THE CLEMENTINE HOMILIES. HOMILY II
HOMILY II.
CHAP. I.--PETER'S ATTENDANTS.
Therefore the next day, I Clement, awaking from sleep before dawn, and
learning that Peter was astir, and was conversing with his attendants concerning
the worship of God (there were sixteen of them,[1] and I have thought good to
set forth their names, as I subsequently learned them, that you may also know who
they were. The first of them was Zacchaeus, who was once a publican, and
Sophonias his brother; Joseph and his foster-brother Michaias; also Thomas and
Eliezer the twins; also AEneas and Lazarus the priests; besides also Elisaeus, and
Benjamin the son of Saphrus; as also Rubilus and Zacharias the builders; and
Ananias and Haggaeus the Jamminians; and Nicetas and Aquila the
friends),--accordingly I went in and saluted him, and at his request sat down.
CHAP. II.--A SOUND MIND IN A SOUND BODY.
And he, breaking off the discourse in which he was engaged, assured me, by
way of apology, why he had not awakened me that I might hear his discourses,
assigning as the reason the discomfort of my voyage. As he wished this to be
dispelled,[2] he had suffered me to sleep. "For," said he, "whenever the soul is
distracted concerning some bodily want, it does not properly approach the
instructions that are presented to it. On this account I am not willing to converse,
either with those who are greatly grieving through some calamity, or are
immoderately angry, or are turned to the frenzy of love, or are suffering trader
bodily exhaustion, or are distressed with the cares of life, or are harassed with
any other sufferings, whose soul, as I said, being downcast, and sympathizing
with the suffering body, occupies also its own intelligence therewith.
CHAP. III.--FOREWARNED IS FOREARMED.
"And let it not be said, Is it not, then, proper to present comforts and
admonitions to those who are in any bad case? To this I answer, that if, indeed,
any one is able, let him present them; but if not, let him bide his time. For
I know[3] that all things have their proper season. Wherefore it is proper to
ply men with words which strengthen the soul in anticipation of evil; so that,
if at any time any evil comes upon them, the mind, being forearmed with the
right argument, may be able to bear up under that which befalls it: for then the
mind knows in the crisis of the struggle to have recourse to him who succoured it
by good counsel.
CHAP. IV.--A REQUEST.
"However, I have learned, O Clement, how that in Alexandria Barnabas
perfectly expounded to you the word respecting prophecy. Was it not so?" I answered,
"Yes, and exceeding well." Then Peter: "Therefore it is not necessary now to
occupy with the instructions which you know, the time which may serve us for
other instructions which you do not know." Then said I: "You have rightly said, O
Peter. But vouchsafe this to me, who purpose always to attend upon you,
continuously to expound to me, a delighted hearer, the doctrine of the Prophet. For,
apart from Him, as I learned from Barnabas, it is impossible to learn the truth."
CHAP. V.--EXCELLENCE OF THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE TRUE PROPHET.
And Peter, being greatly pleased with this, answered: "Already hath the
rectifying process taken its end, as regards you, knowing as you do the greatness
of the infallible prophecy, without which it is impossible for any one to
receive that which is supremely profitable. For of many and diverse blessings which
are in the things which are or which may be, the most blessed of all--whether
it be eternal life, or perpetual health, or a perfect understanding, or light,
or joy, or immortality, or whatever else there is or that can be supremely good
in the nature of things--cannot be possessed without first knowing things as
they are; and this knowledge cannot be otherwise obtained than by first becoming
acquainted with the Prophet of the truth.
CHAP. VI.--THE TRUE PROPHET.
"Now the Prophet of the truth is He who always knows all things--things
past as they were, things present as they are, things future as they shall be;
sinless, merciful, alone entrusted with the declaration of the truth. Read, and
you shall find that those were deceived[4] who thought that they had found the
truth of themselves. For this is peculiar to the Prophet, to declare the truth,
even as it is peculiar to the sun to bring the clay. Wherefore, as many as have
even desired to know the truth, but have not had the good fortune to learn it
from Him, have not found it, but have died seeking it. For how can he find the
truth who seeks it from his own ignorance? And even if he find it, he does not
know it, and passes it by as if it were not. Nor yet shall he be able to obtain
possession of the truth from another, who, in like manner, promises to him
knowledge from ignorance; excepting only the knowledge of morality and things of
that sort, which can be known through reason, which affords to every one the
knowledge that he ought not to wrong another, through his not wishing himself to
be wronged.
CHAP. VII.--UNAIDED QUEST OF TRUTH PROFITLESS.
"All therefore who ever sought the truth, trusting to themselves to be
able to find it, fell into a snare. This is what both the philosophers of the
Greeks, and the more intelligent of the barbarians, have suffered. For, applying
themselves to things visible, they have given decisions by conjecture on things
not apparent, thinking that that was truth which at any time presented itself to
them as such. For, like persons who know the truth, they, still seeking the
truth, reject some of the suppositions that are presented to them, and lay hold
of others, as if they knew, while they do not know, what things are true and
what are false. And they dogmatize concerning truth, even those who are seeking
after truth, not knowing that he who seeks truth cannot learn it from his own
wandering. For not even, as I said, can he recognise her when she stands by him,
since he is unacquainted with her.
CHAP. VIII.--TEST OF TRUTH.
"And it is by no means that which is true, but that which is pleasing,
which persuades every one who seeks to learn from himself. Since, therefore, one
thing is pleasing to one, and another to another, one thing prevails over one as
truth, and another thing over another. But the truth is that which is approved
by the Prophet, not that which is pleasant to each individual. For that which
is one would be many, if the pleasing were the true; which is impossible.
Wherefore also the Grecian philologers--rather than philosophers[1]--going about
matters by conjectures, have dogmatized much and diversely, thinking that the apt
sequence of hypotheses is truth, not knowing that when they have assigned to
themselves false beginnings, their conclusion has corresponded with the beginning.
CHAP. IX.--"THE WEAK THINGS OF THE WORLD."
"Whence a man ought to pass by all else, and commit himself to the Prophet
of the truth alone. And we are all able to judge of Him, whether he is a
prophet, even although we be wholly unlearned, and novices in sophisms, and
unskilled in geometry, and uninitiated in music. For God, as caring for all, has made
the discovery concerning Himself easier to all, in order that neither the
barbarians might be powerless, nor the Greeks unable to find Him. Therefore the
discovery concerning Him is easy; and thus it is:--
CHAP. X.--TEST OF THE PROPHET.
"If he is a Prophet, and is able to know how the world was made, and the
things that are in it, and the things that shall be to the end, if He has
foretold us anything, and we have ascertained that it has been perfectly
accomplished, we easily believe that the things shall be which He says are to be, from the
things that have been already; we believe Him, I say, as not only knowing, but
foreknowing. To whom then, however limited an understanding he may have, does
it not appear, that it behoves us, with respect to the things that are pleasing
to God, to believe beyond all others Him who beyond all men knows, even though
He has not learned? Wherefore, if any one should be unwilling to concede the
power of knowing the truth to such an one--I mean to Him who has foreknowledge
through the divinity of the Spirit that is in Him--conceding the power of knowing
to any one else, is he not void of understanding, in conceding to him who is
no prophet, that power of knowing which he would not concede to the Prophet?
CHAP. XI.--IGNORANCE, KNOWLEDGE, FOREKNOWLEDGE.
"Wherefore, before all things, we must test the Prophet with all judgment
by means of the prophetic promise; and having ascertained Him to be the
Prophet, we must undoubtingly follow the other words of His teaching; and having
confidence concerning things hoped for, we must conduct ourselves according to the
first judgment, knowing that He who tells us these things has not a nature to
lie. Wherefore, if any of the things that are afterwards spoken by Him do not
appear to us to be well spoken, we must know that it is not that it has been
spoken amiss, but that it is that we have not conceived it aright. For ignorance
does not judge knowledge, and so neither is knowledge competent truly to judge
foreknowledge; but foreknowledge affords knowledge to the ignorant.
CHAP. XII.--DOCTRINE OF THE TRUE PROPHET.
"Hence, O beloved Clement, if you would know the things pertaining to God,
you have to learn them from Him alone, because He alone knows the truth. For
if any one else knows anything, he has received it from Him or from His
disciples. And this is His doctrine and true proclamation, that there is one God, whose
work the world is; who being altogether righteous, shall certainly at some
time render to every one according to his deeds.
CHAP. XIII.--FUTURE REWARDS AND PUNISHMENTS.
"For there is every necessity, that he who says that God is by His nature
righteous, should believe also that the souls of men are immortal: for where
would be His justice, when some, having lived piously, have been evil-treated,
and sometimes violently cut off, while others who have been wholly impious, and
have indulged in luxurious living, have died the common death of men? Since
therefore, without all contradiction, God who is good is also just, He shall not
otherwise be known to be just, unless the soul after its separation from the body
be immortal, so that the wicked man, being in hell,[1] as having here received
his good things, may there be punished for his sins; and the good man, who has
been punished here for his sins, may then, as in the bosom of the righteous,
be constituted an heir of good things. Since therefore God is righteous, it is
fully evident to us that there is a judgment, and that souls are immortal.
CHAP. XIV.--RIGHTEOUSNESS AND UNRIGHTEOUSNESS.
"But if any one, according to the opinion of this Simon the Samaritan,
will not admit that God is just, to whom then can any one ascribe justice, or the
possibility of it? For if the Root of all have it not, there is every necessity
to think that it must be impossible to find it in human nature, which, is, as
it were, the fruit. And if it is to be found in man, how much more in God! But
if righteousness can be found nowhere, neither in God nor in man, then neither
can unrighteousness. But there is such a thing as righteousness, for
unrighteousness takes its name from the existence of righteousness; for it is called
unrighteousness, when righteousness is compared with it, and is found to be
opposite to it.
CHAP. XV.--PAIRS.
"Hence therefore God, teaching men with respect to the truth of existing
things, being: Himself one, has distinguished all principles into pairs and
opposites,[2] Himself being one and sole God from the beginning, having made heaven
and earth, day and night, light and fire, sun and moon, life and death. But
man alone amongst these He made self-controlling, having a fitness to be either
righteous or unrighteous. To him also he hath varied the figures of
combinations, placing before him small things first, and great ones afterwards, such as the
world and eternity. But the world that now is, is temporary; that which shall
be, is eternal. First is ignorance, then knowledge. So also has He arranged the
leaders of prophecy. For, since the present world is female, as a mother
bringing forth the souls of her children, but the world to come is male, as a father
receiving his children from their mother, therefore in this world there come a
succession of prophets, as being sons of the world to come, and having
knowledge of men. And if pious men had understood this mystery, they would never have
gone astray, but even now they should have known that Simon, who now enthralls
all men, is a fellow-worker of error and deceit. Now, the doctrine of the
prophetic rule is as follows.
CHAP. XVI.--MAN'S WAYS OPPOSITE TO GOD'S.
"As in the beginning God, who is one, like a right hand and a left, made
the heavens first and then the earth, so also He constituted all the
combinations in order; but upon men He no more does this, but varies all the combinations.
For whereas from Him the greater things come first, and the inferior second,
we find the opposite in men--the first worse, and the second superior. Therefore
from Adam, who was made after the image of God, there sprang first the
unrighteous Cain, and then the righteous Abel. Again, from him who amongst you is
called Deucalion,[3] two forms of spirits were sent forth, the impure namely, and
the pure, first the black raven, and then the white dove. From Abraham also, the
patriarchs of our nation, two firsts[4] sprang--Ishmael first, then Isaac, who
was blessed of God. And from Isaac himself, in like manner, there were again
two--Esau the profane, and Jacob the pious. So, first in birth, as the first
born in the world, was the high priest Aaron, then the lawgiver Moses.
CHAP. XVII.--FIRST THE WORSE, THEN THE BETTER.
"In like manner, the combination with respect to Elias, which behoved to
have come, has been willingly put off to another time, having determined to
enjoy it conveniently hereafter.[5] Wherefore, also, he who was among those born of
woman came first; then he who was among the sons of men came second It were
possible, following this order, to perceive to what series Simon belongs, who
came before me to the Gentiles, and to which I belong who have come after him, and
have come in upon him as light upon darkness, as knowledge upon ignorance, as
healing upon disease. And thus, as the true Prophet has told us, a false
prophet must first come from some deceiver; and then, in like manner, after the
removal of the holy place, the true Gospel must be secretly sent abroad for the
rectification of the heresies that shall be. After this, also, towards the end,
Antichrist must first come, and then our Jesus must be revealed to be indeed the
Christ; and after this, the eternal light having sprung up, all the things of
darkness must disappear.
CHAP. XVIII.--IS TAKE ABOUT SIMON MAGUS.
"Since, then, as I said, some men do not know the rule of combination,
thence they do not know who is my precursor Simon. For if he were known, he would
not be believed; but now, not being known, he is improperly believed; and
though his deeds are those of a hater, he is loved; and though an enemy, he is
received as a friend; and though he be death, he is desired as a saviour; and though
fire, he is esteemed as light; and though a deceiver, he is believed as a
speaker of truth."
Then I Clement, when I heard this, said, "Who then, I pray you, is this
who is such a deceiver? I should like to be informed." Then said Peter: "If you
wish to learn, it is in your power to know it from those from whom I also got
accurate information on all points respecting him.
CHAP. XIX.--JUSTA, A PROSELYTE.
"There is amongst us one Justa, a Syro-Phoenician, by race a Canaanite,
whose daughter was oppressed with a grievous disease.[1] And she came to our
Lord, crying out, and entreating that He would heal her daughter. But He, being
asked also by us, said, 'It is not lawful to heal the Gentiles, who are like to
dogs on account of their using various[2] meats and practices, while the table in
the kingdom has been given to the sons of Israel.' But she, hearing this, and
begging to partake like a dog of the crumbs that fall from this table, having
changed what she was,[3] by living like the sons of the kingdom, she obtained
healing for her daughter, as she asked. For she being a Gentile, and remaining in
the same course of life, He would not have healed had she remained a Gentile,
on account of its not being lawful to heal her as a Gentile.[4]
CHAP. XX.--DIVORCED FOR THE FAITH.
"She, therefore, having taken up a manner of life according to the law,
was, with the daughter who had been healed, driven out from her home by her
husband, whose sentiments were opposed to ours. But she, being faithful to her
engagements, and being in affluent circumstances, remained a widow herself, but gave
her daughter in marriage to a certain man who was attached to the true faith,
and who was poor. And, abstaining from marriage for the sake of her daughter,
she bought two boys and educated them, and had them in place of sons. And they
being educated from their boyhood with Simon Magus, have learned all things
concerning him. For such was their friendship, that they were associated with him
in all things in which he wished to unite with them.
CHAP. XXI.--JUSTA'S ADOPTED SONS, ASSOCIATES WITH SIMON.
"These men having fallen in with Zacchaeus, who sojourned here, and having
received the word of truth from him, and having repented of their former
innovations, and immediately denouncing Simon as being privy with him in all things,
as soon as I came to sojourn here, they came to me with their foster-mother,
being presented to me by him, Zacchaeus, and ever since they continue with me,
enjoying instructions in the truth." When Peter had said this, he sent for them,
and charged them that they should accurately relate to me all things
concerning Simon. And they, having called God to witness that in nothing they would
falsify, proceeded with the relation.
CHAP. XXII.--DOCTRINES OF SIMON.
First Aquila began to speak in this wise: "Listen, O dearest brother, that
you may know accurately everything about this man, whose he is, and what, and
whence; and what the things are which he does, and how and why he does them.[5]
This Simon is the son of Antonius and Rachel, a Samaritan by race, of the
village of Gitthae, which is six schoeni distant from the city. He having
disciplined himself greatly in Alexandria,[6] and being very powerful in magic, and
being ambitious, wishes to be accounted a certain supreme power, greater even than
the God who created the world. And sometimes intimating that he is Christ, he
styles himself the Standing One.[1] And this epithet he employs, as intimating
that he shall always stand, and as not having any cause of corruption so that
his body should fall. And he neither says that the God who created the world is
the Supreme, nor does he believe that the dead will be raised. He rejects
Jerusalem, and substitutes Mount Gerizzim for it. Instead of our Christ, he proclaims
himself. The things of the lair he explains by his own presumption; and he
says, indeed, that there is to be a judgment, but he does not expect it. For if he
were persuaded that he shall be judged by God, he would not dare be impious
towards God Himself. Whence some not knowing that, using religion as a cloak, he
spoils the things of the truth, and faithfully believing the hope and the
judgment which in some way he says are to be, are ruined.
CHAP. XXIII.--SIMON A DISCIPLE OF THE BAPTIST.
"But that he came to deal with the doctrines of religion happened on this
wise. There was one John, a day-baptist,[2] who was also, according to the
method of combination, the forerunner of our Lord Jesus; and as the Lord had twelve
apostles, bearing the number of the twelve months of the sun, so also he,
John, had thirty chief men, fulfilling the monthly reckoning of the moon, in which
number was a certain woman called Helena,[3] that not even this might be
without a dispensational significance. For a woman, being half a man, made up the
imperfect number of the triacontad; as also in the case of the moon, whose
revolution does not make the complete course of the month.[4] But of these thirty, the
first and the most esteemed by John was Simon; and the reason of his not being
chief after the death of John was as follows:--
CHAP. XXIV.--ELECTIONEERING STRATAGEMS.
"He being absent in Egypt for the practice of magic, and John being
killed, Dositheus desiring the leadership,[5] falsely gave out that Simon was dead,
and succeeded to the seat. But Simon, returning not long after, and strenuously
holding by the place as his own, when he met with Dositheus did not demand the
place, knowing that a man who has attained power beyond his expectations cannot
be removed from it. Wherefore with pretended friendship he gives himself for a
while to the second place, under Dositheus. But taking his place after a few
days among the thirty fellow-disciples, he began to malign Dositheus as not
delivering the instructions correctly. And this he said that he did, not through
unwillingness to deliver them correctly, but through ignorance. And on one
occasion, Dositheus, perceiving that this artful accusation of Simon was dissipating
the opinion of him with respect to many, so that they did not think that he was
the Standing One, came in a rage to the usual place of meeting, and finding
Simon, struck him with a staff. But it seemed to pass through the body of Simon
as if he had been smoke. Thereupon Dositheus, being confounded, said to him, 'If
you are the Standing One, I also will worship you.' Then Simon said that he
was; and Dositheus, knowing that he himself was not the Standing One, fell down
and worshipped; and associating himself with the twenty-nine chiefs, he raised
Simon to his own place of repute; and thus, not many days after, Dositheus
himself, while he (Simon) stood, fell down and died.
CHAP. XXV.--SIMON'S DECEIT.
"But Simon is going about in company with Helena, and even till now, as
you see, is stirring up the people. And he says that he has brought down this
Helena from the highest heavens to the world; being queen, as the all-bearing
being, and wisdom, for whose sake, says he, the Greeks and barbarians fought,
having before their eyes but an image of truth;[6] for she, who really is the truth,
was then with the chiefest god. Moreover, by cunningly explaining certain
things of this sort, made up from Grecian myths, he deceives many; especially as he
performs many signal marvels, so that if we did not know that he does these
things by magic, we ourselves should also have been deceived. But whereas we were
his fellow-labourers at the first, so long as be did such things without doing
wrong to the interests of religion; now that he has madly begun to attempt to
deceive those who are religious, we have withdrawn from him.
CHAP. XXVI.--HIS WICKEDNESS.
"For he even began to commit murder? as himself disclosed to us, as a
friend to friends, that, having separated the soul of a child from its own body by
horrid incantations, as his assistant for the exhibition of anything that he
pleased, and having drawn the likeness of the boy, he has it set up in the inner
room where he sleeps, saying that he once formed the boy of air, by divine
arts, and having painted his likeness, he gave him back again to the air. And he
explains that he did the deed thus. He says that the first soul of man, being
turned into the nature of heat, drew to itself, and sucked in the surrounding air,
after the fashion of a gourd;[1] and then that he changed it into water, when
it was within the form of the spirit; and he said that he changed into the
nature of blood the air that was in it, which could not be poured out on account of
the consistency of the spirit, and that he made the blood solidified into
flesh; then, the flesh being thus consolidated, that he exhibited a man not made
from earth, but from air. And thus, having persuaded himself that he was able to
make a new sort of man, he said that he reversed the changes, and again
restored him to the air. And when he told this to others, he was believed; but by us
who were present at his ceremonies he was religiously disbelieved. Wherefore we
denounced his impieties, and withdrew from him."
CHAP. XXVII.--HIS PROMISES.
When Aquila had thus spoken, his brother Nicetas said: "It is necessary, O
Clement our brother, for me to mention what has been left out by Aquila. For,
in the first place, God is witness that we assisted him in no impious work, but
that we looked on while he wrought; and as long as he did harmless things, and
exhibited them, we were also pleased. But when, in order to deceive the godly,
he said that he did, by means of godhead, the things that were done by magic,
we no longer endured him, though he made us many promises, especially that our
statues should be thought worthy of a place in the temple,[2] and that we
should be thought to be gods, and should be worshipped by the multitude, and should
be honoured by kings, and should be thought worthy of public honours, and
enriched with boundless wealth.
CHAP. XXVIII.--FRUITLESS COUNSEL.
"These things, and things reckoned greater than these, he promised us, on
condition only that we should associate with him, and keep silence as to the
wickedness of his undertaking, so that the scheme of his deceit might succeed.
But still we would not consent, but even counselled him to desist from such
madness, saying to him: ' We, O Simon, remembering our friendship towards you from
our childhood, and out of affection for you, give you good counsel. Desist from
this attempt. You cannot be a God. Fear Him who is really God. Know that you
are a man, and that the time of your life is short; and though you should get
great riches, or even become a king, few things accrue to the short time of your
life for enjoyment, and things wickedly gotten soon flee away, and procure
everlasting punishment for the adventurer. Wherefore we counsel you to fear God, by
whom the soul of every one must be judged for the deeds that he hath done here.'
CHAP. XXIX.--IMMORTALITY OF THE SOUL.
"When he heard this he laughed; and when we asked him why he laughed at us
for giving him good counsel, he answered: 'I laugh at your foolish
supposition, because you believe that the soul of man is immortal.' Then I said: ' We do
not wonder, O Simon, at your attempting to deceive us, but we are confounded at
the way in which you deceive even yourself. Tell me, O Simon, even if no one
else has been fully convinced that the soul is immortal, at all events you and we
ought to be so: you as having separated one from a human body, and conversed
with it, and laid your commands upon it; and we as having been present, and
heard your commands, and clearly witnessed the performance of what was ordered.'
Then said Simon: 'I know what you mean; but you know nothing of the matters
concerning which you reason.' Then said Nicetas: ' If you know, speak; but if you do
not know, do not suppose that we can be deceived by your saying that you know,
and that we do not. For we are not so childish, that you can sow in us a
shrewd suspicion that we should think that you know some unutterable things, and so
that you should take and hold us in subjection, by holding us in restraint
through means of desire.'
CHAP. XXX.--AN ARGUMENT.
"Then Simon said: 'I am aware that you know that I separated a soul from a
human body; but I know that you are ignorant that it is not the soul of the
dead person that ministers to me, for it does not exist; but a certain demon
works, pretending to be the soul.' Then said Nicetas: 'Many incredible things we
have heard in our lifetime, but aught more senseless than this speech we do not
expect ever to hear. For if a demon pretends to be the soul of the dead person,
what is the use of the soul at all, that it should be separated from the body?
Were I not we ourselves present and heard you conjuring the soul from the body?
And how comes it that, when one is conjured, another who is not conjured
obeys, as if it were frightened? And you yourself, when at any time we have asked
you why the conferences sometimes cease, did not you say that the soul, having
fulfilled the time upon earth which it was to have passed in the body, goes to
Hades? And you added, that the souls of those who commit suicide are not easily
permitted to come, because, having gone home into Hades, they are guarded.'"
CHAP. XXXI.--A DILEMMA.
Nicetas having thus spoken, Aquila himself in turn said: "This only should
I wish to learn of you, Simon, whether it is the soul or whether it is a demon
that is conjured: what is it afraid of, that it does not despise the
conjuration? Then Simon said: 'It knows that it should suffer punishment if it were
disobedient.' Then said Aquila: 'Therefore, if the soul comes when conjured, there
is also a judgment. If, therefore, souls are immortal, assuredly there is also
a judgment. As you say, then, that those which are conjured on wicked business
are punished if they disobey, how are you not afraid to compel them, when those
that are compelled are punished for disobedience? For it is not wonderful that
you do not already suffer for your doings, seeing the judgment has not yet
come, when you are to suffer the penalty of those deeds which you have compelled
others to do, and when that which has been done under compulsion shall be
pardoned, as having been out of respect for the oath which led to the evil
action.'[1] And he hearing this was enraged, and threatened death to us if we did not
keep silence as to his doings."
CHAP. XXXII.--SIMON'S PRODIGIES.
Aquila having thus spoken, I Clement inquired: "What, then, are the
prodigies that he works?" And they told me that he makes statues walk, and that he
rolls himself on the fire, and is not burnt; and sometimes he flies; and he makes
loaves of stones; he becomes a serpent; he transforms himself into a goat; he
becomes two-faced; he changes himself into gold; he opens lockfast gates; he
melts iron; at banquets he produces images of all manner of forms. In his house
he makes dishes be seen as borne of themselves to wait upon him, no bearers
being seen. I wondered when I heard them speak thus; but many bore witness that
they had been present, and had seen such things.
CHAP. XXXIII.--DOCTRINE OF PAIRS.
These things having been thus spoken, the excellent Peter himself also
proceeded to speak:[2] "You must perceive, brethren. the truth of the rule of
conjunction, from which he who departs not cannot be misled. For since, as we have
said, we see all things in pairs and contraries, and as the night is first, and
then the day; and first ignorance, then knowledge; first disease, then
healing, so the things of error come first into our life, then truth supervenes, as
the physician upon the disease. Therefore straightway, when our God-loved nation
was about to be ransomed from the oppression of the Egyptians, first diseases
were produced by means of the rod turned into a serpent, which was given to
Aaron, and then remedies were superinduced by the prayers of Moses. And now also,
when the Gentiles are about to be ransomed from the superstition with respect to
idols, wickedness, which reigns over them, has by anticipation sent forth her
ally like another serpent, even this Simon whom you see, who works wonders to
astonish and deceive, not signs of healing to convert and save. Wherefore it
behoves you also from the miracles that are done to judge the doers, what is the
character of the performer, and what that of the deed. If he do unprofitable
miracles, he is the agent of wickedness; but if he do profitable things, he is a
leader of goodness.
CHAP. XXXIV.--USELESS AND PHILANTHROPIC MIRACLES.
"Those, then, are useless signs, which you say that Simon did. But I say
that the making statues walk, and rolling himself on burning coals, and becoming
a dragon, and being changed into a goat, and flying in the air, and all such
things, not being for the healing of man, are of a nature to deceive many. But
the miracles of compassionate truth are philanthropic, such as you have heard
that the Lord did, and that I after Him accomplish by my prayers; at which most
of you have been present, some being freed from all kinds of diseases, and some
from demons, some having their hands restored, and some their feet, some
recovering their eyesight, and some their hearing, and whatever else a man can do,
being of a philanthropic spirit."
CHAP. XXXV.--DISCUSSION POSTPONED.
When Peter had thus spoken, towards dawn Zacchaeus entered and saluted us,
and said to Peter: "Simon puts off the inquiry till to-morrow; for to-day is
his Sabbath, which occurs at intervals of eleven days." To him Peter answered:
"Say to Simon, Whenever thou wishest; and know thou that we are always in
readiness to meet thee, by divine providence, when thou desirest." And Zacchaeus
hearing this, went out to return the answer.
CHAP. XXXVI.--ALL FOR THE BEST.
But he (Peter) saw me disheartened, and asked the reason; and being told
that it proceeded from no cause but the postponement of the inquiry,[1] he said:
"He who has apprehended that the world is regulated by the good providence of
God, O beloved Clement, is not vexed by things howsoever occurring, considering
that things take their course advantageously under the providence of the
Ruler. Whence, knowing that He is just, and living with a good conscience, he knows
how by right reason to shake off from his soul any annoyance that befalls him,
because, when complete, it must come to some unknown good. Now then, let not
Simon the magician's postponement of the inquiry grieve you; for perhaps it has
happened from the providence of God for your profit. Wherefore I shall not
scruple to speak to you as being my special friend.
CHAP. XXXVII.--SPIES IN THE ENEMY'S CAMP.
"Some[2] of our people attend feignedly upon Simon as companions, as if
they were persuaded by his most atheistic error, in order that they may learn his
purpose and disclose it to us, so that we may be able to encounter this
terrible man on favourable terms. And now I have learned from them what arguments he
is going to employ in the discussion. And knowing this, I give thanks to God on
the one hand, and I congratulate you on the other, on the postponement of the
discussion; for you, being instructed by me before the discussion, of the
arguments that are to be used by him for the destruction of the ignorant, will be
able to listen without danger of falling.
CHAP. XXXVIII.--CORRUPTION OF THE LAW.
"For the Scriptures have had joined to them many falsehoods against God on
this account. The prophet Moses having by the order of God delivered the law,
with the explanations, to certain chosen men, some seventy in number, in order
that they also might instruct such of the people as chose, after a little the
written law had added to it certain falsehoods contrary to the law of God,[3]
who made the heaven and the earth, and all things in them; the wicked one having
dared to work this for some righteous purpose. And this took place in reason
and judgment, that those might be convicted who should dare to listen to the
things written against God, and those who, through love towards Him, should not
only disbelieve the things spoken against Him, but should not even endure to hear
them at all, even if they should happen to be true, judging it much safer to
incur danger with respect to religious faith, than to live with an evil
conscience on account of blasphemous words.
CHAP. XXXIX.--TACTICS.
"Simon, therefore, as I learn, intends to come into public, and to speak
of those chapters against God that are added to the Scriptures, for the sake of
temptation, that he may seduce as many wretched ones as he can from the love of
God. For we do not wish to say in public that these chapters are added to the
Bible, since we should thereby perplex the unlearned multitudes, and so
accomplish the purpose of this wicked Simon. For they not having yet the power of
discerning, would flee from us as impious; or, as if not only the blasphemous
chapters were false, they would even withdraw from the word. Wherefore we are under
a necessity of assenting to the false chapters, and putting questions in return
to him concerning them, to draw him into a strait, and to give in private an
explanation of the chapters that are spoken against God to the well-disposed
after a trial of their faith; and of this there is but one way, and that a brief
one. It is this.[4]]
CHAP. XL.--PRELIMINARY INSTRUCTION.
"Everything that is spoken or written against God is false. But that we
say this truly, not only for the sake of reputation, but for the sake of truth, I
shall convince you when my discourse has proceeded a little further. Whence
you, my most beloved Clement, ought not to be sorry at Simon's having interposed
a day between this and the discussion. For to-day, before the discussion, you
shall be instructed concerning the chapters added to the Scriptures; and then in
the discussion concerning the only one and good God, the Maker also of the
world, you ought not to be distracted. But in the discussion you will even wonder
how impious men, overlooking the multitudes of things that are spoken in the
Scriptures for God, and looking at those that are spoken against Him, gladly
bring these forward; and thus the hearers, by reason of ignorance, believing the
things against God, become outcasts from His kingdom. Wherefore you, by advantage
of the postponement, learning the mystery of the Scriptures, and gaining the
means of not sinning against God, will incomparably rejoice."
CHAP. XLI.--ASKING FOR INFORMATION, NOT CONTRADICTION.
Then I Clement, hearing this, said: "Truly I rejoice, and I give thanks to
God, who in all things doeth well. However, he knows that I shall be able to
think nothing other than that all things are for God. Wherefore do not suppose
that I ask questions, as doubting the words concerning God,[1] or those that are
to be spoken, but rather that I may learn, and so be able myself to instruct
another who is ingenuously willing to learn. Wherefore tell me what are the
falsehoods added to the Scriptures, and how it comes that they are really false."
Then Peter answered: "Even although you had not asked me, I should have gone on
in order, and afforded you the exposition of these matters, as I promised.
Learn, then, how the Scriptures misrepresent Him in many respects, that you may
know when you. happen upon them.
CHAP. XLII.--RIGHT NOTIONS OF GOD ESSENTIAL TO HOLINESS.
"But what I am going to tell you will be sufficient by way of example. But
I do not think, my dear Clement, that any one who possesses ever so little
love to God and ingenuousness, will be able to take in, or even to hear, the
things that are spoken against Him. For how is it that he can have a monarchic[2]
soul, and be holy, who supposes that there are many gods, and not one only? But
even if there be but one, who will cherish zeal to be holy, that finds in Him
many defects, since he will hope that the Beginning of all things, by reason of
the defects of his own nature, will not visit the crimes of others?
CHAP. XLIII.--A PRIORI ARGUMENT ON THE DIVINE ATTRIBUTES.
"Wherefore, far he it from us to believe that the Lord of all, who made
the heaven and the earth, and all things that are in them, shares His government
with others, or that He lies. For if He lies, then who speaks truth? Or that He
makes experiments as in ignorance; for then who foreknows? And if He
deliberates, and changes His purpose, who is perfect in understanding and permanent in
design? If He envies, who is above rivalry? If He hardens hearts, who makes
wise? If He makes blind and deaf, who has given sight and hearing? If He commits
pilfering, who administers justice? If He mocks, who is sincere? If He is weak,
who is omnipotent? If He is unjust, who is just? If He makes evil things, who
shall make good things? If He does evil, who shall do good?
CHAP. XLIV.--THE SAME CONTINUED.
"But if He desires the fruitful hill,[3] whose then are all things? If He
is false, who then is true? If He dwells in a tabernacle, who is without
bounds? If He is fond of fat, and sacrifices, and offerings, and drink-offerings, who
then is without need, and who is holy, and pure, and perfect? If He is pleased
with candles and candlesticks, who then placed the luminaries in heaven? If He
dwells in shadow, and darkness, and storm, and smoke, who is the light that
lightens the universe? If He comes with trumpets, and shoutings, and darts, and
arrows, who is the looked-for tranquillity of all? If He loves war, who then
wishes peace? If He makes evil things, who makes good things? If He is without
affection, who is a lover of men? If He is not faithful to His promises, who shall
be trusted? If He loves the wicked, and adulterers, and murderers, who shall
be a just judge? If He changes His mind, who is stedfast? If He chooses evil
men, who then takes the part of the good?
CHAP. XLV.--HOW GOD IS TO BE THOUGHT OF.
"Wherefore, Clement, my son, beware of thinking otherwise of God, than
that He is the only God, and Lord, and Father, good and righteous, the Creator,
long-suffering, merciful, the sustainer, the benefactor, ordaining love of men,
counselling purity, immortal and making immortal, incomparable, dwelling in the
souls of the good, that cannot be contained and yet is contained,[4] who has
fixed the great world as a centre in space, who has spread out the heavens and
solidified the earth, who has stored up the water, who has disposed the stars in
the sky, who has made the fountains flow in the earth, has produced faults, has
raised up mountains, hath set bounds to the sea, has ordered winds and blasts,
who by the spirit of counsel has kept safely the body comprehended in a
boundless sea.
CHAP. XLVI.--JUDGMENT TO COME.
"This is our Judge, to whom it behoves us to look. and to regulate our own
souls, thinking all things in His favour, speaking well of Him, persuaded that
by His long-suffering He brings to light the obstinacy of all, and is alone
good. And He, at the end of all, shall sit as a just Judge upon every one of
those who have attempted what they ought not."
CHAP. XLVII.--A PERTINENT QUESTION.
When I Clement heard this, I said, "Truly, this is a godliness; truly this
is piety." And again I said: "I would learn, therefore, why the Bible has
written anything of this sort? For I remember that you said that it was for the
conviction of those who should dare to believe anything that was spoken against
God. But since you permit us, we venture to ask, at your command: If any one,
most beloved Peter, should choose to say to us, 'The Scriptures are true, although
to you the things spoken against God seem to be false,' how should we answer
him?"
CHAP. XLVIII--A PARTICULAR CASE.
Then Peter answered: "You speak well in your inquiry; for it will be for
your safety. Therefore listen: Since there are many things that are spoken by
the Scriptures against God, as time presses on account of the evening, ask with
respect to any one matter that you please, and I will explain it, showing that
it is false, not only because it is spoken against God, but because it is really
false." Then I answered: "I wish to learn how, when the Scriptures say that
God is ignorant, you can show that He knows?"
CHAP. XLIX.--REDUCTIO AD ABSURDUM.
Then Peter answered: "You have presented us with a matter that can easily
be answered. However, listen, how God is ignorant of nothing, but even
foreknows. But first answer me what I ask of you. He who wrote the Bible, and told how
the world was made, and said that God does not foreknow, was he a man or not?"
Then I said: "He was a man." Then Peter answered: "How, then, was it possible
for him, being a man, to know assuredly how the world was made, and that God
does not foreknow?"
CHAP. L.--A SATISFACTORY ANSWER.
Then I, already perceiving the explanation, smiled, and said that he was a
prophet. And Peter said: "If, then, he was a prophet, being a man, he was
ignorant of nothing, by reason of his having received foreknowledge from God; how
then, should He, who gave to man the gift of foreknowledge, being God, Himself
be ignorant?" And I said: "You have spoken rightly." Then Peter said: "Come with
me one step further. It being acknowledged by us that God foreknows all
things, there is every necessity that the scriptures are false which say that He is
ignorant, and those are true which say that He knows." Then said I: "It must
needs be so."
CHAP. LI.--WEIGH IN THE BALANCE.
Then Peter said: "If, therefore, some of the Scriptures arc true and some
false, with good reason said our Master, ' Be ye good money-changers,'[1]
inasmuch as in the Scriptures there are some true sayings and some spurious. And to
those who err by reason of the false scriptures He fitly showed the cause of
their error, saying, 'Ye do therefore err, not knowing the true things of the
Scriptures;[2] for this reason ye are ignorant also of the power of God.'" Then
said I: "You have spoken very excellently."
CHAP. LII.--SINS OF THE SAINTS DENIED.
Then Peter answered: "Assuredly, with good reason, I neither believe
anything against God, nor against the just men recorded in the law, taking for
granted that they are impious imaginations. For, as I am persuaded, neither was Adam
a transgressor, who was fashioned by the hands of God; nor was Noah drunken,
who was found righteous above all the world;[3] nor did Abraham live with three
wives at once, who, on account of his sobriety, was thought worthy of a
numerous posterity; nor did Jacob associate with four--of whom two were sisters--who
was the father of the twelve tribes, and who intimated the coining of the
presence of our Master; nor was Moses a murderer, nor did he learn to judge from an
idolatrous priest--he who set forth the law of God to all the world, and for his
right judgment has been testified to as a faithful steward.
CHAP. LIII.--CLOSE OF THE CONFERENCE.
"But of these and such like things I shall afford you an explanation in
due time. But for the rest, since, as you see, the evening has come upon us, let
what has been said be enough for to-day. But whenever you wish, and about
whatever you wish, ask boldly of us, and we shall gladly explain it at once." Thus
having spoken, he rose up. And then, having partaken of food, we turned to
sleep, for the night had come upon us.