THE CLEMENTINE HOMILIES. HOMILY III
HOMILY III.
CHAP. I.--THE MORNING OF THE DISCUSSION.
Two days, therefore, having elapsed, and while the third was dawning, I
Clement, and the rest of our companions, being roused about the second
cock-crowing, in order to the discussion with Simon, found the lamp still alight, and
Peter kneeling in prayer. Therefore, having finished his supplication, and turning
round, and seeing us in readiness to hear, he said:[1]--
CHAP. II.--SIMON'S DESIGN.
"I wish you to know that those who, according to our arrangement,
associate with Simon that they may learn his intentions, and submit them to us, so that
we may be able to cope with his variety of wickedness, these men have sent to
me, and informed me that Simon to-day is, as he arranged, prepared to come
before all, and show from the Scriptures that He who made the heaven and the earth,
and all things in them, is not the Supreme God, but that there is another,
unknown and supreme, as being in an unspeakable manner God of gods; and that He
sent two gods, one of whom is he who made the world, and the other he who gave
the law. And these things he contrives to say, that he may dissipate the right
faith of those who would worship the one and only God who made heaven and earth.
CHAP. III.--HIS OBJECT.
"When I heard this, how was I not disheartened! Wherefore I wished you
also, my brethren, who associate with me, to know that I am beyond measure grieved
in my soul, seeing the wicked one awake for the temptation of men, and men
wholly indifferent about their own salvation. For to those from amongst the
Gentiles who were about being persuaded respecting the earthly images that they are
no gods, he has contrived to bring in opinions of many other gods, in order
that, if they cease from the polytheo-mania, they may be deceived to speak
otherwise, and even worse than they now do, against the sole government of God, so that
they may not yet value the truths connected with that monarchy, and may never
be able to obtain mercy. And for the sake of this attempt Simon comes to do
battle with us, armed with the false chapters of the Scriptures. And what is more
dreadful, he is not afraid to dogmatize thus against the true God from the
prophets whom he does not in fact believe.
CHAP. IV.--SNARES LAID FOR THE GENTILES.
"And with us, indeed, who have had handed down from our forefathers the
worship of the God who made all things, and also the mystery of the books which
are able to deceive, he will not prevail; but with those from amongst the
Gentiles who have the polytheistic fancy bred in them, and who know not the
falsehoods of the Scriptures, he will prevail much. And not only he; but if any other
shall recount to those from among the Gentiles any vain, dreamlike, richly set
out story against God, he will be believed, because from their childhood their
minds are accustomed to take in things spoken against God. And few there shall be
of them, as a few out of a multitude, who through ingenuousness shall not be
willing so much as to hear an evil word against the God who made all things. And
to these alone from amongst the Gentiles it shall be vouchsafed to be saved.
Let not any one of yon, therefore, altogether complain of Simon, or of any one
else; for nothing happens unjustly, since even the falsehoods of Scripture are
with good reason presented for a test."
CHAP. V.--USE OF ERRORS.
Then I Clement, hearing this, said: "How say you, my lord, that even the
falsehoods of the Scriptures are set forth happily for the proof of men?" And he
answered: "The falsehoods of the Scriptures have been permitted to be written
for a certain righteous reason, at the demand of evil. And when I say happily,
I mean this: In the account of God, the wicked one, not loving God less than
the good one, is exceeded by the good in this one thing only, that he, not
pardoning those who are impious on account of ignorance, through love towards that
which is profound, desires the destruction of the impious; but the good one
desires to present them with a remedy. For the good one desires all to be healed by
repentance, but saves those only who know God. But those who know Him not He
does not heal: not that He does not wish to do so, hut because it is not lawful
to afford to those who, through want of judgment, are like to irrational
animals, the good things which have been prepared for the children of the kingdom.
CHAP. VI.--PURGATORY AND HELL.
"Such is the nature of the one and only God, who made the world, and who
created us, and who has given us all things, that as long as any one is within
the limit of piety, and does not blaspheme His Holy Spirit, through His love
towards him He brings the soul to Himself by reason of His love towards it. And
although it be sinful, it is His nature to save it, after it has been suitably
punished for the deeds it hath done. But if any one shall deny Him, or in any
other way be guilty of impiety against Him, and then shall repent, he shall be
punished indeed for the sins he hath committed against Him, but he shall be saved,
because he turned and lived. And perhaps excessive piety and supplication
shall even be delivered from punishment, ignorance being admitted as a reason for
the pardon of sin after repentance.[1] But those who do not repent shall be
destroyed by the punishment of fire, even though in all other things they are most
holy. But, as I said, at an appointed time a fifth[2] part, being punished with
eternal fire, shall be consumed. For they cannot endure for ever who have been
impious against the one God.
CHAP. VII.--WHAT IS IMPIETY?
"But impiety against Him is, in the matter of religion, to die saying
there is another God, whether superior or inferior, or in any way saying that there
is one besides Him who really is. For He who truly is, is He whose form the
body of man bears; for whose sake the heaven and all the stars, though in their
essence superior, submit to serve him who is in essence inferior, on account of
the form of the Ruler. So much has God blessed man above all, in order that,
loving the Benefactor in proportion to the multitude of His benefits, by means of
this love he may be saved for the world to come.
CHAP. VIII.--WILES OF THE DEVIL.
"Therefore the love of men towards God is sufficient for salvation. And
this the wicked one knows; and while we are hastening to sow the love towards Him
which makes immortal in the souls of those who from among the Gentiles arc
ready to believe in the one and only God, this wicked one, having sufficient
armour against the ignorant for their destruction, hastens to sow the supposition of
many gods, or at least of one greater, in order that men, conceiving and being
persuaded of what is not wisdom, may die, as in the crime of adultery, and be
cast out from His kingdom.
CHAP. IX.--UNCERTAINTY OF THE SCRIPTURES.
"Worthy, therefore, of rejection is every one who is willing so much as to
hear anything against the monarchy of God; but if any one dares to hear
anything against God, as trusting in the Scriptures, let him first of all consider
with me that if any one, as he pleases, form a dogma agreeable to himself, and
then carefully search the Scriptures, he will be able to produce many testimonies
from them in favour of the dogma that he has formed. How, then, can confidence
be placed in them against God, when what every man wishes is found in them?
CHAP. X.--SIMON'S INTENTION.
"Therefore Simon, who is going to discuss in public with us to-morrow, is
bold against the monarchy of God, wishing to produce many statements from these
Scriptures, to the effect that there are many gods, and a certain one who is
not He who made this world, but who is superior to Him; and, at the same time,
he is going to offer many scriptural proofs. But we also can easily show many
passages from them that He who made the world alone is God, and that there is
none other besides Him But if any one shall wish to speak otherwise, he also shall
be able to produce proofs from them at his pleasure. For the Scriptures say
all manner of things, that no one of those who inquire ungratefully may find the
truth, but simply what he wishes to find, the truth being reserved for the
grateful now gratitude is to preserve our love to Him who is the cause of our being.
CHAP. XI.--DISTINCTION BETWEEN PREDICTION AND PROPHECY.
"Whence it must before all things be known, that nowhere can truth be
found unless from a prophet of truth. But He is a true Prophet, who always knows
all things, and even the thoughts of all men, who is without sin, as being
convinced respecting the judgment of God. Wherefore we ought not simply to consider
respecting His foreknowledge, but whether His foreknowledge can stand, apart
from other cause. For physicians predict certain things, having the pulse of the
patient as matter submitted to them; and some predict by means of having fowls,
and some by having sacrifices, and others by having many various matters
submitted to them; yet these are not prophets.
CHAP. XII.--THE SAME.
"But if any one should say that the foreknowledge shown by these
predictions is like to that foreknowledge which is really implanted, he were much
deceived. For he only declares such things as being present, and that if he speaks
truth. However, even these things are serviceable to me, for they establish that
there is such a thing as foreknowledge. But the foreknowledge of the one true
Prophet does not only know things present, but stretches out prophecy without
limit as far as the world to come, and needs nothing for its interpretation, not
prophesying darkly and ambiguously, so that the things spoken would need
another prophet for the interpretation of them; but clearly and simply, as our Master
and Prophet, by the inborn and ever-flowing Spirit, always knew all things.
CHAP. XIII.--PROPHETIC KNOWLEDGE CONSTANT.
"Wherefore He confidently made statements respecting things that are to
be--I mean sufferings, places, limits. For, being a faultless Prophet, and
looking upon all things with the boundless eye of His soul, He knows hidden things.
But if we should hold, as many do, that even the true Prophet, not always, but
sometimes, when He has the Spirit, and through it, foreknows, but when He has it
not is ignorant,--if we should suppose thus, we should deceive ourselves and
mislead others. For such a matter belongs to those who are madly inspired by the
spirit of disorder--to those who are drunken beside the altars, and are gorged
with fat.
CHAP. XIV.--PROPHETIC SPIRIT CONSTANT.
"For if it were permitted to any one who will profess prophecy to have it
believed in the cases in which he was found false, that then he had not the
Holy Spirit of foreknowledge, it will be difficult to convict him of being a false
prophet; for among the many things that he speaks, a few come to pass, and
then he is believed to have the Spirit, although he speaks the first things last,
and the last first; speaks of past events as future, and future as already
past; and also without sequence; or things borrowed from others and altered, and
some that are lessened, unformed, foolish, ambiguous, unseemly, obscure,
proclaiming all unconscientiousness.
CHAP. XV.--CHRIST'S PROPHECIES.
"But our Master did not prophesy after this fashion; but, as I have
already said, being a prophet by an inborn and ever-flowing Spirit, and knowing all
things at all times, He confidently set forth, plainly as I said before,
suffer-lugs, places, appointed times, manners, limits. Accordingly, therefore,
prophesying concerning the temple, He said: 'See ye these buildings? Verily I say to
you, There shall not be left here one stone upon another which shall not be
taken away; and this generation shall not pass until the destruction begin. For
they shall come, and shall sit here, and shall besiege it, and shall slay your
children here." And in like manner He .spoke in plain words the things that were
straightway to happen, which we can now see with our eyes, in order that the
accomplishment might be among those to whom the word was spoken. For the Prophet
of truth utters the word of proof in order to the faith of His hearers.
CHAP. XVI.--DOCTRINE OF CONJUNCTION.
"However, there are many proclaimers of error, having one chief, even the
chief of wickedness, just as the Prophet of truth, being one, and being also
the chief of piety, shall in His own times have as His prophets all who are found
pure. But the chief cause of men being deceived is this, their not
understanding beforehand the doctrine of conjunction, which I shall not fail to expound to
you in private every day, summarily; for it were too long to speak in detail.
Be you therefore to me truth-loving judges of the things that are spoken.
CHAP. XVII.--WHETHER ADAM HAD THE SPIRIT.
"But I shall begin the statement now. God having made all things, if any
one will not allow to a man, fashioned by His hands, to have possessed His great
and Holy Spirit of foreknowledge, how does not he greatly err who attributes
it to another born of a spurious stock![2] And I do not think that he will
obtain pardon, though he be misled by spurious scripture to think dreadful things
against the Father of all. For he who insults the image and the things belonging
to the eternal King, has the sin reckoned as committed against Him in whose
likeness the image was made. But then, says he, the Divine Spirit left him when he
sinned. In that case the Spirit sinned along with him; and how can he escape
peril who says this? But perhaps he received the Spirit after he sinned. Then it
is given to the unrighteous; and where is justice? But it was afforded to the
just and the unjust. This were most unrighteous of all. Thus every falsehood,
though it be aided by ten thousand reasonings, must receive its refutation,
though after a long time.
CHAP. XXVIII.--ADAM NOT IGNORANT.
"Be not deceived. Our father was ignorant of nothing; since, indeed, even
the law publicly current, though charging him with the crime of ignorance for
the sake of the unworthy, sends to him those desirous of knowledge, saying, 'Ask
your father, and he will tell you; your elders, and they will declare to
you.'[3] This father, these ciders ought to be inquired of. But you have not
inquired whose is the time of the kingdom, and whose is the seat of prophecy, though
He Himself points out Himself, saying, The scribes and the Pharisees sit in
Moses' seat; all things whatsoever they say to you, hear them." Hear them, He said,
as entrusted with the key of the kingdom, which is knowledge, which alone can
open the gate of life, through which alone is the entrance to eternal life. But
truly, He says, they possess the key, but those wishing to enter they do not
suffer to do so.
CHAP. XIX.--REIGN OF CHRIST.
"On this account, I say, He Himself, rising from His seat as a father for
his children, proclaiming the things which from the beginning were delivered in
secret to the worthy, extending mercy even to the Gentiles, and
compassionating the souls of all, neglected His own kindred. For He, being thought worthy to
be King of the world to come, fights against[2] him who, by predestination, has
usurped the kingdom that now is. And the thing which exceedingly grieved Him
is this, that by those very persons for whom, as for sons, he did battle, He was
assailed, on account of their ignorance. And vet He loved even those who hated
Him, and wept over the unbelieving, and blessed those who slandered Him, and
prayed for those who were enmity against Him.[3] And not only did He o this as a
father, but also taught His disciples to do the like, bearing themselves as
towards brethren.[4] This did our Father, this did our, Prophet. This is
reasonable, that He should be King over His children; that by the affection of a father
towards his children, and the engrafted respect of children towards their
father, eternal peace might be produced. For when the good man reigneth, there is
true joy among those who are ruled over, on account of him who rules.
CHAP. XX.--CHRIST THE ONLY PROPHET HAS APPEARED IN DIFFERENT AGES.
"But give heed to my first discourse of the truth. If any one do not allow
the man fashioned by the hands of God to have had the Holy Spirit of Christ,
how is he not guilty of the greatest impiety in allowing another born of an
impure stock to have it? But he would act most piously, if he should not allow to
another to have it, but should say that he alone has it, who has changed his
forms and his names from the beginning of the world, and so reappeared again and
again in the world, until coming upon his own times, and being anointed with
mercy for the works of God, he shall enjoy rest for ever. His honour it is to bear
rule and lordship over all things, in air, earth, and waters. But in addition
to these, himself having made man, he had breath, the indescribable garment of
the soul, that he might be able to be immortal.
CHAP. XXI.--THE EATING OF THE FORBIDDEN FRUIT DENIED.
"He himself being the only true prophet, fittingly gave names to each
animal, according to the merits of its nature, as having made it. For if he gave a
name to any one, that was also the name of that which was made, being given by
him who made it.[5] How, them had he still need to partake of a tree, that he
might know what is good and what is evil, if he was commanded not to eat of it?
But this senseless men believe, who think that a reasonless beast was more
powerful than the God who made these things.
CHAP. XXII.--MALE AND FEMALE.
"But a companion was created along with him, a female nature, much
differing from him, as quality from substance, as the moon from the sun, as fire from
light. She, as a female ruling the present world as her like,[6] was entrusted
to be the first prophetess, announcing prophecy with all amongst those born of
woman? But the other, as the son of man, being a male, prophesies better things
to the world to come as a male.
CHAP. XXIII.--TWO KINDS OF PROPHECY.
"Let us then understand that there are two kinds of prophecy:[8] the one
male; and let it be defined that the first, being the male, has been ranked
after the other in the order of advent; but the second, being female, has been
appointed to come first in the advent of the pairs. This second, therefore, being
amongst those born of woman, as the female superintendent of this present world,
wishes to be thought masculine.[9] Wherefore, stealing the l seeds of the
male, and sowing them with her own seeds of the flesh, she brings forth the
fruits--that is, words--as wholly her own. And she promises that she will give the
present earthly riches as a dowry, wishing to change the slow for the swift, the
small for the greater.
CHAP. XXIV.--THE PROPHETESS A MISLEADER.
"However, she, not only presuming to say and to hear that there are many
gods, but also believing herself to be one, and in hope of king that which she
had not a nature to be, and throwing away what she had, and as a female being in
her courses at the offering of sacrifices, is stained with blood; and then she
pollutes those who touch her. But when she conceives and brings forth
temporary kings, she stirs up wars, shedding much blood; and those who desire to learn
truth from her, by telling them all things contrary, and presenting many and
various services, she keeps them always seeking and finding nothing, even until
death. For from the beginning a cause of death lies upon blind men; for she,
prophesying deceit, and ambiguities, and obliquities, deceives those who believe
her.
CHAP. XXV.--CAIN'S NAME AND NATURE.
"Hence the ambiguous name which she gave to her first-born son, calling
him CAIN, which has a capability of interpretation in two ways;[1] for it is
interpreted both POSSESSION and ENVY, as signifying that in the future he was to
envy either a woman, or possessions, or the love of the parents towards her.[2]
But if it be none of these, then it will befall him to be called the POSSESSION.
For she possessed him first, which also was advantageous to him. For he was a
murderer and a liar, and with his sins was not willing to be at peace with
respect to tile government. Moreover, those who came forth by succession from him
were the first adulterers. And there were psalteries, and harps, and forgers of
instruments of war. Wherefore also the prophecy of his descendants being full
of adulterers and of psalteries, secretly by means of pleasures excites to wars.
CHAP. XXVI.--ABEL'S NAME AND NATURE.
"But he who amongst the sons Of men had prophecy innate to his soul as
belonging to it, expressly, as being a male, indicating the hopes of the world to
come, called his own son Abel, which without any ambiguity is translated GRIEF.
For he assigns to his sons to grieve over their deceived brethren. He does not
deceive them when he promises them comfort in the world to come. When he says
that we must pray to one only God, he neither himself speaks of gods, nor does
he believe another who speaks of them. He keeps the good which he has, and
increases more and more. He hates sacrifices, bloodshed, and libations; he loves
the chaste, the pure, the holy. He quenches the fire of altars, represses wars,
teaches pious preachers wisdom, purges sins, sanctions marriage, approves
temperance, leads all to chastity, makes men liberal, prescribes justice, seals those
of them who are perfect, publishes the word of peace, prophesies mention of
the eternal fire of punishment, constantly announces the kingdom of God,
indicates heavenly riches, promises unfading glory, shows the remission of sins by
works.
CHAP. XXVII.--THE PROPHET AND THE PROPHETESS.
"And what need is there to say more? The male is wholly truth, the female
wholly falsehood. But he who is born of the male arid the female, in some
things speaks truth, in some falsehood. For the female, surrounding the white seed
of the male with her own blood, as with red fire, sustains her own weakness with
the extraneous supports of bones, and, pleased with the temporary flower of
flesh, and spoiling the strength of the judgment by short pleasures, leads the
greater part into fornication, and thus deprives them of the coming excellent
Bridegroom. For every person is a bride, whenever, being sown with the true
Prophet's whole word of truth, he is enlightened in his understanding.
CHAP. XXVIII.--SPIRITUAL ADULTERY.
"Wherefore, it is fitting to hear the one only Prophet of the truth,
knowing that the word that is sown by another bearing the charge of fornication, is,
as it were, cast out by the Bridegroom from His kingdom. But to those who know
the mystery, death is also produced by spiritual adultery. For whenever the
soul is sown by others, then it is forsaken by the Spirit, as guilty of
fornication or adultery; and so the living body, the life-giving Spirit being withdrawn,
is dissolved into dust, and the rightful punishment of sin is suffered at the
time of the judgment by the soul, after the dissolution of the body; even as,
among men, she who is caught in adultery is first cast out from the house, and
then afterwards is condemned to punishment."
CHAP. XXIX.--THE SIGNAL GIVEN.
While Peter was about to explain fully to us this mystic word, Zacchaeus
came, saying: "Now indeed, O Peter, is the time for you to go out and engage in
the discussion; for a great crowd awaits you, packed together in the court; and
in the midst of them stands Simon, like a war-chieftain attended by his
spearmen." And Peter, hearing this, ordered me to withdraw for prayer, as not yet
having received baptism for salvation, and then said to those who were already
perfected: "Let us rise and pray that God, by His unfailing mercies, may help me
striving for the salvation of the men whom He has made." And having thus said,
and having prayed, he went out into the uncovered portion of the court, which
was a large space; and there were many come together for the purpose of seeing
him, his pre-eminence having made them more eagerly hasten to hear.[1]
CHAP. XXX.--APOSTOLIC SALUTATION.
Therefore, standing and seeing all the people gazing upon him in profound
silence, and Simon the magician standing in the midst, he began to speak thus:
"Peace be to all you who are in readiness to give your right hands to the truth
of God,[2] which, being His great and incomparable gift in the present world,
He who sent us, being an infallible Prophet of that which is supremely
profitable, gave us in charge, by way of salutation before our words of instruction, to
announce to you, in order that if there be any son of peace among you, peace
may take hold of him through our teaching; but if any of you will not receive
it, then we, shaking off for a testimony the road-dust of our feet, which we have
borne through our toils, and brought to you that you may be saved, will go to
the abodes and the cities of others.[3]
CHAP. XXXI.--FAITH IN GOD.
"And we tell you truly, it shall be more tolerable in the day of judgment
to dwell in the land of Sodom and Gomorrah, than in the place of unbelief. In
the first place, because you have not preserved of yourselves what is
reasonable; in the second place, because, hearing the things concerning us, you have not
come to us; and in the third place, because you have disbelieved us when we
have come to you. Wherefore, being concerned for you, we pray of our own accord
that our peace may come upon you. If therefore ye will have it, you must readily
promise not to do injustice, and generously to bear wrong; which the nature of
man would not sustain, unless it first received the knowledge of that which is
supremely profitable, which is to know the righteous nature of Him who is over
all, that He defends and avenges those who are wronged, and does good for ever
to the pious.
CHAP. XXXII.--INVITATION.
"Do you, therefore, as thankful servants of God, perceiving of yourselves
what is reasonable, take upon you the manner of life that is pleasing to Him,
that so, loving Him, and being loved of Him, you may enjoy good for ever. For to
Him alone is it most possible to bestow it, who gave being to things that were
not, who created the heavens, settled the earth, set bounds to the sea, stored
up the things that are in Hades, and filled all places with air.
CHAP. XXXIII.--WORKS OF CREATION.
"He alone turned into the four contrary elements[4] the one, first, simple
substance. Thus combining them, He made of them myriads of compounds, that,
being turned into opposite natures, and mingled, they might effect the pleasure
of life from the combination of contraries. In like manner, He alone, having
created races of angels and spirits by the FIAT of His will, peopled the heavens;
as also He decked the visible firmament with stars, to which also He assigned
their paths and arranged their courses. He compacted the earth for the
production of fruits. He set bounds to the sea, marking out a dwelling-place on the dry
land.[5] He stores up the things in Hades, designating it as the place of
souls; and He filled all places with air, that all living creatures might be able to
breathe safely in order that they might live.
CHAP. XXXIV.--EXTENT OF CREATION.
"O the great hand of the wise God, which doeth all in all! For a countless
multitude of birds have been made by Him, and those various, differing in all
respects from one another; I mean in respect of their colours, beaks, talons,
looks, senses, voices, and all else. And how many different species of plants,
distinguished by boundless variety of colours, qualities, and scents! And how
many animals on the land and in the water, of which it were impossible to tell
the figures, forms, habitats, colour, food, senses, natures, multitude! Then also
the multitude and height of mountains, the varieties of stones, awful caverns,
fountains, rivers, marshes, seas, harbours, islands, forests, and all the
inhabited world, and places uninhabited!
CHAP. XXXV.--"THESE ARE A PART OF HIS WAYS."
"And how many things besides are unknown, having eluded the sagacity of
men! And of those that are within our comprehension, who of mankind knows the
limit? I mean. how the heaven rolls, how the stars are borne in their courses, and
what forms they have, and the subsistence of their being,[6] and what are
their ethereal paths. And whence the blasts of winds are borne around, and have
different energies; whence the fountains ceaselessly spring, and the rivers, being
ever flowing, run down into the sea, and neither is that fountain emptied
whence they come, nor do they fill that sea whither they come! How far reaches the
unfathomable depth of the boundless Tartarus! Upon what the heaven is upborne
which encircles all! How the clouds spring from air, and are absorbed into air!
What is the nature of thunder and lightning, snow, hail, mist, ice, storms,
showers, hanging clouds! And how He makes plants and animals! And these things,
with all accuracy, continually perfected in their countless varieties!
CHAP. XXXVI.--DOMINION OVER THE CREATURES.
"Therefore, if any one shall accurately scan the whole with reason, he
shall find that God has made them for the sake of man. For showers fall for the
sake of fruits, that man may partake of them, and that animals may be fed, that
they may be useful to men. And the sun shines, that he may turn the air into
four seasons, and that each time may afford its peculiar service to man. And the
fountains spring, that drink may be given to men. And, moreover, who is lord
over the creatures, so far as is possible? Is it not man, who has received wisdom
to till the earth, to sail the sea: to make fishes, birds, and beasts his prey;
to investigate the course of the stars, to mine the earth, to sail the sea; to
build cities, to define kingdoms, to ordain laws, to execute justice, to know
the invisible God, to be cognizant of the names of angels, to drive away
demons, to endeavour to cure diseases by medicines, to find charms against
poison-darting serpents, to understand antipathies?
CHAP. XXXVII.--"WHOM TO KNOW IS LIFE ETERNAL."
But if thou art thankful, O man, understanding that God is thy benefactor
in all things, thou mayest even be immortal, the things that are made for thee
having continuance through thy gratitude. And now thou art able to become
incorruptible, if thou acknowledge Him whom thou didst not know, if thou love Him
whom thou didst forsake, if thou pray to Him alone who is able to punish or to
save thy booty and soul. Wherefore, before all things, consider that no one
shares His rule, no one has a name in common with Him--that is, is called God. For
He alone is both called and is God. Nor is it lawful to think that there is any
other, or to call any other by that name. And if any one should dare do so,
eternal punishment of soul is his."
CHAP. XXXVIII.--SIMON'S CHALLENGE
When Peter had thus spoken, Simon, at the outside of the crowd, cried
aloud:(1) "Why would you lie, and deceive the unlearned multitude standing around
you, persuading them that it is unlawful to think that there are gods, and to
call them so, when the books that are current among the Jews say that there are
many gods?(2) And now I wish, in the presence of all, to discuss with you from
these books on the necessity of thinking that there are gods; first showing
respecting him whom you call God, that he is not the supreme and omnipotent Being,
inasmuch as he is without foreknowledge, imperfect, needy, not good, and
underlying many and innumerable grievous passions. Wherefore, when this has been
shown from the Scriptures, as I say, it follows that there is another, not written
of, foreknowing, perfect, without want, good, removed froth all grievous
passions. But he whom you call the Creator is subject to the opposite evils.
CHAP. XXXIX.--DEFECTS ASCRIBED TO GOD.
"Therefore also Adam, being made at first after his likeness, is created
blind, and is said not to have knowledge of good or evil, and is found a
transgressor, and is driven out of paradise, and is punished with death. In like
manner also, he who made him, because be sees not in all places, says with
reference to the overthrow of Sodom, 'Come, and let us go down, and see whether they do
according to their cry which comes to me; or if not, that I may know.'(3) Thus
he shows himself ignorant And in his saying respecting Adam, 'Let us drive him
out, lest he put forth his hand and touch the tree of life, and eat, and live
for ever;'(4) in saying LEST he is ignorant; and in driving him out lest he
should eat and live for ever, he is also envious. And whereas it is written that
'God repented that he had made man,'(5) this implies both repentance and
igno-rance. For this reflection is a view by which one, through ignorance, wishes to
inquire into the result of the things which he wills, or it is the act of one
repenting on account of the event not being according to his expectation. And
whereas it is written, 'And the Lord smelled a scent of sweetness,'(6) it is the
part of one in need; and his being pleased with the fat of flesh is the part of
one who is not good. But his tempting, as it is written, 'And God did tempt
Abraham,'(7) is the part of one who is wicked, and who is ignorant of the issue of
the experiment."
CHAP. XL.--PETER'S ANSWER.
In like manner Simon, by taking many passages from the Scriptures, seemed
to show that God is subject to every infirmity. And to this Peter said: "Does
he who is evil, and wholly wicked, love to accuse himself in the things in which
he sins? Answer me this." Then said Simon: "He does not." Then said Peter:
"How, then, can God be evil and wicked, seeing that those evil things which have
been commonly written regarding Him, have been added by His own will!." Then
said Simon: "It may be that the charge against Him is written by another power,
and not according to His choice." Then said Peter: "Let us then, in the first
place, inquire into this. If, indeed, He has of His own will accused Himself, as
you formerly acknowledged, then He is not wicked; but if it is done by another
power, it must be inquired and investigated with all energy who hath subjected
to all evils Him who alone is good."
CHAP. XLI.--"STATUS QUAESTIONIS."
Then said Simon: "You are manifestly avoiding the hearing of the charge
from the Scriptures against your God." Then Peter: "You yourself appear to me to
be doing this; for he who avoids the order of inquiry, does not wish a true
investigation to be made. Hence I, who proceed in an orderly manner, and wish that
the writer should first be considered, am manifestly desirous to walk in a
straight path." Then Simon: "First confess that if the things written against the
Creator are true, he is not above all, since, according to the Scriptures, he
is subject to all evil; then afterwards we shall inquire as to the writer." Then
said Peter: "That I may not seem to speak against your want of order through
unwillingness to enter upon the investigation,(1) I answer you. I say that if
the things written against God are true, they do not show that God is wicked."
Then said Simon: "How can you maintain that?"
CHAP. XLII.--WAS ADAM BLIND?
Then said Peter: "Because things are written opposite to those sayings
which speak evil of him; wherefore neither the one nor the other can be
confirmed." Then Simon: "How, then, is the truth to be ascertained, of those Scriptures
that say he is evil, or of those that say he is good?" Then Peter: "Whatever
sayings of the Scriptures are in harmony with the creation that was made by Him
are true, but whatever are contrary to it are false."(2) Then Simon said: "How
can you show that the Scriptures contradict themselves?" And Peter said: "You say
that Adam was created blind, which was not so; for He would not have pointed
out the tree of the knowledge of good and evil to a blind man, and commanded him
not to taste of it." Then said Simon: "He meant that his mind was blind." Then
Peter: "How could he be blind in respect of his mind, who, before tasting of
the tree, in harmony with Him who made him, imposed ap-propriate names on all
the animals?" Then Simon: "If Adam had foreknowledge, how did he not foreknow
that the serpent would deceive his wife?" Then Peter: "If Adam had not
foreknowledge, how did he give names to the sons of men as they were born with reference
to their future doings, calling the first Cain (which is interpreted 'envy'),
who through envy killed his brother Abel (which is interpreted 'grief'); for his
parents grieved over him, the first slain?
CHAP. XLIII.--GOD'S FOREKNOWLEDGE.
"But if Adam, being the work of God, had foreknowledge, much more the God
who created him. And that is false which is written that God reflected, as if
using reasoning on account of ignorance; and that the Lord tempted Abraham, that
He might know if he would endure it; and that which is written, 'Let us go
down, and see if they are doing according to the cry of them which cometh to me;
and if not, that I may know.' And, not to extend my discourse too far,
whatever sayings ascribe ignorance to Him, or anything else that is evil, being upset
by other sayings which affirm the contrary, are proved to be false. But
because He does indeed foreknow, He says to Abraham, 'Thou shalt assuredly know that
thy seed shall be sojourners in a land that is not their own; and they shall
enslave them, and shall evil entreat them, and humble them four hundred years.
But the nation to which they shall be in bondage will I judge, and after that
they shall come out hither with much property; but thou shall depart to thy
fathers with peace, being nourished in a good old age; and in the fourth generation
they shall return hither, for the sins of the Amorites are hitherto not filled
up.'(3)
CHAP. XLIV.--GOD'S DECREES.
"But what? Does not Moses pre-intimate the sins of the people, and predict
their dispersion among the nations? But if He gave foreknowledge to Moses,
how can it be that He had it not Himself? But He has it. And if He has it, as we
have also shown, it is an extravagant saying that He reflected, and that He
repented, and that He went down to see, and whatever else of this sort. Whatsoever
things being fore-known before they come to pass as about to befall, take
issue by a wise economy, without repentance.
CHAP. XLV.--SACRIFICES.
"But that He is not pleased with sacrifices, is shown by this, that those
who lusted after flesh were slain as soon as they tasted it, and were consigned
to a tomb, so that it was called the grave of lusts.(1) He then who at the
first was displeased with the slaughtering of animals, not wishing them to be
slain, did not ordain sacrifices as desiring them; nor from the beginning did He
require them. For neither are sacrifices accomplished without the slaughter of
animals, nor can the first-fruits be presented. But how is it possible for Him to
abide in darkness, and smoke, and storm (for this also is written), who
created a pure heaven, and created the sun to give light to all, and assigned the
invariable order of their revolutions to innumerable stars? Thus, O Simon, the
handwriting of God--I mean the heaven--shows the counsels of Him who made it to be
pure and stable.
CHAP. XLVI.--DISPARAGEMENTS OF GOD.
"Thus the sayings accusatory of the God who made the heaven are both
rendered void by the opposite sayings which are alongside of them, and are refuted
by the creation. For they were not written by a prophetic hand. Wherefore also
they appear opposite to the hand of God, who made all things." Then said Simon:
"How can you show this?"
CHAP. XLVII.--FOREKNOWLEDGE OF MOSES.
Then said Peter: "The law of God was given by Moses, without writing, to
seventy wise men, to be handed down, that the government might be carried on by
succession. But after that Moses was taken up, it was written by some one, but
not by Moses. For in the law itself it is written, 'And Moses died; and they
buried him near the house of Phogor,(2) and no one knows his sepulchre till this
day.' But how could Moses write that Moses died? And whereas in the time after
Moses, about 500 years or thereabouts, it is found lying in the temple which
was built, and after about 500 years more it is carried away, and being burnt in
the time of Nebuchadnezzar it is destroyed; and thus being written after Moses,
and often lost, even this shows the foreknowledge of Moses, because he,
foreseeing its disappearance, did not write it; but those who wrote it, being
convicted of ignorance through their not foreseeing its disappearance, were not
prophets."(3)
CHAP. XLVIII.--TEST OF TRUTH.
Then said Simon: "Since, as you say, we must understand the things
concerning God by comparing them with the creation, how is it possible to recognise
the other things in the law which are from the tradition of Moses, and are true,
and are mixed up with these falsehoods?" Then Peter said: "A certain verse has
been recorded without controversy in the written law, according to the
providence of God, so as to show clearly which of the things written are true and which
are false." Then said Simon: "Which is that? Show it us."
CHAP. XLIX.--THE TRUE PROPHET.
Then Peter said: "I shall tell you forthwith. It is written in the first
book of the law, towards the end: 'A ruler shall not fail from Judah, nor a
leader from his thighs, until He come whose it is; and He is the expectation of the
nations.'(4) If, therefore, any one can apprehend Him who came after the
failure of ruler and leader from Judah, and who was to be expected by the nations,
he will be able by this verse to recognise Him as truly having come;(5) and
believing His teaching, he will know what of the Scriptures are true and what are
false." Then said Simon: "I understand that you speak of your Jesus as Him who
was prophesied of by the scripture. Therefore let it be granted that it is so.
Tell us, then, how he taught you to discriminate the I Scriptures."
CHAP. L.--HIS TEACHING CONCERNING THE SCRIPTURES.
Then Peter: "As to the mixture of truth with falsehood,(6) I remember that
on one occasion He, finding fault with the Sadducees, said, 'Wherefore ye do
err, not knowing the true things of the Scriptures; and on this account ye are
ignorant of the power of God.'(7) But if He cast up to their that they knew not
the true things of the Scriptures, it is manifest that there are false things
in them. And also, inasmuch as He said, 'Be ye prudent money-changers,'(8) it is
because there are genuine and spurious words. And whereas He said, 'Wherefore
do ye not perceive that which is reasonable in the Scriptures?' He makes the
understanding of him stronger who voluntarily judges soundly.
CHAP. LI.--HIS TEACHING CONCERNING THE LAW.
"And His sending to the scribes and teachers of the existing Scriptures,
as to those who knew the true things of the law that then was, is well known.
And also that He said, 'I am not come to destroy the law,'(1) and yet that He
appeared to be destroying it, is the part of one intimating that the things which
He destroyed did not belong to the law. And His saying, 'The heaven and the
earth shall pass away, but one jot or one tittle shall not pass froth the law,'(2)
intimated that the things which pass away before the heaven and the earth do
not belong to the law in reality.
CHAP. LII.--OTHER SAYINGS OF CHRIST.
"Since, then, while the heaven and the earth still stand, sacrifices have
passed away, and kingdoms, and prophecies among those who are born of woman,
and such like, as not being ordinances of God; hence therefore He says, 'Every
plant which the heavenly Father has not planted shall be rooted up.'(3) Wherefore
He, being the true Prophet, said, 'I am the gate of life;(4) he who entereth
through me entereth into life,' there being no other teaching able to save.
Wherefore also He cried, and said, 'Come unto me, all who labour,'(5) that is, who
are seeking the truth, and not finding it; and again, 'My sheep hear my
voice;'(6) and elsewhere, 'Seek and find,'(7) since the truth does not lie on the
surface.
CHAP. LIII.--OTHER SAYINGS OF CHRIST.
"But also a witnessing voice was heard from heaven, saying, 'This is my
beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased; hear Him.'(8) And in addition to this,
willing to convict more fully of error the prophets from whom they asserted that
they had learned, He proclaimed that they died desiring the truth, but not
having learned it, saying, 'Many prophets and kings desired to see what ye see,
and to hear what you hear; and verily I say to you, they neither saw nor
heard.'(9) Still further He said, 'I am he concerning whom Moses prophesied, saying, A
Prophet shall the Lord our God raise unto you of your brethren, like unto me:
Him hear in all things; and whosoever will not hear that Prophet shall die.'(10)
CHAP. LIV.--OTHER SAYINGS.
"Whence it is impossible without His teaching to attain to saving truth,
though one seek it for ever where the thing that is sought is not. But it was,
and is, in the word of our Jesus. Accordingly, He, knowing the true things of
the law, said to the Sadducees, asking on what account Moses permitted to marry
seven,(11) "Moses gave you commandments according to your hard-heartedness; for
from the beginning it was not so: for He who created man at first, made him
male and female.'(12)
CHAP. LV.--TEACHING OF CHRIST.
"But to those who think, as the Scriptures teach, that God swears, He
said, 'Let your yea be yea, and nay, nay; for what is more than these is of the
evil one.'(13) And to those who say that Abraham and Isaac and Jacob are dead, He
said, 'God is not of the dead, but of the living.'(14) And to those who suppose
that God tempts, as the Scriptures say, He said, 'The tempter is the wicked
one,'(15) who also tempted Himself. To those who suppose that God does not
foreknow, He said, 'For your heavenly Father knoweth that ye need all these things
before ye ask Him.'(16) And to those who believe, as the Scriptures say, that He
does not see all things, He said, 'Pray in secret, and your Father, who seeth
secret things, will reward you.'(17)
CHAP. LVI.--TEACHING OF CHRIST.
"And to those who think that He is not good, as the Scriptures say, He
said, 'From which of you shall his son ask bread, and he will give him a stone; or
shall ask a fish, and he will give him a serpent? If ye then, being evil, know
to give good gifts to your children, how much more shall your heavenly Father
give good things to those who ask Him, and to those who do His will!'(18) But
to those who affirmed that He was in the temple, He said, 'Swear not by heaven,
for it is God's throne; nor by the earth, for it is the footstool of His
feet.'(19) And to those who supposed that God is pleased with sacrifices, He said,
'God wishes mercy, and not sacrifices'(20)--the knowledge of Himself, and not
holocausts.
CHAP. LVII.--TEACHING OF CHRIST.
"But to those who are persuaded that He is evil, as the Scriptures say, He
said, 'Call not me good, for One only is good.'(1) And again, 'Be ye good and
merciful, as your Father in the heavens, who makes the sun rise on good and
evil men, and brings rain upon just and unjust.'(2) But to those who were misled
to imagine many gods, as the Scriptures say, He said, 'Hear, O Israel; the Lord
your God is one Lord.'"(3)
CHAP. LVIII.--FLIGHT OF SIMON.
Therefore Simon, perceiving that Peter was driving him to use the
Scriptures as Jesus taught, was unwilling that the discussion should go into the
doctrine concerning God, even although Peter had changed the discussion into question
and answer, as Simon himself asked. However, the discussion occupied three
days.(4) And while the fourth was dawning, he set off darkling as far as Tyre of
Phoenicia.(5) And not many days after, some of the precursors came and said to
Peter: "Simon is doing great miracles in Tyre, and disturbing many of the people
there; and by many slanders he has made you to be hated."
CHAP. LIX.--PETER'S RESOLUTION TO FOLLOW.
Peter, hearing this, on the following night assembled the multitude of
hearers; and as soon as they were come together, he said: "While I am going forth
to the nations which say that there are many gods, to teach and to preach that
God is one, who made heaven and earth, and all things that are in them, in
order that they may love Him and be saved, evil has anticipated me, and by the very
law of conjunction has sent Simon before me, in order that these men, if they
shall cease to say that there are many gods, disowning those upon earth that
are called gods, may think that there are many gods in heaven; so that, not
feeling the excellency of the monarchy, they may perish with eternal punishment. And
what is most dreadful, since true doctrine has incomparable power, he
forestalls me with slanders, and persuades them to this, not even at first to receive
me; lest he who is the slanderer be convicted of being himself in reality a
devil, and the true doctrine be received and believed. Therefore I must quickly
catch him up, lest the false accusation, through gaining time, wholly get hold of
all men.
CHAP. LX.--SUCCESSOR TO BE APPOINTED.
"Since, therefore, it is necessary to set apart some one instead of me to
fill my place, let us all with one consent pray to God, that He would make
manifest who amongst us is the best, that, sitting in the chair of Christ, he may
piously rule His Church. Who, then, shall be set apart? For by the counsel of
God that man is set forth as blessed, 'whom his Lord shall appoint over the
ministry of his fellow-servants, to give them their meat in their season, not
thinking and saying in his heart, My Lord delayeth His coming, and who shall not
begin to beat his fellow-servants, eating and drinking with harlots and drunkards.
And the Lord of that servant shall come in an hour when he doth not look for
Him, and in a day when he is not aware, and shall cut him in sunder, and shall
assign his unfaithful part with the hypocrites.'(6)
CHAP. LXI.--MONARCHY.
"But if any one of those present, being able to instruct the ignorance of
men, shrink from it, thinking only of his own ease, let him expect to hear this
sentence: 'O wicked and slothful servant, thou oughtest to have given my money
to the exchangers, and I at my coming should have got my own. Cast out the
unprofitable servant into the outer darkness.'(7) And with good reason; 'for,'
says He, 'it is thine, O man, to prove my words, as silver and money are proved
among the exchangers.'(8) Therefore the multitude of the faithful ought to obey
some one, that they may live in harmony. For that which tends to the
government of one person, in the form of monarchy, enables the subjects to enjoy peace
by means of good order; but in case of all, through desire of ruling, being
unwilling to submit to one only, they must altogether fall by reason of division.
CHAP. LXII.--OBEDIENCE LEADS TO PEACE.
"But, further, let the things that are happening before your eyes persuade
you; how wars are constantly arising through there being now many kings all
over the earth. For each one holds the government of another as a pretext for
war. But if one were universal superior, he, having no reason why he should make
war, would have perpetual peace. In short, therefore, to those who are thought
worthy of eternal life, God appoints one universal King in the world that shall
then be, that by means of monarchy there may be unfailing peace. It behoves
all, therefore, to follow some one as a leader, honouring him as the image of God;
and it behoves the leader to be acquainted with the road that entereth into
the holy city.
CHAP. LXIII.--ZACCHAEUS APPOINTED.
"But of those who are present, whom shall I choose but Zacchaeus,(1) to
whom also the Lord went in(2) and rested, judging him worthy to be saved?" And
having said this, he laid his hand upon Zacchaeus, who stood by, and forced him
to sit down in his own chair. But Zacchaeus, falling at his feet, begged that he
would permit him to decline the rulership; promising, at the same time, and
saying, "Whatever it behoves the ruler to do, I will do; only grant me not to
have this name; for I am afraid of assuming the name of the rulership, for it
teems with bitter envy and danger. "
CHAP. LXIV.--THE BISHOPRIC.
Then Peter said: "If you are afraid of this, do not be called RULER, but
THE APPOINTED ONE, the Lord having permitted you to be so called, when He said,
'Blessed is that man whom his Lord shall APPOINT to the ministry of his
fellow-servants.'(3) But if you wish it to be altogether unknown that you have
authority of administration, you seem to me to be ignorant that the acknowledged
authority of the president has great influence as regards the respect of the
multitude. For every one obeys him who has received authority, having conscience as a
great constraint. And are you not well aware that you are not to rule as the
rulers of the nations, but as a servant ministering to them, as a father to the
oppressed, visiting them as a physician, guarding them as a shepherd,--in short,
taking all care for their salvation? And do you think that I am not aware what
labours I compel you to undertake, desiring you to be judged by multitudes
whom it is impossible for any one to please? But it is most possible for him who
does well to please God. Wherefore I entreat you to undertake it heartily, by
God, by Christ, for the salvation of the brethren, for their ordering, and your
own profit.
CHAP. LXV.--NOLO EPISCOPARI.
"And consider this other thing, that in proportion as there is labour and
danger in ruling the Church of Christ, so much greater is the reward. And yet
again the greater is also the punishment to him who can, and refuses. I wish,
therefore, knowing that you are the best instructed of my attendants, to turn to
account those noble powers of judging with which you have been entrusted by the
Lord, in order that you may be saluted with the WELL DONE, GOOD AND FAITHFUL
SERVANT, and not be found fault with, and declared liable to punishment, like
him who hid the one talent. But if you will not be appointed a good guardian of
the Church, point out another in your stead, more learned and more faithful than
yourself. But you cannot do this; for you associated with the Lord, and
witnessed His marvellous doings, and learned the administration of the Church.
CHAP. LXVI.--DANGER OF DISOBEDIENCE.
"And your work is to order what things are proper; and that of the
brethren is to submit, and not to disobey. Therefore submitting they shall be saved,
but disobeying they shall be punished by the Lord, because the president is
entrusted with the place of Christ. Wherefore, indeed, honour or contempt shown to
the president is handed on to Christ, and from Christ to God. And this I have
said, that these brethren may not be ignorant of the danger they incur by
disobedience to you, because whosoever disobeys your orders, disobeys Christ; and he
who disobeys Christ offends God.
CHAP. LXVII.--DUTIES OF CHURCH OFFICE-BEARERS.
"It is necessary, therefore, that the Church, as a city built upon a hill,
have an order approved of God, and good government. In particular, let the
bishop, as chief, be heard in the things which he speaks; and let the elders give
heed that the things ordered be done. Let the deacons, going about, look after
the bodies and the souls of the brethren, and report to the bishop. Let all the
rest of the brethren bear wrong patiently; but if they wish judgment to be
given concerning wrongs done to them, let them be reconciled in presence of the
elders; and let the elders report the reconciliation to the bishop.
CHAP. LXVIII.--"MARRIAGE ALWAYS HONOURABLE."
"And let them inculcate marriage not only upon the young, but also upon
those advanced in years, lest burning lust bring a plague upon the Church by
reason of whoredom or adultery. For, above every other sin, the wickedness of
adultery is hated by God, because it not only destroys the person himself who sins,
but those also who eat and associate with him. For it is like the madness of a
dog, because it has the nature of communicating its own madness. For the sake
of chastity, therefore, let not only the elders, but even all, hasten to
accomplish marriage. For the sin of him who commits adultery necessarily comes upon
all. Therefore, to urge the brethren to be chaste, this is the first charity. For
it is the healing of the soul. For the nourishment of the body is rest.
CHAP. LXIX.--NOT FORSAKING THE ASSEMBLING OF YOURSELVES TOGETHER."
"But if you love your brethren, take nothing from them, but share with
them such things as ye have. Feed the hungry; give drink to the thirsty; clothe
the naked; visit the sick; so far as you can, help those in prison; receive
strangers gladly into your own abodes; hate no one. And how you must be pious, your
own mind will teach you, judging rightly. But before all else, if indeed I need
say it to you, come together frequently, if it were every hour, especially on
the appointed days of meeting. For if you do this, you are within a wall of
safety. For disorderliness is the beginning of perdition. Let no one therefore
forsake the assembly on the ground of envy towards a brother. For if any one of
you forsake the assembly, he shall be regarded as of those who scatter the Church
of Christ, and shall be cast out with adulterers. For as an adulterer, under
the influence of the spirit that is in him, he separates himself on some
pretext, and gives place to the wicked one against himself,--a sheep for the stealing,
as one found outside the fold.(1)
CHAP. LXX.--"HEAR THE BISHOP."
"However, hear your bishop, and do not weary of giving all honour to him;
knowing that, by showing it to him, it is borne to Christ, and from Christ it
is borne to God; and to him who offers it, is requited manifold.(2) Honour,
therefore, the throne of Christ. For you are commanded even to honour the chair of
Moses, and that although they who occupy it are accounted sinners.(3) And now I
have said enough to you; and I deem it superfluous to say to him how he is to
live unblameably, since he is an approved disciple of Him who taught me also.
CHAP. LXXI.--VARIOUS DUTIES OF CHRISTIANS.
"But, brethren, there are some things that you must not wait to hear, but
must consider of yourselves what is reasonable. Zacchaeus alone having given
himself up wholly to labour for you, and needing sustenance, and not being able
to attend to his own affairs, how can he procure necessary support? Is it not
reasonable that you are to take forethought for his living? not waiting for his
asking you, for this is the part of a beggar. But he will rather die of hunger
than submit to do this. And shall not you incur punishment, not considering that
the workman is worthy of his hire? And let no one say: Is, then, the word sold
which was freely given? Far be it. For if any one has the means of living, and
takes anything, he sells the word; but if he who has not takes support in
order to live--as the Lord also took at supper and among His friends, having
nothing, though He alone is the owner of all things--he sins not. Therefore suitably
honour elders, catechists, useful deacons, widows who have lived well, orphans
as children of the Church. But wherever there is need of any provision for an
emergency, contribute all together. Be kind one to another, not shrinking from
the endurance of anything whatever for your own salvation."
CHAP. LXXII.--ORDINATION.
And having thus spoken, he placed his hand upon Zacchaeus, saying, "O Thou
Ruler and Lord of all, Father and God, do Thou guard the shepherd with the
flock. Thou art the cause, Thou the power. We are that which is helped; Thou the
helper, the physician, the saviour, the wall, the life, the hope, the refuge,
the joy, the expectation, the rest. In a word, Thou art all things to us. In
order to the eternal attainment of salvation, do Thou co-operate, preserve,
protect. Thou canst do all things. For Thou art the Ruler of rulers, the Lord of
lords, the Governor of kings. Do Thou give power to the president to loose what
ought to be loosed, to bind what ought to be bound. Do Thou make him wise. Do Thou,
as by His name, protect the Church of Thy Christ as a fair bride. For Thine is
eternal glory. Praise to the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost to all
ages. Amen."
CHAP. LXXIII.--BAPTISMS.
And having thus spoken, he afterwards said: "Whoever of yon Wish to be
baptized, begin from to-morrow to fast, and have hands laid upon you day by day,
and inquire about what matters you please. For I mean still to remain with you
ten days." And after three days, having begun to baptize, he called me, and
Aquila, and Nicetas, and said to us: "As I am going to set out for Tyre after seven
days, I wish you to go away this very day, and to lodge secretly with Bernice
the Canaanite, the daughter of Justa, and to learn from her, and write
accurately to me what Simon is about. For this is of great consequence to me, that I
may prepare myself accordingly. Therefore depart straightway in peace." And
leaving him baptizing, as he commanded, we preceded him to Tyre of Phoenicia.