RECOGNITIONS OF CLEMENT. BOOK VII
BOOK VII.
CHAP. I.--JOURNEY FROM TRIPOLIS.
AT length leaving Tripolis,(1) a city of Phoenicia, we made our first halt
at Ortosias, not far from Tripolis; and there we remained the next day also,
because almost all those that hart believed in the Lord, unable to part from
Peter, followed him thus far. Thence we came to Antharadus. But because there were
many in our company, Peter said to Niceta and Aquila: "As there are immense
crowds of brethren with as, and we bring upon ourselves no title envy as we enter
into every city, it seems to me that we must take means, without doing so
unpleasing a thing as to prevent their following us, to secure that the wicked one
shall not stir up envy against us on account of any display! I wish, therefore,
that you, Niceta and Aquila, would go before us with them, so that you may
lead the multitude divided into two sections, that we may enter every city of the
Gentiles travelling apart, rather than in one assemblage.
CHAP. II.--DISCIPLES DIVIDED INTO TWO BANDS.
"But I know that you think it sad to be separated from me for the space of
at least two days. Believe me, that in whatever degree you love me, my diction
towards you is tenfold greater. But if, by reason of our mutual affection, we
will not do the things that are right and honourable, such love will appear to
be unreasonable. And therefore, without bating a tittle of oar love, let us
attend to those things which seem useful and necessary; especially since not a day
can pass in which you may not be present at my discussions. For I purpose to
pass through the most noted cities of the provinces one by one, as you also
know, and to reside three months in each for the sake of teaching. Now, therefore,
go before me to Laodicea, which is the nearest city, and I shall follow yon
after two or three days, so far as I purpose. But you shall wait for me at the inn
nearest to the gate of the city; and thence again, when we have spent a few
days there, you shall go before me to more distant cities. And this I wish you to
do at every city, for the sake of avoiding envy as much as in us lies, and
also that the brethren who are with us, finding lodgings prepared in the several
cities by your foresight, may not seem to be vagabonds."
CHAP. III.--ORDER OF MARCH.
When Peter thus spoke, they of course acquiesced, saying: "It does not
greatly sadden us to do this, because we are ordered by you, who have been chosen
by the foresight of Christ to I do and to counsel well in all things; but also
because, while it is a heavy loss not to see our lord Peter for one, or it may
be two days, yet it is not intolerable. And we think of our twelve brethren who
go before us, and who are deprived of the advantage of hearing and seeing you
for a whole month out of the three that you stay in every city. Therefore we
shall not delay doing as you order, because you order all things aright." And
thus saying, they went forward, having received instructions that they should
speak to the brethren who journeyed with them outside the city, and request them
not to enter the cities in a crowd and with tumult, but apart, and divided
CHAP. IV.--CLEMENT'S JOY AT REMAINING WITH PETER.
But when they were gone, I Clement rejoiced greatly because he had kept me
with himself, and I said to him: "I give thanks to God that yon have not sent
me forward with the others, for I should have died through sadness." Then said
Peter: "And what will happen if necessity shall demand that yon be sent
anywhere for the purpose of teaching? Would yon die if you were separated from me for
a good purpose? Would you not put a restraint upon yourself, to bear patiently
what necessity has laid upon you? Or do you not know that friends are always
together, and are joined in memory, though they be separated bodily; as, on the
other hand, some. persons are near to one another in body, but are separate in
mind?"
CHAP. V.--CLEMENT'S AFFECTION FOR PETER.
Then I answered: "Think not, my lord, that I suffer these things
unreasonably; hut there is a certain cause anti reason of this affection of mine towards
you. For I have you alone as the object of all my affections, instead of
father and mother, and brethren; bat above all this, is the fact that you alone are
the cause of my salvation and knowledge of the truth. And also this I do not
count of least moment, that my youthful age is subject to the snares of lusts;
and I am afraid to he without you, by whose sole presence all effeminacy, however
irrational it be, is put to shame; although I trust, by the mercy of God, that
even my mind, from what it has conceived through your instruction, shall be
unable to receive aught else into its thoughts. Besides, I remember your saying
at Caesarea, 'If any one wishes to accompany me, without violating dutifulness,
let him accompany me.' And by this you meant that he should not make any one
sad, to whom he ought according to God's appointment to cleave; for example, that
he should not leave a faithful wife, or parents, or the like. Now from these I
am entirely free, and so I am fit for following you; and I wish you would
grant me that I might perform to you the service of a servant."
CHAP.VI.--PETER'S SIMPLICITY OF LIFE.
Then Peter, laughing. said: "And do you not think, Clement, that very
necessity must make you my servant? For who else can spread my sheets, and arrange
my beautiful coverlets? Who will be at hand to keep my rings, and prepare my
robes, which I must be constantly changing? Who shall superintend my cooks, and
provide various and choice meats to be prepared by most recondite and various
art; and all those things which are procured at enormous expense, and arc brought
together for men of delicate up-bringing, yea rather, for their appetite, as
for some enormous beast? But perhaps, although you live with me, you do not know
my manner of life. I live on bread alone, with olives, and seldom even with
pot-herbs; and my dress is what you see, a tunic with a pallium: and having
these, I require nothing more. This is sufficient for me, because my mind does not
regard things present, but things eternal, and therefore no present and visible
thing delights me. Whence I embrace and admire indeed your good mind towards
me; and I commend you the more, because, though you have been accustomed to so
great abundance, you have been able so soon to abandon it, and to accommodate
yourself to this life of ours, which makes use of necessary things alone. For
we--that is, I and my brother Andrew--have grown up from our childhood not only
orphans, but also extremely poor, and through necessity have become used to
labour, whence now also we easily bear tile fatigues of our journeyings. But rather,
if you would consent and allow it, I, who am a working man, could more easily
discharge the duty of a servant to you."
CHAP. VII.--PETER'S HUMILITY.
But I trembled when I heard this, and my tears immediately gushed forth,
because so great a man, who is worth more than the whole world, had addressed
such a proposal to me. Then he, when he saw me weeping, inquired the reason; and
I answered him: "How have I so sinned against you, that you should distress me
with such a proposal?" Then Peter: "If it is evil that I said I should serve
you, you were first in fault in saying tile same thing to me." Then said I: "The
cases are not alike: for it becomes me to do this to you; but it is grievous
that you, who are sent as the herald of the Most High God to save the souls of
men, should say it to me." Then said Peter: "I should agree with you, were it not
that our Lord, who came for the salvation of the whole world, and who was
nobler than any creature, submitted to be a servant, that He might persuade us not
to be ashamed to perform the ministry of servants to our brethren." Then said
I: "It were foolishness in me to suppose that I can prevail with you;
nevertheless i give thanks to the providence of God, because I have merited to have you
instead of parents."
CHAP. VIII.--CLEMENT'S FAMILY HISTORY.
Then said Peter: "Is there then no one of your family surviving?" I answered:
"There are indeed many powerful men, coming of the stock of Caesar; for Caesar
himself gave a wife to my father, as being his relative, and educated along
with him, and of a suitably noble family. By her my father had twin sons, born
before me, not very like one another, as my father told me; for I never knew them.
But indeed I have not a distinct recollection even of my mother; but I cherish
the remembrance of her face, as if I had seen it in a dream. My mother's name
was Matthidia, my father's Faustinianus: my brothers', Faustinus and
Faustus.(1) Now, when I was barely five years old, my mother saw a vision--so I learned
from my father--by which she was warned that, unless she speedily for the city
with her twin sons, and was absent for ten years, she and her children should
perish by a miserable fate.
CHAP. IX.--DISAPPEARANCE OF HIS MOTHER AND BROTHERS.
"Then my father, who tenderly loved his sons, put them on board a ship
with their mother, and sent them to Athens to be educated, with slaves and
maid-servants, and a sufficient supply of money; retaining me only to be a comfort to
him, and thankful for this, that the vision had not commanded me also to go
with my mother. And at the end of a year my father sent men to Athens with money
for them, desiring also to know how they did; but those who were sent never
returned. Again, in the third year, my sorrowful father sent other men with money,
who returned in the fourth year, and related that they had seen neither my
mother nor my brothers, that they had never reached Athens, and that no trace had
been found of any one of those who had been with them.
CHAP. X.--DISAPPEARANCE OF HIS FATHER.
"My father hearing this, and confounded with excessive sorrow, not knowing
whither to go or where to seek, went down with me to the harbour, and began to
ask of the sailors whether any of them had seen or heard of the bodies of a
mother and two little children being cast ashore anywhere, four years ago; when
one told one story and another another, but nothing definite was disclosed to us
searching in this boundless sea. Yet my father, by reason of the great
affection which he bore to his wife and children, was fed with vain hopes, until he
thought of placing me under guardians and leaving me at Rome, as I was now twelve
years old, and himself going in quest of them. Therefore he went down to the
harbour weeping, and going on board a ship, took his departure; and from that
time till now I have never received any letters from him, nor do I know whether
he is alive or dead. But I rather suspect that he also has perished, either
through a broken heart or by shipwreck; for twenty years have now elapsed since
then, and no tidings of him have ever reached me."
CHAP. XI.--DIFFERENT EFFECTS OF SUFFERING ON HEATHENS AND CHRISTIANS.
Peter, hearing this, shed tears of sympathy, and said to his friends who
were present: "If any man who is a worshipper of God had endured what this man's
father has endured, immediately men would assign his religion as the cause of
his calamities; but when these things happen to miserable Gentiles, they charge
their misfortunes upon fate. I call them miserable, because they are both
vexed with errors here, and are deprived of future hope; whereas, when the
worshippers of God suffer these things, their patient endurance of them contributes to
their cleansing from sin."
CHAP. XII.--EXCURSION TO ARADUS.
After this, one of those present began to ask Peter, that early next day
we should go to a neighbouring island called Aradus, which was not more than six
furlongs off, to see a certain wonderful work that was in it, viz.
vine-wood(1) columns of immense size. To this Peter assented, as he was very complaisant;
but he charged us that, when we left the ship, we should not rush all together
to see it: "for," said he, "I do not wish you to be noticed by the crowd." When
therefore, next day, we reached the island by ship in the course of an hour
forthwith we hastened to the place where the wonderful columns were. They were
placed in a certain temple, in which there were very magnificent works of
Phidias, on which every one of us gazed earnestly.
CHAP. XIII.--THE BEGGAR WOMAN.
But when Peter had admired only the columns, being no wise ravished with
the grace of the painting, he went out, and saw before the gates a poor woman
asking alms of those who went in; and looking earnestly at her, he said: "Tell
me, O woman, what member of your body is wanting, that you subject yourself to
the indignity of asking alms, and do not rather gain your bread by labouring with
your hands which God has given you." But she, sighing, said: "Would that I had
hands which could be moved; but now only the appearance of hands has been
preserved, for they are lifeless, and have been rendered feeble and without feeling
by my knawing of them." Then Peter said: "What has been the cause of your
inflicting so great an injury upon yourself?" "Want of courage," said she, "and
nought else; for if I had had any bravery in me, I could either have thrown myself
from a precipice, or cast myself into the depths of the sea, and so ended my
griefs."
CHAP. XIV.--THE WOMAN'S GRIEF.
Then Peter said: "Do you think, O woman, that those who destroy themselves
are set free from torments, and not rather that the souls of those who lay
violent hands upon themselves are subjected to greater punishments?" Then said
she: "I wish I were sure that souls live in the infernal regions, for I would
gladly embrace the suffering of the penalty of suicide, only that I might see my
darling children, if it were but for an hour." Then Peter: "What thing is it so
great, that effects you with so heavy sadness? I should like to know. For if you
informed me of the cause, I might be able both to show you clearly, O woman,
that souls do live in the infernal regions; and instead of the precipice or the
deep sea, I might give yon some remedy, that you may be able to end your life
without torment."
CHAP. XV.--THE WOMAN'S STORY.
Then the woman, hearing this welcome promise, began to say: "It is neither
easy of belief, nor do I think it necessary to tell, what is my extraction, or
what is my country. It is enough only to explain the cause of my grief, why I
have rendered my hands powerless by gnawing them. Being born of noble parents,
and having become the wife of a suitably powerful man, I had two twin sons, and
after them one other. But my husband's brother was vehemently enflamed with
unlawful love towards me; and as I valued chastity above all things, and would
neither consent to so great wickedness, nor wished to disclose to my husband the
baseness of his brother, I considered whether in any way I could escape
unpolluted, and yet not set brother against brother, and so bring the whole race of a
noble family into disgrace. I made up my mind, therefore, to leave my country
with my two twins, until the incestuous love should subside, which the sight of
me was fostering and inflaming; and I thought that our other son should remain
to comfort his father to some extent.
CHAP. XVI.--THE WOMAN'S STORY CONTINUED.
"Now in order to carry out this plan, I pretended that I had had a dream,
in which some deity stood by me in a vision, and told me that I should
immediately depart from the city with my twins, and should be absent until he should
command me to return; and that, if I did not do so, I should perish with all my
children. And so it was done. For as soon as I told the dream to my husband, he
was terrified; and sending with me my twin sons, and also slaves and
maid-servants, and giving me plenty of money, he ordered me to sail to Athens, where I
might educate my sons, and that I should stay there until he who commanded me to
depart should give me leave to return. While I was sailing along with my sons,
I was shipwrecked in the night by the violence of the winds, and, wretch that I
am, was driven to this place; and when all had perished, a powerful wave
caught me, and cast me upon a rock. And while I sat there with this only hope, that
haply I might be able to find my sons, I did not throw myself into the deep,
although then my soul, disturbed and drunk with grief, had both the courage and
the power to do it.
CHAP. XVII.--THE WOMAN'S STORY CONTINUED.
"But when the day dawned, and I with shouting and howling was looking
around, if I could even see the corpses of my unhappy sons anywhere washed ashore,
some of those who saw me were moved with compassion, and searched, first over
the sea, and then also along the shores, if they could find either of my
children. But when neither of them was anywhere found, the women of the place, taking
pity on me, began to comfort me, every one telling her own griefs, that I might
take consolation from the likeness of their calamities to my own. But this
saddened me all the more; for my disposition was not such that I could regard the
misfortunes of others as comforts to me. And when many desired to receive me
hospitably, a certain poor I woman who dwells here constrained me to enter into
her hut, saying that she had had a husband who was a sailor, and that he had
died at sea while a young man, and that, although many afterwards asked her in
marriage, she preferred widowhood through love of her husband. 'Therefore,' said
she. 'we shall share whatever we can gain by the labour of our hands.'
CHAP. XVIII.--THE WOMAN'S STORY CONTINUED.
"And, not to detain you with a long and profitless story, I willingly
dwelt with her on account of the faithful affection which she retained for her
husband. But not long after, my hands (unhappy woman that I was!), long torn with
gnawing, became powerless, and she who had taken me in fell into palsy, and now
lies at home in her bed; also the affection of those women who had formerly
pitied me grew cold. We are both helpless. I, as you see, sit begging; and when I
get anything, one meal serves two wretches. Behold, now you have heard enough
of my affairs; why do you delay the fulfilment of your promise, to give me a
remedy, by which both of us may end our miserable life without torment?"
CHAP. XIX.--PETER'S REFLECTIONS ON THE STORY.
While she was speaking, Peter, being distracted with much thought, stood
like one thunder-struck; and I Clement coming up, said: "I have been seeking you
everywhere, and now what are we to do?" But he commanded me to go before him
to the ship, and there to wait for him; and because he must not be gainsayed, I
did as he commanded me. But he, as he afterwards told me the whole, being
struck with a sort of suspicion, asked of the woman her family, and her country, and
the names of her sons; "and straightway," he said, "if you tell me these
things, I shall give you the remedy." But she, like one suffering violence, because
she would not confess these things, and yet was desirous of the remedy, reigned
one thing after another, saying that she was an Ephesian, and her husband a
Sicilian, and giving false names to her sons. Then Peter, supposing that she had
answered truly, said: "Alas! O woman, I thought that some great joy should
spring up to us to-day; for I suspected that you were a certain woman, concerning
whom I lately learned certain like things." But she adjured him, saying: "I
entreat you to tell me what they are, that I may know if amongst women there be one
more unfortunate than myself."
CHAP. XX. -- PETER'S STATEMENT TO THE WOMAN.
Then Peter, incapable of deception, and moved with compassion, began to
say: "There is a certain young man among those who follow me for the sake of
religion and sect, a Roman citizen, who told me that he had a father and two twin
brothers, of whom not one is left to him. (4) My mother,' he said, 'as I learned
from my father, saw a vision, that she should depart from the Roman city for a
time with her twin sons, else they should perish by a dreadful death; and when
she had departed, she was never more seen.' And afterwards his father set out
to search for his wife and sons, and was also lost."
CHAP. XXI. -- A DISCOVERY.
When Peter had thus spoken, the woman, struck with astonishment, fainted. Then
Peter began to hold her rip, and to comfort her, and to ask what was the
matter, or what she suffered. But she at length, with difficulty recovering her
breath, and nerving herself up to the greatness of the joy which she hoped for, and
at the same time wiping her face, said: "Is he here, the youth of whom you
speak?" But Peter, when he understood the matter, said: "Tell me first, or else
you shall not see him." Then she said: "I am the mother of the youth." Then says
Peter: "What is his name?" And she answered: "Clement." Then said Peter: "It
is himself; and he it was that spoke with me a little while ago, and whom I
ordered to go before me to the ship." Then she fell down at Peter's feet and began
to entreat him that he would hasten to the ship. Then Peter said: "Yes if you
will promise me that you will do as I say." Then she said: "I will do anything;
only show me my only son, for I think that in him I shall see my twins also."
Then Peter said: "When you have seen him, dissemble for a little time, until we
leave the island." "I will do so," she said.
CHAP. XXII. -- A HAPPY MEETING.
Then Peter, holding her hand, led her to the ship. And when I saw him giving
his hand to the woman, I began to laugh; yet, approaching to do him honour, I
tried to substitute my hand for his, and to support the woman. But as soon as I
touched her hand, she uttered a loud scream, and rushed into my embrace, and
began to devour me with a mother's kisses. But I, being ignorant of the whole
matter, pushed her off as a mad woman; and at the same time, though with reverence,
I was somewhat angry with Peter.
CHAP. XXIII. -- A MIRACLE.
But he said: "Cease: what mean you, O Clement, my son? Do not push away your
mother." But I as soon as I heard these words, immediately bathed in tears, fell
upon my mother, who had fallen down, and began to kiss her, For as soon as I
heard, by degrees I recalled her countenance to my memory; and the longer I
gazed, the more familiar it grew to me. Mean time a great multitude assembled,
hearing that the woman who used to sit and beg was recognised by her son, who was a
good man. (1) And when we wished to sail hastily away from the island, my
mother said to me: "My darling son, it is right that I should bid farewell to the
woman who took me in; for she is poor, and paralytic, and bedridden." When Peter
and all who were present heard this, they admired the goodness and prudence of
the woman; and immediately Peter ordered some to go and to bring the woman in
her bed as she lay. And when she had been brought, and placed in the midst of
the crowd, Peter said, in the presence of all: "If I am a preacher of truth, for
confirming the faith of all those who stand by, that they may know and believe
that there is one God, who made heaven and earth, in the name of Jesus
Christ, His Son, let this woman rise." And as soon as he had said this, she arose
whole, and fell down at Peter's feet; and greeting her friend anti acquaintance
with kisses asked of her was the meaning of it all. But she shortly related to
her the whole proceeding of the Recognition, (2) so that the crowds standing
around wondered.
CHAP. XXIV -- DEPARTURE FROM ARADUS.
Then Peter, so far as he could, and as time permitted, addressed the
crowds on the faith of God, and the ordinances of religion; and then added, that if
any one wished to know more accurately about these things, he should come to
Antioch, "where," said he, "we have resolved to stay three months, and to teach
fully the things which pertain to salvation. For if," said he, "men leave their
country and their parents for commercial or military purposes, and do not
fear to undertake long voyages, why should it be thought burdensome or difficult
to leave home for three months for the sake of eternal life?" When he had said
these things, and more to the same purpose, I presented a thousand drachmas to
the woman who had entertained my mother, and who bad recovered her health by
means of Peter, and in the presence of all committed her to the charge of a
certain good man, the chief person in that town, who promised that he would gladly do
what we demanded of him. I also distributed a little money among some others,
and among those women who were said formerly to have comforted my mother in her
miseries, to whom I also expressed my thanks. And after this we sailed, along
with my mother, to Antaradus.
CHAP. XXV. -- JOURNEYINGS.
And when we had come to our lodging, (1) my mother began to ask of me what
had become of my father; and I told her that he had gone to seek her, and
never returned. But she, hearing this, only sighed; for her great joy on my account
lightened her other sorrows. And the next clay she journeyed with us, sitting
with Peter's wife; and we came to Balaneae, where we stayed three days, and
then went on to Pathos, and afterwards to Gabala; and so we arrived at Laodicea,
where Niceta and Aquila met us before the gates, and kissing us, conducted us to
a lodging. But Peter, seeing that it was a large and splendid city, said that
it was worthy that we should stay in it ten days, or even longer. Then Niceta
and Aquila asked of me who was this unknown woman; and I answered: "It is my
mother, whom God has given back to me by means of my lord Peter."
CHAP. XXVI. -- RECAPITULATION.
And when I had said this, Peter began to relate the whole matter to them
in order, (2) and said. "When we had come to Aradus, (3) and I had ordered you
to go on before us, the same day after you had gone, Clement was led in the
course of conversation to tell me of his extraction and his family, and how he had
been deprived of his parents, and had had twin brothers older than himself, and
that, as his father told him, his mother once saw a vision, by which she was
ordered to depart from the city of Rome with her twin sons, else she and they
should suddenly perish. And when she had told his father the dream, he, loving
his sons with tender affection, and afraid of any evil befalling them, put his
wife and sons on board a ship with all necessaries, and sent them to Athens to be
educated. Afterwards he sent once and again persons to inquire after them, but
nowhere found even a trace of them. At last the father himself went on the
search, and until now he is nowhere to be found. When Clement had given me this
narrative, there came one to us, asking us to go to the neighbouring island of
Aradus, to see vine-wood columns of wonderful size. I consented; and when we came
to the place, all the rest went into the interior of the temple; but I--for
what reason I know not--had no mind to go farther.
CHAP. XXVII. -- RECAPITULATION CONTINUED.
"But while I was waiting outside for them, I began to notice this woman,
and to wonder in what part of her body she was disabled, that she did not seek
her living by the labour of her hands, but submitted to the shame of beggary. I
therefore asked of her the reason of it. She confessed that she was sprung of a
noble race, and was married to a no less noble husband, 'whose brother,' said
she, 'being inflamed by unlawful love towards me, desired to defile his
brother's bed. This I abhorring, and yet not daring to tell my husband of so great
wickedness, lest I should stir up war between the brothers. and bring disgrace
upon the family, judged it better to depart from my country with my two twin sons,
leaving the younger boy to be a comfort to his father. And that this might be
done with an honourable appearance, I thought good to feign a dream, and to
tell my husband that there stood by me in a vision a certain deity, who told me to
set out from the city immediately with my two twins, and remain until he
should instruct me to return.' She told me that her husband, when he heard this,
believed her, and sent her to Athens, with the twin children to be educated there;
but that they were driven by a terrible tempest upon that island, where, when
the ship had gone to pieces, she was lifted by a wave upon a rock, and delayed
killing herself only for this, 'until,' said she, 'I could embrace at least the
dead limbs of my unfortunate sons, and commit them to burial. But when the day
dawned, and crowds had assembled, they took pity upon me, and threw a garment
over me. But I, miserable, entreated them with many tears, to search if they
could find anywhere the booties of my unfortunate sons. And I, tearing all my
body with my teeth, with wailing and howlings cried out constantly, Unhappy
woman that I am, where is my Faustus? where my Faustinus?'"
CHAP. XXVIII. -- MORE RECOGNITIONS.
And when Peter said this, (4) Niceta and Aquila suddenly started up, and
being astonished, began to be greatly agitated, saying: "O Lord, Thou Ruler and
God of all, are these things true, or are we in a dream?" Then Peter said:
"Unless we be mad, these things are true." But they, after a short pause, and
wiping their faces, said: "We are Faustinus and Faustus: and even at the first, when
you began this narrative, we immediately fell into a suspicion that the
matters that you spoke of might perhaps relate to us; yet again considering that many
like things happen in men's lives, we kept silence, although our hearts were
struck by some hope. Therefore we waited for the end of your story, that, if it
were entirely manifest that it related to us, we might then confess it." And
when they had thus spoken, they went in weeping to our mother. And when they
found her asleep, and wished to embrace her, Peter prevented them, saying:
"Permit me first to prepare your mother's mind, lest haply by the great and sudden
joy she lose her reason, and her understanding he disturbed, especially as she is
now stupefied with sleep."
CHAP. XXIX. -- "NOTHING COMMON OR UNCLEAN."
Therefore, when our mother had risen from her sleep, Peter began to
address her, saying: "I wish you to know, O woman an observance of our religion. We
worship one God, who made the world, and we keep His law, in which He commands
us first of all to worship Him, and to reverence His name, to honour our
parents, and to preserve chastity and uprightness. But this also we observe, not to
have a common table with Gentiles, unless when they believe, and on the reception
of the truth are baptized, and consecrated by a certain threefold invocation
of the blessed name; and then we eat with them. (1) Otherwise, even if it were a
father or a mother, or wife:, or sons, or brothers, we cannot have a common
table with them. Since, therefore, we do this for the special cause of religion,
let it not seem hard to you that your son cannot eat with you, until you have
the same judgment of the faith that he has."
CHAP. XXX. -- "WHO CAN FORBID WATER?"
Then she, when she heard this, said: "And what hinders me to be baptized
to-day? For even before I saw you I was wholly alienated t from those whom they
call gods because they were not able to do anything for me, although I
frequently, and almost daily, sacrificed to them. And as to chastity, what shall I
say, when neither in former times did pleasures deceive me, nor afterwards did
poverty compel me to sin? But I think you know well enough how great was my love
of chastity, when I pretended that dream that I might escape the snares of
unhallowed love, and that I might go abroad with my two twins. and when I left
this my son Clement alone to be a comfort to his father. For if two were scarcely
enough for me, how much more it would have saddened their father, if he had
had none at all? For he was wretched through his great affection towards our
sons, so that even the authority of the dream could scarce prevail upon him to give
up to me Faustinus and Faustus, the brothers of this Clement, and that himself
should be content with Clement alone. "
CHAP. XXXI. -- TOO MUCH JOY.
While she was yet speaking, my brothers could contain themselves no
longer, but rushed into their mother's embrace with many tears, and kissed her. But
she said: "What 'is the meaning of this " Then said Peter: "Be not disturbed, O
woman; be firm. These are your sons Faustinus and Faustus, whom you supposed to
have perished in the deep; but how they are alive, and how they escaped in
that horrible night, and how the one of them is called Niceta and the other
Aquila, they will be able to explain to you themselves, and we also shall hear it
along with you." When Peter had said this, our mother fainted, being overcome with
excess of joy; and after some time, being restored and come to herself, she
said; "I beseech you, darling sons, tell me what has befallen you since that
dismal and cruel night."
CHAP. XXXII.. -- "HE BRINGETH THEM UNTO THEIR DESIRED HAVEN."
Then Niceta began to say: "On that night, O mother, when the ship was
broken up, and we were being tossed upon the sea, supported on a fragment of the
wreck, certain men, whose business it was to rob by sea, found us, and placed us
in their boat, and overcoming the power of the waves by rowing, by various
stretches brought us to Caesarea Stratonis. There they starved us, and heat us, and
terrified us, that we might not disclose the truth; and having changed our
names, they sold us to a certain widow, a very honourable women, named Justa. She,
having bought us, treated us as sons, so that she carefully educated us in
Greek literature and liberal arts. And when we grew up, we also attended to
philosophic studies, that we night be able to confute the Gentiles, by supporting the
doctrines of the divine religion by philosophic disputations.
CHAP. XXXIII. -- ANOTHER WRECK PREVENTED.
"But we adhered, for friendship's sake and boyish companionship, to one
Simon, a magician, who was educated along with us, so that we were almost
deceived by him. For there is mention made in our religion of a certain Prophet, whose
coming was hoped for by all who observe that religion, through whom immortal
and happy life is promised to be given to those who believe in Him. Now we
thought that this Simon was he. But these things shall be explained to you, O
mother, at a more convenient season. Meanwhile, when we were almost deceived by
Simon, a certain colleague of my lord Peter, Zacchaeus by name, warned us that we
should not be duped by the magician, but presented us to Peter on his arrival,
that by him we might be taught the things which were sound and perfect. And this
we hope will happen to you also, even as God has vouchsafed it to us, that we
may be able to eat and have a common table with you. Thus therefore it was, O
mother, that you believed that we were drowned in the sea, while we were stolen
by pirates."
CHAP. XXXIV. -- BAPTISM MUST BE PRECEDED BY FASTING.
When Niceta had spoken thus, our mother fell down at Peter's feet,
entreating and beseeching him that both herself and her hostess might be baptized
without delay; "that," said she, "I may not even for a single clay suffer the loss
of the company and society of my sons." In like manner, we her sons also
entreated Peter. But he said: "What! Do you think that I alone am unpitiful, and that
I do not wish you to enjoy your mother's society at meals? But she must fast
at least one day first, and so be baptized; and this because I have heard from
her a certain declaration, by which her faith has been made manifest to me, and
which has given evidence of her belief; otherwise she must have been instructed
and taught many days before she could have been baptized."
CHAP. XXXV.--DESIRING THE SALVATION OF OTHERS.
Then said I: "I pray you, my lord Peter, tell us what is that declaration
which you say afforded you evidence of her faith?" Then Peter: "It is her
asking that her hostess, whose kindnesses she wishes to requite, may be baptized
along with her. Now she would not ask that this grace be bestowed upon her whom
she loves, unless she believed that there is some great boon in baptism. Whence,
also, I find fault with very many, who, when they are themselves baptized and
believe, yet do nothing worthy of faith with those whom they love, such as
wives, or children, or friends, whom they do not exhort to that which they
themselves have attained, as they would do if indeed they believed that eternal life is
thereby bestowed. In short, if they see them to be sick, or to be subject to
any danger bodily, they grieve and mourn, because they are sure that in this
destruction threatens them. So, then, if they were sure of this, that the
punishment of eternal fire awaits those who do not worship God, when would they cease
warning and exhorting? Or, if they refused, how would they not mourn and bewail
them, being sure that eternal torments awaited them? Now, therefore, we shall
send for that woman at once, and see if she loves the faith of our religion; and
as we find, so shall we act. But since your mother has judged so faithfully
concerning baptism, let her fast only one day before baptism."
CHAP. XXXVI. -- THE SONS' PLEADING.
But she declared with an oath, in presence of my lord Peter's wife, that
from the time she recognised her son, she had been unable to take any food from
excess of joy, excepting only that yesterday she drank a cup of water. Peter's
wife also bore witness, saying that it was even so. Then Aquila said: "What,
then, hinders her being baptized?" Then Peter, smiling, said: "But this is not
the fast of baptism, for it was not done in order to baptism." Then Niceta said:
"But perhaps God, wishing that our mother, on our recognition, should not be
separated even for one day from participation of our table, pre-ordained this
fasting. For as in her ignorance she preserved her chastity, that it might profit
her in order to the grace of baptism; so she fasted before she knew the reason
of fasting, that it might profit her in order to baptism, and that
immediately, from the beginning of our acquaintance, she might enjoy communion of the
table with us."
CHAP. XXXVII. -- PETER INEXORABLE.
Then said Peter: (1) "Let not the wicked one prevail against us, taking
occasion from a mother's love; but let you, and me with you, fast this day along
with her, and to-morrow she shall be baptized: for it is not right that the
precepts of truth be relaxed and weakened in favour of any person or friendship.
Let us not shrink, then, from suffering along with her, for it is a sin to
transgress any commandment. But let us teach our bodily senses, which are without
us, to be in subjection to our inner senses; and not compel our inner senses,
which savour the things that be of God, to follow the outer senses, which savour
the things that be of the flesh. For to this end also the Lord commanded,
saying: 'Whosoever shall look upon a woman to lust after her, hath committed adultery
with her already in his heart.' And to this He added: 'If thy right eye offend
thee, pluck it out, and cast it from thee: for it is profitable for thee that
one of thy members perish, rather than thy whole body be cast into hell-fire.'
(1) He does not say, has offended thee, that you should then east away the
cause of sin after you have sinned; but if it offend you, that is, that before you
sin you should cut off the cause of the sin that provokes and irritates you.
But let none of you think, brethren, that the Lord commended the cutting off of
the members. His meaning is, that the purpose should be cut off, not the
members, and the causes which allure to sin, in order that our thought, borne up on
the chariot of sight, may push towards the love of God, supported by the bodily
senses; (2) and not give loose reins to the eyes of the flesh as to wanton
horses, eager to turn their running outside the way of the commandments, but may
subject the bodily sight to the judgment of the mind, and not suffer those eyes
of ours, which God intended to be viewers and witnesses of His work, to become
panders of evil desire. And therefore let the bodily senses as well as the
internal thought be subject to the law of God, and let them serve His will, whose
work they acknowledge themselves to be."
CHAP. XXXVIII. -- REWARD OF CHASTITY.
Therefore, as the order and reason of the mystery demanded, on the
following day she was baptized in the sea, (3) and returning to the lodging, was
initiated in all the mysteries of religion in their order. And we her sons, Niceta
and Aquila, and I Clement, were present. And after this we dined with her, and
glorified God with her, thankfully acknowledging the zeal and teaching of Peter,
who showed us, by the example of our mother, that the good of chastity is not
lost with God; (4) "as, on the other hand," said he, "unchastity does not
escape punishment, though it may not be punished immediately, but slowly. But so
well pleasing," said he, "is chastity to God, that it confers some grace in the
present life even upon those who are in error; for future blessedness is laid up
for those only who preserve chastity and righteousness by the grace of baptism.
In short, that which has befallen your mother is an example of this, for all
this welfare has been restored to her in reward of her chastity, for the
guarding and preserving of which continence alone is not sufficient; but when any one
perceives that snares and deceptions are being prepared, he must straightway
flee as from the violence of fire or the attack of a mad dog, and not trust that
he can easily frustrate snares of this kind by philosophizing or by humouring
them; but, as I have said, he must flee and withdraw to a distance, as your
mother also did through her true and entire love of chastity. And on this account
she has been preserved to you, and you to her; and in addition, she has been
endowed with the knowledge of eternal life" When he had said this, and much more
to the same effect, the evening having come, we went to sleep.