THE CLEMENTINE HOMILIES. HOMILY IX
HOMILY IX.
CHAP. I.--PETER'S DISCOURSE RESUMED.
THEREFORE on the next day, Peter going out with his companions, and coming
to the former place, and taking his stand, proceeded to say:(1) "God having
cut off by water all the impious men of old, having found one alone amongst them
all that was pious, caused him to be saved in an ark, with his three sons and
their wives. Whence may be perceived that it is His nature not to care for a
multitude of wicked, nor to be indifferent to the salvation of one pious.
Therefore the greatest impiety of all is forsaking the sole Lord of all, and
worshipping many, who are no gods, as if they were gods.
CHAP. II.--MONARCHY AND POLYARCHY.
"If, therefore, while I expound and show you that this is the greatest
sin, which is able to destroy you all, it occur to your mind that you are not
destroyed, being great multitudes, you are deceived. For you have the example of
the old world deluged. And yet their sin was much less than that which is
chargeable against you. For they were wicked with respect to their equals, murdering
or committing adultery. But you are wicked against the God of all, worshipping
lifeless images instead of Him or along with Him, and attributing His divine
name to every kind of senseless matter. In the first place, therefore, you are
unfortunate in not knowing the difference between monarchy and polyarchy--that
monarchy, on the one hand, is productive of concord, but polyarchy is effective of
wars. For unity does not fight with itself, but multitude has occasion of
undertaking battle one against another.
CHAP. III.--FAMILY OF NOE.
"Therefore straightway after the flood,(2) Noe continued to live three
hundred and fifty years with the multitude of his descendants in concord, being a
king according to the image of the one God. But after his death many of his
descendants were ambitious of the kingdom, and being eager to reign, each one
considered how it might be effected; and one attempted it by war, another by
deceit, another by persuasion, and one in one way and another in another; one of whom
was of the family of Ham, whose descendant was Mestren, from whom the tribes
of the Egyptians and Babylonians and Persians were multiplied.
CHAP. IV.--ZOROASTER.
"Of this family there was born in due time a certain one, who took up with
magical practices, by name Nebrod, who chose, giant-like, to devise things in
opposition to God. Him the Greeks have called Zoroaster. He, after the deluge,
being ambitious of sovereignty, and being a great magician, by magical arts
compelled the world-guiding star of the wicked one who now rules, to the bestowal
of the sovereignty as a gift from him. But he,(3) being a prince, and having
authority over him who compelled him,(1) wrathfully poured out the fire of the
kingdom, that he might both bring to allegiance, and might punish him who at
first constrained him.
CHAP. V.--HERO-WORSHIP.
"Therefore the magician Nebrod, being destroyed by this lightning falling
on earth from heaven, for this circumstance had his name changed to Zoroaster,
on account of the living (<greek>zwsan</greek>) stream of the star
(<greek>asteros</greek>) being poured upon him. But the unintelligent amongst the men who
then were, thinking that through the love of God his soul had been sent for by
lightning, buried the remains of his body, and honoured his burial-place with a
temple among the Persians, where the descent of the fire occurred, and
worshipped him as a god. By this example also, others there bury those who die by
lightning as beloved of God, and honour them with temples, anti erect statues of the
dead in their own forms. Thence, in like manner, the rulers in different
places were emulous of like honour, and very many of them honoured the tombs of
those who were beloved of them, though not dying by lightning, with temples and
statues, and lighted up altars, and ordered them to be adored as gods. And long
after, by the lapse of time, they were thought by posterity to be really gods.
CHAP. VI.--FIRE-WORSHIP.
"Thus, in this fashion, there ensued many partitions of the one original
kingdom. The Persians, first taking coals from the lightning which fell from
heaven, preserved them by ordinary fuel, and honouring the heavenly fire as a god,
were honoured by the fire itself with the first kingdom, as its first
worshippers. After them the Babylonians, stealing coals from the fire that was there,
and conveying it safetly to their own home, and worshipping it, they themselves
also reigned in order. And the Egyptians, acting in like manner, and calling
the fire in their own dialect PHTHAE, which is translated HEPHAISTUS or OSIRIS,
he who first reigned amongst them is called by its name. Those also who reigned
in different places, acting in this fashion, and making an image, and kindling
altars in honour of fire, most of them were excluded from the kingdom.
CHAP. VII.--SACRIFICIAL ORGIES.
"But they did not cease to worship images,(2) by reason of the evil
intelligence of the magicians, who found excuses for them, which had power to
constrain them to the foolish worship For, establishing this things by magical
ceremonies, they assigned them feasts from sacrifices, libations, flutes, and
shoutings, by means of which senseless men, being deceived, and their kingdom being
taken from them, yet did not desist from the worship that they had taken up with.
To such an extent did they prefer error, on account of its pleasantness, before
truth. They also howl after their sacrificial surfeit, their soul from the
depth, as it were by dreams, forewarning them of the punishment that is to befall
such deeds of theirs.
CHAP. VIII.--THE BEST MERCHANDISE.
"Many forms of worship,(3) then, having passed away in the world, we come,
bringing to you, as good merchantmen, the worship that has been handed down to
us from our fathers, and preserved; showing you, as it were, the seeds of
plants, and placing them under your judgment and in your power. Choose that which
seems good unto you. If, therefore, ye choose our wares, not only shall ye be
able to escape demons, and the sufferings which are inflicted by demons, but
yourselves also putting them to flight, and having them reduced to make
supplication to you, shall for ever enjoy future blessings.
CHAP. IX.--HOW DEMONS GET POWER OVER MEN.
"Since, on the other hand, you are oppressed by strange sufferings
inflicted by demons, on your removal from the body you shall have your souls also
punished for ever; not indeed by God's inflicting vengeance, but because such is
the judgment of evil deeds. For the demons, having power by means of the food
given to them, are admitted into your bodies by your own hands; and lying hid
there for a long time, they become blended with your souls. And through the
carelessness of those who think not, or even wish not, to help themselves, upon the
dissolution of their bodies, their souls being united to the demon, are of
necessity borne by it into whatever places it pleases. And what is most terrible of
all, when at the end of all things the demon is first consigned to the purifying
fire, the soul which is mixed with it is under the necessity of being horribly
punished, and the demon of being pleased. For the soul, being made of light,
and not capable of bearing the heterogeneous flame of fire, is tortured; but the
demon, being in the substance of his own kind, is greatly pleased, becoming
the strong chain of the soul that he has swallowed up.
CHAP. X.--HOW THEY ARE TO BE EXPELLED.
"But the reason why the demons delight in entering into men's bodies is
this. Being spirits, and having desires after meats and drinks, and sexual
pleasures, but not being able to partake of these by reason of their being spirits,
and wanting organs fitted for their enjoyment, they enter into the bodies of
men, in order that, getting organs to minister to them, they may obtain the things
that they wish, whether it be meat, by means of men's teeth, or sexual
pleasure, by means of men's members. Hence, in order to the putting of demons to
flight, the most useful help is abstinence, and fasting, and suffering of
affliction. For if they enter into men's bodies for the sake of sharing pleasures, it is
manifest that they are put to flight by suffering. But inasmuch as some,(1)
being of a more malignant kind, remain by the body that is undergoing punishment,
though they are punished with it, therefore it is needful to have recourse to
God by prayers and petitions, refraining from every occasion of impurity, that
the hand of God may touch him for his cure, as being pure and faithful.
CHAP. XI.--UNBELIEF THE DEMON'S STRONGHOLD.
"But it is necessary in our prayers to acknowledge that we have had
recourse to God, and to bear witness, not to the apathy, but to the slowness of the
demon. For all things are done to the believer, nothing to the unbeliever.
Therefore the demons themselves, knowing the amount of faith of those of whom they
take possession, measure their stay proportionately. Wherefore they stay
permanently with the unbelieving, tarry for a while with the weak in faith; but with
those who thoroughly believe, and who do good, they cannot remain even for a
moment. For the soul being turned by faith, as it were, into the nature of water,
quenches the demon as a spark of fire. The labour, therefore, of every one is
to be solicitous about the putting to flight of his own demon. For, being mixed
up with men's souls, they suggest to every one's mind desires after what things
they please, in order that he may neglect his salvation.
CHAP. XII.--THEORY OF DISEASE.
"Whence many, not knowing how they are influenced, consent to the evil
thoughts suggested by the demons, as if they were the reasoning of their own
souls. Wherefore they become less active to come to those who are able to save
them, and do not know that they themselves are held captive by the deceiving
demons. Therefore the demons who lurk in their souls induce them to think that it is
not a demon that is distressing them, but a bodily disease, such as some acrid
matter, or bile, or phlegm, or excess of blood, or inflammation of a membrane,
or something else. But even if this were so, the case would not be altered of
its being a kind of demon. For the universal and earthly soul, which enters on
account of all kinds of food, being taken to excess by over-much food, is itself
united to the spirit, as being cognate, which is the soul of man; and the
material part of the food being united to the body, is left as a dreadful poison to
it. Wherefore in all respects moderation is excellent.
CHAP. XIII.--DECEITS OF THE DEMONS.
"But some of the maleficent demons deceive in another way. For at first
they do not even show their existence, in order that care may not be taken
against them; but in due time, by means of anger, love, or some other affection, they
suddenly injure the body, by sword, or halter, or precipice, or something
else, and at last bring to punishment the deceived souls of those who have been
mixed up with them, as we said, withdrawing into the purifying fire. But others,
who are deceived in another way, do not approach us, being seduced by the
instigations of maleficent demons, as if they suffered these things at the hands of
the gods themselves, on account of their neglect of them, and were able to
reconcile them by sacrifices, and that it is not needful to come to us, but rather
to flee from and hate us. And at the same time (2) they hate and flee from those
who have greater compassion for them, and who follow after them in order to do
good to them.
CHAP. XIV.--MORE TRICKS.
"Therefore shunning and hating us they are deceived, not knowing how it
happens that they devise things opposed to their health. For neither can we
compel them against their will to incline towards health, since now we have no such
power over them, nor are they able of themselves to understand the evil
instigation of the demon; for they know not whence these evil instigations are
suggested to them. And these are they whom the demons affright, appearing in such
forms as they please. And sometimes they prescribe remedies for those who are
diseased, and thus they receive divine honours from those who have previously been
deceived. And they conceal from many that they are demons, but not from us, who
know their mystery, and why they do these things, changing themselves in dreams
against those over whom they have power; and why they terrify some, and give
oracular responses to others, and demand sacrifices from them, and command them
to eat With them, that they may swallow up their souls.
CHAP. XV.--TEST OF IDOLS.
"For as dire serpents draw sparrows to them by their breath, so also these
draw to their own will those who partake of their table, being mixed up with
their understanding by means of food and drink, changing themselves in dreams
according to the forms of the images, that they may increase error. For the image
is neither a living creature, nor has it a divine spirit, but the demon that
appeared abused the form.(1) How many, in like manner, have been seen by others
in dreams; and when they have met one another when awake, and compared them
with what they saw in their dream, they have not accorded: so that the dream is
not a manifestation, but is either the production of a demon or of the soul,
giving forums to present fears and desire. For the soul, being struck with fear,
conceives forms in dreams. But if you think that images, as being alive, can
accomplish such things, place them on a beam accurately balanced, and place. an
equipoise in the other scale, then ask them to become either heavier or lighter:
and if this be done, then they are alive. But it does not so happen. But if it
were so, this would not prove them to be gods. For this might be accomplished by
the finger of the demon. Even maggots move, yet they are not called gods.
CHAP. XVI.--POWERS OF THE DEMONS.
"But that the soul of each man embodies the forms of demons after his own
preconceptions, and that those who are called gods do not appear, is manifest
from the fact that they do not appear to the Jews. But some one will say, How
then do they give oracular responses, forecasting future things? This also is
false. But suppose it were true, this does not prove them to be gods; for it
does not follow, if anything prophesies, that it is a god. For pythons prophesy,
yet they are cast out by us as demons, and put to flight. But some one will
say, They work cures for some persons. It is false. But suppose it were true,
this is no proof of Godhead; for physicians also heal many, yet are not gods.
But, says one, physicians do not completely heal those of whom they take charge,
but these heal oracularly. But the demons know the remedies that are suited to
each disease. Wherefore, being skilful physicians, and able to cure those
diseases which can be cured by men, and also being prophets, and knowing when each
disease is healed of itself, they so arrange their remedies that they may gain
the credit of producing the cure.
CHAP. XVII.--REASONS WHY THEIR DECEITS ARE NOT DETECTED.
"For why do they oracularly foretell cures after a long time? And why, if
they are almighty, do they not effect cures without administering any medicine?
And for what reason do they prescribe remedies to some of those who pray to
them, while to some, and it may be more suitable cases, they give no response?
Thus, whenever a cure is going to take place spontaneously, they promise, in
order that they may get the credit of the cure; and others, having been sick, and
having prayed, and having recovered spontaneously, attributed the cure to those
whom they had invoked, and make offerings to them. Those, however, who, after
praying, have failed, are not able to offer their sacrifices. But if the
relatives of the dead, or any of their children, inquired into the losses, you would
find the failures to be more than the successes. But no one who has been taken
in by them is willing to exhibit an accusation against them, through shame or
fear; but, on the other hand, they conceal the crimes which they believe them to
be guilty of.
CHAP. XVIII.--PROPS OF THE SYSTEM.
"And how many also falsify the responses given and the cures effected by
them, and confirm them with an oath! And how many give themselves up to them for
hire, undertaking falsely to suffer certain things, and thus proclaiming their
suffering, and being restored by remedial means, they say that they oracularly
promised them healing, in order that they may assign as the cause the
senseless worship: And how many of these things were formerly done by magical art, in
the way of interpreting dreams, and divining! Yet in course of time these things
have disappeared. And how many are there now, who, wishing to obtain such
things, make use of charms! However, though a thing be prophetical or healing, it
is not divine.
CHAP. XIX.--PRIVILEGES OF THE BAPTIZED.
"For God is almighty. For He is good and righteous, now long-suffering to
all, that those who will, repenting of the evils which they have done, and
living well, may receive a worthy reward in the day in which all things are judged.
Wherefore now begin to obey God by reason of good knowledge,(1) and to oppose
your evil lusts and thoughts, that you may be able to recover the original
saving worship which was committed to humanity. For thus shall blessings
straightway spring up to you, which, when you receive, you will thenceforth quit the
trial of evils. But give thanks to the Giver; being kings for ever of unspeakable
good things, with the King of peace. But in the present life, washing in a
flowing river, or fountain, or even in the sea, with the thrice-blessed invocation,
you shall not only be able to drive away the spirits which lurk in you; but
yourselves no longer sinning, and undoubtingly believing God, you shall drive out
evil spirits and dire demons, with terrible diseases, from others. And
sometimes they shall flee when you but look on them. For they know those who have given
themselves up to God. Wherefore, honouring them, they flee affrighted, as you
saw yesterday, how, when after the address I delayed praying for those who were
suffering these maladies, through respect towards the worship they cried out,
not being able to endure it for a short hour.
CHAP. XX.--"NOT ALMOST, BUT ALTOGETHER SUCH AS I AM."
"Do not then suppose that we do not fear demons on this account, that we
are of a different nature from you. For we are of the same nature, but not of
the same worship. Wherefore, being not only much but altogether superior to you,
we do not grudge you becoming such as we are; but, on the other hand, counsel
you, knowing that all these demons beyond measure honour and fear those who are
reconciled to God.
CHAP. XXI.--THE DEMONS SUBJECT TO THE BELIEVER.
"For, in like manner as the soldiers who are put under one of Caesar's
captains know to honour him who has received authority on account of him who gave
it, so that the commanders say to this one, Come, and he comes, and to another,
Go, and he goes; so also he who has given himself to God, being faithful, is
heard when he only speaks to demons and diseases; and the demons give place,
though they be much stronger than they who command them. For with unspeakable
power God subjects the mind of every one to whom He pleases. For as many captains,
with whole camps and cities, fear Caesar, who is but a man, every one's heart
being eager to honour the image of all;(2) for by the will of God, all things
being enslaved by fear, do not know the cause; so also all disease-producing
spirits, being awed in some natural way, honour and flee from him who has had
recourse to God, and who carries right faith as His image in his heart.
CHAP. XXII.--"RATHER REJOICE."
"But still, though all demons, with all diseases, flee before you, you are
not to rejoice in this only, but in that, through grace, your names, as of the
ever-living, are written in heaven. Thus also the Divine Holy Spirit rejoices,
because man hath overcome death; for the putting of the demons to flight makes
for the safety of another. But this we say, not as denying that we ought to
help others, but that we ought not to be inflated by this and neglect ourselves.
It happens, also, that the demons flee before some wicked men by reason of the
honoured name, and both he who expels the demon and he who witnesses it are
deceived: he who expels him, as if he were honoured on account of righteousness,
not knowing the wickedness of the demon. For he has at once honoured the name,
and by his flight has brought the wicked man into a thought of his
righteousness, and so deceived him away from repentance. But the looker-on, associating with
the expeller as a pious man, hastens to a like manner of life, and is ruined.
Sometimes also they pretend to flee before adjurations not made in the name of
God, that they may deceive men, and destroy them whom they will.
CHAP. XXIII.--THE SICK HEALED.
"This then we would have you know, that unless any one of his own accord
give himself over as a slave to demons, as I said before, the demon has no power
against him. Choosing, therefore, to worship one God, and refraining from the
table of demons, and undertaking chastity with philanthropy and righteousness,
and being baptized with the thrice-blessed invocation for the remission of
sins, and devoting yourselves as much as you can to the perfection of purity, you
can escape everlasting punishment, and be constituted heirs of eternal
blessings."
Having thus spoken, he ordered those to approach who were distressed with
diseases;(3) and thus many approached, having come together through the
experience of those who had been healed yesterday. And he having laid his hands upon
them and prayed, and immediately healed them, and having charged them and the
others to come earlier, he bathed and partook of food, and went to sleep.