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ST. AUGUSTIN
THE CITY OF GOD
BOOK XI.
ARGUMENT.
HERE BEGINS THE SECOND PART(1) OF THIS WORK, WHICH TREATS OF THE ORIGIN, HISTORY,
AND DESTINIES OF THE TWO CITIES, THE EARTHLY AND THE HEAVENLY. IN THE FIRST
PLACE, AUGUSTIN SHOWS IN THIS BOOK HOW THE TWO CITIES WERE FORMED ORIGINALLY,
BY THE SEPARATION OF THE GOOD AND BAD ANGELS; AND TAKES OCCASION TO TREAT OF
THE CREATION OF THE WORLD, AS IT IS DESCRIBED IN HOLY SCRIPTURE IN THE BEGINNING
OF THE BOOK OF GENESIS.
CHAP. 1--OF THIS PART OF THE WORK, WHEREIN WE BEGIN TO EXPLAIN THE ORIGIN
AND END OF THE TWO CITIES.
The City
Of God we speak of is the same to which testimony is borne by that Scripture,
which excels
all
the writings of all nations by its divine authority,
and has brought under its influence all kinds of minds, and this not by a casual
intellectual movement, but obviously by an express providential arrangement.
For there it is written, "Glorious things are spoken of thee, O city of
God."(2) And in another psalm we read, "Great is the Lord, and greatly
to be praised in the city of our God, in the mountain of His holiness, increasing
the joy of the whole earth."(3) And, a little after, in the same psalm, "As
we have heard, so have we seen in the city of the Lord of hosts, in the city
of our God. God has established it for ever." And in another, "There
is a river the streams whereof shall make glad the city of our God, the holy
place of the tabernacles of the Most High. God is in the midst of her, she
shall not be moved."(4) From these and similar testimonies, all of which
it were tedious to cite, we have learned that there is a city of God, and its
Founder has inspired us with a love which makes us covet its citizenship. To
this Founder of the holy city the citizens of the earthly city prefer their
own gods, not knowing that He is the God of gods, not of false, i.e., of impious
and proud gods, who, being deprived of His unchangeable and freely communicated
light, and so reduced to a kind of poverty-stricken power, eagerly grasp at
their own private privileges, and seek divine honors from their deluded subjects;
but of the pious and holy gods, who are better pleased to submit themselves
to one, than to subject many to themselves, and who would rather worship God
than be worshipped as God. But to the enemies of this city we have replied
in the ten preceding books, according to our ability and the help afforded
by our Lord and King. Now, recognizing what is expected of me, and not unmindful
of my promise, and relying, too, on the same succor, I will endeavor to treat
of the origin, and progress, and deserved destinies of the two cities (the
earthly and the heavenly, to wit), which, as we said, are in this present world
commingled, and as it were entangled together. And, first, I will explain how
the foundations of these two cities were originally laid, in the difference
that arose among the angels.
CHAP. 2.--OF THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD, TO WHICH NO MAN CAN ATTAIN SAVE THROUGH
THE MEDIATOR BETWEEN GOD AND MEN, THE MAN CHRIST JESUS.
It is a great and very rare thing for a man, after he has contemplated the
whole creation, corporeal and incorporeal, and has discerned its mutability,
to pass beyond it, and, by the continued soaring of his mind, to attain to
the unchangeable substance of God, and, in that height of contemplation, to
learn from God Himself that none but He has made all that is not of the divine
essence. For God speaks with a man not by means of some audible creature dinning
in his ears, so that atmospheric vibrations connect Him that makes with him
that hears the sound, nor even by means of a spiritual being with the semblance
of a body, such as we see in dreams or similar states; for even in this case
He speaks as if to the ears of the body, because it is by means of the semblance
of a body He speaks, and with the appearance of a real interval of space,--for
visions are exact representations of bodily objects. Not by these, then, does
God speak, but by the truth itself, if any one is prepared to hear with the
mind rather than with the body. For He speaks to that part of man which is
better than all else that is in him, and than which God Himself alone is better.
For since man is most properly understood (or, if that cannot be, then, at
least, believed) to be made in God's image, no doubt it is that part of him
by which he rises above those lower parts he has in common with the beasts,
which brings him nearer to the Supreme. But since the mind itself, though naturally
capable of reason and intelligence is disabled by besotting and inveterate
vices not merely from delighting and abiding in, but even from tolerating His
unchangeable light, until it has been gradually healed, and renewed, and made
capable of such felicity, it had, in the first place, to be impregnated with
faith, and so purified. And that in this faith it might advance the more confidently
towards the truth, the truth itself, God, God's Son, assuming humanity without
destroying His divinity,(1) established and founded this faith, that there
might be a way for man to man's God through a God-man. For this is the Mediator
between God and men, the man Christ Jesus. For it is as man that He is the
Mediator and the Way. Since, if the way lieth between him who goes, and the
place whither he goes, there is hope of his reaching it; but if there be no
way, or if he know not where it is, what boots it to know whither he should
go? Now the only way that is infallibly secured against all mistakes, is when
the very same person is at once God and man, God our end, man our way.(2)
CHAP. 3.--OF THE AUTHORITY OF THE CANONICAL SCRIPTURES COMPOSED BY THE DIVINE
SPIRIT.
This Mediator, having spoken what He judged sufficient first by the prophets,
then by His own lips, and afterwards by the apostles, has besides produced
the Scripture which is called canonical, which has paramount authority, and
to which we yield assent in all matters of which we ought not to be ignorant,
and yet cannot know of ourselves. For if we attain the knowledge of present
objects by the testimony of our own senses,(3) whether internal or external,
then, regarding objects remote from our own senses, we need others to bring
their testimony, since we cannot know them by our own, and we credit the persons
to whom the objects have been or are sensibly present. Accordingly, as in the
case of visible objects which we have not seen, we trust those who have, (and
likewise with all sensible objects,) so in the case of things which are perceived
4 by the mind and spirit, i.e., which are remote from our own interior sense,
it behoves us to trust those who have seen them set in that incorporeal light,
or abidingly contemplate them.
CHAP. 4.--THAT THE WORLD IS NEITHER WITHOUT BEGINNING, NOR YET CREATED BY
A NEW DECREE OF GOD, BY WHICH HE AFTERWARDS WILLED WHAT HE HAD NOT BEFORE WILLED.
Of all
visible things, the world is the greatest; of all invisible, the greatest
is God. But, that
the world
is, we see; that God is, we believe. That God made
the world, we can believe from no one more safely than from God Himself. But
where have we heard Him? Nowhere more distinctly than in the Holy Scriptures,
where His prophet said, "In the beginning God created the heavens and
the earth." s Was the prophet present when God made the heavens and the
earth? No; but the wisdom of God, by whom all things were made, was there,(6)
and wisdom insinuates itself into holy souls, and makes them the friends of
God and His prophets, and noiselessly informs them of His works. They are taught
also by the angels of God, who always behold the face of the Father,(7) and
announce His will to whom it befits. Of these prophets was he who said and
wrote, "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth." And
so fit a witness was he of God, that the same Spirit of God, who revealed these
things to him, enabled him also so long before to predict that our faith also
would be forthcoming.
But why did God choose then to create the heavens and earth which up to that
time He had not made?(1) If they who put this question wish to make out that
the world is eternal and without beginning, and that consequently it has not
been made by God, they are strangely deceived, and rave in the incurable madness
of impiety. For, though the voices of the prophets were silent, the world itself,
by its well-ordered changes and movements, and by the fair appearance of all
visible things, bears a testimony of its own, both that it has been created,
and also that it could not have been created save by God, whose greatness and
beauty are unutterable and invisible. As for those(2) who own, indeed, that
it was made by God, and yet ascribe to it not a temporal but only a creational
beginning, so that in some scarcely intelligible way the world should always
have existed a created world they make an assertion which seems to them to
defend God from the charge of arbitrary hastiness, or of suddenly conceiving
the idea of creating the world as a quite new idea, or of casually changing
His will, though He be unchangeable. But I do not see how this supposition
of theirs can stand in other respects, and chiefly in respect of the soul;
for if they contend that it is co-eternal with God, they will be quite at a
loss to explain whence there has accrued to it new misery, which through a
previous eternity had not existed. For if they said that its happiness and
misery ceaselessly alternate, they must say, further, that this alternation
will continue for ever; whence will result this absurdity, that, though the
soul is called blessed, it is not so in this, that it foresees its own misery
and disgrace. And yet, if it does not foresee it, and supposes that it will
be neither disgraced nor wretched, but always blessed, then it is blessed because
it is deceived; and a more foolish statement one cannot make. But if their
idea is that the soul's misery has alternated with its bliss during the ages
of the past eternity, but that now, when once the soul, has been set free,
it will return henceforth no more to misery, they are nevertheless of opinion
that it has never been truly blessed before, but begins at last to enjoy a
new and uncertain happiness; that is to say, they must acknowledge that some
new thing, and that an important and signal thing, happens to the soul which
never in a whole past eternity happened it before. And if they deny that God's
eternal purpose included this new experience of the soul, they deny that He
is the Author of its blessedness, which is unspeakable impiety. If, on the
other hand, they say that the future blessedness of the soul is the result
of a new decree of God, how will they show that God is not chargeable with
that mutability which displeases them? Further, if they acknowledge that it
was created in time, but will never perish in time,--that it has, like number,(3)
a beginning but no end, --and that, therefore, having once made trial of misery,
and been delivered from it, it will never again return thereto, they will certainly
admit that this takes place without any violation of the immutable counsel
of God. Let them, then, in like manner believe regarding the world that it
too could be made in time, and yet that God, in making it, did not alter His
eternal design.
CHAP. 5.--THAT WE OUGHT NOT TO SEEK TO COMPREHEND THE INFINITE AGES OF TIME
BEFORE THE WORLD, NOR THE INFINITE REALMS OF SPACE.
Next, we must see what reply can be made to those who agree that God is the
Creator of the world, but have difficulties about the time of its creation,
and what reply, also, they can make to difficulties we might raise about the
place of its creation. For, as they demand why the world was created then and
no sooner, we may ask why it was created just here where it is, and not elsewhere.
For if they imagine infinite spaces of time before the world, during which
God could not have been idle, in like manner they may conceive outside the
world infinite realms of space, in which, if any one says that the Omnipotent
cannot hold His hand from working, will it not follow that they must adopt
Epicurus' dream of innumerable worlds? with this difference only, that he asserts
that they are formed and destroyed by the fortuitous movements of atoms, while
they will hold that they are made by God's hand, if they maintain that, throughout
the boundless immensity of space, stretching interminably in every direction
round the world, God cannot rest, and that the worlds which they suppose Him
to make cannot be destroyed. For here the question is with those who, with
ourselves, believe that God is spiritual, and the Creator of all existences
but Himself. As for others, it is a condescension to dispute with them on a
religious question, for they have acquired a reputation only among men who
pay divine honors to a number of gods, and have become conspicuous among the
other philosophers for no other reason than that, though they are still far
from the truth, they are near it in comparison with the rest. While these,
then, neither confine in any place, nor limit, nor distribute the divine substance,
but, as is worthy of God, own it to be wholly though spiritually present everywhere,
will they perchance say that this substance is absent from such immense spaces
outside the world, and is occupied in one only, (and that a very little one
compared with the infinity beyond), the one, namely, in which is the world?
I think they will not proceed to this absurdity. Since they maintain that there
is but one world, of vast material bulk, indeed, yet finite, and in its own
determinate position, and that this was made by the working of God, let them
give the same account of God's resting in the infinite times before the world
as they give of His resting in the infinite spaces outside of it. And as it
does not follow that God set the world in the very spot it occupies and no
other by accident rather than by divine reason, although no human reason can
comprehend why it was so set, and though there was no merit in the spot chosen
to give it the precedence of infinite others, so neither does it follow that
we should suppose that God was guided by chance when He created the world in
that and no earlier time, although previous times had been running by during
an infinite past, and though there was no difference by which one time could
be chosen in preference to another. But if they say that the thoughts of men
are idle when they conceive infinite places, since there is no place beside
the world, we reply that, by the same showing, it is vain to conceive of the
past times of God's rest, since there is no time before the world.
CHAP. 6.--THAT THE WORLD AND TIME HAD BOTH ONE BEGINNING, AND THE ONE DID
NOT ANTICIPATE THE OTHER.
For if
eternity and time are rightly distinguished by this, that time does not exist
without some
movement and
transition, while in eternity there is
no change, who does not see that there could have been no time had not some
creature been made, which by some motion could give birth to change,--the various
parts of which motion and change, as they cannot be simultaneous, succeed one
another,--and thus, in these shorter or longer intervals of duration, time
would begin? Since then, God, in whose eternity is no change at all, is the
Creator and Ordainer of time, I do not see how He can be said to have created
the world after spaces of time had elapsed, unless it be said that prior to
the world there was some creature by whose movement time could pass. And if
the sacred and infallible Scriptures say that in the beginning God created
the heavens and the earth, in order that it may be understood that He had made
nothing previously,--for if He had made anything before the rest, this thing
would rather be said to have been made "in the beginning,"--then
assuredly the world was made, not in time, but simultaneously with time. For
that which is made in time is made both after and before some time,--after
that which is past, before that which is future. But none could then be past,
for there was no creature by whose movements its duration could be measured.
But simultaneously with time the world was made, if in the world's creation
change and motion were created, as seems evident from the order of the first
six or seven days. For in these days the morning and evening are counted, until,
on the sixth day, all things which God then made were finished, and on the
seventh the rest of God was mysteriously and sublimely signalized. What kind
of days these were it is extremely difficult, or perhaps impossible for us
to conceive, and how much more to say!
CHAP. 7.--OF THE NATURE OF THE FIRST DAYS, WHICH ARE SAID TO HAVE HAD MORNING
AND EVENING, BEFORE THERE WAS A SUN.
We see,
indeed, that our ordinary days have no evening but by the setting, and no
morning but by the
rising,
of the sun; but the first three days of all
were passed without sun, since it is reported to have been made on the fourth
day. And first of all, indeed, light was made by the word of God, and God,
we read, separated it from the darkness, and called the light Day, and the
darkness Night; but what kind of light that was, and by what periodic movement
it made evening and morning, is beyond the reach of our senses; neither can
we understand how it was, and .yet must unhesitatingly believe it. For either
it was some material light, whether proceeding from the upper parts of the
world, far removed from our sight, or from the spot where the sun was afterwards
kindled; or under the name of light the holy city was signified, composed of
holy angels and blessed spirits, the city of which the apostle says, "Jerusalem
which is above is our eternal mother in heaven;"(1) and in another place, "For
ye are all the children of the light, and the children of the day; we are not
of the night, nor of darkness."' Yet in some respects we may appropriately
speak of a morning and evening of this day also. For the knowledge of the creature
is, in comparison of the knowledge of the Creator, but a twilight; and so it
dawns and breaks into morning when the creature is drawn to the praise and
love of the Creator; and night never falls when the Creator is not forsaken
through love of the creature. In fine, Scripture, when it would recount those
days in order, never mentions the word night. It never says, " Night was," but "The
evening and the morning were the first day." So of the second and the
rest. And, indeed, the knowledge of created things contemplated by themselves
is, so to speak, more colorless than when they are seen in the wisdom of God,
as in the art by which they were made. Therefore evening is a more suitable
figure than night; and yet, as I said, morning returns when the creature returns
to the praise and love of the Creator. When it does so in the knowledge of
itself, that is the first day; when in the knowledge of the firmament, which
is the name given to the sky between the waters above and those beneath, that
is the second day; when in the knowledge of the earth, and the sea, and all
things that grow out of the earth, that is the third day; when in the knowledge
of the greater and less luminaries, and all the stars, that is the fourth day;
when in the knowledge of all animals that swim in the waters and that fly in
the air, that is the fifth day; when in the knowledge of all animals that live
on the earth, and of man himself, that is the sixth day.(3)
CHAP. 8.--WHAT WE ARE TO UNDERSTAND OF GOD'S RESTING ON THE SEVENTH DAY, AFTER
THE SIX DAYS' WORK.
When it
is said that God rested on the seventh day from all His works, and hallowed
it, we are not
to conceive
of this in a childish fashion, as if work
were a toil to God, who "spake and it was done,"--spake by the spiritual
and eternal, not audible and transitory word. But God's rest signifies the
rest of those who rest in God, as the joy of a house means the joy of those
in the house who rejoice, though not the house, but something else, causes
the joy. How much more intelligible is such phraseology, then, if the house
itself, by its own beauty, makes the inhabitants joyful! For in this case we
not only call it joyful by that figure of speech in which the thing containing
is used for the thing contained (as when we say, "The theatres applaud," "The
meadows low," meaning that the men in the one applaud, and the oxen in
the other low), but also by that figure in which the cause is spoken of as
if it were the effect, as when a letter is said to be joyful, because it makes
its readers so. Most appropriately, therefore, the sacred narrative states
that God rested, meaning thereby that those rest who are in Him, and whom He
makes to rest. And this the prophetic narrative promises also to the men to
whom it speaks, and for whom it was written, that they themselves, after those
good works which God does in and by them, if they have managed by faith to
get near to God in this life, shall enjoy in Him eternal rest. This was pre-figured
to the ancient people of God by the rest enjoined in their sabbath law, of
which, in its own place, I shall speak more at large.
CHAP. 9.--WHAT THE SCRIPTURES TEACH US TO BELIEVE CONCERNING THE CREATION
OF THE ANGELS.
At present,
since I have undertaken to treat of the origin of the holy city, and first
of the holy
angels, who
constitute a large part of this city, and
indeed the more blessed part, since they have never been expatriated, I will
give myself to the task of explaining, by God's help, and as far as seems suitable,
the Scriptures which relate to this point. Where Scripture speaks of the world's
creation, it is not plainly said whether or when the angels were created; but
if mention of them is made, it is implicitly under the name of "heaven," when
it is said, "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth," or
perhaps rather under the name of "light," of which presently. But
that they were wholly omitted, I am unable to believe, because it is written
that God on the seventh day rested from all His works which He made; and this
very book itself begins, "In the beginning God created the heavens and
the earth," so that before heaven and earth God seems to have made nothing.
Since, therefore, He began with the heavens and the earth,--and the earth itself,
as Scripture adds, was at first invisible and formless, light not being as
yet made, and darkness covering the face of the deep (that is to say, covering
an undefined chaos of earth and sea, for where light is not, darkness must
needs be),--and then when all things, which are recorded to have been completed
in six days, were created and arranged, how should the angels be omitted, as
if they were not among the works of God, from which on the seventh day He rested?
Yet, though the fact that the angels are the work of God is not omitted here,
it is indeed not explicitly mentioned; but elsewhere Holy Scripture asserts
it in the clearest manner. For in the Hymn of the Three Children in the Furnace
it was said, "O all ye works of the Lord bless ye the Lord;"(1) and
among these works mentioned afterwards in detail, the angels are named. And
in the psalm it is said, "Praise ye the Lord from the heavens, praise
Him in the heights. Praise ye Him, all His angels; praise ye Him, all His hosts.
Praise ye Him, sun and moon; praise him, all ye stars of light. Praise Him,
ye heaven of heavens; and ye waters that be above the heavens. Let them praise
the name of the Lord; for He commanded, and they were created."(2) Here
the angels are most expressly and by divine authority said to have been made
by God, for of them among the other heavenly things it is said, "He commanded,
and they were created." Who, then, will be bold enough to suggest that
the angels were made after the six days' creation? If any one is so foolish,
his folly is disposed of by a scripture of like authority, where God says, "When
the stars were made, the angels praised me with a loud voice."(3) The
angels therefore existed before the stars; and the stars were made the fourth
day. Shall we then say that they were made the third day? Far from it; for
we know what was made that day. The earth was separated from the water, and
each element took its own distinct form, and the earth produced all that grows
on it. On the second day, then? Not even on this; for on it the firmament was
made between the waters above and beneath, and was called "Heaven," in
which firmament the stars were made on the fourth day. There is no question,
then, that if the angels are included in the works of God during these six
days, they are that light which was called "Day," and whose unity
Scripture signalizes by calling that day not the "first day," but "one
day."(4) For the second day, the third, and the rest are not other days;
but the same "one" day is repeated to complete the number six or
seven, so that there should be knowledge both of God's works and of His rest.
For when God said, "Let there be light, and there was light," if
we are justified in understanding in this light the creation of the angels,
then certainly they were created partakers of the eternal light which is the
unchangeable Wisdom of God, by which all things were made, and whom we call
the only-begotten Son of God; so that they, being illumined by the Light that
created them, might themselves become light and be called "Day," in
participation of that unchangeable Light and Day which is the Word of God,
by whom both themselves and all else were made. "The true Light, which
lighteth every man that cometh into the world,"(5)--this Light lighteth
also every pure angel, that he may be light not in himself, but in God; from
whom if an angel turn away, he becomes impure, as are all those who are called
unclean spirits, and are no longer light in the Lord, but darkness in themselves,
being deprived of the participation of Light eternal. For evil has no positive
nature; but the loss of good has received the name "evil."(6)
CHAP. 10.--OF THE SIMPLE AND UNCHANGEABLE TRINITY, FATHER, SON, AND HOLY GHOST,
ONE GOD, IN WHOM SUBSTANCE AND QUALITY ARE IDENTICAL.
There
is, accordingly, a good which is alone simple, and therefore alone unchangeable,
and this
is God. By this
Good have all others been created, but not simple,
and therefore not unchangeable. "Created," I say,--that is, made,
not begotten. For that which is begotten of the simple Good is simple as itself,
and the same as itself. These two we call the Father and the Son; and both
together with the Holy Spirit are one God; and to this Spirit the epithet Holy
is in Scripture, as it were, appropriated. And He is another than the Father
and the Son, for He is neither the Father nor the Son. I say "another," not "another
thing," because He is equally with them the simple Good, unchangeable
and co-eternal. And this Trinity is one God; and none the less simple because
a Trinity. For we do not say that the nature of the good is simple, because
the Father alone possesses it, or the Son alone, or the Holy Ghost alone; nor
do we say, with the Sabellian heretics, that it is only nominally a Trinity,
and has no real distinction of persons; but we say it is simple, because it
is what it has, with the exception of the relation of the persons to one another.
For, in regard to this relation, it is true that the Father has a Son, and
yet is not Himself the Son; and the Son has a Father, and is not Himself the
Father. But, as regards Himself, irrespective of relation to the other, each
is what He has; thus, He is in Himself living, for He has life, and is Himself
the Life which He has.
It is for this reason, then, that the nature of the Trinity is called simple,
because it has not anything which it can lose, and because it is not one thing
and its contents another, as a cup and the liquor, or a body and its color,
or the air and the light or heat of it, or a mind and its wisdom. For none
of these is what it has: the cup is not liquor, nor the body color, nor the
air light and heat, nor the mind wisdom. And hence they can be deprived of
what they have, and can be turned or changed into other qualities and states,
so that the cup may be emptied of the liquid of which it is full, the body
be discolored, the air darken, the mind grow silly. The incorruptible body
which is promised to the saints in the resurrection cannot, indeed, lose its
quality of incorruption, but the bodily substance and the quality of incorruption
are not the same thing. For the quality of incorruption resides entire in each
several part, not greater in one and less in another; for no part is more incorruptible
than another. The body, indeed, is itself greater in whole than in part; and
one part of it is larger, another smaller, yet is not the larger more incorruptible
than the smaller. The body, then, which is not in each of its parts a whole
body, is one thing; incorruptibility, which is throughout complete, is another
thing;--for every part of the incorruptible body, however unequal to the rest
otherwise, is equally incorrupt. For the hand, e.g., is not more incorrupt
than the finger because it is larger than the finger; so, though finger and
hand are unequal, their incorruptibility is equal. Thus, although incorruptibility
is inseparable from an incorruptible body, yet the substance of the body is
one thing, the quality of incorruption another. And therefore the body is not
what it has. The soul itself, too, though it be always wise (as it will be
eternally when it is redeemed), will be so by participating in the unchangeable
wisdom, which it is not; for though the air be never robbed of the light that
is shed abroad in it, it is not on that account the same thing as the light.
I do not mean that the soul is air, as has been supposed by some who could
not conceive a spiritual nature;(1) but, with much dissimilarity, the two things
have a kind of likeness, which makes it suitable to say that the immaterial
soul is illumined with the immaterial light of the simple wisdom of God, as
the material air is irradiated with material light, and that, as the air, when
deprived of this light, grows dark, (for material darkness is nothing else
than air wanting light,(2)) so the soul, deprived of the light of wisdom, grows
dark.
According
to this, then, those things which are essentially and truly divine are called
simple, because
in them quality and substance are identical, and
because they are divine, or wise, or blessed in themselves, and without extraneous
supplement. In Holy Scripture, it is true, the Spirit of wisdom is called "manifold"(3)
because it contains many things in it; but what it contains it also is, and
it being one is all these things. For neither are there many wisdoms, but one,
in which are untold and infinite treasures of things intellectual, wherein
are all invisible and unchangeable reasons of things visible and changeable
which were created by it.(4) For God made nothing unwittingly; not even a human
workman can be said to do so. But if He knew all that He made, He made only
those things which He had known. Whence flows a very striking but true conclusion,
that this world could not be known to us unless it existed, but could not have
existed unless it had been known to God.
CHAP. 11.--WHETHER THE ANGELS THAT FELL PARTOOK OF THE BLESSEDNESS WHICH THE
HOLY ANGELS HAVE ALWAYS ENJOYED FROM THE TIME OF THEIR CREATION.
And since
these things are so, those spirits whom we call angels were never at any
time or in any
way darkness,
but, as soon as they were made, were made
light; yet they were not so created in order that they might exist and live
in any way whatever, but were enlightened that they might live wisely and blessedly.
Some of them, having turned away from this light, have not won this wise and
blessed life, which is certainly eternal, and accompanied with the sure confidence
of its eternity; but they have still the life of reason, though darkened with
folly, and this they cannot lose even if they would. But who can determine
to what extent they were partakers of that wisdom before they fell? And how
shall we say that they participated in it equally with those who through it
are truly and fully blessed, resting in a true certainty of eternal felicity?
For if they had equally participated in this true knowledge, then the evil
angels would have remained eternally blessed equally with the good, because
they were equally expectant of it. For, though a life be never so long, it
cannot be truly called eternal if it is destined to have an end; for it is
called life inasmuch as it is lived, but eternal because it has no end. Wherefore,
although everything eternal is not therefore blessed (for hell-fire is eternal),
yet if no life can be truly and perfectly blessed except it be eternal, the
life of these angels was not blessed, for it was doomed to end, and therefore
not eternal, whether they knew it or not. In the one case rear, in the other
ignorance, prevented them from being blessed. And even if their ignorance was
not so great as to breed in them a wholly false expectation, but left them
wavering in uncertainty whether their good would be eternal or would some time
terminate, this very doubt concerning so grand a destiny was incompatible with
the plenitude of blessedness which we believe the holy angels enjoyed. For
we do not so narrow and restrict the application of the term "blessedness" as
to apply it to God only,(1) though doubtless He is so truly blessed that greater
blessedness cannot be; and, in comparison of His blessedness, what is that
of the angels, though, according to their capacity, they be perfectly blessed?
CHAP. 12.--A COMPARISON OF THE BLESSEDNESS OF THE RIGHTEOUS, WHO HAVE NOT
YET RECEIVED THE DIVINE REWARD, WITH THAT OF OUR FIRST PARENTS IN PARADISE.
And the angels are not the only members of the rational and intellectual creation
whom we call blessed. For who will take upon him to deny that those first men
in Paradise were blessed previously to sin, although they were uncertain how
long their blessedness was to last, and whether it would be eternal (and eternal
it would have been had they not sinned),--who, I say, will do so, seeing that
even now we not unbecomingly call those blessed whom we see leading a righteous
and holy life, in hope of immortality, who have no harrowing remorse of conscience,
but obtain readily divine remission of the sins of their present infirmity?
These, though they are certain that they shall be rewarded if they persevere,
are not certain that they will persevere. For what man can know that he will
persevere to the end in the exercise and increase of grace, unless he has been
certified by some revelation from Him who, in His just and secret judgment,
while He deceives none, informs few regarding this matter? Accordingly, so
far as present comfort goes, the first man in Paradise was more blessed than
any just man in this insecure state; but as regards the hope of future good,
every man who not merely supposes, but certainly knows that he shall eternally
enjoy the most high God in the company of angels, and beyond the reach of ill,--this
man, no matter what bodily torments afflict him, is more blessed than was he
who, even in that great felicity of Paradise, was uncertain of his fate.(2)
CHAP. 13.--WHETHER ALL THE ANGELS WERE SO CREATED IN ONE COMMON STATE OF FELICITY,
THAT THOSE WHO FELL WERE NOT AWARE THAT THEY WOULD FALL, AND THAT THOSE WHO
STOOD RECEIVED ASSURANCE OF THEIR OWN PERSEVERANCE AFTER THE RUIN OF THE FALLEN.
From all
this, it will readily occur to any one that the blessedness which an intelligent
being
desires
as its legitimate object results from a combination
of these two things, namely, that it uninterruptedly enjoy the unchangeable
good, which is God; and that it be delivered from all dubiety, and know certainly
that it shall eternally abide in the same enjoyment. That it is so with the
angels of light we piously believe; but that the fallen angels, who by their
own default lost that light, did not enjoy this blessedness even before they
sinned, reason bids us conclude. Yet if their life was of any duration before
they fell, we must allow them a blessedness of some kind, though not that which
is accompanied with foresight. Or, if it seems hard to believe that, when the
angels were created, some were created in ignorance either of their perseverance
or their fail, while others were most certainly assured of the eternity of
their felicity,--if it is hard to believe that they were not all from the beginning
on an equal footing, until these who are now evil did of their own will fall
away from the light of goodness, certainly it is much harder to believe that
the holy angels are now uncertain of their eternal blessedness, and do not
know regarding themselves as much as we have been able to gather regarding
them from the Holy Scriptures. For what catholic Christian does not know that
no new devil will ever arise among the good angels, as he knows that this present
devil will never again return into the fellowship of the good? For the truth
in the gospel promises to the saints and the faithful that they will be equal
to the angels of God; and it is also promised them that they will "go
away into life eternal."(1) But if we are certain that we shall never
lapse from eternal felicity, while they are not certain, then we shall not
be their equals, but their superiors. But as the truth never deceives, and
as we shall be their equals, they must be certain of their blessedness. And
because the evil angels could not be certain of that, since their blessedness
was destined to come to an end, it follows either that the angels were unequal,
or that, if equal, the good angels were assured of the eternity of their blessedness
after the perdition of the others; unless, possibly, some one may say that
the words of the Lord about the devil "He was a murderer from the beginning,
and abode not in the truth,"(2) are to be understood as if he was not
only a murderer from the beginning of the human race, when man, whom he could
kill by his deceit, was made, but also that he did not abide in the truth from
the time of his own creation, and was accordingly never blessed with the holy
angels, but refused to submit to his Creator, and proudly exulted as if in
a private lordship of his own, and was thus deceived and deceiving. For the
dominion of the Almighty cannot be eluded; and he who will not piously submit
himself to things as they are, proudly feigns, and mocks himself with a state
of things that does not exist; so that what the blessed Apostle John says thus
becomes intelligible: "The devil sinneth from the beginning,"(3)--that
is, from the time he was created he refused righteousness, which none but a
will piously subject to God can enjoy. Whoever adopts this opinion at least
disagrees with those heretics the Manichees, and with any other pestilential
sect that may suppose that the devil has derived from some adverse evil principle
a nature proper to himself. These persons are so befooled by error, that, although
they acknowledge with ourselves the authority of the gospels, they do not notice
that the Lord did not say, "The devil was naturally a stranger to the
truth," but "The devil abode not in the truth," by which He
meant us to understand that he had fallen from the truth, in which, if he had
abode, he would have become a partaker of it, and have remained in blessedness
along with the holy angels.(4)
CHAP. 14.--AN EXPLANATION OF WHAT IS SAID OF THE DEVIL, THAT HE DID NOT ABIDE
IN THE TRUTH, BECAUSE THE TRUTH WAS NOT IN HIM.
Moreover,
as if we had been inquiring why the devil did not abide in the truth, our
Lord subjoins
the reason, saying, "because the truth is not in him." Now,
it would be in him had he abode in it. But the phraseology is unusual. For,
as the words stand, "He abode not in the truth, because the truth is not
in him," it seems as if the truth's not being in him were the cause of
his not abiding in it; whereas his not abiding in the truth is rather the cause
of its not being in him. The same form of speech is found in the psalm: "I
have called upon Thee, for Thou hast heard me, O God,"(5) where we should
expect it to be said, Thou hast heard me, O God, for I have called upon Thee.
But when he had said, "I have called," then, as if some one were
seeking proof of this, he demonstrates the effectual earnestness of his prayer
by the effect of God's hearing it; as if he had said, The proof that I have
prayed is that Thou hast heard me.
CHAP.
15.--HOW WE ARE TO UNDERSTAND THE WORDS, "THE DEVIL SINNETH FROM
THE BEGINNING."
As for
what John says about the devil, "The devil sinneth from the beginning"(6)
they(7) who suppose it is meant hereby that the devil was made with a sinful
nature, misunderstand it; for if sin be natural, it is not sin at all. And
how do they answer the prophetic proofs,--either what Isaiah says when he represents
the devil under the person of the king of Babylon, "How art thou fallen,
O Lucifer, son of the morning!"(8) or what Ezekiel says, "Thou hast
been in Eden, the garden of God; every precious stone was thy covering,"(9)
where it is meant that he was some time without sin; for a little after it
is still more explicitly said, "Thou wast perfect in thy ways?" And
if these passages cannot well be otherwise interpreted, we must understand
by this one also, "He abode not in the truth," that he was once in
the truth, but did not remain in it. And from this passage." The devil
sinneth from the beginning," it is not to be supposed that he sinned from
the beginning of his created existence, but from the beginning of his sin,
when by his pride he had once commenced to sin. There is a passage, too, in
the Book of Job, of which the devil is the subject: "This is the beginning
of the creation of God, which He made to be a sport to His angels,"(1)
which agrees with the psalm, where it is said, "There is that dragon which
Thou hast made to be a sport therein."(2) But these passages are not to
lead us to suppose that the devil was originally created to be the sport of
the angels, but that he was doomed to this punishment after his sin. His beginning,
then, is the handiwork of God; for there is no nature, even among the least,
and lowest, and last of the beasts, which was not the work of Him from whom
has proceeded all measure, all form, all order, without which nothing can be
planned or conceived. How much more, then, is this angelic nature, which surpasses
in dignity all else that He has made, the handiwork of the Most High!
CHAP. 16.--OF THE RANKS AND DIFFERENCES OF THE CREATURES, ESTIMATED BY THEIR
UTILITY, OR ACCORDING TO THE NATURAL GRADATIONS OF BEING.
For, among those beings which exist, and which are not of God the Creator's
essence, those which have life are ranked above those which have none; those
that have the power of generation, or even of desiring, above those which want
this faculty. And, among things that have life, the sentient are higher than
those which have no sensation, as animals are ranked above trees. And, among
the sentient, the intelligent are above those that have not intelligence,--men,
e.g., above cattle. And, among the intelligent, the immortal such as the angels,
above the mortal, such as men. These are the gradations according to the order
of nature; but according to the utility each man finds in a thing, there are
various standards of value, so that it comes to pass that we prefer some things
that have no sensation to some sentient beings. And so strong is this preference,
that, had we the power, we would abolish the latter from nature altogether,
whether in ignorance of the place they hold in nature, or, though we know it,
sacrificing them to our own convenience. Who, e.g., would not rather have bread
in his house than mice, gold than fleas? But there is little to wonder at in
this, seeing that even when valued by men themselves (whose nature is certainly
of the highest dignity), more is often given for a horse than for a slave,
for a jewel than for a maid. Thus the reason of one contemplating nature prompts
very different judgments from those dictated by the necessity of the needy,
or the desire of the voluptuous; for the former considers what value a thing
in itself has in the scale of creation, while necessity considers how it meets
its need; reason looks for what the mental light will judge to be true, while
pleasure looks for what pleasantly titilates the bodily sense. But of such
consequence in rational natures is the weight, so to speak, of will and of
love, that though in the order of nature angels rank above men, yet, by the
scale of justice, good men are of greater value than bad angels.
CHAP. 17 .--THAT THE FLAW OF WICKEDNESS IS NOT NATURE, BUT CONTRARY TO NATURE,
AND HAS ITS ORIGIN, NOT IN THE CREATOR, BUT IN THE WILL.
It is
with reference to the nature, then, and not to the wickedness of the devil,
that we are to
understand these
words, "This is the beginning of
God's handiwork; "(3) for, without doubt, wickedness can be a flaw or
vice(4) only where the nature previously was not vitiated. Vice, too, is so
contrary to nature, that it cannot but damage it. And therefore departure from
God would be no vice, unless in a nature whose property it was to abide With
God. So that even the wicked will is a strong proof of the goodness of the
nature. But God, as He is the supremely good Creator of good natures, so is
He of evil wills the most just Ruler; so that, while they make an ill use of
good natures, He makes a good use even of evil wills. Accordingly, He caused
the devil (good by God's creation, wicked by his own will) to be cast down
from his high position, and to become the mockery of His angels,--that is,
He caused his temptations to benefit those whom he wishes to injure by them.
And because God, when He created him, was certainly not ignorant of his future
malignity, and foresaw the good which He Himself would bring out of his evil,
therefore says the psalm, "This leviathan whom Thou hast made to be a
sport therein,"(5) that we may see that, even while God in His goodness
created him good, He yet had already foreseen and arranged how He would make
use of him when he became wicked
CHAP. 18.--OF THE BEAUTY OF THE UNIVERSE, WHICH BECOMES, BY GOD'S ORDINANCE,
MORE BRILLIANT BY THE OPPOSITION OF CONTRARIES.
For God
would never have created any, I do not say angel, but even man, whose future
wickedness He
foreknew,
unless He had equally known to what uses in
behalf of the good He could turn him, thus embellishing, the course of the
ages, as it were an exquisite poem set off with antitheses. For what are called
antitheses are among the most elegant of the ornaments of speech. They might
be called in Latin "oppositions," or, to speak more accurately, "contrapositions;" but
this word is not in common use among us,(1) though the Latin, and indeed the
languages of all nations, avail themselves of the same ornaments of style.
In the Second Epistle to the Corinthians the Apostle Paul also makes a graceful
use of antithesis, in that place where he says, "By the armor of righteousness
on the right hand and on the left, by honor and dishonor, by evil report and
good report: as deceivers, and yet true; as unknown, and yet well known; as
dying, and, behold, we live; as chastened, and not killed; as sorrowful, yet
always rejoicing; as poor, yet making many rich; as having nothing, and yet
possessing all things."(2) As, then, these oppositions of contraries lend
beauty to the language, so the beauty of the course of this world is achieved
by the opposition of contraries, arranged, as it were, by an eloquence not
of words, but of things. This is quite plainly stated in the Book of Ecclesiasticus,
in this way: "Good is set against evil, and life against death: so is
the sinner against the godly. So look upon all the works of the Most High,
and these are two and two, one against another."(3)
CHAP.
19.--WHAT, SEEMINGLY, WE ARE TO UNDERSTAND BY THE WORDS, "GODDIVIDED
THE LIGHT FROM THE DARKNESS."
Accordingly,
though the obscurity of the divine word has certainly this advantage, that
it causes
many opinions
about the truth to be started and discussed, each
reader seeing some fresh meaning in it, yet, whatever is said to be meant by
an obscure passage should be either confirmed by the testimony of obvious facts,
or should be asserted in other and less ambiguous texts. This obscurity is
beneficial, whether the sense of the author is at last reached after the discussion
of many other interpretations, or whether, though that sense remain concealed,
other truths are brought out by the discussion of the obscurity. To me it does
not seem incongruous with the working of God, if we understand that the angels
were created when that first light was made, and that a separation was made
between the holy and the unclean angels, when, as is said, "God divided
the light from the darkness; and God called the light Day, and the darkness
He called Night." For He alone could make this discrimination, who was
able also before they fell, to foreknow that they would fall, and that, being
deprived of the light of truth, they would abide in the darkness of pride.
For, so far as regards the day and night, with which we are familiar, He commanded
those luminaries of heaven that are obvious to our senses to divide between
the light and the darkness. "Let there be," He says, "lights
in the firmament of the heaven, to divide the day from the night;" and
shortly after He says, "And God made two great lights; the greater light
to rule the day, and the lesser light to rule the night: the stars also. And
God set them in the firmament of the heaven, to give light upon the earth,
and to rule over the day and over the night, and to divide the light from the
darkness."(4) But between that light, which is the holy company of the
angels spiritually radiant with the illumination of the truth, and that opposing
darkness, which is the noisome foulness of the spiritual condition of those
angels who are turned away from the light of righteousness, only He Himself
could divide, from whom their wickedness (not of nature, but of will), while
yet it was future, could not be hidden or uncertain.
CHAP.
20.--OF THE WORDS WHICH FOLLOW THE SEPARATION OF LIGHT AND DARKNESS, "AND
GOD SAW THE LIGHT THAT IT WAS GOOD."
Then,
we must not pass from this passage of Scripture without noticing that when
God said, "Let there be light, and there was light," it was
immediately added, "And God saw the light that it was good." No such
expression followed the statement that He separated the light from the darkness,
and called the light Day and the darkness Night, lest the seal of His approval
might seem to be set on such darkness, as well as on the light. For when the
darkness was not subject of disapprobation, as when it was divided by the heavenly
bodies from this light which our eyes discern, the statement that God saw that
it was good is inserted, not before, but after the division is recorded. "And
God set them," so runs the passage, "in the firmament of the heaven,
to give light upon the earth, and to rule over the day and over the night,
and to divide the light from the darkness: and God saw that it was good." For
He approved of both, because both were sinless. But where God said, "Let
there be light, and there was light; and God saw the light that it was good;" and
the narrative goes on, "and God divided the light from the darkness! and
God called the light Day, and the darkness He called Night," there was
not in this place subjoined the statement, "And God saw that it was good," lest
both should be designated good, while one of them was evil, not by nature,
but by its own fault. And therefore, in this ease, the light alone received
the approbation of the Creator, while the angelic darkness, though it had been
ordained, was yet not approved.
CHAP. 21.--OF GOD'S ETERNAL AND UNCHANGEABLE KNOWLEDGE AND WILL, WHEREBY ALL
HE HAS MADE PLEASED HIM IN THE ETERNAL DESIGN AS WELL AS IN THE ACTUAL RESULT.
For what
else is to be understood by that invariable refrain, "And God
saw that it was good," than the approval of the work in its design, which
is the wisdom of God? For certainly God did not in the actual achievement of
the work first learn that it was good, but, on the contrary, nothing would
have been made had it not been first known by Him. While, therefore, He sees
that that is good which, had He not seen it before it was made, would never
have been made, it is plain that He is not discovering, but teaching that it
is good. Plato, indeed, was bold enough to say that, when the universe was
completed, God was, as it were, elated with joy.(1) And Plato was not so foolish
as to mean by this that God was rendered more blessed by the novelty of His
creation; but he wished thus to indicate that the work now completed met with
its Maker's approval, as it had while yet in design. It is not as if the knowledge
of God were of various kinds, knowing in different ways things which as yet
are not, things which are, and things which have been. For not in our fashion
does He look forward to what is future, nor at what is present, nor back upon
what is past; but in a manner quite different and far and profoundly remote
from our way of thinking. For He does not pass from this to that by transition
of thought, but beholds all things with absolute unchangeableness; so that
of those things which emerge in time, the future, indeed, are not yet, and
the present are now, and the past no longer are; but all of these are by Him
comprehended in His stable and eternal presence. Nether does He see in one
fashion by the eye, in another by the mind, for He is not composed of mind
and body; nor does His present knowledge differ from that which it ever was
or shall be, for those variations of time, past, present, and future, though
they alter our knowledge, do not affect His, "with whom is no variableness,
neither shadow of turning."(2) Neither is there any growth from thought
to thought in the conceptions of Him in whose spiritual vision all things which
He knows are at once embraced. For as without any movement that time can measure.
He Himself moves all temporal things, so He knows all times with a knowledge
that time cannot measure. And therefore He saw that what He had made was good,
when He saw that it was good to make it. And when He saw it made, He had not
on that account a twofold nor any way increased knowledge of it; as if He had
less knowledge before He made what He saw. For certainly He would not be the
perfect worker He is, unless His knowledge were so perfect as to receive no
addition from His finished works. Wherefore, if the only object had been to
inform us who made the light, it had been enough to say, "God made the
light;" and if further information regarding the means by which it was
made had been intended, it would have sufficed to say, "And God said,
Let there be light, and there was light," that we might know not only
that God had made the world, but also that He had made it by the word. But
because it was right that three leading truths regarding the creature be intimated
to us, viz., who made it, by what means, and why, it is written, "God
said, Let there be light, and there was light. And God saw the light that it
was good." If, then, we ask who made it, it was "God." If, by
what means, He said "Let it be," and it was. If we ask, why He made
it, "it was good." Neither is there any author more excellent than
God, nor any skill more efficacious than the word of God, nor any cause better
than that good might be created by the good God. This also Plato has assigned
as the most sufficient reason for the creation of the world, that good works
might be made by a good God;(3) whether he read this passage, or, perhaps,
was informed of these things by those who had read them, or, by his quick-sighted
genius, penetrated to things spiritual and invisible through the things that
are created, or was instructed regarding them by those who had discerned them.
CHAP. 22.--OF THOSE WHO DO NOT APPROVE OF CERTAIN THINGS WHICH ARE A PART
OF THIS GOOD CREATION OF A GOOD CREATOR, AND WHO THINK THAT THERE IS SOME NATURAL
EVIL.
This cause, however, of a good creation, namely, the goodness of God,--this
cause, I say, so just and fit, which, when piously and carefully weighed, terminates
all the controversies of those who inquire into the origin of the world, has
not been recognized by some heretics,(1) because there are, forsooth, many
things, such as fire, frost, wild beasts, and so forth, which do not suit but
injure this thinblooded and frail mortality of our flesh, which is at present
under just punishment. They do not consider how admirable these things are
in their own places, how excellent in their own natures, how beautifully adjusted
to the rest of creation, and how much grace they contribute to the universe
by their own contributions as to a commonwealth; and how serviceable they are
even to ourselves, if we use them with a knowledge of their fit adaptations,--so
that even poisons, which are destructive when used injudiciously, become wholesome
and medicinal when used in conformity with their qualities and design; just
as, on the other hand, those things which give us pleasure, such as food, drink,
and the light of the sun, are found to be hurtful when immoderately or unseasonably
used. And thus divine providence admonishes us not foolishly to vituperate
things, but to investigate their utility with care; and, where our mental capacity
or infirmity is at fault, to believe that there is a utility, though hidden,
as we have experienced that there were other things which we all but failed
to discover. For this concealment of the use of things is itself either an
exercise of our humility or a levelling of our pride; for no nature at all
is evil, and this is a name for nothing but the want of good. But from things
earthly to things heavenly, from the visible to the invisible, there are some
things better than others; and for this purpose are they unequal, in order
that they might all exist. Now God is in such sort a great worker in great
things, that He is not less in little things,--for these little things are
to be measured not by their own greatness (which does not exist), but by the
wisdom of their Designer; as, in the visible appearance of a man, if one eyebrow
be shaved off, how nearly nothing is taken from the body, but how much from
the beauty!--for that is not constituted by bulk, but by the proportion and
arrangement of the members. But we do not greatly wonder that persons, who
suppose that some evil nature has been generated and propagated by a kind of
opposing principle proper to it, refuse to admit that the cause of the creation
was this, that the good God produced a good creation. For they believe that
He was driven to this enterprise of creation by the urgent necessity of repulsing
the evil that warred against Him, and that He mixed His good nature with the
evil for the sake of restraining and conquering it; and that this nature of
His, being thus shamefully polluted, and most cruelly oppressed and held captive,
He labors to cleanse and deliver it, and with all His pains does not wholly
succeed; but such part of it as could not be cleansed from that defilement
is to serve as a prison and chain of the conquered and incarcerated enemy.
The Manichaeans would not drivel, or rather, rave in such a style as this,
if they believed the nature of God to be, as it is, unchangeable and absolutely
incorruptible, and subject to no injury; and if, moreover, they held in Christian
sobriety, that the soul which has shown itself capable of being altered for
the worse by its own will, and of being corrupted by sin, and so, of being
deprived of the light of eternal truth,--that this soul, I say, is not a part
of God, nor of the same nature as God, but is created by Him, and is far different
from its Creator.
CHAP. 23.---OF THE ERROR IN WHICH THE DOCTRINE OF ORIGEN IS INVOLVED.
But it
is much more surprising that some even of those who, with ourselves, believe
that there is one only
source of all things, and that no nature which
is not divine can exist unless originated by that Creator, have yet refused
to accept with a good and simple faith this so good and simple a reason of
the world's creation, that a good God made it good; and that the things created,
being different from God, were inferior to Him, and yet were good, being created
by none other than He. But they say that souls, though not, indeed, parts of
God, but created by Him, sinned by abandoning God; that, in proportion to their
various sins, they merited different degrees of debasement from heaven to earth,
and diverse bodies as prison-houses; and that this is the world, and this the
cause of its creation, not the production of good things, but the restraining
of evil. Origen is justly blamed for holding this opinion. For in the books
which he entitles <greek>peri</greek> <greek>arkpn</greek>,
that is, Of Origins, this is his sentiment, this his utterance. And I cannot
sufficiently express my astonishment, that a man so erudite and well versed
in ecclesiastical literature, should not have observed, in the first place,
how opposed this is to the meaning of this authoritative Scripture, which,
in recounting all the works of God, regularly adds, "And God saw that
it was good;" and, when all were completed, inserts the words, "And
God saw everything that He had made, and, behold, it was very good."(1)
Was it not obviously meant to be understood that there was no other cause of
the world's creation than that good creatures should be made by a good God?
In this creation, had no one sinned, the world would have been filled and beautified
with natures good without exception; and though there is sin, all things are
not therefore full of sin, for the great majority of the heavenly inhabitants
preserve their nature's integrity. And the sinful will though it violated the
order of its own nature, did not on that account escape the laws of God, who
justly orders all things for good. For as the beauty of a picture is increased
by well-managed shadows, so, to the eye that has skill to discern it, the universe
is beautified even by sinners, though, considered by themselves, their deformity
is a sad blemish.
In the second place, Origen, and all who think with him, ought to have seen
that if it were the true opinion that the world was created in order that souls
might, for their sins, be accommodated with bodies in which they should be
shut up as in houses of correction, the more venial sinners receiving lighter
and more ethereal bodies, while the grosser and graver sinners received bodies
more crass and grovelling, then it would follow that the devils, who are deepest
in wickedness, ought, rather than even wicked men, to have earthly bodies,
since these are the grossest and least ethereal of all, But in point of fact,
that we might see that the deserts of souls are not to be estimated by the
qualities of bodies, the wickedest devil possesses an ethereal body, while
man, wicked, it is true, but with a wickedness small and venial in comparison
with his, received even before his sin a body of clay. And what more foolish
assertion can be advanced than that God, by this sun of ours, did not design
to benefit the material creation, or lend lustre to its loveliness, and therefore
created one single sun for this single world, but that it so happened that
one soul only had so sinned as to deserve to be enclosed in such a body as
it is? On this principle, if it had chanced that not one, but two, yea, or
ten, or a hundred had sinned similarly, and with a like degree of guilt, then
this world would have one hundred suns. And that such is not the case, is due
not to the considerate foresight of the Creator, contriving the safety and
beauty of things material, but rather to the fact that so fine a quality of
sinning was hit upon by only one soul, so that it alone has merited such a
body. Manifestly persons holding such opinions should aim at confining, not
souls of which they know not what they say, but themselves, lest they fall,
and deservedly, far indeed from the truth. And as to these three answers which
I formerly recommended when in the case of any creature the questions are put,
Who made it? By what means? Why? that it should be replied, God, By the Word,
Because it was good,--as to these three answers, it is very questionable whether
the Trinity itself is thus mystically indicated, that is, the Father, the Son,
and the Holy Ghost, or whether there is some good reason for this acceptation
in this passage of Scripture,--this, I say, is questionable, and one can't
be expected to explain everything in one volume.
CHAP. 24.--OF THE DIVINE TRINITY, AND THE INDICATIONS OF ITS PRESENCESCATTERED
EVERYWHERE AMONG ITS WORKS.
We believe,
we maintain, we faithfully preach, that the Father begat the Word, that is,
Wisdom, by
which all things
were made, the only-begotten Son, one
as the Father is one, eternal as the Father is eternal, and, equally with the
Father, supremely good; and that the Holy Spirit is the Spirit alike of Father
and of Son, and is Himself consubstantial and co-eternal with both; and that
this whole is a Trinity by reason of the individuality(2) of the persons, and
one God by reason of the indivisible divine substance, as also one Almighty
by reason of the indivisible omnipotence; yet so that, when we inquire regarding
each singly, it is said that each is God and Almighty; and, when we speak of
all together, it is said that there are not three Gods, nor three Almighties,
but one God Almighty; so great is the indivisible unity of these Three, which
requires that it be so stated. But, whether the Holy Spirit of the Father,
and of the Son, who are both good, can be with propriety called the goodness
of both, because He is common to both, I do not presume to determine hastily.
Nevertheless, I would have less hesitation in saying that He is the holiness
of both, not as if He were a divine attribute merely, but Himself also the
divine substance, and the third person in the Trinity. I am the rather emboldened
to make this statement, because, though the Father is a spirit, and the Son
a spirit, and the Father holy, and the Son holy, yet the third person is distinctively
called the Holy Spirit, as if He were the substantial holiness consubstantial
with the other two. But if the divine goodness is nothing else than the divine
holiness, then certainly it is a reasonable studiousness, and not presumptuous
intrusion, to inquire whether the same Trinity be not hinted at in an enigmatical
mode of speech, by which our inquiry is stimulated, when it is written who
made each creature, and by what means, and why. For it is the Father of the
Word who said, Let there be. And that which was made when He spoke was certainly
made by means of the Word. And by the words, "God saw that it was good," it
is sufficiently intimated that God made what was made not from any necessity,
nor for the sake of supplying any want, but solely from His own goodness, i.e.,
because it was good. And this is stated after the creation had taken place,
that there might be no doubt that the thing made satisfied the goodness on
account of which it was made. And if we are right in understanding; that this
goodness is the Holy Spirit, then the whole Trinity is revealed to us in the
creation. In this, too, is the origin, the enlightenment, the blessedness of
the holy city which is above among the holy angels. For if we inquire whence
it is, God created it; or whence its wisdom, God illumined it; or whence its
blessedness, God is its bliss. It has its form by subsisting in Him; its enlightenment
by contemplating Him; its joy by abiding in Him. It is; it sees; it loves.
In God's eternity is its life; in God's truth its light; in God's goodness
its joy.
CHAP. 25.--OF THE DIVISION OF PHILOSOPHY INTO THREE PARTS.
As far
as one can judge, it is for the same reason that philosophers have aimed
at a threefold division
of science, or rather, were enabled to see that
there was a threefold division (for they did not invent, but only discovered
it), of which one part is called physical, another logical, the third ethical.
The Latin equivalents of these names are now naturalized in the writings of
many authors, so that these divisions are called natural, rational, and moral,
on which I have touched slightly in the eighth book. Not that I would conclude
that these philosophers, in this threefold division, had any thought of a trinity
in God, although Plato is said to have been the first to discover and promulgate
this distribution, and he saw that God alone could be the author of nature,
the bestower of intelligence, and the kindlet of love by which life becomes
good and blessed. But certain it is that, though philosophers disagree both
regarding the nature of things, and the mode of investigating truth, and of
the good to which all our actions ought to tend, yet in these three great general
questions all their intellectual energy is spent. And though there be a confusing
diversity of opinion, every man striving to establish his own opinion in regard
to each of these questions, yet no one of them all doubts that nature has some
cause, science some method, life some end and aim. Then, again, there are three
things which every artificer must possess if he is to effect anything,--nature,
education, practice. Nature is to be judged by capacity, education by knowledge,
practice by its fruit. I am aware that, properly speaking, fruit is what one
enjoys, use [practice] what one uses. And this seems to be the difference between
them, that we are said to enjoy that which in itself, and irrespective of other
ends, delights us; to use that which we seek for the sake of some end beyond.
For which reason the things of time are to be used rather than enjoyed, that
we may deserve to enjoy things eternal; and not as those perverse creatures
who would fain enjoy money and use God,--not spending money for God's sake,
but worshipping God for money's sake. However, in common parlance, we both
use fruits and enjoy uses. For we correctly speak of the "fruits of the
field," which certainly we all use in the present life. And it was in
accordance with this usage that I said that there were three things to be observed
in a man, nature, education, practice. From these the philosophers have elaborated,
as I said, the threefold division of that science by which a blessed life is
attained: the natural having respect to nature, the rational to education,
the moral to practice. If, then, we were ourselves the authors of our nature,
we should have generated knowledge in ourselves, and should not require to
reach it by education, i.e., by learning it from others. Our love, too, proceeding
from ourselves and returning to us, would suffice to make our life blessed,
and would stand in need of no extraneous enjoyment. But now, since our nature
has God as its requisite author, it is certain that we must have Him for our
teacher that we may be wise; Him, too, to dispense to us spiritual sweetness
that we may be blessed.
CHAP. 26.--OF THE IMAGE OF THE SUPREME TRINITY, WHICH WE FIND IN SOLVE SORT
IN HUMAN NATURE EVEN IN ITS PRESENT STATE.
And we indeed recognize in ourselves the image of God, that is, of the supreme
Trinity, an image which, though it be not equal to God, or rather, though it
be very far removed from Him,--being neither co-eternal, nor, to say all in
a word, consubstantial with Him,--is yet nearer to Him in nature than any other
of His works, and is destined to be yet restored, that it may bear a still
closer resemblance. For we both are, and know that we are, and delight in our
being, and our knowledge of it. Moreover, in these three things no true-seeming
illusion disturbs us; for we do not come into contact with these by some bodily
sense, as we perceive the things outside of us,--colors, e.g., by seeing, sounds
by hearing, smells by smelling, tastes by tasting, hard and soft objects by
touching,--of all which sensible objects it is the images resembling them,
but not themselves which we perceive in the mind and hold in the memory, and
which excite us to desire the objects. But, without any delusive representation
of images or phantasms, I am most certain that I am, and that I know and delight
in this. In respect of these truths, I am not at all afraid of the arguments
of the Academicians, who say, What if you are deceived? For if I am deceived,
I am.(1) For he who is not, cannot be deceived; and if I am deceived, by this
same token I am. And since I am if I am deceived, how am I deceived in believing
that I am? for it is certain that I am if I am deceived. Since, therefore,
I, the person deceived, should be, even if I were deceived, certainly I am
not deceived in this knowledge that I am. And, consequently, neither am I deceived
in knowing that I know. For, as I know that I am, so I know this also, that
I know. And when I love these two things, I add to them a certain third thing,
namely, my love, which is of equal moment. For neither am I deceived in this,
that I love, since in those things which I love I am not deceived; though even
if these were false, it would still be true that I loved false things. For
how could I justly be blamed and prohibited from loving false things, if it
were false that I loved them? But, since they are true and real, who doubts
that when they are loved, the love of them is itself true and real? Further,
as there is no one who does not wish to be happy, so there is no one who does
not wish to be. For how can he be happy, if he is nothing?
CHAP. 27.--OF EXISTENCE, AND KNOWLEDGE OF IT, AND THE LOVE OF BOTH.
And truly the very fact of existing is by some natural spell so pleasant,
that even the wretched are, for no other reason, unwilling to perish; and,
when they feel that they are wretched, wish not that they themselves be annihilated,
but that their misery be so. Take even those who, both in their own esteem,
and in point of fact, are utterly wretched, and who are reckoned so, not only
by wise men on account of their folly, but by those who count themselves blessed,
and who think them wretched because they are poor and destitute,--if any one
should give these men an immortality, in which their misery should be deathless,
and should offer the alternative, that if they shrank from existing eternally
in the same misery they might be annihilated, and exist nowhere at all, nor
in any condition, on the instant they would joyfully, nay exultantly, make
election to exist always, even in such a condition, rather than not exist at
all. The well-known feeling of such men witnesses to this. For when we see
that they fear to die, and will rather live in such misfortune than end it
by death, is it not obvious enough how nature shrinks from annihilation? And,
accordingly, when they know that they must die, they seek, as a great boon,
that this mercy be shown them, that they may a little longer live in the same
misery, and delay to end it by death. And so they indubitably prove with what
glad alacrity they would accept immortality, even though it secured to them
endless destruction. What! do not even all irrational animals, to whom such
calculations are unknown, from the huge dragons down to the least worms, all
testify that they wish to exist, and therefore shun death by every movement
in their power? Nay, the very plants and shrubs, which have no such life as
enables them to shun destruction by movements we can see, do not they all seek
in their own fashion to conserve their existence, by rooting themselves more
and more deeply in the earth, that so they may draw nourishment, and throw
out healthy branches towards the sky? In fine, even the lifeless bodies, which
want not only sensation but seminal life, yet either seek the upper air or
sink deep, or are balanced in an intermediate position, so that they may protect
their existence in that situation where they can exist in most accordance with
their nature.
And how much human nature loves the knowledge of its existence, and how it
shrinks from being deceived, will be sufficiently understood from this fact,
that every man prefers to grieve in a sane mind, rather than to be glad in
madness. And this grand and wonderful instinct belongs to men alone of all
animals; for, though some of them have keener eyesight than ourselves for this
world's light, they cannot attain to that spiritual light with which our mind
is somehow irradiated, so that we can form right judgments of all things. For
our power to judge is proportioned to our acceptance of this light. Nevertheless,
the irrational animals, though they have not knowledge, have certainly something
resembling knowledge; whereas the other material things are said to be sensible,
not because they have senses, but because they are the objects of our senses.
Yet among plants, their nourishment and generation have some resemblance to
sensible life. However, both these and all material things have their causes
hidden in their nature; but their outward forms, which lend beauty to this
visible structure of the world, are perceived by our senses, so that they seem
to wish to compensate for their own want of knowledge by providing us with
knowledge. But we perceive them by our bodily senses in such a way that we
do not judge of them by these senses. For we have another and far superior
sense, belonging to the inner man, by which we perceive what things are just,
and what unjust,--just by means of an intelligible idea, unjust by the want
of it. This sense is aided in its functions neither by the eyesight, nor by
the orifice of the ear, nor by the air-holes of the nostrils, nor by the palate's
taste, nor by any bodily touch. By it I am assured both that I am, and that
I know this; and these two I love, and in the same manner I am assured that
I love them.
CHAP. 28.--WHETHER WE OUGHT TO LOVE THE LOVE ITSELF WITH WHICH WE LOVE OUR
EXISTENCE AND OUR KNOWLEDGE OF IT, THAT SO WE MAY MORE NEARLY RESEMBLE THE
IMAGE OF THE DIVINE TRINITY.
We have said as much as the scope of this work demands regarding these two
things, to wit, our existence, and our knowledge of it, and how much they are
loved by us, and how there is found even in the lower creatures a kind of likeness
of these things, and yet with a difference. We have yet to speak of the love
wherewith they are loved, to determine whether this love itself is loved. And
doubtless it is; and this is the proof. Because in men who are justly loved,
it is rather love itself that is loved; for he is not justly called a, good
man who knows what is good, but who loves it. Is it not then obvious that we
love in ourselves the very love wherewith we love whatever good we love? For
there is also a love wherewith we love that which we ought not to love; and
this love is hated by him who loves that wherewith he loves what ought to be
loved. For it is quite possible for both to exist in one man. And this co-existence
is good for a man, to the end that this love which conduces to our living well
may grow, and the other, which leads us to evil may decrease, until our whole
life be perfectly healed and transmuted into good. For if we were beasts, we
should love the fleshly and sensual life, and this would be our sufficient
good; and when it was well with us in respect of it, we should seek nothing
beyond. In like manner, if we were trees, we could not, indeed, in the strict
sense of the word, love anything; nevertheless we should seem, as it were,
to long for that by which we might become more abundantly and luxuriantly fruitful.
If we were stones, or waves, or wind, or flame, or anything of that kind, we
should want, indeed, both sensation and life, yet should possess a kind of
attraction towards our own proper position and natural order. For the specific
gravity of bodies is, as it were, their love, whether they are carried downwards
by their weight, or upwards by their levity. For the body is borne by its gravity,
as the spirit by love, whithersoever it is borne.(1) But we are men, created
in the image of our Creator, whose eternity is true, and whose truth is eternal,
whose love is eternal and true, and who Himself is the eternal, true, and adorable
Trinity, without confusion, without separation; and, therefore, while, as we
run over all the works which He has established, we may detect, as it were,
His footprints, now more and now less distinct even in those things that are
beneath us, since they could not so much as exist, or be bodied forth in any
shape, or follow and observe any law, bad they not been made by Him who supremely
is, and is supremely good and supremely wise; yet in ourselves beholding His
image, let us, like that younger son of the gospel, come to ourselves, and
arise and return to Him from whom by our sin we had departed. There our being
will have no death, our knowledge no error, our love no mishap. But now, though
we are assured of our possession of these three things, not on the testimony
of others, but by our own consciousness of their presence, and because we see
them with our own most truthful interior vision, yet, as we cannot of ourselves
know how long they are to continue, and whether they shall never cease to be,
and what issue their good or bad use will lead to, we seek for others who can
acquaint us of these things, if we have not already found them. Of the trustworthiness
of these witnesses, there will, not now, but subsequently, be an opportunity
of speaking. But in this book let us go on as we have begun, with God's help,
to speak of the city of God, not in its state of pilgrimage and mortality,
but as it exists ever immortal in the heavens,--that is, let us speak of the
holy angels who maintain their allegiance to God, who never were, nor ever
shall be, apostate, between whom and those who forsook light eternal and became
darkness, God, as we have already said, made at the first a separation.
CHAP. 29.--OF THE KNOWLEDGE BY WHICH THE HOLY ANGELS KNOW GOD IN HIS ESSENCE,
AND BY WHICH THEY SEE THE CAUSES OF HIS WORKS IN THE ART OF THE WORKER, BEFORE
THEY SEE THEM IN THE WORKS OF THE ARTIST.
Those holy angels come to the knowledge of God not by audible words, but by
the presence to their souls of immutable truth, i.e., of the only-begotten
Word of God; and they know this Word Himself, and the Father, and their Holy
Spirit, and that this Trinity is indivisible, and that the three persons of
it are one substance, and that there are not three Gods but one God; and this
they so know that it is better understood by them than we are by ourselves.
Thus, too, they know the creature also, not in itself, but by this better way,
in the wisdom of God, as if in the art by which it was created; and, consequently,
they know themselves better in God than in themselves, though they have also
this latter knowledge. For they were created, and are different from their
Creator. In Him, therefore, they have, as it were, a noonday knowledge; in
themselves, a twilight knowledge, according to our former explanations? For
there is a great difference between knowing a thing in the design in conformity
to which it was made, and knowing it in itself,--e.g., the straightness of
lines and correctness of figures is known in one way when mentally conceived,
in another when described on paper; and justice is known in one way in the
unchangeable truth, in another in the spirit of a just man. So is it with all
other things,--as, the firmament between the water above and below, which was
called the heaven; the gathering of the waters beneath, and the laying bare
of the dry land, and the production of plants and trees; the creation of sun,
moon, and stars; and of the animals out of the waters, fowls, and fish, and
monsters of the deep; and of everything that walks or creeps on the earth,
and of man himself, who excels all that is on the earth,--all these things
are known in one way by the angels in the Word of God, in which they see the
eternally abiding causes and reasons according to which they were made, and
in another way in themselves: in the former, with a clearer knowledge; in the
latter, with a knowledge dimmer, and rather of the bare works than of the design.
Yet, when these works are referred to the praise and adoration of the Creator
Himself, it is as if morning dawned in the minds of those who contemplate them.
CHAP. 30.--OF THE PERFECTION OF THE NUMBER SIX, WHICH IS THE FIRST OF THE
NUMBERS WHICH IS COMPOSED OF ITS ALIQUOT PARTS.
These
works are recorded to have been completed in six days (the same day being
six times repeated),
because
six is a perfect number,--not because God
required a protracted time, as if He could not at once create all things, which
then should mark the course of time by the movements proper to them, but because
the perfection of the works was signified by the number six. For the number
six is the first which is made up of its own parts, i.e., of its sixth, third,
and half, which are respectively one, two, and three, and which make a total
of six. In this way of looking at a number, those are said to be its parts
which exactly divide it, as a half, a third, a fourth, or a fraction with any
denominator,e.g., four is a part of nine, but not therefore an aliquot part;
but one is, for it is the ninth part; and three is, for it is the third. Yet
these two parts, the ninth and the third, or one and three, are far from making
its whole sum of nine. So again, in the number ten, four is a part, yet does
not divide it; but one is an aliquot part, for it is a tenth; so it has a fifth,
which is two; and a half, which is five. But these three parts, a tenth, a
fifth, and a half, or one, two, and five, added together, do not make ten,
but eight. Of the number twelve, again, the parts added together exceed the
whole; for it has a twelfth, that is, one; a sixth, or two; a fourth, which
is three; a third, which is four; and a half,which is six. But one, two, three,
four, and six make up, not twelve, but more, viz., sixteen. So much I have
thought fit to state for the sake of illustrating the perfection of the number
six, which is, as I said, the first which is exactly made up of its own parts
added together; and in this number of days God finished His work.(1) And, therefore,
we must not despise the science of numbers, which, in many passages of holy
Scripture, is found to be of eminent service to the careful interpreter.(2)
Neither has it been without reason numbered among God's praises, "Thou
hast ordered all things in number, and measure, and weight."(3)
CHAP. 31.--OF THE SEVENTH DAY, IN WHICH COMPLETENESS AND REPOSE ARE CELEBRATED.
But, on
the seventh day (i.e., the same day repeated seven times, which number is
also a perfect
one, though
for another reason), the rest of God is set forth,
and then, too, we first hear of its being hallowed. So that God did not wish
to hallow this day by His works, but by His rest, which has no evening, for
it is not a creature; so that, being known in one way in the Word of God, and
in another in itself, it should make a twofold knowledge, daylight and dusk
(day and evening). Much more might be said about tile perfection of the number
seven, but this book is already too long, and I fear lest I should seem to
catch at an opportunity of airing my little smattering of science more childishly
than profitably. I must speak, therefore, in moderation and with dignity, lest,
in too keenly following "number," I be accused of forgetting "weight" and "measure." Suffice
it here to say, that three is the first whole number that is odd, four the
first that is even, and of these two, seven is composed. On this account it
is often put for all numbers together, as, "A just man falleth seven times,
and riseth up again,"(4)--that is, let him fall never so often, he will
not perish (and this was ment to be understood not of sins, but of afflictions
conducing to lowliness). Again, "Seven times a day will I praise Thee,"(5)
which elsewhere is expressed thus, "I will bless the Lord at all times."(6)
And many such instances are found in the divine authorities, in which the number
seven is, as I said, commonly used to express the whole, or the completeness
of anything. And so the Holy Spirit, of whom the Lord says, "He will teach
you all truth,"(7) is signified by this number,(8) In it is the rest of
God, the rest His people find in Him. For rest is in the whole, i.e.., in perfect
completeness, while in the part there is labor. And thus we labor as long as
we know in part; "but when that which is perfect is come, then that which
is in part shall be done away."(9) It is even with toil we search into
the Scriptures themselves. But the holy angels, towards whose society and assembly
we sigh while in this our toilsome pilgrimage, as they already abide in their
eternal home, so do they enjoy perfect facility of knowledge and felicity of
rest. It is without difficulty that they help us; for their spiritual movements,
pure and free, cost them no effort.
CHAP. 32.--OF THE OPINION THAT THE ANGELS WERE CREATED BEFORE THE WORLD.
But if
some one oppose our opinion, and say that the holy angels are not referred
to when it is
said, "Let there be light, and there was light;" if
he suppose or teach that some material light, then first created, was meant,
and that the angels were created, not only before the firmament dividing the
waters and named "the heaven," but also before the time signified
in the words, "In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth;" if
he allege that this phrase, "In the beginning," does not mean that
nothing was made before (for the angels were), but that God made all things
by His Wisdom or Word, who is named in Scripture "the Beginning," as
He Himself, in the gospel, replied to the Jews when they asked Him who He was,
that He was the Beginning;(10)--I will not contest the point, chiefly because
it gives me the liveliest satisfaction to find the Trinity celebrated in the
very beginning of the book of Genesis. For having said "In the Beginning
God created the heaven and the earth," meaning that the Father made them
in the Son (as the psalm testifies where it says, "How manifold are Thy
works, O Lord! in Wisdom hast Thou made them all"(11), a little afterwards
mention is fitly made of the Holy Spirit also. For, when it had been told us
what kind of earth God created at first, or what the mass or matter was which
God, under the name of "heaven and earth," had provided for the construction
of the world, as is told in the additional words, "And the earth was without
form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep," then, for
the sake of completing the mention of the Trinity, it is immediately added, "And
the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters." Let each one, then,
take it as he pleases; for it is so profound a passage, that it may well suggest,
for the exercise of the reader's tact, many opinions, and none of them widely
departing from the rule of faith. At the same time, let none doubt that the
holy angels in their heavenly abodes are, though not, indeed, co-eternal with
God, yet secure and certain of eternal and true felicity. To their company
the Lord teaches that His little ones belong; and not only says, "They
shall be equal to the angels of God,"(1) but shows, too, what blessed
contemplation the angels themselves enjoy, saying, "Take heed that ye
despise not one of these little ones: for I say unto you, that in heaven their
angels do always behold the face of my Father which is in heaven."(2)
CHAP. 33.--OF THE TWO DIFFERENT AND DISSIMILAR COMMUNITIES OF ANGELS, WHICH
ARE NOT INAPPROPRIATELY SIGNIFIED BY THE NAMES LIGHT AND DARKNESS.
That certain
angels sinned, and were thrust down to the lowest parts of this world, where
they are, as
it
were, incarcerated till their final damnation
in the day of judgment, the Apostle Peter very plainly declares, when he says
that "God spared not the angels that sinned, but cast them down to hell,
and delivered them into chains of darkness to be reserved into judgment."(3)
Who, then, can doubt that God, either in foreknowledge or in act, separated
between these and the rest? And who will dispute that the rest are justly called "light?" For
even we who are yet living by faith, hoping only and not yet enjoying equality
with them, are already called "light" by the apostle: "For ye
were sometimes darkness, but now are ye light in the Lord."(4) But as
for these apostate angels, all who understand or believe them to be worse than
unbelieving men are well aware that they are called "darkness." Wherefore,
though light and darkness are to be taken in their literal signification in
these passages of Genesis in which it is said, "God said, Let there be
light, and there was light," and "God divided the light from the
darkness," yet, for our part, we understand these two societies of angels,--the
one enjoying God, the other swelling with pride; the one to whom it is said, "Praise
ye Him, all His angels,"(5) the other whose prince says, "All these
things will I give Thee if Thou wilt fall down and worship me;"(6) the
one blazing with the holy love of God, the other reeking with the unclean lust
of self-advancement. And since, as it is written, "God resisteth the proud,
but giveth grace unto the humble,"(7) we may say, the one dwelling in
the heaven of heavens, the other cast thence, and raging through the lower
regions of the air; the one tranquil in the brightness of piety, the other
tempest-tossed with beclouding desires; the one, at God's pleasure, tenderly
succoring, justly avenging,--the other, set on by its own pride, boiling with
the lust of subduing and hurting; the one the minister of God's goodness to
the utmost of their good pleasure, the other held in by God's power from doing
the harm it would; the former laughing at the latter when it does good unwillingly
by its persecutions, the latter envying the former when it gathers in its pilgrims.
These two angelic communities, then, dissimilar and contrary to one another,
the one both by nature good and by will upright, the other also good by nature
but by will depraved, as they are exhibited in other and more explicit passages
of holy writ, so I think they are spoken of in this book of Genesis under the
names of light and darkness; and even if the author perhaps had a different
meaning, yet our discussion of the obscure language has not been wasted time;
for, though we have been unable to discover his meaning, yet we have adhered
to the rule of faith, which is sufficiently ascertained by the faithful from
other passages of equal authority. For, though it is the material works of
God which are here spoken of, they have certainly a resemblance to the spiritual,
so that Paul can say, "Ye are all the children of light, and the children
of the day: we are not of the night, nor of darkness."(8) If, on the other
hand, the author of Genesis saw in the words what we see, then our discussion
reaches this more satisfactory conclusion, that the man of God, so eminently
and divinely wise, or rather, that the Spirit of God who by him recorded God's
works which were finished on the sixth day, may be supposed not to have omitted
all mention of the angels whether he included them in the words "in the
beginning," because He made them first, or, which seems most likely, because
He made them in the only-begotten Word. And, under these names heaven and earth,
the whole creation is signified, either as divided into spiritual and material,
which seems the more likely, or into the two great parts of the world in which
all created things are contained, so that, first of all, the creation is presented
in sum, and then its parts are enumerated according to the mystic number of
the days.
CHAP. 34.--OF THE IDEA THAT THE ANGELS WERE MEANT WHERE THE SEPARATION OF
THE WATERS BY THE FIRMAMENT IS SPOKEN OF, AND OF THAT OTHER IDEA THAT THE WATERS
WERE NOT CREATED.
Some,(1)
however, have supposed that the angelic hosts are somehow referred to under
the name of
waters,
and that this is what is meant by "Let there
be a firmament in the midst of the waters:"(2) that the waters above should
be understood of the angels, and those below either of the visible waters,
or of the multitude of bad angels, or of the nations of men. If this be so,
then it does not here appear when the angels were created, but when they were
separated. Though there have not been wanting men foolish and wicked enough
a to deny that the waters were made by God, because it is nowhere written, "God
said, Let there be waters." With equal folly they might say the same of
the earth, for nowhere do we read, "God said, Let the earth be." But,
say they, it is written, "In the beginning God created the heaven and
the earth." Yes, and there the water is meant, for both are included in
one word. For "the sea is His," as the psalm says, "and He made
it; and His hands formed the dry land."(4) But those who would understand
the angels by the waters above the skies have a difficulty about the specific
gravity of the elements, and fear that the waters, owing to their fluidity
and weight, could not be set in the upper parts of the world. So that, if they
were to construct a man upon their own principles, they would not put in his
head any moist humors, or "phlegm" as the Greeks call it, and which
acts the part of water among the elements of our body. But, in God's handiwork,
the head is the seat of the phlegm, and surely most fitly; and yet, according
to their supposition, so absurdly that if we were not aware of the fact, and
were informed by this same record that God had put a moist and cold and therefore
heavy humor in the uppermost part of man's body, these world-weighers would
refuse belief. And if they were confronted with the authority of Scripture,
they would maintain that something else must be meant by the words. But, were
we to investigate and discover all the details which are written in this divine
book regarding the creation of the world, we should have much to say, and should
widely digress from the proposed aim of this work. Since, then, we have now
said what seemed needful regarding these two diverse and contrary communities
of angels, in which the origin of the two human communities (of which we intend
to speak anon) is also found, let us at once bring this book also to a conclusion.
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