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THE SEVEN BOOKS OF ARNOBIUS
AGAINST THE HEATHEN
BOOK I
(ADVERSUS GENTES)
BOOK I.
1. SINCE I have found some who deem themselves very wise in their opinions,
acting as if they were inspired,(1) and announcing with all the authority
of an oracle,(2) that from the time when the Christian people began to
exist in the world the universe has gone to ruin, that the human race has
been visited with ills of many kinds, that even the very gods, abandoning
their accustomed charge, in virtue of which they were wont in former days
to regard with interest our affairs, have been driven from the regions
of earth,--I have resolved, so far as my capacity and my humble power of
language will allow, to oppose public prejudice, and to refute calumnious
accusations; lest, on the one hand, those persons should imagine that they
are declaring some weighty matter, when they are merely retailing vulgar
rumours;(3) and on the other, lest, if we refrain from such a contest,
they should suppose that they have gained a cause, lost by its own inherent
demerits, not abandoned by the silence of its advocates. For I should not
deny that that charge is a most serious one, and that we fully deserve
the hatred attaching to public enemies,(4) if it should appear that to
us are attributable causes by reason of which the universe has deviated
from its laws, the gods have been driven far away, and such swarms of miseries
have been inflicted on the generations of men.
2.
Let us therefore examine carefully the real significance of that opinion,
and what is
the nature
of the allegation; and laying aside all desire for
wrangling,(5) by which the calm view of subjects is wont to be dimmed,
and even intercepted, let us test, by fairly balancing the considerations
on both sides, whether that which is alleged be true. For it will assuredly
be proved by an array of convincing arguments, not that we are discovered
to be more impious, but that they themselves are convicted of that charge
who profess to be worshippers of the deities, and devotees of an antiquated
superstition. And, in the first place, we ask this of them in friendly
and calm language: Since the name of the Christian religion began to be
used on the earth, what phenomenon, unseen before,(6) unheard of before,
what event contrary to the laws established in the beginning, has the so-called "Nature
of Things" felt or suffered? Have these first elements, from which
it is agreed that all things were compacted, been altered into elements
of an opposite character? Has the fabric of this machine and mass of the
universe, by which we are all covered, and in which we are held enclosed,
relaxed in any part, or broken up? Has the revolution of the globe, to
which we are accustomed, departing from the rate of its primal motion,
begun either to move too slowly, or to be hurried onward in headlong rotation?
Have the stars begun to rise in the west, and the setting of the constellations
to take place in the east? Has the sun himself, the chief of the heavenly
bodies, with whose light all things are clothed, and by whose heat all
things are vivified, blazed forth with increased vehemence? has he become
less warm, and has he altered for the worse into opposite conditions that
well-regulated temperature by which he is wont to act upon the earth? Has
the moon ceased to shape herself anew, and to change into former phases
by the constant recurrence of fresh ones? Has the cold of winter, has the
heat of summer, has the moderate warmth of spring and autumn, been modified
by reason of the intermixture of ill-assorted seasons? Has the winter begun
to have long days? has the night begun to recall the very tardy twilights
of summer? Have the winds at all exhausted their violence? Is the sky not
collected(1) into clouds by reason of the blasts having lost their force,
and do the fields when moistened by the showers not prosper? Does the earth
refuse to receive the seed committed to it, or will not the trees assume
their foliage? Has the flavour of excellent fruits altered, or has the
vine changed in its juice? Is foul blood pressed forth from the olive berries,
and is oil no longer supplied to the lamp, now extinguished? Have animals
of the land and of the sea no sexual desires, and do they not conceive
young? Do they not guard, according to their own habits and their own instinct,
the offspring generated in their wombs? In fine, do men themselves, whom
an active energy with its first impulses has scattered over habitable lands,
not form marriages with due rites? Do they not beget dear children? do
they not attend to public, to individual, and to family concerns? Do they
not apply their talents as each one pleases, to varied occupations, to
different kinds of learning? and do they not reap the fruit of diligent
application? Do those to whom it has been so allotted, not exercise kingly
power or military authority? Are men not every day advanced in posts of
honour, in offices of power? Do they not preside in the discussions of
the law courts? Do they not explain the code of law? do they not expound
the principles of equity? All other things with which the life of man is
surrounded, in which it consists, do not all men in their own tribes practise,
according to the established order of their country's manners?
3. Since this is so, and since no strange influence has suddenly manifested
itself to break the continuous course of events by interrupting their succession,
what is the ground of the allegation, that a plague was brought upon the
earth after the Christian religion came into the world, and after it revealed
the mysteries of hidden truth? But pestilences, say my opponents, and droughts,
wars, famines, locusts, mice, and hailstones, and other hurtful things,
by which the property of men is assailed, the gods bring upon us, incensed
as they are by your wrong-doings and by your transgressions. If it were
not a mark of stupidity to linger on matters which are already clear, and
which require no defence, I should certainly show, by unfolding the history
of past ages, that those ills which you speak of were not unknown, were
not sudden in their visitation; and that the plagues did not burst upon
us, and the affairs of men begin to be attacked by a variety of dangers,
from the time that our sect(2) won the honour(3) of this appellation. For
if we are to blame, and if these plagues have been devised against our
sin, whence did antiquity know these names for misfortunes? Whence did
she give a designation to wars? By what conception could she indicate pestilence
and hailstorms, or how could she introduce these terms among her words,
by which speech was rendered plain? For if these ills are entirely new,
and if they derive their origin from recent transgressions, how could it
be that the ancients coined terms for these things, which, on the one hand,
they knew that they themselves had never experienced, and which, on the
other, they had not heard of as occurring in the time of their ancestors?
Scarcity of produce, say my opponents, and short supplies of grain, press
more heavily on us. For, I would ask, were the former generations, even
the most ancient, at any period wholly free from such an inevitable calamity?
Do not the very words by which these ills are characterized bear evidence
and proclaim loudly that no mortal ever escaped from them with entire immunity?
But if the matter were difficult of belief, we might urge, on the testimony
of authors, how great nations, and what individual nations, and how often
such nations experienced dreadful famine, and perished by accumulated devastation.
Very many hailstorms fall upon and assail all things. For do we not find
it contained and deliberately stated in ancient literature, that even showers
of stones(4) often ruined entire districts? Violent rains cause the crops
to perish, and proclaim barrenness to countries:--were the ancients, indeed,
free from these ills, when we have known of(5) mighty rivers even being
dried up, and the mud of their channels parched? The contagious influences
of pestilence consume the human race:--ransack the records of history written
in various languages, and you will find that all countries have often been
desolated and deprived of their inhabitants. Every kind of crop is consumed,
and devoured by locusts and by mice :--go through your own annals, and
you will be taught by these plagues how often former ages were visited
by them, and how often they were brought to the wretchedness of poverty.
Cities shaken by powerful earthquakes totter to their destruction:--what
! did not bygone days witness cities with their populations engulphed by
huge rents of the earth?(1) or did they enjoy a condition exempt from such
disasters?
4. When was the human race destroyed by a flood? was it not before us?
When was the world set on fire,(2) and reduced to coals and ashes? was
it not before us? When were the greatest cities engulphed in the billows
of the sea? was it not before us? When were wars waged with wild beasts,
and battles fought with lions?(3) was it not before us? When was ruin brought
on whole communities by poisonous serpents?(4) was it not before us? For,
inasmuch as you are wont to lay to our blame the cause of frequent wars,
the devastation of cities, the irruptions of the Germans and the Scythians,
allow me, with your leave, to say,--In your eagerness to calumniate us,
you do not perceive the real nature of that which is alleged.
5. Did we bring it about, that ten thousand years ago a vast number of
men burst forth from the island which is called the Atlantis of Neptune,(5)
as Plato tells us, and utterly ruined and blotted out countless tribes?
Did this form a prejudice against us, that between the Assyrians and Bactrians,
under the leadership of Ninus and Zoroaster of old, a struggle was maintained
not only by the sword and by physical power, but also by magicians, and
by the mysterious learning of the Chaldeans? Is it to be laid to the charge
of our religion, that Helen was carried off under the guidance and at the
instigation of the gods, and that she became a direful destiny to her own
and to after times? Was it because of our name, that that mad-cap Xerxes
let the ocean in upon the land, and that he marched over the sea on foot?
Did we produce and stir into action the causes, by reason of which one
youth, starting from Macedonia, subjected the kingdoms and peoples of the
East to captivity and to bondage? Did we, forsooth, urge the deities into
frenzy, so that the Romans lately, like some swollen torrent, overthrew
all nations, and swept them beneath the flood? But if there is no man who
would dare to attribute to our times those things which took place long
ago, how can we be the causes of the present misfortunes, when nothing
new is occurring, but all things are old, and were unknown to none of the
ancients?
6. Although you allege that those wars which you speak of were excited
through hatred of our religion, it would not be difficult to prove, that
after the name of Christ was heard in the world, not only were they not
increased, but they were even in great measure diminished by the restraining
of furious passions. For since we, a numerous band of men as we are, have
learned from His teaching and His laws that evil ought not to be requited
with evil,(6) that it is better to suffer wrong than to inflict it, that
we should rather shed our own blood than stain our hands and our conscience
with that of another, an ungrateful world is now for a long period enjoying
a benefit from Christ, inasmuch as by His means the rage of savage ferocity
has been softened, and has begun to withhold hostile hands from the blood
of a fellow-creature. But if all without exception, who feel that they
are men not in form of body but in power of reason, would lend an ear for
a little to His salutary and peaceful rules, and would not, in the pride
and arrogance of enlightenment, trust to their own senses rather than to
His admonitions, the whole world, having turned the use of steel into more
peaceful occupations, would now be living in the most placid tranquillity,
and would unite in blessed harmony, maintaining inviolate the sanctity
of treaties.
7. But if, say my opponents, no damage is done to human affairs by you,
whence arise those evils by which wretched mortals are now oppressed and
overwhelmed? You ask of me a decided statement,(7) which is by no means
necessary to this cause. For no immediate and prepared discussion regarding
it has been undertaken by me, for the purpose of showing or proving from
what causes and for what reasons each event took place; but in order to
demonstrate that the reproaches of so grave a charge are far removed from
our door. And if I prove this, if by examples and(8) by powerful arguments
the truth of the matter is made clear, I care not whence these evils come,
or from what sources and first beginnings they flow.
8. And yet, that I may not seem to have no opinion on subjects of this
kind, that I may not appear when asked to have nothing to offer, I may
say, What if the primal matter which has been diffused through the four
elements of the universe, contains the causes of all miseries inherent
in its own constitution? What if the movements of the heavenly bodies produce
these evils in certain signs, regions, seasons, and tracts, and impose
upon things placed under them the necessity of various dangers? What if,
at stated intervals, changes take place in the universe, and, as in the
tides of the sea, prosperity at one time flows, at another time ebbs, evils
alternating with it? What if those impurities of matter which we tread
trader our feet have this condition imposed upon them, that they give forth
the most noxious exhalations, by means of which this our atmosphere is
corrupted, and brings pestilence on our bodies, and weakens the human race?
What if--and this seems nearest the truth--whatever appears to us adverse,
is in reality not an evil to the world itself? And what if, measuring by
our own advantages all things which take place, we blame the results of
nature through ill-formed judgments? Plato, that sublime head and pillar
of philosophers, has declared in his writings, that those cruel floods
and those conflagrations of the I world are a purification of the earth;
nor did that wise man dread to call the overthrow of the human race, its
destruction, ruin, and death, a renewal of things, and to affirm that a
youthfulness, as it were, was secured by this renewed strength.(1)
9. It rains not from heaven, my opponent says, and we are in distress
from some extraordinary deficiency of grain crops. What then, do you demand
that the elements should be the slaves of your wants? and that you may
be able to live more softly and more delicately, ought the compliant seasons
to minister to your convenience? What if, in this way, one who is intent
on voyaging complains, that now for a long time there are no winds, and
that the blasts of heaven have for ever lulled? Is it therefore to be said
that that peacefulness of the universe is pernicious, because it interferes
with the wishes of traders? What if one, accustomed to bask himself in
the sun, and thus to acquire dryness of body, similarly complains that
by the clouds the pleasure of serene weather is taken away? Should the
clouds, therefore, be said to hang over with an injurious veil, because
idle lust is not permitted to scorch itself in the burning heat, and to
devise excuses for drinking? All these events which are brought to pass,
and which happen under this mass of the universe, are not to be regarded
as sent for our petty advantages, but as consistent with the plans and
arrangements of Nature herself.
10. And if anything happens which does not foster ourselves or our affairs
with joyous success, it is not to be set down forthwith as an evil, and
as a pernicious thing. The world rains or does not rain: for itself it
rains or does not rain; and, though you perhaps are ignorant of it, it
either diminishes excessive moisture by a burning drought, or by the outpouring
of rain moderates the dryness extending over a very long period. It raises
pestilences, diseases, famines, and other baneful forms of plagues: how
can you tell whether it does not thus remove that which is in excess, and
whether, through loss to themselves, it does not fix a limit to things
prone to luxuriance?
11. Would you venture to say that, in this universe, this thing or the
other thing is an evil, whose origin and cause you are unable to explain
and to analyze?(2) And because it interferes with your lawful, perhaps
even your unlawful pleasures, would you say that it is pernicious and adverse?
What, then, because cold is disagreeable to your members, and is wont to
chill(3) the warmth of your blood, ought not winter on that account to
exist in the world? And because you are unable(4) to endure the hottest
rays of the sun, is summer to be removed from the year, and a different
course of nature to be instituted under different laws? Hellebore is poison
to men; should it therefore not grow? The wolf lies in wait by the sheepfolds;
is nature at all in fault, because she has produced a beast most dangerous
to sheep? The serpent by his bite takes away life; a reproach, forsooth,
to creation, because it has added to animals monsters so cruel.
12. It is rather presumptuous, when you are not your own master, even
when yon are the property of another, to dictate terms to those more powerful;
to wish that that should happen which you desire, not that which you have
found fixed in things by their original constitution. Wherefore, if you
wish that your complaints should have a basis, you must first inform us
whence you are, or who you are; whether the world was created and fashioned
for you, or whether you came into it as sojourners from other regions.
And since it is not in your power to say or to explain for what purpose
you live beneath this vault of heaven, cease to believe that anything belongs
to you; since those things which take place are not brought about in favour
of a part, but have regard to the interest of the whole.
13. Because of the Christians, my opponents say, the gods inflict upon
us all calamities, and ruin is brought on our crops by the heavenly deities.
I ask when you say these things, do you not see that you are accusing us
with bare-faced effrontery, with palpable and clearly proved falsehoods?
It is almost three hundred years(1)--something less or more--since we Christians(2)
began to exist, and to be taken account of in the world. During all these
years, have wars been incessant, has there been a yearly failure of the
crops, has there been no peace on earth, has there been no season of cheapness
and abundance of all things? For this must first be proved by him who accuses
us, that these calamities have been endless and incessant, that men have
never had a breathing time at all, and that without any relaxation(3) they
have undergone dangers of many forms.
14. And yet do we not see that, in these years and seasons that have intervened,
victories innumerable have been gained from the conquered enemy,--that
the boundaries of the empire have been extended, and that nations whose
names we had not previously heard, have been brought under our power,--that
very often there have been the most plentiful yields of grain, seasons
of cheapness, and such abundance of commodities, that all commerce was
paralyzed, being prostrated by the standard of prices? For in what manner
could affairs be carried on, and how could the human race have existed(4)
even to this time, had not the productiveness of nature continued to supply
all things which use demanded?
15. Sometimes, however, there were seasons of scarcity; yet they were
relieved by times of plenty. Again, certain wars were carried on contrary
to our wishes.(5) But they were afterwards compensated by victories and
successes. What shall we say, then?--that the gods at one time bore in
mind our acts of wrong-doing, at another time again forgot them? If, when
there is a famine, the gods are said to be enraged at us, it follows that
in time of plenty they are not wroth, and ill-to-be-appeased; and so the
matter comes to this, that they both lay aside and resume anger with sportive
whim, and always renew their wrath afresh by the recollection of the causes
of offence.I
16. Yet one cannot discover by any rational process of reasoning, what
is the meaning of these statements. If the gods willed that the Alemanni(6)
and the Persians should be overcome because Christians dwelt among their
tribes, how did they grant victory to the Romans when Christians dwelt
among their peoples also? If they willed that mice and locusts should swarm
forth in prodigious numbers in Asia and in Syria because Christians dwelt
among their tribes too, why was there at the same time no such phenomenon
in Spain and in Gaul, although innumerable Christians lived in those provinces
also?(7) If among the Gaetuli and the Tinguitani(8) they sent dryness anti
aridity on the crops on account of this circumstance, why did they in that
very year give the most bountiful harvest to the Moors and to the Nomads,
when a similar religion had its abode in these regions as well? If in any
one state whatever they have caused many to die with hunger, through disgust
at our name, why have they in the same state made wealthier, ay, very rich,
by the high price of corn, not only men not of our booty, but even Christians
themselves? Accordingly, either all should have had no blessing if we are
the cause of the evils, for we are in all nations; or when you see blessings
mixed with misfortunes, cease to attribute to us that which damages your
interests, when we in no respect interfere with your blessings and prosperity.
For if I cause it to be ill with you, why do I not prevent it from being
well with you? If my name is the cause of a great dearth, why am I powerless
to prevent the greatest productiveness? If I am said to bring the ill luck
of a wound being received in war, why, when the enemy are slain, am I not
an evil augury; and why am I not set forth against good hopes, through
the ill luck of a bad omen?
17. And yet, O ye great worshippers and priests of the deities, why, as
you assert that those most holy gods are enraged at Christian communities,
do you not likewise perceive, do you not see what base feelings, what unseemly
frenzies, you attribute to your deities? For, to be angry, what else is
it than to be insane, to rave, to be urged to the lust of vengeance, and
to revel in the troubles of another's grief, through the madness of a savage
disposition? Your great gods, then, know, are subject to and feel that
which wild beasts, which monstrous brutes experience, which the deadly
plant natrix contains in its poisoned roots. That nature which is superior
to others, and which is based on the firm foundation of unwavering virtue,
experiences, as you allege, the instability which is in man, the faults
which are in the animals of earth. And what therefore follows of necessity,
but that from their eyes flashes dart, flames burst forth, a panting breast
emits a hurried breathing from their mouth, and by reason of their burning
words their parched lips become pale?
18. But if this that you say is true,--if it has been tested and thoroughly
ascertained both that the gods boil with rage, and that an impulse of this
kind agitates the divinities with excitement, on the one hand they are
not immortal, and on the other they are not to be reckoned as at all partaking
of divinity. For wherever, as the philosophers hold, there is any agitation,
there of necessity passion must exist. Where passion is situated, it is
reasonable that mental excitement follow. Where there is mental excitement,
there grief and sorrow exist. Where grief and sorrow exist, there is already
room for weakening and decay; and if these two harass them, extinction
is at hand, viz. death, which ends all things, and takes away life from
every sentient being.
19. Moreover, in this way you represent them as not only unstable and
excitable, but, what all agree is far removed from the character of deity,
as unfair in their dealings, as wrong-doers, and, in fine, as possessing
positively no amount of even moderate fairness. For what is a greater wrong
than to be angry with some, and to injure others, to complain of human
beings, and to ravage the harmless corn crops, to hate the Christian name,
and to ruin the worshippers of Christ with every kind of loss?
20. (1)Do they on this account wreak their wrath on you too, in order
that, roused by your own private wounds, you may rise up for their vengeance?
It seems, then, that the gods seek the help of mortals; and were they not
protected by your strenuous advocacy, they are not able of themselves to
repel and to avenge(2) the insults offered them. Nay rather, if it be true
that they burn with anger, give them an opportunity of defending themselves,
and let them put forth and make trial of their innate powers, to take vengeance
for their offended dignity. By heat, by hurtful cold, by noxious winds,
by the most occult diseases, they can slay us, they can consume(3) us,
and they can drive us entirely from all intercourse with men; or if it
is impolitic to assail us by violence, let them give forth some token of
their indignation,(4) by which it may be clear to all that we live under
heaven subject to their strong displeasure.
21. To you let them give good health, to us bad, ay, the very worst. Let
them water your farms with seasonable showers; from our little fields let
them drive away all those rains which are gentle. Let them see to it that
your sheep are multiplied by a numerous progeny; on our flocks let them
bring luckless barrenness. From your olive-trees and vineyards let them
bring the full harvest; but let them see to it that from not one shoot
of ours one drop be expressed. Finally, and as their worst, let them give
orders that in your mouth the products of the earth retain their natural
qualities; but, on the contrary that in ours the honey become bitter, the
flowing oil grow rancid, and that the wine when sipped, be in the very
lips suddenly changed into disappointing vinegar.
22. And since facts themselves testify that this result never occurs,
and since it is plain that to us no less share of the bounties of life
accrues, and to you no greater, what inordinate desire is there to assert
that the gods are unfavourable, nay, inimical to the Christians, who, in
the greatest adversity, just as in prosperity, differ from you in no respect?
If you allow the truth to be told you, and that, too, without reserve,
these allegations are but words,--words, I say; nay, matters believed on
calumnious reports not proved by any certain evidence.
23. But the true(5) gods, and those who are worthy to have and to wear
the dignity of this name, neither conceive anger nor indulge a grudge,
nor do they contrive by insidious devices what may be hurtful to another
party. For verily it is profane, and surpasses all acts of sacrilege, to
believe that that wise and most blessed nature is uplifted in mind if one
prostrates himself before it in humble adoration; and if this adoration
be not paid, that it deems itself despised, and regards itself as fallen
from the pinnacle of its glory. It is childish, weak, and petty, and scarcely
becoming for those whom the experience of learned men has for a long time
called demigods and heroes,(6) not to be versed in heavenly things, and,
divesting themselves of their own proper state, to be busied with the coarser
matter of earth.
24. These are your ideas, these are your sentiments, impiously conceived,
and more impiously believed. Nay, rather, to speak out more truly, the
augurs, the dream interpreters, the soothsayers, the prophets, and the
priestlings, ever vain, have devised these fables; for they, fearing that
their own arts be brought to nought, and that they may extort but scanty
contributions from the devotees, now few and infrequent, whenever they
have found you to be willing(7) that their craft should come into disrepute,
cry aloud, The gods are neglected, and in the temples there is now a very
thin attendance. Former ceremonies are exposed to derision, and the time-honoured
rites of institutions once sacred have sunk before the superstitions of
new religions. Justly is the human race afflicted by so many pressing calamities,
justly is it racked by the hardships of so many toils. And men--a senseless
race--being unable, from their inborn blindness, to see even that which
is placed in open light, dare to assert in their frenzy what you in your
sane mind do not blush to believe.
25. And lest any one should suppose that we, through distrust in our reply,
invest the gods with the gifts of serenity, that we assign to them minds
free from resentment, and far removed from all excitement, let us allow,
since it is pleasing to you, that they put forth their passion upon us,
that they thirst for our blood, and that now for a long time they are eager
to remove us from the generations of men. But if it is not troublesome
to you, if it is not offensive, if it is a matter of common duty to discuss
the points of this argument not on grounds of partiality, but on those
of truth, we demand to hear from you what is the explanation of this, what
the cause, why, on the one hand, the gods exercise cruelty on us alone,
and why, on the other, men barn against us with exasperation. You follow,
our opponents say, profane religious systems, and you practise rites unheard
of throughout the entire world. What do you, O men, endowed with reason,
dare to assert? What do you dare to prate of? What do you try to bring
forward in the recklessness of unguarded speech? To adore God as the highest
existence, as the Lord of all things that be, as occupying the highest
place among all exalted ones, to pray to Him with respectful submission
in our distresses, to cling to Him with all our senses, so to speak, to
love Him, to look up to Him with faith,--is this an execrable and unhallowed
religion,(1) full of impiety and of sacrilege, polluting by the superstition
of its own novelty ceremonies instituted of old?
26. Is this, I pray, that daring and heinous iniquity on account of which
the mighty powers of heaven whet against us the stings of passionate indignation,
on account of which you yourselves, whenever the savage desire has seized
you, spoil us of our goods, drive us from the homes of our fathers, inflict
upon us capital punishment, torture, mangle, barn us, and at the last expose
us to wild beasts, and give us to be torn by monsters? Whosoever condemns
that in us, or considers that it should be laid against us as a charge,
is he deserving either to be called by the name of man, though he seem
so to himself? or is he to be believed a god, although he declare himself
to be so by the mouth of a thousand(2) prophets? Does Trophonius,(3) or
Jupiter of Dodona, pronounce us to be wicked? And will he himself be called
god, and be reckoned among the number of the deities, who either fixes
the charge of impiety on those who serve the King Supreme, or is racked
with envy because His majesty and His worship are preferred to his own?
Is Apollo whether called Delian or Clarian Didymean, Philesian, or Pythian,
to be reckoned divine, who either knows not the Supreme Ruler, or who is
not aware that He is entreated by us in daily prayers? And although he
knew not the secrets of our hearts, and though he did not discover what
we hold in our inmost thoughts, yet he might either know by his ear, or
might perceive by the very tone of voice which we use in prayer, that we
invoke God Supreme, and that we beg from Him what we require.
27. This is not the place to examine all our traducers, who they are,
or whence they are, what is their power, what their knowledge, why they
tremble at the mention of Christ, why they regard his disciples as enemies
and as hateful persons; but with regard to ourselves to state expressly
to those who will exercise common reason, in terms applicable to all of
us alike,--We Christians are nothing else than worshippers of the Supreme
King and Head, under our Master, Christ. If you examine carefully, you
will find that nothing else is implied in that religion. This is the sum
of all that we do; this is the proposed end and limit of sacred duties.
Before Him we all prostrate ourselves, according to oar custom; Him we
adore in joint prayers; from Him we beg things just and honourable, and
worthy of His ear. Not that He needs our supplications, or loves to see
the homage of so many thousands laid at His feet. This is our benefit,
and has a regard to our advantage. For since we are prone to err, and to
yield to various lusts and appetites through the fault of our innate weakness,
He allows Himself at all times to be comprehended in our thoughts, that
whilst we entreat Him and strive to merit His bounties, we may receive
a desire for purity, and may free ourselves from every stain by the removal
of all our shortcomings.(4)
28. What say ye, O interpreters of sacred and of divine law?(5) Are they
attached to a better cause who adore the Lares Grundules, the Aii Locutii,(1)
and the Limentini,(2) than we who worship God the Father of all things,
and demand of Him protection in danger and distress? They, too, seem to
you wary, wise, most sagacious, and not worthy of any blame, who revere
Fauni and Fatuae, and the genii of states,(3) who worship Pausi and Bellonae:--we
are pronounced dull, doltish, fatuous, stupid, and senseless, who have
given ourselves up to God, at whose nod and pleasure everything which exists
has its being, and remains immoveable by His eternal decree. Do you put
forth this opinion? Have you ordained this law? Do you publish this decree,
that he be crowned with the highest honours who shall worship your slaves?
that he merit the extreme penalty of the cross who shall offer prayers
to you yourselves, his masters? In the greatest states, and in the most
powerful nations, sacred rites are performed in the public name to harlots,
who in old days earned the wages of impurity, and prostituted themselves
to the lust of all;(4) and yet for this there are no swellings of indignation
on the part of the deities. Temples have been erected with lofty roofs
to cats, to beetles, and to heifers:(5)--the powers of the deities thus
insulted are silent; nor are they affected with any feeling of envy because
they see the sacred attributes of vile animals put in rivalry with them.
Are the deities inimical to us alone? To us are they most unrelenting,
because we worship their Author, by whom, if they do exist, they began
to be, and to have the essence of their power and their majesty, from whom,
having obtained their very divinity, so to speak, they feel that they exist,
and realize that they are reckoned among things that be, at whose will
and at whose behest they are able both to perish and be dissolved, and
not to be dissolved and not to perish?(6) For if we all grant that there
is only one great Being, whom in the long lapse of time nought else precedes,
it necessarily follows that after Him all things were generated and put
forth, and that they burst into an existence each of its kind. But if this
is unchallenged and sure, you(7) will be compelled as a consequence to
confess, on the one hand, that the deities are created,(8) and on the other,
that they derive the spring of their existence from the great source of
things. And if they are created and brought forth, they are also doubtless
liable to annihilation and to dangers; but yet they are believed to be
immortal, ever-existent, and subject to no extinction. This is also a gift
from God their Author, that they have been privileged to remain the same
through countless ages, though by nature they are fleeting, and liable
to dissolution.
29. And would that it were allowed me to deliver this argument with the
whole world formed, as it were, into one assembly, and to be placed in
the hearing of all the human race! Are we therefore charged before you
with an impious religion? and because we approach the Head and Pillar(9)
of the universe with worshipful service, are we to be considered--to use
the terms employed by you in reproaching us--as persons to be shunned,
and as godless ones? And who would more properly bear the odium of these
names than he who either knows, or inquires after, or believes any other
god rather than this of ours? To Him do we not owe this first, that we
exist, that we are said to be men, that, being either sent forth from Him,
or having fallen from Him, we are confined in the darkness of this body?(10)
Does it not come from Him that we walk, that we breathe and live? and by
the very power of living, does He not cause us to exist and to move with
the activity of animated being? From this do not causes emanate, through
which our health is sustained by the bountiful supply of various pleasures?
Whose is that world in which you live? or who hath authorized you to retain
its produce and its possession? Who hath given that common light, enabling
us to see distinctly all things lying beneath it, to handle them, and to
examine them? Who has ordained that the fires of the sun should exist for
the growth of things, lest elements pregnant with life should be numbed
by settling down in the torpor of inactivity? When yon believe that the
sun is a deity, do you not ask who is his founder, who has fashioned him?
Since the moon is a goddess in your estimation, do you in like manner care
to know who is her author and framer?
30. Does it not occur to you to reflect and to examine in whose domain
you live? on whose property you are? whose is that earth which you till?(11)
whose is that air which you inhale, and return again in breathing? whose
fountains do you abundantly enjoy? whose water? who has regulated the blasts
of the wind? who has contrived the watery clouds? who has discriminated
the productive powers of seeds by special characteristics? Does Apollo
give you rain? Does Mercury send yon water from heaven? Has Aesculapius,
Hercules, or Diana devised the plan of showers and of storms? And how can
this be, when you give forth that they were born on earth, and that at
a fixed period they received vital perceptions? For if the world preceded
them in the long lapse of time, and if before they were born nature already
experienced rains and storms, those who were born later have no right of
rain-giving, nor can they mix themselves up with those methods which they
found to be in operation here, and to be derived from a greater Author.
31. O greatest, O Supreme Creator of things invisible! O Thou who art
Thyself unseen, and who art incomprehensible! Thou art worthy, Thou art
verily worthy--if only mortal tongue may speak of Thee--that all breathing
and intelligent nature should never cease to feel and to return thanks;
that it should throughout the whole of life fall on bended knee, and offer
supplication with never-ceasing prayers. For Thou art the first cause;
in Thee created things exist, and Thou art the space in which rest the
foundations of all things, whatever they be. Thou art illimitable, unbegotten,
immortal, enduring for aye, God Thyself alone, whom no bodily shape may
represent, no outline delineate; of virtues inexpressible, of greatness
indefinable; unrestricted as to locality, movement, and condition, concerning
whom nothing can be clearly expressed by the significance of man's words.
That Thou mayest he understood, we must be silent; and that erring conjecture
may track Thee through the shady cloud, no word must be uttered. Grant
pardon, O King Supreme, to those who persecute Thy servants; and in virtue
of Thy benign nature, forgive those who fly from the worship of Thy name
and the observance of Thy religion. It is not to be wondered at if Thou
art unknown; it is a cause of greater astonishment if Thou art clearly
comprehended.(1)
But perchance some one dares--for this remains for frantic madness to
do--to be uncertain, and to express doubt whether that God exists or not;
whether He is believed in on the proved truth of reliable evidence, or
on the imaginings of empty rumour. For of those who have given themselves
to philosophizing, we have heard that some(2) deny the existence of any
divine power, that others(3) inquire daily whether there be or not; that
others(4) construct the whole fabric of the universe by chance accidents
and by random collision, and fashion it by the concourse of atoms of different
shapes; with whom we by no means intend to enter at this time on a discussion
of such perverse convictions.(5) For those who think wisely say, that to
argue against things palpably foolish, is a mark of greater folly.
32. Our discussion deals with those who, acknowledging that there is a
divine race of beings, doubt about those of greater rank and power, whilst
they admit that there are deities inferior and more humble. What then?
Do we strive and toil to obtain such results by arguments? Far hence be
such madness; and, as the phrase is, let the folly, say I, be averted from
us. For it is as dangerous to attempt to prove by arguments that God is
the highest being, as it is to wish to discover by reasoning of this kind
that He exists. It is a matter of indifference whether you deny that He
exists, or affirm it and admit it; since equally culpable are both the
assertion of such a thing, and the denial of an unbelieving opponent.
33. Is there any human being who has not entered on the first day of his
life with an idea of that Great Head? In whom has it not been implanted
by nature, on whom has it not been impressed, aye, stamped almost in his
mother's womb even, in whom is there not a native instinct, that He is
King and Lord, the ruler of all things that be? In fine, if the dumb animals
even could stammer forth their thoughts, if they were able to use our languages;
nay, if trees, if the clods of the earth, if stones animated by vital perceptions
were able to produce vocal sounds, and to utter articulate speech, would
they not in that case, with nature as their guide and teacher, in the faith
of uncorrupted innocence, both feel that there is a God, and proclaim that
He alone is Lord of all?
34. But in vain, says one, do you assail us with a groundless and calumnious
charge, as if we deny that there is a deity of a higher kind, since Jupiter
is by us both called and esteemed the best and the greatest; and since
we have dedicated to him the most sacred abodes, and have raised huge Capitols.
You are endeavouring to connect together things which are dissimilar, and
to force them into one class, thereby introducing confusion. For by the
unanimous judgment of all, and by the common consent of the human race,
the omnipotent God is regarded as having never been born, as having never
been brought forth to new light, and as not having begun to exist at any
time or century. For He Himself is the source of all things, the Father
of ages and of seasons. For they do not exist of themselves, but from His
everlasting perpetuity they move on in unbroken and ever endless flow.
Yet Jupiter indeed, as you allege, has both father and mother, grandfathers,
grandmothers, and brothers: now lately conceived in the womb of his mother,
being completely formed and perfected in ten months, he burst with vital
sensations into light unknown to him before. If, then, this is so, how
can Jupiter be God supreme, when it is evident that He is everlasting,
and the former is represented by you as having had a natal day, and as
having uttered a mournful cry, through terror at the strange scene?
35. But suppose they be one, as you wish, and not different in any power
of deity and in majesty, do you therefore persecute us with undeserved
hatred? Why do you shudder at the mention of our name as of the worst omen,
if we too worship the deity whom you worship? or why do you contend that
the gods are friendly to you, but inimical, aye, most hostile to us, though
our relations to them are the same? For if one religion is common to us
and to you, the anger of the gods is stayed;(1) but if they are hostile
to us alone it is plain that both you and they have no knowledge of God.
And that that God is not Jove, is evident by the very wrath of the deities.
36. But, says my opponent, the deities are not inimical to you, because
you worship the omnipotent God; but because you both allege that one born
as men are, and put to death on the cross, which is a disgraceful punishment
even for worthless men, was God, and because you believe that He still
lives, and because you worship Him in daily supplications. If it is agreeable
to you, my friends, state clearly what deities those are who believe that
the worship of Christ by us has a tendency to injure them? Is it Janus,
the founder of the Janiculum, and Saturn, the author of the Saturnian state?
Is it Fauna Fatua,(2) the wife of Faunus, who is called the Good Goddess,
but who is better and more deserving of praise in the drinking of wine?
Is it those gods Indigetes who swim in the river, and live in the channels
of the Numicius, in company with frogs and little fishes? Is it Aesculapius
and father Bacchus, the former born of Coronis, and the other dashed by
lightning from his mother's womb? Is it Mercury, son of Maia, and what
is more divine, Maia the beautiful? Is it the bow-bearing deities Diana
and Apollo, who were companions of their mother's wanderings, and who were
scarcely safe in floating islands? Is it Venus, daughter of Dione, paramour
of a man of Trojan family, and the prostituter of her secret charms? Is
it Ceres, born in Sicilian territory, and Proserpine, surprised while gathering
flowers? Is it the Theban or the Phoenician Hercules,--the latter buried
in Spanish territory, the other burned by fire on Mount OEta? Is it the
brothers Castor and Pollux, sons of Tyndareus,--the one accustomed to tame
horses, the other an excellent boxer, and unconquerable with the untanned
gauntlet? Is it the Titans anti the Bocchores of the Moors, and the Syrian(3)
deities, the offspring of eggs? Is it Apis, born in the Peloponnese, and
in Egypt called Serapis? Is it Isis, tanned by Ethiopian suns, lamenting
her lost son and husband torn limb from limb? Passing on, we omit the royal
offspring of Ops, which your writers have in their books set forth for
your instruction, telling you both who they are, and of what character.
Do these, then, hear with offended ears that Christ is worshipped, and
that He is accepted by us and regarded as a divine person? And being forgetful
of the grade and state in which they recently were, are they unwilling
to share with another that which has been granted to themselves? Is this
the justice of the heavenly deities? Is this the righteous judgment of
the gods? Is not this a kind of malice and of greed? is it not a species
of base envy, to wish their own fortunes only to rise,--those of others
to be lowered, and to be trodden down in despised lowliness?
37. We worship one who was born a man. What then? do you worship no one
who was born a man? Do you not worship one and another, aye, deities innumerable?
Nay, have you not taken from the number of mortals all those whom you now
have in your temples; and have you not set them in heaven, and among the
constellations? For if, perchance, it has escaped you that they once partook
of human destiny, and of the state common to all men, search the most ancient
literature, and range through the writings of those who, living nearest
to the days of antiquity, set forth all things with undisguised truth and
without flattery: you will learn in detail from what fathers, from what
mothers they were each sprung, in what district they were born, of what
tribe; what they made, what they did, what they endured, how they employed
themselves, what fortunes they experienced of an adverse or of a favourable
kind in discharging their functions. But if, while you know that they were
born in the womb, and that they lived on the produce of the earth, you
nevertheless upbraid us with the worship of one born like ourselves, you
act with great injustice, in regarding that as worthy of condemnation in
us which you yourselves habitually do; or what you allow to be lawful for
you, you are unwilling to be in like manner lawful for others.
38. But in the meantime let us grant, in sub-mission to your ideas, that
Christ was one of us--similar in mind, soul, body, weakness, and condition;
is He not worthy to be called and to be esteemed God by us, in consideration
of His bounties, so numerous as they are? For if you have placed in the
assembly(1) of the gods Liber, because he discovered the use of wine; Ceres,
because she discovered the use of bread; Aesculapius, because he discovered
the use of herbs; Minerva, because she produced the olive; Triptolemus,
because he invented the plough; Hercules, because he overpowered and restrained
wild beasts and robbers, and water-serpents of many heads,--with how great
distinctions is He to be honoured by us, who, by instilling His truth into
our hearts, has freed us from great errors; who, when we were straying
everywhere, as if blind and without a guide, withdrew us from precipitous
and devious paths, and set our feet on more smooth places; who has pointed
out what is especially profitable and salutary for the human race; who
has shown us what God is,(2) who He is, how great and how good; who has
permitted and taught us to conceive and to understand, as far as our limited
capacity can, His profound and inexpressible depths; who, in in His great
kindness, has caused it to be known by what founder, by what Creator, this
world was established and made; who has explained the nature of its origin(3)
and essential substance, never before imagined in the conceptions of any;
whence generative warmth is added to the rays of the sun; why the moon,
always uninjured(4) in her motions, is believed to alternate her light
and her obscurity from intelligent causes;(5) what is the origin of animals,
what rules regulate seeds; who designed man himself, who fashioned him,
or from what kind of material did He compact the very build of bodies;
what the perceptions are; what the soul, and whether it flew to us of its
own accord, or whether it was generated and brought into existence with
our bodies themselves; whether it sojourns with us, partaking of death,
or whether it is gifted with an endless immortality; what condition awaits
us when we shall have separated from our bodies relaxed in death; whether
we shall retain our perceptions,(6) or have no recollection of our former
sensations or of past memories;(7) who has restrained(8) our arrogance,
and has caused our necks, uplifted with pride, to acknowledge the measure
of their weakness; who hath shown that we are creatures imperfectly formed,
that we trust in vain expectations, that we understand nothing thoroughly,
that we know nothing, and that we do not see those things which are placed
before our eyes; who has guided us from false superstitions to the true
religion,--a blessing which exceeds and transcends all His other gifts;
who has raised our thoughts to heaven from brutish statues formed of the
vilest clay, and has caused us to hold converse in thanksgiving and prayer
with the Lord of the universe.
39.
But lately, O blindness, I worshipped images produced from the furnace,
gods made on
anvils and
by hammers, the bones of elephants, paintings,
wreaths on aged trees;(9) whenever I espied an anointed stone and one bedaubed
with olive oil, as if some power resided in it I worshipped it, I addressed
myself to it and begged blessings from a senseless stock.(10) And these
very gods of whose existence I had convinced myself, I treated with gross
insults, when I believed them to be wood, stone, and bones, or imagined
that they dwelt in the substance of such objects. Now, having been led
into the paths of truth by so great a teacher, I know what all these things
are, I entertain honourable thoughts concerning those which are worthy,
I offer no insult to any divine name; and what is due to each, whether
inferior" or superior, I assign with clearly-defined gradations, and
on distinct authority. Is Christ, then, not to be regarded by us as God?
and is He, who in other respects may be deemed the very greatest, not to
be honoured with divine worship, from whom we have already received while
alive so great gifts, and from whom, when the day comes, we expect greater
ones?
40. But He died nailed to the cross. What is that to the argument? For
neither does the kind and disgrace of the death change His words or deeds,
nor will the weight of His teaching appear less; because He freed Himself
from the shackles of the body, not by a natural separation, but departed
by reason of violence offered to Him. Pythagoras of Samos was burned to
death in a temple, under an unjust suspicion of aiming at sovereign power.
Did his doctrines lose their peculiar influence, because he breathed forth
his life not willingly, but in consequence of a savage assault? In like
manner Socrates, condemned by the decision of his fellow-citizens, suffered
capital punishment: have his discussions on morals, on virtues, and on
duties been rendered vain, because he was unjustly hurried from life? Others
without number, conspicuous by their renown, their merit, and their public
character, have experienced the most cruel forums of death, as Aquilius,
Trebonius, and Regulus: were they on that account adjudged base after death,
because they perished not by the common law of the fates, but after being
mangled and tortured in the most cruel kind of death? No innocent person
foully slain is ever disgraced thereby; nor is he stained by the mark of
any baseness, who suffers severe punishment, not from his own deserts,
but by reason of the savage nature of his persecutor.(1)
41. And yet, O ye who laugh because we worship one who died an ignominious
death, do not ye too, by consecrating shrines to him, honour father Liber,
who was torn limb from limb by the Titans? Have you not, after his punishment
and his death by lightning, named Aesculapius, the discoverer of medicines,
as the guardian and protector of health, of strength, and of safety? Do
you not invoke the great Hercules himself by offerings, by victims, and
by kindled frankincense, whom you yourselves allege to have been burned
alive after his punishment,(2) and to have been consumed on the fatal pyres?
Do you not, with the unanimous approbation of the Gauls, invoke as a propitious(3)
and as a holy god, in the temples of the Great Mother,(4) that Phrygian
Atys(5) who was mangled and deprived of his virility? Father Romulus himself,
who was torn in pieces by the hands of a hundred senators, do you not call
Quirinus Martius, and do you not honour him with priests and with gorgeous
couches,(6) and do you not worship him in most spacious temples; and in
addition to all this, do you not affirm that he has ascended into heaven?
Either, therefore, you too are to be laughed at, who regard as gods men
slain by the most cruel tortures; or if there is a sure ground for your
thinking that you should do so, allow us too to feel assured for what causes
and on what grounds we do this.
42. You worship, says my opponent, one who was born a mere human being.
Even if that were true, as has been already said in former passages, yet,
in consideration of the many liberal gifts which He has bestowed on us,
He ought to be called and be addressed as God. But since He is God in reality
and without any shadow of doubt, do you think that we will deny that He
is worshipped by us with all the fervour we are capable of, and assumed
as the guardian of our body? Is that Christ of yours a god, then? some
raving, wrathful, and excited man will say. A god, we will reply, and the
god of the inner powers;(7) and--what may still further torture unbelievers
with the most bitter pains--He was sent to us by the King Supreme for a
purpose of the very highest moment. My opponent, becoming more mad and
more frantic, will perhaps ask whether the matter can be proved, as we
allege. There is no greater proof than the credibility of the acts done
by Him, than the unwonted excellence of the virtues He exhibited, than
the conquest and the abrogation of all those deadly ordinances which peoples
and tribes saw executed in the light of day,(8) with no objecting voice;
and even they whose ancient laws or whose country's laws He shows to be
full of vanity and of the most senseless superstition, (even they) dare
not allege these things to be false.
43. My opponent will perhaps meet me with many other slanderous and childish
charges which are commonly urged. Jesus was a Magian;(1) He effected all
these things by secret arts. From the shrines of the Egyptians He stole
the names of angels of might,(2) and the religious system of a remote country.
Why, O witlings, do you speak of things which you have not examined, and
which are unknown to you, prating with the garrulity of a rash tongue?
Were, then, those things which were done, the freaks of demons, and the
tricks of magical arts? Can you specify and point out to me any one of
all those magicians who have ever existed in past ages, that did anything
similar, in the thousandth degree, to Christ? Who has done this without
any power of incantations, without the juice of herbs and of grasses, without
any anxious watching of sacrifices, of libations, or of seasons? For we
do not press it, and inquire what they profess to do, nor in what kind
of acts all their learning and experience are wont to be comprised. For
who is not aware that these men either study to know beforehand things
impending, which, whether they will or not, come of necessity as they have
been ordained? or to inflict a deadly and wasting disease on whom they
choose; or to sever the affections of relatives; or to open without keys
places which are locked; or to seal the month in silence; or in the chariot
race to weaken, urge on, or retard horses; or to inspire in wives, and
in the children of strangers, whether they be males or females, the flames
and mad desires of illicit love?(3) Or if they seem to attempt anything
useful, to be able to do it not by their own power, but by the might of
those deities whom they invoke.
44. And yet it is agreed on that Christ performed all those miracles which
He wrought without any aid from external things, without the observance
of any ceremonial, without any definite mode of procedure, but solely by
the inherent might of His authority; and as was the proper duty of the
true God, as was consistent with His nature, as was worthy of Him, in the
generosity of His bounteous power He bestowed nothing hurtful or injurious,
but only that which is helpful, beneficial, and full of blessings good(4)
for men.
45. What do you say again, oh you(5)--? Is He then a man, is He one of
us, at whose command, at whose voice, raised in the utterance of audible
and intelligible words,(6) infirmities, diseases, fevers, and other ailments
of the body fled away? Was He one of us, whose presence, whose very sight,
that race of demons which took possession of men was unable to bear, and
terrified by the strange power, fled away? Was He one of us, to whose order
the foul leprosy, at once checked, was obedient, and left sameness of colour
to bodies formerly spotted? Was He one of us, at whose light touch the
issues of blood were stanched, and stopped their excessive flow?(7) Was
He one of us, whose hands the waters of the lethargic dropsy fled from,
and that searching(8) fluid avoided; and did the swelling body, assuming
a healthy dryness, find relief? Was He one of us, who bade the lame run?
Was it His work, too, that the maimed stretched forth their hands, and
the joints relaxed the rigidity(9) acquired even at birth; that the paralytic
rose to their feet, and persons now carried home their beds who a little
before were borne on the shoulders of others; the blind were restored to
sight, and men born without eyes now looked on the heaven and the day?
46. Was He one of us, I say, who by one act of intervention at once healed
a hundred or more afflicted with various infirmities and diseases; at whose
word only the raging and maddened seas were still, the whirlwinds and tempests
were lulled; who walked over the deepest pools with unwet foot; who trod
the ridges of the deep, the very waves being astonished, and nature coining
under bondage; who with live loaves satisfied five thousand of His followers:
and who, lest it might appear to the unbelieving and bard of heart to be
an illusion, filled twelve capacious baskets with the fragments that remained?
Was He one of us, who ordered the breath that had departed to return to
the body, persons buried to come forth from the tomb, and after three days
to be loosed from the swathings of the undertaker? Was He one of us, who
saw clearly in the hearts of the silent what each was pondering,(10) what
each had in his secret thoughts? Was He one of us, who, when He uttered
a single word, was thought by nations far removed from one another and
of different speech to be using well-known sounds, and the peculiar language
of each?(11) Was He one of us, who, when He was teaching His followers
the duties of a religion that could not be gainsaid, suddenly filled the
whole world, and showed how great He was and who He was, by unveiling the
boundlessness of His authority? Was He one of us, who, after His body had
been laid in the tomb, manifested Himself in open day to countless numbers
of men; who spoke to them, and listened to them; who taught them, reproved
and admonished them; who, lest they should imagine that they were deceived
by unsubstantial fancies, showed Himself once, a second time, aye frequently,
in familiar conversation; who appears even now to righteous men of unpolluted
mind who love Him, not in airy dreams, but in a form of pure simplicity;(1)
whose name, when heard, puts to flight evil spirits, imposes silence on
soothsayers, prevents men from consulting the augurs, causes the efforts
of arrogant magicians to be frustrated, not by the dread of His name, as
you allege, but by the free exercise of a greater power?
47. These facts set forth in sanctuary we have put forward, not on the
supposition that the greatness of the agent was to be seen in these virtues
alone.(2) For however great these things be, how excessively petty and
trifling will they be found to be, if it shall be revealed from what realms
He has come, of what God He is the minister! But with regard to the acts
which were done by Him, they were performed, indeed, not that He might
boast Himself into empty ostentation, bat that hardened and unbelieving
men might he assured that what was professed was not deceptive, and that
they might now learn to imagine, from the beneficence of His works, what
a true god was. At the same time we wish this also to be known,(3) when,
as was said, an enumeration of His acts has been given in summary, that
Christ was able to do not only those things which He did, but that He could
even overcome the decrees of fate. For if, as is evident, and as is agreed
by all, infirmities and bodily sufferings, if deafness, deformity, and
dumbness, if shrivelling of the sinews and the loss of sight happen to
us, and are brought on us by the decrees of fate and if Christ alone has
corrected this, has restored and cared man, it is clearer than the sun
himself that He was more powerful than the fates are when He has loosened
and overpowered those things which were bound with everlasting knots, and
fixed by unalterable necessity.
48. But, says some one, you in vain claim so much for Christ, when we
now know, and have in past times known, of other gods both giving remedies
to many who were sick, and healing the diseases and the infirmities of
many men. I do not inquire, I do not demand, what god did so, or at what
time; whom he relieved, or what shattered frame he restored to sound health:
this only I long to hear, whether, without the addition of any substance--that
is, of any medical application--he ordered diseases to fly away from men
at a touch; whether he commanded and compelled the cause of ill health
to be eradicated, and the bodies of the weak to return to their natural
strength. For it is known that Christ, either by applying His hand to the
parts affected, or by the command of His voice only, opened the ears of
the deaf, drove away blindness from the eyes, gave speech to the dumb,
loosened the rigidity of the joints, gave the power of walking to the shrivelled,--was
wont to heal by a word and by an order, leprosies, agues, dropsies, and
all other kinds of ailments, which some fell power(4) has willed that the
bodies of men should endure. What act like these have all these gods done,
by whom you allege that help has been brought to the sick and the imperilled?
for if they have at any time ordered, as is reported, either that medicine
or a special diet be given to some,(5) or that a draught be drunk off,
or that the juices of plants and of blades be placed(6) on that which causes
uneasiness or have ordered that persons should walk, remain at rest, or
abstain from something hurtful,--and that this is no great matter, and
deserves no great admiration, is evident, if you will attentively examine
it--a similar mode of treatment is followed by physicians also, a creature
earth-born and not relying on true science, but founding on a system of
conjecture, and wavering in estimating probabilities. Now there is no special
merit in removing by remedies those ailments which affect men: the healing
qualities belong to the drugs--not virtues inherent in him who applies
them; and though it is praiseworthy to know by what medicine or by what
method it may be suitable for persons to be treated, there is room for
this credit being assigned to man, but not to the deity. For it is, at
least, no discredit that he(7) should have improved the health of man by
things taken from without: it is a disgrace to a god that he is not able
to effect it of himself, but that he gives soundness and safety only by
the aid of external objects.
49. And since you compare Christ and the other deities as to the blessings
of health bestowed, how many thousands of infirm persons do you wish to
be shown to you by us; how many persons affected with wasting diseases,
whom no appliances whatever restored, although they went as suppliants
through all the temples, although they prostrated themselves before the
gods, and swept the very thresholds with their lips--though, as long as
life remained, they wearied with prayers, and importuned with most piteous
vows Aesculapius himself, the health-giver, as they call him? Do we not
know that some died of their ailments? that others grew old by the torturing
pain of their diseases? that others began to live a more abandoned life
after they had wasted their days(1) and nights in incessant prayers, and
in expectation of mercy?(2) Of what avail is it, then, to point to one
or another who may have been healed, when so many thousands have been left
unaided, and the shrines are full of all the wretched and the unfortunate?
Unless, perchance, you say that the gods help the good, but that the miseries
of the wicked are overlooked. And yet Christ assisted the good and the
bad alike; nor was there any one rejected by Him, who in adversity sought
help against violence and the ills of fortune. For this is the mark of
a true god and of kingly power, to deny his bounty to none, and not to
consider who merits it or who does not; since natural infirmity and not
the choice of his desire, or of his sober judgment, makes a sinner. To
say, moreover, that aid is given by the gods to the deserving when in distress,
is to leave undecided and render doubtful what you assert: so that both
he who has been made whole may seem to have been preserved by chance, and
he who is not may appear to have been unable to banish infirmity, not because
of his demerit, but by reason of a heaven-sent weakness.(3)
50. Moreover, by His own power He not only performed those miraculous
deeds which have been detailed by us in summary, and not as the importance
of the matter demanded; but, what was more sublime, He has permitted many
others to attempt them, and to perform them by the use of His name. For
when He foresaw that you were to be the detractors of His deeds and of
His divine work, ill order that no lurking suspicion might remain of His
having lavished these gifts and bounties by magic arts, from the immense
multitude of people, which with admiring wonder strove to gain His favour,
He chose fishermen, artisans, rustics, and unskilled persons of a similar
kind, that they being sent through various nations should perform all those
miracles without any deceit and without any material aids. By a word He
assuaged the racking pains of the aching members; and by a word they checked
the writhings of maddening sufferings. By one command He drove demons from
the body, and restored their senses to the lifeless; they, too, by no different
command, restored to health and to soundness of mind those labouring under
the inflictions of these demons.(4) By the application of His hand He removed
the marks of leprosy; they, too, restored to the body its natural skin
by a touch not dissimilar. He ordered the dropsical and swollen flesh to
recover its natural dryness; and His servants in the same manner stayed
the wandering waters, and ordered them to glide through their own channels,
avoiding injury to the frame. Sores of immense size, refusing to admit
of healing, He restrained from further feeding on the flesh, by the interposition
of one word; and they in like manner, by restricting its ravages, compelled
the obstinate and merciless cancer to confine itself to a scar. To the
lame He gave the power of walking, to the dark eyes sight, the dead He
recalled to life; and not less surely did they, too, relax the tightened
nerves, fill the eyes with light already lost, and order the dead to return
from the tombs, reversing the ceremonies of the funeral rites. Nor was
anything calling forth the bewildered admiration of all done by Him, which
He did not freely allow, to be performed by those humble and rustic men,
and which He did not put in their power.
51. What say ye, O minds incredulous, stubborn, hardened? Did that great
Jupiter Capitolinus of yours give to any human being power of this kind?
Did he endow with this right any priest of a curia, the Pontifex Maximus,
nay, even the Dialis, in whose name he is revealed as the god of life?(5)
I shall not say, did he impart power to raise the dead, to give light to
the blind, restore the normal condition of their members to the weakened
and the paralyzed, but did he even enable any one to check a pustule, a
hang-nail, a pimple, either by the word of his mouth or the touch of his
hand? Was this, then, a power natural to man, or could such a right be
granted, could such a licence be given by the mouth of one reared on the
vulgar produce of earth; and was it not a divine and sacred gift? or if
the matter admits of any hyperbole, was it not more than divine and sacred?
For if you do that which you are able to do, and what is compatible with
your strength and your ability, there is no ground for the expression of
astonishment; for you will have done that which you were able, and which
your power was bound to accomplish, in order that there should be a perfect
correspondence(1) between the deed and the doer. To be able to transfer
to a man your own power, share with the frailest being the ability to perform
that which you alone are able to do, is a proof of power supreme over all,
and holding in subjection the causes of all things, and the natural laws
of methods and of means.
52. Come, then, let some Magian Zoroaster(2) arrive from a remote part
of the globe, crossing over the fiery zone,(3) if we believe Hermippus
as an authority. Let these join him too--that Bactrian, whose deeds Ctesias
sets forth in the first book of his History; the Armenian, grandson of
Hosthanes;(4) and Pamphilus, the intimate friend of Cyrus; Apollonius,
Damigero, and Dardanus; Velus, Julianus, and Baebulus; and if there be
any other one who is supposed to have especial powers and reputation in
such magic arts. Let them grant to one of the people to adapt the mouths
of the dumb for the purposes of speech, to unseal the ears of the deaf,
to give the natural powers of the eye to those born without sight, and
to restore feeling and life to bodies long cold in death. Or if that is
too difficult, and if they cannot impart to others the power to do such
acts, let themselves perform them, and with their own rites. Whatever noxious
herbs the earth brings forth from its bosom, whatever powers those muttered
words and accompanying spells contain--these let them add, we envy them
not; those let them collect, we forbid them not. We wish to make trial
and to discover whether they can effect, with the aid of their gods, what
has often been accomplished by unlearned Christians with a word only.
53. Cease in your ignorance to receive such great deeds with abusive language,
which will in no wise injure him who did them, but which will bring danger
to yourselves--danger, I say, by no means small, but one dealing with matters
of great,(5) aye, even the greatest importance, since beyond a doubt the
soul is a precious thing, and nothing can be found dearer to a man than
himself. There was nothing magical, as you suppose, nothing human, delusive,
or crafty in Christ; no deceit lurked in Him,(6) although you smile in
derision, as your wont is, and though you split with roars of laughter.
He was God on high, God in His inmost nature, God from unknown realms,
and was sent by the Ruler of all as a Saviour God; whom neither the sun
himself, nor any stars, if they have powers of perception, not the rulers
and princes of the world, nor, in fine, the great gods, or those who, reigning
themselves so, terrify the whole human race, were able to know or to guess
whence and who He was--and naturally so. But(7) when, freed from the body,
which He carried about as but a very small part of Himself, He allowed
Himself to be seen, and let it be known how great He was, all the elements
of the universe bewildered by the strange events were thrown into confusion.
An earthquake shook the world, the sea was heaved up from its depths, the
heaven was shrouded in darkness, the sun's fiery blaze was checked, and
his heat became moderate;(8) for what else could occur when He was discovered
to be God who heretofore was reckoned one of us?
54. But you do not believe these things; yet those who witnessed their
occurrence, and who saw them done before their eyes--the very best vouchers
and the most trustworthy authorities--both believed them themselves, and
transmitted them to us who follow them, to be believed with no scanty measure
of confidence. Who are these? you perhaps ask. Tribes, peoples, nations,
and that incredulous human race; but(9) if the matter were not plain, and,
as the saying is, clearer than day itself, they would never grant their
assent with so ready belief to events of such a kind. But shall we say
that the men of that time were untrustworthy, false, stupid, and brutish
to such a degree that they pretended to have seen what they never had seen,
and that they put forth under false evidence, or alleged with childish
asseveration things which never took place, and that when they were able
to live in harmony and to maintain friendly relations with you, they wantonly
incurred hatred, and were held in execration?
55. But if this record of events is false, as you say, how comes it that
in so short a time the whole world has been filled with such a religion?
or how could nations dwelling widely apart, and separated by climate and
by the convexities of heaven,(1) unite in one conclusion? They have been
prevailed upon, say my opponents, by mere assertions, been led into vain
hopes; and in their reckless madness have chosen to incur voluntarily the
risks of death, although they had hitherto seen nothing of such a kind
as could by its wonderful and strange character induce them to adopt this
manner of worship. Nay, because they saw all these things to be done by
Christ Himself and by His apostles, who being sent throughout the whole
world carried with them the blessings of the Father, which they dispensed
in benefiting(2) as well the minds as the bodies of men; overcome by the
force of the very truth itself they both devoted themselves to God, and
reckoned it as but a small sacrifice to surrender their bodies to you and
to give their flesh to be mangled.
56. But our writers, we shall be told, have put forth these statements
with false effrontery; they have extolled(3) small matters to an inordinate
degree, and have magnified trivial affairs with most pretentious boastfulness.
And(4) would that all things could have been reduced to writing,--both
those which were done by Himself, and those which were accomplished by
His apostles with equal authority and power. Such an assemblage of miracles,
however, would make you more incredulous; and perhaps you might be able
to discover a passage from which(5) it would seem very probable, both that
additions were made to facts, and that falsehoods were inserted in writings
and commentaries. But in nations which were unknown to the writers, and
which themselves knew not the use of letters, all that was done could not
have been embraced in the records or even have reached the ears of all
men; or, if any were committed to written and connected narrative, some
insertions and additions would have been made by the malevolence of the
demons and of men like to them, whose care and study it is to obstruct(6)
the progress of this truth: there would have been some changes and mutilations
of words and of syllables, at once to mar the faith of the cautious and
to impair the moral effect of the deeds. But it will never avail them that
it be gathered from written testimony only who and what Christ was; for
His cause has been put on such a basis, that if what we say be admitted
to be true, He is by the confession of all proved to have been God.
57. You do not believe our writings, and we do not believe yours. We devise
falsehoods concerning Christ, you say; and you put forth baseless and false
statements concerning your gods: for no god has descended from heaven,
or in his own person and life has sketched out your system, or in a similar
way thrown discredit on our system and our ceremonies. These were written
by men; those, too, were written by men--set forth in human speech; and
whatever you seek to say concerning our writers, remember that about yours,
too, you will find these things said with equal force. What is contained
in your writings you wish to be treated as true; those things, also, which
are attested in our books, you must of necessity confess to be true. You
accuse our system of falsehood; we, too, accuse yours of falsehood. But
ours is more ancient, say you, therefore most credible and trustworthy;
as if, indeed, antiquity were not the most fertile source of errors, and
did not herself put forth those things which in discreditable fables have
attached the utmost infamy to the gods. For could not falsehoods have been
both spoken and believed ten thousand years ago, or is it not most probable
that that which is near to our own time should be more credible than that
which is separated by a long term of years? For these of ours are brought
forward on the faith of witnesses, those of yours on the ground of opinions;
and it is much more natural that there should be less invention in matters
of recent occurrence, than in those far removed in the darkness of antiquity.
58. But they were written by unlearned and ignorant ripen, and should
not therefore be readily believed. See that this be not rather a stronger
reason for believing that they have not been adulterated by any false statements,
but were put forth by men of simple mind, who knew not how to trick out
their tales with meretricious ornaments. But the language is mean and vulgar.
For truth never seeks deceitful polish, nor in that which is well ascertained
and certain does it allow itself to be led away into excessive prolixity.
Syllogisms, enthymemes, definitions, and all those ornaments by which men
seek to establish their statements, aid those groping for the truth, but
do not clearly mark its great features. But he who really knows the subject
under discussion, neither defines, nor deduces, nor seeks the other tricks
of words by which an audience is wont to be taken in, and to be beguiled
into a forced assent to a proposition.
59.
Your narratives, my opponent says, are overrun with barbarisms and solecisms,
and disfigured
by monstrous
blunders. A censure, truly, which
shows a childish and petty spirit; for if we allow that it is reasonable,
let us cease to use certain kinds of fruit because they grow with prickles
on them, and other growths useless for food, which on the one hand cannot
support us, and yet do not on the other hinder us from enjoying that which
specially excels, and which nature has designed to be most wholesome for
us. For how, I pray you, does it interfere with or retard the comprehension
of a statement, whether anything be pronounced smoothly(1) or with uncouth
roughness? whether that have the grave accent which ought to have the acute,
or that have the acute which ought to have the grave? Or how is the truth
of a statement diminished, if an error is made in number or case, in preposition,
participle, or conjunction? Let that pomposity of style and strictly regulated
diction be reserved for public assemblies, for lawsuits, for the forum
and the courts of justice, and by all means be handed over to those who,
striving after the soothing influences of pleasant sensations, bestow all
their care upon splendour of language. But when we are discussing matters
far removed from mere display, we should consider what is said, not with
what charm it is said nor how it tickles the ears, but what benefits it
confers on the hearers, especially since we know that some even who devoted
themselves to philosophy, not only disregarded refinement of style, but
also purposely adopted a vulgar meanness when they might have spoken with
greater elegance and richness, lest forsooth they might impair the stern
gravity of speech and revel rather in the pretentious show of the Sophists.
For indeed it evidences a worthless heart to seek enjoyment in matters
of importance; and when you have to deal with those who are sick and diseased,
to pour into their ears dulcet sounds, not to apply a remedy to their wounds.
Yet, if you consider the true state of the case, no language is naturally
perfect, and in like manner none is faulty. For what natural reason is
there, or what law written in the constitution of the world, that paries
should be called hic,(2) and sella hoec?--since neither have they sex distinguished
by male and female, nor can the most learned man tell me what hic and hoec
are, or why one of them denotes the male sex while the other is applied
to the female. These conventionalities are man's, and certainly are not
indispensable to all persons for the use of forming their language; for
paries might perhaps have been called hoec, and sella hic, without any
fault being found, if it had been agreed upon at first that they should
be so called, and if this practice had been maintained by following generations
in their daily conversation. And yet, O you who charge our writings with
disgraceful blemishes, have you not these solecisms in those most perfect
arid wonderful books of yours? Does not one of you make the plur of uter,
utria? another utres?(3) Do you not also say coelus and coelum, filus and
filum, crocus and crocum, fretus and fretum? Also hoc pane and hic panis,
hic sanguis and hoc sanguen? Are not candelabrum and jugulum in like manner
written jugulus and candelaber? For if each noun cannot have more than
one gender, and if the same word cannot be of this gender and of that,
for one gender cannot pass into the other, he commits as great a blunder
who utters masculine genders under the laws of feminines, as he who applies
masculine articles to feminine genders. And yet we see you using masculines
as feminines, and feminines as masculines, and those which yon call neuter
both in this way and in that, without any distinction. Either. therefore,
it is no blunder to employ them indifferently, and in that case it is vain
for you to say that our works are disfigured with monstrous solecisms;
or if the way in which each ought to be employed is unalterably fixed,
you also are involved in similar errors, although you have on your side
all the Epicadi, Caesellii, Verrii, Scauri, and Nisi.
60. But, say my opponents, if Christ was God, why did He appear in human
shape, and why was He cut off by death after the manner of men? Could that
power which is invisible, and which has no bodily substance, have come
upon earth and adapted itself to the world and mixed in human society,
otherwise than by taking to itself some covering of a more solid substance,
which might bear the gaze of the eyes, and on which the look of the least
observant might fix itself? For what mortal is there who could have seen
Him, who could have distinguished Him, if He had decreed to come upon the
earth such as He is in His own primitive nature, and such as He has chosen
to be in His own proper character and divinity? He took upon Him, therefore,
the form of man; and under the guise of our race He imprisoned His power,
so that He could be seen and carefully regarded, might speak and teach,
and without encroaching on the sovereignty and government of the King Supreme,
might carry out all those objects for the accomplishment of which He had
come into the world.
61. What, then, says my opponent, could not the Supreme Ruler have brought
about those things which He had ordained to be done in the world, without
feigning Himself a man? If it were necessary to do as you say, He perhaps
would have done so; because it was not necessary, He acted otherwise. The
reasons why He chose to do it in this way, and did not choose to do it
in that, are unknown, being involved in so great obscurity, and comprehensible
by scarcely any; but these you might perhaps have understood if you were
not already prepared not to understand, and were not shaping your course
to brave unbelief, before that was explained to you which you sought to
know and to hear.
62. But, you will say, He was cut off by death as men are. Not Christ
Himself; for it is impossible either that death should befall what is divine,
or that that should waste away and disappear in death which is one in its
substance, and not compounded, nor formed by bringing together any parts.
Who, then, you ask, was seen hanging on the cross? Who dead? The human
form,(1) I reply, which He had put on,(2) and which He bore about with
Him. It is a tale passing belief, you say, and wrapt in dark obscurity;
if yo will, it is not dark, and is established by a very close analogy.(3)
If the Sibyl, when she was uttering and pouring forth her prophecies and
oracular responses, was filled, as you say, with Apollo's power, had been
cut down and slain by impious robbers,(4) would Apollo be said to have
been slain in her? If Bacis,(5) if Helenus, Marcius,(6) and other soothsayers,
had been in like manner robbed of life and light when raving as inspired,
would any one say that those who, speaking by their mouths, declared to
inquirers what should be done,(7) had perished according to the conditions
of human life? The death of which you speak was that of the human body
which He had assumed,(8) not His own--of that which was borne, not of the
bearer; and not even this death would He(9) have stooped to suffer, were
it not that a matter of such importance was to be dealt with, and the inscrutable
plan of fate(10) brought to light in hidden mysteries.
63. What are these hidden and unseen mysteries, you will say, which neither
men can know, nor those even who are called gods of the world can in any
wise reach by fancy and conjecture; which none can discover,(11) except
those whom Christ Himself has thought fit to bestow the blessing of so
great knowledge upon, and to lead into the secret recesses of the inner
treasury of wisdom? Do you then see that if He had determined that none
should do Him violence, He should have striven to the utmost to keep off
from Him His enemies, even by directing His power against them?(12) Could
not He, then, who had restored their sight to the blind, make His enemies
blind if it were necessary? Was it hard or troublesome for Him to make
them weak, who had given strength to the feeble? Did He who bade(13) the
lame walk, not know how to take from them all power to move their limbs,(14)
by making their sinews stiff?(15) Would it have been difficult for Him
who drew the dead from their tombs to inflict death on whom He would? But
because reason required that those things which had been resolved on should
be done here also in the world itself, and in no other fashion than was
done, He, with gentleness passing understanding and belief, regarding as
but childish trifles the wrongs which men did Him, submitted to the violence
of savage and most hardened robbers;(16) nor did He think it worth while
to take account of what their daring had aimed at, if He only showed to
His disciples what they were in duty bound to look for from Him. For when
many things about the perils of souls, many evils about their ...; on the
other hand, the Introducer,(17) the Master and Teacher directed His laws
and ordinances, that they might find their end in fitting duties;(1) did
He not destroy the arrogance of the proud? Did He not quench the fires
of lust? Did He not check the craving of greed? Did He not wrest the weapons
from their hands, and rend from them all the sources(2) of every form of
corruption? To conclude, was He not Himself gentle, peaceful, easily approached,
friendly when addressed?(3) Did He not, grieving at men's miseries, pitying
with His unexampled benevolence all in any wise afflicted with troubles
and bodily ills,(4) bring them back and restore them to soundness?
64. What, then, constrains you, what excites you to revile, to rail at,
to hate implacably Him whom no man(5) can accuse of any crime?(6) Tyrants
and your kings, who, putting away all fear of the gods, plunder and pillage
the treasuries of temples; who by proscription, banishment,(7) and slaughter,
strip the state of its nobles? who, with licentious violence, undermine
and wrest away the chastity of matrons and maidens,--these men you name
indigites and divi; and you worship with couches, altars, temples, and
other service, and by celebrating their games and birthdays, those whom
it was fitting that you should assail with keenest(8) hatred. And all those,
too, who by writing books assail in many forms with biting reproaches public
manners; who censure, brand, and tear in pieces your luxurious habits and
lives; who carry down to posterity evil reports of their own times(9) in
their enduring writings; who seek to persuade men that the rights of marriage
should be held in common;(10) who lie with boys, beautiful, lustful, naked;
who declare that you are beasts, runaways, exiles, and mad and frantic
slaves of the most worthless character,--all these with wonder and applause
you exalt to the stars of heaven, you place in the shrines of your libraries,
you present with chariots and statues, and as much as in you lies, gift
with a kind of immortality, as it were, by the witness which immortal titles
bear to them. Christ alone you would tear in pieces,(11) you would rend
asunder, if you could do so to a god; nay, Him alone you would, were it
allowed, gnaw with bloody months, and break His bones in pieces, and devour
Him like beasts of the field. For what that He has done, tell, I pray you,
for what crime?(12) What has He done to turn aside the course of justice,
and rouse you to hatred made fierce by maddening torments? Is it because
He declared that He was sent by the only true King to be your soul's guardian.
and to bring to you the immortality which you believe that you already
possess, relying on the assertions of a few men? But even if you were assured
that He spoke falsely, that He even held out hopes without the slightest
foundation, not even in this case do I see any reason that you should hate
and condemn Him with bitter reproaches. Nay, if yon were kind and gentle
in spirit, you ought to esteem Him even for this alone, that He promised
to you things which you might well wish and hope for; that He was the bearer
of good news; that His message was such as to trouble no one's mind, nay,
rather to fill all with less anxious expectation.(13)
65. Oh ungrateful and impious age, prepared(14) for its own destruction
by its extraordinary obstinacy! If there had come to you a physician from
lands far distant and unknown to you before, offering some medicine to
keep off from you altogether every kind of disease and sickness, would
you not all eagerly hasten to him? Would you not with every kind of flattery
and honour receive him into your houses, and treat him kindly? Would you
not wish that that kind of medicine should be quite sure, and should be
genuine, which promised that even to the utmost limits of life you should
be free from such countless bodily distresses? And though it were a doubtful
matter, you would yet entrust yourselves to him; nor would you hesitate
to drink the unknown draught, indited by the hope of health set before
you and by the love of safety.(15) Christ shone out and appeared to tell
us news of the utmost importance, bringing an omen of prosperity, and a
message of safety to those who believe. What, I pray you, means(1) this
cruelty, what such barbarity, nay rather, to speak more truly, scornful(2)
pride, not only to harass the messenger and bearer of so great a gift with
taunting words; but even to assail Him with fierce hostility, and with
all the weapons which can be showered upon Him, and with all modes of destruction?
Are His words displeasing, and are you offended when you hear them? Count
them as but a soothsayer's empty tales. Does He speak very stupidly, and
promise foolish gifts? Laugh with scorn as wise men, and leave Him in His
folly(3) to be tossed about among His errors. What means this fierceness,
to repeat what has been said more than once; what a passion, so murderous?
to declare implacable hostility towards one who has done nothing to deserve
it at your hands; to wish, if it were allowed you, to tear Him limb from
limb, who not only did no man any harm, but with uniform kindness(4) told
His enemies what salvation was being brought to them from God Supreme,
what must be done that they might escape destruction and obtain an immortality
which they knew not of? And when the strange and unheard-of things which
were held out staggered the minds of those who heard Him, and made them
hesitate to believe, though master of every power and destroyer of death
itself He suffered His human form to be slain, that from the result(5)
they might know that the hopes were safe which they had long entertained
about the soul's salvation, and that in no other way could they avoid the
danger of death.
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