, where it first says, "God created man,
in the image of God created He him(3)," and then, adding to what has been
said, "male and female created He them 3,"--a thing which is alien from our
conceptions of God.
9. I think that by these words Holy Scripture conveys to us a great and
lofty doctrine; and the doctrine is this. While two natures--the Divine and
incorporeal nature, and the irrational life of brutes--are separated from each other
as extremes, human nature is the mean between them: for in the compound nature
of man we may behold a part of each of the natures I have mentioned,--of the
Divine, the rational and intelligent element, which does not admit the
distinction of male and female; of the irrational, our bodily form and structure,
divided into male and female: for each of these elements is certainly to be found in
all that partakes of human life. That the intellectual element, however,
precedes the other, we learn as from one who gives in order an account of the making
of man; and we learn also that his community and kindred with the irrational is
for man a provision for reproduction. For he says first that "God created man
in the image of God" (showing by these words, as the Apostle says, that in such
a being there is no male or female): then he adds the peculiar attributes of
human nature, "male and female created He them(3)."
10. What, then, do we learn from this? Let no one, I pray, be indignant if
I bring from far an argument to bear upon the present subject. God is in His
own nature all that which our mind can conceive of good;--rather, transcending
all good that we can conceive or comprehend. He creates man for no other reason
than that He is good; and being such, and having this as His reason for
entering upon the creation of our nature, He would not exhibit the power of His
goodness in an imperfect form, giving our nature some one of the things at His
disposal, and grudging it a share in another: but the perfect form of goodness is
here to be seen by His both bringing man into being from nothing, and fully
supplying him with all good gifts: but since the list of individual good gifts is a
long one, it is out of the question to apprehend it numerically. The language of
Scripture therefore expresses it concisely by a comprehensive phrase, in
saying that man was made "in the image of God": for this is the same as to say that
He made human nature participant in all good; for if the Deity is the fulness
of good, and this is His image, then the image finds its resemblance to the
Archetype in being filled with all good.
11. Thus there is in us the principle of all excellence, all virtue and
wisdom, and every higher thing that we conceive: but pre-eminent among all is the
fact that we are free from necessity, and not in bondage to any natural power,
but have decision in our own power as we please; for virtue is a voluntary
thing, subject to no dominion: that which is the result of compulsion and force
cannot be virtue. 12. Now as the image bears in all points the semblance of the
archetypal excellence, if it had not a difference in some respect, being
absolutely without divergence it would no longer be a likeness, but will in that case
manifestly be absolutely identical with the Prototype. What difference then do
we discern between the Divine sad that which has been made like to the Divine?
We find it in the fact that the former is uncreate, while the latter has its
being from creation: and this distinction of property brings with it a train of
other properties; for it is very certainly acknowledged that the uncreated
nature is also immutable, and always remains the same, while the created nature
cannot exist without change; for its very passage from nonexistence to existence
is a certain motion and change of the non-existent transmuted by the Divine
purpose into being.
13. As the Gospel calls the stamp upon the coin "the image of Caesar(4),"
whereby we learn that in that which was fashioned to resemble Caesar there was
resemblance as to outward look, but difference as to material, so also in the
present saying, when we consider the attributes contemplated both in the Divine
and human nature, in which the likeness consists, to be in the place of the
features, we find in what underlies them the difference which we behold in the
uncreated and in the created nature.
14. Now as the former always remains the same, while that which came into
being by creation had the beginning of its existence from change, and has a
kindred connection with the like mutation, for this reason He Who, as the
prophetical writing says, "knoweth all things before they be(5)," following out, or
rather perceiving beforehand by His power of foreknowledge what, in a state of
independence and freedom, is the tendency of the motion of man's will,--as He saw,
I say, what would be, He devised for His image the distinction of male and
female, which has no reference to the Divine Archetype, but, as we have said, is
an approximation to the less rational nature.
15. The cause, indeed, of this device, only those can know who were
eye-witnesses of the truth and ministers of the Word; but we, imagining the truth, as
far as we can, by means of conjectures and similitudes, do not set forth that
which occurs to our mind authoritatively, but will place it in the form of a
theoretical speculation before our kindly hearers.
16. What is it then which we understand concerning these matters? In
saying that "God created man" the text indicates, by the indefinite character of the
term, all mankind; for was not Adam here named together with the creation, as
the history tells us in what follows(6)? yet the name given to the man created
is not the particular, but the general name: thus we are led by the employment
of the general name of our nature to some such view as this--that in the Divine
foreknowledge and power all humanity is included in the first creation; for it
is fitting for God not to regard any of the things made by Him as
indeterminate, but that each existing thing should have some limit and measure prescribed
by the wisdom of its Maker.
17. Now just as any particular man is limited by his bodily dimensions,
and the peculiar size which is conjoined with the superficies of his body is the
measure of his separate existence, so I think that the entire plenitude of
humanity was included by the God of all, by His power of foreknowledge, as it were
in one body, and that this is what the text teaches us which says, "God created
man, in the image of God created He him." For the image is not in part of our
nature, nor is the grace in any one of the things found in that nature, but
this power extends equally to all the race: and a sign of this is that mind is
implanted alike in all: for all have the power of understanding and deliberating,
and of all else whereby the Divine nature finds its image in that which was
made according to it: the man that was manifested at the first creation of the
world, and he that shall be after the consummation of all, are alike: they equally
bear in themselves the Divine image(7).
18. For this reason the whole race was spoken of as one man, namely, that
to God's power nothing is either past or future, but even that which we expect
is comprehended, equally with what is at present existing, by the
all-sustaining energy. Our whole nature, then, extending from the first to the last, is, so
to say, one image of Him Who is; but the distinction of kind in male and female
was added to His work lash as I suppose, for the reason which follows(8).
XVII. What we must answer to those who raise the question--"If procreation is
after sin, how would souls have came into being if the first of mankind had
remained sinless(9)?"
1. It is better for us however, perhaps, rather to inquire, before
investigating this point, the solution of the question put forward by our adversaries;
for they say that before the sin there is no account of birth, or of travail,
or of the desire that tends to procreation, but when they were banished from
Paradise after their sin, and the woman was condemned by the sentence of travail,
Adam thus entered with his consort upon the intercourse of married life, and
then took place the beginning of procreation. If, then, marriage did not exist
in Paradise, nor travail, nor birth, they say that it follows as a necessary
conclusion that human souls would not have existed in plurality had not the grace
of immortality fallen away to mortality, and marriage preserved our race by
means of descendants, introducing the offspring of the departing to take their
place, so that in a certain way the sin that entered into the world was for the
life of man: for the human race would have remained in the pair of the
first-formed, had not the fear of death impelled their nature to provide succession.
2. Now here again the true answer, whatever it may be, can be clear to
those only who, like Paul, have been instructed in the mysteries of Paradise; but
our answer is as follows. When the Sadducees once argued against the doctrine
of the resurrection, and brought forward, to establish their own opinion, that
woman of many marriages, who had been wife to seven brethren, and thereupon
inquired whose wife she will be after the resurrection, our Lord answered their
argument so as not only to instruct the Sadducees, but also to reveal to all that
come after them the mystery of the resurrection-life: "for in the
resurrection," He says, "they neither marry, nor are given in marriage neither can they die
any more, for they are equal to the angels, and are the children of God, being
the children of the resurrection(1)." Now the resurrection promises us nothing
else than the restoration of the fallen to their ancient state; for the grace
we look for is a certain return to the first life, bringing back again to
Paradise him who was cast out from it. If then the life of those restored is closely
related to that of the angels, it is clear that the life before the
transgression was a kind of angelic life, and hence also our return to the ancient
condition of our life is compared to the angels. Yet while, as has been said, there is
no marriage among them, the armies of the angels are in countless myriads; for
so Daniel declared in his visions: so, in the same way, if there had not come
upon us as the result of sin a change for the worse, and removal from equality
with the angels, neither should we have needed marriage that we might multiply
but whatever the mode of increase in the angelic nature is (unspeakable and
inconceivable by human conjectures, except that it assuredly exists), it would
have operated also in the case of men, who were "made a little lower than the
angels(2)," to increase mankind to the measure determined by its Maker.
3. But if any one finds a difficulty in an inquiry as to the manner of the
generation of souls, had man not needed the assistance of marriage, we shall
ask him in turn, what is the mode of the angelic existence, how they exist in
countless myriads, being one essence, and at the same time numerically many; for
we shall be giving a fit answer to one who raises the question how man would
have been without marriage, if we say, "as the angels are without marriage;" for
the fact that man was in a like condition with them before the transgression is
shown by the restoration to that state.
4. Now that we have thus cleared up these matters, let us return to our
former point,--how it was that after the making of His image God contrived for
His work the distinction of male and female. I say that the preliminary
speculation we have completed is of service for determining this question; for He Who
brought all things into being and fashioned Man as a whole by His own will to the
Divine image, did not wait to see the number of souls made up to its proper
fulness by the gradual additions of those coming after; but while looking upon
the nature of man in its entirety and fulness by the exercise of His
foreknowledge, and bestowing upon it a lot exalted and equal to the angels, since He saw
beforehand by His all-seeing power the failure of their will to keep a direct
course to what is good, and its consequent declension from the angelic life, in
order that the multitude of human souls might not be cut short by its fall from
that mode by which the angels were increased and multiplied,--for this reason, I
say, He formed for our nature that contrivance for increase which befits those
who had fallen into sin, implanting in mankind, instead of the angelic majesty
of nature, that animal and irrational mode by which they now succeed one
another.
5. Hence also, it seems to me, the great David pitying the misery of man
mourns over his nature with such words as these, that, "man being in honour knew
it not" (meaning by "honour" the equality with the angels), therefore, he
says, "he is compared to the beasts that have no understanding, and made like unto
them(3)." For he truly was made like the beasts, who received in his nature the
present mode of transient generation, on account of his inclination to
material things.
XVIII. That our irrational passions have their rise from kindred with
irrational nature.(4)
1. For I think that from this beginning all our passions issue as from a
spring, and pour their flood over man's life; and an evidence of my words is the
kinship of passions which appears alike in ourselves and in the brutes; for it
is not allowable to ascribe the first beginnings of our constitutional
liability to passion to that human nature which was fashioned in the Divine likeness;
but as brute life first entered into the world, and man, for the reason already
mentioned, took something of their nature (I mean the mode of generation), he
accordingly took at the same time a share of the other attributes contemplated
in that nature; for the likeness of man to God is not found in anger, nor is
pleasure a mark of the superior nature; cowardice also, and boldness, and the
desire of gain, and the dislike of loss, and all the like, are far removed from
that stamp which indicates Divinity.
2. These attributes, then, human nature took to itself from the side of
the brutes; for those qualities with which brute life was armed for
self-preservation, when transferred to human life, became passions; for the carnivorous
animals are preserved by their anger, and those which breed largely by their love
of pleasure cowardice preserves the weak, fear that which is easily taken by
more powerful animals, and greediness those of great bulk; and to miss anything
that tends to pleasure is for the brutes a matter of pain. All these and the like
affections entered man's composition by reason of the animal mode of
generation.
3. I may be allowed to describe the human image by comparison with some
wonderful piece of modelling. For, as one may see in models those carved(5)
shapes which the artificers of such things contrive for the wonder of beholders,
tracing out upon a single head two forms of faces; so man seems to me to bear a
double likeness to opposite things--being moulded in the Divine element of his
mind to the Divine beauty, but bearing, in the passionate impulses that arise in
him, a likeness to the brute nature; while often even his reason is rendered
brutish, and obscures the better element by the worse through its inclination and
disposition towards what is irrational; for whenever a man drags down his
mental energy to these affections, and forces his reason to become the servant of
his passions, there takes place a sort of conversion of the good stamp in him
into the irrational image, his whole nature being traced anew after that design,
as his reason, so to say, cultivates the beginnings of his passions, and
gradually multiplies them; for once it lends its co-operation to passion, it produces
a plenteous and abundant crop of evils.
4. Thus our love of pleasure took its beginning from our being made like
to the irrational creation, and was increased by the transgressions of men,
becoming the parent of so many varieties of sins arising from pleasure as we cannot
find among the irrational animals. Thus the rising of anger in us is indeed
akin to the impulse of the brutes; but it grows by the alliance of thought: for
thence come malignity, envy, deceit, conspiracy, hypocrisy; all these are the
result of the evil husbandry of the mind; for if the passion were divested of the
aid it receives from thought, the anger that is left behind is short-lived and
not sustained, like a bubble, perishing straightway as soon as it comes into
being. Thus the greediness of swine introduces covetousness, and the high spirit
of the horse becomes the origin of pride; and all the particular forms that
proceed from the want of reason in brute nature become vice by the evil use of
the mind.
5. So, likewise, on the contrary, if reason instead assumes sway over such
emotions, each of them is transmuted to a form of virtue; for anger produces
courage, terror caution, fear obedience, hatred aversion from vice, the power of
love the desire for what is truly beautiful; high spirit in our character
raises our thought above the passions, and keeps it from bondage to what is base;
yea, the great Apostle, even, praises such a form of mental elevation when he
bids us constantly to "think those things that are above(6);" and so we find
that every such motion, when elevated by loftiness of mind, is conformed to the
beauty of the Divine image.
6. But the other impulse is greater, as the tendency of sin is heavy and
downward; for the ruling element of our soul is more inclined to be dragged
downwards by the weight of the irrational nature than is the heavy and earthy
element to be exalted by the loftiness of the intellect; hence the misery that
encompasses us often causes the Divine gift to be forgotten, and spreads the
passions of the flesh, like some ugly mask, over the beauty of the image.
7. Those, therefore, are in some sense excusable, who do not admit, when
they look upon such cases, that the Divine form is there; yet we may behold the
Divine image in men by the medium of those who have ordered their lives aright.
For if the man who is subject to passion, and carnal, makes it incredible that
man was adorned, as it were, with Divine beauty, surely the man of lofty
virtue and pure from pollution will confirm you in the better conception of human
nature.
8. For instance (for it is better to make our argument clear by an
illustration), one of those noted for wickedness--some Jechoniah, say, or some other
of evil memory--has obliterated the beauty of his nature by the pollution of
wickedness; yet in Moses and in men like him the form of the image was kept pure.
Now where the beauty of the form has not been obscured, there is made plain the
faithfulness of the saying that man is an image of God.
9. It may be, however, that some one feels shame at the fact that our
life, like that of the brutes, is sustained by food, and for this reason deems man
unworthy of being supposed to have been framed in the image of God; but he may
expect that freedom from this function will one day be bestowed upon our nature
in the life we look for; for, as the Apostle says, "the Kingdom of God is not
meat and drink(7);" and the Lord declared that "man shall not live by bread
alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God(8)." Further, as
the resurrection holds forth to us a life equal with the angels, and with the
angels there is no food, there is sufficient ground for believing that man, who
will live in like fashion with the angels, will be released from such a
function.
XIX. To those who say that the enjoyment of the good things we look for will
again consist in meat and drink, because it is written that by these means man
at first lived in Paradise(9).
1. But some one perhaps will say that man will not be returning to the
same form of life, if as it seems, we formerly existed by eating, and shall
hereafter be free from that function. I, however, when I hear the Holy Scripture, do
not understand only bodily meat, or the pleasure of the flesh; but I recognize
another kind of food also, having a certain analogy to that of the body, the
enjoyment of which extends to the soul alone: "Eat of my bread(1)," is the
bidding of Wisdom to the hungry; and the Lord declares those blessed who hunger for
such food as this, and says, "If any man thirst, let him come unto Me, and
drink": and "drink ye joy(2)," is the great Isaiah's charge to those who are able to
hear his sublimity. There is a prophetic threatening also against those worthy
of vengeance, that they shall be punished with famine; but the "famine" is not
a lack of bread and water, but a failure of the word:-"not a famine of bread,
nor a thirst for water, but a famine of hearing the word of the Lord."
2. We ought, then, to conceive that the fruit in Eden was something worthy
of God's planting(and Eden is interpreted to mean "delight"), and not to doubt
that man was hereby nourished: nor should we at all conceive, concerning the
mode of life in Paradise, this transitory and perishable nutriment: "of every
tree of the garden," He says, "thou mayest freely eat(4)."
3. Who will give to him that has a healthful hunger that tree that is in
Paradise, which includes all good, which is named "every tree," in which this
passage bestows on man the right to share? for in the universal and transcendent
saying every form of good is in harmony with itself, and the whole is one. And
who will keep me back from that tasting of the tree which is of mixed and
doubtful kind? for surely it is clear to all who are at all keen-sighted what that
"every" tree is whose fruit is life, and what again that mixed tree is whose end
is death: for He Who presents ungrudgingly the enjoyment of" every" tree,
surely by some reason and forethought keeps man from participation in those which
are of doubtful kind.
4. It seems to me that I may take the great David and the wise Solomon as
my instructors in the interpretation of this text: for both understand the
grace of the permitted delight to be one,--that very actual Good, which in truth is
"every" good;--David, when he says, "Delight thou in the Lords," and Solomon,
when he names Wisdom herself (which is the Lord) "a tree of life(6)."
5. Thus the "every" tree of which the passage gives food to him who was
made in the likeness of God, is the same with the tree of life; anti there is
opposed to this tree another tree, the food given by which is the knowledge of
good and evil:--not that it bears in turn as fruit each of these things of
opposite significance, but that it produces a fruit blended and mixed with opposite
qualities, the eating of which the Prince of Life forbids, and the serpent
counsels, that he may prepare an entrance for death: and he obtained credence for his
counsel, covering over the fruit with a fair appearance and the show of
pleasure, that it might be pleasant to the eyes and stimulate the desire to taste.
XX. What was the life in Paradise, and what was the forbidden tree(7)?
1. What then is that which includes the knowledge of good and evil blended
together, and is decked with the pleasures of sense? I think I am not aiming
wide of the mark in employing, as a starting-point for my speculation, the sense
of "knowable(8)." It is not, I think, "science" which the Scripture here means
by "knowledge"; but I find a certain distinction, according to Scriptural use,
between "knowledge "and "discernment": for to "discern" skilfully the good
from the evil, the Apostle says is a mark of a more perfect condition and of
"exercised senses(9)," for which reason also he bids us "prove all things(1)," and
says that "discernment "belongs to the spiritual man(2): but "knowledge" is not
always to be understood of skill and acquaintance with anything, but of the
disposition towards what is agreeable,--as "the Lord knoweth them that are
His(3)"; and He says to Moses, "I knew thee above all(4)"; while of those condemned in
their wickedness He Who knows all things says, "I never knew you(5)."
2. The tree, then, from which comes this fruit of mixed knowledge, is
among those things which are forbidden; and that fruit is combined of opposite
qualities, which has the serpent to commend it, it may be for this reason, that the
evil is not exposed in its nakedness, itself appearing in its own proper
nature--for wickedness would surely fail of its effect were it not decked with some
fair colour to entice to the desire of it him whom it deceives--but now the
nature of evil is in a manner mixed, keeping destruction like some snare concealed
in its depths, and displaying some phantom of good in the deceitfulness of its
exterior. The beauty of the substance seems good to those who love money: yet
"the love of money is a root of all evil(6)": and who would plunge into the
unsavoury mud of wantonness, were it not that he whom this bait hurries into
passion thinks pleasure a thing fair and acceptable? so, too, the other sins keep
their destruction hidden, and seem at first sight acceptable, and some deceit
makes them earnestly sought after by unwary men instead of what is good.
3. Now since the majority of men judge the good to lie in that which
gratifies the senses, and there is a certain identity of name between that which is,
and that which appears to be "good,"--for this reason that desire which arises
towards what is evil, as though towards good, is called by Scripture "the
knowledge of good and evil;" "knowledge," as we have said, expressing a certain
mixed disposition. It speaks of the fruit of the forbidden tree not as a thing
absolutely evil (because it is decked with good), nor as a thing purely good
(because evil is latent in it), but as compounded of both, and declares that the
tasting of it brings to death those who touch it; almost proclaiming aloud the
doctrine that the very actual good is in its nature simple and uniform, alien from
all duplicity or conjunction with its opposite, while evil is many-coloured
and fairly adorned, being esteemed to be one thing and revealed by experience as
another, the knowledge of which (that is, its reception by experience) is the
beginning and antecedent of death and destruction.
4. It was because he saw this that the serpent points out the evil fruit
of sin, not showing the evil manifestly in its own nature (for man would not
have been deceived by manifest evil), but giving to what the woman beheld the
glamour of a certain beauty, and conjuring into its taste the spell of a sensual
pleasure, he appeared to her to speak convincingly: "and the woman saw," it says,
"that the tree was good for food, and that it was pleasant to the eyes to
behold, and fair to see; and she took of the fruit thereof and did eat(7)," and
that eating became the mother of death to men. This, then, is that fruit-bearing
of mixed character, where the passage clearly expresses the sense in which the
tree was called "capable of the knowledge of good and evil," because, like the
evil nature of poisons that are prepared with honey, it appears to be good in so
far as it affects the senses with sweetness: but in so far as it destroys him
who touches it, it is the worst of all evil. Thus when the evil poison worked
its effect against man's life, then man, that noble thing and name, the image of
God's nature, was made, as the prophet says, "like unto vanity(8)."
5. The image, therefore, properly belongs to the better part of our
attributes; but all in our life that is painful and miserable is far removed from the
likeness to the Divine.
XXI. That the resurrection is looked for as a consequence, not so much from
the declaration of Scripture as from the very necessity of things(9).
1. Wickedness, however, is not so strong as to prevail over the power of
good; nor is the folly of our nature more powerful and more abiding than the
wisdom of God: for it is impossible that that which is always mutable and variable
should be more firm and more abiding than that which always remains the same
and is firmly fixed in goodness: but it is absolutely certain that the Divine
counsel possesses immutability, while the changeableness of our nature does not
remain settled even in evil.
2. Now that which is always in motion, if its progress be to good, will
never cease moving onwards to what lies before it, by reason of the infinity of
the course to be traversed:--for it will not find any limit of its object such
that when it has apprehended it, it will at last cease its motion: but if its
bias be in the opposite direction, when it has finished the course of wickedness
and reached the extreme limit of evil, then that which is ever moving, finding
no halting point for its impulse natural to itself when it has run through the
lengths that can be run in wickedness, of necessity turns its motion towards
good: for as evil does not extend to infinity, but is comprehended by necessary
limits, it would appear that good once more follows in succession upon the
limit of evil and thus, as we have said, the ever-moving character of our nature
comes to run its course at the last once more back towards good, being taught the
lesson of prudence by the memory of its former misfortunes, to the end that it
may never again be in like case.
3. Our course, then, will once more lie in what is good, by reason of the
fact that the nature of evil is bounded by necessary limits. For just as those
skilled in astronomy tell us that the whole universe is full of light, and that
darkness is made to cast its shadow by the interposition of the body formed by
the earth; and that this darkness is shut off from the rays of the sun, in the
shape of a cone, according to the figure of the sphere-shaped body, and behind
it; while the sun, exceeding the earth by a size many times as great as its
own, enfolding it round about on all sides with its rays, unites at the limit of
the cone the concurrent streams of light; so that if (to suppose the case) any
one had the power of passing beyond the measure to which the shadow extends, he
would certainly find himself in light unbroken by darkness ;--even so I think
that we ought to understand about ourselves, that on passing the limit of
wickedness we shall again have our conversation in light, as the nature of good,
when compared with the measure of wickedness, is incalculably superabundant.
4. Paradise therefore will be restored, that tree will be restored which
is in truth the tree of life;--there will be restored the grace of the image,
and the dignity of rule. It does not seem to me that our hope is one for those
things which are now subjected by God to man for the necessary uses of life, but
one for another kingdom, of a description that belongs to unspeakable mysteries.
XXII. To those who say, "If the resurrection is a thing excellent and good,
how is it that it has not happened already, but is hoped far in some periods of
time ? "(1)
1. Let us give our attention, however, to the next point of our
discussion. It may be that some one, giving his thought wings to soar towards the
sweetness of our hope, deems it a burden and a loss that we are not more speedily
placed in that good state which is above man's sense and knowledge, and is
dissatisfied with the extension of the time that intervenes between him and the object
of his desire. Let him cease to vex himself like a child that is discontented
at the brief delay of something that gives him pleasure; for since all things
are governed by reason and wisdom, we must by no means suppose that anything that
happens is done without reason itself and the wisdom that is therein.
2. You will say then, What is this reason, in accordance with which the
change of our painful life to that which we desire does not take place at once,
but this heavy and corporeal existence of ours waits, extended to some
determinate time, for the term of the consummation of all things, that then man's life
may be set free as it were from the reins, and revert once more, released and
free, to the life of blessedness and impassibility?
3. Well, whether our answer is near the truth of the matter, the Truth
Itself may clearly know; but at all events what occurs to our intelligence is as
follows. I take up then once more in my argument our first text:--God says, "
Let us make man in our image, after our likeness, and God created man, in the
image of God created He him(2)." Accordingly, the Image of God, which we behold in
universal humanity, had its consummation then(3); but Adam as yet was not; for
the thing formed from the earth is called Adam, by etymological nomenclature,
as those tell us who are acquainted with the Hebrew tongue--wherefore also the
apostle, who was specially learned in his native tongue, the tongue of the
Israelites, calls the man "of the earth(4)" <greek>koikos</greek>, as though
translating the name Adam into the Greek word.
4. Man, then, was made in the image of God; that is, the universal nature,
the thing like God; not part of the whole, but all the fulness of the nature
together was so made by omnipotent wisdom. He saw, Who holds all limits in His
grasp, as the Scripture tells us which says, "in His hand are all the corners of
the earth(5),"He saw, "Who knoweth all things" even "before they be(6),"
comprehending them in His knowledge, how great in number humanity will be in the sum
of its individuals. But as He perceived in our created nature the bias towards
evil, and the fact that after its voluntary fall from equality with the angels
it would acquire a fellowship with the lower nature, He mingled, for this
reason, with His own image, an element of the irrational (for the distinction of
male and female does not exist in the Divine and blessed nature);--transferring,
I say, to man the special attribute of the irrational formation, He bestowed
increase upon our race not according to the lofty character of our creation; for
it was not when He made that which was in His own image that He bestowed on man
the power of increasing and multiplying; but when He divided it by sexual
distinctions, then He said, "Increase and multiply, and replenish the earth(7)."
For this belongs not to the Divine, but to the irrational element, as the history
indicates when it narrates that these words were first spoken by God in the
case of the irrational creatures; since we may be sure that, if He had bestowed
on man, before imprinting on our nature the distinction of male and female, the
power for increase conveyed by this utterance, we should not have needed this
form of generation by which the brutes are generated.
5. Now seeing that the full number of men pre-conceived by the operation
of foreknowledge will come into life by means of this animal generation, God,
Who governs all things in a certain order and sequence,--since the inclination of
our nature to what was beneath it (which He Who beholds the future equally
with the present saw before it existed) made some such form of generation
absolutely necessary for mankind,--therefore also foreknew the time coextensive with
the creation of men, so that the extent of time should be adapted for the
entrances of the pre-determined souls, and that the flux and motion of time should
halt at the moment when humanity is no longer produced by means of it; and that
when the generation of men is completed, time should cease together with its
completion, and then should take place the restitution of all things, and with the
World-Reformation humanity also should be changed from the corruptible and
earthly to the impassible and eternal.
6. And this it seems to me the Divine apostle considered when he declared
in his epistle to the Corinthians the sudden stoppage of time, and the change
of the things that are now moving on back to the opposite end where he says,
"Behold, I show you a mystery; we shall not all sleep, but we shall all be
changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump(8)." For when, as
I suppose, the full complement of human nature has reached the limit of the
pre-determined measure, because there is no longer anything to be made up in the
way of increase to the number of souls, he teaches us that the change in
existing things will take place in an instant of time, giving to that limit of time
which has no parts or extension the names of "a moment," and "the twinkling of an
eye"; so that it will no more be possible for one who reaches the verge of
time (which is the last and extreme point, from the fact that nothing is lacking
to the attainment of its extremity) to obtain by death this change which takes
place at a fixed period, but only when the trumpet of the resurrection sounds,
which awakens the dead, and transforms those who are left in life, after the
likeness of those who have undergone the resurrection change, at once to
incorruptibility; so that the weight of the flesh is no longer heavy, nor does its
burden hold them down to earth, but they rise aloft through the air--for, "we shall
be caught up," he tells us, "in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air; and so
shall we ever be with the Lord(9)."
7. Let him therefore wait for that time which is necessarily made
co-extensive with the development of humanity. For even Abraham and the patriarchs,
while they had the desire to see the promised good things, and ceased not to seek
the heavenly country, as the apostle says, are yet even now in the condition of
hoping for that grace, "God having provided some better thing for us,"
according to the words of Paul, "that they without us should not be made perfect(1)."
If they, then, bear the delay who by faith only and by hope saw the good things
"afar off" and "embraced them(2)," as the apostle bears witness, placing their
certainty of the enjoyment of the things for which they hoped in the fact that
they "judged Him faithful Who has promised(3)," what ought most of us to do,
who have not, it may be, a hold upon the better hope from the character of our
lives? Even the prophet's soul fainted with desire, and in his psalm he
confesses this passionate love, saying that his "soul hath a desire and longing to be
in the courts of the Lord(4)," even if he must needs be rejected(5) to a place
amongst the lowest, as it is a greater and more desirable thing to be last there
than to be first among the ungodly tents of this life; nevertheless he was
patient of the delay, deeming, indeed, the life there blessed, and accounting a
brief participation in it more desirable than "thousands" of time--for he says,
"one day in Thy courts is better than thousands(6) "--yet he did not repine at
the necessary dispensation concerning existing things, and thought it sufficient
bliss for man to have those good things even by way of hope; wherefore he says
at the end of the Psalm, "O Lord of hosts, blessed is the man that hopeth in
Thee(7)."
8. Neither, then, should we be troubled at the brief delay of what we hope
for, but give diligence that we may not be cast out from the object of our
hopes; for just as though, if one were to tell some inexperienced person
beforehand, "the gathering of the crops will take place in the season of summer, and the
stores will be filled, and the table abundantly supplied with food at the time
of plenty," it would be a foolish man who should seek to hurry on the coming
of the fruit-time, when he ought to be sowing seeds and preparing the crops for
himself by diligent care; for the fruit-time will surely come, whether he
wishes or not, at the appointed time; and it will be looked on differently by him
who has secured for himself beforehand abundance of crops, and by him who is
found by the fruit-time destitute of all preparation. Even so I think it is one's
duty, as the proclamation is clearly made to all that the time of change will
come, not to trouble himself about times (for He said that "it is not for us to
know the times and the seasons(8)"), nor to pursue calculations by which he will
be sure to sap the hope of the resurrection in the soul; but to make his
confidence in the things expected as a prop to lean on, and to purchase for himself,
by good conversation, the grace that is to come.
XXIII. That he who confesses the beginning of the world's existence must
necessarily also agree as to its end(9).
But if some one, beholding the present course of the world, by which
intervals of time are marked, going on in a certain order, should say that it is not
possible that the predicted stoppage of these moving things should take place,
such a man clearly also does not believe that in the beginning the heaven and
the earth were made by God; for he who admits a beginning, of motion surely
does not doubt as to its also having an end; and he who does not allow its end,
does not admit its beginning either; but as it is by believing that "we
understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God," as the apostle says, "so
that things which are seen were not made of things which do appear(1)," we must
use the same faith as to the word of God when He foretells the necessary stoppage
of existing things.
2. The question of the "how" must, however, be put beyond the reach of our
meddling; for even in the case mentioned it was "by faith" that we admitted
that the thing seen was framed from things not yet apparent, omitting the search
into things beyond our reach. And yet our reason suggests difficulties on many
points, offering no small occasions for doubt as to the things which we believe.
3. For in that case too, argumentative men might by plausible reasoning
upset our faith, so that we should not think that statement true which Holy
Scripture delivers concerning the material creation, when it asserts that all
existing things have their beginning of being from God. For those who abide by the
contrary view maintain that matter is co-eternal with God, and employ in support
of their own doctrine some such arguments as these. If God is in His nature
simple and immaterial, without quantity(2), or size, or combination, and removed
from the idea of circumscription by way of figure, while all matter is
apprehended in extension measured by intervals, and does not escape the apprehension of
our senses, but becomes known to us in colour, and figure, and bulk, and size,
and resistance, and the other attributes belonging to it, none of which it is
possible to conceive in the Divine nature,--what method is there for the
production of matter from the immaterial, or of the nature that has dimensions from
that which is unextended? for if these things are believed to have their
existence from that source, they clearly come into existence after being in Him in some
mysterious way; but if material existence was in Him, how can He be immaterial
while including matter in Himself? and similarly with all the other marks by
which the material nature is differentiated; if quantity exists in God, how is
God without quantity? if the compound nature exists in Him, how is He simple,
without parts and without combination? so that the argument forces us to think
either that He is material, because matter has its existence from Him as a
source; or, if one avoids this, it is necessary to suppose that matter was imported
by Him ab extra for the making of the universe.
4. If, then, it was external to God, something else surely existed besides
God, conceived, in respect of eternity, together with Him Who exists
ungenerately; so that the argument supposes two eternal and unbegotten existences,
having their being concurrently with each other--that of Him Who operates as an
artificer, and that of the thing which admits this skilled operation; and if any
one under pressure of this argument should assume a material substratum for the
Creator of all things, what a support will the Manichaean find for his special
doctrine, who opposes by virtue of ungenerateness a material existence to a Good
Being. Yet we do believe that all things are of God, as we hear the Scripture
say so; and as to the question how they were in God, a question beyond our
reason, we do not seek to pry into it, believing that all things are within the
capacity of God's power--both to give existence to what is not, and to implant
qualities at His pleasure in what is.
5. Consequently, as we suppose the power of the Divine will to be a
sufficient cause to the things that are, for their coming into existence out of
nothing, so too we shall not repose our belief on anything beyond probability in
referring the World-Reformation to the same power. Moreover, it might perhaps be
possible, by some skill in the use of words, to persuade those who raise
frivolous objections on the subject of matter not to think that they can make an
unanswerable attack on our statement.
XXIV. An argument against those who say that matter is co-eternal with God(3).
1. For after all that opinion on the subject of matter does not turn out
to be beyond what appears consistent, which declares that it has its existence
from Him Who is intelligible and immaterial. For we shall find all matter to be
composed of certain qualities, of which if it is divested it can, in itself, be
by no means grasped by idea. Moreover in idea each kind of quality is
separated from the substratum; but idea is an intellectual and not a corporeal method
of examination. If, for instance, some animal or tree is presented to our
notice, or any other of the things that have material existence we perceive in our
mental discussion of it many things concerning the substratum, the idea of each
of which is clearly distinguished from the object we contemplate: for the idea
of colour is one, of weight another; so again that of quantity and of such and
such a peculiar quality of touch: for "softness," and "two cubits long," and the
rest of the attributes we spoke of, are not connected in idea either with one
another or with the body: each of them has conceived concerning it its own
explanatory definition according to its being, having nothing in common with any
other of the qualities that are contemplated in the substratum.
2.(4) If, then, colour is a thing intelligible, and resistance also is
intelligible, and so with quantity and the rest of the like properties, while if
each of these should be withdrawn from the substratum, the whole idea of the
body is dissolved; it would seem to follow that we may suppose the concurrence of
those things, the absence of which we found to be a cause of the dissolution of
the body, to produce the material nature: for as that is not a body which has
not colour, and figure, and resistance, and extension, and weight, and the
other properties, while each of these in its proper existence is found to be not
the body but something else besides the body, so, conversely, whenever the
specified attributes concur they produce bodily existence. Yet if the perception of
these properties is a matter of intellect, and the Divinity is also intellectual
in nature, there is no incongruity in supposing that these intellectual
occasions for the genesis of bodies have their existence from the incorporeal nature,
the intellectual nature on the one hand giving being to the intellectual
potentialities, and the mutual concurrence of these bringing to its genesis the
material nature.
3. Let this discussion, however, be by way of digression: we must direct
our discourse once more to the faith by which we accept the statement that the
universe took being from nothing, and do not doubt, when we are taught by
Scripture, that it will again be transformed into some other state.
XXV. How one even of those who are without may be brought to believe the
Scripture when teaching of the resurrection(5).
1. Some one, perhaps, having regard to the dissolution of bodies, and
judging the Deity by the measure of his own power, asserts that the idea of the
resurrection is impossible, saying that it cannot be that both those things which
are now in motion should become stationary, and those things which are now
without motion should rise again.
2. Let such an one, however, take as the first and greatest evidence of
the truth touching the resurrection the credibility of the herald who proclaims
it. Now the faith of what is said derives its certainty from the result of the
other predictions: for as the Divine Scripture delivers statements many and
various, it is possible by examining how the rest of the utterances stand in the
matter of falsehood and truth to survey also, in the light of them, the doctrine
concerning the resurrection. For if in the other matters the statements are
found to be false and to have failed of true fulfilment, neither is this out of
the region of falsehood; but if all the others have experience to vouch for their
truth, it would seem logical to esteem as true on their account, the
prediction concerning the resurrection also. Let us therefore recall one or two of the
predictions that have been made and compare the result with what was foretold,
so that we may know by means of them whether the idea has a truthful aspect.
3. Who knows not how the people of Israel flourished of old, raised up
against all the powers of the world; what were the palaces in the city of
Jerusalem, what the walls, the towers, the majestic structure of the Temple? things
that seemed worthy of admiration even to the disciples of the Lord, so that they
asked the Lord to take notice of them, in their disposition to marvel, as the
Gospel history shows us, saying, "What works, and what buildings(6)!" But He
indicates to those who wondered at its present state the future desolation of the
place and the disappearance of that beauty, saying that after a little while
nothing of what they saw should be left. And, again, at the time of His Passion,
the women followed, bewailing the unjust sentence against Him,--for they could
not yet see into the dispensation of what was being done:--but He bids them be
silent as to what is befalling Him, for it does not demand their tears, but to
reserve their wailing and lamentation for the true time for tears, when the city
should be compassed by besiegers, and their sufferings reach so great a strait
that they should deem him happy who had not been born: and herein He foretold
also the horrid deed of her who devoured her child, when He said that in those
days the womb should be accounted blest that never bare(7). Where then are
those palaces? where is the Temple? where are the walls? where are the defences of
the towers? where is the power of the Israelites? were not they scattered in
different quarters over almost the whole world? and in their overthrow the
palaces also were brought to ruin.
4. Now it seems to me that the Lord foretold these things and others like
them not for the sake of the matters themselves--for what great advantage to
the hearers, at any rate, was the prediction of what was about to happen? they
would have known by experience, even if they had not previously learnt what would
come;--but in order that by these means faith on their part might follow
concerning more important matters: for the testimony of facts in the former cases is
also a proof of truth in the latter.
5. For just as though, if a husbandman were explaining the virtue of
seeds, it were to happen that some person inexperienced in husbandry should
disbelieve him, it would be sufficient as proof of his statement for the agriculturist
to show him the virtue existing in one seed of those in the bushel and make it
a pledge of the rest--for he who should see the single grain of wheat or
barley, or whatever might chance to be the contents of the bushel, grow into an ear
after being cast into the ground, would by the means of the one cease also to
disbelieve concerning the others--so the truthfulness which confessedly belongs
to the other statements seems to me to be sufficient also for evidence of the
mystery of the resurrection.
6. Still more, however, is this the case with the experience of actual
resurrection which we have learnt not so much by words as by actual facts: for as
the marvel of resurrection was great and passing belief, He begins gradually by
inferior instances of His miraculous power, and
7. For as a mother who nurses her babe with due care for a time supplies
milk by her breast to its mouth while still tender and soft; and when it begins
to grow and to have teeth she gives it bread, not hard or such as it cannot
chew, so that the tender and unpractised gums may not be chafed by rough food; but
softening it with her own teeth, she makes it suitable and convenient for the
powers of the eater; and then as its power increases by growth she gradually
leads on the babe, accustomed to tender food, to more solid nourishment; so the
Lord, nourishing and fostering with miracles the weakness of the human mind,
like some babe not fully grown, makes first of all a prelude of the power of the
resurrection in the case of a desperate disease, which prelude, though it was
great in its achievement, yet was not such a thing that the statement of it
would be disbelieved: for by "rebuking the fever." which was fiercely consuming
Simon's wife's mother, He produced so great a removal of the evil as to enable her
who was already expected to be near death, to "minister(8)" to those present.
8. Next He makes a slight addition to the power, and when the nobleman's
son lies in acknowledged danger of death (for so the history tells us, that he
was about to die, as his father cried, "come down, ere my child die(9)"), He
again brings about the resurrection of one who was believed about to die;
accomplishing the miracle with a greater act of power in that He did not even approach
the place, but sent life from afar off by the force of His command.
9. Once more in what follows He ascends to higher wonders. For having set
out on His way to the ruler of the synagogue's daughter, he voluntarily made a
halt in His way, while making public the secret cure of the woman with an issue
of blood, that in this time death might overcome the sick. When, then, the
soul had just been parted from the body, and those who were wailing over the
sorrow were making a tumult with their mournful cries, He raises the damsel to life
again, as if from sleep, by His word of command, leading on human weakness, by
a sort of path and sequence, to greater things.
10. Still in addition to these acts He exceeds them in wonder, and by a
more exalted act of power prepares for men the way of faith in the resurrection.
The Scripture tells us of a city called Nain in Judaea: a widow there had an
only child, no longer a child in the sense of being among boys, but already
passing from childhood to man's estate: the narrative calls him "a young man." The
story conveys much in few words: the very recital is a real lamentation: the
dead man's mother, it says, "was a widow." See you the weight of her misfortune,
how the text briefly sets out the tragedy of her suffering ? for what does the
phrase mean? that she had no more hope of bearing sons, to cure the loss she had
just sustained in him who had departed; for the woman was a widow: she had not
in her power to look to another instead of to him who was gone; for he was her
only child; and how great a grief is here expressed any one may easily see who
is not an utter stranger to natural feeling. Him alone she had known in
travail him alone she had nursed at her breast; he alone made her table cheerful, he
alone was the cause of brightness in her home, in play, in work, in learning,
in gaiety, at processions, at sports, at gatherings of youth; he alone was all
that is sweet and precious in a mother's eyes. Now at the age of marriage, he
was the stock of her race, the shoot of its succession, the staff of her old age.
Moreover, even the additional detail of his time of life is another lament:
for he who speaks of him as "a young man" tells of the flower of his faded
beauty, speaks of him as just covering his face with down, not yet with a full thick
beard, but still bright with the beauty of his cheeks. What then, think you,
were his mother's sorrows for him? how would her heart be consumed as it were
with a flame; how bitterly would she prolong her lament over him, embracing the
corpse as it lay before her, lengthening out her mourning for him as far as
possible, so as not to hasten the funeral of the dead, but to have her fill of
sorrow! Nor does the narrative pass this by: for Jesus "when He saw her," it says,
"had compassion"; "and He came and touched the bier; and they that bare him
stood still;" and He said to the dead, "Young man, I say unto thee, arise(1)" "and
He delivered him to his mother alive. Observe that no short time had intervened
since the dead man had entered upon that state, he was all but laid in the
tomb; the miracle wrought by the Lord is greater, though the command is the same.
11. His miraculous power proceeds to a still more exalted act, that its
display may more closely approach that miracle of the resurrection which men
doubt. One of the Lord's companions and friends is ill (Lazarus is the sick man's
name); and the Lord deprecates any visiting of His friend, though far away from
the sick man, that in the absence of the Life, death might find room and power
to do his own work by the agency of disease. The Lord informs His disciples in
Galilee of what has befallen Lazarus, and also of his own setting out to him
to raise him up when laid low. They, however, were exceedingly afraid on account
of the fury of the Jews, thinking it a difficult and dangerous matter to turn
again towards Judaea, in the midst of those who sought to slay Him: and thus,
lingering and delaying, they return slowly from Galilee: but they do return, for
His command prevailed, and the disciples were led by the Lord to be initiated
at Bethany in the preliminary mysteries of the general resurrection. Four days
had already passed since the event; all due rites had been performed for the
departed; the body was hidden in the tomb: it was probably already swollen and
beginning to dissolve into corruption, as the body mouldered in the dank earth
and necessarily decayed: the thing was one to turn from, as the dissolved body
under the constraint of nature changed to offensiveness(2). At this point the
doubted fact of the general resurrection is brought to proof by a more manifest
miracle; for one is not raised from severe sickness, nor brought back to life
when at the last breath--nor is a child just dead brought to life, nor a young
man about to be conveyed to the tomb released from his bier; but a man past the
prime of life, a corpse, decaying, swollen, yea already in a state of
dissolution, so that even his own kinsfolk could not suffer that the Lord should draw
near the tomb by reason of the offensiveness of the decayed body there enclosed,
brought into life by a single call, confirms the proclamation of the
resurrection, that is to say, that expectation of it as universal, which we learn by a
particular experience to entertain. For as in the regeneration of the universe the
Apostle tells us that "the Lord Himself will descend with a shout, with the
voice of the archangel(3)," and by a trumpet sound raise up the dead to
incorruption--so now too he who is in the tomb, at the voice of command, shakes off
death as if it were a sleep, and ridding himself from the corruption that had come
upon his condition of a corpse, leaps forth from the tomb whole and sound, not
even hindered in his egress by the bonds of the grave-cloths round his feet and
hands.
12. Are these things too small to produce faith in the resurrection of the
dead? or dost thou seek that thy judgment on this point should be confirmed by
yet other proofs? In truth the Lord seems to me not to have spoken in vain to
them of Capernaum, when He said to Himself, as in the person of men, "Ye will
surely say unto me this proverb, 'Physician, heal thyself(4).'" For it behoved
Him, when He had accustomed men to the miracle of the resurrection in other
bodies, to confirm His word in His own humanity. Thou sawest the thing proclaimed
working in others--those who were about to die, the child which had just ceased
to live, the young man at the edge of the grave, the putrefying corpse, all
alike restored by one command to life. Dost thou seek for those who have come to
death by wounds and bloodshed? does any feebleness of life-giving power hinder
the grace in them? Behold Him Whose hands were pierced with nails: behold Him
Whose side was transfixed with a spear; pass thy fingers through the print of the
nails thrust thy hand into the spear-wound(5); thou canst surely guess how far
within it is likely the point would reach, if thou reckonest the passage
inwards by the breadth of the external scar; for the wound that gives admission to a
man's hand, shows to what depth within the iron entered. If He then has been
raised, well may we utter the Apostle's exclamation, "How say some that there is
no resurrection of the dead(6)?"
13. Since, then, every prediction of the Lord is shown to be true by the
testimony of events, while we not only have learnt this by His words, but also
received the proof of the promise in deed, from those very persons who returned
to life by resurrection, what occasion is left to those who disbelieve? Shall
we not bid farewell to those who pervert our simple faith by "philosophy and
vain deceit(7)," and hold fast to our confession in its purity, learning briefly
through the prophet the mode of the grace, by his words, "Thou shalt take away
their breath and they shall fail, and turn to their dust. Thou shalt send forth
Thy Spirit and they shall be created, and Thou shalt renew the face of the
earth(8);" at which time also he says that the Lord rejoices in His works, sinners
having perished from the earth: for how shall any one be called by the name of
sin, when sin itself exists no longer?
XXVI. That the resurrection is not beyond probability(9).
1. There are, however, some who, owing to the feebleness of human
reasoning, judging the Divine power by the compass of our own, maintain that what is
beyond our capacity is not possible even to God. They point to the disappearance
of the dead of old time, and to the remains of those who have been reduced to
ashes by fire; and further, besides these, they bring forward in idea the
carnivorous beasts, and the fish that receives in its own body the flesh of the
shipwrecked sailor, while this again in turn becomes food for men, and passes by
digestion into the bulk of him who eats it: and they rehearse many such
trivialities, unworthy of God's great power and authority, for the overthrow of the
doctrine, arguing as though God were not able to restore to man his own, by
return(1) through the same ways.
2. But we briefly cut short their long circuits of logical folly by
acknowledging that dissolution of the body into its component parts does take place,
and not only does earth, according to the Divine word, return to earth, but air
and moisture also revert to the kindred element, and there takes place a
return of each of our components to that nature to which it is allied; and although
the human body be dispersed among carnivorous birds, or among the most savage
beasts by becoming their food, and although it pass beneath the teeth of fish,
and although it be changed by fire into vapour and dust, wheresoever one may in
argument suppose the man to be removed, he surely remains in the world; and the
world, the voice of inspiration tells us, is held by the hand of God. If thou,
then, art not ignorant of any of the things in thy hand, dost thou deem the
knowledge of God to be feebler than thine own power, that it should fail to
discover the most minute of the things that are within the compass of the Divine
span?
XXVII. That it is possible, when the human body is dissolved into the elements
of the universe, that each should have his own body restored from the common
source(2).
1. Yet it may be thou thinkest, having regard to the elements of the
universe, that it is a hard thing when the air in us has been resolved into its
kindred element, and the warmth, and moisture, and the earthy nature have likewise
been mingled with their own kind, that from the common source there should
return to the individual what belongs to itself.
2. Dost thou not then judge by human examples that even this does not
surpass the limits of the Divine power? Thou hast seen surely somewhere among the
habitations of men a common herd of some kind of animals collected from every
quarter: yet when it is again divided among its owners, acquaintance with their
homes and the marks put upon the cattle serve to restore to each his own. If
thou conceivest of thyself also something like to this thou wilt not be far from
the right way: for as the soul is disposed to cling to and long for the body
that has been wedded to it, there also attaches to it in secret a certain close
relationship and power of recognition, in virtue of their commixture, as though
some marks had been imprinted by nature, by the aid of which the community
remains unconfused, separated by the distinctive signs. Now as the soul attracts
again to itself that which is its own and properly belongs to it, what labour, I
pray you, that is involved for the Divine power, could be a hindrance to
concourse of kindred things when they are urged to their own place by the unspeakable
attraction of nature, whatever it may be? For that some signs of our compound
nature remain in the soul even after dissolution is shown by the dialogue in
Hades(3), where the bodies had been conveyed to the tomb, but some bodily token
still remained in the souls by which both Lazarus was recognized and the rich man
was not unknown.
3. There is therefore nothing beyond probability in believing that in the
bodies that rise again there will be a return from the common stock to the
individual, especially for any one who examines our nature with careful attention.
For neither does our being consist altogether in flux and change--for surely
that which had by nature no stability would be absolutely incomprehensible--but
according to the more accurate statement some one of our constituent parts is
stationary while the rest goes through a process of alteration: for the body is
on the one hand altered by way of growth and diminution, changing, like
garments, the vesture of its successive statures, while the form, on the other hand,
remains in itself unaltered through every change, not varying from the marks once
imposed upon it by nature, but appearing with its own tokens of identity in
all the changes which the body undergoes.
4. We must except, however, from this statement the change which happens
to the form as the result of disease: for the deformity of sickness takes
possession of the form like some strange mask, and when this is removed by the
word(4), as in the case of Naaman the Syrian, or of those whose story is recorded in
the Gospel, the form that had been hidden by disease is once more by means of
health restored to sight again with its own marks of identity.
5. Now to the element of our soul which is in the likeness of God it is
not that which is subject to flux and change by way of alteration, but this
stable and unalterable element in our composition that is allied: and since various
differences of combination produce varieties of forms (and combination is
nothing else than the mixture of the elements--by elements we mean those which
furnish the substratum for the making of the universe, of which the human body also
is composed), while the form necessarily remains in the soul as in the
impression of a seal, those things which have received from the seal the impression of
its stamp do not fail to be recognized by the soul, but at the time of the
World-Reformation, it receives back to itself all those things which correspond to
the stamp of the form: and surely all those things would so correspond which in
the beginning were stamped by the form; thus it is not beyond probability that
what properly belongs to the individual should once more return to it from the
common source(5).
6. It is said also that quicksilver, if poured out from the vessel that
contains it down a dusty slope, forms small globules and scatters itself over the
ground, mingling with none of those bodies with which it meets: but if one
should collect at one place the substance dispersed in many directions, it flows
back to its kindred substance, if not hindered by anything intervening from
mixing with its own kind. Something of the same sort, I think, we ought to
understand also of the composite nature of man, that if only the power were given it of
God, the proper parts would spontaneously unite with those belonging to them,
without any obstruction on their account arising to Him Who reforms their
nature.
7. Furthermore, in the case of plants that grow from the ground, we do not
observe any labour on the part of nature spent on the wheat or millet or any
other seed of grain or pulse, in changing it into stalk or spike or ears; for
the proper nourishment passes spontaneously, without trouble, from the common
source to the individuality of each of the seeds. If, then, while the moisture
supplied to all the plants is common, each of those plants which is nourished by
it draws the due supply for its own growth, what new thing is it if in the
doctrine of the resurrection also, as in the case of the seeds, it happens that
there is an attraction on the part of each of those who rise, of what belongs to
himself?
8. So that we may learn on all hands, that the preaching of the
resurrection contains nothing beyond those facts which are known to us experimentally.
9. And yet we have said nothing of the most notable point concerning
ourselves; I mean the first beginning of our existence. Who knows not the miracle of
nature, what the maternal womb receives--what it produces? Thou seest how that
which is implanted in the womb to be the beginning of the formation of the
body is in a manner simple and homogeneous: but what langUage can express the
variety of the composite body that is framed? and who, if he did not learn such a
thing in nature generally, would think that to be possible which does take
place--that that small thing of no account is the beginning of a thing so great?
Great, I say, not only with regard to the bodily formation, but to what is more
marvellous than this, I mean the soul itself, and the attributes we behold in it.
XXVIII. To those who say that souls existed before bodies, or that bodies were
formed before souls; wherein there is also a refutation of the fables
concerning transmigration of souls(6).
1. For it is perhaps not beyond our present subject to discuss the
question which has been raised in the churches touching soul and body. Some of those
before our time who have dealt with the question of "principles" think it right
to say that souls have a previous existence as a people in a society of their
own, and that among them also there are standards of vice and of virtue, and
that the soul there, which abides in goodness, remains without experience of
conjunction with the body; but if it does depart from its communion with good, it
falls down to this lower life, and so comes to be in a body. Others, on the
contrary, marking the order of the making of man as stated by Moses, say, that the
soul second to the body in order of time, since God first took dust from the
earth and formed man, and then animated the being thus formed by His breath(7):
and by this argument they prove that the flesh is more noble than the soul; that
which was previously formed than that which was afterwards infused into it: for
they say that the soul was made for the body, that the thing formed might not
be without breath and motion; and that everything that is made for something
else is surely less precious than that for which it is made, as the Gospel tells
us that "the soul is more than meat and the body than raiment(8)," because the
latter things exist for the sake of the former--for the soul was not made for
meat nor our bodies for raiment, but when the former things were already in
being the latter were provided for their needs.
2. Since then the doctrine involved in both these theories is open to
criticism--the doctrine alike of those who ascribe to souls a fabulous
pre-existence in a special state, and of those who think they were created at a later time
than the bodies, it is perhaps necessary to leave none of the statements
contained in the doctrines without examination: yet to engage and wrestle with the
doctrines on each side completely, and to reveal all the absurdities involved in
the theories, would need a large expenditure both of argument and of time; we
shall, however, briefly survey as best we can each of the views mentioned, and
then resume our subject.
3. Those who stand by the former doctrine, and assert that the state of
souls is prior to their life in the flesh, do not seem to me to be clear from the
fabulous doctrines of the heathen which they hold on the subject of successive
incorporation: for if one should search carefully, he will find that their
doctrine is of necessity brought down to this. They tell us that one of their
sages said that he, being one and the same person, was born a man, and afterwards
assumed the form of a woman, and flew about with the birds, and grew as a bush,
and obtained the life of an aquatic creature;--and he who said these things of
himself did not, so far as I can judge, go far from the truth: for such
doctrines as this of saying that one soul passed through so many changes are really
fitting for the chatter of frogs or jackdaws, or the stupidity of fishes, or the
insensibility of trees.
4. And of such absurdity the cause is this--the supposition of the
pre-existence of souls for the first principle of such doctrine leads on the argument
by consequence to the next and adjacent stage, until it astonishes us by
reaching this point. For if the soul, being severed from the more exalted state by
some wickedness after having once, as they say, tasted corporeal life, again
becomes a man, and if the life in the flesh is, as may be presumed, acknowledged to
be, in comparison with the eternal and incorporeal life, more subject to
passion, it naturally follows that that which comes to be in a life such as to
contain more occasions of sin, is both placed in a region of greater wickedness and
rendered more subject to passion than before (now passion in the human soul is
a conformity to the likeness of the irrational); and that being brought into
close connection with this, it descends to the brute nature: and that when it has
once set out on its way through wickedness, it does not cease its advance
towards evil even when found in an irrational condition: for a halt in evil is the
beginning of the impulse towards virtue, and in irrational creatures virtue
does not exist. Thus it will of necessity be continually changed for the worse,
always proceeding to what is more degraded and always finding out what is worse
than the nature in which it is: and just as the sensible nature is lower than
the rational, so too there is a descent from this to the insensible.
5. Now so far in its course their doctrine, even if it does overstep the
bounds of truth, at all events derives one absurdity from another by a kind of
logical sequence: but from this point onwards their teaching takes the form of
incoherent fable. Strict inference points to the complete destruction of the
soul; for that which has once fallen from the exalted state will be unable to
halt at any measure of wickedness, but will pass by means of its relation with the
passions from rational to irrational, and from the latter state will be
transferred to the insensibility of plants; and on the insensible there borders, so
to say, the inanimate; and on this again follows the non-existent, so that
absolutely by this train of reasoning they will have the soul to pass into nothing:
thus a return once more to the better state is impossible for it: and yet they
make the soul return from a bush to the man: they therefore prove that the life
in a bush is more precious than an incorporeal state(9).
6. It has been shown that the process of deterioration which takes place
in the soul will probably be extended downwards; and lower than the insensible
we find the inanimate, to which, by consequence, the principle of their
doctrine brings the soul: but as they will not have this, they either exclude the soul
from insensibility, or, if they are to bring it back to human life, they must,
as has been said, declare the life of a tree to be preferable to the original
state--if, that is, the fall towards vice took place from the one, and the
return towards virtue takes place from the other.
7. Thus this doctrine of theirs, which maintains that souls have a life by
themselves before their life in the flesh, and that they are by reason of
wickedness bound to their bodies, is shown to have neither beginning nor
conclusion: and as for those who assert that the soul is of later creation than the body,
their absurdity was already demonstrated above(1).
8. The doctrine of both, then, is equally to be rejected; but I think that
we ought to direct our own doctrine in the way of truth between these
theories: and this doctrine is that we are not to suppose, according to the error of
the heathen that the souls that revolve with the motion of the universe weighed
down by some wickedness, fall to earth by inability to keep up with the
swiftness of the motion of the spheres.
XXIX. A establishment of the doctrine that the cause of the existence of soul
and body is one and the same.(2)
1. Nor again are we in our doctrine to begin by making up man like a clay
figure, and to say that the soul came into being for the sake of this; for
surely in that case the intellectual nature would be shown to be less precious than
the clay figure. But as man is one, the being consisting of soul and body, we
are to suppose that the beginning of his existence is one, common to both
parts, so that he should not be found to be antecedent and posterior to himself, if
the bodily element were first in point of time, and the other were a later
addition; but we are to say that in the power of God's foreknowledge (according to
the doctrine laid down a little earlier in our discourse), all the fulness of
human nature had pre-existence (and to this the prophetic writing bears witness,
which says that God "knoweth all things before they be(3)"), and in the
creation of individuals not to place the one element before the other, neither the
soul before the body, nor the contrary, that man may. not be at strife against
himself, by being divided by the difference in point of time.
2. For as our nature is conceived as twofold, according to the apostolic
teaching, made up of the visible man and the hidden man, if the one came first
and the other supervened, the power of Him that made us will be shown to be in
some way imperfect, as not being completely sufficient for the whole task at
once, but dividing the work, and busying itself with each of the halves in turn.
3. But just as we say that in wheat, or in any other grain, the whole form
of the plant is potentially included--the leaves, the stalk, the joints, the
grain, the beard--and do not say in our account of its nature that any of these
things has pre-existence, or comes into being before the others, but that the
power abiding in the seed is manifested in a certain natural order, not by any
means that another nature is infused into it--in the same way we suppose the
human germ to possess the potentiality of its nature, sown with it at the first
start of its existence, and that it is unfolded and manifested by a natural
sequence as it proceeds to its perfect state, not employing anything external to
itself as a stepping-stone to perfection, but itself advancing its own self in due
course to the perfect state; so that it is not true to say either that the
soul exists before the body, or that the body exists without the soul, but that
there is one beginning of both, which according to the heavenly view was laid as
their foundation in the original will of God; according to the other, came into
existence on the occasion of generation.
4. For as we cannot discern the articulation of the limbs in that which is
implanted for the conception of the body before it begins to take form, so
neither is it possible to perceive in the same the properties of the soul before
they advance to operation; and just as no one would doubt that the thing so
implanted is fashioned into the different varieties of limbs and interior organs,
not by the importation of any other power from without, but by the power which
resides in it transforming(4) it to this manifestation of energy,--so also we
may by like reasoning equally suppose in the case of the soul that even if it is
not visibly recognized by any manifestations of activity it none the less is
there; for even the form of the future man is there potentially, but is concealed
because it is not possible that it should be made visible before the necessary
sequence of events allows it; so also the soul is there, even though it is not
visible, and will be manifested by means of its own proper and natural
operation, as it advances concurrently with the bodily growth.
5. For since it is not from a dead body that the potentiality for
conception is secreted, but from one which is animate and alive, we hence affirm that
it is reasonable that we should not suppose that what is sent forth from a
living body to be the occasion of life is itself dead and inanimate; for in the
flesh that which is inanimate is surely dead; and the condition of death arises by
the withdrawal of the soul. Would not one therefore in this case be asserting
that withdrawal is antecedent to possession--if, that is, he should maintain
that the inanimate state which is the condition of death is antecedent to the
soul(5)? And if any one should seek for a still clearer evidence of the life of
that particle which becomes the beginning of the living creature in its formation,
it is possible to obtain an idea on this point from other signs also, by which
what is animate is distinguished from what is dead. For in the case of men we
consider it an evidence of life that one is warm and operative and in motion,
but the chill and motionless state in the case of bodies is nothing else than
deadness.
6. Since then we see that of which we are speaking to be warm and
operative, we thereby draw the further inference that it is not inanimate; but as, in
respect of its corporeal part, we do not say that it is flesh, and bones, and
hair, and all that we observe in the human being, but that potentially it is each
of these things, yet does not visibly appear to be so; so also of the part
which belongs to the soul, the elements of rationality, and desire, and anger, and
all the powers of the soul are not yet visible; yet we assert that they have
their place in it, and that the energies of the soul also grow with the subject
in a manner similar to the formation and perfection of the body.
7. For just as a man when perfectly developed has a specially marked
activity of the soul, so at the beginning of his existence he shows in himself that
co-operation of the soul which is suitable and conformable to his existing
need, in its preparing for itself its proper dwelling-place by means of the
implanted matter; for we do not suppose it possible that the soul is adapted to a
strange building, just as it is not possible that the seal impressed on wax should
be fitted to an engraving that does not agree with it.
8. For as the body proceeds from a very small original to the perfect
state, so also the operation of the soul, growing in correspondence with the
subject, gains and increases with it. For at its first formation there comes first of
all its power of growth and nutriment alone, as though it were some root
buried in the ground; for the limited nature of the recipient does not admit of
more; then, as the plant comes forth to the light and shows its shoot to the sun,
the gift of sensibility blossoms in addition, but when at last it is ripened and
has grown up to its proper height, the power of reason begins to shine forth
like a fruit, not appearing in its whole vigour all at once, but by care
increasing with the perfection of the instrument, bearing always as much fruit as the
powers of the subject allow.
9. If, however, thou seekest to trace the operation of the soul in the
formation of the body, "take heed to thyself(6)," as Moses says, and thou wilt
read, as in a book, the history of the works of the soul; for nature itself
expounds to thee, more clearly than any discourse, the varied occupations of the soul
in the body, alike in general and in particular acts of construction.
10. But I deem it superfluous to declare at length in words what is to be
found in ourselves, as though we were expounding some wonder that lay beyond
our boundaries:--who that looks on himself needs words to teach him his own
nature? For it is possible for one who considers the mode of his own life, and
learns how closely concerned the body is in every vital operation, to know in what
the vegetative(7) principle of the soul was occupied on the occasion of the
first formation of that which was beginning its existence; so that hereby also it
is clear to those who have given any attention to the matter, that the thing
which was implanted by separation from the living body for the production of the
living. being was not a thing dead or inanimate m the laboratory of nature.
11. Moreover we plant in the ground the kernels of fruits, and portions
torn from roots, not deprived by death of the vital power which naturally resides
in them, but preserving in themselves, hidden indeed, yet surely living, the
property of their prototype; the earth that surrounds them does not implant such
a power from without, infusing it from itself (for surely then even dead wood
would proceed to growth), but it makes that manifest which resides in them,
nourishing it by its own moisture, perfecting the plant into root, and bark, and
pith, and shoots of branches, which could not happen were not a natural power
implanted with it, which drawing to itself from its surroundings its kindred and
proper nourishment, becomes a bush, or a tree, or an ear of grain, or some
plant of the class of shrubs.
XXX. A brief examination of the construction of our bodies from a medical
point of view(8).
1. NOW the exact structure of our body each man teaches himself by his
experiences of sight and light and perception, having his own nature to instruct
him; any one too may learn everything accurately who takes up the researches
which those skilled in such matters have worked out in books. And of these writers
some learnt by dissection the position of our individual organs; others also
considered and expounded the reason for the existence of all the parts of the
body; so that the knowledge of the human frame which hence results is sufficient
for students. But if any one further seeks that the Church should be his
teacher on all these points, so that he may not need for anything the voice of those
without (for this is the wont of the spiritual sheep, as the Lord says, that
they hear not a strange voice(9)), we shall briefly take in hand the account of
these matters also.
2. We note concerning our bodily nature three things, for the sake of
which our particular pans were formed. Life is the cause of some, good life of
others, others again are adapted with a view to the succession of descendants. All
things in us which are of such a kind that without them it is not possible that
human life should exist, we consider as being in three parts; in the brain,
the heart, and the liver. Again, all that are a sort of additional blessings,
nature's liberality, whereby she bestows on man the gift of living well, are the
organs of sense; for such things do not constitute our life, since even where
some of them are wanting man is often none the less in a condition of life; but
without these forms of activity it is impossible to enjoy participation in the
pleasures of life. The third aim regards the future, and the succession of life.
There are also certain other organs besides these, which help, in common with
all the others, to subserve the continuance of life, importing by their own
means the proper supplies, as the stomach and the lungs, the latter fanning by
respiration the fire at the heart, the former introducing the nourishment for the
internal organs.
3. Our structure, then, being thus divided, we have carefully to mark that
our faculty for life is not supported in any one way by some single organ, but
nature, while distributing the means for our existence among several parts,
makes the contribution of each individual necessary for the whole; just as the
things which nature contrives for the security and beauty of life are also
numerous, and differ much among themselves.
4. We ought, however, I think, first to discuss briefly the first
beginnings of the things which contribute to the constitution of our life. As for the
material of the whole body which serves as a common substratum for the
particular members, it may for the present be left without remark; for a discussion as
to natural substance in general will not be of any assistance to Our purpose
with regard to the consideration of the parts.
5. As it is then acknowledged by all that there is in us a share of all
that we behold as elements in the universe--of heat and cold, and of the other
pair of qualities of moisture and dryness--we must discuss them severally.
6. We see then that the powers which control life are three, of which the
first by its heat produces general warmth, the second by its moisture keeps
damp that which is warmed, so that the living being is kept in an intermediate
condition by the equal balance of the forces exerted by the quality of each of the
opposing natures (the moist element not being dried up by excess of heat, nor
the hot element quenched by the prevalence of moisture); and the third power by
its own agency holds together the separate members in a certain agreement and
harmony, connecting them by the ties which it itself furnishes, and sending
into them all that self-moving and determining force, on the failure of which the
member becomes relaxed and deadened, being left destitute of the determining
spirit.
7. Or rather, before dealing with these, it is right that we should mark
the skilled workmanship of nature in the actual construction of the body. For as
that which is hard and resistent does not admit the action of the senses (as
we may see in the instance of our own bones, and in that of plants in the
ground, where we remark indeed a certain form of life in that they grow and receive
nourishment, yet the resistent character of their substance does not allow them
sensation), for this reason it was necessary that some wax-like formation, so
to say, should be supplied for the action of the senses, with the faculty of
being impressed with the stamp of things capable of striking them, neither
becoming confused by excess of moisture (for the impress would not remain in moist
substance), nor resisting by extraordinary solidity (for that which is unyielding
would not receive any mark from the impressions), but being in a state between
softness and hardness, in order that the living being might not be destitute of
the fairest of all the operations of nature--I mean the motion of sense.
8. Now as a soft and yielding substance, if it had no assistance from the
hard parts, would certainly have, like molluscs, neither motion nor
articulation, nature accordingly mingles in the body the hardness of the bones, and
uniting these by close connection one to another, and knitting their joints together
by means of the sinews, thus plants around them the flesh which receives
sensations, furnished with a somewhat harder and more highly-strung surface than it
would otherwise have had.
9. While resting, then, the whole weight of the body on this substance of
the bones, as on some columns that carry a mass of building, she did not
implant the bone undivided through the whole structure: for in that case man would
have remained without motion or activity, if he had been so constructed, just
like a tree that stands on one spot without either the alternate motion of legs to
advance its motion or the service of hands to minister to the conveniences of
life: but now we see that she contrived that the instrument should be rendered
capable of walking and working by this device, after she had implanted in the
body, by the determining spirit which extends through the nerves, the impulse
and power for motion. And hence is produced the service of the hands, so varied
and multiform, and answering to every thought. Hence are produced, as though by
some mechanical contrivance, the turnings of the neck, and the bending and
raising of the head, and the action of the chin, and the separation of the eyelids,
that takes place with a thought, and the movements of the other joints, by the
tightening or relaxation of certain nerves. And the power that extends through
these exhibits a sort of independent impulse, working with the spirit of its
will by a sort of natural management, in each particular part; but the root of
all, and the principle of the motions of the nerves, is found in the nervous
tissue that surrounds the brain.
10. We consider, then, that we need not spend more time in inquiring in
which of the vital members such a thing resides, when the energy of motion is
shown to be here. But that the brain contributes to life in a special degree is
shown clearly by the result of the opposite conditions: for if the tissue
surrounding it receives any wound or lesion, death immediately follows the injury,
nature being unable to endure the hurt even for a moment; just as, when a
foundation is withdrawn, the whole building collapses with the part; and that member,
from an injury to which the destruction of the whole living being clearly
follows, may properly be acknowledged to contain the cause of life.
11. But as furthermore in those who have ceased to live, when the heat
that is implanted in our nature is quenched, that which has become dead grows
cold, we hence recognize the vital cause also in heat: for we must of necessity
acknowledge that the living being subsists by the presence of that, which failing,
the condition of death supervenes. And of such a force we understand the heart
to be as it were the fountain-head and principle, as from it pipe-like
passages, growing one from another in many ramifications, diffuse in the whole body
the warm and fiery spirit.
12. And since some nourishment must needs also be provided by nature for
the element of heat--for it is not possible that the fire should last by itself,
without being nourished by its proper food--therefore the channels of the
blood, issuing from the liver as from a fountainhead, accompany the warm spirit
everywhere in its way throughout the body, that the one may not by isolation from
the other become a disease and destroy the constitution. Let this instruct
those who go beyond the bounds of fairness, as they learn from nature that
covetousness is a disease that breeds destruction.
13. But since the Divinity alone is free from needs, while human poverty
requires external aid for its own subsistence, nature therefore, in addition to
those three powers by which we said that the whole body is regulated, brings in
imported matter from without, introducing by different entrances that which is
suitable to those powers.
14. For to the fount of the blood, which is the liver, she furnishes its
supply by food: for that which from time to time is imported in this way
prepares the springs of blood to issue from the liver, as the snow on the mountain by
its own moisture increases the springs in the low ground, forcing its own fluid
deep down to the veins below.
15. The breath in the heart is supplied by means of the neighbouring
organ, which is called the lungs, and is a receptacle for air, drawing the breath
from without through the windpipe inserted in it, which extends to the mouth. The
heart being placed in the midst of this organ (and itself also moving
incessantly in imitation of the action of the ever-moving fire), draws to itself,
somewhat as the bellows do in the forges, a supply from the adjacent air, filling
its recesses by dilatation, and while it fans its own fiery element, breathes
upon the adjoining tubes; and this it does not cease to do, drawing the external
air into its own recesses by dilatation, and by compression infusing the air
from itself into the tubes.
16. And this seems to me to be the cause of this spontaneous respiration
of ours; for often the mind is occupied in discourse with others, or is entirely
quiescent when the body is relaxed in sleep, but the respiration of air does
not cease, though the will gives no co-operation to this end. Now I suppose,
since the heart is surrounded by the lungs, and in the back part of its own
structure is attached to them, moving that organ by its own dilatations and
compressions, that the inhaling and exhaling(1) of the air is brought about by the
lungs: for as they are a lightly built and porous body, and have all their recesses
opening at the base of the windpipe, when they contract and are compressed they
necessarily force out by pressure the air that is left in their cavities; and,
when they expand and open, draw the air, by their distention, into the void by
suction.
17. This then is the cause of this involuntary respiration--the
impossibility that the fiery element should remain at rest: for as the operation of
motion is proper to heat, and we understand that the principle of heat is to be
found in the heart, the continual motion going on in this organ produces the
incessant inspiration and exhalation of the air through the lungs: wherefore also
when the fiery element is unnaturally augmented, the breathing of those fevered
subjects becomes more rapid, as though the heart were endeavouring to quench the
flame implanted in it by more violent(2) breathing.
18. But since our nature is poor and in need of supplies for its own
maintenance from all quarters, it not only lacks air of its own, and the breath
which excites heat, which it imports from without for the preservation of the
living being, but the nourishment it finds to fill out the proportions of the body
is an importation. Accordingly, it supplies the deficiency by food and drink,
implanting in the body a certain faculty for appropriating that which it
requires, and rejecting that which is superfluous, and for this purpose too the fire of
the heart gives nature no small assistance.
19. For since, according to the account we have given, the heart which
kindles by its warm breath the individual parts, is the most important of the
vital organs, our Maker caused it to be operative with its efficacious power at all
points, that no part of it might be left ineffectual or unprofitable for the
regulation of the whole organism. Behind, therefore, it enters the lungs, and,
by its continuous motion, drawing that organ to itself, it expands the passages
to inhale the air, and compressing them again it brings about the exspiration
of the imprisoned air; while in front, attached to the space at the upper
extremity of the stomach, it warms it and makes it respond by motion to its own
activity, rousing it, not to inhale air, but to receive its appropriate food: for
the entrances for breath and food are near one another, extending lengthwise one
alongside the other, and are terminated in their upper extremity by the same
boundary, so that their mouths are contiguous and the passages come to an end
together in one mouth, from which the entrance of food is effected through the
one, and that of the breath through the other.
20. Internally, however, the closeness of the connection of the passages
is not maintained throughout; for the heart intervening between the base of the
two, infuses in the one the powers for respiration, and in the other for
nutriment. Now the fiery element is naturally inclined to seek for the material which
serves as fuel, and this necessarily happens with regard to the receptacle of
nourishment; for the more it becomes penetrated by fire through the
neighbouring warmth, the more it draws to itself what nourishes the heat. And this sort of
impulse we call appetite.
21. But if the organ which contains the food should obtain sufficient
material, not even so does the activity of the fire become quiescent: but it
produces a sort of melting of the material just as in a foundry, and, dissolving the
solids, pours them out and transfers them, as it were from a funnel, to the
neighbouring passages: then separating the coarser from the pure substance, it
passes the fine part through certain channels to the entrance of the liver, and
expels the sedimentary matter of the food to the wider passages of the bowels,
and by turning it over in their manifold windings retains the food for a time in
the intestines, lest if it were easily got rid of by a straight passage it
might at once excite the animal again to appetite, and man, like the race of
irrational animals, might never cease from this sort of occupation.
22. As we saw, however, that the liver has especial need of the
co-operation of heat for the conversion of the fluids into blood, while this organ is in
position distant from the heart (for it would, I imagine, have been impossible
that, being one principle or root of the vital power, it should not be hampered
by vicinity with another such principle), in order that the system may suffer
no injury by the distance at which the heat-giving substance is placed, a
muscular passage (and this, by those skilled in such matters, is called the artery)
receives the heated air from the heart and conveys it to the liver, making its
opening there somewhere beside the point at which the fluids enter, and, as it
warms the moist substance by its heat, blends with the liquid something akin to
fire, and makes the blood appear red with the fiery tint it produces.
23. Issuing thence again, certain twin channels, each enclosing its own
current like a pipe, disperse air and blood (that the liquid substance may have
free course when accompanied and lightened by the motion of the heated
substance) in divers directions over the whole body, breaking at every part into
countless branching channels; while as the two principles of the vital powers mingle
together (that alike which disperses heat, and that which supplies moisture to
all parts of the body), they make, as it were, a sort of compulsory contribution
from the substance with which they deal to the supreme force in the vital
economy.
24. Now this force is that which is considered as residing in the cerebral
membranes and the brain, from which it comes that every movement of a joint,
every contraction of the muscles, every spontaneous influence that is exerted
upon the individual members, renders our earthen statue active and mobile as
though by some mechanism. For the most pure form of heat and the most subtle form
of liquid, being united by their respective forces through a process of mixture
and combination, nourish and sustain by their moisture the brain, and i hence
in turn, being rarefied to the most pure condition, the exhalation that proceeds
from that organ anoints the membrane which encloses the brain, which, reaching
from above downwards like a pipe, extending through the successive vertebrae,
is (itself and the marrow which is contained in it) conterminous with the base
of the spine, itself giving like a charioteer the impulse and power to all the
meeting-points of bones and joints, and to the branches of the muscles, for the
motion or rest of the particular parts.
25. For this cause too it seems to me that it has been granted a more
secure defence, being distinguished, in the head, by a double shelter of bones
round about, and in the vertebrae of the neck by the bulwarks formed by the
projections of the spine as well as by the diversified interlacings of the very form
of those vertebrae, by which it is kept in freedom from all harm, enjoying
safety by the defence that surrounds it.
26. So too one might suppose of the heart, that it is itself like some
safe house fitted with the most solid defences, fortified by the enclosing walls
of the bones round about; for in rear there is the spine, strengthened on either
side by the shoulder-blades, and on each flank the enfolding position of the
ribs makes that which is in the midst between them difficult to injure; while in
front the breast-bone and the juncture of the collar-bone serve as a defence,
that its safety may be guarded at all points from external causes of danger.
27. As we see in husbandry, when the rain fall from the clouds or the
overflow from the river channels causes the land beneath it to be saturated with
moisture (let us suppose for our argument a garden, nourishing within its own
compass countless varieties of trees, and all the forms of plants that grow from
the ground, and whereof we contemplate the figure, quality, and individuality in
great variety of detail); then, as these are nourished by the liquid element
while they are in one spot, the power which supplies moisture to each individual
among them is one in nature; but the individuality of the plants so nourished
changes the liquid element into different qualities; for the same substance
becomes bitter in wormwood, and is changed into a deadly juice in hemlock, and
becomes different in different other plants, in saffron, in balsam, in the poppy:
for in one it becomes hot, in another cold, in another it obtains the middle
quality: and in laurel and mastick it is scented, and in the fig and the pear it
is sweetened, and by passing through the vine it is turned into the grape and
into wine; while the juice of the apple, the redness of the rose, the radiance
of the lily, the blue of the violet, the purple of the hyacinthine dye, and all
that we behold in the earth, arise from one and the same moisture, and are
separated into so many varieties in respect of figure and aspect and quality; the
same sort of wonder is wrought in the animated soil of our being by Nature, or
rather by Nature's Lord. Bones, cartilages, veins, arteries, nerves, ligatures,
flesh, skin, fat, hair, glands, nails, eyes, nostrils; ears,--all such things
as these, and countless others in addition, while separated from one another by
various peculiarities, are nourished by the one form of nourishment in ways
proper to their own nature, in the sense that the nourishment, when it is brought
into close relation with any of the subjects, is also changed according to that
to which it approaches, and becomes adapted and allied to the special nature
of the part. For if it should be in the neighbourhood of the eye, it blends with
the visual part and is appropriately distributed by the difference of the
coats round the eye, among the single parts; or, if it flow to the auditory parts,
it is mingled with the auscultatory nature, or if it is in the lip, it becomes
lip; and it grows solid in bone, and grows soft in marrow, and is made tense
with the sinew, and extended with the surface, and passes into the nails, and is
fined down for the growth of the hair, by correspondent exhalations, producing
hair that is somewhat curly or wavy if it makes its way through winding
passages, while, if the course of the exhalations that go to form the hair lies
straight, it renders the hair stiff and straight.
28. Our argument, however, has wandered far from its purpose, going deep
into the works of nature, and endeavouring to describe how and from what
materials our particular organs are formed, those, I mean, intended for life and for
good life, and any other class which we included with these in our first
division.
29. For our purpose was tO show that the seminal cause of our constitution
is neither a soul without body, nor a body without soul, but that, from
animated and living bodies, it is generated at the first as a living and animate
being, and that our humanity takes it and cherishes it like a nursling with the
resources she herself possesses, and it thus grows on both sides and makes its
growth manifest correspondingly in either part:--for it at once displays, by this
artificial and scientific process of formation, the power of soul that is
interwoven in it, appearing at first somewhat obscurely, but afterwards increasing
in radiance concurrently with the perfecting of the work.
30. And as we may see with stone-carvers-- for the artist's purpose is to
produce in stone the figure of some animal; and with this in his mind, he first
severs the stone from its kindred matter, and then, by chipping away the
superfluous parts of it, advances somehow by the intermediate step of his first
outline to the imitation which he has in his purpose, so that even an unskilled
observer may, by what he sees, conjecture the aim of his art; again, by working at
it, he brings it more nearly to the semblance of the object he has in view;
lastly, producing in the material the perfect and finished figure, he brings his
art to its conclusion, and that which a little before was a shapeless stone is
a lion, or a man, or whatsoever it may be that the artist has made, not by the
change of the material into the figure, but by the figure being wrought upon
the material. If one supposes the like in the case of the soul he is not far from
probability; for we say that Nature, the all-contriving, takes from its
kindred matter the part that comes from the man, and moulds her statue within
herself. And as the form follows upon the gradual working of the stone, at first
somewhat indistinct, but more perfect after the completion of the work, so too in
the moulding of its instrument the form of the soul is expressed in the
substratum, incompletely in that which is still incomplete, perfect in that which is
perfect; indeed it would have been perfect from the beginning had our nature not
been maimed by evil. Thus our community in that generation which is subject to
passion and of animal nature, brings it about that the Divine image does not at
once shine forth at our formation, but brings man to perfection by a certain
method and sequence, through those attributes of the soul which are material, and
belong rather to the animal creation.
31. Some such doctrine as this the great apostle also teaches us in his
Epistle to the Corinthians, when he says, "When I was a child, I spake as a
child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child; but when I became a man I put
away childish things(3)"; not that the soul which arises in the man is
different from that which we know to be in the boy, and the childish intellect fails
while the manly intellect takes its being in us; but that the same soul displays
its imperfect condition in the one, its perfect state in the other.
32. For we say that those things are alive which spring up and grow, and
no one would deny that all things that participate in life and natural motion
are animate, yet at the same time one cannot say that such life partakes of a
perfect soul,--for though a certain animate operation exists in plants, it does
not attain to the motions of sense; and on the other hand, though a certain
further animate power exists in the brutes, neither does this attain perfection,
since it does not contain in itself the grace of reason and intelligence.
33. And even so we say that the true and perfect soul is the human soul,
recognized by every operation; and anything else that shares in life we call
animate by a sort of customary misuse of language, because in these cases the soul
does not exist in a perfect condition, but only certain parts of the operation
of the soul, which in man also (according to Moses' mystical account of man's
origin) we learn to have accrued when he made himself like this sensuous world.
Thus Paul, advising those who were able to hear him to lay hold on perfection,
indicates also the mode in which they may attain that object, telling them
that they must "put off the old man," and put on the man "which is renewed after
the image of Him that created him 4."
34. Now may we all return to that Divine grace in which God at the first
created man, when He said, "Let us make man in our image and likeness"; to Whom
be glory and might for ever and ever. Amen.