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ST. AUGUSTIN
THE CITY OF GOD
BOOK XX.
ARGUMENT.
CONCERNING THE LAST JUDGMENT, AND THE DECLARATIONS REGARDING IT IN THE OLD
AND NEW TESTAMENTS.
CHAP. 1.--THAT ALTHOUGH GOD IS ALWAYS JUDGING, IT IS NEVERTHELESS REASONABLE
TO CONFINE OUR ATTENTION IN THIS BOOK TO HIS LAST JUDGMENT.
INTENDING to speak, in dependence on God's grace, of the day of His final
judgment, and to affirm it against the ungodly and incredulous, we must first
of all lay, as it were, in the foundation of the edifice the divine declarations.
Those persons who do not believe such declarations do their best to oppose
to them false and illusive sophisms of their own, either contending that what
is adduced from Scripture has another meaning, or altogether denying that it
is an utterance of God's. For I suppose no man who understands what is written,
and believes it to be communicated by the supreme and true God through holy
men, refuses to yield and consent to these declarations, whether he orally
confesses his consent, or is from some evil influence ashamed or afraid to
do so; or even, with an opinionativeness closely resembling madness, makes
strenuous efforts to defend what he knows and believes to be false against
what he knows and believes to be true.
That,
therefore, which the whole Church of the true God holds and professes as
its creed, that Christ
shall
come from heaven to judge quick and dead, this
we call the last day, or last time, of the divine judgment. For we do not know
how many days this judgment may occupy; but no one who reads the Scriptures,
however negligently, need be told that in them "day" is customarily
used for "time." And when we speak of the day of God's judgment,
we add the word last or final for this reason, because even now God judges,
and has judged from the beginning of human history, banishing from paradise,
and excluding from the tree of life, those first men who perpetrated so great
a sin. Yea, He was certainly exercising judgment also when He did not spare
the angels who sinned, whose prince, overcome by envy, seduced men after being
himself seduced. Neither is it without God's profound and just judgment that
the life of demons and men, the one in the air, the other on earth, is filled
with misery, calamities, and mistakes. And even though no one had sinned, it
could only have been by the good and right judgment of God that the whole rational
creation could have been maintained in eternal blessedness by a persevering
adherence to its Lord. He judges, too, not only in the mass, condemning the
race of devils and the race of men to be miserable on account of the original
sin of these races, but He also judges the voluntary and personal acts of individuals.
For even the devils pray that they may not be tormented,(1) which proves that
without injustice they might either be spared or tormented according to their
deserts. And men are punished by God for their sins often visibly, always secretly,
either in this life or after death, although no man acts rightly save by the
assistance of divine aid; and no man or devil acts unrighteously save by the
permission of the divine and most just judgment. For, as the apostle says, "There
is no unrighteousness with God;"(2) and as he elsewhere says, "His
judgments are inscrutable, and His ways past finding out"(3) In this book,
then, I shall speak, as God permits, not of those first judgments, nor of these
intervening judgments of God, but of the last judgment, when Christ is to come
from heaven to judge the quick and the dead. For that day is properly called
the day of judgment, because in it there shall be no room left for the ignorant
questioning why this wicked person is happy and that righteous man unhappy.
In that day true and full happiness shall be the lot of none but the good,
while deserved and supreme misery shall be the portion of the wicked, and of
them only.
CHAP. 2.--THAT IN THE MINGLED WEB OF HUMAN AFFAIRS GOD'S JUDGMENT IS PRESENT,
THOUGH IT CANNOT BE DISCERNED.
In this
present time we learn to bear with equanimity the ills to which even good
men are subject,
and to
hold cheap the blessings which even the wicked
enjoy. And consequently, even in those conditions of life in which the justice
of God is not apparent, His teaching is salutary. For we do not know by what
judgment of God this good man is poor and that bad man rich; why he who, in
our opinion, ought to suffer acutely for his abandoned life enjoys himself,
while sorrow pursues him whose praiseworthy life leads us to suppose he should
be happy; why the innocent man is dismissed from the bar not only unavenged,
but even condemned, being either wronged by the iniquity of the judge, or overwhelmed
by false evidence, while his guilty adversary, on the other hand, is not only
discharged with impunity, but even has his claims admitted; why the ungodly
enjoys good health, while the godly pines in sickness; why ruffians are of
the soundest constitution, while they who could not hurt any one even with
a word are from infancy afflicted with complicated disorders; why he who is
useful to society is cut off by premature death, while those who, as it might
seem, ought never to have been so much as born have lives of unusual length;
why he who is full of crimes is crowned with honors, while the blameless man
is buried in the darkness of neglect. But who can collect or enumerate all
the contrasts of this kind? But if this anomalous state of things were uniform
in this life, in which, as the sacred Psalmist says, "Man is like to vanity,
his days as a shadow that passeth away,"(1)--so uniform that none but
wicked men won the transitory prosperity of earth, while only the good suffered
its ills,--this could be referred to the just and even benign judgment of God.
We might suppose that they who were not destined to obtain those everlasting
benefits which constitute human blessedness were either deluded by transitory
blessings as the just reward of their wickedness, or were, in God's mercy,
consoled them, and that they who were not destined to suffer eternal torments
were afflicted with temporal chastisement for their sins, or were stimulated
to greater attainment in virtue. But now, as it is, since we not only see good
men involved in the ills of life, and bad men enjoying the good of it, which
seems unjust, but also that evil often overtakes evil men, and good surprises
the good, the rather on this account are God's judgments unsearchable, and
His ways past finding out. Although, therefore, we do not know by what judgment
these things are done or permitted to be done by God, with whom is the highest
virtue, the highest wisdom, the highest justice, no infirmity, no rashness,
no unrighteousness, yet it is salutary for us to learn to hold cheap such things,
be they good or evil, as attach indifferently to good men and bad, and to covet
those good things which belong only to good men, and flee those evils which
belong only to evil men. But when we shall have come to that judgment, the
date of which is called peculiarly the day of judgment, and sometimes the day
of the Lord, we shall then recognize the justice of all God's judgments, not
only of such as shall then be pronounced, but, of all which take effect from
the beginning, or may take effect before that time. And in that day we shall
also recognize with what justice so many, or almost all, the just judgments
of God in the present life defy the scrutiny of human sense or insight, though
in this matter it is not concealed from pious minds that what is concealed
is just.
CHAP. 3.--WHAT SOLOMON, IN THE BOOK OF ECCLESIASTES, SAYS REGARDING THE THINGS
WHICH HAPPEN ALIKE TO GOOD AND WICKED MEN.
Solomon,
the wisest king of Israel, who reigned in Jerusalem, thus commences the book
called Ecclesiastes,
which
the Jews number among their canonical Scriptures: "Vanity
of vanities, said Ecclesiastes, vanity of vanities; all is vanity. What profit
hath a man of all his labor which he hath taken under the sun?"(2) And
after going on to enumerate, with this as his text, the calamities and delusions
of this life, and the shifting nature of the present time, in which there is
nothing substantial, nothing lasting, he bewails, among the other vanities
that are under the sun, this also, that though wisdom excelleth folly as light
excelleth darkness, and though the eyes of the wise man are in his head, while
the fool walketh in darkness,(1) yet one event happeneth to them all, that
is to say, in this life under the sun, unquestionably alluding to those evils
which we see befall good and bad men alike. He says, further, that the good
suffer the ills of life as if they were evil doers, and the bad enjoy the good
of life as if they were good. "There is a vanity which is done upon the
earth; that there be just men unto whom it happeneth according to the work
of the wicked: again, there be wicked men, to whom it happeneth according to
the work of the righteous. I said, that this also is vanity."(2) This
wisest man devoted this whole book to a full exposure of this vanity, evidently
with no other object than that we might long for that life in which there is
no vanity under the sun, but verity under Him who made the sun. In this vanity,
then, was it not by the just and righteous judgment of God that man, made like
to vanity, was destined to pass away? But in these days of vanity it makes
an important difference whether he resists or yields to the truth, and whether
he is destitute of true piety or a partaker of it,--important not so far as
regards the acquirement of the blessings or the evasion of the calamities of
this transitory and vain life, but in connection with the future judgment which
shall make over to good men good things, and to bad men bad things, in permanent,
inalienable possession. In fine, this wise man concludes this book of his by
saying, "Fear God, and keep His commandments: for this is every man. For
God shall bring every work into judgment, with every despised person, whether
it be good, or whether it be evil."(3) What truer, terser, more salutary
enouncement could be made? "Fear God, he says, and keep His commandments:
for this is every man." For whosoever has real existence, is this, is
a keeper of God's commandments; and he who is not this, is nothing. For so
long as he remains in the likeness of vanity, he is not renewed in the image
of the truth. "For God shall bring into judgment every work,"--that
is, whatever man does in this life,--"whether it be good or whether it
be evil, with every despised person,"--that is, with every man who here
seems despicable, and is therefore not considered; for God sees even him and
does not despise him nor pass him over in His judgment.
CHAP. 4.--THAT PROOFS OF THE LAST JUDGMENT WILL BE ADDUCED, FIRST FROM THE
NEW TESTAMENT, AND THEN FROM THE OLD.
The proofs,
then, of this last judgment of God which I propose to adduce shall be drawn
first from
the New
Testament, and then from the Old. For although
the Old Testament is prior in point of time the New has the precedence in intrinsic
value; for the Old acts the part of herald to the New. We shall therefore first
cite passages from the New Testament, and confirm them by quotations from the
Old Testament. The Old contains the law and the prophets, the New the gospel
and the apostolic epistles. Now the apostle says "By the law is the knowledge
of sin. But now the righteousness of God without the law is manifested, being
witnessed by the law and the prophets; now the righteousness of God is by faith
of Jesus Christ upon all them that believe."(4) This righteousness of
God belongs to the New Testament, and evidence for it exists in the old books,
that is to say, in the law and the prophets. I shall first, then state the
case, and then call the witnesses. This order Jesus Christ Himself directs
us to observe, saying, "The scribe instructed in the kingdom of God is
like a good householder, bringing out of his treasure things new and old."(5)
He did not say" old and new," which He certainly would have said
had He not wished to follow the order of merit rather than that of time.
CHAP. 5.--THE PASSAGES IN WHICH THE SAVIOUR DECLARES THAT THERE SHALL BE A
DIVINE JUDGMENT IN THE END OF THE WORLD.
The Saviour
Himself, while reproving the cities in which He had done great works, but
which had not
believed,
and while setting them in unfavorable comparison
with foreign cities, says, "But I say unto you, It shall be more tolerable
for Tyre and Sidon at the day of judgment than for you."(6) And a little
after He says, "Verily, I say unto you, It shall be more tolerable for
the land of Sodom in the day of judgment than for thee."(7) Here He most
plainly predicts that a day of judgment is to come. And in another place He
says, "The men of Nineveh shall rise in judgment with this generation,
and shall condemn it: because they repented at the preaching of Jonas; and,
behold, a greater than Jonas is here. The queen of the south shall rise up
in the judgment with this generation, and shall condemn it: for she came from
the uttermost parts of the earth to hear the words of Solomon; and behold,
a greater than Solomon is here."(1) Two things we learn from this passage,
that a judgment is to take place, and that it is to take place at the resurrection
of the dead. For when He spoke of the Ninevites and the queen of the south,
He certainly spoke of dead persons, and yet He said that they should rise up
in the day of judgment. He did not say, "They shall condemn," as
if they themselves were to be the judges, but because, in comparison with them,
the others shall be justly condemned.
Again,
in another passage, in which He was speaking of the present intermingling
and future separation
of the
good and bad,--the separation which shall be made
in the day of judgment,--He adduced a comparison drawn from the sown wheat
and the tares sown among them, and gave this explanation of it to His disciples: "He
that soweth the good seed is the Son of man,"(2) etc. Here, indeed, He
did not name the judgment or the day of judgment, but indicated it much more
clearly by describing the circumstances, and foretold that it should take place
in the end of the world.
In like
manner He says to His disciples, "Verily I say unto you, That
ye which have followed me, in the regeneration, when the Son of man shall sit
on the throne of His glory, ye also shall sit upon twelve thrones, judging
the twelve tribes of Israel."(3) Here we learn that Jesus shall judge
with His disciples. And therefore He said elsewhere to the Jews, "If I
by Beelzebub cast out devils, by whom do your sons cast them out? Therefore
they shall be your judges."(4) Neither ought we to suppose that only twelve
men shall judge along with Him, though He says that they shall sit upon twelve
thrones; for by the number twelve is signified the completeness of the multitude
of those who shall judge. For the two parts of the number seven (which commonly
symbolizes totality), that is to say four and three, multiplied into one another,
give twelve. For four times three, or three times four, are twelve. There are
other meanings, too, in this number twelve. Were not this the right interpretation
of the twelve thrones, then since we read that Matthias was ordained an apostle
in the room of Judas the traitor, the Apostle Paul, though he labored more
than them all,(5) should have no throne of judgment; but he unmistakeably considers
himself to be included in the number of the judges when he says, "Know
ye not that we shall judge angels?"(6) The same rule is to be observed
in applying the number twelve to those who are to be judged. For though it
was said, "judging the twelve tribes of Israel," the tribe of Levi,
which is the thirteenth, shall not on this account be exempt from judgment,
neither shall judgment be passed only on Israel and not on the other nations.
And by the words "in the regeneration," He certainly meant the resurrection
of the dead to be understood; for our flesh shall be regenerated by incorruption,
as our soul is regenerated by faith.
Many passages
I omit, because, though they seem to refer to the last judgment, yet on a
closer
examination
they are found to be ambiguous, or to allude rather
to some other event,--whether to that coming of the Saviour which continually
occurs in His Church, that is, in His members, in which comes little by little,
and piece by piece, since the whole Church is His body, or to the destruction
of the earthly Jerusalem. For when He speaks even of this, He often uses language
which is applicable to the end of the world and that last and great day of
judgment, so that these two events cannot be distinguished unless all the corresponding
passages bearing on the subject in the three evangelists, Matthew, Mark, and
Luke, are compared with one another,--for some things are put more obscurely
by one evangelist and more plainly by another,--so that it becomes apparent
what things are meant to be referred to one event. It is this which I have
been at pains to do in a letter which I wrote to Hesychius of blessed memory,
bishop of Salon, and entitled, "Of the End of the World."(7)
I shall
now cite from the Gospel according to Matthew the passage which speaks of
the separation
of the good
from the wicked by the most efficacious and final
judgment of Christ: "When the Son of man," he says, "shall come
in His glory, . . . then shall He say also unto them on His left hand, Depart
from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels."(8)
Then He in like manner recounts to the wicked the things they had not done,
but which He had said those on the right hand had done. And when they ask when
they had seen Him in need of these things, He replies that, inasmuch as they
had not done it to the least of His brethren, they had not done it unto Him,
and concludes His address in the words, "And these shall go away into
everlasting punishment, but the righteous into life eternal." Moreover,
the evangelist John most distinctly states that He had predicted that the judgment
should be at the resurrection of the dead. For after saying, "The Father
judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgment unto the Son: that all men
should honor the Son, even as they honor the Father: he that honoreth not the
Son, honoreth not the Father which hath sent Him;" He immediately adds, "Verily,
verily, I say unto you, He that heareth my word and believeth on Him that sent
me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into judgment; but is passed
from death to life."(1) Here He said that believers on Him should not
come into judgment. How, then, shall they be separated from the wicked by judgment,
and be set at His right hand, unless judgment be in this passage used for condemnation?
For into judgment, in this sense, they shall not come who hear His word, and
believe on Him that sent Him.
CHAP. 6.--WHAT IS THE FIRST RESURRECTION, AND WHAT THE SECOND.
After
that He adds the words, "Verily, verily, I say unto you, The hour
is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God;
and they that hear shall live. For as the Father hath life in Himself; so hath
He given to the Son to have life in Himself."(2) As yet He does not speak
of the second resurrection, that is, the resurrection of the body, which shall
be in the end, but of the first, which now is. It is for the sake of making
this distinction that He says, "The hour is coming, and now is." Now
this resurrection regards not the body, but the soul. For souls, too, have
a death of their own in wickedness and sins, whereby they are the dead of whom
the same lips say, "Suffer the dead to bury their dead,"(3)--that
is, let those who are dead in soul bury them that are dead in body. It is of
these dead, then--the dead in ungodliness and wickedness--that He says, "The
hour is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of
God; and they that hear shall live." "They that hear," that
is, they who obey, believe, and persevere to the end. Here no difference is
made between the good and the bad. For it is good for all men to hear His voice
and live, by passing to the life of godliness from the death of ungodliness.
Of this death the Apostle Paul says, "Therefore all are dead, and He died
for all, that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves, but
unto Him which died for them and rose again."(4) Thus all, without one
exception, were dead in sins, whether original or voluntary sins, sins of ignorance,
or sins committed against knowledge; and for all the dead there died the one
only person who lived, that is, who had no sin whatever, in order that they
who live by the remission of their sins should live, not to themselves, but
to Him who died for all, for our sins, and rose again for our justification,
that we, believing in Him who justifies the ungodly, and being justified from
ungodliness or quickened from death, may be able to attain to the first resurrection
which now is. For in this first resurrection none have a part save those who
shall be eternally blessed; but in the second, of which He goes on to speak,
all, as we shall learn, have a part, both the blessed and the wretched. The
one is the resurrection of mercy, the other of judgment. And therefore it is
written in the psalm, "I will sing of mercy and of judgment: unto Thee,
O Lord, will I sing."(5)
And of
this judgment He went on to say, "And hath given Him authority
to execute judgment also, because He is the Son of man." Here He shows
that He will come to judge in that flesh in which He had come to be judged.
For it is to show this He says, "because He is the Son of man." And
then follow the words for our purpose: "Marvel not at this: for the hour
is coming, in the which all that are in the graves shall hear His voice, and
shall come forth; they that have done good, unto the resurrection of life;
and they that have done evil, unto the resurrection of judgment."(6) This
judgment He uses here in the same sense as a little before, when He says, "He
that heareth my word, and believeth on Him that sent me, hath everlasting life,
and shall not come into judgment, but is passed from death to life;" i.e.,
by having a part in the first resurrection, by which a transition from death
to life is made in this present time, he shall not come into damnation, which
He mentions by the name of judgment, as also in the place where He says, "but
they that have done evil unto the resurrection of judgment," i.e., of
damnation. He, therefore, who would not be damned in the second resurrection,
let him rise in the first. For "the hour is coming, and now is, when the
dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God; and they that hear shall live," i.e.,
shall not come into damnation, which is called the second death; into which
death, after the second or bodily resurrection, they shall be hurled who do
not rise in the first or spiritual resurrection. For "the hour is coming" (but
here He does not say, "and now is," because it shall come in the
end of the world in the last and greatest judgment of God) "when all that
are in the graves shall hear His voice and shall come forth." He does
not say, as in the first resurrection, "And they that Hear shall live." For
all shall not live, at least with such life as ought alone to be called life
because it alone is blessed. For some kind of life they must have in order
to hear, and come forth from the graves m their rising bodies. And why all
shall not live He teaches in the words that follow: "They that have done
good, to the resurrection of life,"--these are they who shall live; "but
they that have done evil, to the resurrection of judgment,"--these are
they who shall not live, for they shall die in the second death. They have
done evil because their life has been evil; and their life has been evil because
it has not been renewed in the first or spiritual resurrection which now is,
or because they have not persevered to the end in their renewed life. As, then,
there are two regenerations, of which I have already made mention,--the one
according to faith, and which takes place in the present life by means of baptism;
the other according to the flesh, and which shall be accomplished in its incorruption
and immortality by means of the great and final judgment,--so are there also
two resurrections,--the one the first and spiritual resurrection, which has
place in this life, and preserves us from coming into the second death; the
other the second, which does not occur now, but in the end of the world, and
which is of the body, not of the soul, and which by the last judgment shall
dismiss some into the second death, others into that life which has no death.
CHAP. 7.--WHAT IS WRITTEN IN THE REVELATION OF JOHN REGARDING THE TWO RESURRECTIONS,
AND THE THOUSAND YEARS, AND WHAT MAY REASONABLY BE HELD ON THESE POINTS.
The evangelist
John has spoken of these two resurrections in the book which is called the
Apocalypse,
but
in such a way that some Christians do not understand
the first of the two, and so construe the passage into ridiculous fancies.
For the Apostle John says in the foresaid book, "And I saw an angel come
down from heaven. . . . Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first
resurrection: on such the second death hath no power; but they shall be priests
of God and of Christ, and shall reign with Him a thousand years."(1) Those
who, on the strength of this passage, have suspected that the first resurrection
is future and bodily, have been moved, among other things, specially by the
number of a thousand years, as if it were a fit thing that the saints should
thus enjoy a kind of Sabbath-rest during that period, a holy leisure after
the labors of the six thousand years since man was created, and was on account
of his great sin dismissed from the blessedness of paradise into the woes of
this mortal life, so that thus, as it is written, "One day is with the
Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day,"(2) there should
follow on the completion of six thousand years, as of six days, a kind of seventh-day
Sabbath in the succeeding thousand years; and that it is for this purpose the
saints rise, viz., to celebrate this Sabbath. And. this opinion would not be
objectionable, if it were believed that the joys of the saints in that Sabbath
shall be spiritual, and consequent on the presence of God; for I myself, too,
once held this opinion.(3) But, as they assert that those who then rise again
shall enjoy the leisure of immoderate carnal banquets, furnished with an amount
of meat and drink such as not only to shock the feeling of the temperate, but
even to surpass the measure of credulity itself, such assertions can be believed
only by the carnal. They who do believe them are called by the spiritual Chiliasts,
which we may literally reproduce by the name Millenarians.(4) It were a tedious
process to refute these opinions point by point: we prefer proceeding to show
how that passage of Scripture should be understood.(5)
The Lord
Jesus Christ Himself says, "No man can enter into a strong man's
house, and Spoil his goods, except he first bind the strong man"(6)--meaning
by the strong man the devil, because he had power to take captive the human
race; and meaning by his goods which he was to take, those who had been held
by the devil in divers sins and iniquities, but were to become believers in
Himself. It was then for the binding of this strong one that the apostle saw
in the Apocalypse "an angel coming down from heaven, having the key of
the abyss, and a chain in his hand. And he laid hold," he says, "on
the dragon, that old serpent, which is called the devil and Satan, and bound
him a thousand years,"--that is, bridled and restrained his power so that
he could not seduce and gain possession of those who were to be freed. Now
the thousand years may be understood in two ways, so far as occurs to me: either
because these things happen in the sixth thousand of years or sixth millennium
(the latter part of which is now passing), as if during the sixth day, which
is to be followed by a Sabbath which has no evening, the endless rest of the
saints, so that, speaking of a part under the name of the whole, he calls the
last part of the millennium--the part, that is, which had yet to expire before
the end of the world--a thousand years; or he used the thousand years as an
equivalent for the whole duration of this world, employing the number of perfection
to mark the fullness of time. For a thousand is the cube of ten. For ten times
ten makes a hundred, that is; the square on a plane superficies. But to give
this superficies height, and make it a cube, the hundred is again multiplied
by ten, which gives a thousand. Besides, if a hundred is sometimes used for
totality, as when the Lord said by way of promise to him that left all and
followed Him "He shall receive in this world an hundredfold;"(1)
of which the apostle gives, as it were, an explanation when he says, "As
having nothing, yet possessing all things,"(2)--for even of old it had
been said, The whole world is the wealth of a believer,--with how much greater
reason is a thousand put for totality since it is the cube, while the other
is only the square? And for the same reason we cannot better interpret the
words of the psalm, "He hath been mindful of His covenant for ever, the
word which He commanded to a thousand generations,"(3) than by understanding
it to mean "to all generations."
"And he cast him into the abyss,"--i.e., cast the devil into the
abyss. By the abyss is meant the countless multitude of the wicked whose hearts
are unfathomably deep in malignity against the Church of God; not that the
devil was not there before, but he is said to be cast in thither, because,
when prevented from harming believers, he takes more complete possession of
the ungodly. For that man is more abundantly possessed by the devil who is
not only alienated from God, but also gratuitously hates those who serve God. "And
shut him up, and set a seal upon him, that he should deceive the nations no
more till the thousand years should be fulfilled." "Shut him up,"--i.e.,
prohibited him from going out, from doing what was forbidden. And the addition
of "set a seal upon him" seems to me to mean that it was designed
to keep it a secret who belonged to the devil's party and who did not. For
in this world this is a secret, for we cannot tell whether even the man who
seems to stand shall fall, or whether he who seems to lie shall rise again.
But by the chain and prison-house of this interdict the devil is prohibited
and restrained from seducing those nations which belong to Christ, but which
he formerly seduced or held in subjection. For before the foundation of the
world God chose to rescue these from the power of darkness, and to translate
them into the kingdom of the Son of His love, as the apostle says.(4) For what
Christian is not aware that he seduces nations even now, and draws them with
himself to eternal punishment, but not those predestined to eternal life? And
let no one be dismayed by the circumstance that the devil often seduces even
those who have been regenerated in Christ, and begun to walk in God's way.
For "the Lord knoweth them that are His,"(5) and of these the devil
seduces none to eternal damnation. For it is as God, from whom nothing is hid
even of things future, that the Lord knows them; not as a man, who sees a man
at the present time (if he can be said to see one whose heart he does not see),
but does not see even himself so far as to be able to know what kind of person
he is to be. The devil, then, is bound and shut up in the abyss that he may
not seduce the nations from which the Church is gathered, and which he formerly
seduced before the Church existed. For it is not said "that he should
not seduce any man," but "that he should not seduce the nations"--meaning,
no doubt, those among which the Church exists--"till the thousand years
should be fulfilled,"--i.e., either what remains of the sixth day which
consists of a thousand years, or all the years which are to elapse till the
end of the world.
The words, "that he should not seduce the nations till the thousand years
should be fulfilled," are not to be understood as indicating that afterwards.
he is to seduce only those nations from which the predestined Church is composed,
and from seducing whom he is restrained by that chain and imprisonment; but
they are used in conformity with that usage frequently employed in Scripture
and exemplified in the psalm, "So our eyes wait upon the Lord our God,
until He have mercy upon us,"(6)--not as if the eyes of His servants Would
no longer wait upon the Lord their God when He had mercy upon them. Or the
order of the words is unquestionably this, "And he shut him up and set
a seal upon him, till the thousand years should be fulfilled;" and the
interposed clause, "that he should seduce the nations no more," is
not to be understood in the connection in which it stands, but separately,
and as if added afterwards, so that the whole sentence might be read, "And
He shut him up and set a seal upon him till the thousand years should be fulfilled,
that he should seduce the nations no more,"--i.e., he is shut up till
the thousand years be fulfilled, on this account, that he may no more deceive
the nations.
CHAP. 8.--OF THE BINDING AND LOOSING OF THE DEVIL.
"After that," says John, "he must be loosed a little season." If
the binding and shutting up of the devil means his being made unable to seduce
the Church, must his loosing be the recovery of this ability? By no means.
For the Church predestined and elected before the foundation of the world,
the Church of which it is said, "The Lord knoweth them that are His," shall
never be seduced by him. And yet there shall be a Church in this world even
when the devil shall be loosed, as there has been since the beginning, and
shall be always, the places of the dying being filled by new believers. For
a little after John says that the devil, being loosed, shall draw the nations
whom he has seduced in the whole world to make war against the Church, and
that the number of these enemies shall be as the sand of the sea. "And
they went up on the breadth of the earth, and compassed the camp of the saints
about, and the beloved city: and fire came down from God out of heaven and
devoured them. And the devil who seduced them was cast into the lake of fire
and brimstone, where the beast and the false prophet are, and shall be tormented
day and night for ever and ever."(1) This relates to the last judgment,
but I have thought fit to mention it now, lest any one might suppose that in
that short time during which the devil shall be loose there shall be no Church
upon earth, whether because the devil finds no Church, or destroys it by manifold
persecutions. The devil, then, is not bound during the whole time which this
book embraces,--that is, from the first coming of Christ to the end of the
world, when He shall come the second time,--not bound in this sense, that during
this interval, which goes by the name of a thousand years, he shall not seduce
the Church, for not even when loosed shall he seduce it. For certainly if his
being bound means that he is not able or not permitted to seduce the Church,
what can the loosing of him mean but his being able or permitted to do so?
But God forbid that such should be the case! But the binding of the devil is
his being prevented from the exercise of his whole power to seduce men, either
by violently forcing or fraudulently deceiving them into taking part with him.
If he were during so long a period permitted to assail the weakness of men,
very many persons, such as God would not wish to expose to such temptation,
would have their faith overthrown, or would be prevented from believing; and
that this might not happen, he is bound.
But when the short time comes he shall be loosed. For he shall rage with the
whole force of himself and his angels for three years and six months; and those
with whom he makes war shall have power to withstand all his violence and stratagems.
And if he were never loosed, his malicious power would be less patent, and
less proof would be given of the steadfast fortitude of the holy city: it would,
in short, be less manifest what good use the Almighty makes of his great evil.
For the Almighty does not absolutely seclude the saints from his temptation,
but shelters only their inner man, where faith resides, that by outward temptation
they may grow in grace. And He binds him that he may not, in the free and eager
exercise of his malice, hinder or destroy the faith of those countless weak
persons, already believing or yet to believe, from whom the Church must be
increased and completed; and he will in the end loose him, that the city of
God may see how mighty an adversary it has conquered, to the great glory of
its Redeemer, Helper, Deliverer. And what are we in comparison with those believers
and saints who shall then exist, seeing that they shall be tested by the loosing
of an enemy with whom we make war at the greatest peril even when he is bound?
Although it is also certain that even in this intervening period there have
been and are some soldiers of Christ so wise and strong, that if they were
to be alive in this mortal condition at the time of his loosing, they would
both most wisely guard against, and most patiently endure, all his snares and
assaults.
Now the
devil was thus bound not only when the Church began to be more and more widely
extended
among the
nations beyond Judea, but is now and shall be
bound till the end of the world, when he is to be loosed. Because even now
men are, and doubtless to the end of the world shall be, converted to the faith
from the unbelief in which he held them. And this strong one is bound in each
instance in which he is spoiled of one of his goods; and the abyss in which
he is shut up is not at an end when those die who were alive when first he
was shut up in it, but these have been succeeded, and shall to the end of the
world be succeeded, by others born after them with a like hate of the Christians,
and in the depth of whose blind hearts he is continually shut up as in an abyss.
But it is a question whether, during these three years and six months when
he shall be loose, and raging with all his force, any one who has not previously
believed shall attach himself to the faith. For how in that case would the
words hold good, "Who entereth into the house of a strong one to spoil
his goods, unless first he shall have bound the strong one?" Consequently
this verse seems to compel us to believe that during that time, short as it
is, no one will be added to the Christian community, but that the devil will
make war with those who have previously become Christians, and that, though
some of these may be conquered and desert to the devil, these do not belong
to the predestinated number of the sons of God. For it is not without reason
that John, the same apostle as wrote this Apocalypse, says in his epistle regarding
certain persons, "They went out from us, but they were not of us; for
if they had been of us, they would no doubt have remained with us."(1)
But what shall become of the little ones? For it is beyond all belief that
in these days there shall not be found some Christian children born, but not
yet baptized, and that there shall not also be some born during that very period;
and if there be such, we cannot believe that their parents shall not find some
way of bringing them to the laver of regeneration. But if this shall be the
case, how shall these goods be snatched from the devil when he is loose, since
into his house no man enters to spoil his goods unless he has first bound him?
On the contrary, we are rather to believe that in these days there shall be
no lack either of those who fall away from, or of those who attach themselves
to the Church; but there shall be such resoluteness, both in parents to seek
baptism for their little ones, and in those who shall then first believe, that
they shall conquer that strong one, even though unbound,--that is, shall both
vigilantly comprehend, and patiently bear up against him, though employing
such wiles and putting forth such force as he never before used; and thus they
shall be snatched from him even though unbound. And yet the verse of the Gospel
will not be untrue, "Who entereth into the house of the strong one to
spoil his goods, unless he shall first have bound the strong one?" For
in accordance with this true saying that order is observed--the strong one
first bound, and then his goods spoiled; for the Church is so increased by
the weak and strong from all nations far and near, that by its most robust
faith in things divinely predicted and accomplished, it shall be able to spoil
the goods of even the unbound devil. For as we must own that, "when iniquity
abounds, the love of many waxes cold,"(2) and that those who have not
been written in the book of life shall in large numbers yield to the severe
and unprecedented persecutions and stratagems of the devil now loosed, so we
cannot but think that not only those whom that time shall find sound in the
faith, but also some who till then shall be without, shall become firm in the
faith they have hitherto rejected and mighty to conquer the devil even though
unbound, God's grace aiding them to understand the Scriptures, in which, among
other things, there is foretold that very end which they themselves see to
be arriving. And if this shall be so, his binding is to be spoken of as preceding,
that there might follow a spoiling of him both bound and loosed; for it is
of this it is said, "Who shall enter into the house of the strong one
to spoil his goods, unless he shall first have bound the strong one?"
CHAP. 9.--WHAT THE REIGN OF THE SAINTS WITH CHRIST FOR A THOUSAND YEARS IS,
AND HOW IT DIFFERS FROM THE ETERNAL KINGDOM.
But while
the devil is bound, the saints reign with Christ during the same thousand
years, understood
in the
same way, that is, of the time of His first
coming.(3) For, leaving out of account that kingdom concerning which He shall
say in the end, "Come, ye blessed of my Father, take possession of the
kingdom prepared for you,"(4) the Church could not now be called His kingdom
or the kingdom of heaven unless His saints were even now reigning with Him,
though in another and far different way; for to His saints He says, "Lo,
I am with you always, even to the end of the world."(5) Certainly it is
in this present time that the scribe well instructed in the kingdom of God,
and of whom we have already spoken, brings forth from his treasure things new
and old. And from the Church those reapers shall gather out the tares which
He suffered to grow with the wheat till the harvest, as He explains in the
words "The harvest is the end of the world; and the reapers are the angels.
As therefore the tares are gathered together and burned with fire, so shall
it be in the end of the world. The Son of man shall send His angels, and they
shall gather out of His kingdom all offenses."(1) Can He mean out of that
kingdom in which are no offenses? Then it must be out of His present kingdom,
the Church, that they are gathered. So He says, "He that breaketh one
of the least of these commandments, and teacheth men so, shall be called least
in the kingdom of heaven: but he that doeth and teacheth thus shall be called
great in the kingdom of heaven."(2) He speaks of both as being in the
kingdom of heaven, both the man who does not perform the commandments which
He teaches,--for "to break" means not to keep, not to perform,--and
the man who does and teaches as He did; but the one He calls least, the other
great. And He immediately adds, "For I say unto you, that except your
righteousness exceed that of the scribes and Pharisees,"--that is, the
righteousness of those who break what they teach; for of the scribes and Pharisees
He elsewhere says, "For they say and do not;"(3)--unless therefore,
your righteousness exceed theirs that is, so that you do not break but rather
do what you teach, "ye shall not enter the kingdom of heaven."(4)
We must understand in one sense the kingdom of heaven in which exist together
both he who breaks what he teaches and he who does it, the one being least,
the other great, and in another sense the kingdom of heaven into which only
he who does what he teaches shall enter. Consequently, where both classes exist,
it is the Church as it now is, but where only the one shall exist, it is the
Church as it is destined to be when no wicked person shall be in her. Therefore
the Church even now is the kingdom of Christ, and the kingdom of heaven. Accordingly,
even now His saints reign with Him, though otherwise than as they shall reign
hereafter; and yet, though the tares grow in the Church along with the wheat,
they do not reign with Him. For they reign with Him who do what the apostle
says, "If ye be risen with Christ, mind the things which are above, where
Christ sitteth at the right hand of God. Seek those things which are above,
not the things which are on the earth."(5) Of such persons he also says
that their conversation is in heaven.(6) In fine, they reign with Him who are
so in His kingdom that they themselves are His kingdom. But in what sense are
those the kingdom of Christ who, to say no more, though they are in it until
all offenses are gathered out of it at the end of the world, yet seek their
own things in it, and not the things that are Christ's?(7)
It is
then of this kingdom militant, in which conflict with the enemy is still
maintained, and war carried
on
with warring lusts, or government laid upon
them as they yield, until we come to that most peaceful kingdom in which we
shall reign without an enemy, and it is of this first resurrection in the present
life, that the Apocalypse speaks in the words just quoted. For, after saying
that the devil is bound a thousand years and is afterwards loosed for a short
season, it goes on to give a sketch of what the Church does or of what is done
in the Church in those days, in the words, "And I saw seats and them that
sat upon them, and judgment was given." It is not to be supposed that
this refers to the last judgment, but to the seats of the rulers and to the
rulers themselves by whom the Church is now governed. And no better interpretation
of judgment being given can be produced than that which we have in the words, "What
ye bind on earth shall be bound in heaven; and what ye loose on earth shall
be loosed in heaven."(8) Whence the apostle says, "What have I to
do with judging them that are without? do not ye judge them that are within?"(9) "And
the souls," says John, "of those who were slain for the testimony
of Jesus and for the word of God,"--understanding what he afterwards says, "reigned
with Christ a thousand years,"(10)--that is, the souls of the martyrs
not yet restored to their bodies. For the souls of the pious dead are not separated
from the Church, which even now is the kingdom of Christ; otherwise there would
be no remembrance made of them at the altar of God in the partaking of the
body of Christ, nor would it do any good in danger to run to His baptism, that
we might not pass from this life without it; nor to reconciliation, if by penitence
or a bad conscience any one may be severed from His body. For why are these
things practised, if not because the faithful, even though dead, are His members?
Therefore, while these thousand years run on, their souls reign with Him, though
not as yet in conjunction with their bodies. And therefore in another part
of this same book we read, "Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord from
henceforth and now, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their labors;
for their works do follow them."(1) The Church, then, begins its reign
with Christ now in the living and in the dead. For, as the apostle says, "Christ
died that He might be Lord both of the living and of the dead."(2) But
he mentioned the souls of the martyrs only, because they who have contended
even to death for the truth, themselves principally reign after death; but,
taking the part for the whole, we understand the words of all others who belong
to the Church, which is the kingdom of Christ.
As to
the words following, "And if any have not worshipped the beast
nor his image, nor have received his inscription on their forehead, or on their
hand," we must take them of both the living and the dead. And what this
beast is, though it requires a more careful investigation, yet it is not inconsistent
with the true faith to understand it of the ungodly city itself, and the community
of unbelievers set in opposition to the faithful people and the city of God. "His
image" seems to me to mean his simulation, to wit, in those men who profess
to believe, but live as unbelievers. For they pretend to be what they are not,
and are called Christians, not from a true likeness but from a deceitful image.
For to this beast belong not only the avowed enemies of the name of Christ
and His most glorious city, but also the tares which are to be gathered out
of His kingdom, the Church, in the end of the world. And who are they who do
not worship the beast and his image, if not those who do what the apostle says, "Be
not yoked with unbelievers?"(3) For such do not worship, i.e., do not
consent, are not subjected; neither do they receive the inscription, the brand
of crime, on their forehead by their profession, on their hand by their practice.
They, then, who are free from these pollutions, whether they still live in
this mortal flesh, or are dead, reign with Christ even now, through this whole
interval which is indicated by the thousand years, in a fashion suited to this
time.
"The rest of them," he says, "did not live." For now is
the hour when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God, and they that
hear shall live; and the rest of them shall not live. The words added, "until
the thousand years are finished," mean that they did not live in the time
in which they ought to have lived by passing from death to life. And therefore,
when the day of the bodily resurrection arrives, they shall come out of their
graves, not to life, but to judgment, namely, to damnation, which is called
the second death. For whosoever has not lived until the thousand years be finished,
i.e., during this whole time in which the first resurrection is going on,--whosoever
has not heard the voice of the Son of God, and passed from death to life,--that
man shall certainly in the second resurrection, the resurrection of the flesh,
pass with his flesh into the second death. For he goes to say "This is
the first resurrection. Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first
resurrection," or who experiences it. Now he experiences it who not only
revives from the death of sin, but continues in this renewed life. "In
these the second death hath no power." Therefore it has power in the rest,
of whom he said above, "The rest of them did not live until the thousand
years were finished;" for in this whole intervening time called a thousand
years, however lustily they lived in the body, they were not quickened to life
out of that death in which their wickedness held them, so that by this revived
life they should become partakers of the first resurrection, and so the second
death should have no power over them.
CHAP. 10.--WHAT IS TO BE REPLIED TO THOSE WHO THINK THAT RESURRECTION PERTAINS
ONLY TO BODIES AND NOT TO SOULS.
There
are some who suppose that resurrection can be predicated only of the body,
and therefore they
contend
that this first resurrection (of the Apocalypse)
is a bodily resurrection. For, say they, "to rise again" can only
be said of things that fall. Now, bodies fall in death.(4) There cannot, therefore,
be a resurrection of souls, but of bodies. But what do they say to the apostle
who speaks of a resurrection of souls? For certainly it was in the inner and
not the outer man that those had risen again to whom he says, "If ye have
risen with Christ, mind the things that are above."(5) The same sense
he elsewhere conveyed in other words, saying, "That as Christ has risen
from the dead by the glory of the Father, so we also may walk in newness of
life."(6) So, too, "Awake thou that sleepest, and arise from the
dead, and Christ shall give thee light.(7)" As to what they say about
nothing being able to rise again but what falls, whence they conclude that
resurrection pertains to bodies only, and not to souls, because bodies fall,
why do they make nothing of the words, "Ye that fear the Lord, wait for
His mercy; and go not aside lest ye fall;"(1) and" To his own Master
he stands or falls;"(2) and "He that thinketh he standeth, let him
take heed lest he fall?"(3) For I fancy this fall that we are to take
heed against is a fall of the soul, not of the body. If, then, rising again
belongs to things that fall, and souls fall, it must be owned that souls also
rise again. To the words, "In them the second death hath no power," are
added the words, "but they shall be priests of God and Christ, and shall
reign with Him a thousand years;" and this refers not to the bishops alone,
and presbyters, who are now specially called priests in the Church; but as
we call all believers Christians on account of the mystical chrism, so we call
all priests because they are members of the one Priest. Of them the Apostle
Peter says, "A holy people, a royal priesthood."(4) Certainly he
implied, though in a passing and incidental way, that Christ is God, saying
priests of God and Christ, that is, of the Father and the Son, though it was
in His servant-form and as Son of man that Christ was made a Priest for ever
after the order of Melchisedec. But this we have already explained more than
once.
CHAP. 11.--OF GOG AND MAGOG, WHO ARE TO BE ROUSED BY THE DEVIL TO PERSECUTE
THE CHURCH, WHEN HE IS LOOSED IN THE END OF THE WORLD.
"And when the thousand years are finished, Satan shall be loosed from
his prison, and shall go out to seduce the nations which are in the four corners
of the earth, Gog and Magog, and shall draw them to battle, whose number is
as the sand of the sea." This then, is his purpose in seducing them, to
draw them to this battle. For even before this he was wont to use as many and
various seductions as he could continue. And the words "he shall go out" mean,
he shall burst forth from lurking hatred into open persecution. For this persecution,
occurring while the final judgment is imminent, shall be the last which shall
be endured by the holy Church throughout the world, the whole city of Christ
being assailed by the whole city of the devil, as each exists on earth. For
these nations which he names Cog and Magog are not to be understood of some
barbarous nations in some part of the world, whether the Getae and Massagetae,
as some conclude from the initial letters, or some other foreign nations not
under the Roman government. For John marks that they are spread over the whole
earth, when he says, "The nations which are in the four corners of the
earth," and he added that these are Gog and Magog. The meaning of these
names we find to be, Cog, "a roof," Magog, "from a roof,"--a
house, as it were, and he who comes out of the house. They are therefore the
nations in which we found that the devil was shut up as in an abyss, and the
devil himself coming out from them and going forth, so that they are the roof,
he from the roof. Or if we refer both words to the nations, not one to them
and one to the devil, then they are both the roof, because in them the old
enemy is at present shut up, and as it were roofed in; and they shall be from
the roof when they break forth from concealed to open hatred. The words, "And
they went up on the breadth of the earth, and encompassed the camp of the saints
and the beloved city," do not mean that they have come, or shall come,
to one place, as if the camp of the saints and the beloved city should be in
some one place; for this camp is nothing else than the Church of Christ extending
over the whole world. And consequently wherever the Church shall be,--and it
shall be in all nations, as is signified by "the breadth of the earth,"--there
also shall be the camp of the saints and the beloved city, and there it shall
be encompassed by the savage persecution of all its enemies; for they too shall
exist along with it in all nations,--that is, it shall be straitened, and hard
pressed, and shut up in the straits of tribulation, but shall not desert its
military duty, which is signified by the word "camp."
CHAP. 12.--WHETHER THE FIRE THAT CAME DOWN OUT OF HEAVEN AND DEVOURED THEM
REFERS TO THE LAST PUNISHMENT OF THE WICKED.
The words, "And fire came down out of heaven and devoured them," are
not to be understood of the final punishment which shall be inflicted when
it is said, "Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire;"(5)
for then they shall be cast into the fire, not fire come down out of heaven
upon them. In this place "fire out of heaven" is well understood
of the firmness of the saints, wherewith they refuse to yield obedience to
those who rage against them. For the firmament is "heaven," by whose
firmness these assailants shall be pained with blazing zeal, for they shall
be impotent to draw away the saints to the party of Antichrist. This is the
fire which shall devour them, and this is "from God;" for it is by
God's grace the saints become unconquerable, and so torment their enemies.
For as in a good sense it is said, "The zeal of Thine house hath consumed
me,"(1) so in a bad sense it is said, "Zeal hath possessed the uninstructed
people, and now fire shall consume the enemies."(2) "And now," that
is to say, not the fire of the last judgment. Or if by this fire coming down
out of heaven and consuming them, John meant that blow wherewith Christ in
His coming is to strike those persecutors of the Church whom He shall then
find alive upon earth, when He shall kill Antichrist with the breath of His
mouth,(3) then even this is not the last judgment of the wicked; but the last
judgment is that which they shall suffer when the bodily resurrection has taken
place.
CHAP. 13.--WHETHER THE TIME OF THE PERSECUTION OR ANTICHRIST SHOULD BE RECKONED
IN THE THOUSAND YEARS.
This last
persecution by Antichrist shall last for three years and six months, as we
have already
said, and as
is affirmed both in the book of Revelation
and by Daniel the prophet. Though this time is brief, yet not without reason
is it questioned whether it is comprehended in the thousand years in which
the devil is bound and the saints reign with Christ, or whether this little
season should be added over and above to these years. For if we say that they
are included in the thousand years, then the saints reign with Christ during
a more protracted period than the devil is bound. For they shall reign with
their King and Conqueror mightily even in that crowning persecution when the
devil shall now be unbound and shall rage against them with all his might.
How then does Scripture define both the binding of the devil and the reign
of the saints by the same thousand years, if the binding of the devil ceases
three years and six months before this reign of the saints with Christ? On
the other hand, if we say that the brief space of this persecution is not to
be reckoned as a part of the thousand years, but rather as an additional period,
we shall indeed be able to interpret the words, "The priests of God and
of Christ shall reign with Him a thousand years; and when the thousand years
shall be finished, Satan shall be loosed out of his prison;" for thus
they signify that the reign of the saints and the bondage of the devil shall
cease simultaneously, so that the time of the persecution we speak of should
be contemporaneous neither with the reign of the saints nor with the imprisonment
of Satan, but should be reckoned over and above as a superadded portion of
time. But then in this case we are forced to admit that the saints shall not
reign with Christ during that persecution. But who can dare to say that His
members shall not reign with Him at that very juncture when they shall most
of all, and with the greatest fortitude, cleave to Him, and when the glory
of resistlance and the crown of martyrdom shall be more conspicuous in proportion
to the hotness of the battle? Or if it is suggested that they may be said not
to reign, because of the tribulations which they shall suffer, it will follow
that all the saints who have formerly, during the thousand years, suffered
tribulation, shall not be said to have reigned with Christ during the period
of their tribulation, and consequently even those whose souls the author of
this book says that he saw, and who were slain for the testimony of Jesus and
the word of God, did not reign with Christ when they were suffering persecution,
and they were not themselves the kingdom of Christ, though Christ was then
pre-eminently possessing them. This is indeed perfectly absurd, and to be scouted.
But assuredly the victorious souls of the glorious martyrs having overcome
and finished all griefs and toils, and having laid down their mortal members,
have reigned and do reign with Christ till the thousand years are finished,
that they may afterwards reign with Him when they have received their immortal
bodies. And therefore during these three years and a half the souls of those
who were slain for His testimony, both those which formerly passed from the
body and those which shall pass in that last persecution, shall reign with
Him till the mortal world come to an end, and pass into that kingdom in which
there shall be no death. And thus the reign of the saints with Christ shall
last longer than the bonds and imprisonment of the devil, because they shall
reign with their King the Son of God for these three years and a half during
which the devil is no longer bound. It remains, therefore, that when we read
that "the priests of God and of Christ shall reign with Him a thousand
years; and when the thousand years are finished, the devil shall be loosed
from his imprisonment," that we understand either that the thousand years
of the reign of the saints does not terminate, though the imprisonment of the
devil does,--so that both parties have their thousand years, that is, their
complete time, yet each with a different actual duration approriate to itself,
the kingdom of the saints being longer, the imprisonment of the devil shorter,--or
at least that, as three years and six months is a very short time, it is not
reckoned as either deducted from the whole time of Satan's imprisonment, or
as added to the whole duration of the reign of the saints, as we have shown
above in the sixteenth book(1) regarding the round number of four hundred years,
which were specified as four hundred, though actually somewhat more; and similar
expressions are often found in the sacred writings, if one will mark them.
CHAP. 14.--OF THE DAMNATION OF THE DEVIL AND HIS ADHERENTS; AND A SKETCH OF
THE BODILY RESURRECTION OF ALL THE DEAD, AND OF THE FINAL RETRIBUTIVE JUDGMENT.
After
this mention of the closing persecution, he summarily indicates all that
the devil, and the
city of which
he is the prince, shall suffer in the
last judgment. For he says, "And the devil who seduced them is cast into
the lake of fire and brimstone, in which are the beast and the false prophet,
and they shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever." We have
already said that by the beast is well understood the wicked city. His false
prophet is either Antichrist or that image or figment of which we have spoken
in the same place. After this he gives a brief narrative of the last judgment
itself, which shall take place at the second or bodily resurrection of the
dead, as it had been revealed to him: "I saw a throne great and white,
and One sitting on it from whose face the heaven and the earth fled away, and
their place was not found." He does not say, "I saw a throne great
and white, and One sitting on it, and from His face the heaven and the earth
fled away," for it had not happened then, i.e., before the living and
the dead were judged; but he says that he saw Him sitting on the throne from
whose face heaven and earth fled away, but afterwards. For when the judgment
is finished, this heaven and earth shall cease to be, and there will be a new
heaven and a new earth. For this world shall pass away by transmutation, not
by absolute destruction. And therefore the apostle says, "For the figure
of this world passeth away. I would have you be without anxiety."(2) The
figure, therefore, passes away, not the nature. After John had said that he
had seen One sitting on the throne from whose face heaven and earth fled, though
not till afterwards, he said, "And I saw the dead, great and small: and
the books were opened; and another book was opened, which is the book of the
life of each man: and the dead were judged out of those things which were written
in the books, according to their deeds." He said that the books were opened,
and a book; but he left us at a loss as to the nature of this book, "which
is," he says, "the book of the life of each man." By those books,
then, which he first mentioned, we are to understand the sacred books old and
new, that out of them it might be shown what commandments God had enjoined;
and that book of the life of each man is to show what commandments each man
has done or omitted to do. If this book be materially considered, who can reckon
its size or length, or the time it would take to read a book in which the whole
life of every man is recorded? Shall there be present as many angels as men,
and shall each man hear his life recited by the angel assigned to him? In that
case there will be not one book containing all the lives, but a separate book
for every life. But our passage requires us to think of one only. "And
another book was opened," it says. We must therefore understand it of
a certain divine power, by which it shall be brought about that every one shall
recall to memory all his own works, whether good or evil, and shall mentally
survey them with a marvellous rapidity, so that this knowledge will either
accuse or excuse conscience, and thus all and each shall be simultaneously
judged. And this divine power is called a book, because in it we shall as it
were read all that it causes us to remember. That he may show who the dead,
small and great, are who are to be judged, he recurs to this which he had omitted
or rather deferred, and says, "And the sea presented the dead which were
in it; and death and hell gave up the dead which were in them." This of
course took place before the dead were judged, yet it is mentioned after. And
so, I say, he returns again to what he had omitted. But now he preserves the
order of events, and for the sake of exhibiting it repeats in its own proper
place what he had already said regarding the dead who were judged. For after
he had said, "And the sea presented the dead which were in it, and death
and hell gave up the dead which were in them," he immediately subjoined
what he had already said, "and they were judged every man according to
their works." For this is just what he had said before, "And the
dead were judged according to their works."
CHAP. 15.--WHO THE DEAD ARE WHO ARE GIVEN UP TO JUDGMENT BY THE SEA, AND BY
DEATH AND HELL.
But who
are the dead which were in the sea, and which the sea presented? For we cannot
suppose that
those
who die in the sea are not in hell, nor that their
bodies are preserved in the sea; nor yet, which is still more absurd, that
the sea retained the good, while hell received the bad. Who could believe this?
But some very sensibly suppose that in this place the sea is put for this world.
When John then wished to signify that those whom Christ should find still alive
in the body were to be judged along with those who should rise again, he called
them dead, both the good to whom it is said, "For ye are dead, and your
life is hid with Christ in God,"(1) and the wicked of whom it is said, "Let
the dead bury their dead."(2) They may also be called dead, because they
wear mortal bodies, as the apostle says, "The body indeed is dead because
of sin; but the spirit is life because of righteousness;"(3) proving that
in a living man in the body there is both a body which is dead, and a spirit
which is life. Yet he did not say that the body was mortal, but dead, although
immediately after he speaks in the more usual way of mortal bodies. These,
then, are the dead which were in the sea, and which the sea presented, to wit,
the men who were in this world, because they had not yet died, and whom the
world presented for judgment. "And death and hell," he says, "gave
up the dead which were in them." The sea presented them because they had
merely to be found in the place where they were; but death and hell gave them
up or restored them, because they called them back to life, which they had
already quitted. And perhaps it was not without reason that neither death nor
hell were judged sufficient alone, and both were mentioned,--death to indicate
the good, who have suffered only death and not hell; hell to indicate the wicked,
who suffer also the punishment of hell. For if it does not seem absurd to believe
that the ancient saints who believed in Christ and His then future coming,
were kept in places far removed indeed from the torments of the wicked, but
yet in hell,(4) until Christ's blood and His descent into these places delivered
them, certainly good Christians, redeemed by that precious price already paid,
are quite unacquainted with hell while they wait for their restoration to the
body, and the reception of their reward. After saying, "They were judged
every man according to their works," he briefly added what the judgment
was: "Death and hell were cast into the lake of fire;" by these names
designating the devil and the whole company of his angels, for he is the author
of death and the pains of hell. For this is what he had already, by anticipation,
said in clearer language: "The devil who seduced them was cast into a
lake of fire and brimstone." The obscure addition he had made in the words, "in
which were also the beast and the false prophet," he here explains, "They
who were not found written in the book of life were cast into the lake of fire." This
book is not for reminding God, as if things might escape Him by forgetfulness,
but it symbolizes His predestination of those to whom eternal life shall be
given. For it is not that God is ignorant, and reads in the book to inform
Himself, but rather His infallible prescience is the book of life in which
they are written, that is to say, known beforehand.
CHAP. 16.--OF THE NEW HEAVEN AND THE NEW EARTH.
Having
finished the prophecy of judgment, so far as the wicked are concerned, it
remains that he speak
also
of the good. Having briefly explained the Lord's
words, "These will go away into everlasting punishment," it remains
that he explain the connected words, "but the righteous into life eternal."(5) "And
I saw," he says, "a new heaven and a new earth: for the first heaven
and the first earth have passed away; and there is no more sea."(6) This
will take place in the order which he has by anticipation declared in the words, "I
saw One sitting on the throne, from whose face heaven and earth fled." For
as soon as those who are not written in the book of life have been judged and
cast into eternal fire,--the nature of which fire, or its position in the world
or universe, I suppose is known to no man, unless perhaps the divine Spirit
reveal it to some one,--then shall the figure of this world pass away in a
conflagration of universal fire, as once before the world was flooded with
a deluge of universal water. And by this universal conflagration the qualities
of the corruptible elements which suited our corruptible bodies shall utterly
perish, and our substance shall receive such qualities as shall, by a wonderful
transmutation, harmonize with our immortal bodies, so that, as the world itself
is renewed to some better thing, it is fitly accommodated to men, themselves
renewed in their flesh to some better thing. As for the statement, "And
there shall be no more sea," I would not lightly say whether it is dried
up with that excessive heat, or is itself also turned into some better thing.
For we read that there shall be a new heaven and a new earth, but I do not
remember to have anywhere read anything of a new sea, unless what I find in
this same book, "As it were a sea of glass like crystal "(1) But
he was not then speaking of this end of the world, neither does he seem to
speak of a literal sea, but "as it were a sea." It is possible that,
as prophetic diction delights in mingling figurative and real language, and
thus in some sort veiling the sense, so the words "And there is no more
sea" may be taken in the same sense as the previous phrase, "And
the sea presented the dead which were in it." For then there shall be
no more of this world, no more of the surgings and restlessness of human life,
and it is this which is symbolized by the sea.
CHAP. 17.--OF THE ENDLESS GLORY OF THE CHURCH.
"And I saw," he says, "a great city, new Jerusalem, coming
down from God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. And
I heard a great voice from the throne, saying, Behold, the tabernacle of God
is with men, and He will dwell with them, and they shall be His people, and
God Himself shall be with them. And God shall wipe away all tears from their
eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, but neither
shall there be any more pain: because the former things have passed away. And
He that sat upon the throne said, Behold, I make all things new."(2) This
city is said to come down out of heaven, because the grace with which God formed
it is of heaven. Wherefore He says to it by Isaiah, "I am the Lord that
formed thee."(3) It is indeed descended from heaven from its commencement,
since its citizens during the course of this world grow by the grace of God,
which cometh down from above through the laver of regeneration in the Holy
Ghost sent down from heaven. But by God's final judgment, which shall be administered
by His Son Jesus Christ, there shall by God's grace be manifested a glory so
pervading and so new, that no vestige of what is old shall remain; for even
our bodies shall pass from their old corruption and mortality to new incorruption
and immortality. For to refer this promise to the present time, in which the
saints are reigning with their King a thousand years, seems to me excessively
barefaced, when it is most distinctly said, "God shall wipe away all tears
from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying,
but there shall be no more pain." And who is so absurd, and blinded by
contentious opinionativeness, as to be audacious enough to affirm that in the
midst of the calamities of this mortal state, God's people, or even one single
saint, does live, or has ever lived, or shall ever live, without tears or pain,
--the fact being that the holier a man is, and the fuller of holy desire, so
much the more abundant is the tearfulness of his supplication? Are not these
the utterances of a citizen of the heavenly Jerusalem: "My tears have
been my meat day and night;" (4) and "Every night shall I make my
bed to swim; with my tears shall I water my couch;"(5) and " My groaning
is not hid from Thee;"(6) and "My sorrow was renewed?"(7) Or
are not those God's children who groan, being burdened, not that they wish
to be unclothed, but clothed upon, that mortality may be swallowed up of life?(8)
Do not they even who have the first-fruits of the Spirit groan within themselves,
waiting for the adoption, the redemption of their body?(9) Was not the Apostle
Paul himself a citizen of the heavenly Jerusalem, and was he not so all the
more when he had heaviness and continual sorrow of heart for his Israelitish
brethren?(10) But when shall there be no more death in that city, except when
it shall be said, "O death,where is thy contention?(11) O death, where
is thy sting? The sting of death is sin."(12) Obviously there shall be
no sin when it can be said, "Where is "-- But as for the present
it is not some poor weak citizen of this city, but this same Apostle John himself
who says, "If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the
truth is not in us."(13) No doubt, though this book is called the Apocalypse,
there are in it many obscure passages to exercise the mind of the reader, and
there are few passages so plain as to assist us in the interpretation of the
others, even though we take pains; and this difficulty is increased by the
repetition of the same things, in forms so different, that the things referred
to seem to be different, although in fact they are only differently stated.
But in the words, "God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and
there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, but there shall be
no more pain," there is so manifest a reference to the future world and
the immortality and eternity of the saints,--for only then and only there shall
such a condition be realized,--that if we think this obscure, we need not expect
to find anything plain in any part of Scripture.
CHAP. 18.--WHAT THE APOSTLE PETER PREDICTED REGARDING THE LAST JUDGMENT.
Let us
now see what the Apostle Peter predicted concerning this judgment. "There
shall come," he says, "in the last days scoffers. ...Nevertheless
we, according to His promise, look for new heavens and a new earth, wherein
dwelleth righteousness."(1) There is nothing said here about the resurrection
of the dead, but enough certainly regarding the destruction of this world.
And by his reference to the deluge he seems as it were to suggest to us how
far we should believe the ruin of the world will extend in the end of the world.
For he says that the world which then was perished, and not only the earth
itself, but also the heavens, by which we understand the air, the place and
room of which was occupied by the water. Therefore the whole, or almost the
whole, of the gusty atmosphere (which he calls heaven, or rather the heavens,
meaning the earth's atmosphere, and not the upper air in which sun, moon, and
stars are set) was turned into moisture, and in this way perished together
with the earth, whose former appearance had been destroyed by the deluge. "But
the heavens and the earth which are now, by the same word are kept in store,
reserved unto fire against the day of judgment and perdition of ungodly men." Therefore
the heavens and the earth, or the world which was preserved from the water
to stand in place of that world which perished in the flood, is itself reserved
to fire at last in the day of the judgment and perdition of ungodly men. He
does not hesitate to affirm that in this great change men also shall perish:
their nature, however, shall notwithstanding continue, though in eternal punishments.
Some one will perhaps put the question, If after judgment is pronounced the
world itself is to burn, where shall the saints be during the conflagration,
and before it is replaced by a new heavens and a new earth, since somewhere
they must be, because they have material bodies? We may reply that they shall
be in the upper regions into which the flame of that conflagration shall not
ascend, as neither did the water of the flood; for they shall have such bodies
that they shall be wherever they wish. Moreover, when they have become immortal
and incorruptible, they shall not greatly dread the blaze of that conflagration,
as the corruptible and mortal bodies of the three men were able to live unhurt
in the blazing furnace.
CHAP. 19.--WHAT THE APOSTLE PAUL WROTE TO THE THESSALONIANS ABOUT THE MANIFESTATION
OF ANTICHRIST WHICH SHALL PRECEDE THE DAY OF THE LORD.
I see
that I must omit many of the statements of the gospels and epistles about
this last judgment,
that
this volume may not become unduly long; but
I can on no account omit what the Apostle Paul says, in writing to the Thessalonians, "We
beseech you, brethren, by the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ,"(2) etc.
No one
can doubt that he wrote this of Antichrist and of the day of judgment, which
he here calls
the day
of the Lord, nor that he declared that this day
should not come unless he first came who is called the apostate --apostate,
to wit, from the Lord God. And if this may justly be said of all the ungodly,
how much more of him? But it is uncertain in what temple he shall sit, whether
in that ruin of the temple which was built by Solomon, or in the Church; for
the apostle would not call the temple of any idol or demon the temple of God.
And on this account some think that in this passage Antichrist means not the
prince himself alone, but his whole body, that is, the mass of men who adhere
to him, along with him their prince; and they also think that we should render
the Greek more exactly were we to read, not "in the temple of God," but "for" or "as
the temple of God," as if he himself were the temple of God, the Church.(3)
Then as for the words, "And now ye know what withholdeth," i.e.,
ye know what hindrance or cause of delay there is, "that he might be revealed
in his own time;" they show that he was unwilling to make an explicit
statement, because he said that they knew. And thus we who have not their knowledge
wish and are not able even with pains to understand what the apostle referred
to, especially as his meaning is made still more obscure by what he adds. For
what does he mean by "For the mystery of iniquity doth already work: only
he who now holdeth, let him hold until he be taken out of the way: and then
shall the wicked be revealed?" I frankly confess I do not know what he
means. I will nevertheless mention such conjectures as I have heard or read.
Some think
that the Apostle Paul referred to the Roman empire, and that he was unwilling
to use language
more
explicit, lest he should incur the calumnious
charge of wishing ill to the empire which it was hoped would be eternal; so
that in saying, "For the mystery of iniquity doth already work," he
alluded to Nero, whose deeds already seemed to be as the deeds of Antichrist.
And hence some suppose that he shall rise again and be Antichrist. Others,
again, suppose that he is not even dead, but that he was concealed that he
might be supposed to have been killed, and that he now lives in concealment
in the vigor of that same age which he had reached when he was believed to
have perished, and will live until he is revealed in his own time and restored
to his kingdom.(1) But I wonder that men can be so audacious in their conjectures.
However, it is not absurd to believe that these words of the apostle, "Only
he who now holdeth, let him hold until he be taken out of the way," refer
to the Roman empire, as if it were said, "Only he who now reigneth, let
him reign until he be taken out of the way." "And then shall the
wicked be revealed:" no one doubts that this means Antichrist. But others
think that the words, "Ye know what withholdeth," and "The mystery
of iniquity worketh," refer only to the wicked and the hypocrites who
are in the Church, until they reach a number so great as to furnish Antichrist
with a great people, and that this is the mystery of iniquity, because it seems
hidden; also that the apostle is exhorting the faithful tenaciously to hold
the faith they hold when he says, "Only he who now holdeth, let him hold
until he be taken out of the way," that is, until the mystery of iniquity
which now is hidden departs from the Church. For they suppose that it is to
this same mystery John alludes when in his epistle he says, "Little children,
it is the last time: and as ye have heard that Antichrist shall come, even
now are there many antichrists; whereby we know that it is the last time. They
went out from us, but they were not of us; for if they had been of us, they
would no doubt have continued with us."(2) As therefore there went out
from the Church many heretics, whom John calls "many antichrists," at
that time prior to the end, and which John calls "the last time," so
in the end they shall go out who do not belong to Christ, but to that last
Antichrist, and then he shall be revealed.
Thus various,
then, are the conjectural explanations of the obscure words of the apostle.
That which
there is no
doubt he said is this, that Christ will
not come to judge quick and dead unless Antichrist, His adversary, first come
to seduce those who are dead in soul; although their seduction is a result
of God's secret judgment already passed. For, as it is said "his presence
shall be after the working of Satan, with all power, and signs, and lying wonders,
and with all seduction of unrighteousness in them that perish." For then
shall Satan be loosed, and by means of that Antichrist shall work with all
power in a lying though a wonderful manner. It is commonly questioned whether
these works are called "signs and lying wonders" because he is to
deceive men's senses by false appearances, or because the things he does, though
they be true prodigies, shall be a lie to those who shall believe that such
things could be done only by God, being ignorant of the devil's power, and
especially of such unexampled power as he shall then for the first time put
forth. For when he fell from heaven as fire, and at a stroke swept away from
the holy Job his numerous household and his vast flocks, and then as a whirlwind
rushed upon and smote the house and killed his children, these were not deceitful
appearances, and yet they were the works of Satan to whom God had given this
power. Why they are called signs and lying wonders, we shall then be more likely
to know when the time itself arrives. But whatever be the reason of the name,
they shall be such signs and wonders as shall seduce those who shall deserve
to be seduced, "because they received not the love of the truth that they
might be saved." Neither did the apostle scruple to go on to say, "For
this cause God shall send upon them the working of error that they should believe
a lie." For God shall send, because God shall permit the devil to do these
things, the permission being by His own just judgment, though the doing of
them is in pursuance of the devil's unrighteous and malignant purpose, "that
they all might be judged who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness." Therefore,
being judged, they shall be seduced, and, being seduced, they shall be judged.
But, being judged, they shall be seduced by those secretly just and justly
secret judgments of God, with which He has never ceased to judge since the
first sin of the rational creatures; and, being seduced, they shall be judged
in that last and manifest judgment administered by Jesus Christ, who was Himself
most unjustly judged and shall most justly judge.
CHAP. 20.--WHAT THE SAME APOSTLE TAUGHT IN THE FIRST EPISTLE TO THE THESSALONIANS
REGARDING THE RESURRECTION OF THE DEAD.
But the
apostle has said nothing here regarding, the resurrection of the dead; but
in his first Epistle
to
the Thessalonians he says, "We would not have
you to be ignorant brethren, concerning them which are asleep,"(1) etc.
These words of the apostle most distinctly proclaim the future resurrection
of the dead, when the Lord Christ shall come to judge the quick and the dead.
But it
is commonly asked whether those whom our Lord shall find alive upon earth,
personated in this
passage
by the apostle and those who were alive with
him, shall never die at all, or shall pass with incomprehensible swiftness
through death to immortality in the very moment during which they shall be
caught up along with those who rise again to meet the Lord in the air? For
we cannot say that it is impossible that they should both die and revive again
while they are carried aloft through the air. For the words, "And so shall
we ever be with the Lord," are not to be understood as if he meant that
we shall always remain in the air with the Lord; for He Himself shall not remain
there, but shall only pass through it as He comes. For we shall go to meet
Him as He comes, not where He remains; but "so shall we be with the Lord," that
is, we shall be with Him possessed of immortal bodies wherever we shall be
with Him. We seem compelled to take the words in this sense, and to suppose
that those whom the Lord shall find alive upon earth shall in that brief space
both suffer death and receive immortality: for this same apostle says, "In
Christ shall all be made alive;"(2) while, speaking of the same resurrection
of the body, he elsewhere says, "That which thou sowest is not quickened,
except it die."(3) How, then, shall those whom Christ shall find alive
upon earth be made alive to immortality in Him if they die not, since on this
very account it is said, "That which thou sowest is not quickened, except
it die?" Or if we cannot properly speak of human bodies as sown, unless
in so far as by dying they do in some sort return to the earth, as also the
sentence pronounced by God against the sinning father of the human race runs, "Earth
thou art, and unto earth shalt thou return,"(4) we must acknowledge that
those whom Christ at His coming shall find still in the body are not included
in these words of the apostle nor in those of Genesis; for, being caught up
into the clouds, they are certainly not sown, neither going nor returning to
the earth, whether they experience no death at all or die for a moment in the
air.
But, on
the other hand, there meets us the saying of the same apostle when he was
speaking to the
Corinthians
about the resurrection of the body, "We
shall all rise," or, as other MSS. read, "We shall all sleep."(5)
Since, then, there can be no resurrection unless death has preceded, and since
we can in this passage understand by sleep nothing else than death, how shall
all either sleep or rise again if so many persons whom Christ shall find in
the body shall neither sleep nor rise again? If, then, we believe that the
saints who shall be found alive at Christ's coming, and shall be caught up
to meet Him, shall in that same ascent pass from mortal to immortal bodies,
we shall find no difficulty in the words of the apostle, either when he says, "That
which thou sowest is not quickened, except it die," or when he says, "We
Shall all rise," or "all sleep," for not even the saints shall
be quickened to immortality unless they first die, however briefly; and consequently
they shall not be exempt from resurrection which is preceded by sleep, however
brief. And why should it seem to us incredible that that multitude of bodies
should be, as it were, sown in the air, and should in the air forthwith revive
immortal and incorruptible, when we believe, on the testimony of the same apostle,
that the resurrection shall take place in the twinkling of an eye, and that
the dust of bodies long dead shall return with incomprehensible facility and
swiftness to those members that are now to live endlessly? Neither do we suppose
that in the case of these saints the sentence, "Earth thou art, and unto
earth shalt thou return," is null, though their bodies do not, on dying,
fall to earth, but both die and rise again at once while caught up into the
air. For "Thou shalt return to earth" means, Thou shalt at death
return to that which thou weft before life began. Thou shalt, when examinate,
be that which thou weft before thou wast animate. For it was into a face of
earth that God breathed the breath of life when man was made a living soul;
as if it were said, Thou art earth with a soul, which thou wast not; thou shalt
be earth without a soul, as thou wast. And this is what all bodies of the dead
are before they rot; and what the bodies of those saints shall be if they die,
no matter where they die, as soon as they shall give up that life which they
are immediately to receive back again. In this way, then, they return or go
to earth, inasmuch as from being living men they shall be earth, as that which
becomes cinder is said to go to cinder; that which decays, to go to decay;
and so of six hundred other things. But the manner in which this shall take
place we can now only feebly conjecture, and shall understand it only when
it comes to pass. For that there shall be a bodily resurrection of the dead
when Christ comes to judge quick and dead, we must believe if we would be Christians.
But if we are unable perfectly to comprehend the manner in which it shall take
place, our faith is not on this account vain. Now, however, we ought, as we
formerly promised, to show, as far as seems necessary, what the ancient prophetic
books predicted concerning this final judgment of God; and I fancy no great
time need be spent in discussing and explaining these predictions, if the reader
has been careful to avail himself of the help we have already furnished.
CHAP. 21.--UTTERANCES OF THE PROPHET ISAIAH REGARDING THE RESURRECTION OF
THE DEAD AND THE RETRIBUTIVE JUDGMENT.
The prophet
Isaiah says, "The dead shall rise again, and all who were
in the graves shall rise again; and all who are in the earth shall rejoice:
for the dew which is from Thee is their health, and the earth of the wicked
shall fall."(1) All the former part of this passage relates to the resurrection
of the blessed; but the words, "the earth of the wicked shall fall," is
rightly understood as meaning that the bodies of the wicked shall fall into
the ruin of damnation. And if we would more exactly and carefully scrutinize
the words which refer to the resurrection of the good, we may refer to the
first resurrection the words, "the dead shall rise again," and to
the second the following words, "and all who were in the graves shall
rise again." And if we ask what relates to those saints whom the Lord
at His coming shall find alive upon earth, the following clause may suitably
be referred to them; "All who are in the earth shall rejoice: for the
dew which is from Thee is their health." By "health" in this
place it is best to understand immortality. For that is the most perfect health
which is not repaired by nourishment as by a daily remedy. In like manner the
same prophet, affording hope to the good and terrifying the wicked regarding
the day of judgment, says, "Thus saith the Lord, Behold, I will flow down
upon them as a river of peace, and upon the glory of the Gentiles as a rushing
torrent; their sons shall be carried on the shoulders, and shall be comforted
on the knees. As one whom his mother comforteth, so shall I comfort you; and
ye shall be comforted in Jerusalem. And ye shall see, and your heart shall
rejoice, and your bones shall rise up like a herb; and the hand of the Lord
shall be known by His worshippers, and He shall threaten the contumacious.
For, behold, the Lord shall come as a fire, and as a whirlwind His chariots,
to execute vengeance with indignation, and wasting with a flame of fire. For
with fire of the Lord shall all the earth be judged, and all flesh with His
sword: many shall be wounded by the Lord."(2) In His promise to the good
he says that He will flow down as a river of peace, that is to say, in the
greatest possible abundance of peace. With this peace we shall in the end be
refreshed; but of this we have spoken abundantly in the preceding book. It
is this river in which he says He shall flow down upon those to whom He promises
so great happiness, that we may understand that in the region of that felicity,
which is in heaven, all things are satisfied from this river. But because there
shall thence flow, even upon earthly bodies, the peace of incorruption and
immortality, therefore he says that He shall flow down as this river, that
He may as it were pour Himself from things above to things beneath, and make
men the equals of the angels. By "Jerusalem," too, we should understand
not that which serves with her children, but that which, according to the apostle,
is our free mother, eternal in the heavens.(3) In her we shall be comforted
as we pass toilworn from earth's cards and calamities, and be taken up as her
children on her knees and shoulders. Inexperienced and new to such blandishments,
we shall be received into unwonted bliss. There we shall see, and our heart
shall rejoice. He does not say what we shall see; but what but God, that the
promise in the Gospel may be fulfilled in us, "Blessed are the pure in
heart, for they shall see God ?"(4) What shall we see but all those things
which now we see not, but believe in, and of which the idea we form, according
to our feeble capacity, is incomparably less than the reality? "And ye
shall see," he says, "and your heart shall rejoice." Here ye
believe, there ye shall see.
But because
he said, "Your heart shall rejoice," lest we should
suppose that the blessings of that Jerusalem are only spiritual, he adds, "And
your bones shall rise up like a herb," alluding to the resurrection of
the body, and as it were supplying an omission he had made. For it will not
take place when we have seen; but we shall see when it has taken place. For
he had already spoken of the new heavens and the new earth, speaking repeatedly,
and under many figures, of the things promised to the saints, and saying, "There
shall be new heavens, and a new earth: and the former shall not be remembered
nor come into mind; but they shall find in it gladness and exultation. Behold,
I will make Jerusalem an exultation, and my people a joy. And I will exult
in Jerusalem, and joy in my people; and the voice of weeping shall be no more
heard in her;"(1) and other promises, which some endeavor to refer to
carnal enjoyment during the thousand years. For, in the manner of prophecy,
figurative and literal expressions are mingled, so that a serious mind may,
by useful and salutary effort, reach the spiritual sense; but carnal sluggishness,
or the slowness of an uneducated and undisciplined mind, rests in the superficial
letter, and thinks there is nothing beneath to be looked for. But let this
be enough regarding the style of those prophetic expressions just quoted. And
now, to return to their interpretation. When he had said, "And your bones
shall rise up like a herb," in order to show that it was the resurrection
of the good, though a bodily resurrection, to which he alluded, he added, "And
the hand of the Lord shall be known by His worshippers." What is this
but the hand of Him who distinguishes those who worship from those who despise
Him? Regarding these the context immediately adds, "And He shall threaten
the contumacious," or, as another translator has it, "the unbelieving." He
shall not actually threaten then, but the threats which are now uttered shall
then be fulfilled in effect. "For behold," he says, "the Lord
shall come as a fire, and as a whirlwind His chariots, to execute vengeance
with indignation, and wasting with a flame of fire. For with fire of the Lord
shall all the earth be judged, and all flesh with His sword: many shall be
wounded by the Lord." By fire, whirlwind, sword, he means the judicial
punishment of God. For he says that the Lord Himself shall come as a fire,
to those, that is to say, to whom His coming shall be penal. By His chariots
(for the word is plural)we suitably understand the ministration of angels.
And when he says that all flesh and all the earth shall be judged with His
fire and sword, we do not understand the spiritual and holy to be included,
but the earthly and carnal, of whom it is said that they "mind earthly
things,"(2) and "to be carnally minded is death,"(3) and whom
the Lord calls simply flesh when He says, "My Spirit shall not always
remain in these men, for they are flesh."(4) As to the words, "Many
shall be wounded by the Lord," this wounding shall produce the second
death. It is possible, indeed, to understand fire, sword, and wound in a good
sense. For the Lord said that He wished to send fire on the earth.(5) And the
cloven tongues appeared to them as fire when the Holy Spirit came.(6) And our
Lord says, "I am not come to send peace on earth, but a sword."(7)
And Scripture says that the word of God is a doubly sharp sword,(8) on account
of the two edges, the two Testaments. And in the Song of Songs the holy Church
says that she is wounded with love,(9)--pierced, as it were, with the arrow
of love. But here, where we read or hear that the Lord shall come to execute
vengeance, it is obvious in what sense we are to understand these expressions.
After
briefly mentioning those who shall be consumed in this judgment, speaking
of the wicked and
sinners
under the figure of the meats forbidden by the old
law, from which they had not abstained, he summarily recounts the grace of
the new testament, from the first coming of the Saviour to the last judgment,
of which we now speak; and herewith he concludes his prophecy. For he relates
that the Lord declares that He is coming to gather all nations, that they may
come and witness His glory.(10) For, as the apostle says, "All have sinned
and are in want of the glory of God."(11) And he says that He will do
wonders among them, at which they shall marvel and believe in Him; and that
from them He will send forth those that are saved into various nations, and
distant islands which have not heard His name nor seen His glory, and that
they shall declare His glory among the nations, and shall bring the brethren
of those to whom the prophet was speaking, i.e., shall bring to the faith under
God the Father the brethren of the elect Israelites; and that they shall bring
from all nations an offering to the Lord on beasts of burden and waggons (which
are understood to mean the aids furnished by God in the shape of angelic or
human ministry), to the holy city Jerusalem, which at present is scattered
over the earth, in the faithful saints. For where divine aid is given, men
believe, and where they believe, they come. And the Lord compared them, in
a figure, to the children of Israel offering sacrifice to Him i