Subscribe
to CF
Be
first to know
Read our AAA review
from Catholic Culture
Our Mission
To
bring Jesus Christ; the Way, the Truth and the Life; to all who will follow,
according to scripture and tradition, per the Magisterium
of the Roman Catholic Church.
While you visit!
Listen
to
Radio
For the Sacred
Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary. |
THE SEVEN BOOKS OF ARNOBIUS
AGAINST THE HEATHEN
BOOK II (41 TO 78)
41. Was it for this He sent souls, that they which shortly before had
been gentle and ignorant of what it is to be moved by fierce passions,
should build for themselves markets and amphitheatres, places of blood
and open wickedness, in the one of which they should see men devoured and
torn in pieces by wild beasts, and themselves slay others for no demerit
but to please and gratify the spectators,(1) and should spend those very
days on which such wicked deeds were done in general enjoyment, and keep
holiday with festive gaiety; while in the other, again, they should tear
asunder the flesh of wretched animals, some snatch one part, others another,
as dogs and vultures do, should grind them with their teeth, and give to
their utterly insatiable(2) maw, and that, surrounded by(3) faces so fierce
and savage, those should bewail their lot whom the straits of poverty withheld
from such repasts;(4) that their life should be(5) happy and prosperous
while such barbarous doings defiled their mouths and face? Was it for this
He sent souls, that, forgetting their importance and dignity as divine,
they should acquire gems, precious stones, pearls, at the expense of their
purity; should entwine their necks with these, pierce the tips of their
ears, bind(6) their foreheads with fillets, seek for cosmetics(7) to deck
their bodies,(8) darken their eyes with henna; nor, though in the forms
of men, blush to curl their hair with crisping-pins, to make the skin of
the body smooth, to walk with bare knees, and with every other kind of
wantonness, both to lay aside the strength of their manhood, and to grow
in effeminacy to a woman's habits and luxury?
42. Was it for this He sent souls, that some should infest the highways
and roads,(9) others ensnare the unwary, forge(10) false wills, prepare
poisoned draughts; that they should break open houses by night, tamper
with slaves, steal and drive away, not act uprightly, and betray their
trust perfidiously; that they should strike out delicate dainties for the
palate; that in cooking fowls they should know how to catch the fat as
it drips; that they should make cracknels and sausages,(11) force-meats,
tit-bits, Lucanian sausages, with these(12) a sow's udder and iced(13)
puddings? Was it for this He sent souls, that beings(14) of a sacred and
august race should here practise singing and piping; that they should swell
out their cheeks in blowing the flute; that they should take the lead in
singing impure songs, and raising the loud din of the castanets,(15) by
which another crowd of souls should be led in their wantonness to abandon
themselves to clumsy motions, to dance and sing, form rings of dancers,
and finally, raising their haunches and hips, float along with a tremulous
motion of the loins?
Was it for this He sent souls, that in men they should become impure,
in women harlots, players on the triangle(16) and psaltery; that they should
prostitute their bodies for hire, should abandon themselves to the lust
of all,(17) ready in the brothels, to be met with in the stews,(18) ready
to submit to anything, prepared to do violence to their mouth even?(19)
43. What say you, O offspring and descendants of the Supreme Deity? Did
these souls, then, wise, and sprung from the first causes, become acquainted
with such forms of baseness, crime, and bad feeling? and were they ordered
to dwell here,(20) and be clothed with the garment of the human body, in
order that they might engage in, might practise these evil deeds, and that
very frequently? And is there a man with any sense of reason who thinks
that the world was established because of them, and not rather that it
was set up as a seat and home, in which every kind of wickedness should
be committed daily, all evil deeds be done, plots, impostures, frauds,
covetousness, robberies, violence, impiety, all that is presumptuous, indecent,
base, disgraceful,(1) and all the other evil deeds which men devise over
all the earth with guilty purpose, and contrive for each other's ruin?
44. But, you say, they came of their own accord not sent(2) by their lord.
And (3) where was the Almighty Creator, where the authority of His royal
and exalted place,(4) to prevent their departure, and not suffer them to
fall into dangerous pleasures? For if He knew that by change of place they
would become base--and, as the arranger of all things,(5) He must have
known-or that anything would reach them from without which would make them
forget their greatness and moral dignity,--a thousand times would I beg
of Him to pardon my words,--the cause of all is no other than Himself,
since He allowed them to have freedom to wander(6) who He foresaw would
not abide by their state of innocence; and thus it is brought about that
it does not matter whether they came of their own accord, or obeyed His
command, since in not preventing what should have been prevented, by His
inaction He made the guilt His own, and permitted it before it was done
by neglecting to withhold them from action.
45. But let this monstrous and impious fancy be put(7) far from us, that
Almighty God, the creator and framer, the author(8) of things great and
invisible, should be believed to have begotten souls so fickle, with no
seriousness, firmness, and steadiness, prone to vice, inclining to all
kinds of sins; and while He knew that they were such and of this character,
to have bid(9) them enter into bodies, imprisoned in which,(10) they should
live exposed to the storms and tempests of fortune every day, and now do
mean things, now submit to lewd treatment; that they might perish by shipwreck,
accidents, destructive conflagrations; that poverty might oppress some,
beggary, others; that some might be torn in pieces by wild beasts, others
perish by the venom of flies;(11) that some might limp in walking, others
lose their sight, others be stiff with cramped(12) joints; in fine, that
they should be exposed to all the diseases which the wretched and pitiable
human race endures with agony caused by(13) different sufferings; then
that, forgetting that they have one origin, one father and head, they should
shake to their foundations and violate the rights of kinship, should overthrow
their cities, lay waste their lands as enemies, enslave the free, do violence
to maidens and to other men's wives, hate each other, envy the joys and
good fortune of others; and further, all malign, carp at, and tear each
other to pieces with fiercely biting teeth.
46. But, to say the same things again and again,(14) let this belief,
so monstrous and impious, be put far from us, that. God, who preserves(15)
all things, the origin of the virtues and chief in(16) benevolence, and,
to exalt Him with human praise, most wise, just, making all things perfect,
and that permanently,(17) either made anything which was imperfect and
not quite correct,(18) or was the cause of misery or danger to any being,
or arranged, commanded, and enjoined the very acts in which man's life
is passed and employed to flow from His arrangement. These things are unworthy
of(19) Him, and weaken the force of His greatness; and so far from His
being believed to be their author, whoever imagines that man is sprung
from Him is guilty of blasphemous impiety, man, a being miserable and wretched,
who is sorry that he exists, hates and laments his state, and understands
that he was produced for no other reason than lest evils should not have
something(20) through which to spread themselves, and that there might
always be wretched ones by whose agonies some unseen and cruel power,(21)
adverse to men, should be gratified.
47. But, you say, if God is not the parent and father of souls, by what
sire have they been begotten, and how have they been produced? If you wish
to hear unvarnished statements not spun out with vain ostentation of words,
we, too,(22) admit that we are ignorant of this, do not know it;(1) and
we hold that, to know so great a matter, is not only beyond the reach of
our weakness and frailty, but beyond that also of all the powers which
are in the world, and which have usurped the place of deities in men's
belief. But are we bound to show whose they are, because we deny that they
are God's? That by no means(2) follows necessarily; for if we were to deny
that flies, beetles, and bugs, dormice, weevils, and moths,(3) are made
by the Almighty King, we should not be required in consequence to say who
made and formed them; for without incurring any censure, we may not know
who, indeed, gave them being, and yet assert that not by the Supreme(4)
Deity were creatures produced so useless, so needless, so purposeless,(5)
nay more,, at times even hurtful, and causing unavoidable injuries.
48. Here, too, in like manner, when we deny that souls are the offspring
of God Supreme, it does not necessarily follow that we are bound to declare
from what parent they have sprung, and by what causes they have been produced.
For who prevents us from being either ignorant of the source from which
they issued and came, or aware that they are not God's descendants? By
what method, you say, in what way? Because it is most true and certain(6)
that, as has been pretty frequently said, nothing is effected, made, determined
by the Supreme, except that which it is right and fitting should be done;
except that which is complete and entire, and wholly perfect in its(7)
integrity. But further, we see that men, that is, these very souls--for
what are men but souls bound to bodies?--themselves show by perversely
falling into(8) vice, times without number, that they belong to no patrician
race, but have sprung from insignificant families. For we see some harsh,
vicious, presumptuous, rash, reckless, blinded, false, dissemblers, liars,
proud, overbearing, covetous, greedy, lustful, fickle, weak, and unable
to observe their own precepts; but they would assuredly not be so, if their
original goodness defended(9) them, and they traced their honourable descent
from the head of the universe.
49. But, you will say, there are good men also in the world,--wise, upright,
of faultless and purest morals. We raise no question as to whether there
ever were any such, in whom this very integrity which is spoken of was
in nothing imperfect. Even if they are very honourable men, and have been
worthy of praise, have reached the utmost height of perfection, and their
life has never wavered and sunk into sin, yet we would have you tell us
how many there are, or have been, that we may judge from their number whether
a comparison(10) has been made which is just and evenly balanced.(11) One,
two, three, four, ten, twenty, a hundred, yet are they at least limited
in number, and it may be within the reach of names.(12) But it is fitting
that the human race should be rated and weighed, not by a very few good
men, but by all the rest as well. For the part is in the whole, not the
whole in a part; and that which is the whole should draw to it its parts,
not the whole be brought to its parts. For what if you were to say that
a man, robbed of the use of all his limbs, and shrieking in bitter agony,(13)
was quite well, because in(14) one little nail he suffered no pain? or
that the earth is made of gold, because in one hillock there are a few
small grains from which, when dissolved, gold is produced, and wonder excited
at it when formed into a lump?(15) The whole mass shows the nature of an
element, not particles fine as air; nor does the sea become forthwith sweet,
if you cast or throw into it a few drops of less bitter water, for that
small quantity is swallowed up in its immense mass; and it must be esteemed,
not merely of little importance, but even of none, because, being scattered
throughout all, it is lost and cut off in the immensity of the vast body
of water.
50. You say that there are good men in the human race; and perhaps, if
we compare them with the very wicked, we may be led(16) to believe that
there are. Who are they, pray? Tell us. The philosophers, I suppose, who(17)
assert that they alone are most wise, and who have been uplifted with pride
from the meaning attached to this name,(18)--those, forsooth, who are striving
with their passions every day, and struggling to drive out, to expel deeply-rooted
passions from their minds by the persistent(19) opposition of their better
qualities; who, that it may be impossible for them to be led into wickedness
at the suggestion of some opportunity, shun riches and inheritances, that
they may remove(1) from themselves occasions of stumbling; but in doing
this, and being solicitous about it, they show very clearly that their
souls are, through their weakness, ready and prone to fall into vice. In
our opinion, however, that which is good naturally, does not require to
be either corrected or i reproved;(2) nay more, it should not know what
evil is, if the nature of each kind would abide in its own integrity, for
neither can two contraries be implanted in each other, nor can equality
be contained in inequality, nor sweetness in bitterness. He, then, who
struggles to amend the inborn depravity of his inclinations, shows most
clearly that he is imperfect,(3) blameable, although he may strive with
all zeal and stedfastness.
51. But you laugh at our reply, because, while we deny that souls are
of royal descent, we do not, on the other hand, say in turn from what causes
and beginnings they have sprung. But what kind of crime is it either to
be ignorant of anything, or to confess quite openly that you do not know
that of which you are ignorant? or whether does he rather seem to you most
deserving of ridicule who assumes to himself no knowledge of some dark
subject; or he who thinks that he(4) knows most clearly that which transcends
human knowledge, and which has been involved in dark obscurity? If the
nature of everything were thoroughly considered, you too are in a position
like that which you censure in our case. For you do not say anything which
has been ascertained and set most clearly in the light of truth, because
you say that souls descend from the Supreme Ruler Himself, and enter into
the forms of men. For you conjecture, do not perceives this; surmise, do
not actually know it; for if to know is to retain in the mind that which
you have yourself seen or known, not one of those things which you affirm
can you say that you have ever seen--that is, that souls descend from the
abodes and regions above. You are therefore making use of conjecture, not
trusting clear information. But what is conjecture, except a doubtful imagining
of things, and directing of the mind upon nothing accessible? He, then,
who conjectures, does not comprehend,(5) nor does he walk in the(6) light
of knowledge. But if this is true and certain in the opinion of proper
and very wise judges, your conjectures, too, in which you trust, must be
regarded as showing your ignorance.
52. And yet, lest you should suppose that none but yourselves can make
use of conjectures and surmises, we too are able to bring them forward
as well,(7) as your question is appropriate to either side.(8) Whence,
you say, are men; and what or whence are the souls of these men? Whence,
we will ask, are elephants, bulls, stags, mules,(9) asses? Whence lions,
horses, dogs, wolves, panthers; and what or whence are the souls of these
creatures? For it is not credible that from that Platonic cup,(10) which
Timaeus prepares and mixes, either their souls came, or that the locust,(11)
mouse, shrew, cockroach, frog, centipede, should be believed to have been
quickened and to live, because(12) they have a cause and origin of birth
in(13) the elements themselves, if there are in these secret and very little
known means(14) for producing the creatures which live in each of them.
For we see that some of the wise say that the earth is mother of men, that
others join with it water,(15) that others add to these breath of air,
but that some say that the sun is their framer, and that, having been quickened
by his rays, they are filled with the stir of life.(16) What if it is not
these, and is something else another cause another method, another power,
in fine, unheard of and unknown to us by name, which may have fashioned
the human race, and connected it with things as established;(17) may it
not be that men sprang up in this way, and that the cause of their birth
does not go back to the Supreme God? For what reason do we suppose that
the great Plato had--a man reverent and scrupulous in his wisdom--when
he withdrew the fashioning of man from the highest God, and transferred
it to some lesser deities. and when he would not have the souls of men
formed(18) of that pure mixture of which he had made the soul of the universe,
except that he thought the forming of man unworthy of God, and the fashioning
of a feeble being not beseeming His greatness and excellence?
53. Since this, then, is the case, we do nothing out of place or foolish
in believing that the souls of men are of a neutral character, inasmuch
as they have been produced by secondary beings,(1) made subject to the
law of death, and are of little strength, and that perishable; and that
they are gifted with immortality, if(2) they rest their hope of so great
a gift on God Supreme, who alone has power to grant such blessings, by
putting away corruption. But this, you say, we are stupid in believing.
What is that to you? In so believing, we act most absurdly, sillily. In
what do we injure you, or what wrong do we do or inflict upon you, if we
trust that Almighty God will take care of us when we leave(3) our bodies,
and from the jaws of hell, as is said, deliver us?
54. Can, then, anything be made, some one will say, without God's will?
We(4) must consider carefully, and examine with no little pains, test,
while we think that we are honouring God(5) by such a question, we fall
into the opposite sin, doing despite to His supreme majesty. In what way,
you ask, on what ground? Because, if all things are brought about by His
will, and nothing in the world can either succeed or fail contrary to His
pleasure, it follows of necessity that it should be understood that(6)
all evils, too, arise by His will. But if, on the contrary, we chose to
say that He is privy to and produces no evil, not referring to Him the
causes of very wicked deeds, the worst things will begin to seem to be
done either against His will, or, a monstrous thing to say, while He knows
it not, but is ignorant and unaware of them. But, again, if we choose to
say that there are no evils, as we find some have believed and held, all
races will cry out against us and all nations together, showing us their
sufferings, and the various kinds of dangers with which the human race
is every moment(7) distressed and afflicted. Then they will ask of us,
Why, if there are no evils, do you refrain from certain deeds and actions?
Why do you not do all that eager lust has required or demanded? Why, finally,
do you establish punishments by terrible laws for the guilty? For what
more monstrous(8) act of folly can be found than to assert that there are
no evils, and at the same time to kill and condemn the erring as though
they were evil?(9)
55. But when, overcome, we agree that there are these things,(10) and
expressly allow that all human affairs are full of them, they will next
ask, Why, then, the Almighty God does not take away these evils, but suffers
them to exist and to go on without ceasing through all the ages?(11) If
we have learned of God the Supreme Ruler, and have resolved not to wander
in a maze of impious and mad conjectures, we must answer that we do not
know these things, and have never sought and striven to know things which
could be grasped by no powers which we have, and that we, even thinking
it(12) preferable, rather remain in ignorance and want of knowledge than
say that without God nothing is made, so that it should be understood that
by His will(13) He is at once both the source of evil(14) and the occasion
of countless miseries. Whence then, you will say, are all these evils?
From the elements, say the wise, and from their dissimilarity; but how
it is possible that things which have not feeling and judgment should be
held to be wicked or criminal; or that he should not rather be wicked and
criminal, who, to bring about some result, took what was afterwards to
become very bad and hurtful,(15)--is for them to consider, who make the
assertion. What, then, do we say? whence? There is no necessity that we
should answer, for whether we are able to say whence evil springs, or our
power fails us, and we are unable, in either case it is a small matter
in our opinion; nor do we hold it of much importance either to know or
to be ignorant of it, being content to have laid down but one thing,--that
nothing proceeds from God Supreme which is hurtful and pernicious. This
we are assured of, this we know, on this one truth of knowledge and science
we take our stand,--that nothing is made by Him except that which is for
the well-being of all, which is agreeable, which is very full of love and
joy and gladness, which has unbounded and imperishable pleasures, which
every one may ask in all his prayers to befall him, and think that otherwise(1)
life is pernicious and fatal.
56. As for all the other things which are usually dwelt upon in inquiries
and discussions--from what parents they have sprung, or by whom they are
produced--we neither strive to know,(2) nor care to inquire or examine:
we leave all things to their own causes, and do not consider that they
have been connected and associated with that which we desire should befall
us.(3) For what is there which men of ability do not dare to overthrow,
to destroy,(4) from love of contradiction, although that which they attempt
to invalidate is unobjectionable(5) and manifest, and evidently bears the
stamp of truth? Or what, again, can they not maintain with plausible arguments,
although it may be very manifestly untrue, although it may be a plain and
evident falsehood? For when a man has persuaded himself that there is or
is not something, he likes to affirm what he thinks, and to show greater
subtlety than others, especially if the subject discussed is out of the
ordinary track, and by nature abstruse and obscure.(6) Some of the wise
think that the world was not created, and will never perish;(7) some that
it is immortal, although they say that it was created and made;(8) while
a third party have chosen to say that it both was created and made, and
will perish as other things must.(9) And while of these three opinions
one only must be true, they nevertheless all find arguments by which at
once to uphold their own doctrines, and undermine and overthrow the dogmas
of others. Some teach and declare that this same world is composed of four
elements, others of two,(10) a third party of one; some say that it is
composed of none of these, and that atoms are that from which it is formed,(11)
and its primary origin. And since of these opinions only one is true, but(12)
not one of them certain, here too, in like manner, arguments present themselves
to all with which they may both establish the truth of what they say, and
show that there are some things false(13) in the others' opinions. So,
too, some utterly deny the existence of the gods; others say that they
are lost in doubt as to whether they exist anywhere; others, however, say
that they do exist, but do not trouble themselves about human things; nay
others maintain that they both take part in the affairs of men, and guide
the course of earthly events.(14)
57. While, then, this is the case, and it cannot but be that only one
of all these opinions is true, they all nevertheless make use of arguments
in striving with each other,--and not one of them is without something
plausible to say, whether in affirming his own views, or objecting to the
opinions of others. In exactly the same way is the condition of souls discussed.
For I this one thinks that they both are immortal, and survive the end
of our earthly life; that one believes that they do not survive, but perish
with the bodies themselves: the opinion of another, however, is that they
suffer nothing immediately, but that, after the form of man has been laid
aside, they are allowed to live a little longer,(15) and then come under
the power of death. And while all these opinions cannot be alike true,
yet all who hold them so support their case by strong and very weighty
arguments, that you cannot find out anything which seems false to you,
although on every side you see that things are being said altogether at
variance with each other, and inconsistent from their opposition to each
other;(16) which assuredly would not happen, if man s curiosity could reach
any certainty, or if that which seemed to one to have been really discovered,
was attested by the approval of all the others. It is therefore wholly(1)
vain, a useless task, to bring forward something as though you knew it,
or to wish to assert that you know that which, although it should be true,
you see can be refuted; or to receive that as true which it may be is not,
and is brought forward as if by men raving. And it is rightly so, for we
do not weigh and guess at(2) divine things by divine, but by human methods;
and just as we think that anything should have been made, so we assert
that it must be.
58. What, then, are we alone ignorant? do we alone not know who is the
creator, who the former of souls, what cause fashioned man, whence ills
have broken forth, or why the Supreme Ruler allows them both to exist and
be perpetrated, and does not drive them from the world? have you, indeed,
ascertained and learned any of these things with certainty? If you chose
to lay aside audacious(3) conjectures, can you unfold and disclose whether
this world m which we dwell(4) was created or founded at some time? if
it was founded and made, by what kind of work, pray, or for what purpose?
Can you bring forward and disclose the reason why it does not remain fixed
and immoveable, but is ever being carried round in a circular motion? whether
it revolves of its own will and choice, or is turned by the influence of
some power? what the place, too, and space is in which it is set and revolves,
boundless, bounded, hollow, or(5) solid? whether it is supported by an
axis resting on sockets at its extremities, or rather itself sustains by
its own power, and by the spirit within it upholds itself? Can you, if
asked, make it clear, and show most skilfully,(6) what opens out the snow
into feathery flakes? what was the reason and cause that day did not, in
dawning, arise in the west, and veil its light in the east? how the sun,
too, by one and the same influence,(7) produces results so different, nay,
even so opposite? what the moon is, what the stars? why, on the one hand,
it does not remain of the same shape, or why it was right and necessary
that these particles of fire should be set all over the world? why some(8)
of them are small, others large and greater,--these have a dim light, those
a more vivid and shining brightness?
59. If that which it has pleased us to know is within reach, and if such
knowledge is open to all, declare to us,(9) and say how and by what means
showers of rain are produced, so that water is held suspended in the regions
above and in mid-air, although by nature it is apt to glide away, and so
ready to flow and run downwards. Explain, I say, and tell what it is which
sends the hail whirling through the air, which makes the rain fall drop
by drop, which has spread out rain and feathery flakes of snow and sheets
of lightning;(10) whence the wind rises, and what it is; why the changes
of the seasons were established, when it might have been ordained that
there should be only one, and one kind of climate, so that there should
be nothing wanting to the world's completeness. What is the cause, what
the reason, that the waters of the sea are salt;(11) or that, of those
on land, some are sweet, others bitter or cold? From what kind of material
have the inner parts of men's bodies been formed and built up into firmness?
From what have their bones been made solid? what made the intestines and
veins shaped like pipes, and easily passed through? Why, when it would
be better to give us light by several eyes, to guard against the risk of
blindness, are we restricted to two? For what purpose have so infinite
and innumerable kinds of monsters and serpents been I either formed or
brought forth? what purpose do owls serve in the world,--falcons, hawks?
what other birds(12) and winged creatures? what the different kinds of
ants and worms springing up to be a bane and pest in various ways? what
fleas, obtrusive flies, spiders, shrew, and other mice, leeches, water-spinners?
what thorns, briers, wild-oats, tares? what the seeds of herbs or shrubs,
either sweet to the nostrils, or disagreeable in smell? Nay more, if you
think that anything can be known or comprehended, say what wheat is,--spelt,
barley, millet, the chick-pea, bean, lentil, melon, cumin, scallion, leek,
onion? For even if they are useful to you, and are ranked among the different
kinds of food, it is not a light or easy thing to know what each is,--why
they have been formed with such shapes; whether there was any necessity
that they should not have had other tastes, smells, and colours than those
which each has, or whether they could have taken others also; further,
what these very things are,--taste, I mean,(13) and the rest; and from
what relations they derive their differences of quality. From the elements,
you say, and from the first beginnings of things. Are the elements, then,
bitter or sweet? have they any odour or(1) stench, that we should believe
that, from their uniting, qualities were implanted in their products by
which sweetness is produced, or something prepared offensive to the senses?
60. Seeing, then, that the origin, the cause, the reason of so many and
so important things, escapes you yourselves also, and that you can neither
say nor explain what has been made, nor why and wherefore it should not
have been otherwise, do you assail and attack our timidity, who confess
that we do not know that which cannot be known, and who do not care to
seek out and inquire into those things which it is quite clear cannot be
understood, although human conjecture should extend and spread itself through
a thousand hearts? And therefore Christ the divine,--although you are unwilling
to allow it,--Christ the divine, I repeat, for this must be said often,
that the ears of unbelievers may burst and be rent asunder, speaking in
the form of man by command of the Supreme God, because He knew that men
are naturally(2) blind, and cannot grasp the truth at all, or regard as
sure and certain what they might have persuaded themselves as to things
set before their eyes, and do not hesitate, for the sake of their(3) conjectures,
to raise and bring up questions that cause much strife,--bade us abandon
and disregard all these things of which you speak, and not waste our thoughts
upon things which have been removed far from our knowledge, but, as much
as possible, seek the Lord of the universe with the whole mind and spirit;
be raised above these subjects, and give over to Him our hearts, as yet
hesitating whither to turn;(4) be ever mindful of Him; and although no
imagination can set Him forth as He is,(5) yet form some faint conception
of Him. For Christ said that, of all who are comprehended in the vague
notion of what is sacred and divine,(6) He alone is beyond the reach of
doubt, alone true, and one about whom only a raving and reckless madman
can be in doubt; to know whom is enough, although you have learned nothing
besides; and if by knowledge you have indeed been related to(7) God, the
head of the world, you have gained the true and most important knowledge.
61. What business of yours is it, He(8) says, to examine, to inquire who
made man; what is the origin of souls; who devised the causes of ills;
whether the sun is larger than the earth, or measures only a foot in breadth:(9)
whether the moon shines with borrowed light, or from her own brightness,--things
which there is neither profit in knowing, nor loss in not knowing? Leave
these things to God, and allow Him to know what is, wherefore, or whence;
whether it must have been or not; whether something always existed,(10)
or whether it was produced at the first; whether it should be annihilated
or preserved, consumed, destroyed, or restored in fresh vigour. Your reason
is not permitted to involve you in such questions, and to be busied to
no purpose about things so much out of reach. Your interests are in jeopardy,--the
salvation, I mean,(11) of your souls; and unless you give yourselves to
seek to know the Supreme God, a cruel death awaits you when freed from
the bonds of body, not bringing sudden annihilation, but destroying by
the bitterness of its grievous and long-protracted punishment.
62. And be not deceived or deluded with vain hopes by that which is said
by some ignorant and most presumptuous pretenders,(12) that they are born
of God, and are not subject to the decrees of fate; that His palace lies
open to them if they lead a life of temperance, and that after death as
men, they are restored without hindrance, as if to their father's abode;
nor by that which the Magi(13) assert, that they have intercessory prayers,
won over by which some powers make the way easy to those who are striving
to mount to heaven; nor by that which Etruria holds out in the Acherontic
books,(14) that souls become divine, and are freed from the law(15) of
death, if the blood of certain animals is offered to certain deities. These
are empty delusions, and excite vain desires. None but the Almighty God
can preserve souls; nor is there any one besides who can give them length
of days, and grant to them also a spirit which shall never die,(16) except
He who alone is immortal and everlasting, and restricted by no limit of
time. For since all the gods, whether those who are real, or those who
are merely said to be from hearsay and conjecture, are immortal and everlasting
by His good-will and free gift, how can it be that others(1) are able to
give that which they themselves have,(2) while they have it as the gift
of another, bestowed by a greater power? Let Etruria sacrifice what victims
it may, let the wise deny themselves all the pleasures of life,(3) let
the Magi soften and soothe all lesser powers, yet, unless souls have received
from the Lord of all things that which reason demands, and does so by His
command, it(4) will hereafter deeply repent having made itself a laughing-stock,(5)
when it begins to feel the approach(6) of death.
63. But if, my opponents say, Christ was sent by God for this end, that
He might deliver unhappy souls from ruin and destruction, of what crime
were former ages guilty which were cut off in their mortal state before
He came? Can you, then, know what has become of these souls(7) of men who
lived long ago?(8) whether they, too, have not been aided, provided, and
cared for in some way? Can you, I say, know that which could have been
learned through Christ's teaching; whether the ages are unlimited in number
or not since the human race began to be on the earth; when souls were first
bound to bodies; who contrived that binding,(9) nay, rather, who formed
man himself; whither the souls of men who lived before us have gone; in
what parts or regions of the world they were; whether they were corruptible
or not; whether they could have encountered the danger of death, if Christ
had not come forward as their preserver at their time of need? Lay aside
these cares, and abandon questions to which you can find no answer.(10)
The Lord's compassion has been shown to them, too, and the divine kindness(11)
has been extended to(12) all alike; they have been preserved, have been
delivered, and have laid aside the lot and. condition of mortality. Of
what kind, my opponents ask, what, when? If you were free from presumption,
arrogance, and conceit, you might have learned long ago from this teacher.
64. But, my opponents ask, if Christ came as the Saviour of men, as(13)
you say, why(14) does He not, with uniform benevolence, free all without
exception? I reply, does not He free all alike who invites all alike? or
does He thrust back or repel any one from the kindness of the Supreme who
gives to all alike the power of coming to Him,--to men of high rank, to
the meanest slaves, to women, to boys? To all, He says, the fountain of
life is open,(15) and no one is hindered or kept back from drinking.(16)
If you are so fastidious as to spurn the kindly(17) offered gift, nay,
more, if your wisdom is so great that you term those things which are offered
by Christ ridiculous and absurd, why should He keep on inviting (18) you,
while His only duty is to make the enjoyment of His bounty depend upon
your own free choice?(19) God, Plato says, does not cause any one to choose
his lot in life;(20) nor can another's choice be rightly attributed to
any one, since freedom of choice was put in His power who made it. Must
you be even implored to deign to accept the gift of salvation from God;
and must God's gracious mercy be poured into your bosom while you reject
it with disdain, and flee very far from it? Do you choose to take what
is offered, and turn it to your own advantage? You will in that case have
consulted your own interests. Do you reject with disdain, lightly esteem,
and despise it? You will in this case have robbed yourself of the benefit
of the gift.(21) God compels no one, terrifies no one with overpowering
fear. For our salvation is not necessary to Him, so that He would gain
anything or suffer any loss, if He either made us divine,(22) or allowed
us to be annihilated and destroyed by corruption.
65. Nay, my opponent says, if God is powerful, merciful, willing to save
us, let Him change our dispositions, and compel us to trust in His promises.
This, then, is violence, not kindness nor the bounty of the Supreme God,
but a childish and vain(1) strife in seeking to get the mastery. For what
is so unjust as to force men who are reluctant and unwilling, to reverse
their inclinations; to impress forcibly on their minds what they are unwilling
to receive, and shrink from; to injure before benefiting, and to bring
to another way of thinking and feeling, by taking away the former? You
who wish yourself to be changed,(2) and to suffer violence, that you may
do and may be compelled to take to yourself that which you do not wish,
why do you refuse of your own accord to select that which you wish to do,
when changed and transformed? I am unwilling, He says, and have no wish.
What, then, do you blame God as though He failed you? do you wish Him to
bring you help,(3) whose gifts and bounties you not only reject and shun,
but term empty(4) words, and assail with jocose witticisms? Unless, then,
my opponent says, I shall be a Christian, I cannot hope for salvation.
It is just as you yourself say. For, to bring salvation and impart to souls
what should be bestowed and must be added, Christ alone has had given into
His charge and entrusted(5) to Him by God the Father, the remote and more
secret causes being so disposed. For, as with you, certain gods have fixed
offices, privileges, powers, and you do not ask from any of them what is
not in his power and permitted to him, so it is the right of(6) Christ
alone to give salvation to souls, and assign them everlasting life. For
if you believe that father Bacchus can give a good vintage, but cannot
give relief from sickness; if you believe that Ceres can give good crops,
Aesculapius health, Neptune one thing, Juno(7) another, that Fortune, Mercury,
Vulcan, are each the giver of a fixed and particular thing,--this, too,
you must needs receive from us,(8) that souls can receive from no one life
and salvation, except from Him to whom the Supreme Ruler gave this charge
and duty. The Almighty Master of the world has determined that this should
be the way of salvation,--this the door, so to say, of life; by Him(9)
alone is there access to the light: nor may men either creep in or enter
elsewhere, all other ways being shut up and secured by an impenetrable
barrier.
66. So, then, even if you are pure, and have been cleansed from every
stain of vice, have won over and charmed(10) those powers not to shut the
ways against you and bar your passage when returning to heaven, by no efforts
will you be able to reach the prize of immortality, unless by Christ's
gift you have perceived what constitutes this very immortality, and have
been allowed to enter on the true life. For as to that with which you have
been in the habit of taunting us, that our religion is new,(11) and arose
a few days ago, almost, and that you could not abandon the ancient faith
which you had inherited from your fathers, and pass over to barbarous and
foreign rites, this is urged wholly without reason. For what if in this
way we chose to blame the preceding, even the most ancient ages, because
when they discovered how to raise crops,(12) they despised acorns, and
rejected with scorn the wild strawberry; because they ceased to be covered
with the bark of trees and clad in the hides of wild beasts, after that
garments of cloth were devised, more useful and convenient in wearing;
or because, when houses were built, and more comfortable dwellings erected,
they did not cling to their ancient huts, and did not prefer to remain
nuder rocks and caves like the beasts of the field? It is a disposition
possessed by all, and impressed on us almost from our cradles even, to
prefer good things to bad, useful to useless things, and to pursue and
seek that with more pleasure which has been generally regarded(13) as more
than usually precious, and to set on that our hopes for prosperity and
favourable circumstances.
67. Therefore, when you urge against us that we turn away from the religion(14)
of past ages, it is fitting that you should examine why it is done, not
what is crone, and not set before you what we have left, but observe especially
what we have followed. For if it is a fault or crime to change an opinion,
and pass from ancient customs to new conditions and desires, this accusation
holds against you too, who have so often changed your habits and mode of
life, who have gone over to other customs and ceremonies, so that you are
condemned by(15) past ages as well as we. Do you indeed have the people
distributed into five(16) classes, as your ancestors once had? Do you ever
elect magistrates by vote of the people? Do you know what military, urban,
and common(1) comitia are? Do you watch the sky, or put an end to public
business because evil omens are announced? When you are preparing for war,(2)
do you hang out a flag from the citadel, or practise the forms of the Fetiales,
solemnly(3) demanding the return of what has been carried off? or, when
encountering the dangers of war, do you begin to hope also, because of
favourable omens from the points of the spears?(4) In entering on office,
do you still observe the laws fixing the proper times? with regard to gifts
and presents to advocates, do you observe the Cincian and the sumptuary
laws in restricting your expenses? Do you maintain fires, ever burning,
in gloomy sanctuaries?(5) Do you consecrate tables by putting on them salt-cellars
and images of the gods? When you marry, do you spread the couch with a
toga, and invoke the genii of husbands? do you arrange the hair of brides
with the hasta caelibaris? do you bear the maidens' garments to the temple
of Fortuna Virginalis? Do your matrons work in the halls of your houses,
showing their industry openly do they refrain from drinking wine? are their
friends and relations allowed to kiss them, in order to show that they
are sober and temperate?
68. On the Alban hill, it was not allowed in ancient times to sacrifice
any but snow-white bulls: have you not changed that custom and religious
observance, and has it not been enacted by decree of the senate, that reddish
ones may be offered? While during the reigns of Romulus and Pompilius the
inner parts, having been quite thoroughly cooked and softened, were burnt
up in sacrificing to the gods, did you not begin, under king Tullius,(6)
to hold them out half-raw and slightly warm, paying no regard to the former
usage? While before the arrival of Hercules in Italy supplication was made
to father Dis and Saturn with the heads of men by Apollo's advice; have
you not, in like manner, changed this custom too, by means of cunning deceit
and ambiguous names?(7) Since, then, yourselves also have followed at one
time these customs, at another different laws, and have repudiated and
rejected many things on either perceiving your mistakes or seeing something
better, what have we done contrary to common sense and the discretion all
men have, if we have chosen what is greater and more certain, and have
not suffered ourselves to be held back by unreasoning respect for impostures?
69. But our name is new, we are told, and the religion which we follow
arose but a few days ago. Granting for the present that what you urge against
us is not untrue, what is there, I would ask, among the affairs of men
that is either done by bodily exertion and manual labour, or attained by
the mind's learning and knowledge, which did not begin at some time, and
pass into general use and practice since then? Medicine,(8) philosophy,
music, and all the other arts by which social life has been built up and
refined,--were these born with men, and did they not rather begin to be
pursued, understood, and practised lately, nay, rather, but a short time
since? Before the Etruscan Tages saw the(9) light, did any one know or
trouble himself to know and learn what meaning there was in the fall of
thunderbolts, or in the veins of the victims sacrificed?(10) When did the
motion of the stars or the art of calculating nativities begin to be known?
Was it not after Theutis(11) the Egyptian; or after Atlas, as some say,
the bearer, supporter, stay, and prop of the skies?
70. But why do I speak of these trivial things? The immortal gods themselves,
whose temples you now enter with reverence, whose deity you suppliantly
adore, did they not at certain times, as is handed down by your writings
and traditions, begin to be, to be known and to be invoked by names and
titles which were given to them? For if it is true that Jupiter with his
brothers was born of Saturn and his wife, before Ops was married and bore
children Jupiter had not existed both the Supreme and the Stygian,(12)
no, nor the lord of the sea, nor Juno, nay more, no one inhabited the heavenly
seats except the two parents; but from their union the other gods were
conceived and born, and breathed the breath of life. So, then, at a certain
time the god Jupiter began to be, at a certain time to merit worship anti
sacrifices, at a certain time to be set above his brothers in power.(13)
But, again, if Liber, Venus, Diana, Mercury, Apollo, Hercules, the Muses,
the Tyndarian brothers,(14) and Vulcan the lord of fire, were begotten
by father Jupiter, and born of a parent sprung from Saturn, before that
Memory, Alcmena, Maia, Juno, Latona, Leda, Dione, and Semele also bore
children to Diespiter; these deities, too, were nowhere in the world, nor
in any part of the universe, but by Jupiter's embraces they were begotten
and born, and began to have some sense of their own existence. So then,
these, too, began to be at a certain time, and to be summoned among the
gods to the sacred rites. This we say, in like manner, of Minerva. For
if, as you assert, she burst forth from Jupiter's head ungenerated,(1)
before Jupiter was begotten, and received in his mother's womb the shape
and outline of his body,(2) it is quite certain that Minerva did not exist,
and was not reckoned among things or as existing at all; but from Jove's
head she was born, and began to have a real existence. She therefore has
an origin at the first, and began to be called a goddess at a certain time,
to be set up in temples, and to be consecrated by the inviolable obligations
of religion. Now as this is the case, when you talk of the novelty of our
religion, does your own not come into your thoughts, and do you not take
care to examine when your gods sprung up,--what origins, what causes they
have, or from what stocks they have burst forth and sprung? But how shameful
how shameless it is to censure that in another which you see that you do
yourself,--to take occasion to revile and accuse others for things which
can be retorted upon you in turn!
71. But our rites are(3) new; yours are ancient, and of excessive antiquity,
we are told. And what help does that give you, or how does it damage our
cause and argument? The belief(4) which we hold is new; some day even it,
too, will become old: yours is old; but when it arose, it was new and unheard
of. The credibility of a religion, however, must not be determined by its
age, but by its divinity; and you should consider not when, but what you
began to worship. Four hundred years ago, my opponent says, your religion
did not exist. And two thousand years ago, I reply, your gods did not exist.
By what reckoning, you ask, or by what calculations, can that be inferred?
They are not difficult, not intricate, but can be seen by any one who will
take them in hand even, as the saying is. Who begot Jupiter and his brothers?
Saturn with Ops, as you relate, sprung from Coelus and Hecate. Who begot
Picus, the father of Faunus and grandfather of Latinus? Saturn, as you
again hand down by your books and teachers? Therefore, if this is the case,
Picus and Jupiter are in consequence united by the bond of kinship, inasmuch
as they are sprung from one stock and race. It is clear, then, that what
we say is true. How many steps are there in coming down(5) from Jupiter
and Picus to Latinus? Three, as the line of succession shows. Will you
suppose Faunus, Latinus, and Picus to have each lived a hundred and twenty
years, for beyond this it is that man's life cannot be pro longed? The
estimation is well grounded and clear. There are, then, three hundred and
sixty years garter these?(6) It is just as the calculation shows. Whose
father-in-law was Latinus? Aeneas'. Whose father was he?(7) He was father
of the founder of the town Alba. How many years did kings reign in Alba?
Four hundred and twenty almost. Of what age is the city Rome shown to be
in the annals? It reckons ten(8) hundred and fifty years, or not much less.
So, then, from Jupiter, who is the brother of Picus and father of the other
and lesser gods, down to the present time, there are nearly, or to add
a little to the time, altogether, two thousand years. Now since this cannot
be contradicted, not only is the religion to which you adhere shown to
have sprung up lately; but it is also shown that the gods themselves, to
whom you heap up bulls and other victims at the risk of bringing on disease,
are young and little children, who should still be fed with their mothers'
milk.(9)
72. But your religion precedes ours by many years, and is therefore, you
say, truer, because it has been supported by the authority of antiquity.
And of what avail is it that it should precede ours as many years as you
please, since it began at a certain time? or what(10) are two thousand
years, compared with so many thousands of ages? And yet, lest we should
seem to betray our cause by so long neglect, say, if it does not annoy
you, does the Almighty and Supreme God seem to you to be something new;
and do those who adore and worship Him seem to you to support and introduce
an unheard-of, unknown, and upstart religion? Is there anything older than
Him? or can anything be found preceding Him in being,(11) time, name? Is
not He alone uncreated, immortal, and everlasting? Who is the head(12)
and fountain of things? is not He? To whom does eternity owe its name?
is it not to Him? Is it not because He is everlasting, that the ages go
on without end? This is beyond doubt, and true: the religion which we follow
is not new, then, but we have been late in learning what we should follow
and revere, or where we should both fix our hope of salvation, and employ
the aid given to save us. For He had not yet shone forth who was to point
out the way to those wandering from it, and give the light of knowledge
to those who were lying in the deepest darkness, and dispel the blindness
of their ignorance.
73. But are we alone in this position?(1) What! have you not introduced
into the number of your gods the Egyptian deities named Serapis and Isis,
since the consulship of Piso and Gabinius?(2) What! did you not begin both
to know and be acquainted with, and to worship with remarkable honours,
the Phrygian mother--who, it is said, was first set up as a goddess by
Midas or Dardanus--when Hannibal, the Carthaginian, was plundering Italy
and aiming at the empire of the world?(3) Are not the sacred rites of mother
Ceres, which were adopted but a little while ago, called Graeca because
they were unknown to you, their name bearing witness to their novelty?
Is it not said(4) in the writings of the learned, that the rituals of Numa
Pompilius do not contain the name of Apollo? Now it is clear and manifest
from this, that he, too, was unknown to you. but that at some time afterwards
he began to be known also. If any one, therefore, should ask yon why you
have so lately begun to worship those deities whom we mentioned just now,
it is certain that you will reply, either because we were till lately not
aware that they were gods, or because we have now been warned by the seers,
or because, in very trying circumstances, we have been preserved by their
favour and help. But if you think that this is well said by you, you must
consider that, on our part, a similar reply has been made. Our religion
has sprung up just now; for now He has arrived who was sent to declare
it to us, to bring us to its truth; to show what God is; to summon us from
mere conjectures, to His worship.
74. And why, my, opponent says, did God, the Ruler and Lord of the universe,
determine that a Saviour, Christ, should be sent to you from the heights
of heaven a few hours ago, as it is said? We ask you too, on the other
hand, what cause, what reason is there that the seasons sometimes do not
recur at their own months, but that winter, summer, and autumn come too
late? why, after the crops have been dried up and the corn(5) has perished,
showers sometimes fall which should have dropped on them while yet uninjured,
and made provision for the wants of the time? Nay, this we rather ask,
why, if it were fitting that Hercules should be born, Aesculapius, Mercury,
Liber, and some others, that they might be both added to the assemblies
of the gods, and might do men some service,--why they were produced so
late by Jupiter, that only later ages should know them, while the past
ages(6) of those who went before knew them not? You will say that there
was some reason. There was then some reason here also that the Saviour
of our race came not lately, but to-day. What, then, you ask, is the reason?
We do not deny that we do not know. For it is not within the power of any
one to see the mind of God, or the way in which He has arranged His plans.(7)
Man, a blind creature, and not knowing himself even, can(8) in no way learn
what should happen, when, or what its nature is: the Father Himself, the
Governor and Lord of all, alone knows. Nor, if I have been unable to disclose
to you the causes why something is done in this way or that, does it straightway
follow, that what has been done becomes not done, and that a thing becomes
incredible, which has been shown to be beyond doubt by such(9) virtues
and(10) powers.
75. You may object and rejoin, Why was the Saviour sent forth so late?
In unbounded, eternal ages, we reply, nothing whatever should be spoken
of as late. For where there is no end and no beginning, nothing is too
soon,(11) nothing too late. For time is perceived from its beginnings anti
endings, which an unbroken line and endless(12) succession of ages cannot
have. For what if the things themselves to which it was necessary to bring
help, required that as a fitting time? For what if the condition of antiquity
was different from that of later times? What if it was necessary to give
help to the men of old in one way, to provide for their descendants in
another? Do ye not hear your own writings read, telling that there were
once men who were demi-gods, heroes with immense and huge bodies? Do you
not read that infants on their mothers' breasts shrieked like. Stentors,(13)
whose bones, when dug up in different parts of the earth, have made the
discoverers almost doubt that they were the remains of human limbs? So,
then, it may be that Almighty God, the only God, sent forth Christ then
indeed, after that the human race, becoming feebler, weaker, began to be
such as we are. If that which has been done now could have been done thousands
of years ago, the Supreme Ruler would have done it; or if it had been proper,
that what has been done now should be accomplished as many thousands after
this, nothing compelled God to anticipate the necessary lapse(1) of time.
His plans(2) are executed in fixed ways; and that which has been once decided
on, can in no wise be changed again.(3)
76. Inasmuch then, you say, as you serve the Almighty God, and trust that
He cares for your safety and salvation, why does He suffer you to be exposed
to such storms of persecution, and to undergo all kinds of punishments
and tortures? Let us, too, ask in reply, why, seeing that you worship so
great and so innumerable gods, and build temples to them, fashion images
of gold, sacrifice herds of animals, and all heap up(4) boxfuls of incense
on the already loaded altars, why you live subject to so many dangers and
storms of calamity, with which many fatal misfortunes vex you every day?
Why, I say, do your gods neglect to avert from you so many kinds of disease
and sickness, shipwrecks, downfalls, conflagrations, pestilences, barrenness,
loss of children, and confiscation of goods, discords, wars, enmities,
captures of cities, and the slavery of those who are robbed of their rights
of free birth?(5) But, my opponent says, in such mischances we, too, are
in no wise helped by God. The cause is plain and manifest. For no hope
has been held out to us with respect to this life, nor has any help been
promised or(6) aid decreed us for what belongs to the husk of this flesh,--nay,
more, we have been taught to esteem and value lightly all the threats of
fortune, whatever they be; and if ever any very grievous calamity has assailed
us, to count as pleasant in that misfortune(7) the end which must follow,
and not to fear or flee from it, that we may be the more easily released
from the bonds of the body, and escape from our darkness and(8) blindness.
77. Therefore that bitterness of persecution of which you speak is our
deliverance and not persecution, and our ill-treatment will not bring evil
upon us, but will lead us to the light of liberty. As if some senseless
and stupid fellow were to think that he never punished a man who had been
put into prison(9) with severity and cruelty, unless he were to rage against
the very prison, break its stones in pieces, and burn its roof, its wall,
its doors; and strip, overthrow, and dash to the ground its other parts,
not knowing that thus he was giving light to him whom he seemed to be injuring,
and was taking from him the accursed darkness: in like manner, you too,
by the flames, banishments, tortures, and monsters with which you tear
in pieces and rend asunder our bodies, do not rob us of life, but relieve
us of our skins, not knowing that, as far as you assault and seek to rage
against these our shadows and forms, so far you free us from pressing and
heavy chains, and cutting our bonds, make us fly up to the light.
78. Wherefore, O men, refrain from obstructing what you hope for by vain
questions; nor should you, if anything is otherwise than you think, trust
your own opinions rather than that which should be reverenced.(10) The
times, full of dangers, urge us, and fatal penalties threaten us; let us
flee for safety to God our Saviour, without demanding the reason of the
offered gift. When that at stake is our souls' salvation and our own interests,
something must be done even without reason, as Arrhianus approves of Epictetus
having said.(11) We doubt, we hesitate, and suspect the credibility of
what is said; let us commit ourselves to God, and let not our incredulity
prevail more with us than the greatness of His name and power, lest, while
we are seeking out arguments for ourselves, through which that may seem
false which we do not wish and deny to be true, the last day steal upon
us, and we be found in the jaws of our enemy, death.
Back to Volume 6 Index