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ST. AUGUSTIN
THE CITY OF GOD
BOOK I.
ARGUMENT.
AUGUSTIN CENSURES THE PAGANS, WHO ATTRIBUTED TIlE CALAMITIES OF THE WORLD,
AND ESPECIALLY THE RECENT SACK OF ROME BY THE GOTHS, TO THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION,
AND ITS PROHIBITION OF THE WORSHIP OF THE GODS. HE SPEAKS OF THE BLESSINGS
AND ILLS OF LIFE, WHICH THEN, AS ALWAYS, HAPPENED TO GOOD AND BAD MEN ALIKE.
FINALLY, HE REBUKES THE SHAMELESSNESS OF THOSE WHO CAST UP TO THE CHRISTIANS
THAT THEIR WOMEN HAD BEEN VIOLATED BY THE SOLDIERS.
PREFACE, EXPLAINING HIS DESIGN IN UNDERTAKING THIS WORK.
THE glorious
city of God(1) is my theme in this work, which you, my dearest son Marcellinus,(2)
suggested,
and which is due to you by my promise. I have
undertaken its defence against those who prefer their own gods to the Founder
of this city,--a city surpassingly glorious, whether we view it as it still
lives by faith in this fleeting course of time, and sojourns as a stranger
in the midst of the ungodly, or as it shall dwell in the fixed stability of
its eternal seat, which it now with patience waits for, expecting until "righteousness
shall return unto judgment,''(3) and it obtain, by virtue of its excellence,
final victory and perfect peace. A great work this, and an arduous; but God
is my helper. For I am aware what ability is requisite to persuade the proud
how great is the virtue of humility, which raises us, not by a quite human
arrogance, but by a divine grace, above all earthly dignities that totter on
this shifting scene. For the King and Founder of this city of which we speak,
has in Scripture uttered to His people a dictum of the divine law in these
words: "God resisteth the proud, but giveth grace unto the humble."(4)
But this, which is God's prerogative, the inflated ambition of a proud spirit
also affects, and dearly loves that this be numbered among its attributes,
to
"Show
pity to the humbled soul,
And crush
the sons of pride."(5)
And therefore, as the plan of this work we have undertaken requires, and as
occasion offers, we must speak also of the earthly city, which, though it be
mistress of the nations, is itself ruled by its lust of rule.
CHAP. I.--OF THE ADVERSARIES OF THE NAME OF CHRIST, WHOM THE BARBARIANS FOR
CHRIST'S SAKE SPARED WHEN THEY STORMED THE CITY.
For to this earthly city belong the enemies against whom I have to defend
the city of God. Many of them, indeed, being reclaimed from their ungodly error,
have become sufficiently creditable citizens of this city; but many are so
inflamed with hatred against it, and are so ungrateful to its Redeemer for
His signal benefits, as to forget that they would now be unable to utter a
single word to its prejudice, had they not found in its sacred places, as they
fled from the enemy's steel, that life in which they now boast themselves.(1)
Are not those very Romans, who were spared by the barbarians through their
respect for Christ, become enemies to the name of Christ? The reliquaries of
the martyrs and the churches of the apostles bear witness to this; for in the
sack of the city they were open sanctuary for all who fled to them, whether
Christian or Pagan. To their very threshold the blood-thirsty enemy raged;
there his murderous fury owned a limit. Thither did such of the enemy as had
any pity convey those to whom they had given quarter, lest any less mercifully
disposed might fall upon them. And, indeed, when even those murderers who everywhere
else showed themselves pitiless came to those spots where that was forbidden
which the license of war permitted in every other place, their furious rage
for slaughter was bridled, and their eagerness to take prisoners was quenched.
Thus escaped multitudes who now reproach the Christian religion, and impute
to Christ the ills that have befallen their city; but the preservation of their
own life--a boon which they owe to the respect entertained for Christ by the
barbarians--they attribute not to our Christ, but to their own good luck. They
ought rather, had they any right perceptions, to attribute the severities and
hardships inflicted by their enemies, to that divine providence which is wont
to reform the depraved manners of men by chastisement, and which exercises
with similar afflictions the righteous and praiseworthy,--either translating
them, when they have passed through the trial, to a better world, or detaining
them still on earth for ulterior purposes. And they ought to attribute it to
the spirit of these Christian times, that, contrary to the custom of war, these
bloodthirsty barbarians spared them, and spared them for Christ's sake, whether
this mercy was actually shown in promiscuous places, or in those places specially
dedicated to Christ's name, and of which the very largest were selected as
sanctuaries, that full scope might thus be given to the expansive compassion
which desired that a large multitude might find shelter there. Therefore ought
they to give God thanks, and with sincere confession flee for refuge to His
name, that so they may escape the punishment of eternal fire--they who with
lying lips took upon them this name, that they might escape the punishment
of present destruction. For of those whom you see insolently and shamelessly
insulting the servants of Christ, there are numbers who would not have escaped
that destruction and slaughter had they not pretended that they themselves
were Christ's servants. Yet now, in ungrateful pride and most impious madness,
and at the risk of being punished in everlasting darkness, they perversely
oppose that name under which they fraudulently protected themselves for the
sake of enjoying the light of this brief life.
CHAP. 2.--THAT IT IS QUITE CONTRARY TO THE USAGE OF WAR, THAT THE VICTORS
SHOULD SPARE THE VANQUISHED FOR THE SAKE OF THEIR GODS.
There are histories of numberless wars, both before the building of Rome and
since its rise and the extension of its dominion; let these be read, and let
one instance be cited in which, when a city had been taken by foreigners, the
victors spared those who were found to have fled for sanctuary to the temples
of their gods;(2) or one instance in which a barbarian general gave orders
that none should be put to the sword who had been found in this or that temple.
Did not AEneas see
"Dying
Priam at the shrine,
Staining
the hearth he made divine? "(3)
Did not Diomede and Ulysses
"Drag
with red hands. the sentry slain,
Her fateful image from your fane,
Her chaste locks touch, and stain with gore
The virgin
coronal she wore?" 4
Neither is that true which follows, that
"Thenceforth
the tide of fortune changed,
And Greece
grew weak."(5)
For after this they conquered and destroyed Troy with fire and sword; after
this they beheaded Priam as he fled to the altars. Neither did Troy perish
because it lost Minerva. For what had Minerva herself first lost, that she
should perish? Her guards perhaps? No doubt; just her guards. For as soon as
they were slain, she could be stolen. It was not, in fact, the men who were
preserved by the image, but the image by the men. How, 3 then, was she invoked
to defend the city and the citizens, she who could not defend her own defenders?
CHAP. 3.--THAT THE ROMANS DID NOT SHOW THEIR USUAL SAGACITY WHEN THEY TRUSTED
THAT THEY WOULD BE BENEFITED BY THE GODS WHO HAD BEEN UNABLE TO DEFEND TROY.
And these be the gods to whose protecting care the Romans were delighted to
entrust their city! 0 too, too piteous mistake! And they are enraged at us
when we speak thus about their gods, though, so far from being enraged at their
own writers, they part with money to learn what they say; and, indeed, the
very teachers of these authors are reckoned worthy of a salary from the public
purse, and of other honors. There is Virgil, who is read by boys, in order
that this great poet, this most famous and approved of all poets, may impregnate
their virgin minds, and may not readily be forgotten by them, according to
that saying of Horace,
"The fresh cask long keeps its first tang."(1)
Well, in this Virgil, I say, Juno is introduced as hostile to the Trojans,
and stirring up AEolus, the king of the winds, against them in the words,
"A
race I hate now ploughs the sea,
Transporting Troy to Italy,
And home-gods
conquered"(2)
. . .
And ought
prudent men to have entrusted the defence of Rome to these conquered gods?
But it will
be said, this was
only the saying of Juno, who, like an angry
woman, did not know what she was saying. What, then, says AEneas himself,--AEneas
who is so often designated "pious?" Does he not say,
"Lo!
Panthus, 'scaped from death by flight,
Priest of Apollo on the height,
His conquered gods with trembling hands
He bears,
and shelter swift demands?"(3)
Is it
not clear that the gods (whom he does not scruple to call "conquered")
were rather entrusted to AEneas than he to them, when it is said to him,
"The
gods of her domestic shrines
Your country
to your care consigns?"(4)
If, then, Virgil says that the gods were such as these, and were conquered,
and that when conquered they could not escape except under the protection of
a man, what a madness is it to suppose that Rome had been wisely en-trusted
to these guardians, and could not have been taken unless it had lost them!
Indeed, to worship conquered gods as protectors and champions, what is this
but to worship, not good divinities, but evil omens?(5) Would it not be wiser
to believe, not that Rome would never have fallen into so great a calamity
had not they first perished, but rather that they would have perished long
since had not Rome preserved them as long as she could? For who does not see,
when he thinks of it, what a foolish assumption it is that they could not be
vanquished under vanquished defenders, and that they only perished because
they had lost their guardian gods, when, indeed, the only cause of their perishing
was that they chose for their protectors gods condemned to perish? The poets,
therefore, when they composed and sang these things about the conquered gods,
had no intention to invent falsehoods, but uttered, as honest men, what the
truth extorted from them. This, however, will be carefully and copiously discussed
in another and more fitting place. Meanwhile I will briefly, and to the best
of my ability, explain what I meant to say about these ungrateful men who blasphemously
impute to Christ the calamities which they deservedly suffer in consequence
of their own wicked ways, while that which is for Christ's sake spared them
in spite of their wickedness they do not even take the trouble to notice; and
in their mad and blasphemous insolence, they use against His name those very
lips wherewith they falsely claimed that same name that their lives might be
spared. In the places consecrated to Christ, where for His sake no enemy would
injure them, they restrained their tongues that they might be safe and protected;
but no sooner do they emerge from these sanctuaries, than they un-bridle these
tongues to hurl against Him curses full of hate.
CHAP. 4.--OF THE ASYLUM OF JUNO IN TROY, WHICH SAVED NO ONE FROM THE GREEKS;
AND OF THE CHURCHES OF THE APOSTLES, WHICH PROTECTED FROM THE BARBARIANS ALL
WHO FLED TO THEM.
Troy itself, the mother of the Roman people, was not able, as I have said,
to protect its own citizens in the sacred places of their gods from the fire
and sword of the Greeks, though the Greeks worshipped the same gods. Not only
so, but
"Phoenix
and Ulysses fell
In the void courts by Juno's cell
Were set the spoils to keep;
Snatched from the burning shrines away,
There Ilium's mighty treasure lay,
Rich altars, bowls of massy gold,
And captive raiment, rudely rolled
In one promiscuous heap;
While boys and matrons, wild with fear,
In long
array were standing near." (1) In other words, the place consecrated
to so great a goddess was chosen, not that from it none might be led out a
captive, but that in it all the captives might be immured. Compare now this "asylum"--the
asylum not of an ordinary god, not of one of the rank and file of gods, but
of Jove's own sister and wife, the queen of all the gods--with the churches
built in memory of the apostles. Into it were collected the spoils rescued
from the blazing temples and snatched from the gods, not that they might be
restored to the vanquished, but divided among the victors; while into these
was carried back, with the most religious observance anti respect, everything
which belonged to them, even though found elsewhere There liberty was lost;
here preserved. There bondage was strict; here strictly excluded Into that
temple men were driven to become the chattels of their enemies, now lording
it over them; into these churches men were led by their relenting foes, that
they might be at liberty. In fine, the gentle(2) Greeks appropriated that temple
of Juno to the purposes of their own avarice and pride; while these churches
of Christ were chosen even by the savage barbarians as the fit scenes for humility
and mercy. But perhaps, after all, the Greeks did in that victory of theirs
spare the temples of those gods whom they worshipped in common with the Trojans,
and did not dare to put to the sword or make captive the wretched and vanquished
Trojans who fled thither; and perhaps Virgil, in the manner of poets, has depicted
what never really happened? But there is no question that he depicted the usual
custom of an enemy when sacking a city.
CHAP, 5.--CAESAR'S STATEMENT REGARDING THE UNIVERSAL CUSTOM OF AN ENEMY WHEN
SACKING A CITY.
Even Caesar
himself gives us positive testimony regarding this custom; for, in his deliverance
in the
senate about
the conspirators, he says (as Sallust,
a historian of distinguished veracity, writes(3)) "that virgins and boys
are violated, children torn from the embrace of their parents, matrons subjected
to whatever should be the pleasure of the conquerors, temples and houses plundered,
slaughter and burning rife; in fine, all things filled with arms, corpses,
blood, and wailing." If he had not mentioned temples here, we might suppose
that enemies were in the habit of sparing the dwellings of the gods. And the
Roman temples were in danger of these disasters, not from foreign foes, but
from Catiline and his associates, the most noble senators and citizens of Rome.
But these, it may be said, were abandoned men, and the parricides of their
fatherland.
CHAP. 6.--THAT NOT EVEN THE ROMANS, WHEN THEY TOOK CITIES, SPARED THE CONQUERED
IN THEIR TEMPLES.
Why, then,
need our argument take note of the many nations who have waged wars with
one another, and have
nowhere
spared the conquered in the temples
of their gods? Let us look at the practice of the Romans themselves let us,
I say, recall and review the Romans, whose chief praise it has been "to
spare the vanquished and subdue the proud," and that they preferred "rather
to forgive than to revenge an injury;"(4) and among so many and I great
cities which they have stormed, taken, and overthrown for the extension of
their dominion, let us be told what temples they were accustomed to exempt,
so that whoever took refuge in them was free. Or have they really done this,
and has the fact been suppressed by the historians of these events? Is it to
be believed, that men who sought out with the greatest eagerness points they
could praise, would omit those which, in their own estimation, are the most
signal proofs of piety? Marcus Marcellus, a distinguished Roman, who took Syracuse,
a most splendidly adorned city, is reported to have bewailed its coming ruin,
and to have shed his own tears over it before he spill its blood. He took steps
also to preserve the chastity even of his enemy. For before he gave orders
for the storming of the city, he issued an edict forbidding the violation of
any free person. Yet the city was sacked according to the custom of war; nor
do we anywhere read, that even by so chaste and gentle a commander orders were
given that no one should be injured who had fled to this or that temple. And
this certainly would by no means have been omitted, when neither his weeping
nor his edict preservative of chastity could be passed in silence. Fabius,
the conqueror of the city of Tarentum, is praised for abstaining from making
booty of the images. For when his secretary proposed the question to him, what
he wished done with the statues of the gods, which had been taken in large
numbers, he veiled his moderation under a joke. For he asked of what sort they
were; and when they reported to him that there were not only many large images,
but some of them armed, "Oh," says he, "let us leave with the
Tarentines their angry gods." Seeing, then, that the writers of Roman
history could not pass in silence, neither the weeping of the one general nor
the laughing of the other, neither the chaste pity of the one nor the facetious
moderation of the other, on what occasion would it be omitted, if, for the
honor of any of their enemy's gods, they had shown this particular form of
leniency, that in any temple slaughter or captivity was prohibited?
CHAP. 7.--THAT THE CRUELTIES WHICH OCCURRED IN THE SACK OF ROME WERE IN ACCORDANCE
WITH THE CUSTOM OF WAR, WHEREAS THE ACTS OF CLEMENCY RESULTED FROM THE INFLUENCE
OF CHRIST'S NAME.
All the
spoiling, then, which Rome was exposed to in the recent calamity--all the
slaughter, plundering,
burning,
and misery--was the result of the custom
of war. But what was novel, was that savage barbarians showed themselves in
so gentle a guise, that the largest churches were chosen and set apart for
the purpose of being filled with the people to whom quarter was given, and
that in them none were slain, from them none forcibly dragged; that into them
many were led by their relenting enemies to be set at liberty, and that from
them none were led into slavery by merciless foes. Whoever does not see that
this is to be attributed to the name of Christ, and to the Christian temper,
is blind; whoever sees this, and gives no praise, is ungrateful; whoever hinders
any one from praising it, is mad. Far be it from any prudent man to impute
this clemency to the barbarians. Their fierce and bloody minds were awed, and
bridled, and marvellously tempered by Him who so long before said by His prophet, "I
will visit their transgression with the rod, and their iniquities with stripes;
nevertheless my loving-kindness will I not utterly take from them."(1)
CHAP. 8.--OF THE ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES WHICH OFTEN INDISCRIMINATELY
ACCRUE TO GOOD AND WICKED MEN.
Will some
one say, Why, then, was this divine compassion extended even to the ungodly
and ungrateful?
Why,
but because it was the mercy of Him who daily "maketh
His sun to rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and
on the unjust."(2) For though some of these men, taking thought of this,
repent of their wickedness and reform, some, as the apostle says, "despising
the riches of His goodness and long-suffering, after their hardness and impenitent
heart, treasure up unto themselves wrath against the day of wrath and revelation
of the righteous judgment of God, who will render to every man according to
his deeds:"(3) nevertheless does the patience of God still invite the
wicked to repentance, even as the scourge of God educates the good to patience.
And so, too, does the mercy of God embrace the good that it may cherish them,
as the severity of God arrests the wicked to punish them. To the divine providence
it has seemed good to prepare in the world to come for the righteous good things,
which the unrighteous shall not enjoy; and for the wicked evil things, by which
the good shall not be tormented. But as for the good things of this life, and
its ills, God has willed that these should be common to both; that we might
not too eagerly covet the things which wicked men are seen equally to enjoy,
nor shrink with an unseemly fear from the ills which even good men often suffer.
There is, too, a very great difference in the purpose served both by those
events which we call adverse and those called prosperous. For the good man
is neither uplifted with the good things of time, nor broken by its ills; but
the wicked man, because he is corrupted by this world's happiness, feels himself
punished by its unhappiness.(4) Yet often, even in the present distribution
of temporal things, does God plainly evince His own interference. For if every
sin were now visited with manifest punishment, nothing would seem to be reserved
for the final judgment; on the other hand, if no sin received now a plainly
divine punishment, it would be concluded that there is no divine providence
at all. And so of the good things of this life: if God did not by a very visible
liberality confer these on some of those persons who ask for them, we should
say that these good things were not at His disposal; and if He gave them to
all who sought them, we should suppose that such were the only rewards of His
service; and such a service would make us not godly, but greedy rather, and
covetous. Wherefore, though good and bad men suffer alike, we must not suppose
that there is no difference between the men themselves, because there is no
difference in what they both suffer. For even in the likeness of the sufferings,
there remains an unlikeness in the sufferers; and though exposed to the same
anguish, virtue and vice are not the same thing. For as the same fire causes
gold to glow brightly, and chaff to smoke; and under the same flail the straw
is beaten small, while the grain is cleansed; and as the lees are not mixed
with the oil, though squeezed out of the vat by the same pressure, so the same
violence of affliction proves, purges, clarifies the good, but damns, ruins,
exterminates the wicked. And thus it is that in the same affliction the wicked
detest God and blaspheme, while the good pray and praise. So material a difference
does it make, not what ills are suffered, but what kind of man suffers them.
For, stirred up with the same movement, mud exhales a horrible stench, and
ointment emits a fragrant odor.
CHAP. 9.--OF THE REASONS FOR ADMINISTERING CORRECTION TO BAD AND GOOD TOGETHER.
What, then, have the Christians suffered in that calamitous period, which
would not profit every one who duly and faithfully considered the following
circumstances? First of all, they must humbly consider those very sins which
have provoked God to fill the world with such terrible disasters; for although
they be far from the excesses of wicked, immoral, and ungodly men, yet they
do not judge themselves so clean removed from all faults as to be too good
to suffer for these even temporal ills. For every man, however laudably he
lives, yet yields in some points to the lust of the flesh. Though he do not
fall into gross enormity of wickedness, and abandoned viciousness, and abominable
profanity, yet he slips into some sins, either rarely or so much the more frequently
as the sins seem of less account. But not to mention this, where can we readily
find a man who holds in fit and just estimation those persons on account of
whose revolting pride, luxury, and avarice, and cursed iniquities and impiety,
God now smites the earth as His predictions threatened? Where is the man who
lives with them in the style in which it becomes us to live with them? For
often we wickedly blind ourselves to the occasions of teaching and admonishing
them, sometimes even of reprimanding and chiding them, either because we shrink
from the labor or are ashamed to offend them, or because we fear to lose good
friendships, lest this should stand in the way of our advancement, or injure
us in some worldly matter, which either our covetous disposition desires to
obtain, or our weakness shrinks from losing. So that, although the conduct
of wicked men is distasteful to the good, and therefore they do not fall with
them into that damnation which in the next life awaits such persons, yet, because
they spare their damnable sins through fear, therefore, even though their own
sins be slight and venial, they are justly scourged with the wicked in this
world, though in eternity they quite escape punishment. Justly, when God afflicts
them in common with the wicked, do they find this life bitter, through love
of whose sweetness they declined to be bitter to these sinners.
If any one forbears to reprove and find fault with those who are doing wrong,
because he seeks a more seasonable opportunity, or because he fears they may
be made worse by his rebuke, or that other weak persons may be disheartened
from endeavoring to lead a good and pious life, and may be driven from the
faith; this man's omission seems to be occasioned not by covetousness, but
by a charitable consideration. But what is blame-worthy is, that they who themselves
revolt from the conduct of the wicked, and live in quite another fashion, yet
spare those faults in other men which they ought to reprehend and wean them
from; and spare them because they fear to give offence, test they should injure
their interests in those things which good men may innocently and legitimately
use,--though they use them more greedily than becomes persons who are strangers
in this world, and profess the hope of a heavenly country. For not only the
weaker brethren who enjoy married life, and have children (or desire to have
them), and own houses and establishments, whom the apostle addresses in the
churches, warning and instructing them how they should live, both the wives
with their husbands, and the husbands with their wives, the children with their
parents, and parents with their children, and servants with their masters,
and masters with their servants,--not only do these weaker brethren gladly
obtain and grudgingly lose many earthly and temporal things on account of which
they dare not offend men whose polluted and wicked life greatly displeases
them; but those also who live at a higher level, who are not entangled in the
meshes of married life, but use meagre food and raiment, do often take thought
of their own safety and good name, and abstain from finding fault with the
wicked, because they fear their wiles and violence. And although they do not
fear them to such an extent as to be drawn to the commission of like iniquities,
nay, not by any threats or violence soever; yet those very deeds which they
refuse to share in the commission of they often decline to find fault with,
when possibly they might by finding fault prevent their commission. They abstain
from interference, because they fear that, if it fail of good effect, their
own safety or reputation may be damaged or destroyed; not because they see
that their preservation and good name are needful, that they may be able to
influence those who need their instruction, but rather because they weakly
relish the flattery and respect of men, and fear the judgments of the people,
and the pain or death of the body; that is to say, their non-intervention is
the result of selfishness, and not of love.
Accordingly
this seems to me to be one principal reason why the good are chastised along
with the
wicked,
when God is pleased to visit with temporal punishments
the profligate manners of a community. They are punished together, not because
they have spent an equally corrupt life, but because the good as well as the
wicked, though not equally with them, love this present life; while they ought
to hold it cheap, that the wicked, being admonished and reformed by their example,
might lay hold of life eternal. And if they will not be the companions of the
good in seeking life everlasting, they should be loved as enemies, and be dealt
with patiently. For so long as they live, it remains uncertain whether they
may not come to a better mind. These selfish persons have more cause to fear
than those to whom it was said through the prophet, "He is taken away
in his iniquity, but his blood will I require at the watchman's hand."(1)
For watchmen or overseers of the people are appointed in churches, that they
may unsparingly rebuke sin. Nor is that man guiltless of the sin we speak of,
who, though he be not a watchman, yet sees in the conduct of those with whom
the relationships of this life bring him into contact, many things that should
be blamed, and yet overlooks them, fearing to give offence, and lose such worldly
blessings as may legitimately be desired, but which he too eagerly grasps.
Then, lastly, there is another reason why the good are afflicted with temporal
calamities--the reason which Job's case exemplifies: that the human spirit
may be proved, and that it may be manifested with what fortitude of pious trust,
and with how unmercenary a love, it cleaves to God.(2)
CHAP. 10.--THAT THE SAINTS LOSE NOTHING IN LOSING TEMPORAL GOODS.
These
are the considerations which one must keep in view, that he may answer the
question whether any
evil happens
to the faithful and godly which cannot
be turned to profit. Or shall we say that the question is needless, and that
the apostle is vaporing when he says, "We know that all things work together
for good to them that love God ?"(3)
They lost
all they had. Their faith? Their godliness? The possessions of the hidden
man of the heart,
which in
the sight of God are of great price?(4) Did
they lose these? For these are the wealth of Christians, to whom the wealthy
apostle said, "Godliness with contentment is great gain. For we brought
nothing into this world, find it is certain we can carry nothing out. And having
food and raiment, let us be therewith content. But they that will be rich fall
into temptation and a snare, and into many foolish and hurtful lusts, which
drown men in destruction and perdition. For the love of money is the root of
all evil; which, while some coveted after, they have erred from the faith,
and pierced themselves through with many sorrows."(5)
They,
then, who lost their worldly all in the sack of Rome, if they owned their
possessions as they
had been
taught by the apostle, who himself was poor
without, but rich within,--that is to say, if they used the world as not using
it,--could say in the words of Job, heavily tried, but not overcome: "Naked
came I out of my mother's womb, and naked shall I return thither: the Lord
gave, and the Lord hath taken away; as it pleased the Lord, so has it come
to pass: blessed be the name of the Lord."(6) Like a good servant, Job
counted the will of his Lord his great possession, by obedience to which his
soul was enriched; nor did it grieve him to lose, while yet living, those goods
which he must shortly leave at his death. But as to those feebler spirits who,
though they cannot be said to prefer earthly possessions to Christ, do yet
cleave to them with a somewhat immoderate attachment, they have discovered
by the pain of losing these things how much they were sinning in loving them.
For their grief is of their own making; in the words of the apostle quoted
above, "they have pierced themselves through with many sorrows." For
it was well that they who had so long despised these verbal admonitions should
receive the teaching of experience. For when the apostle says, "They that
will be rich fall into temptation," and so on, what he blames in riches
is not the possession of them, but the desire of them. For elsewhere he says, "Charge
them that are rich in this world, that they be not high-minded, nor trust in
uncertain riches, but in the living God, who giveth us richly all things to
enjoy; that they do good, that they be rich in good works, ready to distribute,
willing to communicate; laying up in store for themselves a good foundation
against the time to come, that they may lay hold on eternal life."(1)
They who were making such a use of their property have been consoled for light
losses by great gains, and have had more pleasure in those possessions which
they have securely laid past, by freely giving them away, than grief in those
which they entirely lost by an anxious and selfish hoarding of them. For nothing
could perish on earth save what they would be ashamed to carry away from earth.
Our Lord's injunction runs, "Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon
earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt, and where thieves break through and
steal; but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor
rust doth corrupt, and where thieves do not break through nor steal: for where
your treasure is, there will your heart be also."(2) And they who have
listened to this injunction have proved in the time of tribulation how well
they were advised in not despising this most trustworthy teacher, and most
faithful and mighty guardian of their treasure. For if many were glad that
their treasure was stored in places which the enemy chanced not to light upon,
how much better founded was the joy of those who, by the counsel of their God,
had fled with their treasure to a citadel which no enemy can possibly reach!
Thus our Paulinus, bishop of Nola,(3) who voluntarily abandoned vast wealth
and became quite poor, though abundantly rich in holiness, when the barbarians
sacked Nola, and took him prisoner, used silently to pray, as he afterwards
told me, "O Lord, let me not be troubled for gold and silver, for where
all my treasure is Thou knowest." For all his treasure was where he had
been taught to hide and store it by Him who had also foretold that these calamities
would happen in the world. Consequently those persons who obeyed their Lord
when He warned them where and how to lay up treasure, did not lose even their,
earthly possessions in the invasion of the barbarians; while those who are
now repenting that they did not obey Him have learnt the right use of earthly
goods, if not by the wisdom which would have prevented their loss, at least
by the experience which follows it.
But some good and Christian men have been put to the torture, that they might
be forced to deliver up their goods to the enemy. They could indeed neither
deliver nor lose that good which made themselves good. If, however, they preferred
torture to the surrender of the mammon of iniquity, then I say they were not
good men. Rather they should have been reminded that, if they suffered so severely
for the sake of money, they should endure all torment, if need be, for Christ's
sake; that they might be taught to love Him rather who enriches with eternal
felicity all who suffer for Him, and not silver and gold, for which it was
pitiable to suffer, whether they preserved it by telling a lie or lost it by
telling the truth. For under these tortures no one lost Christ by confessing
Him, no one preserved wealth save by denying its existence. So that possibly
the torture which taught them that they should set their affections on a possession
they could not lose, was more useful than those possessions which, without
any useful fruit at all, disquieted and tormented their anxious owners. But
then we are reminded that some were tortured who had no wealth to surrender,
but who were not believed when they said so. These too, however, had perhaps
some craving for wealth, and were not willingly poor with a holy resignation;
and to such it had to be made plain, that not the actual possession alone,
but also the desire of wealth, deserved such excruciating pains. And even if
they were destitute of any hidden stores of gold and silver, because they were
living in hopes of a better life,--I know not indeed if any such person was
tortured on the supposition that he had wealth; but if so, then certainly in
confessing, when put to the question, a holy poverty, he confessed Christ.
And though it was scarcely to be expected that the barbarians should believe
him, yet no confessor of a holy poverty could be tortured without receiving
a heavenly reward.
Again, they say that the long famine laid many a Christian low. But this,
too, the faithful turned to good uses by a pious endurance of it. For those
whom famine killed outright it rescued from the ills of this life, as a kindly
disease would have done; and those who were only hunger-bitten were taught
to live more sparingly, and inured to longer fasts.
CHAP. 11.--OF THE END OF THIS LIFE, WHETHER IT IS MATERIAL THAT IT BE LONG
DELAYED.
But, it is added, many Christians were slaughtered, and were put to death
in a hideous variety of cruel ways. Well, if this be hard to bear, it is assuredly
the common lot of all who are born into this life. Of this at least I am certain,
that no one has ever died who was not destined to die some time. Now the end
of life puts the longest life on a par with the shortest. For of two things
which have alike ceased to be, the one is not better, the other worse--the
one greater, the other less.(1) And of what consequence is it what kind of
death puts an end to life, since he who has died once is not forced to go through
the same ordeal a second time? And as in the daily casualties of life every
man is, as it were, threatened with numberless deaths, so long as it remains
uncertain which of them is his fate, I would ask whether it is not better to
suffer one and die, than to live in fear of all? I am not unaware of the poor-spirited
fear which prompts us to choose rather to live long in fear of so many deaths,
than to die once and so escape them all; but the weak and cowardly shrinking
of the flesh is one thing, and the well-considered and reasonable persuasion
of the soul quite another. That death is not to be judged an evil which is
the end of a good life; for death becomes evil only by the retribution which
follows it. They, then, who are destined to die, need not be careful to inquire
what death they are to die, but into what place death will usher them. And
since Christians are well aware that the death of the godly pauper whose sores
the dogs licked was far better than of the wicked rich man who lay in purple
and fine linen, what harm could these terrific deaths do to the dead who had
lived well?
CHAP. 12.--OF THE BURIAL OF THE DEAD: THAT THE DENIAL OF IT TO CHRISTIANS
DOES THEM NO INJURY.(2)
Further
still, we are reminded that in such a carnage as then occurred, the bodies
could not even
be buried.
But godly confidence is not appalled by so
ill-omened a circumstance; for the faithful bear in mind that assurance has
been given that not a hair of their head shall perish, and that, therefore,
though they even be devoured by beasts, their blessed resurrection will not
hereby be hindered. The Truth would nowise have said, "Fear not them which
kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul,"(3) if anything whatever
that an enemy could do to the body of the slain could be detrimental to the
future life. Or will some one perhaps take so absurd a position as to contend
that those who kill the body are not to be feared before death, and lest they
kill the body, but after death, lest they deprive it of burial? If this be
so, then that is false which Christ says, "Be not afraid of them that
kill the body, and after that have no more that they can do;"(4) for it
seems they can do great injury to the dead body. Far be it from us to suppose
that the Truth can be thus false. They who kill the body are said "to
do something," because the deathblow is felt, the body still having sensation;
but after that, they have no more that they can do, for in the slain body there
is no sensation. And so there are indeed many bodies of Christians lying unburied;
but no one has separated them from heaven, nor froth that earth which is all
filled with the presence of Him who knows whence He will raise again what He
created. It is said, indeed, in the Psalm: "The dead bodies of Thy servants
have they given to be meat unto the fowls of the heaven, the flesh of Thy saints
unto the beasts of the earth. Their blood have they shed like water round about
Jerusalem; and there was none to bury them."(5) But this was said rather
to exhibit the cruelty of those who did these things, than the misery of those
who suffered them. To the eyes of men this appears a harsh and doleful lot,
yet "precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of His saints."(6)
Wherefore all these last offices and ceremonies that concern the dead, the
careful funeral arrangements, and the equipment of the tomb, and the pomp of
obsequies, are rather the solace of the living than the comfort of the dead.
If a costly burial does any good to a wicked man, a squalid burial, or none
at all, may harm the godly. His crowd of domestics furnished the purple-clad
Dives with a funeral gorgeous in the eye of man; but in the sight of God that
was a more sumptuous funeral which the ulcerous pauper received at the hands
of the angels, who did not carry him out to a marble tomb, but bore him aloft
to Abraham's bosom.
The men
against whom I have undertaken to defend the city of God laugh at all this.
But even their
own philosophers(7)
have despised a careful burial;
and often whole armies have fought and fallen for their earthly country without
caring to inquire whether they would be left exposed on the field of battle,
or become the food of wild beasts. Of this noble disregard of sepulture poetry
has well said: "He who has no tomb has the sky for his vault."(1)
How much less ought they to insult over the unburied bodies of Christians,
to whom it has been promised that the flesh itself shall be restored, and the
body formed anew, all the members of it being gathered not only from the earth,
but from the most secret recesses of any other of the elements in which the
dead bodies of men have lain hid!
CHAP. 13.--REASONS FOR BURYING THE BODIES OF THE SAINTS.
Nevertheless the bodies of the dead are not on this account to be despised
and left unburied; least of all the bodies of the righteous and faithful, which
have been used by the Holy Spirit as His organs and instruments for all good
works. For if the dress of a father, or his ring, or anything he wore, be precious
to his children, in proportion to the love they bore him, with how much more
reason ought we to care for the bodies of those we love, which they wore far
more closely and intimately than any clothing! For the body is not an extraneous
ornament or aid, but a part of man's very nature. And therefore to the righteous
of ancient times the last offices were piously rendered, and sepulchres provided
for them, and obsequies celebrated;(2) and they themselves, while yet alive,
gave commandment to their sons about the burial, and, on occasion, even about
the removal of their bodies to some favorite place.(3) And Tobit, according
to the angel's testimony, is commended, and is said to have pleased God by
burying the dead.(4) Our Lord Himself, too, though He was to rise again the
third day, applauds, and commends to our applause, the good work of the religious
woman who poured precious ointment over His limbs, and did it against His burial.(5)
And the Gospel speaks with commendation of those who were careful to take down
His body from the cross, and wrap it lovingly in costly cerements, and see
to its burial.(6) These instances certainly do not prove that corpses have
any feeling; but they show that God's providence extends even to the bodies
of the dead, and that such pious offices are pleasing to Him, as cherishing
faith in the resurrection. And we may also draw from them this wholesome lesson,
that if God does not forget even any kind office which loving care pays to
the unconscious dead, much more does He reward the charity we exercise towards
the living. Other things, indeed, which the holy patriarchs said of the burial
and removal of their bodies, they meant to be taken in a prophetic sense; but
of these we need not here speak at large, what we have already said being sufficient.
But if the want of those things which are necessary for the support of the
living, as food and clothing, though painful and trying, does not break down
the fortitude and virtuous endurance of good men, nor eradicate piety from
their souls, but rather renders it more fruitful, how much less can the absence
of the funeral, and of the other customary attentions paid to the dead, render
those wretched who are already reposing in the hidden abodes of the blessed
! Consequently, though in the sack of Rome and of other towns the dead bodies
of the Christians were deprived of these last offices, this is neither the
fault of the living, for they could not render them; nor an infliction to the
dead, for they cannot feel the loss.
CHAP. 14.--OF THE CAPTIVITY OF THE SAINTS, AND THAT DIVINE CONSOLATION NEVER
FAILED THEM THEREIN.
But, say they, many Christians were even led away captive. This indeed were
a most pitiable fate, if they could be led away to any place where they could
not find their God. But for this calamity also sacred Scripture affords great
consolation. The three youths(7) were captives; Daniel was a captive; so were
other prophets: and God, the comforter, did not fail them. And in like manner
He has not failed His own people in the power of a nation which, though barbarous,
is yet human,--He who did not abandon the prophet(8) in the belly of a monster.
These things, indeed, are turned to ridicule rather than credited by those
with whom we are debating; though they believe what they read in their own
books, that Arion of Methymna, the famous lyrist,(9) when he was thrown overboard,
was received on a dolphin's back and carried to land. But that story of ours
about the prophet Jonah is far more incredible,--more incredible because more
marvellous, and more marvellous because a greater exhibition of power.
CHAP. 15.--OF REGULUS, IN WHOM WE HAVE AN EXAMPLE OF THE VOLUNTARY ENDURANCE
OF CAPTIVITY FOR THE SAKE OF RELIGION; WHICH YET DID NOT PROFIT HIM, THOUGH
HE WAS A WORSHIPPER OF THE GODS.
But among their own famous men they have a very noble example of the voluntary
endurance of captivity in obedience to a religious scruple. Marcus Attilius
Regulus, a Roman general, was a prisoner in the hands of the Carthaginians.
But they, being more anxious to exchange their prisoners with the Romans than
to keep them, sent Regulus as a special envoy with their own embassadors to
negotiate this exchanges but bound him first with an oath, that if he failed
to accomplish their wish, he would return to Carthage. He went and persuaded
the senate to the opposite course, because he believed it was not for the advantage
of the Roman republic to make an exchange of prisoners. After he had thus exerted
his influence, the Romans did not compel him to return to the enemy; but what
he had sworn he voluntarily performed. But the Carthaginians put him to death
with refined, elaborate, and horrible tortures. They shut him up in a narrow
box, in which he was compelled to stand, and in which finely sharpened nails
were fixed all round about him, so that he could not lean upon any part of
it without intense pain; and so they killed him by depriving him of sleep.(1)
With justice, indeed, do they applaud the virtue which rose superior to so
frightful a fate. However, the gods he swore by were those who are now supposed
to avenge the prohibition of their worship, by inflicting these present calamities
on the human race. But if these gods, who were worshipped specially in this
behalf, that they might confer happiness in this life, either willed or permitted
these punishments to be inflicted on one who kept his oath to them, what more
cruel punishment could they in their anger have inflicted on a perjured person?
But why may I not draw from my reasoning a double inference? Regulus certainly
had such reverence for the gods, that for his oath's sake he would neither
remain in his own land nor go elsewhere, but without hesitation returned to
his bitterest enemies. If he thought that this course would be advantageous
with respect to this present life, he was certainly much deceived, for it brought
his life to a frightful termination. By his own example, in fact, he taught
that the gods do not secure the temporal happiness of their worshippers; since
he himself, who was devoted to their worship, as both conquered in battle and
taken prisoner, and then, because he refused to act in violation of the oath
he had sworn by them, was tortured and put to death by a new, and hitherto
unheard of, and all too horrible kind of punishment. And on the supposition
that the worshippers of the gods are rewarded by felicity in the life to come,
why, then, do they calumniate the influence of Christianity? why do they assert
that this disaster has overtaken the city because it has ceased to worship
its gods, since, worship them as assiduously as it may, it may yet be as unfortunate
as Regulus was? Or will some one carry so wonderful a blindness to the extent
of wildly attempting, in the face of the evident truth, to contend I that though
one man might be unfortunate, though a worshipper of the gods, yet a whole
city could not be so? That is to say, the power of their gods is better adapted
to preserve multitudes than individuals,--as if a multitude were not composed
of individuals.
But if they say that M. Regulus, even while a prisoner and enduring these
bodily torments, might yet enjoy the blessedness of a virtuous soul,(2) then
let them recognize that true virtue by which a city also may be blessed. For
the blessedness of a community and of an individual flow from the same source;
for a community is nothing else than a harmonious collection of individuals.
So that I am not concerned meantime to discuss what kind of virtue Regulus
possessed; enough, that by his very noble example they are forced to own that
the gods are to be worshipped not for the sake of bodily comforts or external
advantages; for he preferred to lose all such things rather than offend the
gods by whom he had sworn. But what can we make of men who glory in having
such a citizen, but dread having a city like him? If they do not dread this,
then let them acknowledge that some such calamity as befell Regulus may also
befall a community, though they be worshipping their gods as diligently as
he; and let them no longer throw the blame of their misfortunes on Christianity.
But as our present concern is with those Christians who were taken prisoners,
let those who take occasion from this calamity to revile our most wholesome
religion in a fashion not less imprudent than impudent, consider this and hold
their peace; for if it was no reproach to their gods that a most punctilious
worshipper of theirs should, for the sake of keeping his oath to them, be deprived
of his native land without hope of finding another, and fall into the hands
of his enemies, and be put to death by a long-drawn and exquisite torture,
much less ought the Christian name to be charged with the captivity of those
who believe in its power, since they, in confident expectation of a heavenly
country, know that they are pilgrims even in their own homes.
CHAP. 16.--OF THE VIOLATION OF THE CONSECRATED AND OTHER CHRISTIAN VIRGINS,
TO WHICH THEY WERE SUBJECTED IN CAPTIVITY AND TO WHICH THEIR OWN WILL GAVE
NO CONSENT; AND WHETHER THIS CONTAMINATED THEIR SOULS.
But they fancy they bring a conclusive charge against Christianity, when they
aggravate the horror of captivity by adding that not only wives and unmarried
maidens, but even consecrated virgins, were violated. But truly, with respect
to this, it is not Christian faith, nor piety, nor even the virtue of chastity,
which is hemmed into any difficulty; the only difficulty is so to treat the
subject as to satisfy at once modesty and reason. And in discussing it we shall
not be so careful to reply to our accusers as to comfort our friends. Letthis,
therefore, in the first place, be laid down as an unassailable position, that
the virtue which makes the life good has its throne in the soul, and thence
rules the members of the body, which becomes holy in virtue of the holiness
of the will; and that while the will remains firm and unshaken, nothing that
another person does with the body, or upon the body, is any fault of the person
who suffers it, so long as he cannot escape it without sin. But as not only
pain may be inflicted, but lust gratified on the body of another, whenever
anything of this latter kind takes place, shame invades even a thoroughly pure
spirit from which modesty has not departed,--shame, lest that act which could
not be suffered without some sensual pleasure, should be believed to have been
committed also with some assent of the will.
CHAP. 17.--OF SUICIDE COMMITTED THROUGH FEAR OF PUNISHMENT OR DISHONOR.
And consequently, even if some of these virgins killed themselves to avoid
such disgrace, who that has any human feeling would refuse to forgive them.?
And as for those who would not put an end to their lives, lest they might seem
to escape the crime of another by a sin of their own, he who lays this to their
charge as a great wickedness is himself not guiltless of the fault of folly.
For if it is not, lawful to take the law into our own hands, and slay even
a guilty person, whose death no public sentence has warranted, then certainly
he who kills himself is a homicide, and so much the guiltier of his own death,
as he was more innocent of that offence for which he doomed himself to die.
Do we justly execrate the deed of Judas, and does truth itself pronounce that
by hanging himself he rather aggravated than expiated the guilt of that most
iniquitous betrayal, since, by despairing of God's mercy in his sorrow that
wrought death, he left to himself no place for a healing penitence? How much
more ought he to abstain from laying violent hands on himself who has done
nothing worthy of such a punishment! For Judas, when he killed himself, killed
a wicked man; but he passed from this life chargeable not only with the death
of Christ, but with his own: for though he killed himself on account of his
crime, his killing himself was another crime. Why, then, should a man who has
done no ill do ill to himself, and by killing himself kill the innocent to
escape another's guilty act, and perpetrate upon himself a sin of his own,
that the sin of another may not be perpetrated on him?
CHAP. 18.--OF THE VIOLENCE WHICH MAY BE DONE TO THE BODY BY ANOTHER'S LUST,
WHILE THE MIND REMAINS INVIOLATE.
But is there a fear that even another's lust may pollute the violated? It
will not pollute, if it be another's: if it pollute, it is not another's, but
is shared also by the polluted. But since purity is a virtue of the soul, and
has for its companion virtue, the fortitude which will rather endure all ills
than consent to evil; and since no one, however magnanimous and pure, has always
the disposal of his own body, but can control only the consent and refusal
of his will, what sane man can suppose that, if his body be seized and forcibly
made use of to satisfy the lust of another, he thereby loses his purity? For
if purity can be thus destroyed, then assuredly purity is no virtue of the
soul; nor can it be numbered among those good things by which the life is made
good, but among the good things of the body, in the same category as strength,
beauty, sound and unbroken health, and, in short, all such good things as may
be diminished without at all diminishing the goodness and rectitude of our
life. But if purity be nothing better than these, why should the body be perilled
that it may be preserved? If, on the other hand, it belongs to the soul, then
not even when the body is violated is it lost. Nay more, the virtue of holy
continence, when it resists the uncleanness of carnal lust, sanctifies even
the body, and therefore when this continence remains unsubdued, even the sanctity
of the body is preserved, because the will to use it holily remains, and, so
far as lies in the body itself, the power also.
For the sanctity of the body does not consist in the integrity of its members,
nor in their exemption from all touch; for they are exposed to various accidents
which do violence to and wound them, and the surgeons who administer relief
often perform operations that sicken the spectator. A midwife, suppose, has
(whether maliciously or accidentally, or through unskillfulness) destroyed
the virginity of some girl, while endeavoring to ascertain it: I suppose no
one is so foolish as to believe that, by this destruction of the integrity
of one organ, the virgin has lost anything even of her bodily sanctity. And
thus, so long as the soul keeps this firmness of purpose which sanctifies even
the body, the violence done by another's lust makes no impression on this bodily
sanctity, which is preserved intact by one's own persistent continence. Suppose
a virgin violates the oath she has sworn to God, and goes to meet her seducer
with the intention of yielding to him, shall we say that as she goes she is
possessed even of bodily sanctity, when already she has lost and destroyed
that sanctity of soul which sanctifies the body? Far be it from us to so misapply
words. Let us rather draw this conclusion, that while the sanctity of the soul
remains even when the body is violated, the sanctity of the body is not lost;
and that, in like manner, the sanctity of the body is lost when the sanctity
of the soul is violated, though the body itself remains intact. And therefore
a woman who has been violated by the sin of another, and without any consent
of her own, has no cause to put herself to death; much less has she cause to
commit suicide in order to avoid such violation, for in that case she commits
certain homicide to prevent a crime which is uncertain as yet, and not her
own.
CHAP. 19.--OF LUCRETIA, WHO PUT AN END TO HER LIFE BECAUSE OF THE OUTRAGE
DONE HER.
This,
then, is our position, and it seems sufficiently lucid. We maintain that
when a woman is violated
while
her soul admits no consent to the iniquity,
but remains inviolably chaste, the sin is not hers, but his who violates her.
But do they against whom we have to defend not only the souls, but the sacred
bodies too of these outraged Christian captives,--do they, perhaps, dare to
dispute our position? But all know how loudly they extol the purity of Lucretia,
that noble matron of ancient Rome. When King Tarquin's son had violated her
body, she made known the wickedness of this young profligate to her husband
Collatinus, and to Brutus her kinsman, men of high rank and full of courage,
and bound them by an oath to avenge it. Then, heart-sick, and unable to bear
the shame, she put an end to her life. What shall we call her? An adulteress,
or chaste? There is no question which she was. Not more happily than truly
did a declaimer say of this sad occurrence: "Here was a marvel: there
were two, and only one committed adultery." Most forcibly and truly spoken.
For this declaimer, seeing in the union of the two bodies the foul lust of
the one, and the chaste will of the other, and giving heed not to the contact
of the bodily members, but to the wide diversity of their souls, says: "There
were two, but the adultery was committed only by one."
But how is it, that she who was no partner to the crime bears the heavier
punishment of the two? For the adulterer was only banished along with his father;
she suffered the extreme penalty. If that was not impurity by which she was
unwillingly ravished, then this is not justice by which she, being chaste,
is punished. To you I appeal, ye laws and judges of Rome. Even after the perpetration
of great enormities, you do not suffer the criminal to be slain untried. If,
then, one were to bring to your bar this case, and were to prove to you that
a woman not only untried, but chaste and innocent, had been killed, would you
not visit the murderer with punishment proportionably severe? This crime was
committed by Lucretia; that Lucretia so celebrated and landed slew the innocent,
chaste, outraged Lucretia. Pronounce sentence. But if you cannot, because there
does not appear any one whom you can punish, why do you extol with such unmeasured
laudation her who slew an innocent and chaste woman? Assuredly you will find
it impossible to defend her before the judges of the realms below, if they
be such as your poets are fond of representing them; for she is among those.
"Who
guiltless sent themselves to doom,
And all for loathing of the day,
In madness
threw their lives away."
And if she with the others wishes to return,
Fate bars the way: around their keep
The slow unlovely waters creep,
And bind
with ninefold chain."(1)
Or perhaps
she is not there, because she slew herself conscious of guilt, not of innocence?
She
herself alone
knows her reason; but what if she was betrayed
by the pleasure of the act, and gave some consent to Sextus, though so violently
abusing her, and then was so affected with remorse, that she thought death
alone could expiate her sin? Even though this were the case, she ought still
to have held her hand from suicide, if she could with her false gods have accomplished
a fruitful repentance. However, if such were the state of the case, and if
it were false that there were two, but one only committed adultery; if the
truth were that both were involved in it, one by open assault, the other by
secret consent, then she did not kill an innocent woman; and therefore her
erudite defenders may maintain that she is not among that class of the dwellers
below "who guiltless sent themselves to doom." But this case of Lucretia
is in such a dilemma, that if you extenuate the homicide, you confirm the adultery:
if you acquit her of adultery, you make the charge of homicide heavier; and
there is no way out of the dilemma, when one asks, If she was adulterous, why
praise her? if chaste, why slay her?
Nevertheless,
for our purpose of refuting those who are unable to comprehend what true
sanctity
is, and who
therefore insult over our outraged Christian
women, it is enough that in the instance of this noble Roman matron it was
said in her praise, "There were two, but the adultery was the crime of
only one." For Lucretia was confidently believed to be superior to the
contamination of any consenting thought to the adultery. And accordingly, since
she killed herself for being subjected to an outrage in which she had no guilty
part, it is obvious that this act of hers was prompted not by the love of purity,
but by the overwhelming burden of her shame. She was ashamed that so foul a
crime had been perpetrated upon her, though without her abetting; and this
matron, with the Roman love of glory in her veins, was seized with a proud
dread that, if she continued to live, it would be supposed she willingly did
not resent the wrong that had been done her. She could not exhibit to men her
conscience but she judged that her self-inflicted punishment would testify
her state of mind; and she burned with shame at the thought that her patient
endurance of the foul affront that another had done her, should be construed
into complicity with him. Not such was the decision of the Christian women
who suffered as she did, and yet survive. They declined to avenge upon themselves
the guilt of others, and so add crimes of their own to those crimes in which
they had no share. For this they would have done had their shame driven them
to homicide, as the lust of their enemies had driven them to adultery. Within
their own souls, in the witness of their own conscience, they enjoy the glory
of chastity. In the sight of God, too, they are esteemed pure, and this contents
them; they ask no more: it suffices them to have opportunity of doing good,
and they decline to evade the distress of human suspicion, lest they thereby
deviate from the divine law.
CHAP. 20.--THAT CHRISTIANS HAVE NO AUTHORITY FOR COMMITTING SUICIDE IN ANY
CIRCUMSTANCES WHATEVER.
It is
not without significance, that in no passage of the holy canonical books
there can be found either
divine precept or permission to take away our own
life, whether for the sake of entering on the enjoyment of immortality, or
of shunning, or ridding ourselves of anything whatever. Nay, the law, rightly
interpreted, even prohibits suicide, where it says, "Thou shalt not kill." This
is proved especially by the omission of the words "thy neighbor," which
are inserted when false witness is forbidden: "Thou shalt not bear false
witness against thy neighbor." Nor yet should any one on this account
suppose he has not broken this commandment if he has borne false witness only
against himself. For the love of our neighbor is regulated by the love of ourselves,
as it is written, "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." If,
then, he who makes false statements about himself is not less guilty of bearing
false witness than if he had made them to the injury of his neighbor; although
in the commandment prohibiting false witness only his neighbor is mentioned,
and persons taking no pains to understand it might suppose that a man was allowed
to be a false witness to his own hurt; how much greater reason have we to understand
that a man may not kill himself, since in the commandment," Thou shalt
not kill," there is no limitation added nor any exception made in favor
of any one, and least of all in favor of him on whom the command is laid! And
so some attempt to extend this command even to beasts and cattle, as if it
forbade us to take life from any creature. But if so, why not extend it also
to the plants, and all that is rooted in and nourished by the earth? For though
this class of creatures have no sensation, yet they also are said to live,
and consequently they can die; and therefore, if violence be done them, can
be killed. So, too, the apostle, when speaking of the seeds of such things
as these, says, "That which thou sowest is not quickened except it die;" and
in the Psalm it is said, "He killed their vines with hail." Must
we therefore reckon it a breaking of this commandment, "Thou shalt not
kill," to pull a flower? Are we thus insanely to countenance the foolish
error of the Manichaeans? Putting aside, then, these ravings, if, when we say,
Thou shalt not kill, we do not understand this of the plants, since they have
no sensation, nor of the irrational animals that fly, swim, walk, or creep,
since they are dissociated from us by their want of reason, and are therefore
by the just appointment of the Creator subjected to us to kill or keep alive
for our own uses; if so, then it remains that we understand that commandment
simply of man. The commandment is, "Thou shall not kill man;" therefore
neither another nor yourself, for he who kills himself still kills nothing
else than man.
CHAP. 21.--OF THE CASES IN WHICH WE MAY PUT MEN TO DEATH WITHOUT INCURRING
THE GUILT OF MURDER.
However,
there are some exceptions made by the divine authority to its own law, that
men may not
be put to death.
These exceptions are of two kinds, being
justified either by a general law, or by a special commission granted for a
time to some individual. And in this latter case, he to whom authority is delegated,
and who is but the sword in the hand of him who uses it, is not himself responsible
for the death he deals. And, accordingly, they who have waged war in obedience
to the divine command, or in conformity with His laws, have represented in
their persons the public justice or the wisdom of government, and in this capacity
have put to death wicked men; such persons have by no means violated the commandment, "Thou
shalt not kill." Abraham indeed was not merely deemed guiltless of cruelty,
but was even applauded for his piety, because he was ready to slay his son
in obedience to God, not to his own passion. And it is reasonably enough made
a question, whether we are to esteem it to have been in compliance with a command
of God that Jephthah killed his daughter, because she met him when he had vowed
that he would sacrifice to God whatever first met him as he returned victorious
from battle. Samson, too, who drew down the house on himself and his foes together,
is justified only on this ground, that the Spirit who wrought wonders by him
had given him secret instructions to do this. With the exception, then, of
these two classes of cases, which are justified either by a just law that applies
generally, or by a special intimation from God Himself, the fountain of all
justice, whoever kills a man, either himself or another, is implicated in the
guilt of murder.
CHAP. 22. -- THAT SUICIDE CAN NEVER BE PROMPTED BY MAGNANIMITY.
But they who have laid violent hands on themselves are perhaps to be admired
for their greatness of soul, though they cannot be applauded for the soundness
of their judgment. However, if you look at the matter more closely, you will
scarcely call it greatness of soul, which prompts a man to kill himself rather
than bear up against some hardships of fortune, or sins m which he is not implicated.
Is it not rather proof of a feeble mind, to be unable to bear either the pains
of bodily servitude or the foolish opinion of the vulgar? And is not that to
be pronounced the greater mind, which rather faces than flees the ills of life,
and which, in comparison of the light and purity of conscience, holds in small
esteem the judgment of men, and specially of the vulgar, which is frequently
involved in a mist of error? And, therefore, if suicide is to be esteemed a
magnanimous act, none can take higher rank for magnanimity than that Cleombrotus,
who (as the story goes), when he had read Plato's book in which he treats of
the immortality of the soul, threw himself from a wall, and so passed from
this life to that which he believed to be better. For he was not hard pressed
by calamity, nor by any accusation, false or true, which he could not very
well have lived down; there was, in short, no motive but only magnanimity urging
him to seek death, and break away from the sweet detention of this life. And
yet that this was a magnanimous rather than a justifiable action, Plato himself,
whom he had read, would have told him; for he would certainly have been forward
to commit, or at least to recommend suicide, had not the same bright intellect
which saw that the soul was immortal, discerned also that to seek immortality
by suicide was to be prohibited rather than encouraged.
Again,
it is said many have killed themselves to prevent an enemy doing so. But
we are not inquiring
whether
it has been done, but whether it ought to
have been done. Sound judgment is to be preferred even to examples, and indeed
examples harmonize with the voice of reason; but not all examples, but those
only which are distinguished by their piety, and are proportionately worthy
of imitation. For suicide we cannot cite the example of patriarchs, prophets,
or apostles; though our Lord Jesus Christ, when He admonished them to flee
from city to city if they were persecuted, might very well have taken that
occasion to advise them to lay violent hands on themselves, and so escape their
persecutors. But seeing He did not do this, nor proposed this mode of departing
this life, though He were addressing His own friends for whom He had promised
to prepare everlasting mansions, it is obvious that such examples as are produced
from the "nations that forget God," give no warrant of imitation
to the worshippers of the one true God.
CHAP. 23.--WHAT WE ARE TO THINK OF THE EXAMPLE OF CATO, WHO SLEW HIMSELF BECAUSE
UNABLE TO ENDURE CAESAR'S VICTORY.
Besides Lucretia, of whom enough has already been said, our advocates of suicide
have some difficulty in finding any other prescriptive example, unless it be
that of Cato, who killed himself at Utica. His example is appealed to, not
because he was the only man who did so, but because he was so esteemed as a
learned and excellent man, that it could plausibly be maintained that what
he did was and is a good thing to do. But of this action of his, what can I
say but that his own friends, enlightened men as he, prudently dissuaded him,
and therefore judged his act to be that of a feeble rather than a strong spirit,
and dictated not by honorable feeling forestalling shame, but by weakness shrinking
from hardships? Indeed, Cato condemns himself by the advice he gave to his
dearly loved son. For if it was a disgrace to live under Caesar's rule, why
did the father urge the son to this disgrace, by encouraging him to trust absolutely
to Caesar's generosity? Why did he not persuade him to die along with himself?
If Torquatus was applauded for putting his son to death, when contrary to orders
he had engaged, and engaged successfully, with the enemy, why did conquered
Cato spare his conquered son, though he did not spare himself? Was it more
disgraceful to be a victor contrary to orders, than to submit to a victor contrary
to the received ideas of honor? Cato, then, cannot have deemed it to be shameful
to live under Caesar's rule; for had he done so, the father's sword would have
delivered his son from this disgrace. The truth is, that his son, whom he both
hoped and desired would be spared by Caesar, was not more loved by him than
Caesar was envied the glory of pardoning him (as indeed Caesar himself is reported
to have said(1)); or if envy is too strong a word, let us say he was ashamed
that this glory should be his.
CHAP. 24.--THAT IN THAT VIRTUE IN WHICH REGULUS EXCELS CATO, CHRISTIANS ARE
PRE-EMINENTLY DISTINGUISHED.
Our opponents are offended at our preferring to Cato the saintly Job, who
endured dreadful evils in his body rather than deliver himself from all torment
by self-inflicted death; or other saints, of whom it is recorded in our authoritative
and trustworthy books that they bore captivity and the oppression of their
enemies rather than commit suicide. But their own books authorize us to prefer
to Marcus Cato, Marcus Regulus. For Cato had never conquered Caesar; and when
conquered by him, disdained to submit himself to him, and that he might escape
this submission put himself to death. Regulus, on the contrary, had formerly
conquered the Carthaginians, and in command of the army of Rome had won for
the Roman republic a victory which no citizen could bewail, and which the enemy
himself was constrained to admire; yet afterwards, when he in his turn was
defeated by them, he preferred to be their captive rather than to put himself
beyond their reach by suicide. Patient under the domination of the Carthaginians,
and constant in his love of the Romans, he neither deprived the one of his
conquered body, nor the other of his unconquered spirit. Neither was it love
of life that prevented him from killing himself. This was plainly enough indicated
by his unhesitatingly returning, on account of his promise and oath, to the
same enemies whom he had more grievously provoked by his words in the senate
than even by his arms in battle. Having such a contempt of life, and preferring
to end it by whatever torments excited enemies might contrive, rather than
terminate it by his own hand, he could not more distinctly have declared how
great a crime he judged suicide to be. Among all their famous and remarkable
citizens, the Romans have no better man to boast of than this, who was neither
corrupted by prosperity, for he remained a very poor man after winning such
victories; nor broken by adversity, for he returned intrepidly to the most
miserable end. But if the bravest and most renowned heroes, who had but an
earthly country to defend, and who, though they had but false gods, yet rendered
them a true worship, and carefully kept their oath to them; if these men, who
by the custom and right of war put conquered enemies to the sword, yet shrank
from putting an end to their own lives even when conquered by their enemies;
if, though they had no fear at all of death, they would yet rather suffer slavery
than commit suicide, how much rather must Christians, the worshippers of the
true God, the aspirants to a heavenly citizenship, shrink from this act, if
in God's providence they have been for a season delivered into the hands of
their enemies to prove or to correct them! And certainly, Christians subjected
to this humiliating condition will not be deserted by the Most High, who for
their sakes humbled Himself. Neither should they for get that they are bound
by no laws of war, nor military orders, to put even a conquered enemy to the
sword; and if a man may not put to death the enemy who has sinned, or may yet
sin against him, who is so infatuated as to maintain that he may kill himself
because an enemy has sinned, or is going to sin, against him?
CHAP.25. -- THAT WE SHOULD NOT ENDEAVOR BY SIN TO OBVIATE SIN.
But, we are told, there is ground to fear that, when the body is subjected
to the enemy's lust, the insidious pleasure of sense may entice the soul to
consent to the sin, and steps must be taken to prevent so disastrous a result.
And is not suicide the proper mode of preventing not only the enemy's sin,
but the sin of the Christian so allured? Now, in the first place, the soul
which is led by God and His wisdom, rather than by bodily concupiscence, will
certainly never consent to the desire aroused in its own flesh by another's
lust. And, at all events, if it be true, as the truth plainly declares, that
suicide is a detestable and damnable wickedness, who is such a fool as to say,
Let us sin now, that we may obviate a possible future sin; let us now commit
murder, lest we perhaps afterwards should commit adultery? If we are so controlled
by iniquity that innocence is out of the question, and we can at best but make
a choice of sins, is not a future and uncertain adultery preferable to a present
and certain murder? Is it not better to commit a wickedness which penitence
may heal, than a crime which leaves no place for healing contrition? I say
this for the sake of those men or women who fear they may be enticed into consenting
to their violator's lust, and think they should lay violent hands on themselves,
and so prevent, not another's sin, but their own. But far be it from the mind
of a Christian confiding in God, and resting in the hope of His aid; far be
it, I say, from such a mind to yield a shameful consent to pleasures of the
flesh, howsoever presented. And if that lustful disobedience, which still dwells
in our mortal members, follows its own law irrespective of our will, surely
its motions in the body of one who rebels against them are as blameless as
its motions in the body of one who sleeps.
CHAP. 26.--THAT IN CERTAIN PECULIAR CASES THE EXAMPLES OF THE SAINTS ARE NOT
TO BE FOLLOWED.
But, they
say, in the time of persecution some holy women escaped those who menaced
them with outrage,
by casting themselves
into rivers which they knew
would drown them; and having died in this manner, they are venerated in the
church catholic as martyrs. Of such persons I do not presume to speak rashly.
I cannot tell whether there may not have been vouchsafed to the church some
divine authority, proved by trustworthy evidences, for so honoring their memory:
it may be that it is so. It may be they were not deceived by human judgment,
but prompted by divine wisdom, to their act of self-destruction. We know that
this was the case with Samson. And when God enjoins any act, and intimates
by plain evidence that He has enjoined it, who will call obedience criminal?
Who will accuse so religious a submission? But then every man is not justified
in sacrificing his son to God, because Abraham was commendable in so doing.
The soldier who has slain a man in obedience to the authority under which he
is lawfully commissioned, is not accused of murder by any law of his state;
nay, if he has not slain him, it is then he is accused of treason to the state,
and of despising the law. But if he has been acting on his own authority, and
at his own impulse, he has in this case incurred the crime of shedding human
blood. And thus he is punished for doing without orders the very thing he is
punished for neglecting to do when he has been ordered. If the commands of
a general make so great a difference, shall the commands of God make none?
He, then, who knows it is unlawful to kill himself, may nevertheless do so
if he is ordered by Him whose commands we may not neglect. Only let him be
very sure that the divine command has been signified. As for us, we can become
privy to the secrets of conscience only in so far as these are disclosed to
us, and so far only do we judge: "No one knoweth the things of a man,
save the spirit of man which is in him. "(1) But this we affirm, this
we maintain, this we every way pronounce to be right, that no man ought to
inflict on himself voluntary death, for this is to escape the ills of time
by plunging into those of eternity; that no man ought to do so on account of
another man's sins, for this were to escape a guilt which could not pollute
him, by incurring great guilt of his own; that no man ought to do so on account
of his own past sins, for he has all the more need of this life that these
sins may be healed by repentance; that no man should put an end to this life
to obtain that better life we look for after death, for those who die by their
own hand have no better life after death.
CHAP. 27. -- WHETHER VOLUNTARY DEATH SHOULD BE SOUGHT IN ORDER TO AVOID SIN.
There
remains one reason for suicide which I mentioned before, and which is thought
a sound one,--namely,
to prevent
one's falling into sin either through
the blandishments of pleasure or the violence of pain. If this reason were
a good one, then we should be impelled to exhort men at once to destroy themselves,
as soon as they have been washed in the laver of regeneration, and have received
the forgiveness of all sin. Then is the time to escape all future sin, when
all past sin is blotted out. And if this escape be lawfully secured by suicide,
why not then specially? Why does any baptized person hold his hand from taking
his own life? Why does any person who is freed from the hazards of this life
again expose himself to them, when he has power so easily to rid himself of
them all, and when it is written, "He who loveth danger shall fall into
it?"(1) Why does he love, or at least face, so many serious dangers, by
remaining in this life from which he may legitimately depart? But is any one
so blinded and twisted in his moral nature, and so far astray from the truth,
as to think that, though a man ought to make away with himself for fear of
being led into sin by the oppression of one man, his master, he ought yet to
live, and so expose himself to the hourly temptations of this world, both to
all those evils which the oppression of one master involves, and to numberless
other miseries in which this life inevitably implicates us? What reason, then,
is there for our consuming time in those exhortations by which we seek to animate
the baptized, either to virginal chastity, or vidual continence, or matrimonial
fidelity, when we have so much more simple and compendious a method of deliverance
from sin, by persuading those who are fresh from baptism to put an end to their
lives, and so pass to their Lord pure and well-conditioned? If any one thinks
that such persuasion should be attempted, I say not he is foolish, but mad.
With what face, then, can he say to any man, "Kill yourself, lest to your
small sins you add a heinous sin, while you live under an unchaste master,
whose conduct is that of a barbarian?" How can he say this, if he cannot
without wickedness say, "Kill yourself, now that you are washed from all
your sins, lest you fall again into similar or even aggravated sins, while
you live in a world which has such [power to allure by its unclean pleasures,
to torment by its horrible cruelties, to overcome by its errors and terrors?" It
is wicked to say this; it is therefore wicked to kill oneself. For if there
could be any just cause of suicide, this were so. And since not even this is
so, there is none.
CHAP. 28.--BY WHAT JUDGMENT OF GOD THE ENEMY WAS PERMITTED TO INDULGE HIS
LUST ON THE BODIES OF CONTINENT CHRISTIANS.
Let not
your life, then, be a burden to you, ye faithful servants of Christ, though
your chastity
was made the
sport of your enemies. You have a grand and
true consolation, if you maintain a good conscience, and know that you did
not consent to the sins of those who were permitted to commit sinful outrage
upon you. And if you should ask why this permission was granted, indeed it
is a deep providence of the Creator and Governor of the world; and "unsearchable
are His judgments, and His ways past finding out." (2) Nevertheless, faithfully
interrogate your own souls, whether ye have not been unduly puffed up by your
integrity, and continence, and chastity; and whether ye have not been so desirous
of the human praise that is accorded to these virtues, that ye have envied
some who possessed them. I, for my part, do not know your hearts, and therefore
I make no accusation; I do not even hear what your hearts answer when you question
them. And yet, if they answer that it is as I have supposed it might be, do
not marvel that you have lost that by which you can win men's praise, and retain
that which cannot be exhibited to men. If you did not consent to sin, it was
because God added His aid to His grace that it might not be lost, and because
shame before men succeeded to human glory that it might not be loved. But in
both respects even the faint-hearted among you have a consolation, approved
by the one experience, chastened by the other; justified by the one, corrected
by the other. As to those whose hearts, when interrogated, reply that they
have never been proud of the virtue of virginity, widowhood, or matrimonial
chastity, but, condescending to those of low estate, rejoiced with trembling
in these gifts of God, and that they have never envied any one the like excellences
of sanctity and purity, but rose superior to human applause, which is wont
to be abundant in proportion to the rarity of the virtue applauded, and rather
desired that their own number be increased, than that by the smallness of their
numbers each of them should be conspicuous;--even such faithful women, I say,
must not complain that permission was given to the barbarians so grossly to
outrage them; nor must they allow themselves to believe that God overlooked
their character when He permitted acts which no one with impunity commits.
For some most flagrant and wicked desires are allowed free play at present
by the secret judgment of God, and are reserved to the public and final judgment.
Moreover, it is possible that those Christian women, who are unconscious of
any undue pride on account of their virtuous chastity, whereby they sinlessly
suffered the violence of their captors, had yet some lurking infirmity which
might have betrayed them into a proud and contemptuous bearing, had they not
been subjected to the humiliation that befell them in the taking of the city.
As, therefore, some men were removed by death, that no wickedness might change
their disposition, so these women were outraged lest prosperity should corrupt
their modesty. Neither those women then, who were already puffed up by the
circumstance that they were still virgins, nor those who might have been so
puffed up had they not been exposed to the violence of the enemy, lost their
chastity, but rather gained humility; the former were saved from pride already
cherished, the latter from pride that would shortly have grown upon them.
We must further notice that some of those sufferers may have conceived that
continence is a bodily good, and abides so long as the body is inviolate, and
did not understand that the purity both of the body and the soul rests on the
steadfastness of the will strengthened by God's grace, and cannot be forcibly
taken from an unwilling person. From this error they are probably now delivered.
For when they reflect how conscientiously they served God, and when they settle
again to the firm persuasion that He can in nowise desert those who so serve
Him, and so invoke His aid and when they consider, what they cannot doubt,
how pleasing to Him is chastity, they are shut up to the conclusion that He
could never have permitted these disasters to befall His saints, if by them
that saintliness could be destroyed which He Himself had bestowed upon them,
and delights to see in them.
CHAP. 29. --WHAT THE SERVANTS OF CHRIST SHOULD SAY IN REPLY TO THE UNBELIEVERS
WHO CAST IN THEIR TEETH THAT CHRIST DID NOT RESCUE THEM FROM THE FURY OF THEIR
ENEMIES.
The whole
family of God, most high and most true, has therefore a consolation of its
own,--a consolation
which
cannot deceive, and which has in it a surer
hope than the tottering and falling affairs of earth can afford. They will
not refuse the discipline of this temporal life, in which they are schooled
for life eternal; nor will they lament their experience of it, for the good
things of earth they use as pilgrims who are not detained by them, and its
ills either prove or improve them. As for those who insult over them in their
trials, and when ills befall them say, "Where is thy God ?"(1) we
may ask them where their gods are when they suffer the very calamities for
the sake of avoiding which they worship their gods, or maintain they ought
to be worshipped; for the family of Christ is furnished with its reply: our
God is everywhere present, wholly everywhere; not confined to any place. He
can be present unperceived, and be absent without moving; when He exposes us
to adversities, it is either to prove our perfections or correct our imperfections;
and in return for our patient endurance of the sufferings of time, He reserves
for us an everlasting reward. But who are you, that we should deign to speak
with you even about your own gods, much less about our God, who is "to
be feared above all gods? For all the gods of the nations are idols; but the
Lord made the heavens."(2)
CHAP. 30.-- THAT THOSE WHO COMPLAIN OF CHRISTIANITY REALLY DESIRE TO LIVE
WITHOUT RESTRAINT IN SHAMEFUL LUXURY.
If the famous Scipio Nasica were now alive, who was once your pontiff, and
was unanimously chosen by the senate, when, in the panic created by the Punic
war, they sought for the best citizen to entertain the Phrygian goddess, he
would curb this shamelessness of yours, though you would perhaps scarcely dare
to look upon the countenance of such a man. For why in your calamities do you
complain of Christianity, unless because you desire to enjoy your luxurious
license unrestrained, and to lead an abandoned and profligate life without
the interruption of any uneasiness or disaster? For certainly your desire for
peace, and prosperity, and plenty is not prompted by any purpose of using these
blessings honestly, that is to say, with moderation, sobriety, temperance,
and piety; for your purpose rather is to run riot in an endless variety of
sottish pleasures, and thus to generate from your prosperity a moral pestilence
which will prove a thousandfold more disastrous than the fiercest enemies.
It was such a calamity as this that Scipio, your chief pontiff, your best man
in the judgment of the whole senate, feared when he refused to agree to the
destruction of Carthage, Rome's rival and opposed Cato, who advised its destruction.
He feared security, that enemy of weak minds, and he perceived that a wholesome
fear would be a fit guardian for the citizens. And he was not mistaken; the
event proved how wisely he had spoken. For when Carthage was destroyed, and
the Korean republic delivered from its great cause of anxiety, a crowd of disastrous
evils forthwith resulted from the prosperous condition of things. First concord
was weakened, and destroyed by fierce and bloody seditions; then followed,
by a concatenation of baleful causes, civil wars, which brought in their train
such massacres, such bloodshed, such lawless and cruel proscription and plunder,
that those Romans who, in the days of their virtue, had expected injury only
at the hands of their enemies, now that their virtue was lost, suffered greater
cruelties at the hands of their fellow-citizens. The lust of rule, which with
other vices existed among the Romans in more unmitigated intensity than among
any other people, after it had taken possession of the more powerful few, subdued
under its yoke the rest, worn and wearied.
CHAP. 31.--BY WHAT STEPS THE PASSION FOR GOVERNING INCREASED AMONG THE ROMANS.
For at what stage would that passion rest when once it has lodged in a proud
spirit, until by a succession of advances it has reached even the throne. And
to obtain such advances nothing avails but unscrupulous ambition. But unscrupulous
ambition has nothing to work upon, save in a nation corrupted by avarice and
luxury. Moreover, a people becomes avaricious and luxurious by prosperity;
and it was this which that very prudent man Nasica was endeavouring to avoid
when he opposed the destruction of the greatest, strongest, wealthiest city
of Rome's enemy. He thought that thus fear would act as a curb on lust, and
that lust being curbed would not run riot in luxury, and that luxury being
prevented avarice would be at an end; and that these vices being banished,
virtue would flourish and increase the great profit of the state; and liberty,
the fit companion of virtue, would abide unfettered. For similar reasons, and
animated by the same considerate patriotism, that same chief pontiff of yours--I
still refer to him who was adjudged Rome's best man without one dissentient
voice--threw cold water on the proposal of the senate to build a circle of
seats round the theatre, and in a very weighty speech warned them against allowing
the luxurious manners of Greece to sap the Roman manliness, and persuaded them
not to yield to the enervating and emasculating influence of foreign licentiousness.
So authoritative and forcible were his words, that the senate was moved to
prohibit the use even of those benches which hitherto had been customarily
brought to the theatre for the temporary use of the citizens.(1) How eagerly
would such a man as this have banished from Rome the scenic exhibitions themselves,
had he dared to oppose the authority of those whom he supposed to be gods !
For he did not know that they were malicious devils; or if he did, he supposed
they should rather be propitiated than despised. For there had not yet been
revealed to the Gentiles the heavenly doctrine which should purify their hearts
by faith, and transform their natural disposition by humble godliness, and
turn them from the service of proud devils to seek the things that are in heaven,
or even above the heavens.
CHAP. 32.--OF THE ESTABLISHMENT OF SCENIC ENTERTAINMENTS.
Know then, ye who are ignorant of this, and ye who feign ignorance be reminded,
while you murmur against Him who has freed you from such rulers, that the scenic
games, exhibitions of shameless folly and license, were established at Rome,
not by men's vicious cravings, but by the appointment of your gods. Much more
pardonably might you have rendered divine honors to Scipio than to such gods
as these. The gods were not so moral as their pontiff. But give me now your
attention, if your mind, inebriated by its deep potations of error, can take
in any sober truth. The gods enjoined that games be exhibited in their honor
to stay a physical pestilence; their pontiff prohibited the theatre from being
constructed, to prevent a moral pestilence. If, then, there remains in you
sufficient mental enlightenment to prefer the soul to the body, choose whom
you will worship. Besides, though the pestilence was stayed, this was not because
the voluptuous madness of stage-plays had taken possession of a warlike people
hitherto accustomed only to tim games of the circus; but these astute and wicked
spirits, foreseeing that in due course the pestilence would shortly cease,
took occasion to infect, not the bodies, but the morals of their worshippers,
with a far more serious disease. And in this pestilence these gods find great
enjoyment, because it benighted the minds of men with so gross a darkness and
dishonored them with so foul a deformity, that even quite recently (will posterity
be able to credit it?) some of those who fled from the sack of Rome and found
refuge in Carthage, were so infected with this disease, that day after day
they seemed to contend with one another who should most madly run after the
actors in the theatres.
CHAP. 33.-- THAT THE OVERTHROW OF ROME HAS NOT CORRECTED THE VICES OF THE
ROMANS.
Oh infatuated men, what is this blindness, or rather madness, which possesses
you? How is it that while, as we hear, even the eastern nations are bewailing
your ruin, and while powerful states in the most remote parts of the earth
are mourning your fall as a public calamity, ye yourselves should be crowding
to the theatres, should be pouring into them and filling them; and, in short,
be playing a madder part now than ever before? This was the foul plague-spot,
this the wreck of virtue and honor that Scipio sought to preserve you from
when he prohibited the construction of theatres; this was his reason for desiring
that you might still have an enemy to fear, seeing as he did how easily prosperity
would corrupt and destroy you. He did not consider that republic flourishing
whose walls stand, but whose morals are in ruins. But the seductions of evil-minded
devils had more influence with you than the precautions of prudent men. Hence
the injuries you do, you will not permit to be imputed to you: but the injuries
you suffer, you impute to Christianity. Deprayed by good fortune, and not chastened
by adversity, what you desire in the restoration of a peaceful and secure state,
is not the tranquillity of the commonwealth, but the impunity of your own vicious
luxury. Scipio wished you to be hard pressed by an enemy, that you might not
abandon yourselves to luxurious manners; but so abandoned are you, that not
even when crushed by the enemy is your luxury repressed. You have missed the
profit of your calamity; you have been made most wretched, and have remained
most profligate.