THE CLEMENTINE HOMILIES. HOMILY VI
HOMILY VI.
CHAP. I.--CLEMENT MEETS APPION.
AND on the third day, when I came with my friends to the appointed place
in Tyre, I found Appion sitting between Anubion and Athenodorus, and waiting for
us, along with many other learned men. But in no wise dismayed, I greeted
them, and sat down opposite Appion. And in a little he began to speak:--
"I wish to start from the following point, and to come with all speed at
once to the question. Before you, my son Clement, joined us, my friend Anubion
here, and Athenodorus, who yesterday were among those who heard you discourse,
were reporting to me what you said of the numerous false accusations I brought
against the gods when I was visiting you in Rome, at the time you were shamming
love, how I charged them with paederasty, lasciviousness, and numerous incests
of all kinds. But, my son, you ought to have known that I was not in earnest
when I wrote such things about the gods, but was concealing the truth, from my
love to you. That truth, however, if it so please you, you may hear from me now.
CHAP. II.--THE MYTHS ARE NOT TO BE TAKEN LITERALLY.
"The wisest of the ancients, men who had by hard labour learned all truth,
kept the path of knowledge hid from those who were unworthy and had no taste
for lessons in divine things.(1) For it is not really true that from Ouranos and
his mother Ge were born twelve children, as the myth counts them: six sons,
Okeanos, Koios, Krios, Hyperion, Japetos, Kronos; and six daughters, Thea,
Themis, Mnemosyne, Demeter, Tethys, and Rhea.(2) Nor that Kronos, with the knife of
adamant, mutilated his father Ouranos, as you say, and threw the part into the
sea; nor that Aphrodite sprang from the drops of blood which flowed from it; nor
that Kronos associated with Rhea, and devoured his first-begotten son Pluto,
because a certain saying of Prometheus led him to fear that a child born from
him would wax stronger than himself, and spoil him of his kingdom; nor that he
devoured in the same way Poseidon, his second child; nor that, when Zeus was born
next, his mother Rhea concealed him, and when Kronos asked for him that he
might devour him, gave him a stone instead; nor that this, when it was devoured,
pressed those who had been previously devoured, and forced them out, so that
Pluto, who was devoured first, came out first, and after him Poseidon, and then
Zeus;(3) nor that Zeus, as the story goes, preserved by the wit of his mother,
ascended into heaven, and spoiled his father of the kingdom; nor that he punished
his father's brothers; nor that he came down to lust after mortal women; nor
that he associated with his sisters, and daughters, and sisters-in-law, and was
guilty of shameful paederasty; nor that he devoured his daughter Metis, in
order that from her he might make Athene be born out of his own brain (and from his
thigh might bear Dionysos, who is said to have been rent in pieces by the
Titans); nor that he held a feast at the marriage of Peleus and Thetis;(5) nor that
he excluded Erie (discord) from the marriage; nor that Erie on her part, thus
dishonoured, contrived an occasion of quarrelling and discord among the
feasters; nor that she took a golden apple from the gardens of the Hesperides, and
wrote on it 'For the fair.' And then they fable how Hera, and Athena, and
Aphrodite, found the apple, and quarrelling about it, came to Zeus; and he did not
decide it for them, but sent them by Hermes to the shepherd Paris, to be judged of
their beauty. But there was no such judging of the goddesses; nor did Paris
give the apple to Aphrodite; nor did Aphrodite, being thus honoured, honour him in
return, by giving him Helen to wife. For the honour bestowed by the goddess
could never have furnished a pretext for a universal war, and that to the ruin of
him who was honoured, himself nearly related to the race of Aphrodite. But, my
son, as I said, such stories have a peculiar and philosophical meaning, which
can be allegorically set forth in such a way that you yourself would listen
with wonder." And I said, "I beseech you not to torment me with delay." And he
said, "Do not be afraid; for I shall lose no time, but commence at once.
CHAP. III.--APPION PROCEEDS TO INTERPRET THE MYTHS.
"There was once a time when nothing existed but chaos and a confused
mixture of orderless elements, which were as yet simply heaped together.(1) This
nature testifies, and great men have been of opinion that it was so. Of these
great men I shall bring forward to you him who excelled them all in wisdom, Homer,
where he says, with a reference to the original confused mass, 'But may you all
become water and earth;'(2) implying that from these all things had their
origin, and that all things return to their first state, which is chaos, when the
watery and earthy substances are separated. And Hesiod in the THEOGONY says,
'Assuredly chaos was the very first to come into being.'(3) Now, by 'come into
being,' he evidently means that chaos came into being, as having a beginning, and
did not always exist, without beginning. And Orpheus likens chaos to an egg, in
which was the confused mixture of the primordial elements. This chaos, which
Orpheus calls an egg, is taken for granted by Hesiod, having a beginning,
produced from infinite matter, and originated in the following way.
CHAP. IV.--ORIGIN OF CHAOS.
"This matter, of four kinds, and endowed with life, was an entire infinite
abyss, so to speak, in eternal stream, borne about without order, and forming
every now and then countless but ineffectual combinations (which therefore it
dissolved again from want of order); ripe indeed, but not able to be bound so as
to generate a living creature. And once it chanced that this infinite sea,
which was thus by its own nature driven about with a natural motion, flowed in an
orderly manner from the same to the same (back on itself), like a whirlpool,
mixing the substances in such a way that from each(4) there flowed down the
middle of the universe (as in the funnel of a mould) precisely that which was most
useful and suitable for the generation of a living creature. This was carried
down by the all-carrying whirlpool, drew to itself the surrounding spirit, and
having been so conceived that it was very fertile, formed a separate substance.
For just as a bubble is usually formed in water, so everything round about
contributed to the conception of this ball-like globe. Then there came forth to the
light, after it had been conceived in itself, and was borne upwards by the
divine spirit which surrounded it,(5) perhaps the greatest thing ever born; a piece
of workmanship, so to speak, having life in it which had been conceived from
that entire infinite abyss, in shape like an egg, and as swift as a bird.
CHAP. V.--KRONOS AND RHEA EXPLAINED.
"Now you must think of Kronos as time (CHRONOS), and Rhea as the flowing
(RHEON) of the watery substance.(6) For the whole body of matter was borne about
for some TIME, before it brought forth, like an egg, the sphere-like,
all-embracing heaven (OURANOS), which at first was full of productive marrow, so that
it was able to produce out of itself elements and colours of all sorts, while
from the one substance and the one colour it produced all kinds of forms. For as
a peacock's egg seems to have only one colour, while potentially it has in it
all the colours of the animal that is to be, so this living egg, conceived out
of infinite matter, when set in motion by the underlying and ever-flowing
matter, produces many different forms. For within the circumference a certain living
creature, which is both male and female, is formed by the skill of the
indwelling divine spirit. This Orpheus calls Phanes, because when it appeared (PHANEIS)
the universe shone forth from it, with the lustre of that most glorious of the
elements, fire, perfected in moisture. Nor is this incredible, since in
glowworms nature gives us to see a moist light.
CHAP. VI.--PHANES AND PLUTO.
"This egg, then, which was the first substance, growing somewhat hot, was
broken by the living creature within, and then there took shape and came forth
something;(7) such as Orpheus also speaks of, where he says, 'when the
capacious egg was broken,'(1) etc. And so by the mighty power of that which appeared
(PHANEIS) and came forth, the globe attained coherency, and maintained order,
while it itself took its seat, as it were, on the summit of heaven, there in
ineffable mystery diffusing light through endless ages. But the productive matter
left inside the globe, separated the substances of all things. For first its
lower part, just like the dregs, sank downwards of its own weight; and this they
called Pluto from its gravity, and weight, and great quantity (POLU) of
underlying matter, styling it the king of Hades and the dead.(2)
CHAP. VII.--POSEIDON, ZEUS, AND METIS.
"When, then, they say that this primordial substance, although most filthy
and rough, was devoured by Kronos, that is, time, this is to be understood in
a physical sense, as meaning that it sank downwards. And the water which flowed
together after this first sediment, and floated on the surface of the first
substance, they called Poseidon. And then what remained, the purest and noblest
of all, for it was translucent fire, they called Zeus, from its glowing (ZEOUSA)
nature, Now since fire ascends, this was not swallowed, and made to descend by
time or Kronos; but, as I said, the fiery substance, since it has life in it,
and naturally ascends, flew right up into the air, which from its purity is
very intelligent. By his own proper heat, then, Zeus--that is, the glowing
substance--draws up what is left in the underlying moisture, to wit, that very
strong(3) and divine spirit which they called Metis.
CHAP. VIII.--PALLAS AND HERA.
"And this, when it had reached the summit of the aether, was devoured by
it (moisture being mixed with heat, so to say); and causing in it that ceaseless
palpitation, it begat intelligence, which they call Pallas from this
palpitating (PALLESTHAI).(4) And this is artistic wisdom, by which the aetherial
artificer wrought out the whole world. And from all-pervading Zeus, that is, from this
very hot aether, air (AER) extends all the way to our earth; and this they
call Hera. Wherefore, because it has come below the aether, which is the purest
substance (just as a woman, as regards purity, is inferior), when the two were
compared to see which was the better, she was rightly regarded as the sister of
Zeus, in respect of her origin from the same substance, but as his spouse, as
being inferior like a wife.
CHAP. IX.--ARTEMIS.
"And Hera we understand to be a happy tempering of the atmosphere, and
therefore she is very fruitful; but Athena, as they call Pallas, was reckoned a
virgin, because on account of the intense heat she could produce nothing. And in
a similar fashion Artemis is explained: for her they take as the lowest depth
of air, and so they called her a virgin, because she could not bear anything on
account of the extreme cold. And that troubled and drunken composition which
arises from the upper and lower vapours they called Dionysus, as troubling the
intellect. And the water under the earth, which is in nature indeed one, but
which flows through all the paths of earth, and is divided into many parts, they
called Osiris, as being cut in pieces. And they understand Adonis as favourable
seasons, Aphrodite as coition and generation, Demeter as the earth, the Girl
(Proserpine) as seeds; and Dionysus some understand as the vine.
CHAP. X.--ALL SUCH STORIES ARE ALLEGORICAL.
"And I must ask you to think of all such stories as embodying some such
allegory. Look on Apollo as the wandering Sun (PERI-POLON), a son of Zeus, who
was also called Mithras, as completing the period of a year. And these said
transformations of the all-pervading Zeus must be regarded as the numerous changes
of the seasons, while his numberless wives you must understand to be years, or
generations. For the power which proceeds from the aether and passes through the
air unites with all the years and generations in turn, and continually varies
them, and so produces or destroys the crops. And ripe fruits are called his
children, the barrenness of some seasons being referred to unlawful unions."
CHAP. XI.--CLEMENT HAS HEARD ALL THIS BEFORE.
While Appion was allegorizing in this way, I became plunged in thought,
and seemed not to be following what he was saying. So he interrupted his
discourse, and said to me, "If you do not follow what I am saying, why should I speak
at all?" And I answered, "Do not suppose that I do not understand what you say.
I understand it thoroughly; and that the more that this is not the first time I
have heard it. And that you may know that I am not ignorant of these things, I
shall epitomize what you have said, and supply in their order, as I have heard
them from others, the allegorical interpretations of those stories you have
omitted." And Appion said: "Do so."
CHAP. XII.--EPITOME OF APPION'S EXPLANATION.
And I answered:(1) "l shall not at present speak particularly of that
living egg, which was conceived by a happy combination out of infinite matter, and
from which, when it was broken, the masculo-feminine Phanes leaped forth, as
some say. I say little about all that, up to the point when this broken globe
attained coherency, there being left in it some of its marrow-like matter; and I
shall briefly run over the description of what took place in it by the agency of
this matter, with all that followed. For from Kronos and Rhea were born, as
you say--that is, by time and matter--first Pluto, who represents the sediment
which settled down; and then Poseidon, the liquid substance in the middle,(2)
which floated over the heavier body below; and the third child--that is, Zeus--is
the aether, and is highest of all. It was not devoured; but as it is a fiery
power, and naturally ascends, it flew up as with a bound to the very highest
aether.
CHAP. XIII.--KRONOS AND APHRODITE.
"And the bonds of Kronos are the binding together of heaven and earth, as
I have heard others allegorizing; and his mutilation is the separation and
parting of the elements; for they all were severed and separated, according to
their respective natures, that each kind might be arranged by itself. And time no
longer begets anything; but the things which have been begotten of it, by a law
of nature, produce their successors. And the Aphrodite who emerged from the sea
is the fruitful substance which arises out of moisture, with which the warm
spirit mixing, causes that sexual desire, and perfects the beauty of the world.
CHAP. XIV.--PELEUS AND THETIS, PROMETHEUS, ACHILLES, AND POLYXENA.
"And the marriage banquet, at which Zeus held the feast on the occasion of
the marriage of the Nereid Thetis and the beautiful Peleus, has in it this
allegory,(3)--that you may know, Appion, that you are not the only one from whom I
have heard this sort of thing. The banquet, then, is the world, and the twelve
are these heavenly props of the Fates,(4) called the Zodiac. Prometheus is
foresight (PROMETHEIA), by which all things arose; Peleus is clay (PELOS), namely,
that which was COLLECTED(5) from the earth and mixed with Nereis, or water, to
produce man; and from the mixing of the two, i.e., water and earth, the first
offspring was not begotten, but fashioned complete, and called Achilles,
because he never put his lips (CHEILE) to the breast.(6) Still in the bloom of life,
he is slain by an arrow while desiring to have Polyxena, that is, something
other than the truth, and foreign (XENE) to it, death stealing on him through a
wound in his foot.
CHAP. XV.--THE JUDGMENT OF PARIS.
"Then Hera, and Athena, and Aphrodite, and Eris, and the apple, and
Hermes, and the judgment, and the shepherd, have some such hidden meaning as the
following:--Hera is dignity; Athena, manliness; Aphrodite, pleasure; Hermes,
language, which interprets (HERMENEUTIKOS) thought; the shepherd Paris, unreasoned
and brutish passion. Now if, in the prime of life, reason, that shepherd of the
soul, is brutish, does not regard its own advantage, will have nothing to do
with manliness and temperance, chooses only pleasure, and gives the prize to lust
alone, bargaining that it is to receive in return from lust what, may delight
it,--he who thus judges incorrectly will choose pleasure to his own destruction
and that of his friends. And Eris is jealous spite; and the golden apples of
the Hesperides are perhaps riches, by which occasionally even temperate persons
like Hera are seduced, and manly ones like Athena are made jealous, so that they
do things which do not become them, and the soul's beauty like Aphrodite is
destroyed under the guise of refinement. To speak briefly, in all men riches
provoke evil discord.
CHAP. XVI.--HERCULES.
"And Hercules, who slew the serpent which led and guarded riches, is the
true philosophical reason which, free from all wickedness, wanders all over the
world, visiting the souls of men, and chastising all it meets,--namely, men
like fierce lions, or timid stags, or savage boars, or multiform hydras; and so
with all the other fabled labours of Hercules, they all have a hidden reference
to moral valour. But these instances must suffice, for all our time would be
insufficient if we were to go over each one.
CHAP. XVII.--THEY ARE BLAMEWORTHY WHO INVENTED SUCH STORIES.
"Now,(7) since these things can be clearly, profitably, and without
prejudice to piety, set forth in an open and straightforward manner, I wonder you
call those men sensible and wise who concealed them under crooked riddles, and
overlaid them with filthy stories, and thus, as if impelled by an evil spirit,
deceived almost all men. For either these things are not riddles, but real crimes
of the gods, in which case they should not have been exposed to contempt, nor
should these their needs have been set before men at all as models; or things
falsely attributed to the gods were set forth in an allegory, and then, Appion,
they whom you call wise erred, in that, by concealing under unworthy stories
things in themselves worthy, they led men to sin, and that not without
dishonouring those whom they believed to be gods.
CHAP. XVIII.--THE SAME.
"Wherefore do not suppose that they were wise men, but rather evil
spirits, who could cover honourable actions with wicked stories, in order that they
who wish to imitate their betters may emulate these deeds of so-called gods,
which yesterday in my discourse I spoke so freely of,--namely, their parricides,
their murders of their children, their incests of all kinds, their shameless
adulteries and countless impurities. The most impious of them are those who wish
these stories to be believed, in order that they may not be ashamed when they do
the like. If they had been disposed to act reverently, they ought, as I said a
little ago, even if the gods really did the things which are sting of them, to
have veiled their indecencies under more seemly stories, and not, on the
contrary, as you say they did, when the deeds of the gods were honourable, clothed
them in wicked and indecent forms, which, even when interpreted, can only be
understood by much labour; and when they were understood by some, they indeed got
for their much toil the privilege of not being deceived, which they might have
had without the toil, while they who were deceived were utterly ruined. (Those,
however, who trace the allegories to a more honourable source I do not object
to; as, for instance, those who explain one allegory by saying that it was
wisdom which sprang from the head of Zeus.) On the whole, it seems to me more
probable that wicked men, robbing the gods of their honour, ventured to promulgate
these insulting stories.
CHAP. XIX.--NONE OF THESE ALLEGORIES ARE CONSISTENT.
"Nor do we find the poetical allegory about any of the gods consistent
with itself. To go no further than the fashioning of the universe, the poets now
say that nature was the first cause of the whole creation, now that it was mind.
For, say they, the first moving and mixture of the elements came from nature,
but it was the foresight of mind which arranged them in order. Even when they
assert that it was nature which fashioned the universe, being unable absolutely
to demonstrate this on account of the traces of design in the work, they
inweave the foresight of mind in such a way that they are able to entrap even the
wisest. But we say to them: If the world arose from self-moved nature, how did it
ever take proportion and shape, which cannot come but from a superintending
wisdom, and can be comprehended only by knowledge, which alone can trace such
things? If, on the other hand, it is by wisdom that all things subsist and maintain
order, how can it be that those things arose from self-moved chance?
CHAP. XX.--THESE GODS WERE REALLY WICKED MAGICIANS.
"Then those who chose to make dishonourable allegories of divine
things--as, for instance, that Metis was devoured by Zeus--have fallen into a dilemma,
because they did not see that they who in these stories about the gods
indirectly taught physics, denied the very existence of the gods, revolving all kinds of
gods into mere allegorical representations of the various substances of the
universe. And so it is more likely that the gods these persons celebrate were
some sort of wicked magicians, who were in reality wicked men, but by magic
assumed different shapes, committed adulteries, and took away life, and thus to the
men of old who did not understand magic seemed to be gods by the things they
did; and the bodies and tombs of these men are to be seen in many towns.
CHAP. XXI.--THEIR GRAVES ARE STILL TO BE SEEN.
"For instance, as I have mentioned already, in the Caucasian mountains
there is shown the tomb of a certain Kronos, a man, and a fierce monarch who slew
his children. And the son of this man, called Zeus, became worse than his
father; and having by the power of magic been declared ruler of the universe, he
committed many adulteries, and inflicted punishment on his father and uncles, and
so died; and the Cre-tans show his tomb. And in Mesopotamia there lie buried a
certain Helios at Atir, and a certain Selene at Carrhae. A certain Hermes, a
man, lies buried in Egypt; Ares in Thrace; Aphrodite in Cyprus; AEsculapius in
Epidaurus; and the tombs of many other such persons are to be seen.(1)
CHAP. XXII.--THEIR CONTEMPORARIES, THEREFORE, DID NOT LOOK ON THEM AS GODS.
"Thus, to right-thinking men, it is clear that they were admitted to be
mortals. And their contemporaries, knowing that they were mortal, when they died
paid them no more heed; and it was length of thee which clothed them with the
glory of gods. Nor need you wonder that they who lived in the times of
AEsculapius and Hercules were deceived, or the contemporaries of Dionysus or any other
of the men of that time, when even Hector in Ilium, and Achilles in the island
of Leuce, are worshipped by the inhabitants of those places; and the Opuntines
worship Patroclus, and the Rhodians Alexander of Macedon.(1)
CHAP. XXIII.--THE EGYPTIANS PAY DIVINE HONOURS TO A MAN.
"Moreover, among the Egyptians even to the present day, a man is
worshipped as a god before his death. And this truly is a small impiety, that the
Egyptians give divine honours to a man in his lifetime; but what is of all things
most absurd is, that they worship birds and creeping things, and all kinds of
beasts. For the mass of men neither think nor do anything with discretion. But
look, I pray you, at what is most disgraceful of all: he who is with them the
father of gods and men is said by them to have had intercourse with Leda; and many
of them set up in public a painting of this, writing above it the name Zeus. To
punish this insult, I could wish that they would paint their own present king
in such base embraces as they have dared to do with Zeus, and set it up in
public, that from the anger of a temporary monarch, and him a mortal, they might
learn to render honour where it is due. This I say to you, not as myself already
knowing the true God; but I am happy to say that even if I do not know who is
God, I think I at least know clearly what God is.
CHAP. XXIV.--WHAT IS NOT GOD.
"And first, then, the four original elements cannot be God, because they
have a cause. Nor can that mixing be God, nor that compounding, nor that
generating, nor that globe which surrounds the visible universe; nor the dregs which
flow together in Hades, nor the water which floats over them; nor the fiery
substance, nor the air which extends from it to our earth. For the four elements,
if they lay outside one another, could not have been mixed together so as to
generate animal life without some great artificer. If they have always been
united, even in this case they are fitted together by an artistic mind to what is
requisite for the limbs and parts of animals, that they may be able to preserve
their respective proportions, may have a clearly defined shape, and that all the
inward parts may attain the fitting coherency. In the same way also the
positions suitable for each are determined, and that very beautifully, by the
artificer mind. To be brief, in all other things which a living creature must have,
this great being of the world is in no respect wanting.
CHAP. XXV.--THE UNIVERSE IS THE PRODUCT OF MIND.
"Thus we are shut up to the supposition that there is an unbegotten
artificer, who brought the elements together, if they were separate; or, if they were
together, artistically blended them so as to generate life, and perfected from
all one work. For it cannot be that a work which is completely wise can be
made without a mind which is greater than it. Nor will it do to say that love is
the artificer of all things, or desire, or power, or any such thing. All these
are liable to change, and transient in their very nature. Nor can that be God
which is moved by another, much less what is altered by time and nature, and can
be annihilated."(2)
CHAP. XXVI.--PETER ARRIVES FROM CAESAREA.
While I was saying these things to Appion, Peter drew near from Caesarea,
and in Tyre the people were flocking together, hurrying to meet him and unite
in an expression of gratification at his visit. And Appion withdrew, accompanied
by Anubion and Athenodorus only; but the rest of us hurried to meet Peter, and
I was the first to greet him at the gate, and I led him towards the inn. When
we arrived, we dismissed the people; and when he deigned to ask what had taken
place, I concealed nothing, but told him of Simon's slanders, and the
monstrous shapes he had taken, and all the diseases he had sent after the sacrificial
feast, and that some of the sick persons were still there in Tyre, while others
had gone on with Simon to Sidon just as I arrived, hoping to be cured by him,
but that I had heard that none of them had been cured by him. I also told Peter
of the controversy I had with Appion; and he, from his love to me, and desiring
to encourage me, praised and blessed me. Then, having supped, he betook
himself to the rest the fatigues of his journey rendered so necessary.